The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 9, 1929, Page 8

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ALPH ALEXANDER IS HAPGANN'S OPPONENT FIN BISMARCK NOV. 27 te Aller, Clyde Rutherford | and Bud Volkmann Win Last Night FATE RECEIPTS DISAPPOINT i aos | Grooker-Woodhall and Smith-| Schafer Bouts Come on Thanksgiving Eve 8 TRIBUNE STONS 1) Pete Aller outpointed Red Me- » og Gerry 4). | Clyde Rutherford beat Ed Trena- 4 De Volkmann bent Kid Mitch> er Smith vx, Red Schafer, Jimmy ‘Three slam bang bouts with enough jood letting to appease the most Jaret-thirsty ring addict featured the Visappointing opening of Fred J. smith’s Rex theatre boxing club pro- ; rams Friday ni . When the turnstiles failed to click ff even expenses of promotion, smith took the pocketbook kayo with smile and informed the scanty -athering of cash customers their '< ickets would be honored at the Dome + fov. 27. Jack McCann, North Dakota's geavyweight champion, and Ralph ander, Waterloo, Iowa's flailing in, will feature the Thanksgiv- ng show that Smith is offering. ‘4 Smith made the announcement of i McCann-Alexander setto and womised the ringworms that the -Woodhall and Smith-Schaf- matches would be staged at the 5 “time, a big triple windup bill jut of all proportions to what Mis- Jourt Slope fans deserve. While the fans were frankly dis- ‘ppointed in the failure of Brooker, l, Smith and Schafer to draw wn the gloves, none of them felt more out than Smith, who had the ready to go on until bank- stared him in the face. Midgets Open Bill Red McGerry, sorrel-thatched mite the old sod, and Petey Aller, per- gxide blonde of sauerkraut extrac- fiion, hoisted the asbestos of Bis- "marek’s latest fistic club. The two little fighting machines red away throush four rounds ing slugging with Aller’s ex- e giving him the edge over ing little offspring of St. Pa- Aller packed too many right and left hooks for Red, whose most e weapons were stinging jabs. Clever little Petey neatly tied up} Red when the freckle-faced dynamo tied to make a rushing-mauling ‘ight of it. Red rocked Aller with |, tard uppercuts on several occasions _. aut couldn't swing a finishing punch while Rete's hooks failed to dent the trish lad’s tough skull. Rutherford Ring-Wise Clyde Rutherford flashily out- | dointed Ed Tressler in four hard ‘ought stanzas. The Oklahoma| joughboy jabbed, hooked and slugged | ais opponent steadily and twice staved | off impending knockout at the hands | ff Tressler who showed a terrific! ' Ysick in both paws but nothing else | fof ring craft. Rutherford easily took | “phe first and last frames, the second was Tressler's by a hair while the ‘Gate’ of Million crossed time in history that Harvard had in-, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9 1929 i Bismarck Weekly Boxing Program Ope Members of the University of South Dak before returning to Vermilion. right, are Congressman William Williamson of South Dakota, Stanley Gidley, captain of the team, President Hoover The Sout ‘ota football eleven are pictured above as they paid a visit to the White House and called upon President Hoover | Arty,.beaten by Yale and tied by th Dakota cleven was in the cast for a grid engagement at West Point. In the center of the group above, left to { Harvard, visited Illinois, beaten by and V. E. Montgomery, coach. | Northwestern and tied by Iowa. Har- EASTERN GRIDDERS DETERMINED TO BREAK [SOUTH DAKOTA ELEVEN VISITS PRESIDENT HOOVER | HARVARD AND ARMY TEAMS MAY PROFIT IN MIDWEST GAMES Harvard Seemed Destined for Good Season Until Dart- | mouth Came Along CADETS BEATEN AND TIED Georgia's Bulldogs Come North | to Clash With New York y were determined, instances, to save what they could out of the wreckage of an un- continue winning streaks. | Vard, which seemed headed for a suc- Big Ten Program Army-lilinois, Harvard-Michigan | and Minnesota-lowa Games | Are Attractive | Chicago, Nov. 9.—()—Middie west- | ern football today was a carnival with | three intersectional contests provid-' ing color and another strictly a championship affair. | The Army-Illinois game at Cham-; paign and the Harvard-Michigan af- fray at Ann Arbor were at the top of ‘The former was ex- the program. pected to draw 68,000 fans, while 90,-| 000 were expected to jam persons Michigan's stadium. It was the first time since 1926 that Army had the Alleghanies and the first | vaded the middle west. { The other intersectional game was at Lafayette, Ind., where Purdue met | Mississippi. | Of even greater importance to the) Big Ten conference was the clash of | Towa and Minnesota at Iowa City for championship laurels. ‘Wisconsin's much defeated eleven was appearing against A. A. Stage’s Maroons at the University of Chicago stadium, while Northwestern was at Columbus, bent on dumping Ohio FLASHER BEATS ELGIN 26 TO 0 Expected to See | AND CLAIMS CONFERENCE FLAG Morton County Crew, With One: Forfeit Claimed, Wins Seven Games | LOST BUT ONE ENCOUNTER 5 Elgin Crew Fights Hard rirt| Midland Boasts Half, but Weakens in the Second Period (Tribune Special Service) defeated Elgin here 26 to 0 and won an undisputed claim to the football | championsh Slope conference. Flasher has claimed a verdict by for. poned game in the near future,| Flasher's record will stand as seven | games won and one lost. Scores of which the local eleven participated follow: Flasher 26; Carson 0. Flasher 13; Mott 7. State into the scrap heap of defeated Big Ten teams. Notre Dame had Drake of Des Notre Dame's “home” grounds dur- ing the construction of its stadium. Approximately 300,000 spectators were expected to attend the games with a total “gate” of approximately $1,000,000, the greatest “audience” in Big Ten history The Carnegie report set forth in -hird was even. Rutherford showed more than{ average knowledge of what a boxing | » match is all about. He slipped over | tights and lefts to Tressler's head, ducked counter swings, danced out of inches and gave the fans promise | of developing into a pleasing punch- Wilton sent a pair of boys to Bis- | marck who proved they can do other | +, things besides mine coal. Kid Volk- >| man, sturdy and stocky socker with | “thereulean muscles, slammed his way 7 to a clearcut margin over his fellow townsman, Kid Mitchell. Volkman Carries Sock Four socking seances left Volkman with a bloody nose, the result of | steaming into a hard right in second * round, but the satisfaction of hav- ing forced Mitchell to give ground throughout at the same time ac- celerating the Kid's retreat by throw, ing lots of leather that took the wind ut of Mitchell's attacks. i Volkman made up for discrepancy In height with a pair of gorilla-like rms that continually whistled and i ed through Mitchell's guard. | le Kid took a body polishing and } a ramble through slumber- u only because Volkman evidently 4 es not realize the terrific destruc- his volcanic biceps possess, Hereabouts the name of Ralph ymander is not unknown. Two ago, a three-day blizzard pre- @ meeting of the Iowa and orth Dakota mastodons. McCann Visions Kayo Alexander is a veteran of the re- ined rings. Standing six feet, six particular the keen rivalry for schoolboy and prep talent among the leading colleges of California. The University of California in its August ‘C” Bulletin, issued for the benefit of alumni, published a number of letters written by various schoolboy athletes to friends. These were some of the excerpts: “I have already received some of- fers of scholarships from other schools, some of them in the confer- ence, and jobs that will pay my ex- penses through school. My dad cannot see my going to Cal and putting out a lot of mcgey when I can go to set eral other schools without the cost “I don’t expect you fellows to hand me a job on a silver platter, but I re- ceived a letter from the scholarship board at yesterday. stating that. I had been granted a full scholarship to So I would be foolish to go to Berkeley under present circum- stances unless I was sure of a good T still want to go to Berkeley. ‘The coach from came up to the park to sec me, and as a conse- quence I went to with him. I worked out with the varsity three days, and at the end of that period he told me I was a cinch to the var- sity. Whether he was kidding I don’t ; know, but I rather think he meant it, for he has called up three times since T've gotton home telling me the same. I also went to with the frosh coach and kicked a little. ——— of- one of the men here at peeve Moines at Soldier field, Chicago, | | Sport Slants | i Flasher 12; Carson 0. | Flasher 26; Elgin 0. | Elgin fought hard in the game with | Flasher here and held the home team \to one touchdown in the first half, which ended with the score 6 to 0. In the second half, however, the | }Jocal lads came back strong, scoring | two touchdowns in the third canto and one in the fourth quarter, in the {closing seconds of the game on a! long pass from Torkelson to Jonson. Though the whole Flasher team | played good football. Boyd and Bant- ileon. linemen, and Hanson, back, ! stood out as the best individual per- formers. clanson was aided by some great work of Torkelson, Davis, and ; Cotner. his backfield mates. | Flasher is coached by Bernard F. Legrid. ' Bagshaw resigned as head football | coach at the University of Washing- | ton, and two Iowa gridiron athletes | set forth to disprove charges involving | their amateur status. And these are | only two of the disturbances. i Bagshaw's difficulties have been ; long-standing, especially since last | season, yet his withdrawal after the | Huskies met two stunning reversals | at the hands of Southern California and Washington State added signifi- cance to the Carnegie report's dis- | closure that in about three out of | seven colleges the football coach's | tenure depended on producing win- | ning teams. | HOLDS FIELDING RECORD Nemo Leibold. present mai | the Columbus Senators in the {ican Association, established a ‘league fielding record for outfiel in 1924 with the mark of .994. | was with Washington then. | THREE STRAIGHT HOMERS |__In @ baseball game at Kingston, Y., this past season a team one hit in five innings suddenly lout three successive home runs | five pitched balls. Va + | Illini feel a catch in their throat Flasher, N. Dak., Nov. 9.—Ffasher | when they hear the strains of TMlinois Loyalty played by the school's f¢mous ip of the South Missouri | student band and the hardened face | of the stern army officer is seen to With New Leipzig failing to appear | show an emotional softening at the for a postponed game last week, / music of the West Point Cadets, but out here in Fremont, Midland college feit. In the event that New Leipzig | teams are spurred to greater deeds by does not arrange to play the post-/ the “Harmonica Hundred.” gans, played by the band the season’s conference games in|comers with a novel thrill. Ten/Oja ‘minutes | Hundred’ Flasher 1; New Leipzig 0 «forfeit). | pe Fights Last Night || i i a i cs a (By the Associated Press) { Cleveland, O.—Emmet Recco, Elwood City, Tom Kilby, Boston (9). Ted Sand- wina, Sioux City, la. knocked out Big Boy Petersen, Chicago (4). Fremont, Neb., Nov. 9.—Sons ot | |venee for the 7 to 1928. anticipated. and Art ‘The gentle tones of 100 mouth or- college's. newly- the home- each day the “Harmonica | Kakela-. ” drills under the direction | of Prof. Oscar Lyders, director of the | Tanner ‘school of Fine Arts. ‘Brownell Pharmer Flasher 6; Mott 19. . | Flasher 20: Elgin 0, Chicago Blackhawks = Bretmeser | Flasher 12; Regent 6. Tie Kansas City Team Pe pire, Graham, principally as the “homeless” mem- bers of the National Hockey League. opened the hockey season here last night with a rough 1 to 1 tle game country coach, with the Kansas City Pla-mors of the American association. Later,” Pop Said | Revenge on lowa +| For 1928 Contest Lda tpaoane” ngneore May Take Doras. Another Step Toward | Saeryiend. Conference Title i believes Paul | will succeed Bill Cox as the |the Nittany Lion runners. “Er—Yes—No—Er—I'll Call You cessful campaign before its trouncing Georgia's Bulldogs, early - season conquerors of Yale, came to play the | | muchcabused New York universi 5 quarter: ; back, West Virginia was host to the Yale, out for revenge for a last year, entertained sent it out of title consideration Both were at full teams ‘strength. A battle of backfields was’ with Bronko Nagurski Pharmer, Minnesota aces, matched against Bill Glassgow Oran Pape. of Iowa. A sell out crowd (Michigan) ; Kansas City, Nov. 9.—()—The Chi- | judge, Kearns, (Depaul); head lines- go Blackhawks, famed last year man, Wyatt, (Missouri). | TO SUCCEED STAR Nate Carmell, Penn State of cars pe ga eooceee of cars, ns With Three 2 p. m. Monday. Detroit outfit coached by Gus | Dohn A. feature characteristic thecon- Oldemo- pee LOSING Lively Bouts STREAKS DEMONS AND BRAVES WIND UP FOOTBALL YEAR HERE MONDAY Bismarck Must Win, Keep Goal Line Uncrossed, and Crush Jinx FEAR MANDAN TOUCHDOWN Capital City Lads Are Heavy Favorites in Armistice Day Game Bismarck and Mandan high school ridders will close their seasons in a game at Hughes field, Bismarck, at Coach Roy D. McLeod's Demons. fs state champions, will have three tasks Monday. First they must beat Coach Leonard C. McMahan's Braves to retain their grip on unofficial state championship laurels. Secondly, they must deal the death blow to the dying jinx which has pursued them in years gone by in their contests with the Morton county athletes. And last but not least they must keep their goal line ut sed. Coach McMahan probably has blueprinted a few trick scoring plays for his charges to spring on the favorites. With victory almost out of the question, Mandan no doubt will make de efforts to score. Probal y's game: Mandan Hedit L. Spielman R. Smith Dietrich Anderst «c) Ellison In Keeping with its Fine Car Engineering Standards OLDSMOBILE PROVIDES PRESSURE LUBRICATED PISTON PINS ae boon gue ee 3 parte lubricated through connecting rode these and many other advan: Pepe p y as bear pron rag Wy car. Drive it yourself. ach or gesaae psMontse. Loss of Johnson Is a Big Blow for Ranger Ice Team Col. John S. Hammond, Owner, ts Seeking Good Defense Material By EDWARD J. NEIL ‘New_York, Nov. (P)—The New York Rangers, a champion or title- contender ever since their entrance into the National Hockey league, may have a real team again this season, or just a set of forwards and a goal- | tender. The situation is up to Ching Johnson. Ching, otherwise known as “Ivan the Terrible,” has been a great de- fense star as long as the have been in the league. But Ching has ac- quired valuable oil property in the west, and believes that Hockey should offer equal financial at if he is to sign again with the Ingers. This Col. John 8. Hammond, the silver-haired West Pointer who owns the club, says, can’t be done without turning the league receipts over to his defense ace. At an absolute impasse with John- son over the salary question, Ham- mond is searching frantically for de- is gs i i eeee eeied and Viking,” offer this sreige gp oe the majori these are priced In

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