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PAGESIX —~ ? BISMARCK OUT TO WIN RIGHT TO FINAL TILT High School “Demons” Pre- paring For Hard Battle in inal Game ” Semi- (By Bruce Murphy) With ¢ Fargo set suia the Spaulding n become team regul promisin, 1 thi (center) an end on w Uiback with lots ef weight emi-final match with | r this week end, the Bi marek eleven is preparing for a na dotball system aim: if their team mat tay be mentioned E ulding callg in many games, and (right) Ralph Holm-; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE NEW PLAYERS DEVELOPED BY SPAULDING NE) AWTAW, wv SU at the continual development of falter at some time during the | ett Van Duzee (left), @ ‘half-| week's practice on the gridiron — marek iminated by F nd the final title go last year, but the} ping fnewtan Capital Cit ve they have : yards by a much mor itile combination | pushing, Sorward than the 1922 team. x ay Erne Coach Houser has developed a} 5 Bhane ne ade NEA Service pair of ends that will undoubtedly | to 4 combination of the forward pa na Arbor, Mich. Nov. 6.—I give the F k great dealland the r gz ga Mie! pa fow se: of trouble when they try to encircle | constantiy aut, | aia saaoue! Wavee Eaaned De Cla Gite the ends, as this is their nioai Gilets CRC HMEIE tooan? OHUSRUTEOR Faccuatteeca tia: SCHUMER OISELC URS mode of atts ping end runs | cir-tuckle play, often better offensive |) : eertateaeee isle “annexing thel wearone enun the hase Be ee Onio: aUnvenI Soeaney title last year, and has also been | : or instanee, Ohio State had Harle a big factor in their advance this} Eyer si vid Stincheom; Towa, | Devine season. yay | Williams and ‘Te. | q The ‘relative strength of the op Visualize, 2 he posing lines is problematical, 8) piny far in adv oo on an el Rive igino: bisia iof compurison in| co uae Ui : -| son have been the rule ather ‘than this respect. marck will be rep- eleven h » of pace ie tion thin teuaues ie cit resented b t heavy i wi is most dec discon au unted for’ the «élase <of 1g: urea ca certing. — The never|gregations Big Ten competition Benzer, captain and center, knows what‘is comi aiivie acd daring tne tEeKeC mecenG| his second year of football,” pRocine | : ystem. n with plenty of fight, | yy; the winnitig campaigns. 4 inpicenitere gor pe erenuapece el luse acy of Miller,| “gut consider the Michigan outfit} as good as the middle west section | vee U0 Worry Stuhtdreher, Layden, Crowley,| of this season. Instead of boasting | a in some time. Time and state tackle of las ver and Bergman, aided by fast] of but two celebrities in its line up, » has beaten the ends down || RESTA HGE. thse: sencora, moving for are able to ¢ chine ineludes no less | under at and nailed the receiver ||F PREREEAE Tail fall, ‘Dedaon, the Rockn to a successful 11 footballers—five chaps | in his tracks. On offense his work | 4 Mae ucmiiercthér tackle, ha completion, tir to rank in gridiron | has likewise been of high class. 5 Mie antici apacd. Russell A plus a (a team yo Harry} This will be the last seasen for |g Notre Dame, Her-| three of the five, Kipke, Mujrhead || Bender Seroggin. their first , and Sheppard at ends, are all playing : of football. ons, Western Confer- ional triple threat quarterback; M ichigan “Boasts of Five Guistanding Stars | in “Big Ten” Football n the Stanley Muirhead, tackle, and Jack Blott, center. Uteritz made the third | [f All-American eleven last fall artd | Muirhead was named on the All- i Western outfit. This quintet of stars represents the bulk of the strength of the Mich igan aggregation this season. Thre of them are backfield players, and j give to the Wolverines one of the greatest offensive combinations the Big Ten has seen in some years. | Muirhead and Blott, on the line, | are without a doubt in a class b themselves at their respective posi tions. Blott, incidentally is an pert at placement goals, an almost sure thing from ayy angle or dis. tance. Muirhead’s tackling has been and Uteritz; Steger and. Blott, each has another year of competition. ld Fast although considera. Harvard regtSt a victory The backti bly lighter than the line age up well with Alfson, all state ain proved to be the most con-} h tent ground gater on the team,|,, 1, and will undoubtedly figure strong | Big Eastern Battle Heads in the coming battle. Gabe Brown, | Grid List This Week record with il n view th nied sertion of e supporte: diminutive 115 pound quarter-back, | n epoe dene a Ede Eee has shown that his weight is no = adeuchet handicap, by his open field running | Nov. 6 Bees, and center smashes. 0" Princeton peaclonieneatan place at. Palmer Memo- ‘| HARRY WILLS ds a list of Saturday tions this week which Noddings, at the halve: two men, that are hard to stop. O’Hare| rial stadium h s played one season, but Noddings| football attr: and Brown both new men, The| appears every bit promising of | == backfield will average 145 Ibs., while) st! , stubbor y as transpired | Newark, N. J.4 Nov. ar al the average weight of the entire ele-| in week's making con- | Will ne Orleans, _‘teclinica ven will be in the vicinity of 160j tests, knocked out Jack Thompson 0 pour \vVieing with the-geeat Crimson. | Boston last night in the dourth nd of a 12-round wonds threv ed so far k clevef have | to 13 for their} mes with Man- In the seven games this fall, the Bisma run up 144 point: opponents. Two dan, woh by come- minutes \of pla reco Bismarck vims for popular hes involving ‘olumbia, Penn State went- h, ale ‘and Ma the second time in the round a battering attack to the hea hedy. and Brown, Penn- yet Boston col- | HOPPE BEATS Van 0. and er, rs and Rich- | B | mond, and West Virginia and Wash- Bianiavek alley City Teachers | ington und Lee. While football stu-| New Yor Willia College 02 dents find no serious threat to the | Hoppe, world’s champion 18.2 Bismarck 13, Mandan 7. tanding ning unde- {line billiardist, defeated J 27, Dickinson 0. leve ng of the | v, II, last s k 14, Mandan 0. derably affected | est matches Bismarck 39, Garrison 0. ana i 0 points to 447 aaa From the Harvard camp come dec- | ineet Welker Cochran of Lo: |geles in Chicago at a date yet announced in a p | for which they now s that the Crimson ting its season for “Change of Pace” Kockne’ Ss System Ay z the Tiger, tie nies resulting in 1g |iyi9 ond in 1920, and Princeton vie Z| in 1921 and 1922, and Harvard t Princeton is tory is the as WINS BY K. 0. Thomp- into the he went down heavily JAKE SCHAEFER iam F. t in one of the VA GN RAEIIEy Gs over I-con- r, Harry y for from ds end balk acob TITLE GAME UP IN AIR . Bismarck High figh May Yet Be| ig = Sent Against Minot Team | The semi-finals football champion- | it ship games are still in a tangle. || Early last night Principal Tighe ‘Ii of the Fargo high school and local | ji athletic officials came to a tentative | |i agreement that the Bismarck high| | team would play Fargo high at Far- go. Last year Fargo came here for the championship game. Later Supt. Love of Mandan noti= fied the local officials that it was likely the state athletic board would order Bismarck to play Minot. No definite word of the attitude |of Grafton was received but it is| | known that Grafton desires to play Fargo. The matter may be settled late today. nd will 3s An- to be, off for the title | Fast Backfield of Notre Dame Constantly Varies It’s Game ‘ BY BILLY EVANS. In baseball it’s the manager who shifts his style of play that gets re- sults. No longer is the old army game, a baseball term used in reference to a team that uses the sacrifice con- | stantly with a runner on first in an effort to put over a run. | One run doesn’t mean much in these days of the lively ball. In an air-tight pitching duel, the proper play ig to try for a run, but pitch- ers’ battles are the exception. The dangerous team is that club that | mixes them up. | The same principle holds good for | a:winniog pitcher. Once upon a time a fast ba'l alone was enough to be a big winner, but those days are past. The pitcher must mix ‘em up, havea change of pace. . Works Both Ways. What holds good tor baseball is equally true in modern baseball. Open play is to the gridiron what the lively ball is to the diamond. the? lively ball is to the diamond. {| All of which brings us up to the vital question, the reason for the re- markable success of the Notre Dame eleven. On successive Saturday's | Nofre Dame overwhelmed three of | the strongest: teams in the country, | West Point, Princeton and Georgia | <= Tech. : =“"Why the remarkable suczess of | j Notre Dame? 1 >’ First, of course, one must mention Coach, Knute Rockne, master strate- | i-gist of the gridiron. He is the so- called “master ming | Must Have Talent. i # \an the last world series it was proved the “master mind” meant 5 neteiee if lacking the talent to carry ietions. - ; Rockne fk thas the very men in his CHIEF ROEBUCK IN GRID TOGS AND WAR PAINT. Fortunately for| py NEA Scrvice é my to the highest degree. ber of the Haskell Indians football squad this /yeai : Dame mixes them up, | biggest Indian ever to report for football. work hore, and iss ing.’ Coach Harley predicts he will bs a %)-voundef by ne: Lawrence, Ki Nov. 5.—A 17-year-old. Choctaw brave, standing football squad needed to exploit his | ¢ fect § inches in (u's nude tootsies and wieg ni ay 285 punts, is a mem- t. Roebuck is the} sun fields has a serious effect 11 graw-| Player's batting ayant. He innit year, Reebuck shows skill as a 5 a athlete ang is expected to be: ‘2, star rsa of the sua cuts down. his -aver- f ~ Covington, perhaps is faster than Covington Is i Centre’s Big i= | Hope On Grid E By NEA Service Louisville, Nov. 6—Herbert Cov- ington of Centre College was one of jthe best young backs developed in| |B the 192 football season. Fast, brainy, tricky, the little star of the | Praying Colonels, in his first fling {at the collegiate game, proved him- self an able successor to the great | “Bo” McMillan. was McMillan, Down in old’ Ken- |jqg | tuck they'll tell you that he hasn't {a peer in the south when it comes to | (i working his way through a broken | field. He can dodge, sidestep, | straight arm, et al. He can also shift | |b ;and pivot. All in all he’s a tough ||™ {man to stop. | Covington, like McMillan, can ‘also | |i ; hurl passes. Long and accurate ones, | | |too, He's a dangerous chap to have ;around whenever the overhead type ; of play is used. He throws ’em || ;where they'll bé caught as a general j rule. He is likewise strong on the | defense, being a deadly tackler and |j§ fa hard fellow to evade. The Centre ace has still another tasset. A big one it is, at that. He |i {can punt and drop or place kick. Fact is, he is a field goal booter de luxe. In practically every game the | tig Praying Colonels were in last sea- son, Covington negotiated a goal |from_the field. He got one aguin: Harvard just: when things looked || gloomy for his team. And he drove them between the uprights on sev- eral other occasions though against | jf less “famous aggregations. As a field. goal kicker, he ranked with the best in the country in 1922. iad Herbert Covington is at Centre }|m™ College again this fall. Better than ever, #0 reports say. He is tHe hope | |i | Red” Robérts out of schoo! He looks ready. for a big season. \ MIAMI BOOSTERS |. Miami, Fla,, boosters are trying to [induce some major league club to train there . this spring.. When it comes to ‘climate, Mi/ni~is all that could be desired. No club. has train- | ed there singe Cindinnati did " stunts in 1920. « ‘HURTS BATTING Harry Hooper says that. playing’ that ‘constantly Idoking into age at leant 25 points every year. | of the Moran outfit, especially with | |i. The Importance of Being You <a ¢ : . Before you were awake this morn- ing, hundreds of deft hands were busy preparing things to captivate a your fancy. : Long after you drop off to sleep to- g ry night, alert minds will go on plan- ning what to say to interest you to- ie morrow and the day after tomorrow. To a great many people, you loom large. Day by day, through their ) advertising, they earnestly seek to attract your notice and earn. your good-will, . Practically every advertisement you find in this paper, is aimed straight at you. As clearly and re- sponsibly as thought he spoke with you face to faee, the advertiser proffers you convenience, comfort, entertainment, service, or economy. Or all these precious things, perhaps, in one! The advertisement makesits prom- eise to you; yourself; personally. How ‘much worth your while it is-to heed. such personal messages! . + n one it pays ZAD advertisements | a STN DAW awaw7n [iwa \y Sea vee Wen