The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1927, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1927 Minnesota Startins g Lin Lineup Against Invading Iowans Guarded Closely TEAW'S POSTS Yost’ s Dream to Come True When Michigan Stadium Opens ARESHURFLED: DRIVE WANTED, Maw Gront Assortment of Aerial | Piays to Clash BATTLES keyes Bring Strong Line,| PENN CHICAGO Injuries May Keep Scull, Brill Out—Indiana Prepares For Notre Dame Eleven ted Press) lineup} tomor- | starting i Towans Both line shoff! of gi bat Vall week in the h to the powerf: machine. — The strong line! sortment of 1 nnual clash, and point for tl cumby owans are bri ee a gre ys to th had two weeks to games on the Wester ference schedule tomorrow pri to attract capacity crowd i -Ohio tilt is likely to set a} for a stadium dedication, ,006 customers. Coach Wilce of Ohio has i his machine for} speed. Forward passing has been/ the principal dict of the ee squad all week. With Notre Dame as the a’ tion, Indiana has an adva nearly 25,000 Os the Hoosier of the day. Coach Pat Page built his reserve strength to mat | the Rockne extri Chicago, Nert nesota expect to pla 50,000, The Mlinois eleven, quartered at! Chicago to await the call to the first conference game of the season against Northwestern, were puzzled today by the sentim>1t w makes | their opponents the favorites in to- morrow’s contest. Northwestern has won but one contest from the Illini, Since 1908. The Magicians of Pen * who face Coach Stage’s Un i of Chicago team, were handicapped by injuries which probably will keep Paul Scull and Marty Brill out of the backfield. ull, smoothest the backs in making his yellow e bow pads resemble a football ber, quarterback, Wascolonis, full-| back and Brill complete the quartet that has perfected th: deceptive attack. Perfect Indian summer weather the teams excellen ish forward p: but a hint of 2in by game time morrow may cffect the aerial play. The Wisconsin practice ficld has been too diy and hard for heavy workouts the past few days ,as the | coaching staff was afraid of injur- fes. Dummy scrimmage made up the Badgers’ preparations for Pur- due and Ralph Welch. FOUR BIG BATTLES ARE DUE IN EAST New York, Oct. 21.—(AP)—Four | | big battles and many others will be} : fought on eastern gridirons tomor- row. At the Yale bowl, Yale wipe away last season’s miliation from the Army. T' * Yale has upset the dope by de ‘ ly whipping Brown after being bea en by Georgia. Harvard will entertain Dartmouth. | Harvard lost an early to Purdue and then came ba | avenged two years of setbacks Bel * vanquishing Holy Cross, | Caldwell and Moben, star Yale} | backs, have been nursing injuries but will start against the Army. Dartmouth Meets Harvard Dartmouth has not lost a game} _ this season but it has had virtual] setups. Harvard will afford the first real test for the Hawley array andj * Miles Lane, who at present is the} + leading scorer in the e: The Harvard line m the star left tackle, C’ y Who was | Injured last wee! | ‘There i is exceptional interest in to-; morrow’s game a. After 20) years, Princeton is playing Cornell | again, Opposing makcups on th @ part coaches are involved. rf nell is famed as a Bill Roper is an e: Corneil ern and Mine| to crowds of | ill try to 0 hue ar, | be shorn of | has Leen on so, but the train- ll be fit for tomorrow. red jor a munddy ng Ray Jor Columbia takes ou Williams of “Little Three” repute while Lafay- ette tangles against W: ‘ashington and Jetferson, Navy tussles with Duke and Colgate piaye Wabash. — | Fights Last Night | ee (By the Associated Press) Lansing, Mich. — Chuck Wiggins, Jadianapotis, knocked out Tiny Her- maz, Portiand, 1, OFL 2). Fort Thomas, Ky.—Vincent Ham- 1% Go pher-Hawkeye Game Saturday to Break 3-Encounter Deadlock Gamat Saturday a ' With Scores When ame Teams Met! > 'Schedule Since 1920 Shows Even Break Between Two der Spears’ Tutelage—Home- Teams—Things Pick Up Un-|*— lack of pl | | of the high coming Day Will Be Marked | use (10) vs. Penn § Minneapolis, game betwee HN break ch which the ed since awa won in I 28 to 14, Minnesota h 20 to T4n 1 41 to Oin 1 Spaulding had win and » 1 against i s had two wins, 120, Minne reat pl ingtott | State ( Te ROCKY MOUNTAIN tana State vs. Colorado Col- WESTE ice on its home “fie! sid eel ‘ lai t fall having been the | ashes beaton Iowa y in more than 10 years. Gophers Win 15 Times s that have ind Minne- St. Olaf. Ad eae ph : Thomas. | 1918 be tween anil ies that . Moorhead | hegan n ; med in RULE BREAKING Ras STIRS SCHOOLS Sa | Towa teams have ‘scoreless t Si {M 16 Newspapermen Demand Airing of Charge Syracuse Plays Were Given to Foe Otherwise foc a fe e point of a da: nd if Iowa Towa pape n years ago of thoroughly Big Ten callbee and from that time on it been anything el: r third party. paper men joined in a lett! cellor C, V questing a com- They id ble to find euee : who ) had acted improperl. J p Because of a break i rules, Captain Tom th first string m liott and Begg of the versit: been en 1 game with Will am ail 21 oO morrow has been cancelled due se see never Fleas a At Vinl » five member: all team hi oking at amination papers alleged to hav | been stolen by three students t) wecks ago. The students are b from athlet ties until Bi Shins ence standings d e. Towa, already will be battling to ‘r ion of some — strateg wo portance. rred were breaking Sus} a ai ne . spended after 6 o'clock. Come up and ; make it your headquarters. THE SENATOR factual size) 2 for 25¢ ike football 1 ald ‘give < equity calendar next month, eae Sra Ir Dempsey Through With Leo Flynn? ———_—_———_¢ New York, Oct. 21—(7)—In a letter to Ed Frayne, sporting editor’ of the New York Ameri- can, printed today, Jack Demp- sey indicates that his connec. tions with Leo P. Flynn, who di- rected him through the fights with Jack Sharkey and Gene ‘Tunney, are at an end. The letter says: “Leo P. Flynn is all right. However, I only employed him for two fights. He’s got a lot of business of his own to Jook after wil t handling me.” “ GOLORADO HAS _ HOPE OF TITLE Work of Téam’s Captain Ex- pected to Help in Deciding Rocky Mountain Honors c earn Springs, Colo., Oct. 21— Much of the hope of Colorado e for a Rocky Mountain Con- football championship this ar n the team’s captain, Field Phelps a halfback whose |dropkicking has made his team a erious contender for the last two Phelps established a world’s in- scholastic record for the drop- k four years ago by putting the| © 1 through we uprights from a a He has aver- ged two ies ks to a game for \ the last two y Many of them ‘were from the 45-yard mark and | In one game in which his scored more than 100 points d from the field nine times and two of the drop-kicks were be- nd the 45-yard mark. The Colorado College team is iched by William van de Graaff, niversity of Alabama star all-American end at the U Military Academy.. Van de Graff hopes to overhaul the University of Utah, whose pow- am won the Rocky tain title ihe Unive: y of Hawaii in a post- ‘on contest—the first time the lander had met defeat at home -: Dempsey Must Pay Costs of Action 1J., Oct. 21.—(AP)— Dempsey has been ordered by 1 Judge Runyon to pay the costs of his unsuccessful attempt to ve the case of Jack Kearns, his » former manager, who is suing him .33, tried as an action- aw before a judge and jury. * Judge Runyon last week denied Dempsey’s application and an- nounced that the suit would head the The court costs are estimated at $50, Regular meeting Elks Lodge ‘| postponed until November 4th. MONEY TO LOAN On Improved City Property Low Interest Rate and Repayment Privilege Bismarck and Mandap P. C. REMINGTON Y % Phone 220-W America’s largest sell- ing high-grade cigar --over amillion a day In @ la % popular sizes and. ed ms 10¢ to 3 for $1.00 CONGRESS CIGAR CO,, Inc. Philadelphia, Pa. feist. Piti pian, knocked out Young elt, Ine Tadiangpoli,, (4) Blackwell, Okla.—Art _Stigall, knocked out Battling Wichita, Kan, (4). wi TOMORROW SET FOR DEDICATION OF NEW PLANT }|Ohio-Michigan Game to Mark First Use of Giant Athletic Center, Sponsored by Coach BY BILLY EVANS A dream that was born 25 years ago, when Fielding H, Yost was ed football coach of the Univer- is to be realized na sity of Michiga! tomorrow. Yost’s dream was a mi stadium to house Michigan’s athletic activities. It has come true, and when Ohio State meets Michigan at Ann Arbor tomorrow it will be offi- cially dedicated. Fielding H. Yost, now director of athletics Michigan, is one of football’s greatest personalities, an outstanding figure. Let us go back some 25 years to get the atmosphere and color of other days. It was back in the days when mass play was all the rage that Fielding H. Yost acquired the un- usual name of lurry-Up” and it was in 1901, his first year at Michi- in, that Yost turned out one of is greatest teams. His eleven scored 550 points while the oppo- sition failed to register. It was the thought of Yost that if his team constantly had the jump on the op- osition, started to run off plays Betore the rival team was set, it “Pe advantage. In an effort to bring about hustling, “Hurry Up, now” was his slogan on the field. He would shout it over and over hundreds of times during a, ractice session. "t long before they ‘began fing him lurry-Up” on the Michigan campus. Then the sports writers took it up and before the close of his first year at Michigan he was “Hurry-Up” Yost to the foot- ball world and he has been that ever since, Game Better Today I asked this Fielding H. Yost per- son which was the better game, that of 25 years ago, featuring mass play, or the game of yy with its for- wird pass and fancy open work? “It’s a better game today than it used to be,” says Yost. “It’s not only better to play, but far more interesting to watch. The modern game fairly bristles with thrills and there is always a chance ie the underdog, but in the old e, the superior team invariably t1 emphied.” Go back for a-minute to a few snatches of Yost’s early career. Born close to the campus of the University of West Virginia at Mor- gantown, it was but natural that Fost should attend that college. He ade the eleven, but he yearned to d_ some eastern college that wi jion-dollar would be a more prominent in a football way, so hg later shifted to Lafayette. That was in 1894. There the foot- ball genius that was to make Yost one of the outstanding figures in the great college game got its start. Pennsylvania with its famous “guards back” play as developed by George Woodruff was_ sweeping everything before it. Yost saw Pennsylvania play and carefully studied the formation originated by i Woodruff, who had starred at Yale as a player. He figured out a line of strategy that he believed would stop it and I am told when Lafayette met Perfn that fall, the “guards back” play for the first time—at least temporarily—was halted. Came to Michigan in 1901 Yost came to Michigan in 1901. This year rounds out his 26th sea- son as director of Michigan’s foot- ball destinies. Not a defeat marked up against Yost in four years at Michigan, his elevens viinning 55 games and tying one. Even as remarkable as this long winning streak, was the fact-that in all that time only 40 points were To compliment your appearance GORDON felt is, fine, light and velvet smooth. Shades are correct in tone and complete in scored on Michigan; less tifan one point per game. Yost is not only a great football coach, but a fine lawyer as well. Since both professions require a keen analytical mind, Yost gets plenty of brain work during all 12 month: of the year. He is said to be the wealthiest of all football coaches, could retire and live a life of ease ff he cared, but football at Michigan art of his life and hz will prob- | > ly be connected with Michigan to the > atid of his days. Despite 25 years of service at knew onl; mass foo! his teams. Fools Them All But Yost fooled them all, and some of the be.. forward passing ever done has been seen at Michigan. At that, there is perhaps no coach in the game who resorts to old tricks as much as Yost. One of his HA : isa ase dal eiike¢ full- lunging into the line empty hand while the halves crisscross around the'ends. This one play has been used by Yost men to score over 50 touchdowns. old-time line smashing Il, could never make over Michigan, Yost is still the same old “Hurry-Up.” He admits the first 25 years of college football coaghing are the hardest. He anticipates a iia pleasant time during the next By the law of averages, Yost should have been counted out some years ago, and a number of prophets have tried to count him out several times in his career. When the game was changed al most overnight by the Abbe of the forward pass and open play, it was predicted that Yost, who in’s mammoth new rai cole stadium is a memorial to what Fiel pee has done for Michigan. It’s an honor he richly deserves. avavavavavaR STHEWe dee % @ Fasnton SHOP For, 4 a \WSvwcerety. Service} f SHIRTS Such as we're show- ing this season— must be seen to hoe appreciated. Mere words cannot de- seribe thelr beauty or value. $150, $1.75, $2.00 $2.50 up Come in! Michiga authentic. A Gordon Hat will set off your personal appearance to its best advantage. Gordon Hats are ‘made in models to suit your face and figure. There is one with the height of crown and the width of brim for you. Stop in at your nearest Gordon dealer’s today. color range. Styles are AVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAY > < q > q > < > < > HATS Fit your personality Priced at 85, $7 and $10 Tiree ani sto Acceworica, Bismarck po & Tire Co. Next to First Guaranty Bank drain my crankcase Let’s not run into colder weather with dirty and diluted oil in there, And let’s do it right while we are about it: refill with the one oil that combines correct body for hard service and free flow at cold starts. the one oil— TEXACO amin mike THE TEXAS COMPANY, 17 Bettery Place, New York City * Teneso Petroleom Products

Other pages from this issue: