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. Ses se PAGE SIX FINE FOOTBALL IS PLAYED IN BIG CONTESTS Performance of “Red” Grange Stands Out One of Greatest of All Times as OTHER BIG MES Chic Oct, 20.—-The big games of the 19: f on got fay ly under w Thrillime contests with urprises result ed. Huge er ttended games probably the crowd in the countr be he 70,000 that jam med the new University of Minot 700,000 stadium The out football, tory of a8 to 14 ished the unbeaten, versatile Iino of the great ast or we core, Big Ten s Harold “Rec halfback, gave individual perform. | s in the history of football If back took the first kick for a tovehde «three more a » and 45 the score k him out. He later to heave nd score st half. He! touchdowns yards respe¢ti y Coach Zuppke then te returned to the game veral successful pas 1 fifth touchdown in the ran with the ball 21 times and netted | yards. Michigan scored ch downs in the second and final per-| | iods. An innov ion in football was the! ks by Illinois players, | e shins, ‘ Big Ten games Minnes ta and Wisconsin | 7 tie, with Minnesota 1 wantage but unable to push the over for the winning marker from the one-yard line. Gra Minneso-{ quarterback, nur an injury, | wits not at his best. \ Chiengo had an ea exposin In othe y time beating | Indi 23 to 0, Towa beat Li rence College, 13 to 5. Purdue wp set the buck by defeating | Northwestern, 7 to 3, Ohio State beat | Ohio Wesleyan 10 to 0. | In the east, the »-Dartmouth, | Nebraska Army-Notre Dame, Col and Pr y furnish- ed the big interest. Yale fought} Dartmouth to a 14 to 14 tie, staving off defeat by stubbornly defending her goal from Dartmouth’s ard the last. Notre Dame p shy brand of foot vier Army team, 12 to 7. aerial offense of Notre Dame dazzled the Cadets, Nebraska proved her claim to a team by beating Col- gate, 33 to 7, at Lincoln. A young rineeton substitute, Sammy Ewing, | eld goal that e the Ti- rs i sensational 17 N: to 14 victory THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~ BROWN’S S ‘The presence on versity a. fairly he nd three red-headed, a ye Yankton College Aug 0. Co Stoute Institute Northwest Scho Central Ag Bewkabik Virginia Cloud Teachers 0. Nebraska Ce Drake 1 irinn Nebraska Ca Oberlin Kansas Age Detroit A Louis U 1 Marquette 10; J Missouri Ambers Cuty Winor Teachers 0. Coe 18; Dubuqu Wabash 7; Centena St. Teach B SOL Center 42; Tray fayette 21; Junior We Hanover 0, His Left Foot CAPTAIN SHELDON KICKING the team of Captain 1 Sheldon makes formidable contender football hono) ws’ exeprionce and is f ter anc, you will notice, ane attack 16; Huron Colle Hamilton | Alabama i mastern S$. D. State] U of Virgi Hee 6; Northern) | Trinity 14 3 | Ursinu Falls | Haverford | Wachingto of Agr. 30; uror 7 Colleve 0; St rigate 0, rel 0, | piycatte: 7 | Kansas 0. Columbia COAL 7; Mic Loyola 7. ohn Carroll 3, la s the hall i 4; nial tO; 1 | & Migh |team will meet Manda Jagain Tuesd: hers Mankato} in loca! ball p: vietory over 0 0. utler 7, western district title, The local During his football career at Mich- — | team won't be in the best shape for] i nie Vick, who was an All- PH tthe game, but the team is showifg selection for center, was nsylvania 0 j lots of f and hopes to win agai known as the iron man of the grid-{ Bucknell 30. 4 Grafton defeated Grand Forks | iron, NISTER KICKER eldon Is Red - Headed and Boots the Oval Brown Uni- Sheldon He's | s Florida 4 Richmond 0, chool's High 3 o'elock to 0 an Mandan Saturd t to win « tackler. BH. S, MEETS football | With i coy | MANDAN AGAIN Will Play Here Again Tuesday Afternoon hi y Bis- n and then Dickinson to win the south- =y | | | | Saturday ee FAR WEST Colorado Aggies 17; School of Mines 0. Colorado HIGH SCHOOL Wahpeton 12; Fargo 0. Grafton 10; Grand Forks 7. Williston 38; Wolf Point, Mont. | Devils Li ke 118; Larimore 0. Rugby 32; Westhope 0. Lidgerwood 13; Lisbon 0. ; Kenmare 3. Duluth Central 28; Two Harbors 9. Superior Central 12; Denfeld 7. Cathedral 22; Cloquet 7 NORTH CENTRAL CONFEREN North Dakota Aggies 3; 8 | Moines 7 | U. of South Dakota 19; Nebraska | Wesleyan 0. i outh Dakota State 7; North Dake- hton 26 Morningside 6. | BIG TEN Minnesota 7; Wisconsin 7. igan 14; Ilinois 39. e 10; Ohio Wesleyan 0. Northwestern 3. | Lawrence 5, i Indiana 0, MINNESOTA CONFERENCE | St. Thomas 40; Hamline 0, St. Olaf 16; Gustavus Adolphus 0. St. Johns 14; Eveleth Junior Col- lege 0. FAST | Princeton 17; Navy 14. Dartmouth 17; Navy 14. Notre Dame 13; Army 7. Penn 10; Columbia 7. Brown 35; Boston U. 0. U'of Maine 20; Bates 0. Fordham 26; Stephens 0. Quantico Marines 6; _ Georgetown 0. ce John Hopkins 0; U of Pittsburg! 6. 20 Virginia Polytechnic 12; of Maryland 0. Holy ‘Cross 6; Harvard 12. Middlebury 26; Tufts 7. Colby 9; Bowdoin 0. . Rutyers 10; Cornell 0. Syracuse 10; Boston College 0. Case 9; Mount Union 7. Auburn 17; Howard 0. Magsachusetts Aggies 53; Worches- ter Tech 13. New Hampshire 3; Connecticut Ag- gies 6. Muhlenberg 25; Gettysburg 0. ‘ale’ Freshmen 16; Andover ‘7. Cornell 26; Ripon 0. Union 13; Trinity 0. Washington & Jefferson 10; Car- negie Tech 0, U J WEST ; U of Cincinnati 7; Denison 13. ade ae PITY THE POOR INDIAN Haskell Quarterback Only Gwns a 1200-Barrel Oil Well — If he isn’t the’ hest quarterback in the country, John Seott, who calls , comes pretty close to being He has a 1200-barrel oil well gurgling forth its riches But he’s too busy playing football to let his signals for the the wealthiest. ies his Oklahoma farm. It’s Too Bad Rey ERRE ae xt JOHN SCOTT Haskell Indians, at least money worry him, * for a good hat. ‘LANPHER High School, 10 to 7, in a game im- portant in the northeastern title con- flicts Saturday. Fargo High, for the first time inj years, will not enter the semi-finals | {for state football honors. The Mid- gets were put out of the running by} Wahpeton High Schgol, which defeat- ed the Fargo team 12 to 0, Wahpeton will contest with Valley City for dis- trict honors. f Minot defeated, Kenmare, 59 to 3. | Devils Lake High rolled up the big} ‘score of the seadon, defeating Lari- more, 118 to 0. gional | Billy Evans Says || i) ! Baseball fans will always regret j | the fact that Brooklyn failed to win the National Leggue pennant of 1924. Victory by Brooklyn would have ered the greatest pitching attrac- tion in the history of the series. Walter Johason versus Dazzy Vance would undoubtedly have been the pitching selections for the open- ing game, What a treat that would have been. The veteran speed-ball king of the American League pitted again- Vashington been the winners. | Perhaps not--but the desire to win the all-important first game would have found both managers depend- ing on their one best bet y often the world series games e both teams insist ball, In al isn't wise to| Get a run is the s tem gener adopted. Johnson versus Vance, howev would have been rel dessert pon chances. It is a rare occurrence to have two outstanding of the Johnson- Vance type in a big series, pitchers who ined success through the me medium, 2 dazzling fast ball. For that reason Brooklyn fans in particular, baseball fans in general, |will regret the fact that Brooklyn just fell short of landing the Nati pennant. ing the greatest year 1s more or I s$ nion- the pitching feats of the! the National League. ‘The! studded with pitching| | gems by Kentucky} Vance's best strikeout _perform- ance was 15. He also whiffed 14. In {both cases the Chicago Cubs were the victims. Four times he set 11 men jon trikes, once he got 10, while on seven occasions he had nine of the opposition take three healthy swings | and return to the bene! Z In the American League Johnson, with 14 strikeouts, was the leader. Johnson no longer goes in for the strikeout stuff, so his record in no way compares with that of Vance. down Who would have been returned the victor had Johnson and Vance, met? Really it would be an unkind act to even offer an opinion, ‘That question will go down in baseball as one of the unsolved mysteries of the game. One of the most active players on| the field, in every scrimmage, mak-} jing as many tackles as his ends,| Vick never suffered injury, The story is that time was never | once taken out for him, that he never lost a minute of play. Vick seemed immune from injury. Vick starred in baseball as well as football. Graduating from Michigan, | he entered professional baseball and has done quite well. No one for a minute cons\lers baseball nearly so rough and danger- ous as football, yet Vick has often | been injured on the diamond. | Near the close of the past season, | he suffered a broken jaw as the re-| | sult of a pitched ball. Yet the same | jaw stood up undér many a gridiron | uelling. RETIRE EPINARD \ New York, Oct. 20-—(By the A. P.) ~-Epinard, famous French thorough- bred, will not race again and will be | retired to the stud on his return Lo | Europe, i A window in the south side of a building will get, in the course of a 45 times the amount of sun- | side will get. . Graceful in ‘contour, correct! jin proportion,| perfect in qual-| ity—does that! describe your, hat? Yes, if it’s a Lanpher. The price is low, but enough HATS st the N al League ace, In som rters the question has been r t¢ whether it would have been good judgment to send ! Vane inst Johnson had Brooklyn |‘ FIVE DOLLARS Local Boy Is One of A. C.’s Grid Mainstays PHIL BOISE Two Bismarck young men are re- porting the Bi to the daily Dakota Agricultural college. these, Philip Boise, is a regular on the t He p the usual duties of scrimmage of n football team of the North One of am, this being his fourth year.| s left end but in addition to wing job he does the punting for the team and his educated toc has more than once du every ing: yards for the Bison team by means of long punts, game his. career ‘ined a He has ce on the first played so far this year seems to have definitely earned a} regular pl several in and team. Boise is also prominent in other activities of the college, being the president of the student commi: in He wh s student affairs. Was busine manager of the 1925 Bison, the college annual, and is one of the officers of his fraternit: He is cadet officer in the R. O. T. C. unit. At the college his unit won Tthe gold star last year for the see- ond consecutive time. The other Bismarck hoy on the football squad is George Holta, Holta is a senior and has never before tried out for a position on the team but has developed fast this year and will be given a chance to show his ability in one of the season's games. Injuries to an ankle are all that have kept him from seeing action earlier lin the year, Holta plays tackle, Both Boise and Holta are lieuten-| ants in the cadet battalion and are on the approved list for promotion to captainci 1 > SH | Breezy. Baseball | Bits | VEACH FAILS TO DELIVER The failure of Bobby Veach to de- iver for the Boston Red Sox may | | man in the American League. 1n- outfielder to the miyprs. Veach cost | the Red Sox a sum close to $26,000 and wasn’t a profitable investment. VALUABLE UTILITY PLAYER Jimmy Dykes of the Philadelphia | Athletics, capable of playing’ any po- sition in the infield or outfield, pefhaps the most valuable utility mean the passing af the outfielder cidentally he is in the .300 class as a batsman, WELCH ON THE MARKET {| Rumor has it that Connie Mack | hes already placed Outfielder nk Welch on the trade m: et. Welch has the abilit@ but lacks the dispo- sition to~mnake the most of it. COONEY COMES FAST, Looks as if the Boston Braves had picked up a prize package in Pitcher Cooney. Not only is he a very cap- pble pitfier, but he plays the out- field well and can tickle the old apple a la Rogers Hornsby, EXPERTS OVERLOOK BASSLER In picking All-America teams, the experts have dverlooked Johnny Bassler af Detroit. He is a fine re- ceiver.and the hardest hitting catah- er in the Amerfean League. fis mark is close to . MEUSEL HAS BEST ARM Bob Meusel of the New York Americans has the strongest and most accurate throwing ‘arm in the majors. He literally throws strikes on every ball from the outfield. | WILLIAMS LOOKS GOOD wr Williams he has pickgd up an out- fielder who will win a regular job next season. from Mobile and went big the last ronth fhe American League. HEAVY BAT HELP Outfielder Ken Williams of the St. Louis Browns used a much heavier bat than usual the past sea- son with a hope of increasing his heme run total but failed to get re- sults, HORNSBY SE:S8 NEW RECORD Rogers Hornsby, in batting well ever .400 for 1924, again leads the National League and set a new rec- ord of tophing that organization for five successive years. He is the most consistent ‘batsman in the majors. MOORE HELPS PIRATES Moo: who was used in the out- MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1924 field during the fag end of the sea- son because of his hitting, came to Williams was secured | the Pittsburg club as an intielder. Earlier in the campaign he did great work in place of Traynor at third. SEEK TO FIND SPANISH WOMAN the Mrs. Val- Efforts are being made by Spanish foreign office to locate Martina Saez Rueda, widow of entin Lopez, who in the year 1922 was living with her daughter and son-in-law, George Van Dickinson, somewhere in North Dakota, says a letter from Juan A. Meana, Spanish- Vice Consul, Chicago, Illinois, to Governor Nestos. State authorities have been unable to locate her. READ TRIBUNE WANT ADDS. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Headache Pain Neuralgia Toothache Lumbago Neuritis. Rheumatism Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Manager Lee Fohl of the Boston Red Sox is hopeful that in Danny Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacld better pipe tobacco 22 2s Why better? “Wellman's Method” 222 famous Secret, old-time now ours -exclusively Certainly rounds tobacco out! =20e Cut just right, tao (See below) eee In foil,not tin . -therefore 10¢ to SECA ROR . je