The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, December 21, 1919, SECTION TWO, Image 25

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SECTION TWO
Pages 1 to 20
Classified Advertising and
Sporting News
VOL. XXXVIII.
PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1919.
NO. 51.
r
EAST'S BEST AGAINST
WEST'S IS BEST CARD
TWO FORMER OREGON ALL-STARS WHO HAVE JOINED COACH
ING STAFF IN SOUTH.
OFF FOR
ENT-DAY CONDITIONS
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CLASH WITH U. OF 0,
Present-day conditions are such-that useful gifts are the only sensible gift to give. Fine furniture
heads the list of useful gifts and this big store leads in showing the finest furniture- at the fairest
prices. Buy now and pay later. :
New Year's Contest at Pasa
dena to Be Hummer.
Trip Marks Epoch in Annals
of Crimson Sport.
Hp
HARVARD
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Li
M
'Turkish Rockers
Sewing Rockers
Center Tables
China Closets
Ladies' Writing Desks
Book Racks
Magazine Racks
A Small
&o Button- cal Rest
A
llk sal a4la
We have a fine assortment ot
Morris Chairs for Christmas.
Make your selection early. .
SALE OF
FLOOR LAMPS
SHADES
35 Lamp now
$28.00
$30 Lamp now
$24,50
J27 Lamp now
$23.00
$25 Lamp now
$20.00
Odd shades
- cheap.
Table Lamps as cheap aa it.
Magazine Stand
Special at Gadsbys'
$3.75
SALE OF
CEDAR CHESTS
Buy a moth - proof genuine
Cedar Chest. Store your furs at
home. Priced as low as $15 at
Gadsbys'. Size 40 Inches lon, 17
inches wide.
THIS COLUMBIA
GRAFONOLA
OUTFIT
ixci.rmxa twflth sei.ec
'HONS OfT YOLK CHOICE.
.. , . -n ri .
2
it1
I $10 Cash ,
$2.50 Weekly
a7'""B
I lllllll ! rsl5.00f1.V..s.':'.$13:25
1 IPI
I We charge no interest. This . JEjW- Mf01 La FT M 'tJjWi
b e a u t i ful Columbia Grafonola vfe. f3 23 I ' 1 a ' ' 1
may be had in mahogany, Cir- L M 1 1 '
cassian walnut and oak. Colum- "-
bia Orafonolas are priced frtfm -
$20 op and sold on easy weekly Matched Library Set In Golden or Fumrd Oa4c Serviceable and Com.
and monthly payments. fortable.
Corner Second and Morrison Streets
Values That Cannot Elsewhere Be Approached in
Piano Benches
Library Tables
Carpet Sweepers
Music Cabinets
Pedestals, Costumers
Hall Trees, Hall Seats
Deposit Will Reserve Any
REED CHAIRS AND ROCKERS
FOR CHRISTMAS
We Have Complete Showing of Reed Chair, Rocker. Tablea. Setteea
and Lamps. Iteed Chairs as Cheap aa 915. Easy Terms.
MATCHED BEDROOM SUITES
We Have a. Moat Complete Line of Matched Bedroom Snlteav Either In
Oak. Mnhoicany. Walnut or lllrdneyc Maple. Ak to See 1 belli, frlce
Within Heaaon at Gadabya'. Your Credit la Ooou. lie It.
. ' ' v-
Massive Overstuff ed" Tapestry Davenports
We have onlv two of these on our sample floor, all In different colors of
tapestries. This piece of furniture Is made with the factory guarantee.
Spring arms,, spring; back, spring edge and comfy spring cushions. Up
holstered In good grade tapestry. Designs similar to cirt. I C nfl
Special at Gadsbys' at. ItvJ.UU
OTHER DAVENPORTS AS CHEAP AS fSP.OO.
42, 48. AND 50-PIECE DINNER SETS
FOR YOUR TABLE
"
$l0.001-np?eecers.e.t:$ 8.75
$14.50 ?21.npnieece..Se:t:$12.85
$ 1 4.75 '."p-ieVe. s.e.t: $13.10
LIBRARY SUITES
Plate Racks
Umbrella Stands
Tabourettes
Footstools
Telephone Tables
Telephone Stools
Article Intended for Gift Purposes
. .
$ 1 8.50 FoTpeVe.: S16.8S
$l9.75FonieVe.:$17.75
$23.75 ?o,-npnieece. s.e.t: $2 1 .40
$24.50 L8.".1:' $22.00
FOR CHRISTMAS
Medicine Cabinets
Morris Chairs
Rocking Chairs
Easy Chairs
Sectional Bookcases
Rugs K
to I
Buy Him a Big Com
fortable Chair or
Rocker for Xmas
Large stock of Pretty Oak Rock
ers. Nothing better for Christmas.
Pretty
Reed Rockers
From $12.50 Up
Extra special value. Pretty Ma
hogany Spinet Desk, giving you
an opportunity to buy one at a
real bargain. Reg. 47.60 4r) Ri
vals. Special at Gadsbys' 1rZi I U
Buy Her One for Carlatmaa.
TRIPLE MIRROR DRESSING
TABLES
in golden oak," mahoganv, birds
eye maple and walnut. Buv her
one for Christmas at Gadsbys'.
VSE OCR EXCHANGE DEIT.
If you have furniture that doeint
ult you want lomethlnf more up-to-date
and better phone ui and we'll
end a competent man to see It and
arrange to take It aa part payment on
the kind you want the Gadsby kind.
We'll make you. a liberal allowance
for your, goods and we'll veil you new
furniture at low price. The new furni
ture will be promptly delivered. Ex
change goods can be. bought at our
First and Wahlng-ton Store.
Desks jj
BOTH TEAMS FORMIDABLE
Harvard's Record for 119 Season
Is Impressive, but So Is That
of Oregon Lemon -Yellow. .
BY HARRY M. GRAYSOM.
LOS ANGELES. Cal.. Dec 20.(Spe
cial.) For the second consecutive
time the University of Oregon Is
to uphold the honor of the west In
the annual Pasadena classic New
Year's day. The big event at the
Crown city' was inaugurated on the
first day of 1916 when Washing-ton
State college, coached by Bill "Lone
star" Diets, triumphed over Brown
university 14 to 0.
During- the 1916 season Hugro Bez
dek's Oregon steamroller crushed and
humiliated every western team but
Washington, with which it played a
scoreless tie. and New Year's day,
1917. saw the present Penn State
mentor's hustling- aggregation crown
its efforts by trampling on Pennsyl
vania 14 to 0. This 14 to 0 score in
favor of teams from this western
slope has become a. 'sort of habit.
The Pasadena folks were wise In not
featuring intercollegiate football dur
ing the recent unpleasantness abroad.
Service elevens were pressed into
service instead, the Mare Island Ma
rines licking the Camp Lewis team
in 1918 and the Great Lakes Naval
Training Station outfit walloping the
Marines a year ago.
With the war on- the shelf and col
lege football back to its normal place
we will once more gaze upon the
spectacle of two representative var-
sity teams fighting for what, is as
near as possible to a national title.
! Harvard and Oregon sport the best
: records in the east and west respec-
tively.
: When the charging crimson and the
! fighting lemon-yellow clash, some
twenty-eight or thirty thousand peo
I pie will see the. east's best pitted
against the best team produced on
the Pacific coast this season. Al
though Brown in 1915 and Tennsy in
1916 were truly representative ma
chines, they did not have the very
best tally sheets compiled in the east
those years. They were wonderful
combinations and the best the Pasa
dena people could Induce to make the
hike.
Harvard Record Impressive.
Harvard's 1919 record is very im
pressive. But one touchdown has been
recorded on her during the entire se
mester, that happening in the Prince
ton game which ended in a gruelling
10. to 10 tie.- Princeton's goal ' from
field in this close struggle and a suc
cessfully negotiated drop-kick regis
tered by a Yale booter were the only
other registrations by crimson ene
mies. While whitewashing her opponents
the Cambridge institution ran up 65
points on Bates, 47 on Virginia. 20 on
Springfield. 17 on Brown and Boston
college, which won the Catholic
championship of the east, and 23 on
Tufts. Yale, her ancient and legen
dary foe, succumbed, 10 to 3. This
game proved that Coach Bob Fisher's
men composed the best drilled team
along the east coast as far as moderji
football is concerned.
Although the results of games alone
count when the win and loss column
Is summed up at the sounding of taps
on a regular playing season, the Uni
versity of Oregon's lone loss to Wash
ington State college does not count as
heavily against the Eugene lads as
one who does not know the circum
stances would Imagine.
Never in the history of the Lane
county school has such a heart-break
ing game been lost. Oregon was
beaten 7 to 0. but she was not licked.
No Oregon team is ever whipped.
Since the Oregon state varsity was
founded and a football team placed
on the field, not once has that team
slowed up. No matter whether an
Oregon machine is piling up huge
scores or being hopelessly beaten, it
fights on and on. Oregon fight is
traditional,
"Shy" Huntington's muster roll out
1 played Gus Welch's Pullman squad at
! every department of the game. Eldon
l Jenne's punts averaged two yards
more in length that did those of Hero
Bill Steers, but outside of that fea
ture there was not one little thing at
which Welch's crew excelled.
Pullman Grli Break.
Oregon superiority reigned supreme.
but still Huntington's hustlers lost.
When Stan AnderRon fumbled on a
delayed pass and "Swede" Brooks re
covered for' the Cougars on the lemon
yellow's 1-6-yard line the little God of
Luck smiled serenely on the crimson
and gray. The break of the game
was obtained by Pullman, which
seemed to instill heaps of the old
dash and after making first down the
ball was bucked across in the hands
of Fullback Lloyd Gtllis.
Twice during this memorable con
test did the Oregon huskies have the
ball on the Pullman two-yard line.
On as many more occasions they had
it within the hated opposition's ten
yard chalk mark, but each time "Fat"
Herreld, Fred Hamilton or some other
member of that famous Cougar line
smeared plays calculated to shove the
pigskin across the Rhine.
One might say that Oregon lacked
the punch. It did in this contest, but
the well-known poke was not on a
v:y-atton when Eugene ' trounced
Washington 24 to 13. the Oregon Ag
gies 9 to 0, Idaho 27 to 6 and the
MVltnomah Amateur Athletic club
twice. 29 to 7 and 16 to 7.
Since New Year's day, 1917, saw the
last of the East versus West contests
and featured Oregon against Pennsy,
the coming classic will mark the
lemon-yellow's second stand for west
ern football. The Pasadena committee
chose wisely when it picked the Eu
gene squad.
Chairman W. F. Creller. Seward A
compose the football committee of the
Tournament of Roses association, are
to be congratulated for their display
of bulldog tenacity which has been
rewarded with the coming of Har
vard. The famous old Cambridge
school is admired for the sportsman
like way in which It agreed to cross
the continent.
Harvard, as the eastern champion
goes to Pasadena to fight for the
national title. She will be heartily
welcomed; -received -with open arms,
and. In coming establishes a precedent
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LKFT JOHNNY BECKETT.
which will in the future have the ef
fect of making any member of the
Big Three, the Big-Ten or any other
conference in the land eager to have
Its very best team participate as a
principal In the Pasadena "big game."
which is now regarded as the super
classic of the football world.
OllEGOX IS WAKMLY GRKETED
Pasudena Makes Much of Squad
Wearing Lemon-Yellow.
BY PORTER W. YETT.
WITH THE OREGON TEAM. Pasa
dena, Cal., Dec. 20. The team arrived
at the Maryland hotel 'at noon, where
they were received warmly by hotel
patrons and admirers. When the
lemon-yellow warriors from Oregon
filed through the lobby they were
given rousing applause.
The team was immediately assigned
to bungalow SI, on Euclid avenue.
Trainer Bill Hayward snt in orders
for the regular training table menu.
Holly Huntington was renewing ac
quaintances with former friends here.
This is his third trip to Pasadena.
Coach "Shy" Huntington, "Brick"
Mitchell, Bart Spellman. Neal Cosgriff
and Ken Bartlett were also received
by old friends here. Brick Mitchell
joined the special at Port Costa.
John Beckett was waiting for the
boys at Benicla, where the special was
ferried across the bay. John will be
Uow'n next week to Join the coaching
staff.
The team went to the park after
lucht lunch, but did not practice,
the baggage failed to arrive in time.
Buck Weaver, White Sox star, was
a visitor at the park.
The boys will do preliminary work
at Tournament park.
Harry M. Grayson, former Orego
nlan sporting editor, was on the re
ception committee.
Mr. Berttonneau of the football
committee welcomed the team at the
Maryland.
Mr. Keisling of the Pasadena Even
ing Post also was on the reception
staff.
Captain Brandy Brandenberg and
Bill Steers were much sought after
members of, the team.
Many hotel guests were heard to
comment on the good appearance of
the boys from Eugene.
There will be a dance in the hotel
lobby tonight and tomorrow. After
practice the team will visit the Holly
wood movie studios.
K EARNS LISTS FIGHT OFFERS
Dempsey Manager Claims He Has
Received 1 6 Proposals.
DOS ANGELES. Cal.. Dec 20. Jack
Kearns. manager for Jack Dempsey,
today announced he had received 16
genuine offers for the Carpentier
Dempsey match. They were:
D. J. Tortorlch. New Orleans. t'JOO.OOO
for Dempsey's end. Says he will outbid
anv promoter In America.
Colonel Miller of Oklahoma. $300,001
purse.
Otto Floto, Kansas City.. Mo.. $200.00
purse.
Vlenne. Paris, $250,000 to Dempsey foi
match In France.
Jack Curley. $1.10.000 purse.
Dc Coin, $200,000 to Dempsey for match
In Paris. -
Prince Murat and Duke De Cases offer to
outbid any offer for nratch In Europe.
Portland, Or.. $Ki0.lM)0 purse.
Booker and Mitchell, $250,000, to Demp
sey for Itgnt eliner in r.ngiann or r ranee.
Billy Cibson. fjju.uuu to uempiey loi
fight in America.
Frit Mente. tjriagepon, vonn., aiuu.wu
to Dempsey.
James W Cofforth. $40O.noo purse lor
l.-.-rnund fiaht at Tijuana. Mexico.
Morris Penler. Pueblo. S2SO.UUO to uemp
y for fight at Pueblo.
William R. Parson, New York city. $10.-
000 and one-third of pronte to uempsey
to fight In London.
Ben Stein. MllwauKee. i.uiw.vuu irancs
to Dempsey for fight In Paris.
Charles Cochran, . $350,000 purse for
fight in Kngland.
PUEBLO, Colo.. Dec. 20. A bona
fide offer of $250,000 for the Demp-
sey-Carpentler fight was wired Jack
Kearns. manager oi jacK uempsey,
last night by Morris A. Renter of
Pueblo and Fred Dixon of Colorado
Springs, representing -40 southern
Colorado business men.
Colorado "U" Has Boxers.
BOULDER. Colo., Dec. 20. Coach
Ed Grubb of the University of Colo
rado says he has a string of prom
ising material for wrestling and box
ing matches with athletes of Colo
rado school of mines. Colorado col
lege and Denver university. A team
of six men, three boxers and three
wrestlers, will be chosen to represent
the university.
Kopf Back on Job.
CINCINNATI, O.. Dec. 20. Short
stop Larry Kopf of the Cincinnati
Reds, who has been at his home in
Connecticut since the close of the
season, has packed up and returned
to Cincinnati for the winter and
taken a Job as an automobile sales
man. '
Deaf Mate Is Hlngrle Sculler.
CAMBRIDGE, Eng.. Dec. 5. A deaf
mute, D. H. Gollan. of Trinity college,
won his heat in the Colquohoun sculls
racing on the Cam recently. He was
guided in part by a professional
trainer on the bank oy use of signs.
J Gollan was defeated in the final.
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RltiHT "BRICK. MITCHEtt..
CUE PLAY IS TO
E
THREE-CUSHION PLAYERS ARE
HEADY FfR FINISH.
Three Xlglits Per Week Planned
After Holidays to Wind Up
Milliard Tournament.
With the cold snap over Harry
Green is again managing to stage
from four to six matches each night
excepting Saturday and Sunday in the
annual three-cushion handicap tourn
ament at the Rlalto. With the players
hitting their regular form the com
petition is beginning to pick up.
The big sensation of last week was
George Hart's defeat at the hands of
N. J. "Red" Davis. Hart, who was
the winner in class A last year, had
been figured pretty nearly invincible
in this year's matches, but received
a setback at the hands of Davis.
Hart is one of the best three-cush
ion players In the state and although
he has not yet entirely recovered
from the trimming, is determined to
win the rest of his matches.
Harve Hicks continues to lead all
class A cueists with a record of three
straight victories. Hicks did not play
last week, being out of the city. The
m I Hart-Hicks match, when it is sched
uled, will draw one of the biggest
crowds of the tournament.
, There are three other billiardists
who have lost only one game up to
date in class A, all of whom will fig
ure in the race for first price. These
are Bert Cruikshank, Joe McCloskey
and W. A. Walby.
Billy Bryan, not any relation to
W. J., is holding his own in class
B and rests on top with four wins
and one loss. Bryan was defeated for
the first time last week. Jake Wein
stlen being the man to turn the trick.
Alex Merk, Is in second notch with
three victories and one defeat now
chalked against him.
J. A. Mitchell Is heading the per
centage column in class C with six
wins and two defeats. Waring, play
ing class c. has taken part in tnore
contests than any other man in the
entire tournament. Up to date War
lug has played nine games, winning
live and losing four.
W. R. Phillips, wielding a wicked
cue in class D, etill holds the high
run record of eight for all classes
In the tournament.
Sam Goddland, class A; W. A. Wal
by, class A and Jake Weinstein, class
B, have all registered runs of six.
Manager Harry D. Green is planning
on staging about six matches on Mon
day and Tuesday nights and perhaps
Wednesday night. The tournament
will come to a halt, through the
Christmas holidays and will not re
sume until Monday, December 29.
Kialto Three Cushion Billiard Tournament
standings.
CLASS A.
W. L.I W. L.
Harve Hicks... 3 OiOeorge Hart.... 2 1
M. (jruiKftiank . A l'X. J. Davit,. . . . 1 2
Sfam tio4i land .
2 2 C. Peterson 0 2
J. McCluaky...
2 liMax Le Vinson., o 1
2 ljM. Ruven o 4
CL.VSS B.
4 1!N. Kormlle 2 2
1 Dr. Selig 2 2
3 2 C. F. Lathrop. . 1 4
3 1 Frank Setrll.... I 4
3 1 M. Miles 0 3
2 1A, Kaiser 3 4
W. A. W alby. .
Pllly Bi yan. . .
Alex Merk
J. Wilpsteln..
W. D. Snow . . .
Jamtrs KMrtln.
L. Talbot .
CLASS C.
J. A. Mitchell.
V. H. Wi-ring.
J. Finney
P 2lo. A. Vraniyan. 1
5 4 CJ Klli.e I
4 2 lr. Gardner..., 2
I VO. Raker 1
: 2'C. Mu.-kley n
3 3' A. Koth 0
3 3 K. Wendell 1
3 :i
CLASS D.
5 1 H. P. Bowles. . 4
4 1 W. . Wnliing-. . 1
:: :'-'.J. w Mi inigton i
3 liC. W Karlcy... 1
2 3
Jhs. McGrath..
W. E. Wh.te. . .
Ji.e Kelly
C Arthur ....
K. Koth
R. S. Wilson . . .
Robt. F-liii.'ll. .
V. T. Ericksou.
Wm. Powtrs...
W. R. Phillips.
PULLMAN TO GKT ICE RIXK
Water Piped to Area Covered by
Tennis Courts.
WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE,
Pullman. Dec. 20 (Special.) When
State college students return after the
Christmas holidays they will be
treated to a spacious outdoor ice rink
as the result of efforts of Doc Bohler,
athletic director of the institution.
With freezing weather promised, by
the college weather prophet, nothing
seems, to be denying the outlook for
some real skating for college co-eds
and their companions.
The entire area covered by the score
of tennis courts has been sacrificed
by Doc Bohler. and water from the
college standpipe has been piped down
the Incline back of Bohler gymnasium
leading to the new rink.. All that
remains to be done Is for the college
fire chief to give the command which
will result in the flooding of the
ground and old Jack Frost will do
the rest. -
Wilde Match Held Up.
CLEVELAND, O.. Dec. 20. The 10
round boxing contest between Jimmie
Wilde of England, world's flyweight
champion, and Carl Tremaine of
Cleveland, has been tentatively post
poned. Matt Hinkel, local promoter,
aancunced. VuiusjUv.
PARTY NUMBERS 45 MEN
Weights of Easterners Indicate
Team of Tremendous "Beef"
With Light Back field.
CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Dec. 20. (Spe
cial.) The Harvard football team
pulled out of the South station. Bos
ton, a little after 2 o'clock this after
noon, bound on a trip across the con
tinent which will end in a New Year's
day game with Oregon at Pasadena,
CaL The trip is without example In
the athletic annals of Harvard or. for
that matter, in the history of the so
called big three teams of Harvard.
Princeton and Yale. The crimson has
sent a crew overseas and a track team
in combination with Yale, but has
never been allowed to wander very
far from its own hearthside when on
this side of the water.
Forty-five persons are making the
trip, 35 of whom are nfflMaiiti-
fied with the Harvard party, although
paying meir own expenses.
lnB piayers and "their
""". starting with the nrnhnhla
ne-up for the game, are as follows:
left end. John I") mmnn OnA I
left tackle. Robert Sedgwick. 1!0 pounds:
left guard, Thomas Woods. 222 pounds:
center. Arnold Horween. 107 pounds: right
n ri.fco DTOWn. Ml nminrla- . K
ckle. Keith Kane. 1K n. ,.!.,-
end. Percy steel.. 180 po.md.: 'quarter
back. Captain William Murray. 139 pounds:
.i.. ..oudi-n. nu-nara Humphrey. 170
pounds; right halfback. Edward Casey 1.-.5
pounds: fullback. Ralph Horween. 1S3
poundn; ends. Morris I'hlnnv -ii r,,
Joneph Ryan, HM pounds: 'tackle. Hurl
Faxon. 173 pounds: guard or tackle, guard
or center, Charles Thorndlke. 182 pounds:
Wynana Hubbard. 1!"0 pounds; center.
Charles Havemeyer. ISO pounds- nuartpp.
backs. Win Mow Pelton. l.lo ronnrl knir
Johnson. 150 pounds: backs. Frederic
Church. 100 pounds: Arthur Famllton. 170
pounds; Nils Nelson. Stanley Burnham. 170
pounds.
Seve Coaches
on Board.
The other Harvard men making the
trip are Head Coach Bob Fischer. As
sistant Coaches Derrlec Parmenter.
Ted Mahan. Paul Withlngton. Dick
Wigglesworth. Sam Felton and Jim
mie Knox: Trainer William "Hooch"
Donovan. Graduate Manager Fred W.
Moore. Undergraduate Manager Rich
ard Higglns. Club Physician Dr.
Thomas Richards. Faculty Represen
tative Mathew Luce.
The newspaper men accompany
ing the team were William D. Sulli
van, city editor of the Globe; Burton
Whitman, sporting editor of the Her
ald; Howard Reynolds, sporting edi
tor of the Post: William Spargo.
sporting editor of the Traveler, and
Charles Parker, football editor of the
American. The women en route are
the Mesdames James. Fisher. Knox
and Sullivan. A small student dem
onstration took place as the train was
pulling out.
Oregosi Barka Heavier.
According .to the best available
statistics Oregon will be outweighed
in the rush line by about ten pounds
a man. but behind the forwards will
have a big advantage over the Crim
son backfield. with Eddie Casey scal
ing only 155 pounds and Captain Mur
ray only two pounds the heavier.
Loss of Tubby Clark, the 220 guard,
through fear of further injury. Phil
Philbin, center, through probation,
and Mitchel Gratwick, back. Injured,
deprives the team of three letter men.
Clark's absence is a severe blow to
Harvard's chances. The crimson
lineup owes much of its effectiveness
the past fall to this big fellow's all
around football. If fhe ground con
ditions permit. Harvard Is expected to
try an open game, using Casey a lot
If he Isn't too well covered, and em
phasizing pass formations. The
"Felton to Casey" toss which won the
Yale game and tied that with Prince
ton is a threat which the lemon
yellow eleven had better look out for
in the pinches.
Harvard will have Ralph Horween at
fullback for most of the game, unless
he is Injured, and the punting which
fell short in the contest with Yale
should be considerably improved this
time. Horween's weight will come in
handy to hit the line. In case any
thing happens to the elder brother,
Arnold Horween can be shifted from
center to fullback.
Squad Stops at Chicago.
The Harvard itinerary shows that
the football players will arrive in
Chicago tomorrow afternoon at 3
o'clock and will have about four
hours stopover. It is planned by the
Chicago graduates to entertain the
party at dinner. The train is sched
uled to leave Chicago Sunday night.
Monday the team will be traveling
through Nebraska and the following
day through Wyoming and Utah.
Wednesday the train will carry
through Nevada and Into California
over the summit of the Sierra Nevada
mountains. On Wednesday afternoon.
December 24. the team wiil arrive at
Oakland, thence taking the ferry to
San Francisco and arriving in that
city Christmas eve.
In San Francisco Major Moore's
party will make its headquarters at
the Palace hotel, where it will have
breakfast Christmas day. Ttrkt fore
noon the Harvard graduates in San
Francisco at the University club will
entertain the team and the coaches at
luncheon. Whether the eleven will
have a chance for a worko-Jt remains
to be decided, but in all probability
the players will have signal drill at
least.
Christmas night the team will set .
out on its final lap of the journey to
Pasadena.
The football players will have a
chance to practice December 26 and
will have four other days besides
Sunday in which to make their final
preparations
Aberdeen Seniors Win.
ABERDEEN. Wash.. Dec. 20 (Spe
cial.) Basketball titles In the lnter
class games of the Weatherwax high
school were won both in the girls' and
the boys' teams by the seniors. Simi
larly in both the boys' and girls' con
tests the sophomores, juniors and
freshmen followed in the order named.
In the final games of -the series the
boy seniors won. from the sopho
mores 26 to 19. while the juniors de
feated the freshmen by a score of 33
to 0. In the girls' play the seniors
beat the sophomores 8 to S, while the
juniors were victors over the fresh
man 10 to 2.
st .'WCTyBr-r-. "JNtr