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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1929 Purdue Stands Alone at Top of Big Ten Heap--Thanks to Iowa i | | y DBALS HARSH BLOW: 9 Spears’ ars? Machine ts Is Beaten| Outplayed \PE REPEATS FOR A WIN| vilermakers Now Figuring Out; Best Plan to Eliminate | Hawkeyes | Shicago, Nov. 11. y stands on the st western conference — foot . puted leadership of t wa. It was Iowa Saturd rdue without compar y who left aio State, previously undefeated but d, its first conference beating. {hands of California, now the ring : \ Volkman Won Bout j welterwetent crown Brother Joe once | down. Pete Gergen attempted a pass | total of 30 yards against 15 for the i leader of the far western clan, upset | H 4 lin the try for point. It failed and| Saints. The Bison made 15 first poison winds for the Heinies to Purdue Faces fowa some of the significance of the clash : ° | ere Friday Night ———____. Iwhen it was grounded it signalled | downs to 13 for the Saints. The sum- |] inhale... . Tony Wilding, Captain Purdue will altempt to clear the| with Notre Dame at Chicago, where larsters DIAMOND STAR DEAD | defeat for the big boys tutored by | mary: Cheape, ‘Tommy O'Brien, Jean wa obstacle Saturday at Lafayette | close to 120,000 spectators may be in Kid Mitchell beat Bud Volkman on| Pittsburgh, Nov. 11—()—Mark E. Casey Finnegan. ND. AG. aCoee Bouin, Cyril Tolley, Gene Tun- the standout contest of the Big|on the party, but not much. \ . jthe boxing card at the Rex theater | Baldwin, 66, former major league Saints Scofe in Third “Goodwin le smiths |} Re¥—faces marching past into the neard. In the other games, Chi-| Purdue's Boilermakers lead the Big OFEM | Fricay night, it nas been announced. | baseball pitcher, who started his pro-| ‘The Saints, who have had difficulty | _Hlanson it OConnor* mists ... and Hobey Baker going fy 70,200 Illinois will play their) Ten all by themselves, thanks to | Volkman was given the Bismarck | fessional career with Duluth in ine hitting their stride, rallied in the} Grimm ae cation con {] 20r his last glorious end run, cut t {ditional contest at Urbana, Mich-|Towa’s upset of Minnesota. ‘The ‘Tribune decision over Mitchell Sat- | Northwestern league in 1885 and who! third and final periods. Johnny| StcMiitan re tha ott forever, ty the flanking fire in will tackle Minnesota at Minne- | trouble with this situation is that the (By The Associated Press) | urday. had played with Pittsburgh, Chicago,| Brace, fleet little Saint halfback,| McGrath rt Thornburg of the machine guns . olis, and Indiana will venture into|same Towa cast. starring Glassgow| Although injuries have ended his) Confusion resulted when Mitchell | Cincinnati and Washington, died, | wiggled his way through, under and| Milts 4 ay food 2 lair of the Northwestern Wild-|and the flashy Fape, travels to La- football career, Al Marsters, Dart-| was introduced as Volkman and Volk- jover the North Dakota line to land} tergen ih Garner agth for Minnesota a week from day, for the second time in two and Iowa's defense impregnable, in the fourth period when ‘onko Nagurski, who was called ym his tackle position, to fullback, ittered nearly 50 yards for the/| »phers’ only touchdown. The de- at was a stunning one for Minneso- which has been hovering around Je championship doorway for sev- il years, and this season seemed to ire found the combination of the} Sk, ‘Buckeyes Meet Inevitable fOhio State finally ran into the in- | fitable Saturday and was beaten, 18 | ' £6, by Northwestern. The victory | Go left Northwestern in a position | i demand to be cut in on the cham- onship if Iowa succeeds in taking irdue Saturday. Ohio State's | ‘uchdown was the result of the | tngest run in a Big Ten game this | ry tiason, when Wesley Fesler, Ohio! Nate's great end, caught a fumble in | Te air, and raced 98 yards over the orthwestern goal line MWisconsin at last w: team it could beat, defeating Chi- | go, 2010 6. Michigan grabbed all ‘fe breaks to score its first triumph ‘jler a Harvard team by a 14 to 12} ‘Bore, and Mlinois even more deci-| fwely thrust’ back the ua) Ned Cagle and the Ar #17. Purdue, using its regular rt only a few minutes in the second sriod, and its ball carrying aces Gest” Welc! Glen Harmeson, } & ‘at all, walloped Mississippi, 27 5] 2 2 1 * atholic Schools : Battle for Lead i. ties a : St Mary's, | {Both Undefeated, in Thanks- giving Day Contest | bg St. Paul, Nov. 11—(P—At least eae of the four teams remaining in he Minnesota college conference | inotball race will be eliminated Sat- teams except Bt. . Mary's tase ane ‘yeni in the feature tilt at Min- is will be St. Olaf and Augs: irg, which are tied with St. Thomas ‘f second place. The Cadets play ‘Uamiine on Their home field. diSt, Mary’s, undefeated and alone in LRN STATE ATE BLEVEN FOUR PROMINENT TRADITIONAL _ “TOGOPHER DREAMS; Ramblers Meet Trelane, and» : Football Results —¢ Purdue Faces lowa in 3 HAnwes | 9 to 7 After Being Badly TARTANS ote PANTHERS | Tennessee Will Attempt to Keep college football campa ball slate but for those who focus mostly upon the “standing of the Purdue to-| teams” four battles hold special siz- reshold of its| nificance in the east, west, and sot ampionship—but with the ominous | Notre Dame-Southern California at cker of title | Soldier field, Purdue-Iowa at Lafay- pes, slanting across the doorway. | ette, Tennessee-Vanderbilt_ st, Knox- Paradoxically, Purdue owes its un-| ville and Pittsburgh-Carnegic at Pitt race to | stadium. the heap by tossing Minnesota | ship aspirations. All four ar om the list of undefeated teams. At | beaten, all untied and all possess ter- ep same time Northwestern gave | rific scoring punch. d an opportunity to prepare at| very much. Figures compiled by the Associated | ‘ars, but accomplished the job in|two Tennessee rivals locked in a follows: nost the same manner as last year. | battle that may decide the conference ith but 60 seconds left to play, and | championship or at least determine | Total tiling by four points, Oran Pape, the | whether the volunteers or the Van- , Section and Players-- Pos. G. Td. bar Fidg. Points me Iowa halfback who scored the | derbilt Commodores will share the | East—Marsters, Dartmouth ... ab 6 16 o 108 | aning touchdown against the Goph-| peak with Tulane. Tennessee, has !South—McEver, Tennessee ..... hb 6 15 ai 0 el 3 last season, rushed over with the | not been beaten in three years but | Pacifie—Schwartz, Washington State. fo 7 12 9 0 72 gre that gave Iowa a 9 to 7 triumph. | their winning streak will be subjected | Southwest—Miller, Arkansas . hb 6 0 0 66 wa, still as much out of the con-|to a severe test by Vandy. | Missouri Valley—King, Drake . hb 7 8 4 0 52 sence as in it, presented great foot-| Yale meets Princeton at New Haven | Big Ten—Pharmer, Minnesota . hb 4 6 7 2 49 Nl in defeating Minnesota. The | in the biggest traditional game of the |Rocky Mountain—Pomeroy, Utah fb 4 7 0 9 42 undering herd from the north} week and anything may happen. Big Six—Bausch, Kansas ...... fb 6 4 0 0 4 GAMES TOP rato PROGRAM i to * (Helena) 4 Tyg into which men vanish ... but * State | when they were grounded and during ‘é Middle West Affairs Duluth Rosenbloom vs. Braddock and nals Defeat j the third period took s 15 yard pen- bh oe the amar sae ee darkness I i et piestowin Taylor vs. Zorilla Are | — | pass. Bhamne the pany Bio ae igt || t Flanders comes the sound of Newport Boston Unive Three-Year Record Clean (JACK AND MADISON ‘MOUNT ST. CHARLES ELEVEN Square Garden and Jack Dempsey's North Dakotans Lose Chance at H program provide the high spots of boxing this week. MISTS OF ARMISTICE By WM. W. BRAUCHER The armistice is old now, shrouded in the mists of years ~ SQUARE GARDEN TO _NOSES OUT BISON BY 7 T06 threatened. Gelhausen, Saint punt | Failure of Pass for Ext Pass for Extra Pet| Kicked from behind his own goal Tins | STAGE RING SHOWS in Second Quarter Sig- ay hobnails clanking .. . and faces flash out from the night and fade again . . . men of the diamond, the gridiron and the track... Hank + bravest of the babe" the first big leaguer to go. . Tommy Hitchcock, trading his Main Events [TEAMS PRACTICALLY EVEN) 2% stand the pressure on the bench | | into the Joust to add vocal as well as: physical weight to Bison prestige. New York, Nov. 11.—()—Madison { Bison Breal he high spots of boring this | Second Touchdown at Both prorede er rey breaks. ; sis ssuchusetts Ags in the saddle for a ride on s. Ohio State 6, 4 aT irst Hi: Dakota's most serious bad break came Against Vandy seg a, Norwich 0. Friday night at the Garden there | lla aia at the end of the first half when the || {h¢ Back of a war eagle . . . and —- ust North Carolina | wilt be a New York-New Jersey tour- whistle blew while a pass was in mid- : cond (4 a m a train “as By ALAN GOULD New York, Nov. 11.—(47—With the draw- a spectacular close, tradition big part in this week's foot - Wittamenew= From this angle the big cames t at Evanston. Ohio is down for a] fayette this week with another upset | mouth quarterback, continues to lead! man as Mitchell. Both fighters re- st game with Kenyon at Columbus,/in mind. Purdue, playing at home, jthe nation’s players in individual! side at Wilton. d Wisconsin will have an open date | figures to be a favorite but not by |Scoring. \ ——___—__—-- took up the game when she was seven, | Good, Saint quarterback, bucked it] Officials: Referce, Hicks, Kansas: SOUTHPAW CONTROL was trained by her father, and won | over for the touchdown and Gross, | jmbire, | dtritmates Jimmy Walkup. Fort Worth Jeft-| the girls’ championship of England substitute Saint fullback went through “scoring: Touchae turday. opponents. The Panthers have thejconferences in the country show} handed pitching star, is one south-| when she was 13 years old. the Dakota line straight up on the | (Dakota), ¢ fowa not only ruined Minnesota's | class to trim Carnegie but the Tar- | Marsters heading the procession with paw who has control. In a 15-game “arch toward the championship Sat- | tans may spring an upset. 108 points in six games. The leading stretch last season he walked only | Pittsburgh has steam-rolled seven | Press from the eight major groups 01 The southern scramble finds the |scorer in each of the cight groups 13 batters. - DON'T SPIT! NOY SEPT The word “SPIT” stops you!.... and so should the danger of spit- tipped ci; . Beware... smoke Cremo—it’s certified! ‘The law is clear on the matter of +s .evel offenders approved step of the way by aemeniens ives that foil, wrap and tip the cigars without the danger of spit. Over $7,000,000 perfecting the method of manufacture used by Certified A deliberately made with confidence to smokers of say that no psig of cigars: Try a Certified Cremo—made of the choicest, Cremo ever runs this condovon laoreet itt See tee ate aad oot: Each leaf eisk. Because the goes through a slow, expensive maturing process that develops the sacthod of manufacture fullest flavor and mildness, You never realized how good Centified lens bas cue Crouse the Cremo is—don't let its 5-cent price stand in your way. Your physician oe pega pa of purit will recommend a mild cigar in 1 Pach £ thet y Thee n'a bit of seep in Cathbed Gremo ives to milk. “ph Macon 0, |Rament, Maxie Rosenbloom, veteran | Helena, Mont., Nov. 11—On a sharp | air in the shadow of the Saint's goal | Ghibere: New York light heavyweight, and | reversal of form in one of the snap- | posts. James J. Braddock, young slugeer’| piest football tilts played ‘in Helena! The pass of 20 yards was ee foe Reh nad hee meet in the 10/1 many a day, Mount St. Charles |Pleted with inches to go when the { Jersey City junior lightweight. Re- | Dakota Agricultural college Bison. 7 tells the story: turns to New York for the 10 round to 6, and won their first big battle | ells the story: semifinal. mecting Dominic Petrone. | of the season. It was the second de-| Dakota made 30 line bucks for 51 Another Jersey City 130 pounder en- | feat of the season for the Bison and hg) and the Saints 29 for 94 yards. counters Don Valenti, of England, in| it came after a thrilling display of |The Bison made 10 end runs for 30 the first 10 rounder. gridiron pyrotechnics. yards while the Saints made 26 for j Terre Haute, Ind., featherweight, as | air, skirting ends and a hodge podge forward passes and completed 12 for his principal attraction for the Fri-| of trick stunts that kept the fans on|® gain of 89 yards. 1 being inter- day program at the Chicago coliseum. | their toes despite the tang in the air.)cepted. ‘The Saints attempted 8/ Easton, Mo., high school began its | expecting a pass or a trick play. Hanson; Howland threw 28 field goals, captors. John Miljus, he of the wild pitch, tossing fast ball grenades at the pill boxes at Varennes... . Red- shirted Shawkey standing ‘by at the surrender of the German grand fleet... . Major Frank Cav- anaugh sitting down to fumble at the shrapnel in his shoulder. . Tommy Armour fighting the dark- ness with shell-torn eyes. . . Grover Alexander keeping his shirt on and his rifle loaded. . Jess Petty and Joe Harris with the bases loaded and mud up to . Eddie Rickenbacker half ended. The following analysis of the game | Leonard (Young) Zabbarino, the | College Saturday nosed out the North Dempsey has obtained Bud Taylor,| Both teams relied on attacks Feu ie yards, The Bison attempted 27 their hips... e All have distinct bearing upon sec- ¢ t the top| tional as well as national champi Taylor meets Santiago Zorilla of| After playing an even game in the | Passes, but failed to connect. The || cruising the clouds like a bird of s Panama in the 10 round final. first period the Bison laid down aj Bison punted 10 times for 440 yards || Prey... . Bob Martin to fight ae ‘ re j oe s | Another 10 rounder brings together | barrage of forward passes in the |Sgainst 9 punts by the Saints for || in the iihes and in the ring, too. i wii | Mitchell, and Not i My Sullivan of St. Paul and Vince | second quarter that concluded when | 375 yards. Two Saint punts were |] --+ Johnny Poe, Johnny Overton, Southern California's setback at the prow | Dundee of Baltimore, who is after the | Cy Lonsbrough went over for a touch- | blocked. Dakota was penalized aj} Crashing that Hindenburg line. Big Six Mathewson mixing GOT EARLY START the ball on the Bison one foot line | Blakeslee rh Johnson Betty Nuthall, British tennis star,|early in the fourth period. Johnny, “onsbroush = fv Geinetnen state; uchde od (Snints), ‘Try for al—Gross try for point when the Bison were} {if .titutions: Biecn Y season with a 138 to 4 vic-; Time and again the ball surged up Thomaswon over Oak Grove. Carl Younger | ne fe Dvorak fe Duke university freshman eleven. 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