The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 2, 1930, Page 8

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PASSING ATTAG ATTACK OF WESTERNERS HURTS EAST'S PRIDE OFTEN Southern California Piles Up Lead of 26 to 0 in Bitter First Half TOBY UANSA IS STOPPED Invaders Take Ball Into Scoring Territory Several Times i but Fail BY PAUL B. ZIMMERMAN Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 2.—(/P)—Bur- dened with a decisive 47 to 14 trounc- ing handed them as a New Year's day ting by the mighty Trojans of the University of Southern California, Pittsburgh's grid squad today pre- pared to return to its native heath, victim of the most decisive defeat; ever meted out in the 14 years of tournament of roses competition. Passing Attack Great ‘The Golden Pitt Panthers, who dug their cleats into the turf of the his- toric battle ground yesterday intent on reversing a 7 to 6 beating admin- -istered in 1928 by Stanford, left the greensward bowed in their first de- feat of the season because they could not solve the puzzling Southern Cali-' fornia passing attack. Beginnine with the intial touch- @own, which came only a few mo- ments after 70,000 persons had filled! the stadium, the men of Troy found scoring possible in four of their seven; taliles because of unerring aerial’ work. A fifth counter was indirectly the result of a long pass and the oth- ers were the result of plunging, drit- ine football. ‘The Panthers, with a quartet of all-/ Americans in the lineup, saw the glory of individual performance stolen from them by a group of U. S. C. gridsters who shattered the famed Pitt defense. \ Toby Uansa, one of these all-Amer- ‘ican selections, opened the conflict with a dazzling 68-yard end run on the first play following the opening kickoff, but fleet Russell Saunders, U. 8. C. safety man, cut him down from behind, 18 yards short of the when the Panthers had failed to crack the Trojan line for the Necessary yardage, the touchdown parade for the Pacific coast repre- sentatives started. Sauners’ pass to Harry Edelson caught the Pitt sec- ondary defense: flat-footed and the CollegesResolve | To Clean Sports; Association Decides That Next Carnegie Report Will Have Another Subject New York, Jan. 2—(7)—The Na- ional Collegiate Atheltic association has made a New Year's resolution * thet the next bulletin on college ath- Jetics issued by the Carnegie Founda .tion must teli of conditions entirely unlike those described in bulletin 23. At their 24th annual meeting yes-/ terday the delegates admitted the ex- istence of the conditions the Carnegie revort described, and decided to rem- edy them. @ mew president, Charles W. - Kennedy, Princeton, wos authorized mittee to draw up | to appoint a prectical and promising reform pro- gram. The committee will report at the next annual meeting. Meanwhile. ; collese and university presidents and secondary school atuhorities will be urged to start a quiet, earnest effort to clean up their own institutions. { The proposal of President Frank P. { Day, of Union college, that colleges} _ Should ebolish gate receipts and re-; “turn to amateur coaches, was reject- | ed on the grounds that it would be only a return to an older and no bet- _ et system. eo ~ Basketball Scores jorth Daketa U. 35, Montana mm « ! ° i Rocky DUCHENE’S EXTRA PERIOD BASKET GIVES NODAKS 25-24 4 WIN | NORTH CENTRAL STARS GRAB [Marquette Five _13-6 MARGIN IN DENVER TILT) Too Strong for ‘Red Rabbit’ Jarrett, sit? Jarrett, Nodak, and Lawrence Smith, Morn- ingside, Score | WINNERS WELL ORGANIZED Mountain Contingent Scores With Line Attack in Closing Minute Denver, Colo., Jan. 2.—(?)}—An all- star football squad recruited from the North Central conference packed too much team work for Rocky Mountain conference players yesterday, the vis- itors taking home a 13-6 victory. Coach Jack West's players had a lot of fancy football ready for the bene- ; fit game, sponsored by the Denver Elks, and they capitalized on a wealth of deception in two uninterrupted {marches for touchdowns, one in the second period, the other in the third. “Red Rabbit” Jarrett, University of North Dakota halfback, went across for the first score by hooking up on the last lap of a triple pass. Law- rence Smith, Morningside back, scored the other after a series of tackle smashes and reverses. The Rocky Mountain team scored with only a minute left to play. Thorn, Brigham Young halfback, plunged across from the two-yard line, eee @ long line smash- ing march. Mountaineers Are Outplayed ‘The Rocky Mountain team was outplayed in every department of the game. It never functioned as a team until a few minutes before the final gun when a sustained march battered down the left side of the North Cen- tral line, Thorn, Brigham Young university halfback, smashing across for a touchdown from the two-yard mark. The visiting array worked as though they had played together all season. They put up a stubborn de- fensive front that disorganized the Rocky Mountain attack, MacMillan, North Dakota center, McGrath, North Dakota State tackle, and Ebsen, South Dakota university playing prominent roles. The visitors scored their first touchdown in the second period after a 75-yard march down the field, im. mediately after the entrance of “Red Rabbitt” Jarrett, North Dakota half- back into the lineup. Jarret’s first contribution was 2a 20-yard dash around end. The scoring play came on a pass, the first of many worked successfully. Kahl passed to Berg, Rocky | Hansen, Seattle heavyweight, defeated ploits of the backs went for nothing, interference being conspicuously lack- ing. ‘The visitors tackled more sharply | tain yardage was piled up in the sec- ond half. ‘The lineup and summary: North Central— Felber (North Dakota U.) Smith (North Dakota Bere (North Dakota Kingsbury iMorningsld Gridley (North Dakota Morrill (South Dakota U.). rhb Dakota State). ‘Mountain Central ‘Scoring: Lawrence smith, Mornings Kahl, rth Dakota U. (sub for Lonsbrough). ‘Touchdown—Thorne. man, Carberry, Univ. of Io Illinois Will Face Great Butler Five Stretch Murphy Scores Fifteen Points, but Montana State Beats Purdue EIN’S TO GGERY _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAS. Golden I Pitt Panther F er Eleven Buried Under 47-14 Count by Trojans Ernest Barnard Predicts Hotter American Drive League President Looks for Cleveland, Tigers, Senators and Browns to Leap Note—This is be Rd, first of a ser- jes of Associated Presse stories by nationally known sports leaders taking up 1930 prospects based on 1929 results, By ERNEST S. BARNARD (President American ) League} Chicago, Jan. 2.—(#)—Never having applied for membership in the “I told you so” society, it is rather difficult for me to give utterance to an Amer- ican League review for the 1929 sea- son. However, it may be safe to re- call my predictions of last New Year's when I declared the Athletics would give the New York Yankees plenty of trouble and possibly win the pen- nant. Cleveland Standing Better Tt also may be recalled I forecasted better things for Cleveland and De- troit. Cleveland did finish much higher than it did in '28, while De- troit slumped toward the end of the Season and failed to finish as high as I had expected under its new man- agement. On the other hand, neither St. Louis nor Washington was as success- | ful as I had anticipated. Neverthe- less, the American League, as a unit, played to larger attendance than it | ® did in 1928. Naturally, I cannot but express my satisfaction over the result of the world series in which the Athletics won four out of five games from the jes, I was quoted as saying the Ath- vanced by me, was stronger than the National. ‘The series results proved I was cor- rect in my diagnosis of the condi- tions, Hotter Contest Looms It is my sincere belief the Ameri- can League race of 1930 will be more hotly contested right down the line than it was in 1929. Cleveland must manager. phoneme lateral iors ment The Boston Red Sox have made & few changes which should make ephebai arog eergetidewiame er nal Chicago Nationals. Prior to the ser- | ¢¥. letics would win because the Ameri- | M can League, for reasons then ad- | Fi Bison Courtmen| Milwaukee Men Snare 26 to! 17 Victory After Missing Many Opportunities i Milwaukee, Jan. 2.—(P)}—Marquette | university's basketball team re | North Dakota State of Fargo 1 night 26 to 17 in a slow game. ‘The hill toppers missed many op- portunities to score by their ragged play and did not begin to get their range until the second half. They were leading only by two points when the first half ended. The Dakotans’ defense held up well at first but finally crumpled under the Marquette assault. Bison players were held at an effective dis- tance most of the way hy Marquette’s man-to-man defense. The first score came after five minutes of play when Johnson scored on a free throw. Marquette retaliated with two free throws by O’Brien. Each team seemed to be slowed up and could not find the basket. The score see-sawed with the Bison hav- ing the advantage early in the first half, eight to five. Marquette then loosened up and scored five points to take and hold the advantage throughout the re- mainder of the first half. “Lanky” Andrew was high scorer for Marquette with nine points. Marquette’s defense was the bright spot of the game, with Shipley and King starring. Captain Pete Gergen, high-scorer with seven points for the Bison, did stellar work at guard. The summary Marquete (26 FG FT PF ‘Donnell, f et ae 1 2 0 0 2 0 4 1 2 0 0 3 0 0 3 2 0 1 aie see |) o 4 0 1 0 9 2 0 1 0 0 2 lee, 1 9 1 Gergen, & (captain) « eer eae Johnson, & 0 1 4 al Totals. 8 12 Officials: "Referee," Lyle Claeno, Bradley Tech; umpire, Glen Holmes, ‘Wisconsin. Score at half: Marquette 10, North Dakota State 8. Montana Cagers Defeat Vikings ne | Grizzlies Used Second Team First Half and Came Through With a 34 to 28 Win Valley City, N. D., Jan. 3—(@)— MONTANA GRIZLES | two to tie and three to win. Nothing | | GIVEN 4TH SETBACK |, AFTER TORRID FRAY jm Blond Sophomore Continues His! Senssational Court Play in Forward Position MADE A ONE-HANDED Toss! — | Coach Clem Letich Finds New Guarding Combination in Wexler and Webster Grand Forks, N. D., Jun. 2,—Mon- | tana’s Grizzlies kept a wary eye on Vern DuChene Tuesday night for 40 minutes, but in the excitement of an extra period needed to settle the is- sue, they gave him an inch and Vern took a mile, sinking @ hard short shot after a sensational dribble that gave North Dakota a breath taking 25 to 24 basketball victory. DuChene is one of those players you find occasionally who is always strongest in the pinch, a performer who works at all times with cracked ice in his vein. He needed that tem- Perament in the extra period. After both teams had fought their hearts out to a 23-23 draw in the regulation quota of play, they took the floor for another five minutes. DuChene Takes Pass For three minutes there were wild passes and dribbles, close shots, long shots, everything but scores. Then Ray Gillson, the eccentric left hander from Eau Claire, came from nowhere to intercept a long Montana pass in midfloor. Rankin and Lockwood stood between him and the net, how- ever, so he dribbled uncertainly for- ward a-step or two. DuChene, mean- while sneaked away from his guard, darted across Lockwood's path and took @ fast lead from Gillson. He was to the right of the basket and without dimit his speed he} feinted cleverly, ducked to the side, and left a blazing, dribbling trail un- der the board where he sank the win- ning field goal with one hand. That shot was an epic, a thriller that had the customers on the rungs of the armory chairs, pulling at their collars, There was continued and prolonged cheering. It matters little if Kilroy made a free throw shortly thereafter for that |Portland Fi ighter Given Unpopular | Revenge Tonight New Tennis King . Win Over Minoter,,..., was but a point, and Montana needed further materialized, so sturdy was North Dakota's defense. Montana was Grizzlies Crossed Coach Clem Letich, the silent one, crossed the Grizzlies by starting Har- forced to take its fourth straight set- | ° After Being Floored in Fourth Period Portland, Ore., Jan. 2.—(@)—Wesley | Ketchell, Portland ' scored a 10-round decision over Her- man Ratzlaff, Minot, N. D., in the {main event of the New Year's day decision boxing card yesterday. The was not popular as ringsiders figured Ratzlaff was entitled to a draw. Ketchell had Ratzlaff on the floor | in the third round but the North Da- kotan was up without taking a count. | Ratzlaff forced the fighting from the fourth round on. Ketchell weighed 158 and Ratzlaff 155 pounds. ‘The fight was a study in left hand- {ed slugging which kept the crowd on edge throughout. After hitting the canvas in the fourth period, Ratzlaff bounced up to carry the fight to Ketchell during the remainder of the| round. Ketchell back-pedaled the remain- der of the fight, now and then dart- ing in to return the sudden attack. In the fifth round Ketchell twice nailed Ratzlaff with terrific lefts, but Ratzlaff swarmed all over him, more than making up for the local’s ad- vantage. Again in the sixth, Ketchell connected solidly, but from that point | on Ratzlaff had the decided advan- | tage except in the tenth round, which waseven. That round was a slugging match, the fighters standing toe to toe and throwing every punch they knew. The seventh, eighth and ninth rounds went to Ratzlaff by wide mar- gins. He uncorked an attack that Rad Ketchell groggy more than once. Ketchell, under an avalanche of blows, missed often and widely. It was evident the fourth round knock- down decided the judges in favor of Ketchell. Midwest’s Power Proves Too Much Pest Welch Leads Team to 25 Teague record of 11 consecutive vic- to 12 Conquest of Passing Southwesterners Sauk Tex., Jan. 2.—()—“Power” cn teams an presmed by the south- erners yesterday in the annual lassic, Fifteen thousand fans watched a ate eee eaded by the redoubtable “! Welch of Purdue, shatter a south- western all-star line to pieces and ef- = have one of the best pitching staffs) me University of Montana ended its in the country. If they develop more | pasketball invasion of North Dakota of a punch, they are going to prove | and Minnesota with a 34 to 28 victory ch | Seattle Heavyweight mpire, Mahoney, Denver University; lines field’ judge, Bre y In the death of Miller | & few days before the season ended, niet the most efficient managers I ever have known, Pins College Matman Portland, Ore., Jan. 2—()—Charley ho gave Cantonwine @ 21 advantage. tate) in) Univ. of Utah) lontana State) ‘Thorne (Brigham Young U.) Wylie (Montana State) 0 7 6 o—13 — 0 ide for Morrill). Point after Rocky Moun- ahan, Colorado Aggties, | due was back in form last night, but Boilermakers were defeated, 38 to 35, by Montana State. Murphy was high point man with six field goals and three free throws, but the Bobcats un- leashed a swift drive late in the Seine 49 pamne frome Renind for a wie Ory. Ohio State also took a beating, its second in two nights, when Pennsyl- vania scored a 31 to 25 decision at Philadelphia. The victory gave Penn ference opponents, Having beaien in ference opponents, ing In- diana and lost to Michigan. Marquette scored an easy 26 to 17 victory over North Dakota State at night, and Montana university defeated Valley City State Fees % to 28, at Valley City, SOUTHERN HALF BEATEN Atlanta, Jan. 2.—(?)—In a game for charity yesterday the eleven recruit- ed from the northern half of the Southern Conference topped the Car- dinal squad from the south, 21-12, French fruit growers are conducting Fe “eat more fruit” campaign. over Valley City Teachers college last Facing a second string in the first throughout City coming within five points of the lead on several occasions. Murdock and Soroos were the offensive lights of Valley City. Montana made sev- eral Jong shots which kept them in the lead. The lineups: wes City, Gh— RG FT PE EB sdiccraay, ! OF a ee Hit ogra ‘“ o 0 fe - 0 o 0 ip Mechads: #2 Bano 28) ee Hendrickson, + o 0 oF Totaln... 9 10 6 Montana (34)— Lewis, f gh nae ial Chinske, ee tias | Bret 2 1 o W. Rholitts; ee eee Dvorak, ¢ ee are Rule c ges aay | Rol 1 a oO Ranking Hae ear Lock wood, 0 0 1 Kilroy, & Dae ives | ‘Totals. Bio a Referee, Moorhead. | *-Fichts Last Night (By the Associated Press) old Storeim, a long legged Aberdeen | ¢, almost every south- sophomire, at center, and Webster, basis phrcdicep yg egress another six footer, at guard. Both| Near the close of the second period boys played polished _ basketball | the southern team utilized a pass to throughout and gave signs of future | tie the score at 6-6, but thereafter brilliance. In fact, Bill Lowe, who| was distinctly outplayed. has been @ regular to date, did not} Rebholz, Wisconsin, and ‘Young, get in the game because of the effec- | netroit, ‘scored twice each for the tive combination Letich uncovered in | midwest, Young counting on passes Wexler, small |trom Welch and Holman of Ohio. nevertheless, | Geis, Arkansas, made the southwest's | two tallies on passes from Grubbs, = Fettig Is Beaten While the boy: hunting for high scoring honors, Cap- tain Vic Brown, North Dakota, mod- estly rang out the old year in unusual fashion by winning first place with- out the help of a single field goal. Brown shot eight times from the free throw mark and seven of his attempts dropped through the net. Six of these came in the first half, in large part accounting for North Dakota's 16 to! 16 draw with the westerners at the end of the first 20 minutes. The summary: North Dakota (25)— Brown, f .. Duchene, Storeim, c . Webster, ¢ | Wexler, & O'Keefe, t ‘Ginison,'c, f° Totals.... Montana’ (24)— wv, Rohlitts, ¢ Richie Mack of Mini Minneapolis Shades Judy Ruddy, Grand Forks, in Eight Rounds 1 orth “Dakota 2; na Referee, Dick Holzer, Crippled Hockey Team Seeks Scrappy Center Pittsburgh, Jan. 2—(P\—In an effort to strengthen their crippled coma, Wash—Joe Glick, New paabates Dee Snell, Ta- coma « Canton, O—G hearge ©: tralia, outpointed cankie’ Wil Montana (10). “THE An Old Line—Legal Reserve Mataal Insurance A Srlers gon, com J. F. Griffin, state agent Prices Reduced hockey team the management of the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National | league has begun negotiations with the Detroit club for Jimmy Herberts, scrappy center, now playing for the London, Ontario club of the Interna- tional league. Jess Spring, defense with the New York Americans has been sent here to finish the season. Exports from the port of New York in 1927 totaled 10,461,159 long tons of cargo. +50c | an Ratzlaff Loses | Loses Decision Phantoms After Baltimore Youth Legionnaires Face Bis- | William Jacobs Wears Crown | marck Independents at High’ | Following Final Victory Over School Gymnasium { Dartmouth Man New York, Jan. 2.—()—William | Bismarck’s basketball Phan- { toms tonight at the high school | Jacobs, Baltimore City college, is the [ Sepereoy Hotes denn Brdigend new king of America’s indoor tennis venge,” when they meet the Lin- | Players of junior age and John Rich- ton Legionnaires at 8 o'clock. ardson, Dartmouth, is the new crown The Lint feated prince. Phantoms area ce pond Jacobs conquered Richardson yes- a a eT ty | crown, 6-3, 6-2, 2-6, 7-9, 6- manage Nel Churchill 34 ‘again { Jacobs had been favored from the will have a strong lineup on the | start to win the tournament but floor, with several collegians | Richardson was not even among the home for vacation included. 16 seeded players. Tomorrow night at the same Jacobs is 17 y and Richardson 18. the independent club | Marcus Hecht, 16, New York, won will face the high | the national boys’ indoor title, beating { By Laurie Laurie Peppin| means of | Bernard Friedman, Philadelphia, in | the final, 6-3, 6-2, Hecht never lost.a jae in the tournament. | In doubles, Hecht and Friedman {lost to Frank’ Parker, Milwaukee, and | Giles Verstraaten, New York, in thd final, 7-5, 6-3. In the junior doubles Sanday Dav+ enport anti Richard Downing of Nev York beat Donald frame, Harvard, and Fred Roll, Mercersburg, 6-4, 6-4, Canadiens Prove ‘Money’ Ability Montreal Team Comes Through | 6-8, 7-5. in Pinch to Defeat Strong = | ¢@_______» Blackhawks | Football Results | ‘oO = oh 13, Recky Moun- it 25, Le ppc a1. en ai, pecaete 2 int 18, Went New York, Jan. 2—(}—Les Cana- diens of Montreal always have oan knowns as ons of the greatest grou! of “money players” in the National hockey league but they never have given better proof of it than they did by beating the Chicago Black- hawks, 3 to 2, last night. "Ss, ‘Gatverstty Wi ington of Mavwalt Mee pid Caneel bd pigert—margcthore tiara stake vas pl thunder storms occurring daily on t! Canadian group for the Canadiens | earth. vision. goal after 20 seconds ane overtime play. He carrier the puck almost the length of the rink. The victory put Les Canadiens a ies »<|Cannon, Glassgow Play Great Game Eastern Football Eleven Takes Westerners Into Camp by ] 19 to 7 Count | Why trust to luck? _ Put certainty of success in every baking by using either OCCIDENT. LYON’S BEST . San Francisco, Jan. 2.—(?)—West- Fargo’s Only Modern Fireproof Hotel DINING ROOM—COFFEE SHOP —PRIVATE DINING ROOM— DRUG. STORE—BARBER SHOP —BEAUTY PARLOR—ONE-DAY LAUNDRY SERVICE—VALET SERVICE FREE PARKING SPACE Two Large Garages Within One Block Dak. Men’s Dry-C Cleshing Capital Steam Laundry i KLEIN'S TOGG ERY * BISMARCK, NoRTH Dakota 3

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