The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 29, 1930, Page 10

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10 ARMY ELEVEN HOPES La Barba Decision Hissed at Garden TO WIN OVER GREAT NOTRE DAME dias Tare Heute Fo, Knute Rockne’s Eleven Made! Time Champ New York, Nov. 29.—(4)—Fidel La Barba, Pacific coast featherweight. gained a decision over Bud faylor of Terre Haute, Ind.. at Madison Square Garden last night but a chorus of boos greeted announcement of the official verdict. | Most of the gathering seemed to {think Taylor's two- fisted punching had gained him at least a draw with the one-time flyweight champion. | Taylor carried the fight to his oppon- | ent most of the way but La Barba’s close defense nullified the effects of many of the punches Taylor tossed his way. Two to One Favorite in Feature Contest ' ICY GRIDIRON IS PROMISED) Crowd of 125,000 Enthusiastic Fans Expected to Pack Soldier Field Chicago, Nov. 29.—()—Army versus | Notre Dime, the choicest football bit of the season, brought together two} great, undefeated elevens, with around 125,006 spectators to watch} them on Soldier field today. Everything was at stake for both teams. Victory for the Army meant the Cadets’ greatest campaign. Tri- umph «for Notre Dame meant one more stride toward national cham- pionship honors. Conditions were fitted to test the merits of every man to the utmost, with promise of an icy gridiron and midwestern tempera-) tures. Had the game been scheduled for New York, the Cadets migi.t have been at even money with the Irish, but in the west Notre Dame always is the favorite and the rough riders from South Bend ruled at 2 to l—a healthy drop from the 5 to 1 quoted carlier in the week. There was little wegering, however, with most of it on a point basis. No definite announcements were made as to who would start when the teams took the field at 1:30 p. m.. (C.8.T.) today. but Coach Knute Rockne, who kept his men in South Bend until this morning. indicated he would send out his best line and the second Notre Dame backfield. Major Ralph Sasse, Army's head coach.had available his most powerful combination and indicated he would send it out at the start. ‘The meeting was the seventeenth since the rivairy started in 191%. and in which Notre Dame had eieven vic- tortes, the Army four, with one score- less tie. The probable lineu| Army Messinger Muarez . New England Will Ask Commissioner For Bird Supply | Formal Request From Walton League and Individual Letters Planned New England, N. D., Nov 29—Game | Commissioner Burnie F. Maurek 1s; sons, to know that some of those 2,000. Hungarian partridges and ring- neck pheasants which the state will | hima are wanted at New Eng- W. L. Gardner, who with 8. A. Pull- | er has just completed the boundary ; lines of the new 2,000-acte game pre- | serve 10 miles west of New England, | reported that the boundaries now are | fixed, stakes set, and the land posted | on the preserve. “We found it difficult to make any headway under the old three-man | commission plan. We never could | find the member of the commission | we hoped to do business with, there being no office at Bismarck. However, since the election last spring and the appointing of the one-man game com- mission, we were able to go right ahead. Papers were all filed in due form and all is in readiness for the | reception of the game birds,” Mr. Gardner said. | The New England chapter officials of the Izaak Walton league have been asked to make a request for game birds. A committee was named by the New England Town Criers club to ask for more fish for the Cannon Ball and to request that the carp be seined out of the river above the dam. A half dozen members of the logal ‘| club and the league are going to ask individually that game birds be sent to the local preserve this winter. At the mecting of the Town Criers club there were a number of expres- sions of appreciation of the state game and fish commissioner for the ; consideration given New England, with three large plantings of fish in! the river during the last year. Post Announces re Dame— i ‘onley jaxk which North a Oxford Runner| Fred Hovde, Devils Lake, Enters , Half-Mile in English ° ~~ All-American Cambridge, Eng. Nov. 29.—(P)— ‘Two American Rhodes scholars will|/Northwestern, Alabama and be running for Oxford in the annual wOxtord-Cambridge” relay races to-| Fordham Place Two Each day. They are E. W. Goodwillie, who is entered to run both the 400 yards on Mythical Eleven | and the half mile, and Fred L. Hovde, ae | half-miler, Devils Lake, N. D.. former| New York, Nov. 29.—(4—The New | University of Minnesota football star. | York Evening Post's all- America, foot- | Goodwillie is a former track star| ball team. announced today, lists two of the Chicago Athletic club and Cor-| Players trom Northwestern, two from nell university who came to England | Alabama and two trom Fordham with | with the Cornell-Princeton team that |one each from Southern California, ran against Oxford-Cambridge in| Washington State, Notre Dame, Col- | gate and Georgia. The team: | 1926. Hovde was quarterback on the! Ai bide, Southern California Wisniewsk!, Fordha University of Minnesota football) Anisnog, Washington State. team. Both competed in the relays| Woodworth, Northwestern - last year. Slano, Fordham . Sington, Alabama Ooffet, Georgia . jarideo, Notre Dam Shires Sold to [rides Rode re hb | hb | tb] All-America. Circuit Berth ~~ | OPES aT Montreal, | ronto tonight Orlando, ‘pilot of @ glide MARCHMONT SCHWARTZ Halfback, Notre Dame FRANK BAKER End, riba aber 2 Hockey Styles Clash Tonight| Canadiens, Last Year Champs, | Battle Boston Bruins for Second Time New York, Nov. 29.—(#)—A test of two opposing styles of hockey is on joucatannd ite: tonight's National league program as | Chicago, Ottawa. A close second in importance among tonight's four games is the clash of last year’s Stanley cup finalists at| the Canadiens, who won! {the title, face the Boston Bruins for the second time this year. won the first clash, 5-2. The Detroit Falcons play at To- against the Maple. Leafs, and then return home to en- i tertain the New York Americans in/ the only Sunday game. Tonight's fourth game sends the New York Rangers against the Phil-' | adelphia Quakers. Stribling Is Flop As Pilot of \Glider: 29.—(P)—As| , W. L, Stribling is a, great fighter. He did very well in the) jair with one, but. landing on a lake the tipped over and went under the ab water, parachute and all. boat pulled him out and he was put to bed with chills. the league leader, Fi Milwaukee Team: _— Russell, Neon econtlin ‘Great Man’ Says It's a Break for Him Because He Can’ Play Regularly Chicago, Nov. 29.—(7)—The next) episode of the Horatio Alger book career of Charles Arthur Shires, self- confessed Great Man. will have its scene at Milwaukee. Ho will war the baseball livery of the Milwaukee Brewers. of the American Association. Shires yesterday was sold by Wash- ington to Milwaukee for $10,000, marking his return to minor-league baseball. The Great Man was ob- tained from the Texas League by the Chicago White Sox late in the 1928 season and finished the campaign at first base. He was under suspension a good share of the 1929 season for breaches of training rules and for en- gaging in fist fights with Manager Lena Blackburne. He spent last winter as a heavy- welent Loxer. Under Manager Donie Bush, Shires settled down, but was injured and paved in few games for the Sox. Bush tr.ded him to Washington. ‘The | grat one served as a pinch-bateman | for Washington and chafed by idle-| noss, asked Manager Walter Johnson to send him to the minors where he could play regularly, but his request was refused. Meanwhile he has been 1p folly-\ wood, Calif. acting n one-rcel talk- jes and recently was married to a University of Visconsin co-ed. Shires halied the sale as break, saying that his “talents are too great to oe wasted on a major league to ax | AHOUGHT You WERE PREPARED eo Go oUT WITH A SMOKER AND HORWITZ CHICAGO CAPTAIN Chicago, Nov. 29.—(?)—Sam Hor- witz, Chicago, for two years a regu- lar guard on Coach A. A. BStagg’s university of Chicago football team. yesterday was elected captain of the maroon squad for the 1931 season. © ME THIS EVENING ! EGAD ww DAN You RECALL ME SAYING THERE WAS “fo BE Poot TOURNAMENT AT HE OWL'S CLUB “TONIGHT 2 JING sE By Ahern | OUR BOARDING HOUS. = 7 HAWFULLY — OLD MAN » MY sa = To sit AT “THE AND READ “HE 1 CAWNT Stay HUP “TILL DAWA He HAS ~To F SINGLE -FOOT “TONIGHT » meets Boston | A motor} —\ ze ut ef HEARTH “TONIGHT PIPER! ~ BESIDES, |-THIs city 1S BECAUSE MIDOR, YouR PACE IS A Br-100 FAST 31 FOR TWEMTY YEARS FoR ME ~~ RELLY, UKE AN "OWLING (©1990 BY.NEA SERVICE, INC fhe, "Foe Cpa) ND ELEVEN POSTS N. D. A.C. Followers Rate 1931 |All-North Missourl Slope Confer- Football Squad With ‘Ag. ence Aggregation Ploked i | sis ie by Coanhes. | {BEACH WON , CHAMPIONSHIP Six Midgets, Four Cowboys, One Belfield Man on Stel- lar Machine » Nov. 20.—The re- Slope conference meeting here selested a all- conference team giving Places on it although tl qualified from the championship, Yes by Beach, which tied Dickinson’ in Fargo, N. D., Nov. 29.—Cliften “Cy” | Lonsbrough, Fargo. star quarterback ,on the North Dakota State. college | football team, who will captain the Bison in 1931, came to the Bison in- stitution i 1928 . after spending a jyear at Michigan where he was re- garded as one of the outstanding | backfield prospects in the middlewest. In his freshman year ““Cy” was largely instrumental in the Bison yearlings’ first gridiron win- over the | Dickinsori, N. university first year team and in | cent. North 1929, his first year on the varsity, his work aided in the Bison's comeback ‘to front ranks in North Central con- ference play. This year. he became Finnegan's most valuable man, developing into not only the best ground gainer on | the squad, but proving adept at tackl- ing, passing and blocking. His work has prompted him to be hailed by sport critics as all-conference timber and by a few as the outstanding man | jin the loop. When the Nodaks of Grand Forks handéd the Bison their only conference loss, 14-7, it was “Cy” “| that copped individual honors, gain- ing considerable more round than any man on the field. | ‘With the loss of only four veterans ‘for next year, he will captain what -many believe is destined to be~ the greatest aggregation since “Gil” Do- bie’s famous “Aggies” of 1908. His Fin experience was gained at Fargo school. ‘Dartmouth Is - | played but two other teams of the conference. The mythical first and second all-conference teams named were as follows: MEROrer! ep two games. Because the Midgets had! Two « of Greatest Football Teams of Year Battle on Soldier Field’. DICKINSON, BEACH, AND BELFIELD MEN ON ALL-STAR TEAM ELMER OLIPHANT = i Stanford Foe Heavy Rains Slow Up. Up. Playing Field; Cannell’s Star-End Out of Game MEROPEE: Pap g RBBBmnooonn BEBARHSOoHE Of their first team selection, coaches said: Ends—Ralph Jonas Beach: Jones is small, shifty and fast, 8 good pass reeeiver and hard to get around, Mil- ton. Anderson, Dickinson: A_ big, rangy énd who gave his opponents | Plenty of trouhle. and was undoubt- edly the best pass receiver in the con- ference. ‘Tackles—Stuart Scott, ‘Dickinson: Hard to get through, @ powerful man on the offense and one of the best linemen in the conference. Feld- husen, Beach: Beach's best lineman Stanford University, Callff.,, Nov. 29.—()—The undefeated Dartmouth college football team today cate to grips with the Stanford Indians here. Heavy rains during the week, which slowed up the playing field peor ea tended to ald the easterners, who had |@ substantial advantage in the line. Coach Jack Cannell, of Dartmouth. }looked to his huge forward wall to halt Stanford's smashes inside the tackles, ieee an ey peice | Stari” Yudieky, stellar end, left m,| ‘his ability to hold {dependent on three wingmen, Branch, throug! b Whitehair and Sullivan, considered | ine pi tony Mis it adr Nick Herald, Dickinson |-rhe smalleet man in the line but one ,Of the best fighters. Busserman, | Beach: A power on his side of the ‘Sun Has Picked Sa one ttt Se All-American Team! "== Center—Robert Berry, Dickinson: ae votes for center were tied be- ween Knerevitch re} Beach and Berry. coin was tossed, the decision going to Berry. Bob is a cool headed play- er and never made @ bad pass from the pivot position. Knegevitch is the biggest man on the Beach team. He {was their punter and a good all- New York Paper Gives Recogni-| ‘ween tion to Interferers and Defensive Players . H | New York, Nov. 29.—(#)—The New } York Sun's all-America football team ‘comprises two Southesn California players, two from Notre Dame. two from the Big Ten, two from the east and“one each from Alabama, Texas" Belfield: | and Washington State. ‘Schwartz was outstanding on the Bel- Qui ; A hard shifty player who could pass and run with equal ability. Jones was the dynamo of the Beach attack. _ |hhad yet to break into the exclusive | ‘The. Sun made a special point of theid laced giving recognition to the interferers er baer although be Moo ae and defensive players back because in our present day foot- », Th sateen. See ball the quarterback ‘has nearly the aker, Northwestern . c| same functions ss eny man in the wards, Washington State’. ween 3 player who oould run, A le pass, and hit the line for good yard- age. ‘Pullback-Russell, Dickinson: The best defensive man in the conference. Bee could circle end as well as hit the Lewis Brothers Obtain Monopoly Athletic agerial Duties at Alabama Polytechnic Re- volve by Families Baker, Southern” ton, Alabama . ler, Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Southern California. , Colgate . AN IT WOULD DO You ANY HARM % Go IN DRYDOCK FOR ONE NIGHT! TH" REASON You DOT BELIEVE OUR CENSUS REPORT FOR ex ALL You'VE SEEA |’ ARE MILIK-MEN ay OnGare NIGHTS (<0) BEAT did me return to school. Prices Raise for ' Intersectional Go versity of Washington. good sing! peo reser sold as high as $40, a while med pace of 10, although the contest” ts still more than a week away. The 90,000 seats. were ole more than. arise weeks ago. and the aistrict ttorney’s office has sent out werning have been printed in large quantities. Eight Universities Place Candi! dates on Camps All-Ameri- | can Team That Year \ By ALAN J. GOULD Kl seseeem Press we jo, 9—"U's” Take Team | Ania the South and Far West | ranks of Walter Camp's All-America first eleven,, they Tepresenta- gained cE tives on the all-star squad of 33 play- va in 1915. Eight universities “made” the first | team, Harvard and Cornell being the only ones to have more than a single representative. Cpe ee the entire squad 11 colleges gained places. I$ marked fresh recognition by the “Father of Football” of the game's early days when the old “Big Three” the lists. the first time, in fact, neither | of Cold weather forced postponement ,| for one week of the Carnegie Tech- Washington & Jefferson contest but remained to be renewed at Boston—that be- tween Holy Cross and Boston college. At Annapolis, Navy, with one eye duels with | 88ers ihe sen season and ran up s great-record with a team featuring Chuck Barrett, Murray Shelton and Gib Oool. Har-| vard swamped Yale by 41 to 0. | ‘Three of the 1915 All-Americas, | of Dartmouth, Earl i i Cy i i i 8 rte Ba SOUTH AND FAR WEST GAIN FOOTBALL HONORS IN 1915 Mahan, Harvard All-America fullback of 1915, is called one of the two greatest of all time at the position. Elmer Oliphant, Army halfback of 15 years ago, is a legendary figure at West Point. : Third'Team Heyman, W. & J. Cody, Vanderbilt Dadmun, Harvard © McEwan, West Pt. 9 SENTINEL, BUTTE Crowd Disappointed With Walker Win PERFORMERS GIVEN i Two of the Best in Their Day » | Chejstner Helped Himse“4 * @ut of Ring *macking strands of the ring. | Christner landed among the spece ! tators and rolled over the press table, « falling to the floor where he lay as ° ‘the officials tolled off 20 seconds. |Under Tilinois rules, a fi¢hter knocked ifrom the ed is sot to'20 sec- | onds during which to return, the ropes, limping on his id leg. He was helped to his corner where he said he could not continue. The fight was awarded to Walker. General Clinnin would make no statement as to whether the commis- sion planned to investigate the bout. Even before the decision was an- nounced officially, the crowd milled » down toward the ring shouting “fake” and booing and ‘hissing. Pirate’sRecord — Parallels Waner’s - Return of ‘Little Poison’ to Lineup | After Iliness Pittsburgh. Pa, Nov. 29.—(?)— ‘Where the Pirates wind up next sea- son in’ the National League-probably « fe 4 g gainst fake pasteboards ‘reported to | tht the University of South Carolina. Eastern Elevens . Resume Battles \Only a Dozen Teams.in Section Have Finished 1930 Foot- ball Schedules New York, Nov 29.—(#)—The call to arms sounded on the eastern foot- ball front again today but all except! @ dozen or so of the section's 100-odd teams had laid aside the moleskins. year. ia, Washington State's the Pacific Coast 1 in’ the. course of an unbeaten and untied season, came to battle Harry Stuhl- dreher's Villanova Wildcats, and Temple's warriors were hosts to Drake the Missouri Valley conference. another traditional rivalry at least on the f Penn and the Army, had a ime tee len- Muhlenberg took its Se sence Dick Tarlow’s western laryland eleven whose winning reak of 20 straight was interrupted | by a tie with Albright. | versity of Baltimore and Loy- | ola of Maryland were matched at; Baltimore. . fae Bh leges as piel td The Unit ~———_—_——*|T "Tulane Gridders | “" (Ry the Associated Press) New York—Fidel La Barba, Los jed Hud Taylor. veh-—Ted Zarss/ Monaco, inted Jimmy Neal, Cin- THEY COLD : Hy can art Seu ened, will depend largely on the number of ; games in which Loyd Waner, :the © {Little Poison” of the outfield, is able | to play. Waner, it was discovered this year, the standings. The Pirates this sea- son 95 games it which the lit- tle pate due to illness. ; During those games the club wor 44 and. lost 51 for a percentage of 463. After Waner returned to the line- up around the middle of the season he played in 69 games. The club won 36 and lost 23 for a percentage of #10. Ens Will Winter At Florida Beach Pirate Manager Preceded to 1 ager of Reds West Palm Beach, Fla... Nov. '29.— (®)—Two ‘big league baseball man- have selected West Palm Beach for their personal winter train- ing grounds. Jewel Ens, manager of the Pitts- burgh Pirates, accompaneid by Mrs. Ens and their two children, is @ guest at a local hotel and intends to take a winter home here later. He was preceded to this ctiy by Manager Dan Howley of the Cincin- natt Reds, who is already settled « here ‘with his family for the, winter months. it Repartee Experts | | Atianta, Ga.. Nov. 29.—(>)—It seems that Tulane university gridsters go in for wit. | “During a game with Georgia | Tech, hére Nollie Felts got off a miseable punt—one of the few | no-good boots he makes. A Tech. lineman, thinking to get the goat of the young sophomore and rat- tle him, exclaimed: - “Who was that who made tl great kick? Surely that wasn’t great sophomore back and Ticker, Felts. Who was it?” Unabashed and gtinning all over, Felts waved his hand and with mock meekness whispered | “Here I am, teacher, here I am.” ‘Phree of the Western Conference's jstar backfield men of this year are |sophomores, Risk, Purdue; Newman, Michigan, and Rentner, Northwest- Charlie Retzlaff, young Duluth pesrremany boxer, has scored more than 20 knockouts in’the year and {a half he has been fighting profes- i sjonally. He has yet to lose a match. i PLANES FEED GAME Pa., Nov. 29.—Wild | .In , Stuttgart, Germany, a large | skating rink using artificial ice made | from a secret chemical formula is in | daily use. The layer of artificial ice | 4s less than three inches thick. ‘ Most of Fans Harbor impression i Me Coach ae tla comtie Bs sthader 7 +ed-to his feet and struggled through Bues’ Percentage Takes Rise on : was worth just exactly 147 points in ; was unable to partici- ; Training Quarters by Man-.- - ‘ | >< \ oe

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