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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12 Creighton'Utah, C. A. CM tah Aggies, -- U flit DEFEATS Takes Jump in Parachute to Pay Fight Bet Aggies, Colorado College, Colorado Ag- Utah gies, Denver May Win. at Prove Colorado va. v Colorado Aggie' win ovar Utah Saturday makes tha Rocky Mountain n red afeonftronoa race a fair with tako your pick prospect. e With Utah daflnltaly out of tha for tha tttla, tha burden of uphold Inr tha honor of tha atata of Utah falla upon tha oapabla ehoulders of Dick Romney 'and hi a team of have a hard Tha Utah Act-teroad ahead, but, for that matter, so have the rest of the echoola which re at In tha conference running Colorado college la the only unde. feated team n the conference and It atill haa aorae rocks to paaa. Colorado A (ilea have throe hard games to win If thay want to be champions and Denver haa two hard game and one which doea not look ao bad from the distance. Utah Aggie have three hard same. Utah Agglea muat Win from Colorado Agglea. Denver university and Utah university. Colorado Aggie have to lick Utah Aggies, Boulder and Colorado collage. Denver must defeat Boulder, Utah Agglea and Colo rado Mines. Colorado college muat beat Boulder and Colorado Agglea. They have games with Greeley Teach-er- a and Weatern State, but these last named gamea should not be bard eon Colorado four-cor- run-nin- Ac-fle- a. e 111 tea (a. There are two critical game ached led for Saturday. One of theee la In Logan, when Utah Agglea play Colorado Aggie at the dedication of the Utah Aggie stadium. The other la in Boulder, when Colorado college In and Colorado university play. either gam the fan la Invited to pick his own winner. Utah Aggie and Colorado college both have to lift their jinx to win their oonteata. Colorado college baa a double burden to take car of, for the C C. Tlgera pulled a little on Boulder last year which wa (y not appreciated at all by Boulder. Coach Myron E. WItham of Boulder la out to give Colorado collage a drubbing for that little atunt and when WItham aterti pointing for team be points. Tha situation which came on la at Tear goee about like this (a near trat. . a w can make out from rival report a): The Tiger and Boulder were about to begin their annual battle. Coach "Bully" Van da Or Hi of the Tlgera called Referee Mahoney to one aide and explained a play to him, aaylng that thl particular play was complicated and Bully did not want e 10 rua the rlak of a penalty. The ekehed the formation. Then at beIn contest a time th critical the wildering play waa pulled. Colorado game. college scored and won th the argument etarted. Whereupon WItham maintain that th play Which netted the touchdown wa Illegal and waa not tha play which Bully exBoulder plained to th referee. Th version of th play is that th Tiger center did not paaa the ball to the backfleld, but paaaed It In such a way that either he or a guard locked It In the bend of th knee, fell under th pile of playera, while tha Colorado U. men chased Tiger who wa carrying When the ma a of hi headguard. liver and Gold moved off the Tiger or center guard, that Individual picked a up th ball and went over tor Colorado college denies touchdown. was refuses but th this that play, to say Just how It waa pulled, because they might need It again. But regardleaa of the legality, or Illegality of th formation, th play won the game for Colorado college and WItham la out with the avowed purpoee of knocking th Tiger out at f th running If such a thing all possible. Add to this special attraction the fact that th Boulder boy twice previously turned the Tigers back Juat when a win meant a chajnplonahlp and you hav a llttl Idea of the mental ha tarda which th Tiger are up against hav alway been Colorado Aggie a Jinx to Utah Aggies. This Jinx waa broken last year, but It look a a though Dick would have to begin at the beginning and re break It all over again. The Fort Colllna Jinx waa at its height four or five year ago, ever to when Dick took hi Aggie ColoIn Colorado the Farmer play rado. Utah Aggiea had a three-poilead with a couple of minutes to play In th first half. Colorado Aggies etarted an offensive which netted a touchdown Just a th half whistle unwore blew. The Logan boy daunted and cam through with another touchdown to take another three-poilead. They held Colorado Aggies away from the goal line all through the half, but etirrendered the hall on .down a on their own line with two minute to play. The final whistle found a Colorado Aggie Blunging over the Utah Aggie goal for a touchdown and a victory. raf-er- 1 Becker Takes Double Trophy in Chicago Shoot I. fHICAtJO. Oct. Que Becker of Ogden. Utah, captured the double trophy In today's trapshootlng pro. gram at Lincoln Park. The Utah trant scored forty-eigout of fifty doubl target to win th event. ht PROFESSIONAL At Provldenc FOOTBALL. Providence rrankiort 0. At Cleveland Cleveland fl. Duluth Eskimo 20. Chicago Bear At Chicago ton, O., Triangles At Chicago--Chica- 14, Day- 7. Cardinal , CAFES -- and Prices PEMBROKE CO. V vs !'; " . 'S j Hi. ;. S 'J 1 .... ' .v.. "V f it l III i t If i i Here are three of the men who will be en in action at the Vt stadium Saturday, when Crelfhton and Utah clash. At tha top left la Paul Cattey, who showed op so well in th game lut Saturday. Caffey is center for the TJteg and la a good one. At tha tipper right, Ed Dunn, the 185. pound canter on the Crelghton team. Dunn is th man who broke through tha Wyoming Una twice and blocked punts which resulted in both of Crelghton 's scores against the Cowboys. Standing is 0org Bolton, Crelghton end, i 1 th. e Re-gio- Utes Back and Ready for Creighton Game n .' j It wa a great MOAB, Oot. t game. With the moat evenly matched team ever to play on th Moab field, Eddie Klmball'a Moab grldder yes-terdPeterson's Carbon Miners by tha narrow margin of 7 to (. Much of the time wa spent on straight football and little yardage could be mad by cither team on line buck. Moab mad it points In th first quarter. Carter carried the ball over on a line buck and walker registered with a place kick for the additional Jeanselm went through the fiolnt. Carbon In th second quarter, but th kick failed. The last halt was scorsless. Moab la pleased with th result, a with Klrby and R. Carter, star play, era, out by reason of Injury it waa feared that th team waa too badly crippled to win. The UneuD and summary Woab N. palton, le; K. Winburn, It; Tangran, Ig; Newell Taylor, rg; Neal Taylor, rt; C. Carter, re; Powell, lh; R. Winburn. qb; Walker (captain), fb; Allred, rh. Carbon Potts, le; Larson, It; Asay, Ig; Croffet (captain), c; Harrle, rg; Bemroan, rt; Watts, fb; Hughes, rh. Moab Holyolk for Substitutions: Powell. Carbon Wanks for Watts; for Foffet Kay. Officials Referee, Palls; umpire, Geer Thompson; head linesman, Oath. MONROE IS SPEEDY. Special te The Tribune. MONROE, Oct to Monroe's fast high school- eleven drubbed the Salina score here Jrlddere a by a mud field. This was heavy Monroe third successive win in league contest and givea it the lead In the divisional play for tha Sanpete-Sevi- er title. At th beginning of the season Wa satch waa touted as the moat probable champion, but was defeated by Mon roe In the first game or the season. The only serious poaalhlllty of upsetting the dope would occur If Richfield should defeat Monro In next Friday game. That would tie Monroe, Wasatch and Richfield. Thla la not likely, however, because.lt seems that Monroe has Uie edge over Ita tradi tional rivals. The game at Monroe Friday was slow and The field waa muddy and a drirzing rain added to the unfavorable circumstance for the The Monro boys outplayed game. their opponents In every department of the game. At times Salina would rally and the south Sevier team made a few serious thrusts at the Monroe line, but the local boys smothered the attempts before they reached the' ... acorlng mne. Coach Swenson a Monroe grldflers, the greater punch and ver. exhibiting satlllty of play, took the lead with a touchdown In the first period, and. although the field was slow, they wen through for a touchdown In each of th succeeding periods of play. Lee's accurate toe added three point after the touchdowns. Coach Swenson hart an opportunity to send In a long list of reserves, many of whom ebowed very good form. Forward pasae were a potent fac tor In th Monro scoring, th "Wella to Kee" combination featuring and figuring In thre of th touchdown. n Le playd well at quarter. K. and Lazenby ahowed well for the visitors. The lineup and summary: one-side- d. ' hi m Utes in Good Shape and Eager to Take Remain. Amherst Cuts Princeton Out List of Schedule Games on 12-- i 1 . 0 VirmwBnjn'VW. DI IS ctan VALLEY FLASH ooya. Thy had had a wonderful trip, been well received and royally treated. And there were no alibis. One of the boys Tigers Hand Northwest era Defeat After Bowing to Southern Parsons KANSAS CITY, Oct. SO (AP). In striking contrast to the unmerciful drubbing thay took last week on a Texa gridiron from Southern Meth odist university, the University of Missouri Tlgera rose to their great--emoment of triumph yesterday on the shores of Lake Michigan to de feat Northwestern, S3 to 19. The Tigers' flashy return to favor as, however, no more surprising than Was NebraKa's great demon stration of power In sweeping the Orange of Syracuse before It to a SI to 0 victory at Lincoln. The Scarlet- Jerseyed athletes of the 1'ralrle state smothered the eastern passing attack. The tKianom Airgiea turned back the undefeated Crelghton Bluejay, 18 to 6, on th Stillwater. Okla.. grid st Jen-ae- Itt Blackfoot Hoop Season Planned Ipeeial te Th Trtbane. BLACKFOOT, Idahe, Oct IP Eleven tean'S will enter the Interorganiza-tio- n basketball tournament, which start at the Rlarkfoot hleh school t. Th November gymnasium preeent PARIS. Oct. SO (API. Th final outlook Indicates that th niesner autumn Oiris and the Faculty team will conSunday of the Lona-rhamp-s eearon was favored with perfect tend for final honors, although the weather end featured by th running ttlarkfnot iabea, composed of of th J1! 009 franc Trlx Oladlator for under IS, are beginning to mak girls th and un over a eoiim of other stt up and take notice. ?o meters. It was won b neorres The tournament will probably last Ponglsta Soun, with J. Wlttouek'i ten dsy. ss the two-gam- e elimination Bol .toaselyn seond and O. mips, plan is being osed. Ther ar ighty. co s Bllbso third. two girls st play. Soim w th favorlt. paving 2! A pnnsnt will b awarded to th in, ana won ty ten lengtne. winning team. meet Princeton' la 1928, as it has for the last Th three years. Amherst schedule, announced today, contains eight games, all with smaller collages. The Princeton gam has been abandoned, it was announced in accordance with Amherst's new pol-ic-y of selecting Its opponents from colleges of smaller enrollment. Myles Lane Is Held Scoreless but Keeps Lead Irving Scores horn" "wejcom commit- e. i No mishaps of any kind were ported on the trip. re- Dart-mou- th y. e, slaty-seve- Hole-in-On- e atOgdenClub "Old-Barney- Tb TrMnia. Special OGDEX. Oct. S9 Frank J. Irving, on of Ogden' best known golfers, made a hele-tn-otoday, He shot No. S In en stroke while playing In a threesome with Dr. Mark Brown and Jack Andrew over th Ogden Golf and Country club course. At th present writing, the Blue lead In th annual Red and Blue play The Reds by a score of 34 to So Rules for Hurlers Gives yyASHINQTOX. Oct, 30 (AP). Walter Johnson,, who took order for twenty yean in th major league, today gare his first lesson ss to how a minor league dub should be managed. In a conference with Jam P. Binnott, president of the Newark Bears of the Interna tlonal league, with whom the veteran Washington twirier manahas signed a two-yegerial contract, Johnson discussed spring training plans and laid down rule Ho. 1 for his catchers, inclnding, prob-sb- l. himself. He told Mr. Binnott teat the Bear Barling staff should get under wsy for th Florida camp the last week In February and adrised that ne games should b played during the first ten days of training. Johnson agreed to meet Mr. Binnott in Dallas, Texas, for th meeting of the National Aseoclatioa f Saaeball Blubs, December 6, 7 and 8. ar J. started today' play 'way behind, but msd th play more even. Captain Rice Kimball of the Red won his match with hi rival Frank M. Driggs. scoring thre skipper, point for hi !d. Tb (core made todar ar follow: t RHUS. BLUBS. Capt. Kimball... 3 Capt. Driggs .... Dr. Oreenwll 2 Dr. Mark Urown S K. IJ. Fortr ... 1W. L. Wattls... I K. K. Layser.,, 0 R, H. Rutledg.. I B. J. FiBfh J. F. Martin I .... Paul Wattls ... Dr. F. W. Baker P. Heely Larry Clayton... Rev. 3. B. Car ver S 3 1 0 Jo Brewer Henry Amea John Sparge II. Eccks i ... .... .... Steele Arrives Fit for Bout With Andrews After a week of the mot strenuous kind of training, Erni Steele, th stocky doihen lightweight, ha ar rived In town and pronounced him self rsady and anxious for hi Andrsws, fight with Jack! popular Bait Lake fighter. Thl bout topg th card at th weekly Manhattan club boxing show at th Hippo- drome theater Monday vnlng. Realising fully th Importance ef a step toward th light thl boat weight suprsmacy of th atats, end appreciating also the past record and reputation of his opponent, Steele haa especially put himself through an tough grind of preparation, werklng out particularly with Adrian Klton of Santaquln, and on arrival her th hard hitting downitater la hopefully confident and eager to get at his man. Andrew I taking th bout serious ly too, and he ha also done aome conscientious training. He knowa Just what a dangeroua man Steel i ,and he also knows that, unless be throw them in hard and often, the Invader will hav the edge In the walloping phase of the thing, and, against a vicious onslaught of powerful slugging, his uprtor speed and boxing ability will avail him llttl. Thl type of battle, a clever boxer against a rugged with the puncher, alway makes a hit two such local patronage, and, with highly touted principal a Andrew be to and Steele, th bout promises one of the most Interesting eetto ef the season, A spectacular exhibition of speed and clever boxing should develop in the aemlwlndup event of th evening, d bout between Frankle a or cseper, Karnes ana ;rm rob both of whom ar These boys, Wyo. well known and well liked here, have met and defeated eome of th leading In th west, and, allightweight though they are hardly in th same claaa a Steele and Andrews, they are them In the rating. not Steal ha defeated both of them In previous bout thl season, knocking out Roe In the second round of their battle, and taking an easy few weeks decision front Barns ago. By th!r showings against Steele, th pair appear to be pretty evenly matched, and th fact that they hav both lost to Steele Is not such a reflection on their ability. At the time of their respective defeats, tbey were both lust getting started for th sea- of eon, and rensldsrlng tbsir lack condition and Steele rural hardihood th reault wa what eeld only reasonably be expected. Sine that time Barnes haa staged a cod pi of surprisingly good bouts, and Rosa I le o that Monday greatly Improved, bout between the two will shew a ef entirely different boy. eoupl A dangerou fighter te begin with, and particularly well seasoned after a week of strenuous workout with Erni Steele. Adrian Elton U bound to caus Feg Jotaneon plenty of troud ble In the main preliminary of Menday'a program. The Sanaeasone seversl taquln aeuthpaw, for a great favorlt with the Salt La We sporting public, will be making his Initial appearance ef th season, and. In selecting Feg Johnson a bis oppoIt a mad nent, th matchmaker point to get on of th beat ef th six-rou- tee, but those that were on hand gave the Utes enough reception te make them know that they were not more of th iron. Inside the valley a relirvenated Kansas eleven came tearing In from behind In the rloslng moments of th to defeat Drake, 7 to t. thus gam ousting the lowans from the undefeated list. Iowa State came lashing In with a second period scoring atMonroe. Patina. that brouaht a IS to T defeat to le... .. Magleby tack Jorreneen.. IX . . . Anderson the Kansas Aggies. It... Pushing. Oklahoma and Washington both f ancaater. .. . .. ( .. Anderson figured in tie gamea with leaser e. Nielaon schools Washington waa tied, t t A. Anderson Torgenaon rg.. by Westminater college, while Ok Glbbe rt... ... Water Burges was held even hy the Central lahoma re.... Jnaen Utat Teacher of Oklahoma, 14 to e K. Jpnsen Oh.. 14. lh.. . ... Kotter Draper. Mapjuette'a Golden avalancha at Wllaon Nelson rh... Wells last found a foe to avalanche on, and ..fb... Latenby iandallde hurled Crinnall, II to . the PuMtlrotlona: II was a field day for the Milwau Fallna Ra'musann for Jorgensen: kee men. or four Draper for Cashing; Long for Jorgen-so- full team, forty-fou- r teams, practicing up on th luckPoorup for Raamuesnn. . less valley opponent. Monroe wehb for Anderson: Tuft for Maglehy: Hyatt for A. Anderson; Jones for I.e; Rorenaon for lort: Frtholorow for Kotter: Hannon for Wells; A. Hansen for Glbba; Forbueh for Nelson. Refer. Burmsster: umnire. Swin Oct. 30 will not football la NEW TORK. Oct 30 (AF). Although twenty-si- x point ahead of hi nearest rlvaJ, Myle Lana of lost ground tn th Individual football acorlng race when th Green eleven waa ahut out by Tale Eatur-daIt waa th first game thla season In which Ln failed te score. Making twenty-seve- n points In hi team's rout of Laiayatta, CapUiq Johnny Reepke of Fena But rocketed Into second place with seventy-fivwhil Nork of Georgetown took third by making two touchdown In a walkaway victory over Waynes- n Burg for a total of point. Th leaders; TO. FO. FT. TF. 101 Lan, Dartmouth nb..H10 1 11 IS Koepk. Fnn St., hb 1 S Nork. Georgetown, hb.ll t Stevens, R. I. St., hb.lt 11 Booth, Pittsburgh, rh. f lw, for on Tourney Goshen Slugger in Good Shape for Jackie in Main Bout. said that It waa a "sort of a funny with a lot of funny situations, and a tie could easily have resulted. But It Just wasn't In the cards." Coach Ike Armstrong didn't have much to say about th defeat, but from Indication h has a stiff week's workout ahead for hi boy to put men? in snap ior (. raiamion. No tniurl resulted from the Colo rado Aggl game, and, with the ad Lawrence and ditional week for Pomeroy to get In ondltlon to fill In the backfield, the Ute ar looking forward with optimism te th remainder of th schedule. The pep band and rosters, en arrival at th Union Paclfie atatlon, mad a an Impromptu noisy salt, and gav rally under the train sheds to let the town know that they did not carry the defeat too seriously r consider tn trip a loss, etuaent president Frank Jonas led the noisy rooter up the ramp Into th (tatlon. Arrival of the train several minutes ahead of schedule time waa raspon-Ibi- s for lack of connection between game, r. PUT Monday. DALLAS, Texas. Oct SO (A). High scores marked final practice at Cedar Crest Country club her today as sixty. odd professional golfer pol ished their form for th rrefesalonal dolt association tournament, which tarts har Mac., n MHEBST, (AP). Ambent A Utah' grid warrior, deflated, but not downhearted, returned to Bait Lake Sunday night, accompanied by the rooter and pep band, which war at 0 Fort Collins to witness th d feat of Utah by the Colorado Aggiea. Hundred of University of Utah student war on hnd at th Union Pa- clflo atatlon to welcome the boy back, and tell them that, though they are definitely out of the conference till he running, the student body still hind them to the last man. The Ute outfit smiled when It stepped from th train just before o'clock, but the smile waa a grim on and carried a glint that spoke for a fighting Utah crew In th remaining conierence games. Cal Boberg, gradual manager of athletic, said that: "The boy are back, and they're smiling. They've been licked this once, but they are going after Crelgh ton hard;" That waa the general attitude of th PROS WIND IIP PRACTIGE 1 I four-roun- four-roun- local featherweight. of Sacramento reThe Dm K f turn to th limelight ftr a S John Fushmer... 1 ronalderabl absence to meet Jimmy I B. U Van Meter 1 Green In another P. A. Dig d pramlalng D. H. IavU .... S R. W. Stevens.. d preliminary, w'ft'e A. V. Melntoh. Dr. Q. A. Dtekson S bout between Young Leytb, and Art Fay Fraker .... I Storma, and a eurtain raiser featuring Hrry Gee Prev. matches .. J Prev. matches ..II Danny sealer (entered and Billy Trodmorgaa round out the card. 34 Total Total .. Member of th golf club will hav th balance of the week in vtitrn to r ay their Red and Slue matchee. This a rrangrment was agreed te to- dsy by the rival captains because th weather kept a number of player from the coure. Another considera tion In giving the balance of the week SAtf FRAXC1SCO, Oct. 0 fAP. to th matchee la that the annual Red St Mary' defeated Oneaga eolleg and Blue dinner will not be ami) next vnlveral'y at ktetag stadium today by Saturday plgbt In the Hotel Rigtiow. a IS- - score. Th gam wa played Nine bole matche will not count, but In a steady rain. St. Mary scored all participant must play th eight- touchdown In the second and third een bole, tb captain ruled. period. lvl four-reun- four-roun- St. Mary's Beats Gonzaga Eleven tomorrow. A high wind, which prorata te teat all week, iwept th course, playing havoo with approach shots and vn rolling putt off line. Moat ef th eon- testants oevotea tneir attention to their short game and spent their time studying the greens. Th majority of tnam hav seen accustomsa to creep Ing bent green and th Bermuda grass on th Cedar Crest layout 1 proving a pussllng teltur. v ef th contest Harry On th Cooper of Le Angeles and Walter Hagen of Pasadena, yia., th defending champion, war (light favorlt over th field, although Jo Turnei and Oo Baraaen ef fJsw York, John Golden of Paterson, J. J., Tommy Armour of Waahlngton, Bobby Crulck-han- k of Purchase, N. T.i Johnny Far- rail ef Mamarenack and a boat ef th other were atrongly barked. Cooper learned tils trad at Cedar Crest and holds a aourse record . ef IT ther. Sine he made th record, however, many ef the bole hav been lengthened and a cor of new trap hav bean Installed. None of th practicing pro hav broken TO thl week. Hagen wa a favorlt en hi record. Turnesa' practice haa Indicated that Ib 1 ' W mnA Araw mwiA AaMam hav dassled th galleries with the marvelous control of their approach shot. Golden, with Al Esplnoaa of Chicago, however, he been having a great deal of difficulty making hla putt break for th hoi. Armour and been consistently Crulckshank hav clot te par. On ef th beat record ef the day waa turned In by Wort Dutra of Wash., who shot a St on th first nln. Dutra started to burn up th course after taking on par on Ne. 1, where he we trapped. He parred No. I with a thre, scored a birdie three at th neat he! and followed It with an agl three en the fifth. A streak of wildneas Intervened, however, te make hint even par for the nine. Th tournament win get under way at S o'clock tomorrow, with threeInter somes taking off at vale on th flrat eighteen. hoi qualifying round. The field will play eighteen holee In the afternoon and the ranking thlrty-o- n player will then be paired for elimination inatehea durth week. ef th real Hagen. th ing ohamplon, I not required te qualify. a. 465-ya- flve-mln- ut Utah's defeat at th hands of Colorado Aggie may be marked up as the price exacUd from tb Ute for glory they obtained by playing to a gtandstlQ two week ago. mountain Experience In th Rocky region show that any team which, Invade th midwest early In the season pay dearly for th effort. The same Colorado Agglea which beet the Utes yesterday saw two conference championships slip from their fingers entirely and another chemplonihlp marred by a tl. all becaus thay bad com ahead toe fait In their effort to sis up favorably with tb middle western team. Other team hav gon out of their own barnyard and made respectable ahowlng against Mississippi valley opponent, but they, too, hav paid the prlee which Utah paid Saturday. When a Rocky mountain team gee east to play football the advantage la entirely with th eastern team. Big Ten team hav world ef material. Often they have more lettermcn returning than Rocky mountain teams hav soud members. They hav greater latent strength than de Rocky mountain teams. When a Colorado or Montane team goeaUtah, back they find themselves battling against an ipexhaustlbl reserve supply, Tbu to mak a (hewing against a team which la playing at hom with lota of good man on th field and a lot more good onea on th bench the Rocky mountain coach find himself up against a problem of developing a team a lot faster than be ahould do so. H find that h baa to pound, pound, pound from th start, Tb result 1 Injuries early In th season, Injuries which are apt to reappear at any tlm or Injuria which might not disappear th season. With that toll during taken from the team tha coach must then bring his men te their cutting edge a month ahead of tlm and arly in October must See hi team In th shape he would like to hav It to November. Th result I that whan th killing gam of mtdseason com around the team which played th boy In the aat la tired and must sooner or later crumble. And th quicker they orum- ble uie quicaer iney can readjust themselvea end meet their Rocky mountain comrietltlon. All of which bring up th question a whether or not tb gamea with Big Ten team really pay. Other schools In th conference hav com te the conclusion that th Big Ten or any other competition should not Infringe upon thir Rocky mountain schedule and the result ) that many of th Colorado school ar dickering for game after th season elos, rather than Just whan tb season beginning. 8om achool hav decided to confine their effort entirely to R. M. C. competition, believing betit ter to b a big aggregation at home than a group of defeated heroes In om ether conference. Thl Is by th fsct that th larger schools refus to com to th mountain te play. Th altitude la toe high and th gate are toe low. The question which the management of athletics at Utah unlvrity must face soon is whether or not to eontlnu competition east of the aeaeon: Mississippi early In th whether to tlck to the R. M. C. and hav team most of the winning time or whether to sacrtfic conference contender for a chance to puh ever one of the big one. Th solution will b, probably, that UUh football folk will begin angling for big nonoonferenc games to be played late In tha Mason or after the R. M. C. season has closed. In a short time the Ute should be able to hav many of thei gam played In the Ute stadium. Meanwfiil. tv is Armstrong getting ready to give Crelghton a hard game. m JJorth-wests- remarked hopefully, "I'm to steg-- a comeback that than th Salt Lake out. heavier foinf great ball, but fit, and displayed some will outshine anything I aver th passing attack of th local eleven, did. And the next tins Z'U together with some footwork by Erni onto my dough.' ' Nott. quarterback, gav th locals th hang needed point. whose wlfs recently Kay, Th Rio tirand outfit scored la th sued him for divorce, ha been first oerlod when Nott bulleled a pass to Slav Howl on end. Howells wa working in the steel mills at out In th open and ran th nearly Gary for S9 a weak. fifty yarda between himself and th run from my parents goal without.. any( Interferene. Th m r'Sht back within horns to the mill every mornOgden outfit tha first few minutes and acord in ing and evsning," he said. th same way. Richards passing to And X box every night In tha Feterson for th score, Th goal point town gym. Just because the tied th soots. ' Anothsr pas in th second quarter sporting world thinks I'm nut the local outfit ahead. fott mess doesn't that I waa through who tossed to Robinson, standing n th goal line, and Robinson fell over the marker for th tally. Th winning point wr put ovr In th4 tnira quarter, wnn a v. r. oaca jumwas bled his goal and Rebtnaon through th line and tackled him In h could get to th field. th same period Price bucked the ball over for Ogden, but th point were ot enough. With lea than a minute to play, after he had Intercepted an Ogden paa and raced forty yard toward hie own goal before being downed, Nott d put ever a dropklck from the thirty-yarangle with the wind against him and th added difficulty of a bad bar. senangl to get through th waa th Nott' beautiful work Golfer Ready Richard and Sixty-Od- d sation of th game. Prlc itarred for the vlaitor. A turn gam will b played at Ogden Annual Professional In two weak. be-f- ! I Five; Salina Loses Stubby defeated th East. of Invasion CHICAGO. Oct. SO (AP) Anothsr star has joined tha ranks of those who would state a comeback, Joey Kay, speed marvel of th cinder track until ha net Fssvo Nur-la 1928, hss been ttsJninf quietly la Gary, Ind. "But one of these lvn , ' Moab Conquers Price in defeated His Comeback Ogden Union Paclfie team, 11 to 14, in a beautiful gam of ball on th Weat Th visitor had a high eampua. nr. Soun Captures Longchamps Race Sizes . ! bey Utei Not Firit Contender! to Be Beaten After "J dle. Ml 24 EAST EEOAD WAY Sunday when th TIKES Crucial Battle in u- One more victory wa added to th B, O. W. eleven triumph of th D. I THIRD III In-tr- Joey Ray Training for 4; n: Bulldogs, . go New Tork Yankees It, it Games With Big Ten Exact Price Always .P. Is ihental in Victory by i 19-1Good Game. Oct. 30 (A?). A bet on Dempsey wag squared tip this afternoon, when C. D. Vienot, who had been in an airplane once before, leaped from s plan at an altitude of mora than 2000 a successful feat and mad parachut landing. Vlenot, a special delivery carrier, picked Dempsey In th rcent battle In Chicago a wager with 8. and mad Juhns, a fellow worker, whereby the loser muat either pay th winner 128 or Jump from an airplane at a height of 2000 feet Seeing "no reason for losing 125," Vlenot jnadt the parachut Jump. After th Jump, he admitted His he bad trained a little. training consisted of attending several showing of a movie, daredevil hero in which th Jumped from a plane. unl. va. Colorado collage yersity at Boulder. Taaehara Colorado Mine at Qroalay. Great Work NolV rMAHA, Neb, SATURDAY'S SCHEDULE. Colorado Aoglss vs. UUh Aggiss at Logan. Crelghton vt. Utah at Salt La ka. Waatarn Stata va. Brigham Young 1927. Gam es Head List Saturday Boulder-Tige- r WILL GET INTO ACTION SATURDAY Four Teams Still in Race for Grid Title 31 1 1 . Nibley Petition to Be Presented Nlbly golfer" who ere intr- ested in prh th pro area and upkeep of th municipal perk are invited to attend th eity eommlislon Tuesday vnlng, according te mting Mickey Riley, th elub' pro. Bishop C. W. Nibley petition aaklnsr that derived from ne of the link by th golfing nubile be directed t Improvement ef the park Itself and not to other disposition will b formally presented to th commission in th IIIIIIIIllIHKIfI a S GOtF It a i As Champions Flay PROPER ACTION V X OE'O W' t WILL ENABLE THE P LAYER TO PERFECT THE BACKS' N SHOT I It a good Idea fee aa average player I va a backapin mash let . By ASK 0. gSPINOIA. ProOn ef America' Ldln fessional. e e The beekspia mash! Is ne longer used by any player, so all players should perfect the beekspia ahot by developing th proper wrist actio when usmg the regular maahle. The top Is put on the ball by the action th maehie, of maahle ef the wrist niblick, rather than by the rough face f th old tlm backapin maahle, which ha been barred from teurna ment py. (Copyright, HIT, AMoelaUd editors, Inc.) sov plays', pits.: a a SI C. A. Donahue i B fri) 4 m aw Chicago here te show yeu what I new J l tyle. . IS A weederf ul ertunlty t w fall and Winter JJ leet yeu M In th ult from th feed have It talleeed te piece st yeur rdr. I tn J TODAY C0MS I XX! . MADTSOf. Wis.. Oct. IS (AF).aT- Knulaon, 15. E tough ton high school eophomor. died at th Wisconsin Genera) hospital late last night ae a result ef Injuries received 'a an Interclsa football gam al Stougit-to- o JTrlday. fred 8 John D. Owen teeert Bank Bamnt N. S last Pint South 8 ElIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUXSXIl , |