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THE BISMARCK TRIBUN Michig WOLVERINES PULLED. NEXPECTED HARON FROM CHARS I 2 to-0 Defeat Last Year Threat-/ ened to Keep Champion- ship From Iitini | ROSTY’ PETERS IS OUT Charges of Professionalism Are, Again Preferred Against Oran Pape, lowa Chicago, Oct. : (%)—Big Ton! football's grudge contest on Satur-| ay’s program will be presented at rbana, Tll., where Michigan's buif-, ed Wolverines meet Mlinois. The Mlini, title-winners the last Wo Seasons, will be on a hunt for re- Wolverines who sud- ht enge on Henly came to life after four st nf lefeats last year \d trim:ned Coach 3 to 0. The de- a time to keep second consecutive and did spoil cn S021 +hampionship. otherwise perfect s Previous performances give Mlinois Sonsiderable of a Michi- an usually has mac be at its best for it a practice to n Illinois contest. | ¢ Iini probal Il take the field, without the servi - . the drop-kicking quarierbac! uffered a rib iracture last -eck | 1930 FOOTBALL RULES Major Pilots Flunk; Minors May Help Out | preparing und indicated hat he will alternate them Satur- Town's cligibility troubles which! fed Jast June, show no signs of ting up. For the second time ince the season he flect halfback ding scorers of the Big Ten last, » has been charged w profes- jonalism. Several weel Pape s cleared of charges in connection; ith @ pro game at Galena, 1 rday his elisibility ag: ioned when it was charged he pla’ lo: the Dubuque, Towa. Bears, in 1924. With Captain will fagain injured and Pape E t in, the Hawkeyes’ chances of a ecessful invasion of Wisconsin Sat- furday, are not so bright. The Badgers | f reorganizing following their Se! pfeats by Northwestern and Notre me. The Chicago-Purdue battle for, life” in the won and lost standing. ' to be the feature piece of; i¢ day. The Boilermakers have | lemonstrated they lug a powerful at- » but the Maroons are being) inted for the first time of the cam-| Pprign and are more hopeful of halt-| ing Purdue. Ohio State {s vistoning its third) ‘straight conference victory Saturday,| “when Indiana goes to Columbus. The} /Buckeyes started the season as a rather unimportant factor in the Big ‘Ten race, but blossomed into the sur- Prise team of the league in victories ‘over Iowa and Michigan. Northwestern reserves will carry the Purple standard Saturday in a doubleheader against Wabash and the Notre Dame reserves. The regulars have not yet recovered from the mauling given them by the Gophers Jast Saturday and Coach Dick Han- ley plans to save them for the Illinois | game a weck from Saturday. Min- mesota has a letdown tn its schedule when Ripon goes to Minneapolis Sat- | Willie Heston’s Son Might Star Twenty-eight years ago a young men from out of the west came to the University of Michigan to play football for Fielding H. Yost. The | westerner made a place at halfback on the Wolverine elevens of 1901 and ' 1902. Time has not dimmed the lus- _ ter of Willie Heston, whose sensation- al play on the gridiron won him rec- ognition on the late Walter Camp's All-American and All-Time elevens. Today Yost is gone as head coach. Departed are the stars of his point minute teams who thought it dis- | graceful if they failed to run up less than 100 points a game, at the same | time keeping their own goal line un- | 2ressed. Shaping the destiny of the ge and Blue this year is Harry ci himself an All-American a few 'D Suceess of the above minor league managers brings them consideration as big league material. : Kansas City and Berghammer at Milwaukee, both of the American association, and Atz had many winners at he lcs Se ei AG Zwilling is at Fort Worth in the Texas league. ‘UNEXPECTED POWER OF BISON Sammy and Jimmy PUTS FEAR IN NODAK HEARTS To Fight as Welters * Flickertail Line Believed Inferior ! to Forward Wall of the Jackrabbits SOUTH DAKOTA OUTPLAYED |Nodaks, With Five Wins in Six who himseif has yet to clinch his! Starts So Far, Have a Creditable Eleven Grand Forks, N. Dak., Oct. 23.— All the good things that have been said about Casey Finnegans, North Dakota Bison football team are too true to please the vivacious and foxy Mr. C. A. West, mentor of the touted North Dakota football aggregation. Finnegan's Bison trek to Memorial stadium for the state championship classic Saturday afternoon at 2 p. m. and Mr. West is sitting on pins and needles, fearful lest Casey return carrying ¥: him the long end of Scouts who saw the Bison battle South Dakota State's powerful array to a scoreless tie last week-end at Fargo were both surprised and star- ued at the exhibition of strength Finnegan's warriors showed. They battled fiercely throughout, making eight first downs to three for South Dakota State. South Dakota State last year was beaten by North Dakota 6-0 but State held the upper hand through- out the first three quarters and there are those who have said that North Dakota was more or less lucky to win. If there was any luck in last Satur- day's scoreless tie at Fargo, it was with the Jackrabbits, for the Aggies had the whip hand. It will be remembered farther that in last year's A. C. game at Fargo, the Bison more or less outplayed the university the first half, which ended © to 0, but in the last half the de- fense wilted and the university re- turned victorious. However, the A. C.'s morale is 100 per cent better this season and Mr. West is scratching his head every hour pondering on how he can get through a line that. poked impenetrable last Saturday at ‘argo. ! ESS ¢——- ———_—_____-—_———_4 at 3 lants | Rockford Sheik’s Title Will Be =— , Safe; Otto Von Porat on @ The ring has known a flock of November 4 Card queer happenings but two of Jack Sharkey's knockouts, with Jack Delancy and Tommy Loughran as the victims, rank among the most unus- val. Hy It was extraordinary that in each | 280 last summer when he failed to} case a light heavyweight champion Jift the crown worn by Sammy Man- | was the vietim of the Boston sailor, | dell, will have another chance at the; Chicago. Oct. 23—(—Jimmy Mc-{ Larnin, whose sensational rise in the | claims to any title, however high he 9 Welterweight. } % . os ‘The pair have been signed by ed rank now on the heavyweight Padsty. Harmon 40 top ihe Ck The one-round knockout of De- | stadium card a week from Monday, | lanes at Madison Square Garden had ‘in @ 10-round bout at 145 poms | an unpleasant aftermath, with quite ; Which will leave Mandell's title ou 2. few of the experts convinced that Of the argument. : Delaney “led with his chin.” Never-' Otto ven Porat. Norwegian heavy theless, for the few moments that #lso will appear on the card in hi s ’ ed De- | first engagement since returning | elag cremenial scapaancemss from a visit to Norway. He will meet | These clever light heavyweights Charlie Smith, a recent British{ apparently do something to arouse | heavyweight invader. the fighting blood of Sharkey. = Flo Ps i > Pla jin knocking out Loughran in three ives Coach Deceives Coa ili { ; Tounds he bowled over an even smart- ‘er boxer than Delaney, perhaps the Gainesville, Fla. Oct. 23.— The} coach who has drilled his team in the smartest in the ring, with a bk | that landed on the chin or Tomm: | temple or between the eyes, accord- use of deceptive plays so well that he fails to recognize the players haponteld| be said to have accomplished his pur- ‘ing to what side of the ring the ex- | pert. was on. The effect was even more startling | as Loughran arose at the count of five, walked gingerly along the ropes, | his back toward Sharkey, until he | reached a neutral corner, looking for | all the world as if he was about to \ deliver a speech explaining to the) ‘customers that the unpleasantnes: i was just temporary and that every. thing soon would be all right. pose. When the University of Florida, one of the strongest teams in the south, scored its first touchdown of the sea- | |son Coach Charlie Bachman told sport | writers covering the game that Cap- tain Cawthon was the ball-carrier. I have known stranger knockouts | That would have been all right had | ,{ not some of the writers investigated Eee a ee ainy | further, to learn that Mills Smith car- |1n both his fights with Dempsey, told | Hed the ball over the tine on © play | me afterward. “I had a boxer in 3) 146 ‘ball carrier. semifinal once who was knocked out r ‘in a round. We went over to a club ‘ after the fight and after a little con- versation, this boxer turned to mé, | looked at his watch and said: ‘Jim- | my, we better be gettin’ over to the | arena. It's time for that fight I got \tonight.’ He had been knocked out ; ahd'didn't remember it. Tecall another fight in which Allentown Johnny Leonard, one of my boys, was knocked flat by Carl | Duane in the first round. He was on Chicago, Oct. 23.—(#)-—School pol- | ities and fraternity jealousies largely | were responsible for four of the ten | schools in the western conference do- | ;form of the intercollegiate football | bond {rules remain to confound even those; j¥ho are entrusted with interpreting; peared at a police station yesterday and enforcing them. and said Pete La Djone, bond broker | \contradictions and |moved, are ready to be presented to/| {the Rules Committee when it meets iin December. They will have their! jeague next year. if Ray Caldwell is first reading at the Football Coaches | successful in getting Ray Jr. with the | association sessions in New York in/ Barons. December. Rockford shiek November 4—but as jbunched in a separate section as they, : Strangest set of rules ever put to- j Satisfactory at the time but which E, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1929 an and Illinois Clash at Urbana in ‘Grudge’ Encounter = BOOK WILL BE GREATLY SIMPLIFIED CLARFIED STYLES BROKER FACES BATTERY COUNT Transfer Exits PREPARED TOFAVOR, ORDINARY AUDIENCE st ny tn | Str New Plans Were Worked Out by igitecommead E. K. Hall, Dartmouth, and !t0 FACE STRANGLER LEWIS the Rules Committee PRESENT CODE IS STRANGE, Butted Him Without Warn- ‘cath | ing While Chatting Los Angeles, Oct. 23.—(4)—“Dyna- mite” Gus Sonnenberg, who gained the world wrestling championship by Introduction Explaining in De- tail History of Game Is One of Interest faces a title bout with Ed “Strangler” —_—— |Lewis tonight handicapped by a split By CHESTER L. SMITIO jlip and a bruised nose received in a Not much longer will the present ' street encounter with a Los Angeles broker. Sonnenberg, bleeding profusely, ap- Within another year the code will}and amateur wrestler, butted him be in such form that the gridiron | without warning during discussion of | ———-—-—-——----— layman will be able to gain at leastia possible bout between them. A a faint idea of | battery warrant, sworn to by Sonnen- the difference be-/ berg, was issued later by City Prose- tween a fumbled} cutor Lloyd Nix. punt and offside! or why the ref-{head struck him in the face, causing eree steps off 15/the cut lip and bleeding nose, but the Yards on one penalty, five on! another and half the distance q Another Father, goal line on a third. The clarified tules, which are | identical with those in force | this season but! ‘W. A. Alexander Birmingham, Ala., Oct. 23.—A father other flaws re-| league, may blossom out with the , Birmingham Barons of the Southern ; Big Ed Walsh. star pitcher of days There are 28 rules at present. each | gone rules. The number of sections have) Ray Caldwell the younger is 16 been reduced wherever possible and | years old and a right-handed pitcher. ‘lightweight ranks was halted a year | they will be printed with the approved|The youngster measures 6 feet 4; rulings, of which there are 63 in this| inches in height, a couple of inches year’s guide, attached to the rule to) taller than his dad, who starred in the which they apply instead of being} majors 10 years ago. ‘Mentor Prefers Bar to Football now are. Explanatory Introduction There also will be an introduction! which will explain in detail the his- | tory of the game, its origin, how it was transplanted in this country and the changes it has undergone at! American hands. The committee! went ahead about this particular task | with a merited seriousness with the idea that the completed work would: provide a complete background and| instructions for play that would be!lege in order that he might remain adequate for a person who had never|here to complete his law studies this before heard of the game. year before taking his bar examina- The present code is perhaps the | tion. Fredericks’ frosh team was unde- feated last fall. His success attract- ed the attention of Jim Crowley at Michigan State, who offered him the varsity line coaching duties. Because Michigan State has no law passed up a chance to become a var- gether in any! sport. Part of it! is taken from the} English game from which foot- : ball sprang. More — of it was derived to suit the pio- neers who s0 bravely sct out in; the cast nearly a half century ago: to devise a pas-| that he could continue his prepara- tions for a career in law. HAS 20 SIXFOOTERS Regardless of the showing the 1929 St. Mary's college football varsity, an time that woul; imposing lot of freshman candidat ites suit their fancies.| promise “heavy gridiron business” as Several groups | first stringers next year. Twenty of were working in-| the 59 yearlings are six feet tall. or dependently at {better and a team could be picked the time and fragments of their ef-| averaging 196 pounds. Twenty-three forts were pieced together in a hap- | of hig! hazard sort of way that was perfectly | iFlying Tackler Says Broker, his rough-and-tumble flying tackle, | The mat champion said La Djone's | result of the encounter would not in-j 33 + terfere with his title match tonight. | te Son Act Appears : with ail of the) and son act. similar to that of the y Chicago White Sox in the American ; “ PREFERRED BY GUS SONNENBERG Zuppke’s A ; Friends you fall back on often let you down easy < WE Cutra.ve Nou CAN'T HEAR HAIR, nce THANG % BEND. KENNEDY, | FOOTBALL MOTT 23, 1 Regent. N. D. Oct fighting ie, o¢ eer NTO Mott defea t fullba 1 he ex instru re Vicior | or th nil one forward, bw 108) i by. is coach of the White Sox, , jcontaining from one to 17 sections. | while his son, Ed Walsh Jr., is a regu- | These have been rewritten into 13!lar hurler on the Sox staff. pire. jana, Gallagher and | Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 23—In spite! ,;of a slight variation in one name from the famous original, Coach Cord ,Lipe of the Marquette university, freshman tre seagres usually has! to suppress a from his year- Detroit, Mich., Oct. 23.—Johnny jing players when he orders “Galla- Fredericks, coach of the freshman gher and Sheehan” to go into the eleven at the University of Detroit,/trosh backfield. Robert Gallagher of Tron River, Mich., and Eugene Shee- sity line coach at Michigan State col-;han of Antioch, Ill. are the backs|~ | who cause the merriment. HITTING RECORD in a game. "GATOR STAR IS COLONEL versity R. O. T. C. ED TOURISTS a ‘Wisconsin football cap- | tain, was a tourist guide in Paris dur- GUI TS John Parks, ing the summer. to gay Paree. Frank Amann. guard on signal. He is an apt scholar. football eleven on | Three times during the 1929 Na- tional League season Ed Roush of the New York Giants registered five hits | | Rainey Cawthon, Florida's football school, Fredericks preferred to remain} captain and fullback, has been ap- on the minor coaching job here so! pointed student colonel of the Uni- It was his first visit Park county high school football team at Livingston, Mont., is deaf and dumb. A nod, a touch of his hand or foot hj by the quarterback, gives him his Thought Lieut. Harry Wilson Moves to Rantoul, Ill.; May Scout for army Champaign, Ml, Oct. 23.—(a~ University of Illinois students are wondering if there is any significance jin the transfer of Second Lieut i Harrf Wilson from West Point to Chanute field at Rantoul. Ml, and also, how much can a football scout learn from an airplane? Lieut. Wilson is “Lighthorse” Harry Wilson, captain of the 1927 army eleven, who has been sent to Rantoul for flying instructions. The army meets Illinois in Memorial stadium Nov. 9, and the campus fears Lieut. Wilson will be flying about watchince the Illini at their football chores, Nodak-Bison Tilt _ ToBe Broadcast _ KEJM, Grand Forks, and WDAY, | Fargo, Plan the State's First Radio Hookup Grand Forks, N. Dak., Oct. 23. The first two station radio hookup jin North Dakota for the purpose of broadcasting an athletic event will be arranged for the University of North Dakota Homecoming game between es . Ite. the Nodaks and the Bison from State College, Fargo, according to an an- nouncement made today by Jack Stewart, stadium manager. The two stations over which the nf | Chain broadcast will take place are : | KFJM, Grand Forks, and WDAY, rs | Fare 0, The game is scheduled to start at 2 o'clock, but the announcements will begin about 1:45 p. m. The Implement ers Mutual Fire Insurance company. whose home office is located in Grand Forks. North Dakota, is sponsoring the broadcast. RECOGNIZED CHAMPION A gold belt studded with diamonds and emblematic of the world’s heavy- weight wrestling championship has been presented Dick Shikat, giant German. Shikat is the first cham- pion recognized in more than six years by the New York Btate Athletic Commission. WIN JUNIOR TITLES Nearly all of the younger set. how- ever, have held junior titles in South- ern California, and some in other sec- tions of the country. Football is almost a family sport it the University of Iowa. The lqwkeye roster includes three sets of brothers, one pair being twins. You don’t have to swap them from socket to socket. 1A, There are no tempeta- | mental tubes among them. They're all alike. All good. long since have been outgrown. Each year since the beginning of | football in this country, new rules! and amendments have been tacked! on to the original until the result re- | sembles nothing so much as a house, which was started 50 years ago and; has had a new room added every 12 months, each designed by a different architect and constructed of differ- ent materials. Although the Bison have shown! his back, out cold, but in some man- reat signs of power they are to meet | ner his senses were partly restored & worthy foe in the Flickertails. Last by the impact of the week-end the university negotiated | timekeeper’s mallet with the ring its fifth victory out of six | floor. Sweeping over Morningside, 26-0. The! “Still in a daze, he rolled over, Nodaks came th the fray with | barely staggered to his feet at the only two injuries, Aus Smith receiv-| count of nine and then tore into ing a torn finger nail and Richmond | . When he came to the corner, ; he looked at me and said: ‘I'm all .| Tight, Jimmy.’ “He had never called me anything but Mr. Bronson, so I knew some- , thing was wrong. | night and I asked him: ‘Do you know ! what night this is?’ He replied ‘Thursday.’ I knew then he was out j of his head but he went out, fought on by instinct and finally Duane out in the fifth round.” Most any club that wins 102 ball games in a season has a right to fig- ure that is good enough to win a pen- nant, but all it got for St. Paul this It was Monday | be ing away with elected football cap- | ‘tains for this season. Raia ae ; from managers ner cigar store coaches, | . This year Minnesota. | and Purdue did likewise. The coaches will appoint a captain for each game. Ten captains for the are linemen. Willis Committee Makes Change P guiding tation for the change. ford, secretary of the | Walter Okeson of Lehigh. head of the (Eastern Association of Football Of- jficials, and F. A. Lambert of Colum- product represented several days of i | the expectations of commit- poly Be lee he oie | compactness. guards—a " tee in clarity and Ri ee in! The present Rules Committee con- ‘Ulinois team, Henry Anderson of ;Sists of 10 members, the eight in ad- knocked | Northwestern and John Parks of Wis- (dition to:Hall and Langford repre- consin guards. ‘Truskowski of |S¢ntingasmany sections. They include Stichigan cod John M. Kelly of the Tad Jones, New England states; Bill | Chicago team are ends. |Roper, middle Atlantic states; H. J. ee We’d Never Mention | “SPIT” were there not millions of spit-tipped cigars be- . i } 7 \ } . Ci mm | e