The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1923, Page 4

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IHOUSER’S MEN. __ | BEAT MANDAN: | SCORE 13 107 With Score Against Locals at Comes Back Strong BH. EASILY | BEST | End of First Half, Team | ' i Amount of Ground Gain Shows Local Team was Far Superior During Game t | (By Bruce Murphy) fp Outplaying their opponents in three out of four quarters, the_Bismarek High School Demons took their first ard the District Champion- lefeating the ppy Man- dan eleven by/a count of 13 to 7, ‘on the an gridiron Saturd ternoon. Coach Houser’s proteges ated to win, but the dope overturned during the first half, and it was only by a urt of straight football jn the last quarter, that Bismarck was able to ht it again, The Demon: were } bucket ried the scoring divhen they recovered a Mandan fum- Vhle on the thirty yard line, and con- lverted it into a touchdown by a long forward pass, and two line bucks. "the goul-kick was missed, The score came just at the opening of the sec- od pe During the rest of the t half, Mandan brought its offen- ive strength into p and by series of fake end runs nd off. je plays, marched seventy E the field for a touchdown. Nel- F added the extra point, and Bis- a marek trailed 7-6, s Show Superiority told a different ‘The Mandan team was thrown irely upon the defense, and did succeed in temporarily holding off he Demon’ attack at critical timest 3ut the vast amount of ground gain- ‘d by Bismarck was bound to result n a touchdown, and it came in the niddle of the last quarter. — ‘I'wice ain after that the Mandan goal s threatened, Once the oval was The ards from another touchdown. The Mandan team was clearly out- classed in every department of the sco game with the exception of the kick- ing. Burdiek’s toe gained ground, failed. During Mandan made only through the Bismarck Bismarck made 35 I, and twen- ve more vig the aerial orute, The second quarter was the only stage of! the game where the Mandan team ifwaa at all superior. Bismarck gain- iJed thirty yards on ight football, jJand twenty on forward s. The \{Mandan team made — seventy-three yards on end runs and line bucks, |[During the second half, the ‘Jmarck team amassed a great deal of yardage. Two-hundred and sixty- five yards on line bucks and end #vuns and nine yards on forward ifpasses were the distances gained. \J Enough territory was traversed to \fcount up three or four touchdowns. Man gained only twenty-five yards, in the last half, three of w resulted from their only successful jaw of the contest. Eighteen first where other means the first quarter seven yards defense, y ‘ w \Jorought to the two-foot line, and the ifgame ended with Bismarck four ' | downs were made by the Bismarck j,team during the entire contest, to (js: negotiated by the Mandan ele- ven. Each side drew one penalty of five yards each. Mandan completed one pass out of nine, while Bis- marck made four out of ten for a distance of fifty-five yards, The Bismarck team showed com- mendable improvement in offense, and Coach Houser is building a fine machine from a green squad. backfield men worked more as a Yunit with the rest of the team. The ‘line men were much more effective at opening holes. The defense, ex- cept for the momentary lapse during See ete reader owas also wall ji executed. j} - Alfson, as usual, was the outstand-| marck 6. | ing star of the Demon line-up. Shep- i[pare, a end, Scott, at tackle, and | Brown, at quarterback played effec- |tive games. O'Hare, Noddings, and ; Kiebert in the backfield, all showed considerable advancement, i¢__ Burdick, stocky quarterback, and ;|)gerous men on the Mandaa line-up, | while Porter played a strong game _J,at_end. + The Bismarck line-up was compos- ied of: Benzer, centeg; Bender. and : | Russell, guards; Scott and Dodson, jitackles; Sheppard and Scroggins, = ends; Brown, quarterback; Alfson, \) fullback; .O’H; “Following is a resume of the play: “First Peried Heidt, for Mandan, kicked off romptly at three o'clock. Alfson turned the kick to the 35 yard line. ilfson tore off six yards through ht tackle. O’Hare’ made it first wn and followed with five yards und right’ end. Brown lost four, jyand Dodson kicked to Burdick on - {,Mandan’s 29 yard mark. Bismarck’s slime held, and an. off-side penalty ‘forced Mandan ‘to punt. Brown re- he Sarna to Bivmarck’s 88 yard. live. ‘two line bucks and a pass. failed to ‘work, and Burdick caught Dodson’s int on’ his own 26 yard line. AAf- mon recayered a Mandan, fumble, but the-oval on a poor pass from om the first play. Burdick ted to Brown on his rd matk. Alfson made eight in ¢ Brown made. it ar grab at Alfson’s to the seven yard 3 yards throug blew for the first 0-0, Brown sneaked through center for a fou son end yare ed Nel led Alt: pla; gin pas: hal 26. } | six six on ed. an ed ing seve on yarde--more,:’ ‘Noddin, more. -The third quarter ended with Bismarck in possessig O'Hare missed goal. to kick and a Brown lost Speared a pass, but fumbled tackled, and Brown recovered, Dod- son kicked to Burdick on Mandan’s| 0Ut for, Mandan. 27 yard line. Burdick made five. Nel- yards, placing h} yards of the goal. first down on two plays. rested on the made three yards. Nel five. Heidt made a y: went through tackle for 2 touchdown. tween, the goal posts. Scott made a yard on a fake tackle play. |left end. The | tackle. ys, and Brown again, made it firs down. A pass was incomplete. Scrog- teen yard gain. Heidt kicked over the goal, and it jwas Bi yard line. Several line bucks netted! first down. through left tackle. first down. |, Nelson, halfback, were the most dan-| more. dan’s 25 yard line, Alfson made five off-tackle. first down. | Mandan recovered a fumble on their seven yards off tackle. Heidt made! it first down, ‘ forty yard mark. Bismarck failed to make their downs, and the ball re- verted. Kiebett tackled Nelson for’a five-yard loss the only pass Mandan completed dur- qunted to Bigmarck’s 27 yard line.] Time out for Porter. punted to Burdick on his yard mark. Arthur substituted’ for Porter st end. Heidt was stepped a yard. rolled over the goal Noddings cir for 2 “yards Kicbert Down the World Series Home Stretch RCK HIGH: MOVES Photo shows McGuire, who was runni pring two for the Giants in manner pleas Groh’s single during the first game. for Gowdy, rounding third, with Bancroft crossing thé’ plate, ing tg the home team rooters, and all made possible by Heinie 3 STENGEL’S HOMER FINISHES IT E ah De a +g ® In the t d-fought campaign, poled a migh s and advanced The whistle { yards. quarter, Second Period - first play. | Yards. Mandan chose | Bism Alfson received the kick-off | began need to the 34 yard mark. ix. Noddings negotiated | "ds O'Hare| More a when | dupli touchdown on the r through the line. tore around Bismarck’s right ona fake and nego the ofl Porter adde ds on another fake. A pass fail- of completion. Burdick made] - The ball yard line. Burdick son added d. Burdick three, son placed his kick-squarely be- Brown receiv- the kick-off on the 21 yard mark, Noddin, added five around| | OlHlare made three through Brown made it first down, son tore off cight yards, in s hooked Alfson’s throw for a fif- Three Bismarck ses were incomplete and 4c firs f effided, Score Mandan 7, Bis- Third Period arck’s ball on their own 20 O'Hare negotiated eight Alfson made it O'Haye “tore off six Alfson raced around end for yards, bringing the ball to Man- O'Hare plunge made it Two line plays netted yards. Time out for O'Hare. yard line, Burdick negotiated wn, Burdick was ‘stopped ‘the scrimmage line. A pass fai Brown returned the put to his for O'Hare. Scott an attempted fake. Burdick pass- to Nelson for three yards, It was the entire ontest. Burdick Kiebert made en yards on two pla Dodson own 39 a center smash, Two plays, lost ‘A, long punt of Burdiek’s line. It was marek’s ball on their 20° yard -A line play netted. two yards. led ‘Mandag’s right end idded_ three. 83 "for rine added four |; ih of the last inning, of the first world serie home run to deep ¢ plate, bringing ‘home the run that meant a Giant victory Mandan’s_19| Johnstone tore Alfson recovered a Score| fumble on the 31 yard mark. Kiebert made half a yard, -Two pas: no good, and the o Mandan, Bismarck Alfson made | yard line. 1 to Brown on rek's 36 yard line. : h toward the goal line, Alfson s ed, with four yards and Kiebert made first down, It was Bismarck’s ball onthe 36 yard line. negotiated ed 32] dings gained six. within 36| first down. Kiebert a q2| five yards each. Kiebert made a yard. Alfson id Alfson made Carpentier’s Victory Over Joe Beckett g- | France, ed in By oe pa ‘failed and ae . Casey Stengel, centerfielder, and veteran df-many a ter, The camera caught him coming Into the made two. The ball was on the one yarli line. Alfson smashed over right ard for the touchdowns \ Brown ked goal, There was~seyen min- utes left to play. McCormick recgiv- ed for Mandan on the 32 yara~-ighe. A line play a pass failed. Scroggins intercepted a Mandan throw. Kiebert failed to gain. Nod- dings circled right end for eight yards. Alfson made it first down, and followed with a six yard gain. Brown negotiated three, and Alfson gained five. It was first down on Mandan’s six yard line, with two minutes to play. Noddings made two, Kiebert failed to gain. Alfson made 3 yards on two plays. The ball reverted to Mandan on the two foot line, Burdick punted to Brown, who made a pretty return, and brought the oval thirty yards down to the a LTE DISMANUK LRIBUING game Of the world series, the six yard line. One play gained two yards, and the final whistle blew. Score Bismarck 18, Mandan 7. A. C. Wins After 15.—North Dakota Agricultural Bisons played like champions Saturday and downed South Dakota State, 14 to 13, in one of the most thrilling, hair-raising and hard fought contests witnessed on the A. C, gridiron., The contest was a story of an out- weighed green team of Bisons play- ing high class football against the dope—for very few of the Bisons’ staunchest admirers gave them a cHance to win the contest. The eleven that won the game de- served the victory for South Dakota Fargo, Oct. State was forced into a kicking game early in the contest, in fact shortly after Thompson ran across the Bison line with the first counter ‘of the game. ¢ [ High School Scores. Fargo high 48; -Lidgerwood 0. Alexandria 9; Moorhead 9. Jamestown 29; Carrington 0. 4 Bismarck 13; Mandan 7. Oakes 130, Enderlin 0. ° Hillsboro 43; Cooperstown 0. ~ Bemidji 56; Thief River Falls 0. Valley City second 32; Jamestown seconds 0/ | || Hope 56; Mayville 6, A Hard Fight, HAIL TO THE KING Navy 27; West Verginia Wesleyan Penn State 20; Gettysburg 0. Columbia 12; Wesleyan 6, Northern Normal and Industrial school 13; Huron college 3. La Crosse Normal 12; college 9. Washington and Lee 6; Kentucky Lawrence 6, Washington and Jefferson 12; Brown 7. Cosnell 28; Williams 6. Florida 7;- Georgia Tech 7. Ohio Wesleyan 14; Ohio Northern Pennsylvania 13; Swartpmore 10. Carnegie 13; Carroll 0, Oberlin 13; Case 7, Amherst 0; Union 0. Tufts 14; Bates 6, = Syracuse 23; Alabama 0. ZINN PITCHES ONE-HIT GAME Kansas City Wins Sunday Game From Baltimore Kansas City, Oct. 15—Jimmy Zinn Baltimore, Kansas - City, Duluth Cathedral 20; Superior 0.| champions of the American assi La Crosse’ 26; Eau Claire 0. Detroit 15;Park Rapids 0. North Dakota CoHeges, South Dakota U.13; North Dakota Us. /A, C. 14; S. 8. State 18, Concordia 25; Jamestown 6, . Big Ten Conference. Wiseonsin 21; Michigan Aggies 0. Michigan 3; Vanderbilt 0. Minnesota 13; Haskell Indians 12. Indiana 7; Northwestern 6. { Towa 7; Purdye-0. Ilinois'21; Butler 7 |, Colgate 23; Ohio State 23. Minnesota Conference, Carleton 52; Macalester 0, ~ St. Olaf 7; Luther college 7+ St, Mary’s (Winona) 10; Gustavus Adolphus 3. : Bic Three, Harvard 6; Middelbury 6. . Yale 40; Georgia 0. j Princeton 17; Georgetown 0. , _ General, : Nebraska 24; Oklahoma 0. Notre Dame 13; “Army 0, Drake U 54; Rolla School’ of Mines Grinnell 16;. Washington U 2, Colorado, college 18;;: Colorado. School of Mises 0... ‘ Colora*e U 60: Colorado State 4. Utah Wises: Wyoming U0). so. Superior Normal Oshkosh 1 with the International league cham- tion, touched Parnham and Thomas, Oriole’ pitchers, for 10 hits to win, 7 to 1, The victory gives Kansas City one-game lead on the series pions, the count now standing two to one in favor of, Kansas City, Zinn, who ‘formerly was with the Pirates, pitched his game before what probably. was the greatest crowd that ever witnessed a minor league game. Club officials estimated the attendgnce. as 23,105. . The stands, which held 17,500 peo- ples were. packed, with spectators / greatest point of ascendancy. The for , i The Yankees’ big moment in the first world series game came in the second inning. ‘Ward had singled j past Groh on the first pitch. Schang singled to center, Ward stopping at second. Schang advancing. Hoyt fanned. Then Witt singled, scoring Ward and Schang-. shows Witt reaching first, Ward scoring and Schang rounding third on the way to the plate. ! When Babe Ruth completed his first home run ut the Polo Grounds in the second inning: of the second ers from the stands were so great that the Babe’ just couldn't keep frgm ;doffing his cap. If a ‘ballplayer ever registered “happiness,” he is doing it in this phdtograph\of Ruth. YANKEES POUND M’GRAW PITCHERS | SUNDAY, WHILE BUSH HOLDS BATTERS “Bullett Joe” Pitches One of The Finest Games in His Career in the World Series —Dugan. and Meusel Lead The Attack of American Leaguers New York, Oct:, 15,—Sweeping for- ward with irresistible power on the high tide of triumph, the New York Yankees battered the world’s cham> pion Giants into subjection Sunday for the second successive time and took a formidable jead of three games to two in the 1923 struggfe for diamond supremacy. Baffled at every turn by the mar- velous, almost flawless mound work of “Bullet Joe” Bush, reeling under the terrific force of the Yankee bom- j bardment, the Giants were submerg- ed by a score, of 8 to 1, put to route as ‘complete as it was devastating, Bush, he of the red flannel shirt and ‘puzzling fork ball, held the Giants at bay with three hits, all of which were made by “Irish” Meusel, whose triple in the second inning Ted to his team’s only score. “ “Bullet Joe” Bush Invincible. Except for this brief flurry, Bush pitched @ one-hit game here Sunday | was invincible, domipiating the game against with his masterful hurling, while the Yankees, swinging their big guns into | with without delay, won the battle with a barrage of seven hits in the first two innings. Two of McGraw’s aces, Jack Bentley and Jack. Scott, were shelled into retirement in less than three innings ang two others were galled into the fray before the- echoes of the last fusilade died away. Another record crowd, a mighty gathering of 66,000, that filled’ the Yankee stadium to overflowing, while 50,000 more fought in vain to gain entrance, witnessed the’ Giant de- bacle and the Yankees’ star dt its standing four and five deep along) paig attendance of 62,817 eclipsed by the back of the upper tier. The out- of this barrier was crowded )with people. *” Zinn faced just '28 batters in the nine innings he worked. OIL PUMPING AND LOSS OF POWER , elim- Caused from worn cylin inated with the Rottler ing Bar. The fastest, simplest, and most ac- curate tool on the market tor 2 phn ‘ishing automobile cylinde: done with the moter in the ehassi field wax roped Off and every foot|in the ‘third game of the series at nearly 400 the previous record, set the stadium two days ago, while.the receipts, passing the $200,000 mark for ‘the second time, brought the total “gate” of the series to within $75,000 of the million dollar mark. Odds Favor Yankees, But: even if Nehf is returned vic- torioug in his second appearance, the odds will be all in favor of the American” Jeague> ch: Me Graw will ha ‘ granting he wins with’ hig ace, while Huggins, is strongly éntrencheg with Sam Jones, who lost to Nehf al- no need of pulling your. motor and|though he outpitched his rival; Herb dismantling it. \This top! saves that expense. Makes absolutdly true hole in perfect ent with thi block in a fraction of the time re- quired by, ather device, takes from, Fennady Sou: here atar_who won th second ‘game And saved Saturday’ when Shawkey’ weakened, and Waite Hoyt, vietim of the Giants in; the. first game, who is gdnfident he can 015 inches to>.064.inches at one cut.| come back and win, Garage owners, get one of these Bush’s performance yesterday tools and make, thas extra profit this | stood out in high relief against the winter. that you have been sending outside. ‘for ture or ask on. “We can “prove tool. State, Distributor, ineffectiveness, of McGraw’s twirlers, who were bomBardeq from the_hill almost as quickly they went in. Pageant Dis ode Mada blind. speed, ive curves, and mar- velous pobeig of bis fork-bAll. Only “OCTOBER 15, 1928 TOWARD CHAMPIONSHIP : WHEN YANKEE ROOTERS WENT WILD ~ Scott out, Ward and This remarkable photo 32 men faced him and except Meusel, none got the semblance of a hit. He walked out, struck out three and turned back his opposition in rapid- fire order in six of the nine innings. Giants Score in Second, Meusel’s trip and Casey Stengel’s out combined to give the Giants their only run in the second inning. In the fourth Young walked, and Meugel got his second hit, a double, with two out. But Stengel was easy for Bush and Pipp. Meusel singled for his third straight safe blow in the seventh, and got to secong when Kelley walked, but Gowdy hit weakly to Ward and Kelly was forced at sec- ond for the third out. Those few sorties ‘tell the story of the com- pleteness with which the Giants were held in check, Bush seemed to grow stronggr as the game progressed, or perhaps it was that the Giants lost heart, and in the eighth “Bullet Joe” réceived an ovdtion when he struck out Jimmy O'Connell, $75,000 beauty, and Dave Bancroft in sdecession. hw Dugan Leads Attack, Led by “Jumping Joe” Dugan, who jadded batting glory to his already Marvelous fielding record for the seyies, and Bob Meusel, the Yankees concentrated their attack in the first two innings. Theréafter, with a for- inidable leaq behind Bush, they let down in their offensive, Dugan gathered four hits, includ- ing a home run, jnside the park in the second inning, and scored tiree runs, while Meusel slugged out three safe blows, including a triple. Four- teen safe hits in all were collected off the Giant moundsmen, Regular meeting of Bis- marck Lodge No. 5, A. F. & M. tonight at 7:30'p. m. Work in the M. M. Degree. Cattle Shipments Amount to $385,000 Killdeer, Oct. 15—Thus far this year there “have been 308 cars of cattle shippeq out of Killdeer. This means approximately 7,700 head. At an estimated value of $60 a round this brought in $385,000. A ldPze portion of this stock owned by Dunn county ranchers came-off the reser- vation, although a number of cars came from as far west as Arnegard due to the excellent service receiyed out of Killdeer. REVIVE TUTTLE PAPER Wilton, Oct. 15—The Tuttie news- paper, formerly known as the Star, has been revived by M. W. Hutch- ings, and will-be known as the Tut- tle Times. VAPOR-0 At your DRUGGISTS M°CABE DRUGCO. NEKOMA.N_D. The Barber- kK “North Coast Limited” ‘The North Coast Limited” ‘fs one of America’s ” > Finest Trains Uv. Bismarck - 11:29 a. m. Your Train! a My <

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