The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1929, Page 8

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| NMAQ, WCFL, KYW, WWAE. Despite Its its Two Early Defeats, OHIO STATE FACES INDIANA Purdue's Fullback, Alex Yune- ern conference football teams will go into battle tomorrow to preserve or wreck champion:hip ci campaign is to create as much mis- ery as possible for teams in the race, | its reguls THE Fight Big Ten Teams Conti MACHINES FIGURE IN YALE, HARVARD, | UNINPORTANT TILTS Michigan Is Out to Hum- ble Illinois Interesting Games HARVARD FACES DARTMOUTH Carnegie Tech Will Attempt to! Make It Three Straight Over Notre Dame vich, Will Not Play Against Chicagoans | - ! Fight west- By WILLIAM J. CHIPMAN New York, Oct. 25.—(#)—-It is no new thing for Yale, Harvard Chicago, Oct sances. Put out of the running by two de- | in the role of underdog, all three will feats, Michigan's only interest in the | be in the role tomorrow. and will attempt to upset Ilinois for the second consecutive y PRINCETON PICKED TO LOSE BY CRITICS: “Yale: army Game Heads Impor- i M’Cann and Brown tant Saturday Program of iMay See Action in Chi icago Coliseum Fred J. Smith's Letter to Demp- sey Brings Results; Match- maker Writes Jack McCann and Tony Brown, North Dakota heavyweights, may ap- pear cards in the near future, OT nounced by Fred J. Smith, Bismarck Princeton to enter an October game | promoter. Chicago coliseum boxing it is an- on Shortly before McCann and Brown fought for the heavyweight cham- Some 120,000 enthusiasts will be | Plonship of North Dakota here Oct. present at Soldiers’ field, the Yale | 17 Smith wrote to Jack Dempsey, for- Bow! and Palmer stadium. The Yale-| mer world’s heavyweight champion Army game at New Haven tops the , and now manager of the Chicago col- Ohio State will battle to add an- | card for sectional and general inter- | iseum, in regard to the two Flickertail other victory to its record of two} est, straight, when it meets Indiana in| and Harvard at Cambridge will coms | Ray A twice-defeated Princeton eleven | coliscum, which brings encouragement but the meeting of Dartmouth | fighters. Smith recently received a reply from C. Alvis, matchmaker of the Ohio stadium, and ¥ and | Mand attention. Towa will be out to break into the; victory column when they meet at| faces its last chance to save some- to Jack and Tony. Madison. Purdue and Chicago will! thing from its eastern preliminary engage in a contest for unblemished | season, but all the odds rest with Bill} records, each having thus far scored | Ingram’s fine Navy team. one triumph with no defeats. Carnegie Tech will attempt ‘The complete letter follows: “Your letter of Sept. 26 to Mr. Jack | | Dempsey. relative to your boxers, Mc- to} Cann and Brown, has becn handed ‘Only light workouts were on today’s | make it three straight over a great |to the writer. program. fowa, and Indiana left; Notre Dame cleven at Pittsburgh. | their own camps last night after! with the Irish favored to break their short drills, and planned to take their | Scotch jinx. last practice exercise on enemy fields. Cornell has an open date, and Michigan stopped in Chicago; Pennsylvania expects no more than ‘and planned to work out before pro- | @ work-out against Lehigh, Syracuse ceeding to Mlinois. Purdue headed in vades Providence favored to win for Chicago this morning and was to, from Brown, share Stage field with Chicago this, New York will see clashes involving afternoon. | New York universtiy against Butler Almost every team was reported to! of Indiana and Fordham against be without the services of one or More | Davis and Elkins, stars on the eve of battle. Purdue's | fullback, Alex Yunevich, is not ex- Bison Resting for d sha IF t | ected to be in shape to play acatnst | PPASON MESUNG LOT Nodak Encounter: the temporary loss of Red Burgess. | fullback. “Frosty” Peters, Mlinois quarterback and | dropkick Coach Casey Finnegan Wants His Men to Spend Last Night in Home Beds fice, has a fractured rib and probably | will be kepi out of action while Ohio | State will be forced to substitute for | halfback McConnell. Five Indiana | regulars who accompanied the team | to Columbus, may not bs able to play. Towa left for Madison without John | Pubrman, whose cligibility still was! uncertain, while Captain — Willis| Glassgow, just recovering from injur- Fargo, N. D., Oct ——With every man in condition for hard fes, was not a certain starter. Oran| gridiron warfare, Casey Finnegan Pape, fleet halfback, accompanied the | will let his agricultural college war- id, but was not clear of eligibility | riors taper off today in preparation for their invasion of Grand Forks Saturday. The Bison, all 22 men of the varsity squad, will leave Saturday morning for the battleground, Finnegan be- lieving that his men will be in better condition if they spend the last night in their home beds, Wearers of the yellow and green are in confident mood, believing that ia university cannot be any tougher “\than South Dakota State was’a week ‘ago. Close followers of the sport, how- ever, give the Nodaks a slight advan- ‘tage in the pre-game dope. They fig- ure that no coach could put a squad on the mental edge the Bison were against the Jackrabbits for two con- j sccutive weeks. “We'll fight ‘em from start to fin- and Northwestern will non-conference opponents. | enteviaining Ripon, and 3 mesiing Wabash end tro Dame re-erves in a double- er at Evanston. | Fights Last ‘Night _ (By the wiaied Press) ce Wilson, Deo Jimmy Kerr, Tait Littman, Cud- ahy, topped Don Levis, Bartlesville, Okla, (3). McKeesport, Pa— Walter Ma- Jeske, Saginaw, Mich., Reed, Los Angeles, drey [ Footisall on the Air | Jackie Fields Meets Mahan in Title Bout Kansas City, “Oct. 25.—(\—Jackie Fields, welterweight. See ey will defend his title here Nov. 4, against Dummy Mahan, Mexican mute chal- lenger, under the auspices of the Air ish and, no matter what the result, | it will be a battle worth seeing,” Fin- | Megan said. “We want a victory, and ,I know that every man will give his best in an effort to get it.” * (By The Associated Press) Arm, nal Broadcasting @ompany chain, 1:30 p. m. Dartmouth-Harva: Brosdcasting company p.m. Mlinois-Michigan Columbia, Broadcasting system chain, 3 p. m. Corps Reserve Officers association. (Time is eastern standard.) Jack Dempsey. former heavyweight, Chicago—the Purdue-Chicago foot- , champion, will be the third man in ball game tomorrow at Stagg field, | the ting. The fight is billed for 10 will be broadcast by stations, WILS, | rounds 147 pounds. ae TOPPED THREE DEPARTMENTS TOP AND BOTTOM | Charlie Gehringer, Detroit second Detroit Tigers amassed 1679 hits to baseman, won !929 American league fead the ¢.merican league in 1929, but honors for the most runs scored— tiso committed the most errors, 130—; the most three-base hits—19, with 244, and the most stolen hases—27, MEN! MEN! REAL SHAVES in Your Own Razor National chain, 2:15 12 G0e $1.00 ant ohn thogrewiel bogey: sry asting moot guict “Kindly keep in touch with me from |time to time, as it may be possible that I will have some work for you in the near future.” McCann knocked Brown out in the sixth round of their engagement here, and now is recognized as king of the state heavies. Shock Troops to Battle Washburn Game Here Tomorrow Post- poned Half Hour Because of Louis Grambs Rites Bismarck will not meet Washburn jon Hughes field tomorrow afternoon | until 3 o'clock, it was announced this morning by Roy D. McLeod, sehool athletic director. high | ‘The game, originally set to begin at 2:30 o'clock, was postponed one- half hour because of the funeral services for Louis L. Grambs. a gradu- ate of Bismarck high school in 1924. With Bismarck conceded a victory over Washburn by a large margin, “shock” | troops against the team from the! Coach McLeod will start his McLean county city. The “shock” troops probably will see service through most of the game, the regu- lars being saved for the all-important ord game here the following Satur- | lay. HEILMANN'S STRING SNAPPED Harry Heilmann's batting prowess, | which carried him to the American League batting championships in the | alternate years of 1921, 1923, 1925 and | 1927, failed him in 1929, the Detroit slugger winding up the season in ninth place with a 343 average. THUTONIG GLADIATOR - RECEIVES OFFER FOR ATLANTIC CITY FIGHT Firm of Herman to and Bob Gunnis, Philadelphia, Seeks His Services OPPONENT by —e Jack Sharkey, Logical Foe, “a lieved Under Contract of New Yorkers New York, Oct. 25.—.?—Th2 lure of 2 $250,000 purse may cause Max Schmeling. Teuton heavyweight, to abandon his life of case in Germany and hasten back to the shores that gave him a rather better than small fortune during the last year. The fight promotion firm of Her- man Taylor and Bob Gunnis, Phila- delphia, along with Bob Duffy, New York manager, have offered Schme- ling a quarter of a million for a 15- round match at convention hall, At- lantic City, N. J., against the “best available opponent,” in January. With the announcement Jack Dempsey would not be selected to face the Teuton puncher, the matter of an opponent may give the promoters a headache or two, Jack Sharkey, gen- erally considered the best of the cur- rent crop of heavyweights. is believed under exclusive contract to Madison Square Garden. With the two Jacks out of the picture. Tommy Loughran or Young Stribling might be called upon, despite the fact that both have ? been beaten by Sharkey—Stribling on a decision and Loughran on a knock- out. Schmeling and his American man- ‘ager, Joe Jacobs, both are under sus- pension in New York state for Schme- ling’s failure to mect Phil Scott, but no action has been teken in New Jer- sey against the German. W ashington State Has Mile Record Those traveling men of Notre Dame will have to yield the mileage record to the Washington State col- lege football team this fall. The Rockne Ramblers will cover 19,000 miles in getting to and from football games, but the far westerners in two trips will travel 13,000 miles. | On the last. day in November the | Washington team journeys to Los Angeles to meet Southern California, | jaunt of 3200 miles. Christmas day will find them in Honolulu, 3279 {miles from home. where they pla ithe Honolulu Athletic club. | THREE ONE-HIT GAMES |_ Rube Walberg of Philadelphia, Red | Faber of Chicago and George Pipgras of New York pitched one-hit games against St. Louis, Detroit. and Boston, respectively, in the 1929 American | league season BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1929 nue Championship Battles Tomorrow GOPHERANDPURE SCHMELING MAY RETURN FOR QUARTER MILLION IN JANUARY PRESIDENT HEYDLER DENIES AMERICAN LOOP IS STRONGE National League Head Scores Estimate of Strength Made by E. S. Barnard LITTLE DIFFERENCE NOTED! Makes Statement Despite Na- | tional’s Loss of 12 0f 13 Series Contests | New York, Oct. -—Coming to the defense of the National League, jNine Teams Battle for’ Better 'Gusties-Augies pe Clash Important Positions in Minnesota's Conference St. Paul, Oct. 25. —First place | jteams of the Minnesota college con- | ee standings will have tough | sledding Saturday as they continue | the process of elimination. Most prominent on the five-game John A. Heydier, its president, has | Program, which includes three leaguc | issued a statement denying the; American League is 20 per cent’ stronger, an estimate of comparative | strength made by Ernest S. Barnard, president of the American League. Mr. Heydler is convinced, he said, games. is the Gustavus-Augsburg ‘contest slated for the Augies’ home | grounds. These teams and St. Mary's | are rated first among the nine teams. | Second in importance is the Ham- i line-Macalester homecoming game for there is little or no difference in the | both teams to be played at Norton playing ability of the two circuits as #® whole, in spite of a decided super- field. ‘The other conference game will be jority shown by the American League j played ‘at Moorhead between the | in the last three world’s series. The National League president said also he finds himself out of ac- cord with President Barnard’s state- ; ment that the junior league has been | bringing in better players. “I know full well that the loss of | 12 out of 13 games in the last three world's series is bound to give rise to the talk of all around American, League superiority.” said Mr. Heyd- Jer, “but impa students of the! game know there is no material | difference in the playing strength of the two leagues.” 1 Do You Know That— e Earl Sande sings in a sweet tenor voice ....He has even gone as far as warbling “La don- na e Mobile” from Rigoletto, for heaven's sake .... Jack Curley admonished the boys down in New York the cther day that “when you are writing about wrestlers you are srling about genticmen.” says Jack ... Which is probably mere than many first rate news- ‘paper men can boast .... Jack made it casy for the wisecrack- ers, however, when he said that top notch wrestlers are men of elegant manners ..... Yer, we hereby parry repreachfully, we've noticed that when they were in the ring together... . M. Curley says they are lingeists and trav- At least they have to talk some language in there an- familiar to the fans - . And as for traveling, they have to travel, and sometimes rapidly, at that. “TU RN MITTER ‘ammy Collins, home run star of ithe Rochester club of the Interna tional league, bats from either side of the plate. PLAYED FOUR TIES - Of the five tie games played in the National league in 1929, the Chicago j Sie participated in four. ge & required to pass for inter-city trips, FS a0 ieee laggards on the hills; the speed desired and the drifting range for the | leisurely evening drive about town —all these new day driving requirements are expertly provided with — | the motor, there is no knock ' | when Parco Ethyl drives the car. Here, indeed, | ideal new-day motor fuel. A volatile, | Meh preted pnthen taneous tat teopened so cid gee ah mt ot ‘very highest grade. 4 A PRODUCT OF PRODUCERS & REFINESS CORFORATION Concordia eleven and St. John's. neither of which has broken into the | ‘win column although the Cobbers have a 13 to 13 tie with St. Mary's to their credit. | Carleton resumes fts march toward another midwest conference cham- | | pionship when it entertains Beloit | college of Beloit, Wis. Games of non- conference rating include Trinity at | (St. Mary's and Fort Snelling at St./ Gustav ‘us Adolphus, always a threat | for the Gopher circuit title. has three ' consecutive victories to their credit Jana is favored to down the Augies. | Augsburg is not in the best shape | as three or four of its regulars are nursing hurts that may keep them j out of the game. The weight ad- i vantage of Gustavus is expected to, ; Play an important part. | Although many dopesters are pick- | ing Hamline to take the measure of | ‘the Macalester eleven, the setto/ promises to be one of the most bitter- , ly fought games between the Snelling javenue teams. Where Hamline has ‘the advantage in the line, Macalester | | has more experienced ball carriers. | Coach D. C. Mitchell said today all |; Hamline football records for attend- | janee may be broken, with a crowd of | more than 3,000 expected. Carleton 7lready has one victory tn the midwest conference, that over | Hamline, and should make it two | | straight when it lines up against Beloit. After last week's defeat by , burg Coach Frank Cleve at Concordia i {set about to produce more scoring | 'punch in, the backfield and to, strengthen weak spots in the line, and | | the team that faces the crippled but ' fighting St. John’s eleven is expected | to be a better machine than that of | last week. | terday, Tony and Jimmy older opponents down. Now at Chicago..." re Chicago, Oct. 25—v?)—Tony Con- Baie rt zoneri and Jimmy McLarnin have ar-! oS Joslin re rived to begin training for engage- 9. Johnson c ments on fight cards to be presented | J- Olgierson Ig by Promoters Jack Dempsey and | L . Porter It Paddy Harmon. J. Woodmansce le Stanislaus Loyaza, the Chilean |M. Benser qb | lightweight, who will meet Canzoneri! J. Byrne Ih in the ten-round windup of ‘Demp- | R. Jenkins rh sey's show at the coliseum Oct. 30, was | J- Andrews fo to arrive =_— Substitutions: OLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL? ‘=| Junior High Loses To Freshman Team Will junior high ‘school's football eleven bowed to experience and st- oe weight as high school fresh- len romped to a 35 to 0 victory yes- | The junior high school lads fought | throughout but were incapable of gaining much ground or holding their Junior High' Neit ‘Terry Smith Delaney Soredah! Anderson Aschmore Tidball Swartz Brauer Owens Freshmen—B. Hos- kins, L. Ahlen. V. Enge, G. Boutrous, and L. Schneider; Junior high—Bow- man, Cremmen. Dohn. Thoresen. The old world is influéncing foot- Hagelin and Cameron. ball at the University of Indiana.| | Referee: = Payne. Umpire: Van Coach Page is using Scandinavian | Wk. and German exercises for his players. fitting the exercise to the player's | ; particular ability. Picasingly youthful styles priced to please mature judgment. HATS Sit your personality—$5 to $10 S. E. BERGESON & SON Headlinesman: Neff. About 71 high & ‘schools are compet- ‘ing for the state football champion- ship of Montana this season. one | Try HENRY GEORGE-you dastee ann t for 58. Tune in and enjey HENRY and. GEORGE at supper-time, tonight, over Station WCCO and Associated (. B.S. Stations 6 o'clock Central Standard Time. GEORGE | apne econ ©,

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