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P PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1927, ) Mandan Gridders Score 12-0 Victory Over Bismarck — | Heilmann, Waner Crowned as Battling Leaders of Major League Speed Gives Braves |Acclaim a es |Outtield Victory in Battle Clouting Cross-River Team Plays Inspired Football in First Half— Leader S Players Smash Through Line, Circle Ends. Drive Off Tackle and Heave Accurate Passes in Series Colorful Yankees Have Babe Ruth, But Pirates Have Famous Waner Brothers—Corsair Trio Has Decided Defensive Edge, But ,Gotham Combination Packs Detroit Player Heads American League Batting List, Ousting CAPITAL CITY MEN DO BETTER IN THE LAST HALF| Simmons—Paul Carries Off games set ; Individual Honors in Na- Heidt Proves Offensive Star of Game—McDonald, Jarvis and/ tional League With .379 Av- H Seitz Give Him Splendid Interference—Local Team erage Heavier Distance Punch H Lacks Punch to Carry Ball Over pbuibas, i (By The Associated Pr i Pittsburgh, Oct. 3.—()—Two of Taking advantage of Bismarck high school’s ponderous} New batting leaders te greatest as well as the most col- ‘ and slow-starting foothall eleven, Mandan's fast and clever eee Oia nti ortu: outfield trios in history will crew defeated the cupital city team, 12 to 0, here Saturday |troit’ snatched the A’ | afternoon on the Hughes field. honor away from Al For 20 minutes during the first half, the Mandan Braves, plata tla ae aan with Heidt cast in the leading role, played inspired football. |) TtSntuder at Detroit.” Heilmann They circled the ends, drove off tackle, smashed through the | Heinie Manush of Detroit, center of the line and heaved accurate passes, al] with equal! . t the pace last year with facility 4 y “ori 7 .) wns a t sti » | S80, ; facility and success, scoring two touchdowns and blasting the) Daal AVaneecoe Bictouingh ieareieal| hopes of the Demons. i ene cee reer +0 off the individyal batting honor in The beginning of the second half was a different story,|the National, his final average of for the Demons, who had been on the receiving end for those] .379 being 20 pe better than 20 hee s during the first z ae closest rival, Rogers Horn: roam the outlying precincts for the Yankees and Pirates in the world series, The Yankees have the incompara- ble Babe Ruth, just finished earn- ing his $70,000 salary by shattering his own home run record, but the e full roster of the New York Yankees, captors of the pennant in the American League for the second consecutive season. They are, | Pirates have the famous Waner front row: Walter Ruether, pitcher; Jae Dugan, 3rd base; Ben Paschal, outfield; Benny Bengough, catcher; Thomas, pitcher; | brothers, hitters and ball-hawks ex- ay Mo field; Etdie Bennett, mascot. In the center row, left to right are: Bob Sh PY, r; Joe Giard, | traordinary, O'Leary, coach; Miller Huggins, manager; Art Fletcher, coach; Herb Pennock, pitcher; Jules Wera Waner Heads National List k TOW, left to right, are: Lou Gehrig, 1st base; Bob sel, left field; Babe Ruth, right fiel Vileey Paul Waner, is his second year as Earl Combs, center field; Charley Miller, utility; Waite Hoyt, pit Tony Lazzeri, 2nd a big leaguer, is the National vi IN r ; is But op; Urban Shocker, pitcher;- Cedric Durst,’ outfield; Doc Woods, trainer. league’s leading batsman with an coring lust them- | smothered Wittenberg, New York. Waner succeeds Bub- Slattery recovered aj mo n " : é ~v | unofficial mark of .379, the leader on straight football. xe bles Hargrave, Cincinnati catcher, | in hits, triples and runs driven in Heidt on Bismarck’s 45| | “We needed first ¢ opposition | who led the circuit last season with IL E POWERFUL G PHER GRIDDERS SU TE Lloyd, only 22 and in his first year lin our opening game we got it,” | 353 | : Ap under the bi ch Toward Goal id Coach Stagg of Chicago, refus-|| Babe Ruth, with his record- inder the big top, has made a rare : ark for a beginner, leading the bbs raged by the Okla-| breaking total of 60 home runs for | NORTH DAKOTA TEAM BY 57-10 SCORE longue’ Preemie D There will be a bet-|the season, finished 13 home. runs T0 OKL AHOM A {1 Pe enn cares Drening, tha % of | Koenig, short 2 ated Demons, ea b modern record for one base hits and ashing off tackle for 3|ter Chicago team playing next Sat-|ahead of Lou Gehrig, Lis closest z z AEMEMBHITg HiWibetr ioe the ee 3 1 then again starting | urday, but whether it will be a bet-|rival, but Gehrig led in extra base ame Prov lainly Exercise|—Nydahl, Almquist 4, Joesting, Frais as Rest tetel teed Out im wiat looked like a wide enf|ter team than Indiana, I cannot hits, 116 to Ruth's 97. Ruth was iS beesborii err 2, Westin. eee ee encase y. ed with a cut back} chieasoeieals eal the leading run scorer with 158 tal-| Badgers Beat Corneli—Iowa; Romp For Minnesota Play- North Dakota—Sheppard. Sodaks Lose, 47-2—Princeton) 5° Ae eee ae wat a The Chicago-Indiana clash is one|Gebrign with Lis; Combs ‘of the| TFounces Monmouth — Yale | ers—Flickertails Score Their) Points after touchdown—Nydahl,| Beats Amherst—Michigan TOC nee ceccecel Tina hey ind the ball went /of the two conference games on Sat-| Yankees “with Hornsby, 134! Victorious Over Bowdoin Points in Final Period|% Thomas, 1. Wins From Wesleyan | | as the Yankee combinatws: chictiy ever to EveeBiaves on.downs and | ur h tees ae it oak and Lo d Waner of the Pirates Against Third St naan saci * | due to Ruth, packs a much heavier thay 4 out of | State being the other. The| witht 123. ; Again: i ringers istane fh danger. smarek | other six teams range far afield for|” Frankie Frisch was away ahead the last five) ~"S#°R8° oml et f Football Results || , Evanston, 11, Oct. 3_Northwest- Paci is 205 opponents. Purdue, sliding }of all competitor: in both major | minutes of play Haskins, 155-pound, : : . o—<—$_——_—_—_——-¢ | <5 versatile football team flashed nee eee a punch to cerry the ball| through mud and rain to a hard-|leagues in stolen bases with 48.| halfback of t niversity of Okla-/ Minneapolis, October 3.—Display- a formidable early season attack| Ment over the rival right fielders, two! ing a powerful offensive, the Min-| |. _ BIG TEN against South Dakota and buried,| #2ul Waner and Ruth. Paul has a orv over the negota football team made its 1927| Minnesota, 57- North Dakota 10. | | the visitors under a score of 47 to| 23 point edge on the Babe in straight icago Saturday, 13 debut by defeating North Dakota} Northwestern, 47; South Dakota, 2.|2 in Dyche stadium this afternoon, | hitting. He also has a bigger col- ed the scurng university, 57 to 10, before 22,000| Illinois, 19; Bradley, 0 The Coyotes fought stubbornly,| lection of doubles and triples to d toss to Chureh- | qooters at’ Memorial stadium Satur-| Indiana, 21; Kentucky, 0. but never had a chance against the| h¢lp offset the Babe’s home run 0 others which |day afternoon, this being a record| Oklahoma, 13; Chicago 7. ‘i long runs of Lewis and Gustafson,|SUPremacy. There is another mar- ing to ade the scori: y Mountain conference _ last| defeats, and Waite Hoyt of the|brought one score. Two minutes| attendance for an opening game at| Ohio State, a Sven ea . star Purple backs, and the alert line| Sit in Paul’s favor in fielding, where The Demons also unleashed | Year and unbeaten since 1925. Coach| Yankees led the American league|later Haskins tossed the ball 35] Minnesota. The best previous rec- ee ied in ae play of the Purple forwards whose| "¢ has nearly 100 more put outs and passes, most of which | Hanley was well satisfied with his| with 22 wins and seven defeats. yards ag. to Crider, and Coach} ord was 18,000 for the initial con-| Michigan, 33; Ohio Wesleyan, 0. work converted two Dakota errors| 14 more assists than the big Bam, dat the sky in the gen-|first Northwestern contest, a 47-2) Fourteen major league bascball| A. A, Stagz's thirt: season | test with the Flickertails in 1926. | Wisconsin, 13; Cornell College, 6. | into Purple touchdowns. Tiny Lew. -_Unly One Ruth of Mandan’s goal line,| Victory over South Dakota. His|/teams were disbanding today| with Chicago opened with defeat. With all of the regulars in the | Iowa, 32; Monmouth, 6. is, brilliant N t white chalk line for|€ tion of a coveted s ed 15 to 0 victory over De Pauw,|George Sisler of the St. Louis goes east to play Harvard. Browns topped the American league | | In the non-conference contests! base stealers with 28 thefts. ed reserves into next Saturday, Northwestern has| Jess Haines of the St. Louis Car- |to. 7. ked one of the toughest oppo-|dinals topped the National league jdrive with Utah, co-champions of the pitchers with 24 victories and 10|ill, followed t to stem the tide and | Pe & = . . ; ‘ ‘orthwestern ‘ Both are great “team” players but r that they would fall|team’s tackling, however, he said,!and more than 350 players were} Except for Mendenhall’s touch- lineup, the game was merely an ex- settled the issue in the fist neers the Babe's all-around influence, his right hands. ~ Enough of | Was “well-nigh atrocious, starting for their homes, barring |down for Chicago in the second pe-|ercise romp for the Gophers who WEST with the help of perfect blocking by| Constant threat at bat and the pros- passes did fall| Minols Beats Bradley the few who live where they play|riod, the game was dull all the way, | galloped up and down the field at) Idaho, 20; Montana State, 12. his mates, pect of his breaking up a ball game the right —_ hands to| A brand new style of attack] or who will witness the world series,| until the Oklahoma rally. will during the first half which end- | University of California, 7; Fresno in short notice, cannot be measured Bismarck in a earned Illinois a 19 to 0 victory over starting Wednesday a: Pittsburgh. ed with the score standing 45 to 0| State college, 0. AMHERST BEATEN in figures. There is only one Ruth, en the field were Bradley, Coach Zuppke sending the|” ‘The curtain dropped on the 1027| BADGERS BEAT CORNELL in favor of the Maroon and Gold.|St. Mary’s, 16; Stanford, 0. BY PRINCET all observers agree. This is the ant a penalty __ for | Illini into battle from set formations : 4 season yesterday with only one con-| BY SCORE OF 31 TO 6 Even with the addition of some of | Kansas, 19; Grinnell, 0. Princeton, N. roughness on Man-, With the quarterback calling sepals: eat aneton panei: The St Louis} Madison, Wis., Oct. 8.—Substitut-|tho second string reserves in the re Braves up against | for the first time since 1921. Cardinals defeated the Chicago|ing frequently as the Cornell college | third quarter, the Gophers continued MIDDLE WEST line. Two attempts | ToVing backfield man, in motion to- Cubs 6 +» Oct. 3.—Prince-| Babe’s eighth world series, and ton opened its football season today| Paws first. [at Palmer stadium by defeating the| _ Earl Combs, the Kentucky colonel xe . z s to 4, and gained second|team tired, Wisconsin scored. an|tq smear their’ North Dakota St. John’s, 0; Hamline, 0. Amherst eleven, 14 , and Lloyd Waner, rival lead off men r of the line failed to] ward his own goal, added deception! place in the National league. easy 31 to 6 victory over the Iowa |itors all over the landscape, adding |Columbus’ 20; St, Themas, 0. making little headway beth sah| as well as center ficlders, are a close game ended, Hee ke Bi i ie offensive when they!" ‘The New York Giants, who had|collegians Saturday in the opening |12 more points to their total during | Carleton, 19;' Luther, 0. rushing attacks and forwards, the) match. Combs has a few points’ Mandan was the offen-) ?FoKe Bradley's winning streak. aspired for the runner up post, beat | game of the season for the Big Ten that period. Things did not go s0)Notre Dame, 28; Ooe, 7 . { the game and his team- RT ARIE out Philadelphia, 5 to 4, in 10 in-|entry. smoothly in the final period with | Marquette, 9; Lawrence, 0. <Donald, Jarvis and Seitz, nings, but landed in third place, one-| Nearly three full teams were sent |}many third stringers in the Min- e for a share of the glory be- half game behind the world’s cham-|into the game by Coach Glenn This- | nesota lineup and it was during that of the splendid interference Tigers opened up in the third quar-| edge at bat, but Lloyd has a better ter and put over both touchdowns, | fielding mark.’ Both are exception- Jack Requardt, quarterback, was re-| ally fast, not only in covering their r 5 u sponsible for eac! i territory, but th 6 pions. The Cardinals were booked |tlethwaite of the Badgers, and only |session that the Flickertails scored EAST Ponsible for each of the tallies. orgs nue unite eset: Colaha : e 8 t ‘l y, 63 iversi it, 0. ties is less spectacular than “Sprouts” they gave him during the Braves’ for a double-header against the|the starting group was ‘unable to|their 10 points which represent the | pimy. 65 University of Detroit, 0.) Vang. 2a ae the\piayera calle bagi bak desk scoring spree. McDonalc backing HUDDLE CREDIT Cubs, but rain set in during the! pierce the Cornell line for substan- | largest score ever made by a North Yale, 14; Bowdoin, 0 : LOSES TO HARVARD steady and consistent, of the type up the fi \d Voseka, Herner, eighth inning and the second game !tial gains. Dakota team in 17 years of com-| columbia, 28; Union, 0, Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 3.—Har-| of George Burns, old Giant outfield- Morris and Fleck in the forward was called off. : ‘After holding the Badgers score-|petition with the Gophers. Harvard; ai; / Vernon, 3 vard opened its 1927’ football season| €F a played a steady defensive a abnigR closed the qieerony one! less: Aisin Oe oe Daslat Cormel| 7 jiachine Sane an Dartmouth, Hobart, 0. by scoring a 21 to 3 uielatay, pee the Were Kiki Cuyler, in the other me. yy i: ‘J an one-hal ames ahead of St.|weakened in le face of a brilliant ie innesot am wit /B) un i iversity i i i Lofthouse looked like the best Emporia Teachers’ College) Louis. The National league cham- |running attack and allowed Wiscon-|Herb Joesting, Harold ‘Barnhart, Beams Sh alebier, 18: University of Vermont eleven under| outfield post for the Pirates, playing man in the Bismarck lineup both on] Coach Said to Have Been pions lost their Zinal game to Cin- sin backs to cross its goal line five |Shorty Almquist and Mally Nydahi Princeton, 14; Amherst. 0. a hot sun in the Harvard stadium the offense and defense. carried eg % cinnati, 1 to 0. Chicago ended in| times bet the ball well and while his kicking First to Use System fourth place, six and one-half games | Cornell s was mediocre he came down the behind the Giants. up to his 1924-25 form, the Pirates would be even stronger on the ram- . : a of Saturday. Coach Horween of Har- fs ee in the final mine oat eee Baa ek oon rent NORTH CENTRAL _{ Yard used nearly three full teams, | parts but ae race ponte to stay Cincinnati. was | utes of play as a result of a success- | Hanson, George MacKinnon, Ganage South Dakota Frosh, 6; Spring- WOLVERINE TEAM on the bane BS a bree hold- field fast afterwards, on one occa- if Dg te fifth, and the Brooklyn Dodgers, |ful aeria) attack launched in mid-|Gibson, Mike Gai and ’ Bronko|field Normal, 6 e DEFEATS. rE M be lieth hatte d fi Ider bats - sion kicking from behind his goal| Emporia, Kas. Oct. 3.—(?)—H.|who won their closing game irom. | field. Nagurski in the line with a machine| Morningside, 18; Western Union,| DEFEATS WESLEY AN Pscin decBoh Malia Gab ee line and taékling the receiver on|W- (Bill) Hargivs, veteran, mentor | Becton f tod fiched sane from that flattened the North Dakota ag-|12. 4.0. 15, wyoming, 0 ee i et atoerie tl dmes eateries primar » 13; 1 0. the 25 yard line. Dunn showed up|of the Emporia Teachers’ college e $ , ia {IOWA GRIDDERS ti letely. did their speedy halfback, Louis Gil-| ermed, slugging Yankee guardian well a tre Attensa (ae ae iat: | here, in getiecally created sik Ine ieee seventh and Philadelphia A CRT an alin gregation completely. There was no bert, who scored 15 of his team’s it y in the opinion of observers. 4 g stopping this formidable array of : j of left, in th ae Brown, Cervinski and Slattery in|ing the first to use the huddle sys-| ‘The Yankees were not scheduled| owa City, Iowa, Oct. 3.—Display-|gridders and their performance HIGH SCHOOLS points and passed three times for] Lanky Bob is much faster and has the line. Slattery was down the|tem in football. A high school] yesterday, but they won the Amer-|ing a ragged style of football, Uni- pare much oe comment. Penden. pai Binwarck, o A aur oe, the University of| @ rie arm shat is a constant threat field (on punts) to nail the receiver | quarterback of McMinnville, Ore-/ican league pennant with 18% |versity of Iowa defeated Monmouth among old football stars, close stu- Mortead 1 ooo Likes, 0, Wesley in pian the sturdy Ohio] to base runners. his tracks several times. gon, gave Hargiss the idea. ames to spare over Philadelphia. | Saturday in the season’s opener, 32| dents of the game, gathereed in the rps ia’ 19 Jn i fle ei ae |e plan oot! team, 33 to 0, Bismarck Mandan ee pipeuasne the huddle recently, Washington beat Philadelphia 9 to 5|to 6. During only one period, the| stands, Fa: cordia, oe ‘2b; Casnclte 0. Gilbert e hh ‘ Michigan’s flaunted aerial attack. ++ Fleck |Hargiss told the story of its be-/in the last game und placed third, |second, did the Hawkeyes look like} Of course, one must not judge ‘Abed cig Sun gt lieelice tee ee om Bemis Benny Osterbaan, all-American e+ Ellison Whale cee Detroit took a double-header from |Big Ten timber when 18 of their|the Gophers too highly on the! Sioux Fails, 26; Sioux City East| served his style Punting bi i ree] end, took one of Gilbert’s passes in + Toman] “While coach of the Oregon Ag-|Cleveland, 11 to 5, and 5 to 4, and|points were scored. performance Saturday as the North | j,;°) 7. bee y off and y! - ng. ack a kick] the third quarter to romp over the + Morris |gies in Corvallis in 1919, I refereed] ended in fourth rlace, two and one-| Monmouth played the Hawks on| Dakota team is not to be compared Min ot, 112; Stanley, 0. 1 @ punt for a touchdown, the| goal line after Hoffman had com- + Herner|a high school football game in Mc-|half games behind Washington. __| virtually even terms during the final| with the teams that Minnesota will Minot’ Reserves, 63; Glenburn, 0, | encores Sained without use of| pleted a similar play. Voseka | Minnville. The field had no bleach-| Chicago finishd fifth, Cleveland|two periols. Outstanding players| meet later in the season, Neverthe- es, G25 Glenburn, 0. ted anes 1M, fence failed to kee sixth, and the St. gous Browns, | for ihe wilyasaity mers Glasgow, ae less, the varsity ge tg fog 5 ° 4 wi varming on the! who closed with an 8 to 3 win over|Smith and Captain Nelson. For the} serves disp! enough si Belt. Hor Cig Periods the game|Chicago, were seventh, The Boston|invaders, Clark, Graham, Walker|urday to make followers of Minne- [ Yesterday's Games | i Near the end of the § 5 in Th layed the best/sota fe t Dr. Clarence W. Mice ea umetct ae Moker cae Red Sox brought up the rear of the}and Captain Thom played the sota feel that rocession. The Red Sox. and the/game. pores R Spears will shape up a team this IN, 3 Substitutions: Bismarck, Mein-| Started a drive and carried the ball} Philadelphia Nationals finished iast fen that call cae, much talk in NATIONAL LEAGUE hover for Klipstein, Hank Brown |to their opponents 10 yard line. in their respective leagues with the| YALE IS VICTOR western, gridiron circles. Pittsburgh ..... 4 set pertiean, lipetein toe ee: “an thi te aoe ; same percentage, each having won ee ROWDOIN: iM fata The ol Penalty, bugsbes snade fea Cincinnati er 4 ouse, le the cheering was 5 i ; Bo - . si riggs toe Damm, York for Head’ | deafenin The nGatorbaee ney 51 games and lost 101 Philade' lew Haven, Conn., e | appearance wi phers Cvengros, Meadows and Spencer; hia was 43 fi Pittsbi Bowdoin eleven was no match for|day and cost them much yardage be- | -Jablo: strom. Mandan; Fread for Jarvis, |been yelling at the top of his voice Oe first fine. while the Red Sox Yale Saturday and the Blue won its| cause of being offside, polaing ani Tablonowaks sod nae E Helbling for McDonald, Stevens for|to make his signals heard and was|were 59 games behind, the Yankees. first game of the season, 41 to 0. | backfield in motion. Being offside, Philadelphia ... il 1 Peanaet russell for Ellison, Die-| Wearing himself out. Finally, un- The visitors were outplayed all| however, was the worst fault that] New York . 5 for Seitz. able to make himself heard nbove the way, the Eli: scoring 19 first| could be found with the team and it Wein, ed mae Dawns: Mandan, 9; Bis. res din, hee Het ctF his. cbeadeoar, TE AMS IN E AST downs while Bowdoin was held to no|is a fault that Coach Spears will] walsh ah Tone Fitzsimmons, marek 9, first downs through thc line. It did| eradicate with more drilling. As a Referee, D. C. Jones (Ames);|_,“‘Come back her, you guys, and get four first. downs on forward| whole, the Gophers dis vorted them. Beery. and Taylor, Cum: Umpire, Ed Cox (Michigan); Head- Tl tell you what the play is.’ passes, however. selves gloriously and the rooters R oH E linesman, Mike Avery (North Da- ‘The boys came back, gathered —____—_———— | were highly pleased with what they | poston 3 9 5 around him. He gave them the Sores eaaens 2 - gy Iowa Saturday for a game with the) saw. Brooklyn 5 Pr uchdowns: Mandan, Heidt 1,/Play and they went through it ‘ith- i v Veteran Backs Perform Brilliantly a 5 Fleck 1. Goals, Heidt 2 missed.|out additional signals. This was Navy, ule Somes ne fh thei:| Joesting, Almquist, Nydahl and Cee, Geldemith and Hogan; Me Blemarek, Spriggs, 1 Feponied aud He Pall ee carried Elevens Prepare For Strenuous| peculiarly deceptive style, but the| Barnhart started right in where line, ie for a touchdown, f in November last, and Play required much less time than} Games—Drake to Meet Navy Navy has shown all-around strength | they left off in Novem missed, ————————— thi when he tried to call his signals. and has a forward pass attack that|the way this quartet tore up things “This gave me an idea. Jn the j spring of 1920, during the few i i carried 6 in Encounter Saturday is hard to stop. | : was scandalous. Almquist | (@ innings, rain) i itersectional ill pit} off the sco. honore of the day " Adee nani mane: university with four touchdowns, the diminu-| ., Bush, Jones and Hartnett; Haines, fieeks practice for the next fall, I] New York, Oct. 3.—(AP)—The| at West Point; Cornell vs.’ the Uni-|tive quarterback racing 60 yards to| Sherdel and Schulte, : tried it out at the Aggie school./eastern football season swung into| versity of Richmend at Ithaca; Syra-|cross the North Dakota’s goal line AMERICAN LEAGUE j i At first it was awkward, but even-lits third week today with .the ma-|cuse vs. Johns Hopkins at Syracuse;}on one occasion, Joésting regis- RH i tually it became better and I have jority of teams getting ready for|Colgate vs. Virginia Holy at Hamil-|tered only one touchdown but the 4 2 tothe been using it ieee wine the really hard work, now that the ton, and Holy Cross vs.’ Dayton at wy a id it treated ie eons Chi 3 lo 2 | feat A conditioning process is out o! e | Worcester. a big as esota’s rt K } All Western Conference Teams Investigations in recent years|way and OT genmianse of teamnunte| aie Tanineioan game at Phila-| All-American fullback carried four] |B gd Stewart, Barna- Except Chicago Show Up | 2v@, convince: Hargiss that no | developed. delphia stands out as the first really | North Dakota players across the sSuiceic gece Gage was using the system before| Eastern teams found difficulty in|important meeting between major|goal line with him from the eight- ) : A H E ‘Well in Openers he tried it on the West Coast. Now| going at top speed last week as ex-| eastern elevens. Pennsylvania start-|yard line. That the Owatonna eee y the huddle is universally used. tremely hot weather imposed undue|ed none too well, but Lou Youn; underbolt has not lost any ef his 9 i —_— lergiss is one of the old timers |hardshi the players. While|eleven looked like an entirely dif-|drive was demonstrated throughout | _. Powers, Dykes and Cochrane; Pihicage, Oct. 3—(AP)—The west-|of the Kansas conference, ranking Aye tie eee favorites came] ferent outfit in smothering Swarth-|the 30 minutes that he played for | Hopkins, Judd and Ruel. eonference h| with Dr. Garfield Weede of th football teams, wit! e|through as expected, in some in-| more last week, 33 to 0. he ploughed through the ing one exception of oe a did much | Pittsburg Teachers’ College, Pitts- cae scores were not what they| Cornell has had to fill several gaps Ine ee will, In addition to Be ter- First Game to grouse the hopes of their, parti-|burg, Kas. Jn the four years prior| might have been in cooler weather. | with reserve material, but Coach |rific line plunging, Joestins thrilled R HH E in the opening genes of the|to his graduation from the Emporia Harvard, having impressed ob-|Gilntour Dobie seemed to have the|the fans in the first period br dasb- | Cleveland .. 5 oil 1 All but Ci 9 won more| Teachers’ College, then the Kansas| servers with a heavy and fast squad| makings of a strong team. ing through a broken field for a| Detroit ...... 14 0 a impressively and began to- cate weraey in wee ares in its opener against Vermont, is peLtiavette will engage Rutgers at pretty R of 34 yards. oot and Myatt; Billings and » bas: 5 getting re: lor ‘irst important |Easton, Pa., West Vir; meets ie ‘oodall ‘ track. In 1800" he “easched” int |Sethns Foedy for i ait on Purdue uni-| Pittsburgh on Pitt’s field; Princeton Second fame Marion, Kansas, high . . Saet tiése eons is! school. The|versity Saturday at the Harvard{faces Lehigh at Princeton; Dart- stadium, ‘ mouth ppposee Allegheny at Han- 4 Yale will provide more color in the| over a: lew York ‘university will 5 4 lntersectianal ae gage for the bag to Alfred. s bh (} Benser hota and Myatt; R. Sm with ‘6 against Drake Solow | Carrol Shea. . G Others not scheduled. LITTLE WORLD SERIES & R H