The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, November 13, 1914, Home Edition, Page ELEVEN, Image 11

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13. Jeff’s Sense of Humor Aggravates Mutt - - By “Bud” Fisher --- . - • ice amohcavy' \ Tt's a MiaA GoS* Yo ° / . WHAT 1 , OMG UTC* / DO with IT» j TuOO(C AT TH€ J S 6 5 IT ) •F* L. cweLL b«& v— , / — 1 >, 1 Sg*} water we-Low ] x GoNM * \ 1 so it 1 *' ' —■L. '' . tfjl ay 0.. PRINCETON UNO ISLE ELEVEN TO CLASH IN ANNUAL GAME SATURDAY This Contest Will Figure Prominently in the Formal Opening of the Tigers New Amphitheatre, the Palmer Memorial Stadium---Is Fortieth Annual Game---During This Time No Dispute Has Come Up, of Any Importance, tcf Threaten the Athletic Relations of the Two Rivals. New York.—The football teams of Princeton and Yale universities play their annual game at Princeton Satur day and some records are expected to be broken before the contest closes. Sev eral interesting coincidents mark this particular meeting of the elevens. To begin with it is the fortieth annual game between the universities, the series hav ing been started in lS73y and continued without a break. During this long stretch of years not a single dispute of sufficient importance to threaten the athletic relations of the two ’varsity ri vals has developed. As if in celebra tion of this splendid spirit of sportsman ship, Yale will, as the opponent of v'rinceton, figure prominently in the iT.nnal opening of the Palmer Memorial stadium, the Tigers’ new football am phitheatre. This huge structure, second only in size to the new Yale “Bowl," with its seating capacity for 41,000 spectators will permit the Princeton management to accommodate a larger gathering of Stoves and Heaters r It Pays to Pay Otir Prices Economy begins at home—and ends when you pay too little for your range or heater. It’s economy to PAY enough and GET enough. When you skimp on price you get “skimped” quality. And trouble begins in the household then and there. Observe the standard name of the maker before you make your choice— Do Not Buy on Looks Alone Every stove and heater in these stocks has a big reputation for dependable quality back of it. You don’t want one that will play you false any more than we don’t want to sell it to you. We carry the famous Miller Ranges, The Princess and many others. A woman need have no fear of results with our ranges. They are sterling —true through and through. All sizes are represented in the stock. We can fill the necessities of the case for a public institution just as well as for a kitchenette. And the range will he certain to “roast the turkey right.” We are headquarters for Stoves, Ranges and Heaters of the best kind. L. P. SPETH BROAD STREET. AUGUSTA football followers than has heretofore witnessed any one game between these two university teams. According to the statements of Treasurer George R. Mur ray, the Palmer Stadium will be filled Saturday afternoon every seat having been sold and as a result the gross gate receipts will aggregate SBO,OOO. This sum is considerably in excess of any previous game receipts and it is divided equally between the athletic associations of the two universities. New Attendance Records. With new records for attendance and gate receipts assured close followers of football are predicting that the recent record of no touchdown games will also he wiped out. Not since the 1911 game has either university crossed her rival’s line for a touchdown. In that year Sam White picked up a Yale fumble and ran sixty odd yavds, scoring Princeton’9 winning points. In 1912. the game end ed In a 6 to fi tie each' Eleven scoring two field goals, the most sensational be ing Pumpelly’s forty-nine-yard drop kick ROAST THE TURKEY RIGHT The best turkey in the world can be spoiled by wrong roasting. And wrong roasting never hap pens with the right range. Let a woman be ever so fine a cook yet the range can easily mar her reputa tion. And so we say in the spirit of Thanks giving emphasize the statement to— Get The Right Range. which tied the score for Yale in the closing minutes of the game. Last sea son Hobey Baker dropped a successful field goal for the Tigers and Guernsey did likewise for Yale. According to th# experts, the swift, open and dashing at tack of the two teams this autumn war rants the belief that one or both will succeed in carrying the ball across the opponent’s line. Rule* of 1873. When Princeton and Yale lined up in the initial game of the series in 1873 the contest was played under the “rules of ’1873“ which were a modification of the association code. Three years later the Intercollegiate Rifles were adopted but an arbitrary addition was made to the effect that goals only should count as in previous seasons. In 1882 the rules were amended so that two safeties equalled a touchdown and a year later the point scoring system, now in vogue, was first used. Previous to that year Yale had won two games, Princeton two and four wefre ties. Since 1883 Yale has won eighteen games. Princeton eight and five had ended In tie contests. Dur ing these comparatively modern years of the game Yale has scored 313 points to Princeton’s 130. This preponderance of points in favor of the Blue is due to the fact that most of Yale’s victories have been double figure ones. In sixteen out of eighteen victories Yale scored in dou ble figures, the largest score being made in 1890 when Princeton was crushed 32 to 0. The Tigers’ biggest score # wns made in 1896 when Yale fell before the Orange and Black by a score of 24 to 6. A recapitulation of the entire series of thirty-nine games since 1873, there fore, shows tha{ Yale has won twenty games; Princeton ten and nine have re sulted in ties. “Newt Pridemush filed a petition in voluntary bankruptcy yesterday. He gave his assets as one automobile and his liabilities as th’ same.” THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA. GA. SUFFERED BY COMPARISON. ‘‘Th© collection here seems vurry In complete,” remarked Mrs. Newrlch, go ing through tho museum. ‘‘For one fed Y@mr Adi f@r (k Snadlu^ • lmw<& (1© TBd© jEkrufldl ©ilk© B©i@ir© 1 © 9 d®dk Satarday E^©- thing, I haven't seen a skull of Crom well. They have a vurry fine one at the museum at Oxford, England.”— Boston Transcript. Thanksgiving Dinner^ Good news ! Just as you are giving up in despair perhaps over the unpleasant Impression your furnishings will leave on Thanksgiving guests we come forward with this saving word anent a special purchase intended solely to brighten up the home for the holiday and on all other days as long as you live. It is a most unusual offering and one we can never promise to repeat consisting of Dining Room Sets and Odd But Acceptable Pieces. Besides the handsome, new designs there is sturdy quality to back the beauty up. And there are novelties galore—unsuspected utility pieces each with a practical mis sion of its own. From Parlor to Kitchen Our stocks embrace the largest variety of accepted suggestions STOVES, RANGES, FLOOR COVERINGS OF EVERY CHARACTER. We are local agents for the famous McDougall Kitchen Cabinet. Any and everything for the home is here at reasonable prices. MAXWELL BROS. 973 BROAD. “HOME FURNISHERS.” TELEPHONE 836 V. A. HEMSTREET & BRO. 655 Broad Street. Has Everything for Hunting and Fishing REPAIR GUNS, PISTOLS, ETC. Come in and see our stock. Hunting season opens Nov. 20th. ELEVEN