The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 8, 1928, Page 10

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PAGE TEN Big Ten Teams to Play Only Outfits Who O PLAN IS MADE [Purdue and Indiana Favored AFTER DEBATE IN CONVENTION | All Teams Will Carry on Rela- tions With West Point, However IRISH FOLLOW RULES Eligibility Status of McLain and Holman to Be Decided Today (AP)—Except , the Big Ten ise to enter into with any team three-year athletic relations which does not have a player rule. After a turbulent debate, during which protests were made against the army which does not have such a rule, the faculty advisory com- mittee of the conference last night decided to enforce the rule with the one exception. The action saved the army from embarrassment as it was over the three-year rule that it broke its ath- letic relations with the navy. While the navy has a rule identical with » that of the Big Ten, it was included in the exception, The faculty committee, however, agreed to enforce unequivocally the rule against colleges and universities although it is satisfied that Notre Dame, which also was protested and which has games scheduled with three Big Ten football teams next fall, lives up to the rule. The rule states that no player is eligible to compete in Big Ten athletics or against Big Ten teams who has flayed more than three years of col- lege athletics. 3 backfield squad in the country. Th receivers. The ace of the squad is ‘ In the group The faculty action was the only highlight of the first day’s meeting of Big Ten athletic heads, most of the time being spent in arranging schedules for minor sports. The eligibility status of two foot- ball stars, Mayes McLain of Iowa and Allan Holman of Ohio State, was expected to be decided by the eligibility committee today. Goach Glenn Thistlethwaite of Wisconsin was elected president of the coaches committee, succeeding Jimmie Phelan of Purdue. VIKINGS MERT BISON TONIGHT Coach Leonard T. Saalwaechter's Bison basketball five faces the hard task of defeating the strong Valley City Vikings tonight at Fargo with ely no teamwork preparation. landicapped by a late start, the Buf- HORSE EXPERT PICKS WINNER FOR FUTURITY Walter Cox, Instructed to Buy Race Winner, Produces the Goods French Lick Springs, Ind., Dec. 8. —If a major league baseball mag- nate would one of his scouts and tell him, Ruth for next »” the scout prob- ably would quit his job or call the doctors for his boss, But Walter Cox, the veteran See aeiver of the Grand Circuit, the Br idn’t refuse an assignment in his falo mentor has devoted his time|line that was almost as difficult. He drilling in fundamentals with the] accepted the order and delivered the best working combination still in goods, 10.1 seconds. Eight of them are fine punters and ten of them are great passers. 1nt BISMARCK TRIBUNE of Florida, one of the finest football teams of the year, boasts of the best and fastest ere are twelve backs on the squad. Six of them can do the hundred in And all of them are good “Cannonball Clyde” Crabtree, from Cicero, Ill., who was mentioned as a quarterback on several Al-America teams. icture above are shown, left to right, Capt. Ernest Bowyer, Tommy Owens, Raney Caw- thon, Crabtree, Royce Goodbread, Carl Brumbaugh, “Red” Bethea, Wilbur James, “Red” McEwan, John Al- len, Ed Sauls and Broward McClellan. And they all weigh better than 170 pounds. | All-American Selections for 1928 (By ALAN J. GOULD) (Associated Press Sports Writer) FIRST TEAM SCHOOL POS. Age H. Ww. RESIDENCE Malcolmn Frankain, St. Mary’s.End 22 5:11 198 Berkeley, Calif. Otto Pommerening, Mich....Tackle 24 5:11 178 Ann Arbor, Mich. Edward J. Burke, Navy 5:11% 180 Larkesville, Pa. |Charles Howe, Princeton 5:10 188 Beaver Falls, Pa. |Seraphim Post, Stanford. 6:00 190 Berkeley, Calif. eae 6 5 Frank Speer, Georgia Tech 205 Atlanta, Ga. Dale Van Sickel, Florida. 5:10% 170 Gainesville, Fla. Earl H. Clark, Colorado, Col..Q. 200 183 Pueblo, Colo. C. Keener Cagle, Army..... H. Back 23 5:09 , 167 Merryville, La. Charles Carroll, U. of Wash..H. Back 22 6:00 190 Seattle, Wash. ‘Kenneth Strong, N. Y. U....F. Back 23 6:01 SECOND TE. POSITION {Irvine Phillips, California .End. |Mike Getto, Pittsburgh. Tackle. |George Gibson, Minnesota. Guird.. Nathan Barrager, South Calif..Center.... Dan MacMullen, Nebraska. 201 W. Haven, Conn, THIRD TEAM Miller Brown, Missouri Ibert J. Nowack, Illinois -Bruce Dumont, Colgate Peter Pund, Georgia Tech. Guard...Choc Sanders, Southern Meth. Gordy Brown, U. of Texas. -Tackle....Melvyl Dressell, Wash. State Wesley Fesler, Ohio State End -Edward Messinger, Army Howard Maple, Oregon State.Quarterback. .Howard Harpster, Carnegie Warner Mizell, Georga Tech...Halfback. lyde Crabtree, Florida |Paul Scull, Pennsylvania Halfback. is Glassgow, U. of Iowa Clifford Hoffman, Stanford....Fullback. MAY DUPLICATE | LAST CAMPAIGN Both Teams Have Same Prob- lems; Must Find Good Run- ning Guards BADGERS ARE GIANTS Sophomores Stir Iowa Hopes; Fargoan Veteran at North- western By PAUL MICKELSON Chicago, Dec. 8.—(AP)—The Western conference basketball cham- pionship race this winter promises to be as dizzy and close as the 1928 football campaign. The season opens January 5. The Hoosier twins, Purdue and In- diana, which tied for the title last season, are favorites again. Second choice contenders are Iowa, Wiscon- sin and Northwestern. Both Purdue and Indiana had the same problem to solve—find a run- ning guard. Four of Purdue’s last season team, Capt. Wilbur Cummins and Glen Harmeson, forwards; Charles “Stretch” Murphy, center, and War- ren “Dutch” Schnaiter, guard, are back. Seven Lettermen Back Indiana has seven lettermen, but will need to replace Bob Carrell at guard after January, as he will be graduated at the end of the first semester. The other lettermen are Capt. Dale Wells and James Strick- land, forwards; Branch McCracken, center, and Doug Schaied, guard. Coach Everett Dean has plenty of sophomore material. Wisconsin has a band of giant vet- erans and the championship fever is high at Madison. The astute “Doc” Meanwell’s worry is that his men will be too large to work his decep- tive short lyre The Badger regulars back are Elmer Tenhopen, Lycan Miller and Raymond Ellerman, for- w.rds; Johnny Doyle, guard; Harry Kowalczwk and Harold Foster, cen- ters. * A great crop of promising sopho- mores stirred Jowa’s title hopes. Coach Justin Barry has his enti last season team back—Capt. Fran- ¢!: Wilson, center; Forest Twoggod and Doyle Plunkett, forwards; Bob Kennan and Virgil David, guards, but sophs are expected to edge into some of these places. Fargoan Purple Veteran At Northwestern, the vets are Capt. Hal Gleichmann and Johnny Haas, Fargo, N. Dak., forwards; “Rut” Walter, center, and Frank MuRPHy **"* PURDUE “CENTER Claims That Women Who Ran in Last Race Were Not Ex- hausted But Merely ‘Playing the Game’; Says Pulses Were Normal After Woman Had ‘Run Berlin, Dec. 8.—(AP)—The elim- Purdue, Indiana Favored in Big Ten Cage Campaign Western Conference basketball squads are long on size, as the four stars above indicate. Coach Meanwell of Wisconsin says so many of his candi- dates are oversize that his famous short passing game may be impaired. GERMAN SCORES OLYMPIC OFFICIALS FOR LEAVING OUT WOMEN’S 800-METER EVENT program. the 600 or 800 meter regularly run and in which rational training for them is indulged in the results have been quite satisfac- tory. clines me to the nervous tension of the short sprints is more likely to prove deleterious than the running of longer dis- tances.” doubt until after tomorrow's strug- Thomas . gle, which marks the North Dakota| French Lick hota ees Agricultural college's firs} game of the season. Although Bison teams have con- sistently beaten the Vikings in the Past, Coach “Sally” is even more pes- simistic than usual over this one. “With practically no practice, and with a comparatively slow team on the floor, we'll be lucky if we win,” is “Sally’s” comment. Then center position seems to be most in doubt with Matt Braus, a veteran, getting serious competition from Leo May, Aberdeen athlete, and Johnny Smith of Fargo. The fleet forward and captain, Bobby Hahn, has a good hold on his po- sition, with Cecil Bliss and George Hermes fighting for the other berth. Newcomers who seem formidable are Eric Tonn and Oscar Hanson of Hancock, Minn., and Raymond Bas- wealthy Honorable Mention ENDS — Rosenzweig, Carnegie; jarna, Hobart; Smi Arkansas; bernathy, Vanderbilt; Alley, Ten. Nit and produced olomite, 2: winner of the Kentucky Futurity at | : Lexington and one ae the leading | Nessee; Collins, Notre Dame; Ph four two-year-olds of 1928. ARS ateont) | Peevincial | ceorees “One night last summer a year town: Donchess, Pittsburgh; Tappan ago I was thinking about horses and|8"d McCaslin, Southern California; how nice it would be to get a win-|Hayeraft, Minnesota; Murphy, B ner in the Futurity,” Taggart said,iton College: Petty, Texas Aggi “T called Walter Gox on the phone | Batrabee, New York U.; Churchill, and told him lahoma. é would win the Freie % colt that | A CKLES—Hibbs, Southern Cali- to buy him and train him and send|fornia; Lassman, New York; Wake- me all the bills. m Cornell; prague, Army; “He bought Volomite but I didn’t|Smith, Pennsylvania; Raskowski, see the colt until the Toledo meet-|Qhio State; Maree, Georgia Tec! ing. Walter said he was a great | Steele, Florida; Burnett, Mississippi prospect but I could sec that he| 7 thought more of Walter Dear, an-| Clemson; Thayer, — Tennessee; other two-year-old in his stable,|Schleusner, Iowa Williams, Texas When the stable went to Lexington (Christian; Bancroft, Cox wanted to drive Walter Dear in|Tobin, St. Mary's; Gerald Snyder, Maryland ' bama; _Terremere, Schmidt, a Santa Clara; California; Parkinson, ittsburgh; White, Washington & Lee; McCrary, Georgia. BIG BOY FACES TOM LOUGHRAN Chicago, Dec. 8.—(AP)—Tommy Loughran, world’s light heavyweight champion, has been signed by Pro- moter Mique Malloy to meet “Big Tinsley, Louisiana State; Swofford,!Boy” Peterson, Biloxi, Miss., heavy- weight, in a 10-round but at the Chicago Coliseum, Dec. 17. Malloy also has signed Joey San- Marshall, guard. Coach Dave MacMillan starts his second year of coaching at Minne- sota with five lettermen, headed by Capt. George Otterness, guard, ichigan, which started slow last and finished with a bang, has regulars, Illinois’ strength is: unknown, but Craig Ruby usually develops a fast team. Prospects are low at Ohio State and Chicago, both hit hard by grad- uation, ' ILLINI SHARPEN EYES PREPARING ination of the 800 meter race from the program of women’s competi- tions at the Los Angeles Olympic games in 1932, as decided by the International Amateur Athletic Fed- eration at Amsterdam, was a grave mistake, in the opinion of Dr. Hede Bergmann, examining physician of women athletes. German delegates sought to retain the event. “The decision was a hasty, emo- tional one, based upon what the delegates had seen transpire in the Olympic stadium,” Dr. Bergmann explained. “After Frau Lina Radke- Batschauer of Germany won the 800 meter race in the world record time most of her competitors threw themselves down on the ground} and acted as though they were com- pletely exhausted. It was a piece of good play-acting, for the whole vast audience pitied the poor girls, and many a spectator was indig- TENNESSEE AND Knoxville, Tenn., Dec. 8.—(AP)— Knoxville occupied the center of a colorful football stage today with two undefeated teams representing 29th, the Universities of Florida and Ten- nessee fighting it out in the finale of the 1928 season. Florida held a distinct edge over the Tennessee volunteers at the kickoff on the basis of comparative ‘results, the ’Gators having rounded out a strenuous schedule without loss or tie, also establishing a na- tion-wide scoring record. Tennessee’s “past” is almost as good, although a Thanksgiving set- back irthe form of a tie with the sett of Wahpeton. the Futurity and I got W. H. Leese gor of Milwaukee to meet Armando ington State; McGuirl George “Baldy” Hays may be out of his accustomed guard position to- morrow because of an injured ankle. His place will probably be filled by to drive my colt. Volomite didn’t vork well for the strange driver in the first heat but he came down and went great in the second heat lege; Brewster, West V gurski Minnesota; evorkian, orado Aggies; Anderson, Cornell; Brown; Carmen, Utah; Prince, Col-t the promisi “Gilly” Johnson of Rockford, Il!., while Pete Gergen looks best for his old post at guard. With only two weeks remaining before the Bison take a six-game jaunt through Illinois, Coach Saal- waechter will probably use all his men tomorrow in an attempt to find the best five. F —— | Fights Last Night ———_________—__-¢ (By the Associated Press) Boston.—Dave Shade, Califor- nia, outpointed Arthur Flynn, Lawrence, Mass. (10). Frankie O’Brien, Hartford, Conn., out- en Jack Britton, New York Toledo, ©.— Rosy Rosales, Mooney, Georgetown; Miller, Notre Dame; Barrett, Harvard; Lyon, Ranans State; Broadstone, Nebras- two-year-olds of the > vol-| Santiago of Cuba in the 10-round - |semi-wind up of the card. GOPHERS MEET NODAKS TODAY ball steps Chicago, Dec. 8.—(AP)—Basket- from the background to a closeup on the Big Ten athletic screen tonight when six teams get their first tests of the season. The scheduled games were Wa- bash at Northwestern, Monmouth at Chicago, Ohio Wesleyan at Ohio State, Washington University of St. Louis at Indiana, North Dakota at Minnesota, and South Dakota at Towa, Cleveland, outpointed Larry Chit (10). Joe », won on foul CENTER LEADS FOR NODAK GAME Champaign, Ill, Dec. 8.—Shoot- ing baskets and scrimmage i: nant at seeing members of my sex thus spurred on to what seemed a super-human effort. Struck Out Race k-| “A few days later the I. A. A. F. Kentucky Wildcats virtually elim- inated the southern conference running. ing up most of the time of basket- ball players as they go through their daily workouts at the University of Illinois this week. Coach Ruby is giving his candi- dates plenty of drill in preparation, for the practice season which gets under way here next. Monday night when Bradley Tech of Peoria comes here. On Dec. 15 Lombard will play on the local court and on Dec, 20 North Dakota plays here. Only a few days Christmas vacation will. be granted the outstanding players on the squad as they will return for daily drill shortly after Christmas. day and prepare for the game with Wabash at Wabash on December 31. Illinois conference season will get under way on January 5 when Pur- due comes here. team, but with six letter men of met, and with the picture of the prostrate girls still vigorously be- fore them the majority of the dele- gates, including a number who are opposed to all women’s participa- tion in the Olympic Games, voted on ‘humanitarian’ grounds in favor of striking the 800 meter distance from the Los Angeles program. “Now, what were the facts in the case? I was with the girls a few minutes after the race. to have seen how they their noses, chatted- gayly, their hair and were very much con- cerned that their finery should be|to adjusted just right. Do you sup- pose that @irls who have been over- exerted would care about such de- tails? “I examined their pulses, their blood pressure, their. her GEORGIA TEAMS, Atlanta, Ga., Dec, 8.—(AP)—The triumphant tornado of Georgia Tech today Bulldogs of the Universtity of Geor- You ought/ gia with every prospect of continu- powdered|ing its stride toward more impres- did up|sive gridiron honors for the season, The trek of some 40,000 Georgians gagement demonstrated, the conviction of partisans that the “Tech-Georgia” game is anybod; as it always has been. 1 Seven of the Bulldogs have just meral condi-|recovered from influenza, among ssed {the team has been soundly thrashed from Sammy Lurica, Toledo (4). Eau Claire, Wis.—Johnny Cic- cone, Duluth, Minn., outpointed George Mavis, Chicago (1 and won the race, “T had no idea when I called Cox an order in such a short time.” a. With Walter Dear 5 and Vol-|_ GUARDS — Drennon, _ Georgia Brew 05 were regarded as the|Robesky, Stanford; Hagler, Ala- outstanding bam: Farris, North Carolina; > | Carolina State; DiMolia, Pittsburgh; DRAFT PUZZLE Young, Ohio State; Koch. Baylor; * |Lafayette: Crane, Illinois; Farber, |Brown; Trainer, Harvard; Carroll, | Georgetown; Carlson, Oregon State. |. CENTERS — Pressley, Clemson; <= braska; Rendolph, Indiana; Powell, Toronto, Ont., Dec. 8.— (AP) — | Southern Methodist; Atkins, Texas the North American continent today|Kneen, Cornell; Pa: jeaux, Baylor; was moved from Toronto, where the | Stadelman, Oregon; ‘hman, I ball have been in session, to Chicago|nor, Harvard: Heinecke Stanford. where a joint meeting of the Amer. jors, will be held next Thursday. The 27 minors came together with mes, Ia.. of the program and when they went ted Hank Busges, W: ockae, home it was in the same relative Min ik Dill Class AA leagues, opponents of the Wintinee merpalane Dies iller, unrestricted draft and the A league, that he would be able to deliver such ormite, Contendsr 2:05% and Trusty! Tech; Edy, Yale; Holm, Nebraska; year, anderbilt; Vaughn, North Meisel, West Virginia; Thompson, | Moy iham, Notre Dame; James, Ne- The temporary baseball capital of|Christian; Westgate, Pensylvania; 27 minor leagues of organized base-nois; Hawley, Davis & Elkins; Tich- ican and National Leagues the ma- the question of the draft at the head la, (10). , position. Committees from the iels, conerie (10). in favor of it, will meet at West Baden, Ind. January 10. With a smaller ‘representation from the|Y; leagues of lower classification, very much in favor of wholesale drafting, to talk, if possible, to the majors face to face ut the selection of Players through the medium com- monly called the draft. The draft question will now move to New York and Chicago. It may be discussed at the National League meeting at New York and the Amer- ican, League conclave at Chicago Tuesday. The Toronto convention - {Seemed to oy from the ition al- ‘though an elaborate 01 bi mmendations for revision had been made ty the malercmniner advisory SCALPERS GET H. 8. TICKETS Mass., Dec. wh) one non-draft and three more or less | ba: QUARTERBACKS Don_ Wil- liams, Southern California; Hovd Minnestoa; Armistead, Vanderbilt; Hunting, Gonzaga; Cuisinier, W: Damaged consin; Fleishhacker, Stanfor. Los Angeles, Dec, 8.—Nathan Bar- Witt, Tennessee: Ellis, Tufts; Put-|rager, All-Pacific Coast center, who nam, Harvard; Weston, Boston Col-| started his football career in high lege; Gulick, Hobart; Hume, South-| school as a fullback, will head the ern Methodist; Bi ger, Syracuse; | University of Southern California Shober, Pennsylvania; Russell, Ne-| eleven during the 1929 season, hav- ka. ing been unanimously elected by his team mates upon the completion of the Trojan 1928 schedule. Barrager is a blond of fiery tem- perament and if the Trojans next. year are not A Shia Piniast: 3 ver | teams ever produced it will no’ Terman, Ge regh Phakay is fault. The captain-elect is six, ; | feet. in height, weighs 180 pounds, is 20 years of age and calls San Fer- nando (Calif.) his home town. | Bone Bréaks Injure Georgetown Machine ait: Gabe Mar- pestis ae ~ loan Ne-| Washington, D. C., Dec. 8—(AP) » Mlins Letzelter,|—Broken legs all but Lom, California; Coych, Georgstawn University football Utah; Hanna, \Centenary; Love. | squad this year, i Southeyn Methodist; Niemic and| Three. , including’ the , Notre Dame. Jcaptain, suffered fractures. CKS ’—. Holmer, North-|were: Captain Jerry Carroll, ’ ; McLain, Lowa; Ered Col- | Duplin and William Holloway, Dame; Miles, Princeton; eridemic al struck il- | freshman Dannier, a half- back, and lineman, th frosh Mayers suffering leg frac. mid ¢. HALFBACKS — Peake, Virginia Poly Marsters, Dartmouth; Loud, le; Bennett and Wittmer, Prince- ton; Bartrug, West Virginia; Hart, Colgate; Gillispie, Villanova; was Miss Hitomi of Japan, but case was one of extreme disap- pointment at not winning the race, She had counted on victory with certainty. That the exertion did not harm her, however, may be judged from the fact that she ap- peared in the other competitions for which she had entered, and that two: weeks later she was in excel- lent form and won first place in the 800.meter race at Berlin. Canadian Is Pacemaker “As for the Canadian last season back it is going to be hard going for any new man to break into the regular outfit. The Illini mentor will give a large num- ber a tryout during the practice games in order to show their waret and on the showing of the men in these games will: depend to a lar; extent just who will be selected the Varsity squad this season. If - player fie srtaeate: enough to make the first team, however, he will have a chance to for the|/but is a 3] Tarwain and Lt the| That, may bes season's record by si jence, try for ei ceed bags le ae reserves eight games dur- ing ‘the winter, 0] ing igo Brad- ley reserves here Mo . "Captain Dorn, How, hails “Dem: ling, Solyon and Drew are the let- ter men available this winter. The Illini mentor will have plenty of ma- terial six feet tall or over, am: irls, one of ‘them admitted she entered the contest only as a pace maker for her colleague and had not train- ed for this sort of @ distance other later vigorously denied at London that she had been over- exerted. Both girls helped to bring|, victory to the Canadian women’s relay team a few days later in the the number heine, Deming who ie 6 4x100 meter relay. feet 1 inch; » 6 feet, 3 inches;|as though Solyon, 6 feet 2 inches; Tarwain, 6| worked? feet; Bergeson, 5 feet 11. inches. Mills is only 5 feet 10 inches tall Does this look |- id been over- “Some of the other young ladies, like the Italian contestant, also ad- they mitted’ that they had not trained are methbers of |for this distance. reserves season, “The Ameri ntry, Miss Mc- goons ERE A Raconn _ (Beech eee ct Se SOUNDS LIKE A RECORD ping it. one coun- ‘ennessee made|trymen must have admonished her A aot sharply, "lee the next moment she Rome Eo kickoffs for sone i downs, Nor kota, coached by Jack West, won its first champion- hip in the North . Central Confer |}; by Yale and University of Alabama. "Dia you know that— | eee eee er Coach Ruby has ‘several. score|tion—everything was in order. The|them the dangerous McCrary, and men working out for berths on thejonly on¢ who was visibly depre: eminently un-|chempions last season, will play In- A. F., acting mere- | diana, » Michi impulsively, to strike the long|Notre Dame on a_ holiday trip stance races off the women's through the middlewest. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1928 bserve Eligibility to End Big Ten Cage Race on Too JUDGE QUARTET MAKES LAW FOR YANKEE $PORTS Landis, Steffen, Fuchs, and Mahoney All Were or Are Familiar With Bench By JAY R. VESSELS New York, Dec. 8—(?)—They’re laying down the law of athletics, are these judges of sportdom—Landis, Steffen, Fuchs and Mahoney. For a long time the first named of the Big Four was THE judge of sport, but the others have now at- tracted the public eye. . Doubtless the best known of the jurists associated with sports is the dynamic Judge Landis, high com- missioner of baseball. Retained to help safeguard the game which at the time was staggering from the “Black Sox” scandal, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, formerly of tho Federal bench in Chicago, is still a judge, a mighty judge, of things concerning professional baseball. Another baseball figure with the word judge prefixing his name is Emil Fuchs, owner of the Boston Braves. His courage in accepting thé managership of his own team, baseball men say, merits ranking with the most fearless of jurists. Judge Fuchs formerly presided as a Boston magistrate, Walter P. Steffens, a judge of the courts, by vocation and a judge of football talent by avocation, is a member of the Superior court bench of Chicago. The brilliant Carnegie Tech team, undefeated during the 1928 football season until it met New York University in its closing game of the year, attests to the Chi- cago jurist’s power and influence in the game of football. Judge Stef- fens, while officially designed as “advisory coach” at Carnegie, is recognized as the than behind the oe when it comes to football at the ittsburgh institution, . Three of the judges hold power over national baseball, the Boston Braves or the Carnegie Tech grid- iron terrors, but Judge Jeremiah T. Mahoney wields the gavel on le- gal subjects affecting the Amateur Athletic Union, As chairman of the judicial committee, he is chief ad- visor. He was active in the days of the late J. E. Sullivan and now is one of the trustees of the J. E. Sulli- van Fund, established to further the cause of amateur athletics, He receives the greeting “Good Morn- ing, Judge,” when he occupies the pene in a New York magistrate’s court, BAST STARS T0 PLAY ON COAST Chicago, Dec. 8.— (AP) — Eight Big Ten football stars, six of whom won all-conference honors during the past season, have agreed to play fo: the East in its fourth annual gridiron battle with an all-star western team at San Francisco, Dec. In the countries in which distances are In fact, my experience in- belief that the ‘GATORS CLASH The Big Ten players are Captain Rube Wagner, Wisconsin; tackle; Captain George Gibson, Minnesota, guard; Captain Walter Holmer, Northwestern, fullback; Kenneth Haycraft, Minnesota, end; Leo Ras- kowski, Ohio State, tackle; Yatz Levison, Northwestern, quarterback; Offensive Captain “Chuck” Bennett, Indiana, halfback, and Captain “Butch” ‘Nowack, Illinois, tackle. MARQUETTE 10 PLAY BLUBJAYS Milwaukee, Wis. Dec. 8.—(P)—~ Marquette “university’s golden ava- lanche and the Creighton Bluejays will write finis to the 1928 collegiate season in the middlewest when they mest: today in the Marquette stadium ere, Contrasted with mud, slush and rain which prevailed on November 17 when the teams were scheduled to meet here, ‘the players will find a dry, frozen field which the coaches predict would result in an open game with plenty of forward passing, Coach et Wynne and his 27 Creightonians arrived here early pestertay and worked out at the larquette stadium in the afternoon, The visitors will present their full strength, but Marquette may be! minus the services of Captain “Swede” Gebert, star backfield man.i Volunteers from the SET TO BATTLE encountered the crippled Atlanta for this traditional en- however, iy’s— Although women’s styles are always changing, their de- signs. remain the same. Bagshaw won't be long at Washington. . . . He believes in a team of eleven men and when they all graduated last year, he didn’t have any subs coming along who knew anything. Pop Warner smokes cigaret: the time, and at home drops the ashes all over... . And Mrs. Warner sits on edge every time he smokes -because she ws he is going to cover the rug. - +. And he sits up late at right ind thinks out new plays and then rushes over to one of the it ch’s homes . and gets him out to see how it would a og 3 Fep ‘also draws and aint Veppke the Illinois ++ - Twice, against Stanford, Cagle was caught on wide end runs and raced toward his own geal only to throw the ball for ins. ... Seems like dumb foot- I, but it was smart for Cagle and he got the praisc. ‘ MAY GET BUMPED OFF Pennsylvania, eastern basketball "|My HUSBAND IS LiKe THE OF HAASE Te oeUR ES Ohio State, mn and ab show weig' Jy lit and and best 1.75 9.00 most direc resdi price ening low to 50 stead cents tives fat 1 week

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