Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PY OUT UNLESS GROUP. > CHANGES ITS PLANS School in Tall Corn State Is * Charged With Conducting P al Athletics Unfairly al 3 Bs P wOOMMITTEE MEETS DEC. 6| | H innesota Faces Rested Wis-| ® yy consin Squad; Chicago od Tackles Washington M WEEKES P)--lowa’s foot- bd By WIL & cnicago, Nov Shall squad is preparing for what may ) Wprove to be its last game with a west= Be conference opponent On Jan. 1, unless the Big Ten face cs changes on Towa's | nference teams ve, as outlined last | h having failed to con- affairs as required | So the school | 's champion | ~ in, and | Purdue eleven | wis son, will making Ml ap- earance in hen it cngages Michigan at Ann ‘aarbor. Meets Dee. 6-7 ei 48 ‘The conference faculty committee §Dwit meet in Chicago Dec. 6 and 7, to Méecide if Iowa has reorganized its athletic system to a point where re- itement m.y be possible. MMe With the desire of winding up its Werelationship with the Big Ten with a victory, Towa also has a revenge ive. Michigan, counted as no h for Towa last year, arose to de- | the Hawkeyes 10 to 6, in the Mexinal game of the season. and Coach ‘Wngwersen’s team is working to be ‘certain that docs not happen this s ir. faut the game will be the last, in any [} Hease, for Captain Willis Glassgow, one , greatest ball carriers in Iowa 4 Pignatelli, quarterback; PP himyers and Reberts, a fine pair of ay ; Fuhrman, another guard; “Westra, tackle; Carlson, end; and iback Hagerty, all seniors. Purdue's champions did little work day, but were down for scrim- egmage asainst Indiana plays this ‘neefternoon. Coach Jimmy Phelan cau- © @ioned the Boilermakers against fig- ‘thawing Indiana for a pushover, and will send his best against the Hoosiers, won but one major contest Coach Page of Indiana, the final practice sessions tion. pre rday, Wisconsin, hich tackles the Gophers at Minne- ®polis Saturday, was driven through a ing drill in freezing weather. ini, Bucks Wants Second . Illinois and Ohio State are prepar- fing for the contest Saturday which pill second place, as though ey were after the championship. ‘he Ohio-Iilinois games always have bitterly fought and the results, “tiamore often than not, have been of ‘waupset nature. i) In a season during which upsets @lthave beconie extremely common, “GNorthwestern is priming with the thope of being the team to smash] nuNotre Dame's drive for national hon- | A remarkable f THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1929 (No. 5), aft Chandler (No. 1) of Ge ference was § Strong Scoring Punch Makes | All Ten Teams in Line for | Title Possibilities MAROONS LOOK POWERFUL Pirates Run Wild to Down To- ronto, While Boston Bruins Keep Slate Clear j By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. New York, Nov. 20—(7)—A new game for hockey fans is to find the | weak team in the national league. | This year's change of rules with its, great splurge of scoring has made) every one of the 10 clubs a potential champion and so far not one has | been eliminated from the list of pos: sibilities, | The Americans last night took their | second defeat of the year from the rejuvenated Chicago Blackhawks by | {a 5-1 score. | Pittsburgh, another trailer last year, | trounced the strong Toronto Maple | Northwestern has had two days thot scrimmage which Coach Hanley Pdhopes has shaken his squad out of the ‘geslump that gave Indiana victory last Paweek. Notre Dame's preparation ha: Leafs in one of the wildest scoring | affairs the league has seen. The | Pirates handed Toronto a two goal | }lead. then ran wild to come out on! | the long end of a 10 to 5 score. | Pdbeen held up by weather conditions, Temo outdoor work havin MEEhis week. The Rambl ithe field house yesterday | Montreal's Maroons showed that been done: they have to be reckoned with this worked iN| year by downing their intra-city | F. Chicago faces t! i %o compete with one of the biggest | second victory in three games by feams in the country in the Univer-| overpowering the Detroit Cougars, ity of Washingtor to 4. Boston's champion Bruins conquered the runner-up New York Rangers, 3 to 2. The victory left the ; Bruins alone at the top of the stan ing, the only team which has won Il of its first three games. ‘Seven Razorbacks Sener ne nai ace On Firemen Force tra Member, in Line for Asso- Fayetteville, Ark., Nov. 20.—(Pi— i ciation Presidency | lars football togs in the afternoon | and a fireman's uniform at night for 'seven University of Arkansas stu- | dents. ithe Chicago, Nov. 20. ie A. Gordon of the Indian . Chi- go, is slated to become president of Western Golf apices He} the ticket to he chosen at the| In excha! for sleepin: uarters, Grmual meeting, December 15, andj they cerveras the westusnal’ guard: eee ation is equivalent to election. | ians of the property of this city’s resi- Gents. SCORING MARK Pred Lindstrom of the New York Giants scored 26 runs in 13 con- tive games for the longest run- oring streak in the 1929 National | je Season. Do You Know That—{ One of the new National League umpires Is Ted McGrew from the - the next scene, MICHIGAN RECORD Michigan's baseball team that toured Japan recently played 13 games with the strongest Nipponcse nines and won 11 of them. al ehac Every man has his price but some don’t want ,_ | Tivals, Les Canadiens, 5 to 1, while! job of attempting the Ottawa Senators turned in their | ‘The fire station is home to them. | ng Sanford Roland (No, 15) and Guard He Dropped It, But It Was a Touchdown ew York University game, showing Beryl Follet, N. Y. U. halfback over the line for a touchdown and being tackled by Halfback was ruled a touchdown, even though Follet dropped the ball. Fine inter- George Sargisson (No. 16). After a kick is blocked, sometimes the player who blocked it doesn’t feel so enthusiastic about it. Tackle Marvil of Northwestern is shown on the ground (No. 31) after blocking a punt in the Ohio State-Northwestern game. Baker (54), Northwestern's end, is starting to recover {he ball, which is shown at right, under the arrow. NEW PLAN OF ATTACK FOR ICE TEAM IS TO FIND WEAK CLUB gg OE EEE EE A H | Fights Last Night | Notre Dame Cautioned to Look 5 (By The Associated Press) New York — Kid Chocolate, Cuba, outpointed Joe Martinez, Spain, (10). Baby Face Quintera, Cuba, stopped Willie Bonaventri, » (5). Juan Cepero.° Cuba, outpointed Alex Orraine, New Haven, Conn, (6). Indianapolis — Steve Smith, Bridgeport, Conn., tpointed Jimmy Reed, Erie, Pa., (10). Babe Pelzco, New York, stopped Her- man Silverberg, Phliadelphia, (5). Los Angeles — Frankie Camp- bell, kaocked out Harry Dillon, Canada, (1). Eddie Burabrook, Baliimore, won on foul from Henry Goldberg, New York, (5). Cleveland — Temmy Freeman, Erie, Pa. sicpped Farmer Joe Cooper, Terze Haute, Ind., (1). New Haven, Conn.—Luis (Kid) Kaplan, Meridan, Conn. out- pointed Emory Cabana, Philadel- phia, (10). St. Petersburg, Fla. — Antonio Diaz, Cuba, knocked out Frankic A. Marr, Chicago, (3). Hudson, Wis.—Eddie Mason, St. Paul, outpointed Urban Liberty, Somerset, Wis., (6). Youngstown, O.—Frankle Wine, Billings, Mont., outpointed Young Scarney, Youngstown, (10). Tony Bombardo, ¥Ycungstown, outpoint- ae Young Dempsey? Montana, Strangler Lewis Defeats Stecher Sonnenberg Challenger Takes Last Two Falls in Bout With Headlock | | | Kansas City, Nov. 20.—(P)—Ed | c’Strangler”) Lewis retained his pre- | eminence as the outstanding con- tender for Gus Sonnen! heavy- weight wrestling crown y_as the {result of a defeat of Joe Stecher, | Dodge, Neb., last night. Lewis won the last two of .three falls, using his favorite headlock. Stecher employed a body scissors to take the first. Both men are former #g stadiums. At least, that will be the case if \the recent Stanford-Southern Cali- ‘fornia football game is any triterion. | Stanford University is up with the times, and between 150 and 200 air- planes were accommodated on the landing field at Palo Alto, two blocks Hanley to Have Birthday Party Out, as the Wildcats May | Present Coach Gift | Evanston, TL, Nov. 20.—(7)—Bad news for Notre Dame: Coach Dick Hanley of Northwestern has his , bigthday this week. | Each year the Wildcats have given their coach a football victory for a |birthday present. They vow Saturday will be no exception even though they tackle the championship bound Ramblers, TF | Sport Slants o —_—_ Five years ago, at the close of 1924, , the University of California won the ‘football championship of the Pacific ; Coast Conference for the fifth suc- ‘cessive time. A year later Andy Smith, the head coach, died and his , Youthful successor, Clarence (Nibs) | Price began rebuilding the machine {that bogged down somewhat in the ‘last season of Smith's regime. Meanwhile the stars of Southern California and Stanford, for a time {of Washington, were in the ascendent. | Price faced disappointments and ra- pidly improving competition for the crown that California's Golden Bears cannot be kept off the top. pressure, California, for ree par z Sess ss sss ue z t i li eee git i the first time in five ilowa May Play Its Last Big Ten Game HAWKEYES WLLBE NAGURSKI WILL FINISH COLLEGIATE GRID.CAREER SATURDAY VERSATILE BIG NAG OF MINNESOTA SAD AMONG BEST BACKS Takes His Place in Roll of Honor Along With Martineau and Joesting SEVEN OTHERS GRADUATE Doc Spears’ Eleven Will Attempt to Wind Up Season With "Win Saturday Minneapolis, Nov. 20.—One of the greatest football players in all Min- complete his three years of competi- tion Saturday when Minnesoeta meets ‘Wisconsin in the closing game of the 1929 season. such as Earl Martineau and Herb/ Joesting, Nagurski never played on a Western conference team, but, again like them, he played on one or more teams said by sports | experts to be the equal of any in the | country. Dr. Spears’ 1928 team was | one of these. { called upon to perform. It would be! hard to surpass his defensive work, | and as a ball carrier he combines a | one weighing 203 pounds. The Big Nag ‘who was asked if he could swim. nesota history, Bronko Nagurski, will Like other great Minnesota backs, championship Nagurski is superior wherever he ts, terrific drive with a speed unusual for does not kick, and that is the only thing he doesn’t do. Like‘the man| Bronko can reply “I don't know; I never tried.” { Along with Nagurski Minnesota will lose Kakela, a guard, Bob Tanner, a veteran end, Pulkrabek, who is com- pleting his third year at guard, and Harold Barnhart. George Lagenberg, tackle, and Bert Oja, center, have Played only two years of conference | football and will be eligible next year if they are in school, although their return is uncertain. Lloyd Johnson, a | center, also will graduate. i ‘With these veterans gone, Minne- sota will face a stiffer schedule next year than the one which tore to pieces this year’s team. There will be six conference contests instead of five. Minnesota will face Wisconsin Sat- urday in a determined effort to end the season above the .500 rating. With two wins and two losses at present, the team will fall below the halfway mark unless Wisconsin is defeated. ‘The difficulty comes in the fact that Wisconsin will have had a two-weeks layoff, just as Iowa did Nov. 9 before meeting Minnesota. Dr. Spears will give his players a chance to recover during the early part of the week, be- fore he speeds them up for the sea- son's final battle. Farris Is Backed | For All-American | Chapel Hill, N. C., Nov. 20.—Admir- ers of the University of North Caro- lina’s big Blue and White eleven be- lieve they have an outstanding candi- date for All-America honors in Ray Farris, famous triple-threat guerd and captain of the Tarheel aggrega- tion. Farris is six feet tall, weighs 185 pounds and on certain plays is pulled out of the forward wall to run with the ball, kick or pass. The Tarheel leader was developed in college after his high school coach told him he never would inake the grade, Hi} FH 38 4 { ii z k i : il i This and ‘adepe has year I I 5 3 Mandan Youth Will Receive Box- WILL TRAVEL TO DULUTH Veteran Manager Has Brought Against Michigan Saturday JOIN JACK HURLEY'S ‘Parisian Police Object | to Noise’ ing Training From Colo- nel and Petrolle Out Petrolle, LeRoy, Mur- phy, and Retzlaff Boomer Brooker, North Dakota featherweight champion, soon will Join the stables of Colonel Jack Hurley at the Sliver Spray gym- | nastum, Duluth, Minn. j The clever young Mandan boxer yesterday announced his plans to | go to Duluth in about two weeks. | Hurley, who became noted in the | boxing world as the manager of Billy Petrolle, the Fargo Express, | Spud Murp Russie LeRoy, Charley Retzlaff, and a number of others, has been after Brooker’s services for several months, it is understood. Brooker has been developed by Leslie McDonald, Mandan veteran of the squared circle. The Morton county youth has reached what is | believed to be the limit of his pro- ficiency against competition avail- able in this “neck of the woods” and is cager to learn more. Mc- Donald is happy that Brooker has the offer from Hurley and is confident that the seasoned man- ager and Billy Petrolle will be able | to develop the youth into a first | class performer. i “Brooker has everything in a physical way,” McDonald said yes- terday, “and, as it appears ‘to mc, all he needs is more experience, more and stiffer competition, and advanced teaching in the game to be a topnotcher. I expect Boomer, . who is only 21 now, will develop into a junior lightweight or light- weight soon.” Brooker will fight Matt Hum- mel, Bismarck, in a six-round match on the Jack McCann- Ralph Alexander card here Thanksgiving eve before leaving for Duluth, Mutuel Wagering | Machine Big Help Agua Caliente, Mexico, Nov. 20— A machine which prints the ticket of | the horse selected, delivers the ticket | to the purchaser, makes a record ot | the same and registers the transac- | tion on an electrically operated total- | izer is to be used in handling mutuel | wagering on the horses at Agua! Caliente in the race meeting which | opens Dec. 28 for a run of 81 or more 8. Forty of these ticket-vending ma- chines are installed at convenient | places in the grandstand, clubhotise and elsewhere at the track, with the totalizer mounted at an advantageous | position in the grandstand. Every sale | on each machine is recorded on the | totalizer so that bettors always are | permitted to sec the amount wagered | on any horse in any race. | Exhaustive tests under actual rac- | ing conditions have proved the ma- chine's reliability in handling mutuel | wagering to the satisfaction of the | Agua Caliente management. FANS FOLLOW TEAM Florida takes its football seriously. | When Florida met Georgia. Tech in| Atlanta it was accompanied by 1,500) students, and 5,500 other fans includ ing Gov. Doyle §. Carlton and ten! state officials. A hofiday was de-j| clared at the university. | When he makes cigars e+ he oplts on the endef [BROOKER ANNOUNCES PLANS TO (McCann Works Out STABLES|With Tony Brown Paris, Nov. 20.—Silence 15 fondly imagined by the police as possible at the Longchamps race track where thousands cheer their favorites and the sound of automobile motors often resembles # battle din. The Longchamps track authorities planned to install loudspeakers on the course to announce results, They asked police permission and were re- fused. They were told the Bois de Boulogne, where the track is located, is a park and people might be dis- | turbed by the noise. Trojans Practice Under Floodlight Berkeley, Calif. Nov. 20.—Kight | towers supporting lights, designed and | |installed by Paul Wucker, Associated | collegiate rowing circle by scheduling | Students’ mechanician, furnish light | for late practice sessions of the foot- | ball squad of the University of Cal- | the squad is coached by a student. ifornia, Four of the structures are anchored permanently near the side lines of the practice field and are fed by a line circling the field, while the wheels and may be moved like whecl- barrows. Fifteen-inch flood lamps containing 1000-watt globes are mounted on the eight towers. iNorth Dakota Heavyweight Champion Puts Bismarcker Down for Count of Two Jack McCann, the Manassa Mauler of the Northwest who meets Ralph Alexander, heavyweight champion of Iowa, in a 10-round bout here Thanksgiving eve, last night had a strenuous public workout with Tony Brown. | McCann floored Brown for the | count of two in the first canto but the Bismarck battler gave him plenty of trouble during the next two rounds, McCann knocked Brown out in the sixth round of a match for the North Dakota heavyweight championship | recently. The two heavies will work out again at the Rex theater before the public | tonight. It is not known just when the Waterloo, Ia., opponent of Mc- Cann on the Thanksgiving card will | arrive in the city, managers of the | program announce? } HAS ROWING TEAM Oregon hopes to enter the inter- ines with the California and Wash- ington freshmen crews. At present ONLY SLIGHT DIFFERENCE A variation of only 10 seconds time | other four are towers mounted on two | {rom the regular 15 minutes were no- ;ticed when the forty-plays-to-the- period method of football was tried in the game between Boston univer- sity and Worcester Tech. DOBBS HATS , The Dobbs Driffield, the selection for December, comes at the opportune time when men feel the holiday dress- up urge. The Driffield'reflects the per- sonality of the wearer in the swing of the brim or in the arrangement of the crown. The pleasant texture is the result of theCavanagh Process of manufacture BERGESON’S Bismarck, North Dakota On Broadway Opposite Postoffice IF WE MUST SAY SO —IT’S “SPIT” And they put it on spit- tipped cigars. Smoke CREMO... It’s Safe have you been disgusted with the dingy rolled by careless, dirty lips and fingers and on the ends! What a far cry this is from modern method of manufacture used by Certified Cremo.