The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 2, 1929, Page 8

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PED JARRETT MAKES SPECTACULAR JAUNT POR SINGLE COUNTER orth Dakotans Keep Ball in Chicago Territory Through Most of the Game | LOSERS MAKE ONE THREAT All- Slope COACHES’ ALL-SOUTH First Jonson, Flasher Phillips, Mott . Ebert, Mott .... Thomas, Flasher Schatz, Regent i Bleick, Elgin Veolz, Mott Butnisky, C Neumann, New Leipzig . Rogers, Regent Biglor, Mott ... Honorable mention—C. Anderson, halfback. Brought Successful Close to No- mad Season; Loyola's First Loss at Home Loyola Field, Chicago, Dec. 2—| -In a game played with the ther- nometer hovering around zero, North Dakota, champions of the North Cen- ral conference, proved too much for Loyola Saturday, and earned a 7 to victory over the Chicagoans. ‘The Dakotans outplayed the Loy- bla team and the entire battle was ged almost exclusively in Loyola ritory. Loyola only threatened on ne occasion, late in the third quar- er, when they worked the ball down © the Dakota {i' ard line, only to elinquish the oval on downs. Red Jarrett, Richmond and Burma blayed sensational ball for the Da- kotans and repeatedly brought the srowd to their feet by ripping off sational gains. Jarrett especially s the dcciding factor in the Dako- ia success, time after time pounding tackle, and outrunning the Loy- ends for sizeable gains. In the d quarter, after working the ball his own 40 yard line to Loyola's yard stripe, Jarrett raced far ound his left end, and treaded First Jones, Beach .. Doering, Belfield Messer, Dickinson . Apt, Belfield ... Lee, Dickinson .. Pletau, Beach ..... Smith, Dickinson .. Gumper, Belfield .. Russell, Dickinson . Davis, Beach . Neuens, Belfield . Charles E. Hood, Belfield; Irvin C. Not voting—Coach at Dickinson, ec |RAMBLERS, CARNEGIE RECORD, . ELI’S COMEBACK HIGHLIGHTS Yale and Notre Dame Gave Sea- \Killdeer Beats North Dakota started off immedi- after the first kickoff, and on separate occasions in the first threatened the Loyola goal. son’s Football Fans Best in Sheer Drama ALBIE BOOTH CUT CAPERS | Purdue’s Mighty Boilermakers, Panthers, Tulane, Utah Complete Big Five By ALAN GOULD j New York, Dec. 2—(#)—The foot- ball frenzy is over for 1929 except for a few remaining flourishes in the south and far west, but the picture / of a campaign of individual achievements $s still vivid and the argument over ip claims yet is far from settled. ‘The season that was brought to an ls 3 ! i | i g ie i i ! | | i E i é i | hs EE L f a i i Richmond Burma i a i = 8 Ree ee Te ee _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _ MONDAY, DECEMBER 2 1929 odaks Outplay Loyola ELDER’S 100- YARD DASH BRINGS IRISH 7 TO WIN OVER ARMY LEO MAY TOSSES BASKET WITH Elevens MISSOURI SLOPE CONFERENCE TEAMS Freiz, Elgin Hanson, Flasher New Leipzig, end; Yonaka, Mott, ‘Voting—Coaches V. J. Cassidy, Carson; M. J. Tobias, New Leipzig; Russa Osborne, Mott; Erling Logeland, Regent. Not voting—Coaches at Flasher, Elgin. COACHES’ ALL-NORTH MISSOURI SLOPE CONFERENCE TEAMS Second Sanford, Belfield ‘Lawhead, Beach .-R. Foster, Beach .-Malone, Dickinson Volt, Dickinson Normal High School ‘Voting—Coaches H. J. Wienbergen, Dickinson Normal High School; Joos, Beach. Golden V |Coach Claude Miller Has Five Men Back From the State Championship Machine basketball i [ BRERRERE SEF o cretd &z & i é | i ore hy periods P 9 0 0 HO ot e [ a il bi Scoring: North Dakota—T: 4 farr tee entre point, ‘Rishon’ "by bstitutes: itsenk'! faith, Nolan dot aut, Conaelly Ce for Conne! r fol Or Pee a ae i i i 4 : ; E i | i : i A ay f i i! i ff i | i | g at tf H i i g2iE gig E re ~ ii Fit gyereeete & wee s i E i a a af et ihe H i ¥} TreEeee fa | i i il i i i Valley City, N. D., Dec.|2—Valley | City high school’s Hiliners, i fi i 308 Eleven Throughout and Grab 7 to 0 ——y CADETS HAVE SLIGHT ‘MARGIN IN PLAY BUT " ROCKMEN GET BREAK Red Cagle, West Point’s Great Halfback, Winds Up East- \ ern Career in Glory NO PASSES ARE COMPLETED the Century Man to Make a Touchdown Was Thrilling By BRIAN BELL fighting football team stopped Notre Dame's stalwarts in all but 11 sec- onds of their annual football game Saturday but in that 11 seconds the \undefeated and untied team from South Bend won the game.” score wes 7 to 0, and 83,000, a rec- was desperately fouhgt in bitterly cold weather. Jack Elder, one of the fatest men in a footbal uniform, won the game for the Ramblers early in the sec- touchdown of the game. His time for the century with a football under his arm could not have been much more than that in which he is clocked when unencumbered with football paraphernalia and wears scantier of the field. goal line marker, Elder tucked H i eng team, suffering from phie- his South Bend home, and Players were determined to beat | Army today “for Rock.” The situation had changed with dramatic suddenness. Just before made the Notre Dame touch- counter seemed abou! F E i ry at ae 3 z nD Au il i cit: i ff i § s g ? i i i j : [ : i zs fl if & £ 8 t : z : : Ay a Hf Eze : i i ! ag g i é 5 ' : : aff ; E eF if uf i é g a g ity Felt ek 3 3 : ipa al : “setae tf ‘| i i i 4 i a g i a be 4 ti i g g 5 e ‘ i i ett HE | ! [ : i | | i i [ : ait i Ss é E r i i i f i ™ Hl i 3 : li i i i z i 5 f j if i Gy? Eleven Seconds That It Took for |< New York, Dec. 2—(P)—Army’s| (oii; ord eastern crowd saw the battle that | the length of the field for the only} friiri sity Hid al Ey | reading ball carriers were rushed in in a body early in the second period. The Army has one more game to play, against Stanford at Palo Alto,; Calif., Dec. 28. ! Notre Dame started its second backfield, composed of Gebert, O'Con- ner, Schwartz and Savolld, behind the first string line. Colerick was at left end in place of Collins. Army— Not! Carlmark Cs Dame— jek inger ier “ umber Price Messinger Cary | Hutchinson Cagle (c; |. Murrel i Score by A M if r (sub for 0 touchdown—Cad kick from p! Substitutions: Pame—Cardeo for % jor, Brill foi i be ler for hwarts, Mullins for envoigl, It Donoghue, fo" Leahy. tinto @ battle when he scheduled the! : Bren fotdi ror Malling, coterie [Grand Recreations of the Fargo Com- | Leading Lightweights, Also for Collins, Culver for ‘Twomey,|mercial League for the opening en- O'Connor for Brill. t of the season Saturday, a Fight This Week Officials: Referee, 3 ard Throp, De La Salle; umpire, Bchommer, Chicago: Hnesman, Kearns, De- field judge, A. W. Palmer, Diegel and Hagen | Victor Favorites Of Professionals Pro Tournament Sched- uled This Week By PAUL B. ZIMMERMAN Los Angeles, Dec. 2.—()—Sixty- seven wanderers of the nation’s faire | ways today will cast their hopes into the whirlpool of 36-hole medal play. troubled by the knowledge that only privilege of entering match competi- tion tomorrow for the national pro- fessional golf championship. final round will be played Saturday. To stroke the course in a par 71 will not be sufficient, if pre-tourna- ment indications mean . Leo Diegel, defending champion, with the self-confidence of many victories in- | stilled in him, stands out in the group of those classed as favorites. from whom the an skiquets Give MoreComfort They are made of Pennsylvania & § i ef |Worth Dakota State Noses Out! by 25 to 24. Count and CENTER IS LEADING SCORERS — Friday, Saturday Blakely, Newgard, mcPherson, | JACKIE Fields to Saalwaechter got his North Dakota Agricultural college basketabli team { gagemen' battle which almost proved too tough for the Bison to handl the game remained, Leo May heaved | one from just inside the center of the court which ey on, the end rim for a fraction of a second and) weight title which Ficlds holds then tumbled in for what proved to} be the winning counter. /not be at stake, as the bout is at score was 25 to 24. 67 Golfers Entered in National en Johnson. & - i Thomaseon, 32 will come out of the test with the | it Fairhead, Miller gard, Blake Referee, Dick Kimball. Hazen Coach Selects Victory | | Gets Attention as 26 SECONDS LEFT; BISON WIN Court Drive Nears selected by Father Bauer are John Schwartz, Herbert Solan, Ervin Grand Recreation Stars Chicago, Dec, 2—(#)—With the season the basketball Miller and Hermes Start in Losing Lineup Meet Billy Light In 10-Round Bout Tommy Grogan and Joe Glick, Fargo, N. D., Dec. 2.—Leonard i grow: poner ; Humerous rumors. One says Iowa will New York, Dec. 2—(#—Jackie|not be forgiven and taken back into Fields’ 10-round bout with Billy/the group as an athletic opponent, Light of St. Paul at Chicago tonight | because athletic directors of three is the high spot in this week's na- ities, A. A. Stagg of Chicago. ‘schedule. The Fielding H. Yost of Michigan, and Huff of Mlinois, are opposed 149 | tO readmitting Iowa. But no reasons | have been given why Yost, Huff and Stagg, should have aligned them- selves against Towa. arena, Bob Olin, New York, vs. Joe) Another report, also Jacking sub- Banovi, Binghamton, N. ¥., Tight | Stantiation, says Iowa will be re- eavyweights, and Andy Divodi, New | turned to good standing because sev- eral other schools are equally guilty In fact, when just 26 seconds ot} | ; tional boxing The final 3 done i 1 ry 4. Philadelphia, Benny Bass, Philadel 2 | phia, vs. Joe Martinez, Spain, junior “| lightweights; Joe Marciente, New York. vs. Phil Swick, Cleveland, and Jackie Pilkington, New York, vs. Cal- [eussesen— Fl one rT) ie 0 0: Gill, flyweights, six rounds. Tuesday—At St. Louis, Eddie Montreal Techn’ Free throws miseed — ies, Goodwin 3, Ji 4, McPherson 2, 3 io, Nolzer; umpire, C. Ten Basketball Men | "'rricay—at san Francisco, — Grogan. Omaha, vs. Joe Glick, Brook- 2.—Father | lyn, lightweights, 10 rounds. At To- Atherton, Indianapolis, jweights, 10 rounds. times during y Lou Gehrig turned the trick six | “The Purity of Certified Milk applied to CREMO” r o Here's @ i with cantideeees ich you sm imported cigars will appreciate: You will a a the I th F i F

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