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

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Minnesota Out 13-7 Triumph Hurtling Herb Joesting Leads Thundering Herd Out of Ann Arbor After Trampling Wolverines and Attaining Pinnacle of Big Ten Gridiron*Hopes BY CHARLES W (Associated Ann Arbor, Mich., Nov. 21.—(A sota roared into Ann Arbor Saturd wound up its season undefeated but ti The Gophers carried the’ little brown jug. The Gophers carried Se oa ti rivalry between these teams since 1 for the first time fn eight years, for over the Wolverines since 1919, The game ended the inte legiate stars of the gridiroa—Herb Joesting, £ and Louis Gilbert. battle, witnessed _b: ity savage fought, with Minn in the second half with a tremend: which the superiority of the victors was clearly defined both in the back- | @ forward wall. | Minnesota finished | a and Wisconsin, and holding the ame nto a 7 to which T count ard to exp as ich it s ha the day on wh Michigan Scores First | The Wolverines outplayed Minne- | in the first two period: zn touchdown in four dramatic plays | after getting the ball on an exchange | of punts a few seconds after the} game opened. ; | Harold Barnhart, the Minnesota punter, kicked out of Rounds on, Michigan's ‘ard line, just after} the battle started and Miller picked up two yards around right end. Then; Pucklewartz, the boy who blundered in the game in which Illinois defeat- ed Michigan, tossed a long Oosterbaan, the all-American who grabbed the ball out of t mosphere and raced across the Kne. Gilbert kicked goal for the ex- tra point and the tremendous throng settled back in its seats in anticipa- tion of witn ng another Michigan , vietory ov traditional riv: But Joesting, another all-Amer can, Almquist and Nydahl had to be reckoned with and when they start-! ed their smashing and passing game, the Wolverines wilted. These swift charging Gophers ripped through the line, circled the end and tossed passes, resulting in two touchdowns and came periously near scoring an- | other, missing the attempt by four yards. | Joesting Makes Counter i With Joesting, Nydahl and Sim. quist lugging the ball, Minnesota | its first touchdown a few utes after the second half opened | with Joesting carrying the ball over; from the one-yard line. Art Pharmer, a pinch kicker, was called into the game, Almquist fum- bled a bad from center but sueceeded in tossing it to Pharmer. | The Wolverines were swarming in on Pharmer, however, blocking his/| attempted kick and in desperation | he attempted to hurl a forward pass | for the extra point, but this was bat-, ted down by Rich, the Wolverines fullback. | Almguist’s Pass Wins With ‘the fourth period a few sec- onds old and with the Gophers) charging on Michigan's 6-yard line, Almquist tossed a pass to Haycraft | over the goal line for the second and | winning marker. Almquist kicked goal for the extra point. \ Minnesota came to Ann Arbor a clearly established favorite and its superiority is revealed in the statis- tics which show that Minnesota made 18 first downs as compared to two for the Wolverines. innesota completed seven out of | 19 passes, while the Wolverines com- pleted three out of 10. The Gophers | had four aerial shots intercepted and | Michigan lost one. victors | gained 307 yards by rushing as com- | pared to 28 by the Wolverines. The| passes netted 98 yards for Minne- sota and 58 for Michigan. { South Dakota State Sneaks Away With | 5 Bt Victory Over Regis! Denver, Colo., Nov. 21.—(AP)— South Dakota State college defeat- ed Regis college in an exciting nip rea tuck game here Saturday, 10 to al e | In the first period, Frandsen of | South Dakota put a neat dropkick through the bars for the first South Dakota score and Regis retaliated a few minutes later with a 50-yard run by Dougjas, fleet ranger back, that netted a touchdown. Regis started its reserves but re-/ placed most of them with first string tne in the keen period, which was es peers it was a battle of punts two exchanges of punts in jird period, a pass, Schaeffer to iter, put the ball on Regis’ 20- line, where Engelman hit tackle to the 10-yard li + _ Schaeffer passed to Frandsen over the goal line for South Dakota's u and Frandsen | kicked dal. A series of passes marekd the isitors’ play c wit : team the —The Thundering Herd from Minne- bowled over Michigan, 13 to 7, and er Power Wins tarting vus 7 ‘ fighting Wolverines, It was a battle between two powerful line o— ° | From Belgium | Thinks He Is Fighter to Lift | Crown of Champion Tunney 5 Pounds | ° . DUNKLEY Sports Writer) twice, mbolic of the traditional ield in triumphant glory the victory, which was the first carcers of some of the greatest Senny Oosterbaan, Harold Almquist crowd of more than 86,000, was slowly, coming from behind ush that gradually wore down the but in ° i JOHN VAN EUMBECK A young Belgian fighter, named John “Cyclone” Van Humbeck, weighing 203 pounds in fighting -Jeondition, is the latest European contender to arrive here for a bout with Champion Gene Tunney. The Belgian is w.anaged by Tommy Burns, former heavyweight cham- ion of the world, and Burns thinks jis man will eventually get Tunney’s Football Results | Purdue 21; Indiana 6. Northwesjgrn 12; Iowa 0. University 7; Colo- n rado Aggies 39. crowr. Kansas 1 Bans Cone “orest 13; Highpoint 0. Coe 74; Beloit 0. Cornell 7; Carleton 0. Corroll 27; Lake Forest 6. JIMMY OLSON Case 7; Western Reserve 6. Dayton 20; Maskell-14. Creighton 20; St. Louis 9. Geneva 6; =e FROSH QUINT At Terre si ‘ormal 27; DeKalb 12. ’ “At ringfield—South Da-, |Orville Maule Also Member of phen Eid ce Squad That Has 14 Na- Western Reserve 6; Case 7. tive Sons be Mount Union 6; O| . “ t Virginia St. Xavier 41 est Wesleyan. 6. Bluffton 12; Bowli Adrian 20; lay 6. Towa State 14; Grinnell 0. Bradley 69; Eureka 6. Jimmy Olson, former basketball luminary of Bismarck high, and Orville Maule, equally as brilliant while a member of the Dickinson ing Green’6. - Slope representatives on the Univer- Army 13; Ursinus 0. Navy 33: Loyola 6. Boston College 19; Conn. Ag- gies 0. Tufts 32; Mass. Aggies 6. North Carolina 18; Duke 0. Brown 31; New Hampshire 13. Hamilton 21; Queens 6. Holy Cross 19; Boston U. 0. Lafayette 43; Lehigh 0. ketball_ squad, according to Coach! Clem Letich, varsity mentor, who| released the names of the survivors of his frosh cage elimination tourna- | ment Saturda: Fourteen candidates have been se- lected by the Flickertail coach to constitute the yearling crew during the coming winter and every man is Wooster 13: ‘ron 6. a graduate of a North Dakota high Bethany 7; Waynesburg 0. | school, the first time in many years Drexel 19; Washington Col- |that a North Dakota frosh quint| lege 6. Manlius 96; Buffalo P Fresh- men 0. Fordham Freshmen 47; Rut- gers Freshmen 0. has been composed of native sons. Other members of the squad are: Curtis Schave, Glenn Jarrett, John Forks, Gayhart Drangstad, George Nelson and Dwight Hitchcock, Minot, Maynard Stardig, Ambrose, Frank Ployhar, Valley City, and Harold Thoreson, Fargo. COOLIDGE IS FAN _, Washington, Nov. 21. ident Coolidge Saturday attended his» second football game since en. tering the White House, the annua! clash between the all-Marine an all-Army teams for the service championshi played in a colorful sorts at Catholic university sta- ium. Detroit 1 Georgetown 3 Temple 19; Bucknell 13. 5 Georgia Tech 19; Oglethorpe 7. Naval Academy Plebes 34; Culver Military Academy 0. Marines 14; All-Army 13. Michigan State College 25; Butler 0. Lebanon Valley 6; Albright 6. Penn Military Academy 38; Juniata 7. Adrian 20; Findlay 0. Oberlin 6; Mt. Union 6. Haverford 20; Delaware 0. St. Bonaventure 7; Mount St. Mary 6. i Upsala 19; New York Aggies 6. FAR WEST Ramona 14; Occidental 7. Wyoming Montezuma 0. Stanford 13; California 6. U. S.C. 27; Washington State ” California Tech 6; Whittier 6. _ College of Idaho 14; Puget und 6, . Colorado College 20; Teachers The All-American T SOUTH . ' : é Mississippl A. & M. 7; Mill- If you are a football fan saps 0, Westminster 14; Missouri make the Rolls of Honor. School of Mines 7. Gallaudet 20; American 6. : The Bismarck Tribune’ will prin' outstanding All- 1, Seeraia Tech 19; Ogelthorpe Aue Neues us chien ty Md bel 3 piling Fill Stetson 36: Miami * in the form below and send it to The Sports Editor of The Vanderbilt 39; Maryland 20, Bismarck Tribune. Pee e = Davis Elkins 32; Louisville 0: Each day in another part of'the sports section we will Kentucky 3; Center 0. Oklahoma Aggies 13; Univer- sity of Oklahoma 7. Centenary 33; L. P. I. 0. Virginia Freshmen 0; North Carolina Freshmen 0. Hanae? Birmingham South- ern 0, Nebraska Runs Wild Over Kansas Aggies Manhattan, Kan., Nov. 21.—The Nebraska Cornhuskers downed the Kansas Aggie Wildcats 33 to 0, here ‘turday in the Husker’s final con- A crowd of 10,000 Position : Player Leit End ........ Left Tackle ...... Center Right End ....... Quarterback ...:........ MAROONS TRAP | | BADGERS WITH high quint, are the only Missourij sity of North Dakota freshman bas- | 1Creighton Defeats - Larson and Stanley Gorder, Grand! —Pres- | Minnesota’s great victory dver Michigan resulted in the scribes picking at least seven All-American prospects from both teams. For Minnesota—Joesting, Almquist, Gibson and Hanson; for Michigan—Oosterbaan, Gilbert and Baer. What do you think? from week to week you have your opinion of who picture some All-American possibility and tell you some- ing. shed ie. Do you think he rates the All-Amer- First Team Bight Tackle oo..ccccececcses sedan 12-0 VICTORY Chicago Converts Wisconsin | Errors in Battle of Breaks Stage Field, Chicago, Nov. 21.— (AP)—Coach Amos Stagg’s hard- driving football team outfought and outsmarted Wisconsin ‘ Saturday, | downing the Badgers; 12 to 0, before afproximately 55,000 shivering spec- tators.| The game was a battle of breaks and was played for the most part amidst a light snowfall which made passing, punting and catching diffi- cult. The Marobns,. however, took advantage of this condition, convert- ing Badger errors into touchdowns. Today’s victory gave the Maroons the edge of one game in the 30 years of rivalry between the two schools. The defeat pushed Coach Glenn Thistlethwaite’s first Cardinal Wrestlers are well paid for their efforts. There is 'a match, Dugan Has TurkeyDay | Encounter WILDCATS DOWN IOWA, 12-0, IN _ CLOSING GAME Waldo Fisher, Fargo Boy, Ends Steel Goal Posts Are No Match For Joy ‘and Victory Cambridge, Mass. Nov. 21.— ° (AP) —Steel and ‘concrete proved no match for joy and vic- tory in the Harvard stadium Saturday. ; A year, ago when Princeton lebrated its last victory over Harvard by" carrying oft the Big Ten Career in tered remai both Har- vard goal posts, the Crimson Heroic Role authorities hit on the idea of steel uprights embedded in five feet of concrete to save wear and tear on the athletic equip- wiuch ninct: trsted ct ein ot juch a set ea the gridiron when Yale invaded the stadium Saturday afternoon, but there was nothing but four holes in the end zones, when darkness fell. One white crossbar was sight- ed moving westward atop a Con- necticut registered limousine and an hour later another mud spattered piece of white steel was bobbing up Boylston in Bos- ton onthe shoulders of four hoarse voiced, fur coated young- sters. - Dyche Stadium, Evanston, Ill., Nov, ay Associated Press.) Purple ildcat ripping, wrig- gling and .forward-pas: through @ stubborn defense, b: it North- western a 12-0 victory over Iowa Saturday. The game had snow-swept Pyche stadium for a setting, with 22,000 fans shivering under a raw Lake ichigan wind. The field was the color of silver with frost and snow, making footing uncertain and fum- bles frequent. From the first whistle, North- western was the aggressor, tearing into the Iowa line and secondary de- fense with a ferocity it had not shown in previous games. in Triumphant March while ip the beam at 156 pound advantage for man. Also’ featuri Towa 24-yard mark. A ‘was in- complete. Then the rple chief- tain ‘looped a toss to Fisher on the edge of the gridiron andthe second Northwestern touchdown was writ- ten into the score, rc by will rf 10-round bout billed as the of ibe_ windu; eleven into the conference cellar with Iowa, Chicago’s defense against the Wis- consin overhead game was especial- ly tight. The Badgers tried 13 passes, 10 of which were incomplete and three were intercepted by the Maroons. Captain Crofoot, Rose, |Redholz and Mohardt tossed th passes, but the Maroons were too alert and fast. Chicago Recovers Fumble Chicago was put into position to score its first touchdown as a re- sult of a bad pass from center. The Badgers had the ball near midfield jand in a position to make a Play, through the line when Shoemaker, Wisconsin center, shot the ball past the Badger backs and it rolled to the Wisconsin 20-yard line where the alert Maroons recovered and subse- {quently scored. The second Maroon touchdown was | put across near the end ¥£ the game. | Anderson threw a 40-yard pass to | Priess, substitute Chicago end, who dropped the ball on’ the Wisconsin 'seven-yard line. Wisconsin was 1 jowever, and the referee gave the | ball to Chicago on Wisconsin’s sev- jen-yard line. On the next play a | Wisconsin lineman was off-side and , the ball was placed on the two-yard {strip, from where Raysson catried (the ball over in a line smash. An- |derson again failed to kick goal.. The statistics of the game showed Chicago garnered five first downs |to Wisconsin’s three. Chicago tried {seven passes. Two of them were completed on the way to the first touchdown, two were incomplete and three were intercepted. | St. Louis, 20 to 8 21.—Creighton ive Ss lers_ closed’ their 1927 football season here Saturday j with a 20 to 8 victory over St. Louis University. ’ Creighton scored early in the first’ quarter when Beha ran 25 yards on a fake cross buck. Decker of St. Louis tied the score a little later when the visitors started an offen- sive which carried the bafl 60 yards to a touchdown. Creighton grabbed the lead in the second quarter when Deising went over from the five-yard lint. Som- mexs converted. Deising went over for the final Creighton touchdown in the fourth period, hurdling the St. Louis line for seven yards. A bad pass from center resulted in a safety for St. Louis in the last few minutes of play. ‘eams Are Coming in and have followed the Second Team Sehool Player School Prreerrererrtirertrrerrrrir ort ve penalized for illegal interference, | ¢, second section a doul with Jakie Gorman, 175, Minneap- Bs 170, Elgin, olis, and Ralph McGirl, ns lent with the announcement of hc latest ring encounter, Jack McCann, leading sparring mate for Jack Dempsey at Li in Fields when the former champion was training for his last bout with Gene Tunney, dropped into Bismarck ‘and announced it he was leaving for New York within the next month, where he was to complete final ar- rangements for a contract with Leo- P. Flynn, Dempsey’s manager. McCann Gains Notice oe e only sparring r who reported in Manassa Mauler’s camp on the first training Sr cnt was there when the camp off ally closed on the eve: of the Soldier's - field spectacle. McCann, who has been harvesting, threshing and plowing on his farm 30-miles north of Mandan, reported that he was in the best of trim and stated that he 4s willing to meet any heavyweight in the northwest The bie fallow ie pore seicdarty ons low ly anx-. ious to cl with ce” Horn, the Minneapolis bruiser, who cli and| McCann on the chin in the t again for g round of, gains, ‘ai by Harmeson. Welch finally crashed the line for 5 yards to score. Cara- wae, kicked the: goal. ie ‘rom the 30-yard line at the opening of the fourth period, Welch made a beautiful 29-yard gain through the line. He carried the ball over on the next play. Caraway added the point. Later Harmeson intercepted a Purdue ‘pass and ran 40 yards for a touchdown.’ Welch kicked the goal. Neafly 30,000 saw the game. Begi The first touchdown followed a triumphant parade down the field at the start of the second perlod, with Tiny Lewis going ov:r for tke score on a seven-yard burst through the middle of the line. In th. final mo- ments of play, Fisher, the “’urple’s speedy left end, found himself alone at the far side of the field-and Gus- tafson’s from the 30-yard line fell into his cupped arms. He stepped over for the second and final Northwestern score. Northwestern, which has been called the team of “all-Americ: cripples” because of wholesale . i juries through a season of reverses, was able in this, her last, Big Ten game, to send forward her full strength. Armil Saves Day Glassgow and sArmil bore the BY EDWARD J. NEIL (Associated Press Sports Writer) | brunt ‘of what little offense the I is showed. Armil’s punting Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 21.—(AP) | and a subborn defe ise saved furth- ROR edad cn ncaa éuffed and], Northwestern piste Armil’s phatrhasee theo sad tod ever has punting was a life saver. Time aft- Thownite the ny ta ever has/er time he sailed the ball from his inthe pridh on bok er Bade rr toe, putting it out of bound: far odes ft mery- rs the i td down the field. His kicking -.:as bet- page of glory—but glofy of ce-|ter than that of either Holmer or » One of Armil’s kicks, how- ever, caused trouble for Iowa. Just after the final period opened, Armil, standing back of his goal line, was slow in getting the ball away. It was partly blocked, being downed on the 12-yard line. ‘PEST’ WELCH ‘BEATS INDIANA Hero vf Harvard Game Runs Wild in Last Quarter For 21-6 Victory OLD BLT RISES SUPREME OVER BAST GRIDIRONS Harvard Fights Savagely, But Fails to Overcome 14 to 0 Lead oe Bloomington, Ind., Nov. 21.—Pur- due got away to a late start against Indiana Saturday and played bril- liantly. fof the last two quarters to win, 21 to 6. Welch starred for the victors. _ Indiana scored with a rush in the first quarter. After Purdue punted Indiana unleashed an aerial attack which placed the ball on the Boiler- makers’ 8 yard line, Harrell flashed, oe for the score.:The kick was wide. They battled evenly in the second period. But in the third, Purdue took advantage of an Indiana penal- ty and started cutting through the line, Welch junged, again feat. Triumph came Yale, huge and powerful and flushed with successes that have swept: the Bulldog to the pinnacle of eastern football while Harvard fumbled about somewhere near the bottom of the heap. Vic- tory in the 46th meeting of these] “It was then that Iowa displayed ancient rivals came to Yale by a rF score of 14 to 0, but to Harvard | eneieros serene, Rominwtentern, iter came an @verlasting satisfaction in ine. § an eleven that “never knew it was peepee peer Rt grein licked,” that nearly. tore itself tolately to pierce the Hawkeye wall ieces “trying,” and closed the only to find it stone. On the fourth at with a sui lown, Lewis charged the center of ery ounce of the the line to cross the two yards that Eli Backs ice meant a touchdown, but when the Only twice Saturday did there! men were unpiled the ball lacked a flash in that crack backfield of Yale] yard of being over. the brilliance that mowed down the|" Towa, getting the ball on downs, with: drive cies heaped wees nape ei ree bets vernpe rele bas ee pee ae tse thi e ne ie Grimson forwards battesed thet ayy gone in at end. Gustafson took | has been a big flop this entire sea- into the heart of critical plays, Har- sear abies el nad doce aeiee |e vard backs brok forward eS al ce up igh execution of two per- winter, sending Jack ‘where his head hit the floor with such force that he was knocked out. ° McCann feels that such a blotch on his escutcheon should be wiped out before his and is con- sidering offers that .are reese oe sine him face-to-face with the Minneapolis pug. Horn is only lukewarm and snn claims that his conqueror is ducking a return go. Vanderbilt was held to a tie score ‘on two successive ys this season by Georgia Tech and T neasee. Brown’s football team, last year after forward pass, and forced to win throu; fect plays. Yale had two new heroes tonight to add to those that-have glinted through the generations of gridiron conflict that have made the meet- ings of Harvard and the Eli the an- nual football classics of New Eng- land. And they were the heroes of two perfect plays. Garvey Races 52 Yards One was John Garvey, flaming successor to Bruce Caldwell, in the hub of the Bulldog attack, the other was Bill, Hammersley, chief, of the} blue kickers, and rated about third strong on the varsity. It was Garvey who took the ball two yards back of midfield near the al with routers er) “fatert of ference Decker and Scott, the full rds to a Peek ra Just two jods later it .was Hammersley varie’ dityand sripe, followed "a almost identical Hei and ily outran the tail end of ‘the Crimson defense to shoot over the line for the final acore.-

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