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

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1929 ost of Football’s Pre-Season Favorites Far Down in Standing Lists - mNGEST PURDUE [NODAK QUINT TO DO LITTLE — ‘6StrongElevens _[{_Feutba nevus (CHICAGO LOYOLA TAKES 217 |St. Mary's Places Tgven INHISTORY GLOBE-TROTTING THIS YEAR| Out for National | :: meta aa VICTORY FROM RABBIT TEAM. 5 Grid Siars on | rth Dakota Next Mythical Elevens ear, However, they will be kept off | Honors This Week ATR f ler, Schultz for Devery, Parks for Schultz, y pe alot Opponents of North Dakota Next, Ssiyltz, Havers” for Vari “Shntins i ‘ Eniversity ; Touchdowns: L. Nelson, Fly: a , University of tin, ‘Motiog. iB ison, Flynn, Grif. Oregon Aggies i Detroit 7, |Captain Victor Brown and Glenn | the floor until football ends, Nov. 30. RUNSPREDICTIONS cnet | uel exler, fatertown, 5S. is joyd | Jarrett Only Veterans Nelson, Grand Forks and Bili Lowe, | Purdue, Pitt, Irish, Vols, Tulane, | & hinnesota, Northwestern and/ © Wisconsin, Rated Strong, Disapponiting WA’S SCHEDULE IS TOUGH | shicago’s Two Intersectional | Wins Make Record Great | Improvement Chicago, Nov. jen’s most top: ‘on has closed, with Purdue, unde-| ated and untied, the owner of its qirst championship, and most of the -season favorites well down the ct in the final standing Purdue, not rated as championship tuff before the scason opened, de- eated five conference opponents, ichigan, Chicago, Wisco Towa, ‘nd Indiana, in decisive fashion, and ind time to wallop the Kansas Ag- lies, Mississippi and Depauw, to com- te its greatest season. The Boil- akers ran up 187 points to 44 for ts adversaries, and only Michigan of heir conference opponents, was able 0 score upon them. Minois Came Close Illinois was the only eleven to come ‘lose to filling expectations. The gilini landed in second place by de- g Ohio State in its final game urday. Illinois defeated Chicago, in and Ohio State, was beat- by Northwestern, and had a 17 to triumph over Army to partly com- @ensate for the loss of the title it yon two seasons in a row. 4, Minnesota and Northwestern, which “fed for third place, were highly rat- ‘ed in the advance dope, but lack of le reserve power proved the un- of both. Minnesota started “well, defeating Northwestern and In- Giana, but ran into its annual snags, and Michigan, and took a pair of beatings before squeezing out a {phe point victory over Wisconsin Sat- arday. The Gophers were triumph- it in their only intersectional test, defeating Vanderbilt. 15 to 6. Northwestern started by whipping Wisconsin, then was beaten by Min- aesota. Hope at Evanston again arose when Illinois was defeated for the first time since 1912, and Ohio State was soundly trounced. But In- diana came along and caught the} Wildcats flatfooted, winning 19 to/ 14, and Notre Dame's great squad | tompleted the destruction by a 26 to f victory Saturday. lowa Schedule Toughest owa battled through probably the difficult schedule of any con- ference team. ‘The Hawkeyes took six Big ‘Ten opponents, five in a row, and pounded out a record of two victories, two ties and two defeats. Wisconsin and Minnesota were con- by the Hawkeyes, but Ohio State, the puzzle team of the Big Ten, sneaked over a 7 to 6 victory. Mlinois was tied at 7-7, and Saturday, with Iowa fighting for a victory in what might become its final Big Ten game, Michigan held the Hawkeyes to @ scoreless tie. Ohio State defeated Iowa and Returning Ey | 16 GAMES ARE SCHEDULED) Nomads of the North Last Year | Made 10,000-Mile Trip Through West Grand Forks, N. D., Noy. 25.—There will be little globe trotting done by this year's edition of the University of | North Dakota basketball team. A | survey of the university's sched- | ule discloses 16 games, only 7 of which } are away from Grand Forks. This 1s | ‘lin contrast to last year's hazardous | card which called for 29 contest of which were on foreign floors. complete schedule follows: | Dec. and 6—Concordia, here. | Dec, 15—Min:1esota at Minneapolis. Dec. 16—Carleton college at North- field. | Dec. 31 and Jan, 1—University of | Montana, here. | Jan, 10—University of South Da- , kota, here. i Jan, 16—Morningside at Sioux City. dan, 17—South Dakota at Vermil- fon. | Jan, 20—South Dakota State at | Brookings. Jan, 25—Sout’: Dakota State, here. Feb. 7—Morningside, here. Feb. 14 and 15—North Dakota A. C. | at Fargo. Feb, 21 and 22—North Dakota A. C. | here, | Prospects for a winning team are | not bright this year at the university. Only two of the nine “Nomads of the | North,” who made the 10,000 mile trip to the Pacific coast last season ar available. They are Captain Vict Brown, Valley City, and Glenn Jar- rett, Grand Forks, Brown will be playing his third year at forward and Jarrett his second season at the same position. Seven icttermen were graduated last spring and consequently there is | little reserve material on hand. Roy Hanson, Bowman, a substitute from last year, who did not earn a letter, is a strong possibility for center. He | will have competition from Fred Fel- | ber, Fairmont, Minn.; Harold Stor- cim, Aberdeen, 8. D.; and Ray Gil son, Eau Claire, Wis. This trio per- The | Jevrus, and formed on the freshmen team last | Eau Claire, Wis., are four sophomore | guards who wi"! have to furnish the } varsity with a defensive pair, Paul, Westdal, Willi:ton; Hugh Tarbell, ; New Rockford; Charles McLaughlin, | Grand Forks; Charles Webster, Bu- | Earl Fitzgerald, Grand | Forks, are players with little experi- ; ence who are being worked into the | Letich. Marsters Still At Scoring Helm’ Gene McEver, Tennessee, Will Be Held Idle Until Thanks- giving Day (By the Associated Press) His cl it rival, Gene McEver of Tennessee, held idle until Thanks- giving day, Al Marsters remains at the top of the heap in the race for | national football individual scoring | honors. Hi Although the Dartmouth star has not played for three weeks and will again this year, the 108 ored in his first six games remain a goal for others to shoot at. ‘The sectional leaders: Fast—Marsters, Dartmouth, qb, 6 gam 6 touchdowns, 12 points after touchdown; To‘al 108. South—McEver, Tennessee, hb, 7 games, 16 touchdowns, 1 point after touchdown; total 97. Pacific—Schwartz, Wash. State. fb, 9 games, 14 touchdowns; Total 84. Southwest—Leland, Texas Chris- tian. hb, 9 games, 13 touchdowns; to- tal 78. Me ouri Valley—King, Drake, qb. 9 games, 9 touchdowns, 5 points after vouchaown ; total 59, Rocky Mt.—Clark, Colorado college, qb, 6 games, 7 touchdowns, 7 points after touchdown, 2 field goals; to- tal 55. Big Ten—Bergherm. Northwester fb, 8 games, 8 touchdowns, 5 poni after touchdown; total 5 Big Ten—Pharmer, Minnesota, hb, 6 games, 6 touchdowns, 3 points after touchdown, 8 field goals; total 53. Big Six—Warren, Oklahoma, hb, 7 games, 4 touchdowns; total 24. Big Six—Cox, Kansas, hb, 7 games, 4 touchdowns; total 24. Texans and St. Mary's Unbeaten By ALAN J. GOULD New York, Nov. 25.—(4)—The col- lege gridiron campaign faces its; double-barreled climax this week, on Thanksgiving day and Saturday, with every prospect of a sensational finish to the championship races still unde- cided. The fate of six of the seven major title contenders is involved. Purdue, champion of the Big Ten, has double- riveted its place in the top group by finishing the season with a clean and impressive slate of eight victories but Pittsburgh in the east, Notre Dame in the mid-west, Tennessee and Tu- lane in the south, Texas Christian in the southwest, and St. Mary's on the Pacific coast, all stake their title as- pirations in important battles this week. None of these teams has tasted de- feat or tie, except St. Mary's which was held to a scoreless deadlock by California. but nevertheless remains as the outstanding team on the Pa- ficic coast so far as the records concerned, since Stanford's 21-6 de- feat of California scrambled the big conference race in the far west. On Thanksgiving day. Pittsburgh will seek to clinch its claim to the eastern championship as well as the bid for national honors by conquering Penn State. In the south, Tennessee will tackle Kentucky at Lexington and Tulane will oppose Louisiana State to determine perhaps the final southern conference rating. Nebraska, by defeating Iowa State in another holiday tilt, can clinch the Big Six crown once more. Notre Dame, on Saturday, will bat- tle the Army at the Yankee stadium in the most colorful fray of the week, an eastern climax game that over- shadows even such attractive contests as the Cornell-Penn and Navy-Dart- mouth contests, both at Franklin field, Philadelphia. Notre Dame will run into a deter- mined Army eleven, featuring the last season charge of the all-American halfback, Red Cagle. Approximately 80,000 spectators are expected to see Captain Cagle match his individual Passing and running powers against the great Notre Dame cast. —— Smoke Cremo—it’s certified sanitary. Michigan, but was held to a scoreless draw by Indiana, The Buckeyes lost to Northwestern, and finished their season Saturday by taking a 27 to 0 beating from Illinois. Wisconsin was the biggest disap- pointment of the campaign, with Michigan a close second. Wisconsin was doped to be right up among the leaders all the way, but, after de- feating Colgate, was able to beat only Chicago. The Badgers lost to Iowa, Purdue and Minnesota, as well as taking a beating from Notre Dame. Wolverines Came Back Michigan with Herry Kipke in his first season as head coach, was de- feated by Purdue, Ohio State and Illinois, but came back in the final games to down Harvard and Minne- sota and tie Iowa. ‘Chicago's showing was an immense improvement over its 1928 perform- ances. Indiana, the favorite, was ‘efeated in Chicago's first confer- etice game, and Princeton and the ‘University of Washington, were de- ely beaten. Indiana was not expected to go any- How often have places wi “You betcha | SPIT on cigars!” Don’t run the risk of the spit-tipped cigars he makes. you been disgusted with the filthy, germ-breeding here some cigars are madc...dark, otully factories... warm, dingy shops and windows... where cigars are rolled by careless, dirty lips and fingers and where the ends of the cigars Certified For Your Protection by Alfred W. McCann, D.Litt, A.B., LL.D, Noted pare food expert, long fective im ernsedes for pare are spit on! What a far cry this is from the modern method of manufacture used by Certified Cremo. Price alone docsn't make a cigar safe for your mouth. At an price there can be no tastier cigar than Certified ° and, in addition, it’s clean. 1 lowa State Teachers freshmen 14, nell College freshmen 6, Cole eshmen 0. Iowa State Te hers 19, Parsons 6, Nebrask 6 3 Aggies 6. 0. Duquesne John Carr indiana State \ Poly 6, Wabash 8, Depauw 7. Joyola 21, South D: Frankford — Yello: neapolis Red Dame B 0, Kk Ke 0. Milliken 3 Illinios We Kk Transylvania 33, Eastern Teach- ers College 0. Army 19, Ohio Wesleyan 6. jocherter 13, Hobart 0. Mass, Aggies 0, Tufts 0. Boxton College'33, Boston Univer- sity 0, Lowell Textile Brown, 14, New Holy Cross 22, 8 Bers 7. Fordham 14, Bucknell 0. Clemson it "Temple 16, Dra! Lehigh 13, Ja Juniata, Ht 2 ara U1 rsity 32, DePaul 25. Duke 20, Wakeforest 0. Long Isiand 13, Cooper Union 12, . , West Virginia Wesley - aun 6, Akron 13, Baldwin-Wallace 0. St. Thomas (Scranton) 12, St. Johns, New York, 7 sourit Swartmore 5 9, Southern Methodist Unive: Rice Ins’ 0, Western nis 0, Harvard 7% Birmingham South- n 6. eee Institute 20, State Nor- . al 0. Oglethorpe 26, Mercer 0. Texas Christian University 34, Baylor 7. Villanova © 24, State 6. Touisville 6, Florida 20, Oklahoma’ Centenary (19, Tech 0. North Carolina prgetown 0. South Carolina 7. Oklahoma Aggies 7. Louisiana Poly a Wrer Brigham mee University 40, ersity 13, Colorado eRe ‘ Mount Saint Marys 14, Washing- ton College 0, Stanford 21, California 6. Washington State 27, Gonzaga 0. Mount Union 34, Hiram 0, Oregon 7, Hawaii 0. University of Southern California i Saturday Look Strong Against State ONLY 6,000 SAW CONTEST Running and Punting of Weert Englemann, South Da- kota, Is Feature Chicago, Nov. 25.—(4)—Loyola uni- versity crashed through South Dakota State for a 21 to 7 victory Saturday before 6,000 at Loyola stadium. Loyola scored in each of the last three periods. The Jackrabbits pushed over their lone score in the final quarter, A 20-yard run by Tommy Flynn, Loyola fullback, and a first down by Molloy and Burke placed the ball on the Dakotan’s one-yard line at the start of the second period. Flynn went over for the touchdown and added the extra point with a plunge | through center. ° ! Loyola again scored in the third period with Marty Griffen, halfback, doing brilliant work. Griffen made ‘the touchdown, and added the extra point with a dropkick. Both teams scored in the last) period, Molloy for the Ramblers and L, Nelson for South Dakota. Engel- | mann’s running and punting featured the offense of the visitors while Flynn jand Griffen were Loyola luminaries. | is { \ The lineups: Loyola— S.D. State— Herting Hoberg Hadler Lowe Adler Jenison Tollefson Devery Henry Englemaun Nelson | Notre Dame; uy tre Dame; he: \ Paul; ficld judge, | elmer le Lutgenkirchen It Poppelreifer 7 Waesco Faut Moran ‘ei! ni Griffin Durkin . Shaughnes: inesman, Ker Hogan, Notre Di Score by periods Loyola . bs: I sh | kirchen, Nola for Faul, elly for! Collins, Molloy for Griffin, Burke for Durkin, Flynn for Smith, ‘Collins for Connelly, Griffin for Molloy, Smith for Flynn, Howland for Burke, Huppert for Gol South Dakot Wheeler for Herting, K , St. Thomas and St. Olaf Hon- ored by Selection of Two Apiece on All-State Large Crowd for iving Ev Thanksgiving Eve Card Is Predicted| Condition of Roads Will Decide) u0%¢ the distinction of placing the Size of Throng for Heavy. | freatest, number ee Sirst weight Beut ' second with two each and Augsburg tod Gustavus placed one each on the ‘ —— , honorary aggregation. With the arrival of Ralph Alex- | These 11, the pick of the state col- ander, Waterloo, Ia., heavyweight lege capference, were weeded out of in Bismarck scheduled for | 72 candidates by coaches of the con- i ference. All the first team members Ave Frawley, Gustavus; Antil, St. Thomas, and Saumers, St. Olaf, end their grid careers this season. Miller, St. Mary's, one of the leac- ‘ing ball carriers of the country, was Placed at ut half with Saumers, his mate. Almli, St. Olaf, was given the call | over Johnny Kolesar for quarterback, ‘for, although there was little to choose ‘between the two insofar as ability is concerned, Kolesar was hampered eid tary ae bevat by injuries and ne y in games. He w — on the team. dee lerson, Augsburg, was put at fullback. Four St. Mary's men were picked for line posts, Lipinski, left end; Lynch, center; Stitch, right guard; and Prelesnik, right tackle. Steinbach, St. Thomas was placed at the other tackle position, and An- til put at right end. Frawley was Picked over Jacobson, MacAlester, for left guard. The second team consists of: Engh, Concordia, left end; Truesdell, Ham- line, left tackle; Jacobson, MacAles- ter, left guard; Wicklund, Gastavus, center; Grimsrud, » Tight* guard; good, St. Mary's right tackle; Hogan, St. Thomas, right end; Kolc- Thomas, left half; Witty, Gusta- ‘a ag half, and Larson, Hamline, “Foots” nt, Alabama tackie, Sington, Alabama guard has the largest feet in Southern con. and tackle, ference football, wearing a size 13': Placing a special or- Don’t risk your battery and engine! 32-de gree days demand this double-range oil— change to Mobiloil - Arctic today! When the oil lies cold-stiffened in your crankcase, it can’t get into circulation quickly. Your battery must give its utmost to turn your engine over. Your battery wasn’t built to do stunts. Your engine wasn't built to run without prompt oil distribution. The use of incorrect oil in winter sacrifices months of useful battery and engine life. Just changing to a winter oil is not enough. 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