i ( i rcr, 4 4 if 5 aT 1 J I i Ji j. a .-. yetg CteSQOH Statesman. Salem- Oigmt TtirdgiZfonlngr, Nevmbsr t9t 1828 . - ro -g,7 WMbraam Sqnaadi)22 Sftroinig, Arrive Fog Twkey Pay Game GDASTbfllOlnUN IWO BEARCATS ENDING CAREER Mort and Mumford Wear . Cardinal and Gold Last Time; Game at 1 :30 Probable Lineup Willamette Whitman Flnck . . L.T. .L.G. .C. . .RG. RT. .RE. Q. . 1H AND SPEAKING OF SNAPPER-BACKS Rasmuasen Carpenter Ackerman B. Hillis . Verstees . Pope PePoe . . . preach RH Ellis F L. Holmgren . . Caley McKellar Anderson , . Lad ley Hart Lindnian Applegate . . Bagley . Reese , . Nellson Twenty-two husky football war riors from Walla Walla parked their gridiron togs at a Salem hotel Wednesday night; the first Whitman college gridiron squad to visit Salem for three years. Players brought along by Coach R V. Borleske in addition to the eleven who are expected to start this afternoon's annual .game with the Willamette Bearcats, are Havnes, Ferrell, Council. Harsh barger. Qulne, Cartwrlght. Hef fron. C. Anderson and Bell. Today's game on Sweetland field" will start at 1:30 p. m., a tma aolprtpd as most convenient fni lha fans who want to enjoy holt. Thnksivine dinner after the game, but not too late in the afternoon. cinxa it " the last game of the season, it is also the last for two Willamette players who have been imminent wearers of the cardinal and gold for three and four sea sons respectively; Mort, hardi fighting guard, and Mumford, de pendable end. They are not list ed In the starting lineup, but are certain to play a considerable share of the game, along with a lot of others. Coach "Spec" Keene expects that he will have to use nearly all of the able bod ied men on the squad, in an ef fore to stop the heavy and power ful Missionaries. Willamette's starting lineup in cludes only four men who have earned their letters prior to this year, in contrast to tne wnuman array which is composed almost entirely of men who have played Jk lx''l t v SCHWARTZ I " (CHAIWORTH North Carolina I SSN, W ,cr re TODAY MARKS SEASON'S END Whirlwind Finish Anticipat ed in Nearly Every Part of Country HOWE Princeton BARRAGER Southern CalifornU RANDOLPH Indiana They know their stuff, do theae centers. All are accurate at pass ing the baft to the backfield. Their play in checking the rush of the enemy line has also been one of the nice things seen during thi current football season. WOLVES COMPLETE SUNLSEH MONMOUTH. Ore., Nov. 28. (Special) The Oregon Normal school Wolves came home with the scalps of the Southern Oregon Normal eleven and laid away their gridiron armor for the year after an exceDtionallv successful season. at least two seasons under Coach jxhe game at Ashland was won 12 to u. Borleske. The four veterans in the Wil lamette lineup are Ackerman, cen ter; Versteeg, tackle; DePoe, Quarterback, and French, half. The absence of Cranor and Mc Mullin from the backfield due to . Injuries, will be most keenly felt. Cranor has practiced only once since the Pacific game, but he may play a few minutes. Officials at today's game will be Maiaon, referee; Hauaer, um pire, and Huntington, head linesman. TAYLOR SIGNED UP TO FIGHT TED FOX Webiobts Ready For Final Game " Against Uclas Allle Taylor .of Bend, three times conqueror of Phil Bayes, was the logical man to bring to Balem for a fight against Ted Pox following the Independence lad's triumph over Bayes, and Match maker Harry Plant announced Wednesday that the match, ten tatively planned prior to last week's fight in the event of a vtc tnn for Fox' had been signed up definitely for next Thursday. De cember , at the Oregon .theatre. Taylor's supremacy over Bayes wasn't so marked as that dis played by Fox when he knocked Bayes out in the fifth round a week ago, but Taylor hasn't been fighting as long as Bayes, and hasn't gone back any from his form of two and three years ago when he was listed as one of the leaders at his weight in the north. meat He hu kent the speed that made him a contender early in his career, and has been gradually adding power to his attack. Fox will have a harder time dis posing of Taylor than he did In putting Bayes away; but if Sa lem's new favorite accomplishes this difficult task, there are some more fast boys waiting the call to come to Salem and match punches with the speedy lad from Independence. in thia contest, according to rooters who accompanied the team. th Wolves showed even more nnwnr than thv had been credlt- mA wit earlier In the season, and their aunremacr over the Ash land team was scarcely Indicated In the score. The Monmouth team gained 460 yards ana is first downs to Ashland 111 yards and three first (towns. Plain and fs.nev sassing and running by the Wolves Is believed to have been largely responsiDie for the victory. Ed Warren sub stantiated his reputed ability to manipulate a pigskin with ease by completing 12 to 16 passes. Clon nirar the fallback, eained much favorable comment by hla . out- atBiiiin nlavlnr and line Blung ing. He hit the line for yardage re nontarflr and was a valuable asset when yardage was needed for first down. Senn, who haiis rrom me nnahtne of Medford. dashed around right end for a touchdown in th third Quarter. He out played his former schoolmates no- ticeably. A crowd oi aooui v observed the game, and It wrm rmonllf commented that It was one of the hardest fought and Mainsnt fumes witnessed on the Ashland field. The lineup was: Monmouth Ashland T.rs ANfJEL.ES. Nov. 28 (.p) Twentv.five bir University of Oregon footballers stretcneo their limbs on Southern California nil tnHiv - ready for whatever the Prnfna of the University Of Cali fornia at Las Angeles have in tore for them in the Thanksgiv in? dav rame at the coliseum here tomorrow afternoon. ine ciasn will close the conference season for both. The Webfooteis went through light, limbering up workout on Pasadena rridiron after their ar. rlTal. Although Coach John Mc- Ewan has but a small squad. Ore gon ruled a heavy favorite. The probable lineup 1C3SHJS Bv ALAN J. GOULD j&vniiHl Press Snorts Editor MP.vv YORK: -Nov. 28 (AP) Feast or famine, win or lose, there will be plenty of Thanksgiving Day action on college griairons. Except, for a few Wg games yei 10 be played In the east, south and far west. It will bring the season to a colorful climax. rhnmnionnhin eames will add seat to the holiday occasion in five of the major areas. The big bat tle is over so far as title awards are concerned In the Pacific coast and big ten conferences, but im portant decisions are expected in . 11 t tne eastern secior as wtn s u southern, southwestern. Rocky mountains and big six conferences. Many Classics Dislied lp For those ardent adherents whose football appetite is still keen, in spite of lessened Interest in the championship angle of the situation, there will be the flavor of old traditions in abundance. especially for such eastern clas sics as Cornell-Pennsylvania at PhiladelDhia. Colsrate-Brown at Providence, where they play in the mornine: West Virginia- Washington and Jefferson at Mq: - gantown; and - Pittsburgh-Penn State at Pittsburgh. Nowhere will championship contentions have more widely as sorted tests than In the . south. where all 22 members of the southern conference jump , into action. Twenty of them play among themselves while Maryland and Clemson, the other two, have traditional foes in Johns Hopkins and Furman as their excuse for leaving the family circle on a holi day. Trio Yet Undefeated Georeia Tech. Tennessee and Florida, the "big three" of Dixie all undefeated and untied, look strong enough to maintain this nace. Tech faces a mediocre Auburn eleven and Florida's Bteam-roller bumns Into a Washington and Lee team that is below the Gen erals' usual standard. No upsets are expected here but Tennessee encounters rugged opposition In Kentucky. The Vols are favorites. but they may need to put on full nressure to win and keeD tneir slate clean In anticipation of the final and citclal clash with Flor- llda on December 8. THAT old ex-pug, Leach Cross, still has plenty of pull around New York, He's turned dentist. He used to get more dough In the old days for knocking out a singlemolar than he does in these times for removing a whole set of bicuspids. But now the pleasure is all his. A lot of fichtern are findine out that this Kid Chocolate Is really Hot Cocoa. SEASOIpSES Webfoots to Play Uclas -and Huskies to Tangle With Cougar Eleven President Doney pointed out to tha team that todav Is their chance to "come back" after the recent disappointment, and to make a name ; for themselves by doing what no Willamette team has ever done. Brainless Betsy says this Is a queer world when 12 strikes in a row can send a bowler to fame and a big leaguer to the bushes. a Just think, onllpee rrad now have nine whole months to rest their brains before they bee in their 1929 worrying. a a After read ine- the final scores it looks like a lot of foothall roach es will do all 'their future worry ing oenind a shirt counter or ou a coal truck. It must be great to be a studsnt at Michigan. They quit worrying on October 6. That was the day they lost the opening game of the season. SPUD MURPHY WilVS Lewis Smith Dove Ingham. Wiener Stearns Watkins Warren Senn Phillips Clonniger e Madden lg Neff Tg May It Kettenger rt Wood le Huntley re Goldsmith q Caldwell Ih Hlnes rh Prultt f Youngmeyer Oregon Pone . . . Colbert LTR. Hasan LGR. Stadelman . . . C . . Shields RGL. Christensnen . RTL. Archer REL Kitxmlller Williams r- m. - Nebraska is an odds-on ravome t.rr. " BlshWto clinch the Missouri valley big Tandy . Noble French Gould Brown Rasmus U Simpson LHR. . Labrucherie Rnrnell fc) .RHL. .Fleming (c) Gould F Fields All Stars Play "Hot Shots" At Chemawa Today rmcMAWA. Ore.. Nov. 28. (Special) The "All Stars," pick of the Chemawa Interclass foot ball league, and the "Hot Shots," the regular second team of the school, wfll clash on the gridiron Thanksgiving day. The All Stars have as their lu minaries the Solomon twins, ' a pair of halfbacks so identical in alza and feature that their school mates never know which is carry ing the ball. Mike or Jim. Many baffling trick plays staged by this team are based, on this resemblance. The Hot Shots are counting strongly on the speed and elusive ness of "Hoopa" Dowd Franklin. Returns From Seattle W. N. Coffee, pastor of the Free Meth odist church, returned to Salem Wednesday from Seattle wherahe had rone Monday to conduct the funeral services of a Seattle mln Ister. George Washington said: "When we assumed the soldier we did not lay aside the citizen." In 1843 the public debt of the United States was $32,700,000. six championship by conquering Kansas State, but the same thing cannot be said for the prospects facinar two other leaders Texas In the southwest and Utah in the Rocky mountain xone. Oregon State Plays The big intersections! engage ment of the day offers a final test to the claims of New York unlver alt to national recognition. The Violets, minus the services of their tar tackle and cantaln. Al Lass man. will trv their lock-step shift on Oregon State college at the Yankee stadium. The New York- era following their impressive ex hlbition of scoring power against Carnegie, figure to win by a de cisive margin, but they will meet a well-drilled, resourceiui eleven directed by one of the far west's cleverest field generals, Howard Maple. The N. Y. U.-Oregon btate skirmish as a prelude to another big east-west battle in New York, with Army and Stanford meeting on the same gridiron this Satur day. OVER POUDER MILL CITY, Ore., Nov. 28 Rnecl&n SDud Murphy of Hub bard took a decision over Frankie Burnell of Portland. In tha main event of last night's fight card here, which was declared to b one of the best ever staged In Mill City. Burnell put on an exhibition oi gameness xthat won him many friends even' though he lost the decision. He entered the ring with black eye acquired In previous workouts, and Murphy concen trated on this mark so successful ly that by the end of the fourth round the eve was entirely closed. Burnell was all but out in the fifth, but came back strong In the last three rounds. Red Haves of Stayton won a decision over Chuck Rosander of Portland in a lively six round semi final in which both boys gave ev ervthine they had. Floyd Sumpter and Don Mason of Mill Cltv battled for four rounds, Sumpter winning the de cision. They punished each other busily from the opening gong. Younr Ambrose of Salem won an easy decision from John Nel son also of Salem. A shirt tear ing contest between Hollis Turn idge and Fred Robertson, won by the former, was a novel event. A capacity crowd attended the card, which was staged by the Mill City firemen. Another will be ar ranged for sometime In January. By RUSSELL J. XEWLAND Associated Press Sports Writer SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 28 (AP) A football diet featuring th two ramainlne coast confer ence games of 1928. in addition to several old time rivalries, wui oe served to Thanksgiving Day fans in the west. Conference football closes on twn 'widely separated gridirons. with Oregon furnishing opposi tion in the south to University of California at Los Angeles and Washinfton and Washington State struggling for state honors at Seattle. While Oregon, ne of the five teams which won more games than it lost la not exDected to havA trou ble In vanquishing U. C L. A., the engagement In the north sector has developed pretty much" into an "even-Stephen" nronosltlon. Earlier, Washington blare was fimired to be a "sure shot over a pathetitcally weaK wasningion pven its recora was ana m i hetter" than its foe in Seattle Rut the Washington cohorts dis covered some kind of gridiron Kihpr and nut un a remarkable if losing battle with caiirornia and Stanford. In dropping a 6-0 game to Call, fornla and a 12-0 battle to Stan ford, the huskies actually out- played their greatly favored op-1 ponents but succumbed to a passing attack in the late minutes. Washington's attack is built around Chuck Carroll, a halfback of numerous qualifications and all- Amerlcan calibre. bpectaiors thourht he owned the ball in the California and Stanford games be cause he carried it on almost every play. There are ten other men on the Washington team. Montana, reeling under anotner disastrous conference year In which it lost all five games, tries its luck at Spokane against Gon- zaga. The "little big game" annual classic that pits St. Mary's forces against Santa Clara, will be fought out between two elevens of prac tically eaual strength. The tilt will be held in Keiar stadium. San Francisco, and a crowd is expected to see these keen rivals close their Althonrh many students living at some distance began leaving Wednesday for their homes tor the vacation, a considerable num ber who lire In Portland and near, er towns will remain in Salem for the Whitman game. 'JVCvfSNSPO v r. l a 1 r WW I J Recklessness Charged C. E. Earls. Salem route 6, was arrested Wednesday on a charge of reck less driving. Meeting Postponed The Salem Garden club, which ordinarily meets on the first Monday of the month, has oostDoned its Decem ber meeting to the second Monday In 1632 the Virginia Assembly on account of conflict with the ordered all settlers to plant mul- Drama League play "Jon which berry trees. Is to be given next Monday. OFFICIAL VISIT MADE ZENA. Ore.. Nov. 28. fSOO- ciai) Joslah Wills, Polk county school superintendent, visitea tne Zena school Friday afternoon and gave a talk on club work. He also urged the pupils to take part in the coming declamation con test. season. spirit runs men ON EVE OF GUI ThA Uat fwn rallv of the foot held at WlUam- UOtt ovwwvia - ette university chapel hour wea ..oarfav student snlrit. which suf " " - . fered a decided slump iouowm the game with Pacific university t.n rfm ir ft was fully recovered. and the team was assured strong support for the game tnis alter noon In addltiton to numerous songs and yells led by the cheer leaders short talks were given by Presl Hsnf Tionay and Coach Keene Thanksgiving Gridl Menu 41 PMWP-K CaUFOOMt A 6EOt?6U TECH POiYSEO THE Oppen Volcano Sawdust Burner is the ONLY Sawdust Burner on the mar ket that is air cooled by an air jacket the same way an automobile engine is cooled by a water jacket. This one feature means a saving in fuel of frdm 5 to 25 over any other sawdust burner. It also helps keep your basement cool. The OPPEN VOLCANO burns Screened Hosrared Fuel without trouble, as well -as coarse or fine Sawdust. The OPPEN VOLCANO Is manufactured In Salem and any replacements, such as burned out grates, etc. can be replaced without sending out of town. The OPPEN VOLCANO SAWDUST BURNER Is SERVICED by the FACTORY that MADE IT! THE OPPEN VOLCANO is Saving from 40 to 60 in Fuel for those who have, them - ' AH Owners are Boosters and we will gladly refer you to. Them or Show you , ; ?. Ve win glre you a free trial with nt - y 'obligation on your part, If you Wish. - ' - - i- - - ' ' Manufactured at 695 MILL ST. Phone 372 or 2086-J - "iin '-mr jsfsA nnn"inT i - -j 11 1 : v :' -.. i : w tf H 'i.vasgsv - : The Gift Store for Men Mi a y n In jut ' I I x 5 - I .. -V : K . . ,x nDODRlU M DSS TDMZ R(lB To Those Who Shop for "Him" We know the frills that thrill the masculine heart! We know the patterns of silk socks the new mufflers the warm cozy lounging robes he's always wanted, but just never got around to buying for himself. - No store In Salem makes a greater effort to be truly of service at Christmas than does this one. One peep inside our door Monday at the convenient arrangement of gift ideas and suggestions for "Him" will convince you how easy and how pleasant shopping for him can be at this friendly store. Emmons Tailor Furnisher Clothier ' 426 State SHKmoDir rr mm FRIDAY NIGHT, Nov. 308 p. m. is efTexas Eve marking the coming of new ,and better Texaco Gasoline and Texaco Golden Motor Oil the greatest event in the history of motor fuel in Oregon. i , From the skies will come a show er of Texas "shooting stars" every red star with Texaco Green "T" on one side, and gold on the other to fall is worth five gallons of Texaco gasoline ifree. Watch the' papers tomorrow for full an-' nouncement of this outstanding '..;S - event. - ; THE TEXAS COMPANY 11-3