The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 16, 1929, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1929 n Honored by Tribune’s All-State Grid Selections SCHEDULE MADE FOR BISON BASKETEERS MINNESOTA, STILLHOPINGFOR ‘Hawkeyes Might yess sacliag ‘SAALWABCHTER HAS | T PRB-CONFBRENCE | TITLE SHARE, FACES MICHIGAN. gone al i Jan. 24—South Dakota State, Fargo. lowa Victory Over Purdue Would AFFAIRS ARRANGED! = Se * = jon. Minnesota, Concordia, Augus-; ‘Feb. 1—Morningside, Sioux City. western a Chance Feb. 3—South Dakota State, bi | Brookings. é eb, thbacicbane * : Chicago, Nov. 16.—(4)—The cham- Feb. 1eNorth Bakole: U2 Fargo. ee hel sone nd en on Early Program Feb. 15—North Dakota U.. Fargo. tie Dulventty of bah tus SNORT Cont Feb. 21—North Daketa U., Grand may sever the barrier obstructing the Forks. PLAY FOUR GAMES WITH U Feb. 22—Nortn Dakota U., Grand tine ec Me Mar. 5—St. Thomas, Fargo. due-Tows clash “at Latajeties Ind. New Leipzig Is Beaten by Mott i} Minneapolis, Nov. 4)—Munne- | rests not only the title hopes of the | sota, a team still hoping to share the , Boilermakers but also those of the \Victors, Led by Yonaka and Grant, Score Seven Touch- Big Ten title, and Michigan, which | Gophers and the Wildcats. downs in Skirmish " a 12 Bismarck Me Players of 7 Machines ATTRACTIVE |Put on Stellar Eleven; SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HOPES | Five Are Bismarck Men —_TO BEAT NOTRE DAME TWICE + ——— John O'Hare, Earl Hoffman, Eddie Spriggs, Wally Hultberg, | Crowd of 120,000 Persons Ex- and Charley Whittey Arc Members of State Champion- | ship Eleven on First Team | i {East Tilts Draw 250,000 Persons \Yale and Princeton Meet for RAMBLERS WANT REVENGE! Fifty-third Time; Missouri — Faces New York U Jan. Jan. Jan, 2—DePaul, Chicago. 4—Loyola, Chicago. 6—St. Thomas, St. Paul. Jan. 11—South Dakota U., Fargo. |Coach Harry Kipke’s Wolverines | Have Yet to Win a Con- pected to Crowd Soldier Field for Tussle ference Victory |LITTLE BROWN JUG IS PRIZE 6 ATHLETES FROM 17 TEAMS MENTIONED ! tana, Marquette, DePaul illiston, Mohall, Grand Forks, Valley City, Fargo, Minot, | Fessenden, Devils Lake, Jamestown, and Mandan Men | Placed on First Two Outfits Minnesotans Crushed by lowa Last Week as Michigan Defeated Harvard Rockne's Irish May Have More Power to Show; Trojans Forced Twice | New York, Nov. 16.—(4)—More than ja quarter of a million football en- thusiasts were attracted to eastern {stadia today to witness half a dozen climactic games involving old rival — Notre {ries and one intersectional clash — at | Missouri against New York university. For the greatest crowd, 78,000, the! magnet was a game at New Haven, the \titty-third clash between Yale and Princeton. With Albie Booth lamed by a charlie horse, Yale had its hands full. Arrangement Calls for Eighteen Games, Ten of Which Are With Conference Fives Chicago, Nov. 16. — (4) Dame's boast —“no team ever be: Notre Dame twice” — was challenged today by the University of Southern California. Soldier field, backing against the Lake Michigan shore on one side and bowing on the other to the city’s skyline of skyscrapers, prepared for a crowd of 120,000 pi sons; one of the really great crowds of all sportdom. BISMARCK TRIBUNE (ORTH DAKOTA Ht SCHOOL FOOTBALL SELECTION ALL. has yet to win her first conference | taerate aie iichost age game, fought today over a little! Northwestern defeats Indiana, the brown jug. Sixty thousand persons | Gophers, Boilermakers, and Wild- held tickets for this, one of the tra- | cats would be tied for the top with ditional games of the midwest. } one defeat each. A victory for the Minnesota was defending the jug— | Boilermakers, however. would vir- | the bit of crockery which is the sym- | tually assure them of their first Big jbol_of victory between these two | Ten title for they are regarded as | oe erulhg 07 eet ng Ahern | ht to Peoria bette in their | x va ad- | e season next week. ‘ministered. Michigan, lowly in Big | Tie | Towaiarsie championship an Soares Bsr bored Lior he contest today promises to be a battle ; Win from a week ago, had ® | of forward walls with the resi ifrgaracs lineup, with a hint of much | Piacupe sie forward passing. | The outcome of tat Minnesota- m Michigan clash was doubtful, with Ratoni sig the Gophers facing a team that has ped Truskowski (c) le ie its confidence restored with its Three of the victors’ touchdowns | Roach facouuve tie ‘Ten losses. ‘The Goph. were scored by forward passes, with | Poe ers, on the other hand, have not re- Voelz, Grant, and Banning on the re- Bovard covered fully from the bruising game ceiving end. Yonaka, who made all | Steinke at Iowa City last week when their the passes on which touchdowns were | Auer championship hopes were consider- scored, also scored two touchdowns | Hewitt ably dimmed with a 9 to 7 loss. on runs while Beglor crashed through | Simrall Northwestern will have a chance the line for another, and Grant ran Dahlem for one. : Daniels Riebath Yonaka and Grant were Mott's | Morrison — most impressive performers while| Officials—Referee, Eckersall, Chi- Neumann played @ great game for the| cago; umpire, Haines (Yale); field . vistors. Crane, Mott quarterback, was | judge, Hackett (West Point); head | before returning | injured carly in the contest and the} jtinesman, Lipp (Chicago). |Mott mentor was forced to rear-| - : e cdhatiline new range his tmckfield. The victors | GROWTH OF GOLF . ; Kenyon at Colum! econsin ‘counted 33 points in the first half. | improved and increased facilities | Will have a rest with no game sched- Mott meets Elgin here next Wed-;for municipal golfers in increased | uled. nesday in another South Missouri numbers are being provided in Balti- Slope conference game. more as fast as workmen can do the job. Second— ...Boyle, Grand Forks -Neuenschwander, Fessenden Mace, Devils Lake . Withnell, Jamestown t— O'Hare, Bismarck (c) E. Spriggs, Bismarck Moses, Williston Horner, Mohall .. Hultberg, Bismare' Whittey, Bismarck Brunk, Grand Forks . Hoffman, Bismarck . Jacobson, V: Platt, Fargo Drangstad, Minot . Fargo, N. D., Nov. 16—North Da- kota State college's 1929-30 basketball schedule, just completed by Coach ;Columbia, At Syracuse Colgate was | Heonerd PRTNaT Tor tne lean baa: Southern California was one of the the favorite over Syracuse. Some|keteers this winter. Between Dec. 7 four teams that whipped the men of 30.000 were intent on seeing each Of ang March 5 the Yellow and Green rt t year. That game | thes 8. : y i 26 to 12. for pir aes to give Harvard 8 | floor. | hard tussle. {ae me reN i But canttte Tech aise beat Notre! Missouri and New York university | ye yi take the Dison crew tote | is 8 5 i ” {of Milwaukee; ul ane yola in in 1928, but failed in 1929. Georxia| : | Chicago; and St. Thomas in St. Paul. Tech did last season—and didn't this. | * a. er Eight conference contests are Southern California remained today | | Sport Slant: ‘scheduled, closing the last of Febru- |the last of the quartet of challenger: { >-—_—_—__————___-@ ary with the annual four-game joust ‘The Notre Dame slogan was not lit-| when the debate shifts to batter-|between North Dakota university and erally true, the Ramblers having een ing-ram fullbacks, Earl owder- | North Dakota State, in which the beaten by Carnegic Tech in 1926 and |joyse” Pomeroy of the champion | first two will be played at Fargo and again in 1928; but the train load of University of Utah team should not |the last two at Grand Forks. rooters that arrived last night carried ‘6 overlooked. An expert observer in} Saalwaechter's men will open the that banner across ong of the cars the Rocky Moun rea remarks; |N. C. I. campaign Jan. 11 at home and seemed ready to lef the Carnegie; “tn three games Pomeroy has|taking on South Dakota U. On Jan. games stand as the exceptions that) tolen the show every time, with an|24 they will engage South -Dakota prove the slogan. verage of about eight yards per try, |State at Fargo and the following week The contest promises a struggle be-| using a straight drive. Marvin Jonas, | Will go afield to meet South Dakota tween the power house type of attack | strapping center, who helps clear the|U.. Morningside and South Dakota as used by Southern California, and | way for Pomeroy. is another big fac-|State, respectively, the speed assault employed by the tor in the success of Ike Armstrong's |to their own lot for three games. Ramblers. Neither team has used the | utes.” | ‘The schedule follows: air to any great extent this season, |“ ytah, with one of the most power-| Dec. 7—Minnesota, Minneapolis. but both were ready to shoot every-/fy) scoring machines in the country,| Dec. 14—Concordia, Fargo. thing they had today. vq... {18 headed toward its third conference! Dec. 20—Augustana, Fargo. incihier” sshittles Weare Domne ae jchampionship in four years. | Jan, 1—Marquette, Milwaukee. parently never has opened up to any- thing like its full power. Trojans Forced At Baker field in New York Penn-/| ylvania was a hot favorite to down} (Tribune Special Service) Mott, N. D., Nov. 16.— Mott high school’s football eleven defeated New Leipzig here 45 to 6. The victors made 21 first downs to four for the visitors. Mott attempted 12 forward passes, gaining 173 yards to 90 yards for New Leipzig on 14 at- «+S. Spriggs, Bismarck HONORABL™: MENTION Li —-Wallace Green, Dohn a: i Potter, all of Bismarck; Schol- land:. and Gertcis, Fargo; Freerks, Jamestown; Jarvis, Valley City; Vetter, Linton; Doerr, Ashley; Barlow, Washburn. Ends—Sencchal, Minot; Fisher, Fargo; Sheehan, Valley City; Strom, Williston. ‘Tackles — Erlenmeyer, Bismarck; Dalzeil, Grand Forks; Ellison, Mandan; Christianson, Devils Lake. Guards—Mockel, Williston; Theige, Harvey; Brown, Hankinson; Swanson, Oakes. Center—Grey, Valley City. Minnesota | Anderson a | Barnhart Pharmer | to DAN AEN EE SI By WILLIAM S. MOELLER Forty-five athletes from 17 high s:-ool football teams are honored by Bismarck Tribune today with all-North Dakota mention. One of the striking things about this particular selection is that 12 Bis- varck high school athictes receive mention as being among the most pro- it in the state at their particular positions. This is not strange, how- » when one realizes that not one Bismarck regular performer was out- yed in any game this year. Bismarck, North Dakota champion for the second time in as mapy and the first champion of the new!:-organized Sioux Land conference, | smbeaten and unscored upon this season, snares most cf the honors of the team, with five of its men selectcd. Williston, Mohall, Grand Forks, alley City, Fargo and Minot each placed one man in the remaining positions. On the second team the following elevens are represented: Bismarck, men; Grand Forks, two; and Williston, Fargo, Fessenden, Devils Lake, amestown ond Mandan, one each. Teams whose men failed to make either first or second teams, but who have performers deemed worthy of hon- Grable raention, are Linton, Ashley, Washburn, Harvey, | been somewhat of a jinx for the Wild- ; cats and may definitely eliminate them from championship considera- tion today. Tilinois appeared to have an edge over Chicago. Ohio State will meet NOW PAYING COACHES Philadelphia high schools this fall EAE ea en are paying their football coaches for EASY TO FIND jthe first time. Previously teams Fort. Slocum, N. J—If you see a|Wwere coached by instructors who re- NARCOTIC SURVEY FINDS NO Dr. R. N. Blackwell of Southern Methodist, most enterprising of the} Southwest Conference schools in uthern California, however, has \ceived no salary. i ‘Two Are Cinches * First of all, let’s not wi time talking about “Smilin’ Th | John O'Hare and the dynamic Earl Hoffman, Bis: k quarterback and center respectively. Selecting them is the easiest part of the task. One who would fail to honor them with ‘irst team selection, after seeing them play in one or more games, might be a fit subject for the guillotine. North Dakota had some nice half- backs on several elevens this fall but the neat running of Eddie Spriggs, of Bismarck, and Moses, Williston, Hankinson, and Oakes | performer when called back. Hej ‘could run, pass, or kick, and was one | {of the most depéndable of the Forks | |crew. Spriggs, despite his small | | size, was a great end in his first year. | He was an excellent receiver of pass- though a small target, and a eedy runner once he wrapped his arms around the pigskin. He should be a shining performer next fall. Charles Whittey, of the champion- | ship eleven, and Roy Platt, of Fargo! i | been forced twice to use everything. Stanford fell only after a terrific bat- tle, and held the Trojans to a single touchdown. California got the jump on Jones’ team in the first half, and made 15 points while the Trojans were playing some poor football. Clear, cold weather was forecast and the field was in excellent condition, Probable lineups: S. California Tapaan Hall Barragar Notre Dame Murphy McMahon Metzger le broadening its fields of football activ- ity, stoutly defends the conference against attacks, criticism or insinua- tion that it tolerates “subsidizing and recruiting.” The Carnegie report noted a comparative lack of prosely- ting in the great Southwest. “No one is allowed to solicit for athletes,” as- serts Dr. Blackwell, citing rules as stringent as those of the Yale-Har- vard-Princeton pact of 1923. He adds: “If a university has a igood football team end wins a oham- pionship it always brings forth the; question of ‘paid athletes,’ regardless | DR. MENA: GREGORY By HORTENSE SAUNDERS New York, Nov. 16—(NEA)—Prison authorities long have realized that the most dangerous criminal is the drug addict. So, partly as a measure of safety, they-have made some effort to cure him, But the addict must become a crim- inal before his case is given much KNOWN CURES PERMANENT young man walking around hand- cuffed té an automobile door, keep | him in sight. and notify Police Chief ; Stemer of Newhaldeon, N. J. Chief Stemer arrived here recently with Raymond Morgan, alleged deserter, and .handeuffed him to the door of his automobile while he called for in- structions. When he returned, Mor- gan, the handcuffs and the car door ‘were missing. manently. And there is no practical H method known.” The committee suggested that New York try out an experiment ‘of a new type of institution for the care of drug addicts that would consider the rehabilitation as well as the cure, and would not be a penal institution, though it should have a. follow-up and, if necessary, a parole system. A SPANKING SHOT Pittsburgh.—When Mrs. Nellie Gar rett again finds it necessary to chas- | PLEASANT JOB Wolverhampton, England.—-A f. tory building here ts one of the nicest. places to work in that can be imag- ined. It -is painted all colors of the rainbow, inside and out. Broad stripes. of blue, cream, red, yellow, brown, and green cross the interior. Workers in- side all wear shiny overalls of varted colors. The factory makes paints ant varnishes. / 1 London.—-Wasps prove exceedingly stamped them as the class of the lot.| heavy machine, were two neat tack. | Williamson Nash of the justification of the charge. I{|consideration by the authorities out-| Cases appearing to be hopeless, or | tise her son, she will not use a sawed- | obnoxious this time of the year in | Spriggs was Bismarck’s second trip threat back. He could kick and pa: ‘but running, especially on end runs ‘and in the broken field on a dry field, was his forte. Moses was the only backfield performer on the Williston ‘club who had any success in advanc- | ing the ball in the Bismarck game probably was one of the flectest in the state, and tore off a "beautiful run against the champions ‘merely because of his speed. » Neuenschwander, Fessenden, and ‘Wallace, Devils Lake, were two halves ‘who might have been meats on ‘stronger elevens. The ssenden, youth, sprinting star in state track meets last spring, was responsible in | @ big way for many of the large scores q iwhich his team ran up against op- Position in the central part of the . Wallace, though kept on the Gidelines at times because of injuries, twas the most effective man in the backfield, the veteran being a threat man with good running ‘ability. Several Backs Strong Close on the heels of these three wformers were the capital city’s halfbacks, Wally Green, Dohn, Potter, Schollander and Gerteis, 4 1 Whittey, though comparatively | | small for the position, was a Rock of ; | Gibraltar in defensve play and Platt | made the greatest use of his husky build in smashing up plays and tear- | ing holes in opposing lines. Erlen- meyer, husky Demon, probably was good a performer as either in any | game he played, but Oid Man In- eligibility got the best of him at | times and he did not play in evel j contest. George Toman, campaigner | for three terms as tackle on the Man- | dan eleven, was one of the best men in the position in the state until ap- ‘ pendicitis won a decision over him | Jate in the season. Mickelson was a | “plugger” type tackle on the Coyote team, never flashy but always in the way. Brunk, Jacobson Strong Brunk was Grand Forks’ outstand- ing lineman, and Grand Forks did not have such a bad season after a shaky start. The guard played one of his best games against Valley City. but was a constant source of trouble for opponents throughout the season. Jacobson played tackle for Valley City, but is placed at guard because he was a good enough lineman for the first team. The big fellow was i |fiela Kassis McNamara Galloway Anthony Arbelbide Saunders Aspit Pinckert Musick Officials — Referee, ham); umpire, McCord, (Illinois); judge, Badenoch, (Chicago); head linesman, Wyatt, (Missouri). ———_———_—--—* Fights Last Night | Ht (By The Associated Press) New York—Maxie Rosenbloom, New York, outpointed James J. Jersey City, N. J. (10). Dominick Petrone, New York, and Young Zazzarino, New Jersey, drew, (10). Don Volene, England, and Harry Carleton, Jersey City, drew, (10). Chicago—Vince Dundee, Balti- more, outpointed My Sullivan, St. Paul, (10). Bud Taylor, Terre Haute, Ind., cutpointed Santiago (10). Meyer Schwartz O'Connor Savoldi Birch, (Earl- |the university loses all of its football | games nothing is said. side. In New York, in fact. the only Colerick | Is it reason- | way he can be treated, unless he !s {able to expect a good football team’ wealthy enough to hire his own doc- jto be any more harmful in its effect | tor and go to a private sanitarium, is; upon a student body as a whole than to get “sent up” for some offense. lit is to expect Philadelphia business men to go to rack and ruin because they had a championship baseball team this year?” From a Long Island weekly news- paper: “A few weeks back we had occasion to encounter the star football player (who received a scholarship at. college). This was to have been his last year. To the inquiry as to why jhe was not on the gridiron he plied: ‘My leg is all shot and I can't play football any more. When a col- lege is paying you to play the game and your leg goes bad, what else are you going to do’ Among those mentioned as possible successors to Enoch Bagshaw, who r signed under fire as head, football coach at the University of Washing ton, are Harry Stuhldreher of Valla- Clarence Spears of Minnesota. nova, Ike Armstrong of Utah and Dr.| | Naturally, this includes only a small | Percentage of narcotic users. |. In spite of the propaganda against | the use of drugs and the educational campaigns waged, little has been done, in this city at least, to help the drug addict, to protect society against him, or to learn what becomes of those who | are “cured,” ‘ 1 Intensive Study Made When Richard C. Paterson Jr. as sumed charge of the New York de- partment of correction, and found the | management of drug users one of his problems, he named a committee in- {cluding such men as Dr. Menas 8. Gregory, director of Bellevue hospital, to make one of the most intensive | | studies of the drug problem ever un: dertaken, and to find out how ef- fective various cures are. Their report of a year's investiga- tion, now prepared, shows that the {cure usually is easy enough, but that staying cured is a different matter, ' those which return repeatedly, should | off shotgun for a paddie, The youth be definitely committed to the insti-|had about completed arrangements | tution as a matter of public. safety.|/to buy the weapon from another boy,.' the experts advised when the mother interposed. She | Erseyege arg) REET the at =| WAs TIGER YER took hold of the muzzle and pro. |Bngland. Last year they got so troublesome that the ministry of ag- riculture broadcast some ways of dealing with them. The methods, alt of which are being used this year, in- ‘ ceeded to emphasize previous instruc- ee a, papa area egg an tions about firearms. ‘Then the gun | Is on ie t, kc Tiger elevens of 1880, 1900 and 1901, went Hn and = lodged in Mrs, | ever made cluded one of putting beer in a bottle. Lured by sugar, the wasps drink the beer, fall intoxicated, and 0 themselves. s The greatest offer to | and that the average drug user who Stuhidreher seéms to be “men-' has pronounced cured \tloned* whenever a blg coaching job! born gone back bobs up. The former leader of the| “Four Horsemen” of Notre Dame ha: ‘built himself a fine reputation a‘ | Villanova, where his contract still has some time to go. He was “men- | tioned” not so long ago as a possible | successor to Gil Dobie at Cornell, but Gil has cast another winning team as jan anchor to windward. Spears, it is noted by L. H. Gregory | in the ‘Portland Oregonian, once | came within a telegram of accepting the Hiliners’ best. Russell Enge and Dale Brown, Bis- marck, might have outplayed the first pair had they a chance to meet them, but they would have been forced to give away a large pound; advantage. The pony guards were! important cogs in one of the finest | teams ever developed in the state. ‘Thompson, Fargo pivot man, was/ second only to Hoffman in effective | at the center of the line. He 3 oans; Freerks, eeomn: aa Valley City; Vetter, ton; Dee , ; and Barlow, Wash- wm. All of these men were good ergiigen's biggest. fault was his lack s fault was his lac! for the ball”. The fleet back time grasped the ball arms to keep from losing ly, and this-affected his . him of a straight , and his effectiveness ly. Dohn, not much of a ball . small-car owners \ In commemoration of Dodge Broth- ers’ fifteenth anniversary we are offering the biggest opportunity ever presented to small-car owners to purchase a new Dodge Brotheys Six at an exchange difference every owner of a small car can well afford.to pay {You are cordially invited to come in and learn the de- - tails of the plan. we have to offer. Boston—Andy Martin, Boston, rc ea Fay Kosky, Chicago, Miami, Fia—Dave Shade, Call- fernia, knocked out Dick Evans, | | which subsequently engaged John J.| McEwan, the one-time all-American | center and | Vince, Brother of Former Cham- pion, Decisively Beats My Sullivan by Holdout Trouble; Pitts- burgh Meets Maroons ee e be) SEFEE i Fy in °M. B. GILMAN. Me i :

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