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mmr Oye ot _ Face, the crowds always are large. ; thour has won five six-day races and scored four of his victories in . Chicago. Geo - races, two in New York and one in i up. with Carl Stockholm to ice ; Mankato Teachers 0; Winona Teach- PAGE SIX 5 CHICAGO LOOKS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE —— GOOD 10 BEAT PENNSY ELEVEN Loss of Joesting Heavy Blow to} Minnesota Machine—Would Have Played Big Part MICHIGAN, OHIO BATTLE! Purdue-Wisconsin Game Looks| Bad For Thistlethwaite | Charges, Still Green | P—One of American | Chicago, Oc! the Big Ten’s two al Joesting of | aptain Herl Minnes gone to the hospital | with an d foot, so the “under dogs” ition were unanimous- ly the favorites in today’s Western Conference football matehe: ven Chicago, facing P ) ia on the home gridiron with a record of defeats by the} Quakers, was conceded a good} chance to break the monotonous string of Penn vic‘o. ies but the dove} faltered and broke down when the | Notre Dame-Indiana contest was considered. Upset Prospects Bright Except for the: two battles, which do not affect conferenec rat- ings, the prospects of an upset were very bright for cach of the teaws which confronts an opponent long victorious. The loss of Joesting, whose foot ‘was lanced to open up a bad wound, was a heavy blow to the Minnesota machine. He v shatter the Iowa A stadium dedi signal for a home te: the Michigan j:nx tod backed by an Ohio team which has everything to gain and nothing to backfield to depend upon speed, and Coach Weiman of Michigan effect-] tho himself, in the| G} ed some changes eleven, which defeated Wisconsin a week ago. Much will depend the toe of Louis Gilbert, Michigan halfback. Illinois and practically the same lineup as Northwestern had | Milini until today had met no con- ference foe this year. Purdue, The upset prospects extended also to the Purdue-Wisconsin affair, though each has been defeated. | Bad breaks figured in their down- falls last Saturday, but the best Abyssinian team Purdue has sent out in many years was out to put over its first} victory against the Badgers in 35 years. The “pony backs? of Wisconsin, were up against veteran line and, “Pest” Welch of Purdue, who shone | against Harvard and failed against Chicago. Five capacity crowds were as-| sured in the conference. More than | 85,000 were expected at Michigan; 50,000 each at Chicago and North-| ing. Likewise, i E ‘ et had trounced Harvard the week previous, 19-0, already suffered defeats in Big ime would produce plenty of ac enn Thistlethwait sorthw sconsin at Madison toda ‘Ten cir tion. est pf W: rthiet uta se" Strange Breeds of Dogs Are Displayed at Event Sand janis. Hairless and With Webbed} Feet, Are Curious Type Ex-| hibited at London Kennel ‘Club Show—Valued at $500) | Each London, Oct ry dog j has his day 3,000 royal and western; 50,000 more at Minnesota; | 2tistocratic dogs had their week at 25,000 to 30,000 at Indiana, and| the Kennel Club show in the Crystal Palace. about 30,000 at Wisconsin. Real Indian summer weather pre- vailed generally over Western Con- ference territory and the extra seat- ing capacity at Michigan will make | possible a new confererce record | for one day’s attendance of nearly | I 300,000 spectators. Danes, Basset Hounds, and scores of driver and all-American varieties filled the great hall with | been taken to a hospital lz the sound of their “Wuf-Wuf!” and, with an infected foot. Joes 8] venly “Bow-Wow!” Neg has been bothering him since evenly matched fl ae Eighty separate breeds, inclu Minnesota’s opening game of the , Harvard Improves the finest of their type in'the world, Season October 1, with the North| ,, Most critics are of the | opinion were judged in a thousand separate Dakota team. | that Harvard has improved greatly Six-day Season to Start Roll- ing With Contests on Coli- seum Track Oct. 23 Chicago, October, 22—(AP)—Chi- cago will start the six-day bi le season rolling with the first major meet in the country October 23. Around the Coliseum track the best riders in Italy, Germany, France and long grind. As has been the case in recent years, the participants will work in pairs. grabbin; could. Today, however, when a team member becomes tired, or has a| couple of twelve-foot pythons from dogs were on display, for coveted blue Crows, dachshund. retrievers, Irish wolf-hounds, G: classes. amounted to $15,000. gowns were seen c slumped considerably in pop this year. Althouzh they were se ond in the list with 284 entries, this total was less than half the num- ber of the Alsatian entries last year. r a : Smooth-haired terriers were third the United States will pedal in the with 185 entries. T porter, had the oddest entries. They are “Nemo” and “Turo,” Abyssinian Ht used to be that riders would| sand terriers, of which the kennel _ reel around the track day and night,| catalogue says: only what cat naps they lars unknown. Half « million dollars worth of! Their entrance fees alone! Society fashionable | mbing the hair § their nails women in b 3 niols were most popu- 5 entries, Alsatians havi ari L. Cura, a London reptile im- “Further particu- Cura one day was unloading a particularly nasty spill, his partner| a crate which had come from the} takes up the race and continues to| interior of Abyssinia. The pythons the cheers of an assemblage of fans| were taken out, but there was some like that seen at no other sporting| thing else moving about in the crate. "event. The six-day bike fans represent many nationalities and “My word!” exclaimed Cura, “Who | usually | are you?” | There were two queer-looking’ and fourth prizes in the foreign dogs section, and now they’re worth about $500 each. JOESTING OUT -OF GAME TODAY Minnesota Prepared For Fierce Battle With Iowa Universi- ty at Homecoming Minneapolis, Oct. 22. of gloom tempered the h joy of “old grads” for t ota-lowa univ at Memorial stad It was the news that ¢ Herb Joesting, the Gopher: ‘Nearly 50,000 tickets, the stadi- um’s capacity, had been sold to the homecomer: tations of its ne with expec- innesota repeat ietory ter of fact, that is one of the reasons for feeling isconsin by Michi at the Mad it elated over Purdue's defeat, since his elev- was the watchword of the rival coaches and HARD BATTLES CAP'T. “COTTON WILCOXK y, despite the fact that both teams in made no hit with on institution of learn- FACE EASTERN BRAVES MEET MOBRIDGE Mandan Given Edge. in En. counter, Despite Number of Veterans on S. D. Team Bismarck clashed with Washburn this afternoon at Washburn in a game which was expected to prove a real encounter. Coach Roy McLeod planned to give as many men as possible a game, but the Demons were not looking for any setup. ees has a ne oe this year, but it is aggressive and speedy and was expected'to give good oppo- in today’s game. Coming out of the Fargo game with only a few minor injuries, the Demons were in good shape for the . The game today was expect- ed to give Coach McLeod a further line on what his men can do the three hard opponents slated on he three coming ridge, Valley City Drills this week took up some new plays but were mainly along the line of developing a stronger of- fense, with apparent succes. team was expected to show more aggressiveness in today’s game than. it did in the first three games of the season. The following men were ‘among those slated to get in the game: Slattery, Cervinski, Roberts, Hedstrom, Hoffman, Klipstein and Meinhover. MANDAN CLASHES WITH MOBRIDGE chance in the siti their schedule fc Saturdays: M and Mandan. this afternoon at Mandan given the edge oi Be eae and much needed rest. TUNNEY DENIES MARRIAGE RUMORS; SAYS HE ISN'T CONSIDERING Clement much,” = says Titleholder Says Any Man Who ‘satirical columnist Marries While Makes Mistake — French Ban B. Johnson has closed his desk and shut his door forever—that is, the desk he has used and the door he has entered through so many, many times as president of the American League. After 27 years’ service at the helm of that organization, John- 8on resigned on Monday, October 17. The “stormy petrel’ of the American League is shown closing his desk for the last time. He leaves his office with thousands of friends. He now plans to take a long eel THAT Vautef, of Le Journal + ihere. “We would, like to see more Champion’ of him, and hear less.” He objects to “this moralist of blows” talking about the “highest Writer Insists Gene Should) type of man” in connection with xing. He says: “Tunney appears Settle Down in Wedded/to exaggerate a little when — affirms that the art of smashing Stage faces is, of all possible forms of human ac’ able.” ‘ity, the most dignified, Poland Springs, Maine, Oct. 22.—| the most noble and the most honor- (®)—Gene Tunney, who expects to Mandan and Mobridge clashed be champion five more years, is Mobridge, with married in just one wa! the game, profession. Coath Leonard McMahan took 20 ix. the offing, the world’s heavy- Vautel is immensely amused by is|Tunney’s attitude toward women to his|when the champion says they do Tf there are any girls| not interest him and that he pro- poses to consecrate his time and men with him to the South Dakota weight champion intists he does not the higher thi: of life PLAYERS TODAY town, including Jarvis, Heidt, Me- know it. mete doesn’t seem very. polite, Donald, Seitz, Morris, Voseka, El son, Fleck, Herner, Borresen, v -Pri .| wards, Toman, Walton Russell, Wi Cernell-Princeton, Dartmouth. Stenhene Helbling, he heat liam_ Russell, Harvard Games Are Class- | Griffin, Mees and Arthur. Although five of Mobridge’s men| elaborate on his five-year :. -ure of have played two years of football|hs crown, but said considerable in and six of them one year, the:Braves | denial of matrimonial intentions. to have more speed ics on Program « New Yor of the east’s football “unknowns' will be out in the open by nightfall, with their capabilities officially re-] 95 corded. Such teams as Princeton, Cornell, Army and Dartmouth, hith- erto untested, open agajnst major competition. yle of Bill Roper of Princeton. unable to forget the 33 to 0 beating self against undefeated Dartmouth. The annual clash between Wash- s| ington and Jefferson and Lafayette fit addition to Joesting, under- study, Bob Knoerr, v in poor shape. The Iowa squad scaled from 5 to 10 pounds more to a man than the Minnesotans. >—_—_—_—_—_—__——+ | Fights Last Night Pil al (By The Associated’ Press) Boston — Sid Barbarian, Detroit, defeated Mickey Sears, Boston, (10). Newark, N. J.—Bobby Garcia, Itimore, knocked out Al. Delmont wark, (1). Lelyd Hybert, Cleve- land, beat Jean Menzap, France, (10). o Minneapolis—Ernie Peters, Chica- their huzzas are loud and mean-| little things with no hair at all, but £9, outpointed Britt Gorman, Minne- ingful. When they cheer a favor-! just bare, light-brown skin; sharp apolis, (10), Howard Mayberry, ite, wearily humping his way around| ears, flashing black eyes, pointed Duluth, defeated Ollie Bartlett, Min- the track, they put their heart into| nose; something like brown rats, neapolis, (10). it, and in spite of a popular impres-| only larger. And, of all things, they | sion thata Forty riders have entered the Chicago race. Franco Georgetti of Italy, the motor-paced champion of | cided. America, is paired with Bobby! desert, little as they are. Walthour, Jr., youthful rider whose} webbed feet gives them a_ better father was one of the foremost en- grip on the sand when they’re run- durance riders of the old days. Ed-} ning.” die Madden and Harry Horan, two of the most popular riders in the game, also are paired. althour and his Italian team- mate are considered among the best riders entered in the race. Wal-|@ tti_has won three He won the last race in New Gork last March and after a month's rest came to Chicago and Football Friday | lew attend a six-day bike| had webbed feet! half dog! Half duck and! \ Cura took them to a dog fancier. “Abyssinian sand terriers,” he de- | “They guard tents on the Their “Nemo” and “Turo” won third _ LITTLE JOE BOTON-~-- AND say gton to Bs was Teaser r Syracuse, N. Y.—Osk Till, Syra- cuse, won from Jack Malone, St. Paul, (10). Denver — Jock Kane, Denver, de- feated Ted Blatt, Milwaukee, (10). One Step Watson, Omaha, beat | Peewey Johnson, Omaha, (10). Tampa, Fla. — Tommy White, Texas, knocked out Tod Smith, Can- ton, Ohio, (8). Erie, Pacrntly Leonard, Syra- cuse, won from Willie Lavin, Buf- falo, (10). Jimmy Reed, knocked out Duncan McTavish, Buffalo, (6). Worcester, Mass. — Pete Zivic, Pittsburgh, knocked out Tony Car- ney, New Rockfo-d, (9) COAL SHIPMENTS DECLINE Lignite coal shipmen‘s for the three-week period ending October 8 showed a decline when compared for the same period a year ago, accord- ing to figures compiled by the state railroad board. This year intra- state shipments were 86,160 tons as com: with 100,158 for the same period a year ago. Interstate ship- metns.were 6,775 tons compared to 7,855 tons fot the same period in onl; tb - ig. Prseicten bp feides Wash- brings two undefeated teams togeth- ad sev-| er at Easton, Pa. The supremacy list. In, of Allegheny county was staked on the meeting between Pittsb=rgh and Carnegie Tech. Pitt’s Panthers are , anxious to maintain a perfect rec- | ord and keep in the running as one {of the strongest teams in the east. Penn State hoped to break the jinx that has prevented it from crossing the goal line of undefeated Syracuse. Among other games in the east are New York university | vs. Rutgers; Williams vs. Columbia; | Navy vs. Boston College; West Vir- j zinia vs. Georgetown, and Holy Cross vs. Catholic University. CHICAGO TAKES TO NEW SPORT \Jai-Alai, Sponsored by Mayor William Hale Thompson, Gains Favor in City Chicago, Oct. 22,—(P)--Mayor William Hale Teempenn, who brought Chicago its first heavy- weight championship boxing match, is the unofficial sponsor for the in- troduction here of a brand new sport, alai, pronounced “hi-li.” : Jai alai is the national sport of Spain and acne ee Brain speaking countries, notably Cul and some of the South American republics. it follows somewhat the lines of tennis and handball, or racquets, ex- cept that the players wear a cesta, or basket, on their throwing hand, and it partakes of speed of those mes, A jai alai jum is being uilt close by one of the most popu: lar north side cabarets, whose pro- prietors are the fina: backers of the project. It is planned to bring 40 players, recruited in the Basque province o! Spain, here for the games. Bonds will be filed with the immigration to cover rive about December 1. as or saw games on ry gre were reported Oct, 22.—(P)\—The last] Were repo" Mobridge’:: re good as Mandan’s. turned back Timber Lake, Ipswich| Parmelia Pryor, Greenwich, Conn., and Gettysburg but was defeated by! girl and sister of Samuel F.:Pryor,!and have children. the Pierre team, the only important | Jr. opponent. The game at Ithaca has been gen- aes Slaitas es '\ erally regarded as a test between the tackle-smashing tactics of Dobie} Ejjison, and the versatile running and open| against 1 for wins is not] the fact that the rumors had gained The squad | curren: Mobridge F: left tackle| girl in question is the sister of one Mc-jof my dearest friend: ‘the Valearmy tay Waa wooo! fee erected Me start Walton| after the last fight the: ' year-old background, Yale has been} "= PO Lingon a week ago. u An invisible camera has been in- it took from the Army last year.| vented which is operated by radio] GENE SHOULD WED, The teams appeared to be about] and in daylight or darkness, so that} FRENCH SCRIBE SAYS a thief, merely by his presence in the room, sets it-in action. PENNSYLVANIA COACH AND FIVE OF HIS STARS picking. Pennsylvania as one of the outstanding teams in the country. An has ad considerable to do with such an optimistic feeli ries over Yale, Harvard and’Dartmouth, with most However, Penn surprised, and in so doing gave ir Eastern: experts: are already stay of six months. They will ar-| season victory over Brown, by the score of 1: ie -last: year, boasting egulars back, was favored to defeat Pennsylvania. When Pennsy! ver trip to New Orleans! of truly * 6 Teathuslast of the] istatontiea! clases Penn. the clash with Penns: yania, Victory in this “Last seasbn Pennsylvanis oferwhelmed. Chi ro, 7 That’s what he said when pressed|Vautel cries, “and I have always for confirmation of the latest of|heard that America . produces the - three Reverted engagements since! most gallant men. i “Without doubt, chastity is indis- did not|pensible to a boxer who wishes to take care of a good pair of legs and to possess a thrust without rejoiner, but a man is going far in repelling lack Dempsey out in Sol- diers’ field Chicago. He Gene was returning from a two|}women with the intransigeance of weeks’ vacation when apprised of|Gene Tunney. friend. “I am engaged to no onc. aetna “Is not boxing like all ny man who marries v-hile he! sports, a means to ameliorate jury was noted | is champion makes big mistake,” | specie: as ‘t left for| said Gene. x “This boy only fulfills half his that he was to wed Miss; task in beating his rivals; he ought to take a beautiful type of woman SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1927 Traditional ‘Under Dogs’ Favorites in Western Conference Games | Yost Tells of Shift Development in College Football Circles DEMONS CLASH WITH WASHBURN THERE TODAY More Aggressiveness Expected From Bismarck Team in Afternoon’s Game RULE AGAINST RUNNING START BROUGHT PLAY Dr. H. L. Williams, Minnesota ‘U’ Mentér, Originated Puzzling Process @ FORMATION IS USED Punt Formation Used by Mich: igan Gives Latitude in Pass- ing, Running, Kicking Editor’s Note: This is the second of a series of articles by Fielding H. Yost, famous fogt- ball coach and now director of athletics at the University of Michigan. x ee BY FIELDING H. YOST Ann Arbor, Mich., October 22.—(?) —Development of the present much misunderstood shift plays in Amer- ican foot! stared in 1894 or 1895 with the abolition of the right of players to be in motion towards the line Bey scrimmage when the ball was passed. Since that time the fundamental of the rules has been against the “running start,” while previous to the rule cl two years as many as ten men were in motion forward when the ball was snapped. ‘the origifal American Rugby rules required only one man to be on the line of scrimmage when the ball was snapped. This resulted in the formation of the flying wedge, a V shaped formation. It started far “ack and the ball was snapped to one of the runners just before the wedge crossed the scrimmage line. Changes in the rule in 1894 pre- vented the use of the flying wedge, while additional changes in the rules in 1895 required the presence of five men on the line of scrim- mage with the provision that one man might be in motion backward toward his own goal line. is change in the rule was followed by the famous guards back formation of Pennsylvania with its compan- * ion tackle back, turtle back and all mass formations. , After twenty years of such plays, in 1905, the rules again were changed, this timc to provide for seven men on the line of scrimmage and soon after this what are generally known- as shift pldys came into use. It is necessary, to make a distinction be- tween a shift play and the general understarding of a shift play. ll teams use a shift of person- vel. Some accomplish this shift up- on a signal number, the players tak- ing different positions as they line up. Some shift in the huddle, a practice that Michigan has used y + N other since the introduction of that sys- by producing the elite. If it is not, What is it then? “ The} “But this Tunney, so disdainful of the daughters of Eve, will surely Shortly finish by meeting one who will had me|triumph over his defense and who engaged to a girl in Califcrnia, then | will then score a knockout.” to one in Illinois. Paris, Oct. 22—“Gene Tunney | $2,525 per person. boxes very well, but he talks too | clude undeveloped Canada’s national wealth is offi- cially estimated at $22,000, which works out on-an 000,000, rage of jis does not in- source! | aed the oe pee) ye we 0, tl weeks ago, and they loaked for the ’ PENN EXPECTS TO DOWN CHICAGO ivania meets Chicago today at Chicago, one of the ould be a “big boost. cago, 27-0, Naturally, Stagg is 7 Fesult tbls year, ‘ an en! of ‘the year will be staged. ‘Present form fa Pe in. While Coach sport. J. S. Markstein ind F. V.} the Maroons je anxious to' make. good showing in Big Ten cly Tes, tt looks Ot be mi in'New Orleans, sill ‘conduct tnets| football exhibitions here, tem of signal calling. In these shifts there is no attempt at a for- ward. mo ‘ement, just a different dis- tribution of the personnel to get the best of the abilities of different players, The generally discussed shift as originated by Dr. H. L. Williams of Minnesota, whgre a group shifts and is supposed to stop, is the one that has been the center of public dis- cussion for the past several years, and it is the shift which occasioned changes of the rules during the past year, . Following out the fundamentals of the game as evolved in 1894, the rules committee has attempted to stop all possibility of a “running start” by ieecring. the officials to count “one, two, » four,” after a shift or huddle before the ball is pat in play. i In spite of all this discussion of shifts and other styles of play, foot- ball has become as tal in its general scheme of at: °: as. 52- ball. Line play especially, includ- ing the end positions, has become similar both on offense and defense. There remains, however, quite a dif- ference in the disposition of the backs, Ninety per cent of the teams in the United States use what is known the “Z” formation with a man back at is is the formation from which 2 nesota shift makes its had umber of be Warn now in use at ‘Warner system, used by the Navy, Stanford 04,4 variation aa follows! x X=X aX Ties ry ws