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aes tee 2 te oN NE art am menenenmmrantrnenitros ittisar sieves Sr tot Pe ARCK TRIBUNE - THe Ss TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1929- and Michigan Have Corner on Big Ten Bas ‘ Purdue PETC LRP GETS GT COALS, {REE COUNTERS Purdue Scoring Outfit Swamps . Chicago Maroons by 64 ketball Race. . Manager Bush Expects Strength With Experimental Pittsburgh.N ine, FLORIDA T0 STAGE In) [May Succeed Tex | PENNSYLVANIA STAR |[“BASKETBALL TWOMINOR LEAGUE | rips ANNUALTHORSESHOE | STARS ARE SIGNED; | oa aed PETHING TOURNEY) "WRIGHT IS TRADED OUTDO THIS SEASON 22 ass ‘9 to 1 after maintaining command ee ee Sink tik Famous Hurdler Marries Lord Burghley Weds Direct Descendant of Mary, Queen of Scots GC the first of the year in Orlando. heely Replaces Grantham third! place and all but pushed In- | Sheely Ropl: been transformed from guard to for- . Indian girls used a fast passing e | 4 ji N C offense arid an air tight defense. The ‘i Cash Prizes Offered Total),. Fah : Ernié Schaaf Set New Cage/ pai was in New Salem territory most: to 16 Victory Jim Stroner, Wichita Recruit, to ‘ng Record Last Year |°t the time. ; — | $1,500; Fobruary Meet is | t Scoring Record Las ‘This was the third straight victory, * i ird; Traynor 12.5 Average for the undefeated Bismarck Indian, NORTHWESTERN WINS ONE Tonth Annual Play Third; Tray! With 12.5 Averag tor , ‘lis t Short ‘The summary: j St. Petersburg, Fia.,.Jan. 15—(7)—| ai Bismarck S Michigan Trips Illinois; Badgers aries ber on _yimaing. and | —— : Fo Fr PF’ Beat Hoosiers; Hawks winter sports of Florida, but a class /PITCHING STAFF IS GOOD 0 0 2 of minor games continues to hold the Ua ee ie Beat Gophers attention of hundreds of the winter 20 3 Cilcago, Jan, 16-—Ue)—The Big Ten Horseshoe pitchers hold their tenth | Waner Brothers Are Fixtures i no basketball championship today ap- RH Roan ror ey |<< but ene Cote Garden ne EETaRE G ere dui je week 0! ,. . peared to rest between Purdue and with cash prizes of $1,500. | mains Open Michigan with only two other teams, wines Sidhe ayeo Be ct * i 4 Wisconsin and Iowa, conceded an and co jor Pittsburgh, Jan. 15.—(@)—The " outside chance. Sport are provided in many cities. | pittsburgh Pirates will open the 1029 Bee ced ‘When the smoke cleared from last Shuffleboard has so gained in popu {season with an experimental team. ee ee is ie larity that St. Petersburg alone has | yet, Donie Bush, manager of the Na- Sore night's five battles, all the others, in- @ membership in shuffleboard clubs 1 League batting leaders, fi ding seemed lost by th of more than 600 for this season and | {i0"e! Leas! ing leaders, tgures | ong the chiet adviser to Tex Rickard \ “an ere rd is expecting to enroll 1,000 shortly {the ‘Pennant mace os Deing between |i." money matters, Willlam F. Carey, Totals, 0 1, 3 Led by “Stretch” Murphy, who piter the first of the year and 2,000 "The addition of two minor leaguers, po! Mod ee Reotred Borie Lei Referee: Naybox, New Salem. teamecail conference: scoting tecords pelleted i ech the trading of Glenn Wright and re- |! mentioned as the probable suc: Timkeeper: Green, Ejerstead, sat pit t ight field + and 10 wn bowling and quolts have |can of Adam Comorsky, an outfickl- Genera ickard or wrt tH tr free throws, Purdue ranvits string of their followitgs and Florida cities | cr, make experimenting necessary. Square Garden Corporation. Carey isitition last season, Schaaf has a 1 fgtorles to four by swamping Chi- cach year, witness tournaments for | ‘im Stroner, Wichita recruit, scems | S1Vtr re oP the corporation, [chence to achieve ‘the rare feat of ,) vi a be baal he darren any kee {the champ! ip bed city, state, and to be the key man of the’ proposed . presi ‘po! 5 MAEsiat the top hy edging ous Tih in the former, national honors in !1929 pirate edition. Stroner replaces | , hols, 21 to 17, in a great defensive iy cuties ‘en Traynor at third, the Corsair captain H only by Kinney of Yale pole, 0 17, ere he ly oe Ing a. t ae phat the | moving over to the short field, vacat- B ALL back in 1915-17 and Sweeney of Penn i Wisconsin remained in the race as aie: antares " ac or cele ed by Wright, sent to Brooklyn for in 1918-20. Schaat’s bid this year ‘ a threat by upsetting Indiana, 24 to Cee er ee mnusl Southern | Jess Petty and Harry Riconda, will probably be conducted from a 0. ‘The victory held the Badgers in Bie or ths year in. - new spot.in the fore court, as he has diana out of the race, Iowa ran its mark’ to two victories and one defeat by overwhelming Minnesota, 36 to 23, while’ Northwestern finally got start- ed and dimmed Ohio State's chances by bumping the Buckeyes, 27 to 4. Irving Nelson, sophomore forward, led Jowa’s victorious attack. The Hawks excelled the Gophers in all departments. HARVEY ARJER SAID Not many months ago all England expected Prince Henry, son of King George, to marry Lady Mary Scott, daughter of the Duke of Baccleuch. But only recently Lady Mary Scott was married to Lord David Burghley. though he never saw a game. Born under the Union Jack, at GOD FOOTBALL FAN San Francisco, Jan. 15—(#)}—Should The news is of particular intcrest who ever visited this country. Twice he has come here for the winner of the 400-meter hurdle cham: Her blood comes, through the famous » Middlesboroug! ~ reared on the English brand of ball » been a patient at the U. 8. Marine _ tebra, or broken neck. His only ac- ay = Pe Hl i ship's catpenter. . Yokohama since } ns aera | other and even more unpropitious circumstance. . ~ h, Yorkshire, Arjer was church in the Strand. and his conversion to the American game accomplished in the face of an- State Sportsmen, Envy Christmas Gift to Alberta (SELECTED) If North Dakota could expect the Christmas present in 1929 which the Province of Alberts, Canada, has re- ceived, soprismen in this state might well believe thet there is a Santa Claus who looks after the interests of outdoor fans, egriculturists and con- servationists. . Alberta has received a report from its provincial government that: the anti-crow and gopher campaign, in which thousands of citizens, including school children, members of gun clubs and conservation officials, partici- pated, has resulted in a net decline of 104,700 crows and magpies.” It also is announced by Alberta that the gopher cclonies ‘have lost more than 80,000 of their active mem- bers as a result of the anti-vermin campaign. North Dakota needs a cleanup like this as far as the crows, weasels, skunks, and certain hawks are con- We could save thousands of of game and thousands.of song- year from vermin if the control bureau to gun clubs and 137 in the 1928 drive For more than seven years he has hospital here with a dislocated ver- quaintance with the game has been the radio but he has come to hundreds of players by name é i 8 E an intimate knowledge of and of the styles of play jous teams, but his judg- which team will win has respected by the patients re re- : on ‘West Kasson as a In the harbor at hile doing repair work he fell from a box only a foot high and ined the injury which has him bedridden. Just prior the s Underweight Children ‘Are Given Privileges City, Jan. 15.—(—Un- i i aEE i i e crs i & i i i lie ges fgg a i is Hi gi ul a? Sevnnameg 0 fat os te 00 0 OD ps ED HE to American sports fans because of the fact that Lord Burghley is one of the most popular and best liked athletes Penn relays and was awarded victory in the hurdles on. one trip. . During the recent Olympic games he was the pionship. Lord Burghley, by his democracy and famous saying of “Just call me Davey,” endeared himself to Americans. His wife traces her ancestry to a branch of the Stuarts, once deposed. Duke’ of Monmouth, fourth in descent, from Mary, Queen of Scots. Monmouth was the adored son of Charles II, who after his father's death lost his head in an effort’to establish his claims to the English throne. She also-traces her ancestry to Sir Walter Scott. The couple were married in London recently at the St. Clement Dane's Yankees Outnumber Canada’s Players on Cambridge Team Cambridge, Eng., Jan. 15.—(AP)— Three graduates of colleges in the United States and two Canadians have been chosen for the Cambridge University ice hockey team. The Cambridge captain is Cecil Wylde (Caius College), who won his \letter at Harvard two years ago and @ member of the British Olympic six. Another veteran of last year's cempaign is D. Graham (Jesus Col. lege) of Philadelphia, former Yale freshmen player and captain of a ckempionship Eli water-polo team. Much is expected of John Watts (Trinity) of Morristown, N. J. Watts 43 a former captain of: hockey at 8t. Paul's School, Concord, N. H., an in- stitution famous for its puck artists, although he is more well known as a Harvard oarsman: The Canadians are G. Graham (Trinity), who played at: Queens Col- lege, Ont. and W. G. Speechley (St. John’s), former Alberta’. University goal-guard, whose work in the c saved the Oxford game last year. Most: prominent among the three Swiss and two Englishmen who com- Plete the list. is the honorable secre- tary, or to put it into American, the manager, the young Earl of Lincoln. ree sung, ped not only one of lew good true English hockey payers, but is a well-known cricketer well. Scotchman, Generous With Touchdowns, to Lead Marshall Outfit Huntington, W. Va., Jan. 15.—(Pe- Scotch lad, Tommy Stark, the highest scoring back in West Virginia during the 1928 season, will. captain the Marshall College football team this prec He made aa touchdowns for ints, nosing out Rodriguez, West Virgitiia Wesleyan fullback, for state scoring hondrs by one touchdown. Some radios sound like they need a new needle | Anglers from throughout the nation are entered. BRITONS WANT PROS IN TENNIS TOUREY London, Jan. 15.—(7)—A seriou: move is being made in British tennis circles to have professionels admitted to opea tennis tournaments. It is believed that by so doing, ‘amateurs would derive considerable benefit and that it would make for a general improvement in tiie class of Play et individual clubs. At a meeting of the Surrey Lawn Tennis association the secretary of a prominent Dulwich club urged that Professionals be acmitted to tourna- ments, because, in his view, such competitive play would raise the, standard of the younger amateurs pley. Action one way ocr another is ex- Pected before the next season opens. PHANTOMS, MANDAN TQ MEET FOR TITLE The Bismarck Phantoms and the Mandan Independents will meet in the Bismarck high schoo! gymnasium at 8:15 p. m. tomor- row to decide the inter-city bas- ketball championship. Both teams are composed of former high school and univer- sity performers and are said to be closely matched.° Neil O. Churchill, manager of the Phantoms, is dickering with a game at Steele with the inde- Pendent team of the Kidder county city the latter part of the week but said today the game 15 still indefinite. Boilermaker Coach Wants .500 Average age} Lafayette, Ind., Jan. 15.—(}—Ward “Piggy” Lambert wants to make his ‘Western conference basketball cham- took over the coac! Earl Sheely, late of Sacramento, replaces Grantham on first while “Sparky” Adams completes the in- field at second. The Waner brothers are outfield fixtures, but left field is open, Con- orosky, Grantham and Brickell bat- tle it-out for the sun field, Comorsky having the edge. The team has high class Mounds- men. Two good southpaws are signed in Petty and Fussell and great things are expected of Larry French, Port- land, Ore., rookie, Orthodox hurlers include Burleigh Grimes, 1928 iron man of the league, who acquired 25 victories and pitched more innings than any other hurler. Kremer, Hill ‘and Meadows are back, each claiming to be in excellent condition. They-were not so good last year. Brame, who showed plenty of stuff last season, also ‘is back. Two recruits who showed enough form to be retained are Blankenship and Taucher. Daw- son, aviater when not pitching; Swe- tonic, just purchased from Indianapo- lis, and Meine of Kansas City round out the staff. Catchers Are Plentiful Catchers are plentiful. Charley Hargreaves will have to hustle tc re- tain first string position with Hems- ley and Spencer doing the pushing. Spencer ‘was repurchased from In- dianapolis last year. Hemsley is rat- ed one of the’best backstops to break into major league baseball in several years. Each has a fine throwing arm and both are fair batsmen. “Pepper Pot” Bartell, reserve sec- Ge baseman, may see plenty of ac- tion. Should Comorosky cinch left field; TEAMS NEAR FINALS ‘The first round of play in the in- terclass volley ball tournament being Tun off at the high school was com- pleted yesterday in Group Six and Group Seven . ‘ In Group Six, the following teams won their way into.the semi-finals:. Evenson, Landers, Crose, and Klip- stein, by defeating Ulsrud, Alfonte, Marcks, and Jenkins, respectively. In Group ‘even, Herbert defeated Toliver, Hedstrom defeated Wilkin, Nelson defeated Rosen, and Harms defeated Mitchell. The second round*of play in the tournament was completed in Groups Two, Three and Four. In Group Two Stephens defeated Jordan in a fast contest, close from start to finish. D’Ardis defeated Olson in a close game. This ‘brings Stephens and D’Ardis into the finals. In the con- solation play Vada Heaton defeated Dunahey and Humphreys defeated Vera Heaton. In Group Three, Cave and Rohrer won their way into the finals by de- feating Meinhover and Paris respec- tively. Coghlan and Paris defeated Slater and Rickel: im: the consolation. In Group Four, Dorothy Petron won from Alfonte and will play in the finals against Jule Walz who took werd this season. The scoring record since the league was formed follows: Year Name, College PG F T 1910-11—Kiendl, Col 8. 64 100 72. 128 67 93 66. 132 57 119 66 128 44 130 1917-18—Van Slyck, Yale 32 51 115 1918+19—Sweeney, Penn. 17 61 95 1919-20—Gweeney, Penn. 28 93 149 1920-21—McNichol, Penn 15 122 152 1921-22—Grave, Penn. TT 135 100 140 : ; a1, .99 Pri 27 1 6S 1925-26—Loeb, Princeton 33 28 94 1926-27—Lorch, Col. - 28 18 4 and Gartner, Prin. 30 14 74 1927-28—Sehaaf, Penn... 40 45 125 Dickinson's team into camp for three games. Cameron defeated Hill and Bowman defeated Kennedy in the consolation, The semi-finals will be played off by Groups Six and Seven today, the finals in Groups Two, Three, and Friday. In the majority of the cases the games have been very close and hard fought from one gam& to the next. Four, Wednesday, and Six and Seven|. Clermond-Ferrand, France, Jan. 15. —(#)—The mother of Emile “Spider” Pladner, the crack French flyweight | appears several years younger the 22 he may boast of, having been born here in 106. There is no cauli- flower ear; not a cut and nary @ scar to show for fifty or more ring battles. He looks more like:a choir boy than the tough little battler he is. To correspondents Madame Plad- BEALL TRIES COME-BACK , George Beall,.one of the “wildest” Pitchers.in captivity, has been re- stored to good grace, and will try a comeback with Casey Stengel’s Toledo Mudhens next spring. Grantham and Riconda may figure in a deal with the possibility also that |’ Grantham will be retained as utility man. ST, MARY'S DEFEATS AGGIE PUCK-CHASERS Winona, Minn., Jan. 15.—(P)—St. Mary’s college won its first intercol. legiate game here tonight by defeat ing the North Dakota Aggies, 10 to 2. two Aggie counters came in the second period. The Redmen scored Lambert job at Purdue in 1918. During the Past ‘won ten years the Boilermakers have Michigan and six of 11 with Chicago. Three Olympic Stars bers of the it ‘on Iowa Track Squad Towa City, Ia., Jan. 15—Three mem- ‘the United ‘States : @ i i 3 zl i (Alan J. Gould covered ‘Virtually-all diese /Marizing the significance of the’ périod in ‘Peper, he is bringing beck'the thrills. @ \ ASSOCIATED “SPORTS & » 2 tesvarticles ner said in a mock serious tone: “TI -