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Do. PAGE SIX NOTRE DAME WINS LAURELS IN FOOTBALL GRID SQUAD tance, standing off the challenges of urday’s Victory overs Princeton an Impressive One | For Catholic University | | IOWA IS DEFEATED! | Chicago, Oct, 22.—Notre Dame uni- | versity took the spotlight in col | today, as a result of the to 2 beating handed Pr wuts in the second successive inter- ame of the Indiana school. ies launched a bewilder- ing series of and-circling runs and forward passes t Princeton, | making four touchdowns. Princeton got but four fist downs. Princeton's two points came on a safety in the first period. . Yale got a surprise in Bucknell, winning by a 29 to 14 score, while Harvard was able to beat Holy Cros by only a 6 to 0 score, It was not a big day for the “Big Three” of thet — East. Penn State crushed the Navy 21 ta! 6, Harry Wilson secring three touch- downs, one,of them from the kick- | off. The Army defeated Auburn 28 | to 6, while Syracuse, playing in the Yankee stadium in New York, de- feated the powerful: Pittsburgh elev- en, 3 to 0; The western conference games Iowa's first defeat in the games of football, Illinois crushing the Iowans by a score of | 9 to 6. Britto nmade a 50-yard place | kick for Illinois, Michigan showed great strength in | defeating Ohio State, 23 to 0, before 45,000, persons at Ann Arbor. Wis- consin ran almost at will through | Indiana, for a 52 to 0 victory, while Purdue university and Wabash play- | eda 7 to 7 tie. Chicago beat North- western, 13 to 0. The University of North Dakota | battled hard against Minnesota in the annual contest of the two teams, but lost 27, to 0. jPgwerful line | plunges of Minnesota "hacks account- ed for most of the Gophers’ big gains. Carl Lidberg, Minnesota half, | ‘heered the supporters of Spauld- ing’s team by his fine work. The North Dakota team won cheers for the gameness digplayed in the face of great odds, The North Dakota Aggies showed strength Saturday in playing the Des Moines Univers Tigers to a 0 to 0 score at Des Moines. Both teams were well matched, except that the Aggies were outweighed > Football Res Results _ Fargo high 8; Ji Moorhead high 72 Oakes Valley C Minot Larimore 6; Devils Lake 6 Grand Forks 6; Grafton 7. Hope 3; Casselton 3. College rth Dakota Aggies 0; University at Des Moines 0. South Dakota State 27; Creighton 20. South Dakota University 0; Ne- braska Wesleyan 0. ; Minnesota U 27; North Dakota U | Concordia 8; St. Johns 0. Gustavus Adolphus 19; Parker col- lege 6. St. Olaf 21; Macalester 0. BILL BOELTER Captain Bill Boelter, star halfback and captain of the Drake University stars of the west. Boelter has been an- All-lowa and an All-Missouri Valley choice for two years. This on he hopes to make the All- Western. ‘TEV TRIUMPHS EASILY OVER | iy Part to the Soggy Con- dition of the Track FELL BEHIND BADLY Belmont Park, New York, Oct, 22. —Coming down the home stretch with a blinding irresistible burst of speed, Zev, the Rancocas Stable’s great son of the Finn-Miss Kearney, scored a smashing thoroughbred victory for America Saturday afternoon, con- quering Papyrus, the English derby winner by the decisive margin of six lengths over the mile and a half Bel- mont Park course, With Zev's sensational victory went $80,000 of the $100,000 purse for which the classic was fought and the crown of the three year old cham- pion of the World at stake for the first time in one of the most color- ful spectacles American turf history thas ever known, { A vast throng of 60,000, the largest in eastern track annals, gathered in this picturesque Long Island setting thoroughbrew laurels. But while | there were thrills aplenty, the crowd saw the Am n cold sweep to a triumph almost as one sided as it answered pre- jnot in the b | loping to conv: \tory over Papyrus A a rather bad start, Zev overtook his rival’ be- |fore the first quarter pole had been reached and thereafter was never headed, despite the game and gallant json: of the English champfon. |Over the first mile and a quarter it eleven, is. one of the pre-eminent | ENGLISH HORSE | Showing of” Papyrus Blamed} in expectation of a tense duel for | was a thriling race, Zev leading by practically a length over that dis- rus and apparently runnifig well iota himself. Then came the real \test, the final quarter and Zez met {it brilliantly while Papyrus was {found wanting. * | Makes Great Finish, | Straightening out his mount for | the finishing drive, Earl Sande, pre- 'mier American rider, gave Zev his | head and the colt responded with a| terrific burst of speed. Papyrus fell | | Bebina rapidly, apparently tired and | “all in” under this withering pace, ii Zev galloped under the wire and six lengths in the van amid a thun- | | derous ovation from the throng that | had watched the struggle in pulse-| | gripping suspense. Zev, always a noted “mud horse,” jdemonstrated he was completely at \ the wate tk idsemiedl that theatory oF Papyrus’ defeat lay in part at least ‘to the fact that the derby winner | seemed unable to run at his best on the sloopy track. Papyrus Disappointing. | |_ There was no question but that | Papyrus was a disappointment to | ¢ | turf critics, especially in view of the English horse’s brilliant time trials | just before the. racd, and perhaps an planation of this was the fact, developed after the match, that the derby winner was shod smoothly | while Zev wore both toe and heel caulks. This, it was said, accounted | | for the fact ‘that Papyrus seemed to | lip at the start, unable to gain firm footing. “Papyrus was not at home in the going,” declared Steve Donoghue, the | great English jockey, who rode’ the | invader, afterward, and this opinion | was confined by Basil Jarvis, the jcolt's trainer, but neither put this | forward as an alibi for defeat. There | was doubt in their minds, as well as those of the vast gathering that the lipeke horse, as they stood today, won. Behind the test of thoroughbred Vises and stamina, was a brilliant | duel of horsemanship and in this | matching of riding wits, Sande, won over ‘his famous rival, Donoghue, wipner of five English derbies, who piloted Papyrus to triumph in this year’s classic at Epsom Dow: It was Sande’s generalship as much jas Zev's greatness that brought vic- tory to America. The little jockey who has piloted the Rancocas star to oe of his big triumphs, outmaneuver- and outthought his opponent. eMnantice tithe race, 2 minutes 352-5 seconds, was not remarkable but it'was good in the fact of exist- ing track conditions. The fractional times showed that Zev displayed his greatest speed over the first’five fur- longs of the race but by compari- son with Papyrus, the Rancocas colt seemed to travel swiftest in the final stages of the encounter, home in the heavy going and after | |Sowles; uards, Kollman, Hillman CAPTAIN McELWAIN This détermined docking young fellow anéwers to the name T. Mclwain (the suspicion: is first name is Bill) and he is @ guy Around the campus of ithe Northwestern university, being no less a personage than captain of the en, donhed the molegkins, and we! given some practice for a few min- utes du: the contest. Bismarck’s geores came as the re-; sult of end runs and forward pas! while Linton resorted to bucking the line for their gains, The “Bearcat” lineup was compos- ed of: Ends, Register, Blunt, Per- | kins and Erickson; tackles, Jot and Garske; center, Benson; quar- terback, McGray and Olson; haif- backs, Boelter, Day and Noddings; , fullback, Keibert and Byrne. Officials were: Mal Brown, ref- | eree; Bruce Murphy, umpire; Her- bie O'Hare, head linesman. MINOT TEAM. WINS TITLE Puts Williston Out of Running For High School Honors, By 22 to 14 Score Minot high schcol won a lear} claim to the northwestern high schobl football title Saturday after- noon by defeating Williston, 22 to 14, ang should Bismarck keep her slate clear in the game next Saturday with Mandan, Minot and Bismarck may meet to settle thé district cham- BEAT LINTON Bismarck High Second Team “Wins, 19 to 0 The “Bearcats,” the reserve eleven of the local high, registered their second win over the Linton first string men by a score of 19 to 0, in a contest staged.on the loca], grid- iron Saturday afternoon. The heavy, but inexperienced Lin- ton eleven was no match for the lighter Bismarck team. On the first play after the initial kick-off, a de- layed crossbuck made telling effect on the unprepared Lintonites, and Kiebert brushed aside a few oppon- ents and ran sixty yards for the first counter. Archie McGray piloted his team to another touchdown in the first half, and the last quarter brought another tally, Noddings . and Kiebert, two of Houser’s mainstays on the first elev- Hamline 33; Fort Snelling Third | Infantry 0, Carleton 38; Knox 9. e Wisconsin 52; Indiana 0. lino 6. Michigan 23; Ohio State 0, Minnesota 27; North Dakota U 0. Purdue 7; Wabash 7. Jamestown 9; Moorhead State Teachers college 0. Eau Claire Normal 16; Superior Normal 14. Towa State 7; Kansas Aggies 7. Alabama 7; Sewanee 0. Butler 16; Bethany 0. St. Xaviig 13; John Carroll 9. Otterbein 18; Hiram 0. Ohio Wesleyan 14; Wittenberg 0. Marietta 6; Dayton 0. Georgia Tech 20; Georgetown 10. | Lombard 13; Bradley 7. George 1 Tennessee 0. . \West Virginia 81; Marshall 0, Lebanon Valley 7; Franklin and Marshall 6. U of Colorado 41; Brigham Young Notre Dame 25; Princeton 2. Bebiesks 0; Kansas 0. Michigan ies 13; Albion 0, Ohio Northabe 14; ‘Western Re- serve 0. 7 mie 12; Bates. 7. . yracuse 8; Pittshurgh 0. Pennsylvania 19; Columbia ‘7. ypickinana 28, ‘illanova 0. rsinus 16; Haverford 6. » Swarthmore o: Susquehana 0. ri fey hgoet pall ‘Trinity 0; liam ai Mor s Trinity 20; St. ae ie 1 RECORD DROP. KICK pionship. It ts the first time in sev- en years the Williston team-has not been in the running for state honors. Fargo high defeated Jamestown 8 to 0 Saturday, the Fargo team hav- IN NORTHWEST | ing a much harder time to win than the dope indicated. Absence of Rusch from the Fargo lineup hand- icapped the team. Fargo is, expected to play with the Oakes team for the southeastern championship. Oakes beat Valley City, 12,to 7, hard; impressive victory as that of Bis- marek over the Valley team by a 12 to 0 score. “Grafton took the lead in the florth- eastern district by déféating Grand Forks high, 7 to 6. Devils Dake ‘and Larimore remain undefeated, having played &6 to 6 tie. Garrison Wins - Over. Coleharbor Coach Spee of the Garrison high school, has whipped his gridiron warriors into shape, which is well illsutrated by the way they took the Coleharbor players into camp on their own field at Coleharbor Friday. The score stood, 39 to 0, in favor of the visitors. Jerstad’s crew showed a driving attack going through the line and around the end for downs tinte after time, the locals only held the visi. tors to downs once. , The visitors completed two out of three passes, Ray and Taylor caught one each. Captain McElwain and Robinson were the most adept at gaining | ground for the visitors, they made several line. smashes and end runs, gaining ground nearly every time. Garrison still carries the honor of never letting a high school score against them. The locals put a good fight but |) showed the lack of experience. As this was their first game of the sea- son, Coleharbor's center was very adept at running back en kickoffs Touchdown: McElwain: 3;,Robip- son 2, Boise 1. Points after touch- downs: McElwain 2, Taylor 1, Heimdall, according to Celtic my- thology, was the perfect sentinel. itis hearing was so acute that he cotild hear the wool eseie ona shbep’s bark. His eyesight was, so kéen he could see everythitig that hipbened everi though it poe whitie he slept. Advertising, if you use it properly, is &h infallible sentinel for you. It ginris: you agaist fraud and infer- ibtity. it pibieti you against mak- iti unwise and unsatisfactory pur- chases. Merchants and sbacAlteas who advertise must give full value be- tatise they have good names to pro- tect. The makers of well - known prddvets and the stores that sell these | products ‘often value the names at millions of-dollars. ‘They eannot af- ¢ ford b to jeopardide the worth of these naies by selling any. but good goods of Hit qneasure and fair price. So, you can bank on this. Adver- goed aH ae . as 9 MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1923 Yai aw be