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PAGE EIGHT DEMON OUTFIT CONCEDED WIN Game Will Begin at Hughes Field at 3 P. M, It Is Announced 1s LIGHT McLeod Not Satisfied With Way Things Are Going; Team Needs Work LINTON Coach Roy McLeod announced late today that the following lineup would enter the game against Linton tomorrow: Quarter, Jacobson; halves, Ed Spriggs and Landers; full, O'Hare; ends, Fay Brown and Meinhover; tackles, Slattery and Lee; guards, Paris and Klipstein; center, Hoffman. ‘A second eleven which might also see service follows: Quarter, Potter; halves, John Spriggs and Smith; full, Fens- termacher; ends, Greene and Dale Brown; tackles, Church and Hartley; guards, Whittey and Enge; center, Erlenmeyer. Mac expects to shift his men about liberally and many candi- dates besides the 22 named will be used in tomorrow's fray if possible. The Bismarck high school foot- ball machine is practically conceded a victory over the lighter and green- er Linton team in the first game of the season at Hughes field at 3 p. m. tomorrow. Though little is known of the Lin- ton squad, Bismarck having one of the heaviest high school teams in the state, should outweigh their Em- mons county opponents by at least 10 pounds to the man. McLeod will probably send the following men into the game tomor- row: Ben Jacobson or Fay Brown, quarterback; Landers, Fenster- macher or Spriggs, at halves; O'Hare at full; Slattery, Meinhover, Dale Brown, or Greene at ends; Lee, Church, Hartley, or Rosen at tackles; Paris, Klipstein, Boutrous, or Whit- tey at guards; Hoffman or Meyer at center. If Jacobson’s leg permits his playing, Fay Brown will be sta- tioned at end : : Coach Bill Gussner will choose his starting lineup from the following men: Fogle, Goordes, Volk, Wover- ton, Reidlinger, all backs; and Gillespie, Vetter, Pius, Thomas, Bechtel, Blore, Haugse, Dockter, Sautter, Woods, and Brant, line- men. The Linton team which lost only one game last year was wrecked last spring by graduation of eight men. Mac is working his men out light- ly this afternoon mostly with signal practice. All of his men aré in good shape. ————— if Yesterday's Games | easier NATIONAL LEAGUE (First pace) Wilson; Scott, Henry and Hogan. (Second core) Pe | 8 Alexander and Wilson; Hubbell and Hogan. R 6 H Pittsburgh ....... i Philadelphia ..... 4 1 Hill and Hemsley; Willoughb: and Davis. E 0 2 'y (First Game) R Cincinnati . g. -A Boston E 1 pee 12 1 Kolp ai ukeforth; R. Smith, Edwards and Spohrer. (Second onan) Cincinnati . Boston Ash, well and Taylor. Others not scheduled. ind Picinich; Cant- AMERICAN LEAGUE R H E Philsdelphia 6 8 2 Detroi 9 ‘CRARRSanocrtca | 6 juinn, and Cochrane; Whitehill, ith and Woodall, Hargrave. R H 2 9 5 E 1 5 14 2 ving; Crowder and OVER VISITORS es 8 & Gridders Three Trio of Brothers Gill Expected to Go Big for Golden Bear Machine A trio of brothers will perform on University of California football elevens this fall. Frank “Red” Gill, left, and Harry “Blackie” Gill, center, are members of the varsity eleven, playing halfback and guard positions, respectively. The third Gill is Ralston, nicknamed “Rusty,” and he is expected to prove a star for the yearling squad. The Gills enrolled from Santa Maria, Calif., where they starred in high school sports. RUSTY JONES, WHO SCRAPPED HERE LAST WINTER, BACK IN NORTHWEST Jones, Now a Welterweight, to Meet Puglisi at Duluth in) Opening Bout This Time; Kansas City Gamester Made Good Showing Here Rusty Jones? The name has a familiar ring. Yes. It is the Kansas City game- | ster who stood up to Billy Petrolle in the Bismarck auditorium last Feb. 28 and traded wallops with the most. wicked walloper in the lightweight clan today. Rusty has once more invadad the northwest. He has moved from the Show-me state and is now head- quartering in Minneapolis, old stamping grounds for him. Jones has picked up weight since he last appeared in a northwest arena and is now scrapping in the welter ranks. Jones returns to Duluth after a three year absence to meet Angelo Puglisi, a thumping lad developed by Jack Hurley in his Silver Spray The bout will be held next night and is the headliner rd that will also feature | Frankie Petrolle, Bill’s brother. Fought as Amateur Puglisi fought as an amateur in | Duluth last winter. He had real success winning practically all ot his bouts and returning to lick those who had earlier defeated him. Now Puglisi is ready to ste of the,horde of simon pures. i doing ‘that against. Jones. Rusty Jones well against Billy Petrolle. fighters who can, are few and far between. But Jones is as good if not better than the average resin- sniffer in the United States today aod he will give Puglisi a real bat- tle. We don’t know just how good this Polish lad is. If he can stop Jones, he is plenty good. If he can draw with Jones he is good. If he is licked, he is still a classy mauler. Jones is no dub and his long years of milling have not dimmed his cun-; ning or his speed. Frankie Petrolle Shows Frankle Petrofle meets Bobby Burns, a braw Scot from the Duluth steel mills. Burns will try to doj what Eddie King failed to-do last Tuesday. Frankie swung a right from the floor that stopped King after two minutes of typical Petrolle swarming. Burns knows his mitts, the Duluth scribes tell us. He'll have to if he counts on blockading Frankie’s confessed ambition of be- out | e is didn't show ‘up'éo|'" The | ing welter king of fistiana. Frankie's sidekick, Johnny Ci cone, will also show his wares. Johnny is scheduled to do battle with Jimmy Kearns, an Omaha light- weight, who made Earl Orton, former Fargoan, step to get a daw, in a sizzler 10 days back. It’s just too bad for Bismarck that Jack Hurley decided to go east in- stead of west. DELANEY STOPS ITALIAN BOXER New York, Sept. 21—()—Jack Delaney, once the colorful “rapier of the north” has come back—but not as far as he has gone back. Re- turning to the ring at Ebbets field last night for his first fight since he was knocked out by Jack Sharkey last April, Delaney scored an unim- vessive technical knockout over jamio Tassi of Italy in eleven rounds. For nine rounds it looked as if the battle would go the full 15 frames with Delaney the winner on points. In the tenth the Bridgeport hoxer land- ed a flurry of lefts on the Italian’s face and inflicted the first real dam- age of the bout. After 25 seconds of the eleventh had passed Referee Eddie . Forbes stepped in to save Tassi from further punishment. GHTS IGHT: (By The Associated Press) Chicage—Eddie Shea, Chicago outpcinted Babe Ruth, Louis- ville, (10); Ray Bowen, Wash- ington, defeated Roger O’Briend, Chicago, (6); Jackie Stewart, Louisville, outpointed Ollie Bart- Jett, Minneapolis (5). Brooklyn — Jack Bridgeport, Conn., stop do Tassi, Italy, (11); ner, Tampa, F! Amadeo Grillo, Italy, (4); Lou Barba, New York outpointed Paul Hoffman, Holland, (6); Harry Fay, Louisville, defeated Johnny Urban, Pittsburgh, (6); Jackie Block, East New York, knocked. out George Firodalisi, New York (4); Benny Moseley. New Yerk, and Tommy Komeo, New York, drew, (4). Pittsburgh—Ike © Mc¥owler, Jolinstown, Pa., outpointed Pac- ko, Toledo, ( Delaney, d Man- lie Joy- outpointed THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bismarck Raises Curtain on Football Stage Against Linton Here LOCAL WELTER MEETS WATSON IN HEADLINER Says He Will Earn Early Kneckout Victory Over Kid:" der County Star Scrappin’ Lee Bismarck Welterweight Who Runs Up Against A. J. Watson, Dark Horse DEVELOPS. GOOD LEFT . Finished Traming Yesterday With Slashing Rounds With Newsboy — Lee Cavanagh, Bismarck ‘welter- weight, finished his heavy training yesterday afternoon with a few slashing rounds with Newsboy Lloyd and is resting today confident of a knockout victory in an early round over A. J. Watson, pride middle- weight of Kidder county. The two men meet in a 10-round affair on a card staged at Lake View pavilion at Lake Williams. The card will begin at 8:30 o'clock tonight. Watson is a dark horse in North ‘Dakota fistic circles, having had but a few fights here, but Cavanagh is convinced that he can put him away for the count. Secrecy envelops the training quarters of the Dawson scrapper. Lee has been developing his left the past two weeks, his southpaw soupbone having been slighted in his North Dakota engagements this year. Lee said that if Watson thinks his left is weak for this fight, he can easily find out how weak it is by getting in front of it during the bout tonight. Bobby Harding, Lake Williams, and Phil Keating, Pettibone, will fight six rounds at 135 pounds. Mutt and Jeff will put on an exhibition in five rounds at catch weights. Mutt. hails from Iowa, while Jeff registers from Wisconsin. Pettibone Boy and Woodworth Boy meet in another five-round engagement. Other fights on the card are not an- nounced. BLURJAYS LIKE GOPHER AFFAIR Omaha, Neb., Sept. 21.—When Creighton _university’s Bluejays meet the Minnesota university Go- phers in Minneapolis on October 6 it will be the old, familiar battle be- tween the famed Notre Dame shift and Minnesota’s crushing straight attack. For Chet Wynne, Creigh- ton’'s head coach, is a pupil of Knut Rockne, whose pet fullback he was in 1919, 1920, and 1921, when he won all-American honors. Coach Wynne administered his first drill to the sixty candidates for the Creighton eleven on September 15. Assisting him was Line Coach John McMullan, another all-Ameri- can athlete from the South Bend school of coaching. Captain Maillard, 210-pound tackle, is only one of the four all- American or all-Western selections on the Creighton squad this year. The other three are Left End Don Somers, Minnesota lad whose punts average better than 50 yards; Suare terback Johnny Scott, Cherokee (Iowa) boy, whose brilliant work last year gave Creighton fans a new yell, “See Scotty go!”; and Guard| The Sammy Caniglia, tigerish guard from Omaha’s Italian quarter. A special train -has been ehartered by Omaha fans for the Minneapolis trip, and hundreds of Creighton fol- lowers are planning to follow their team north. . 2 After the opening game with Minnesota, the Bluejays face eight solid weeks of hard sledding. They will meet, in order, the Oklahoma Aggies, who last year handed the GCusiabtaniaus their sole defeat; Oklahoma ‘university (homecoming pu) St. Louis university, South akota State, Utah, Marquette, Grinnell, and Drake. STATE QUARTER LAMOURE HEAD La Moure, N..D., Sept .2.—(4)— H. C. Biegert, formerly of the South kota state collage football squad, will lead his La Moure high school huskies into the first battle of the season here this afternoon. They will meet the Sheldon high school outfit. tee : With only five lettermen back from 1927 and a small squad seeking berths on the 1928 squad, the prot pect for the season is not so promi: Here, fans, meet Mr. Lee Cava- nagh, Bismarck welterweight de luxe and erstwhile Billings Wildcat, who is. tearing up. the North Dakota ibitions. Lee has held Clyde Hull, Faith, S. D., and Herman Ratzlaff, Minot, to draws in the last two years. He lost a close decision to Tiger Johnny coment Minot, but he wants to meet him again so he can grab that victory back. He-has resided and trained in Bismarck all summer. He licked Battling Krause, Hazen veteran, who has been close to the top, a short time ago. % BILLY PETROLLE ‘SET FOR LOAYZA Battle to Prove Which Is Greatest Threat of Sammy Mandell Detroit, Sept. 21—)—Billy Pe- trolle, the Fargo Express, and Stan Loayza, South American boxer, do battle here tonight to prove that one of them is a lightweight threat to the throne of Champion Sammy Mandell. : The bout is scheduled for ten rounds but Petrolle /is out to si Loayza in shorter time than it to Jimmy McLarnin last month when the little Irishman floored Loayza for the count in the fourth round. South American looks on to- night’s bout as one in which he can ie in. lost prestige. He has taking it easy since his knockout by McLarnin while Petrolle has concen- trated on this evening’s affai Nejther fighter lacks a: sive- ness and each has proved he carries a knockout punch. Although Pe- trolle _ e “a ia climb into the under ounds, giving away wel ht to the Bouth American, he has been trained down to the weight while Loayza has been slack training the ith his past three weeks avoid- ing any Possibly: Th main go is aetiatad by 10 sup) rounders between Toute “Kid? Kap- lan, former featherweight champ, and Bert Lamb, Detroit, and Lew Kirsch, New York, opposing Roger Bernard of Flint, Mich. SDAYSREMAIN IN ASSOCIATION Chicago, Sept. 30.—\ — Bruno today are a step nearer their goal, the American association pennant— but only a half-step behind is Mike Kelley ready to shove his Minneap- steps af the Indians falter during mii ing, Biegert said today. He has been devoting much of his time to strengthening the line, as that di- Baton Rouge, La., Sept. 21—With a new coach who is expected to | vision is the weakest. The backs are use @ new system, the football situation at Louisiana. State this fall is | fair. a bit brighter than it has been in ears, Cohen, who starred for Vande ilt before the war.and who since then has served as assistant coach at various schools, including five years “as, Wallace Wade's assistant at Ala- . bama, has taken over Mike Donahue’s. job. He brought with him Alabama line s' him ‘and retai + Year’ sistants. Cohen knows southern He scouted all Alabai coaching. squad in Ben Enis to aid members of other football. ma Oj for five years and was a in the success of thet the Crimson Tide to deve » 28- e derelan 2 Lat ag- to use He this The material Biegert now has on hand is as foll Larson, A B. Leer, tackl Leer, tackl , Shuck, le; F. loppnow, gu: Smoku, ‘guar the three remaining days of the pennant race. © ih Only one-half game separates the two leaders but Indianapolis has four games tb play with three days while the Millers take on three times. Kup- | flinger rd Love, Lynch, all ends; Ribble,|had the ; quale: Smith, half; Pierce, half and Bubec, fullback: ‘ D. Winslow Lit and H. Winslow may also get jobs as | son. indidat ites from last year’s freshmen squad include Thomas, Boise, Seumpler,’ Hartman’ ‘and . 21, at La Moure. 5 28, at Ellendale. . 8. D., Oct. 5, at La Enderlin; Oct. 12, at Enderlin. Lisbon, Oct. io e Wahpeton, (tentative) Oct. 27, (tentative) Nov. 2, La St. Johns fighting show with his splendid ex-| 9 hibitions & ‘been | Double: Cavanagh Takes on Middleweight Opponent at Wildwood Lake Tonight GUE | FREDDIE HOVDE PRACTICALLY ASSURED MAJOR LEAGUE ~ QUARTER POSITION ON GOPHER OUTETT CONTESTS ARE EQUALLY WARM American League Furnishes the Most Thrills by Un- expected Shift (By The Associated Press) There’s not much to choose be- tween the two major league races but the fact remains that most of the drama is being enacted in the less of a cut-and-dried proposition by the simple process of matching any- thing their closest competitors may or may, not achieve. If the New York Giants lost the Cardinals man- age to do the same thing. win, Bill McKechnie’s boys that John McGraw doesn’t profit in the standings thereby. But in the American Lea er Huggins’ champion Yankees have given their supporters more alternate moments of ecstatic joy and dismal gloom than is good for the constitution, even of a leath- er-lunged. bronx fan. From to bad and back again Yankee fortunes have gone this year. The Bronx was in deep mourn- ing today, for the Yankees, losing a 12 toni battle to the Chicago White Sox yesterday, saw the Phil- adelp! Athletics creep to within one game of the lead again. Meanwhile the National Lea; remained unchanged as the Car- dinals and the Giants tangled in a double-bill and emerged with one victory apiece 8 to 5 and 7 to 4 re- spectively. What advantage there was went to McKechnie for he got rid of two more games from his schedule without losing any ground to his chief rival. : spite the even split, the Giants vecerh wy losers. They were pre- sented with a wonderful opportunity: to tie for the lead and ended exacily here they started—two gamcs out of first place. They meet the Ccrds in tomorrow and for the last games, the Pittsburgh trounced the Phillies 6 to 4, while the Cincinnati Reds were splitting even in two games with the Boston Braves. The Reds won the first game 7 to 2 but went down in the nightcap, 9 to 5. Urban Faber was the master of the situation at Chicago where the Yankee @hip struck a reef and went down with all hands aboard. The veteran spitballer held the pions to eight hits in 12 inings and walked off with a 4 to 3 decision. The Sox tied the/score in the eighth, ager] Pipgraz out of the ‘box, and won out in the 12th on a single, a stolen base and twy sacri- fices off Waite Hoyt. Before the Yankees f.aally had gone down at Chicago, the Athiezics, thanks to Jack Quinn had turned back Detroit, 6 to 1. The Tigers got only six hits off Quinn and would have suffered a shutout but for a fumble by Ji:amy Dyess. The St. Louis Browns clinched third place in the standings by de- feating the Boston Red Sox, 5 to 2. CERISE eos SAS 8 | Major Leaders pO ii ad ce (By the Associated Press) :. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Hornsby, Braves, .386. Runs—P. Waner, Pirates, 134. Runs baited Bottomley, Cards, Hits—P. Waner, ‘Pirates, 219, P. Wi - Pirates, 51. Triples—P. Waner, Pirates, 19. Homers—Wilson, Cubs, 30. Stolen bases—Cuyler, Cubs, 32. Pitching Bena “Giants, won ost 8. AMERICAN LEAGUE — Batting—Manush, Browns, .372. Runs—Ruth, Yanks, 150. Runs batted: in—+Ruth, ‘Yanks, 184. Hits—Manush, Browns, 223. Triples Combe, Yanks 3 om ai Homers—Ruth, Yanks, Stolen bases—Myer, Red Pitching—Crowder, 19, lost 5. FLAX RUST LIVES 3—] OVER ON STUBBLE| Flax rust, which has caused a considerable amount of damage in North Dakota this year, is carried ‘over on the straw and plowing un- der of the stubble ma: Betzel and his Indianapolis Indians | Gtr, olis Millers into the van should foot- | tat; on Know Her? eee You Should. It’s Our Fair Helen, Tennis Queen, All Dressed Up One sees Helen Wills fikely fo forget exactly what "eh ikel forge’ ly wi she looks like when she is wearing some- thing else. Well, here’s Helen in a neat outfit she wore recently in the east and it doesn’t take a second look to that she rates about as high in looks as she ‘does in the tennis venkat Art that’s plenty pictured so that we're sible. Crop rotation as a means lor controlling the rust is also ad- visable. nis abn hes rp years, but this is the first season jamage has been "not believed that the red the seed grain,” Mr. Brentzel says. “About the only way that rust could be spread by means of seed is from bits of rusty stems and leaves which sometimes may be found in seed flax. By grading, such bits of rusty ma- terial are easily removed.” In Czarist Russia marriage was te ized as valid unless sanc- not recogni tioned by the church. Devils Lake Lad Is Being Picked for Regular Service by Spears; Twin City Scribes Unanimous in Saying He’ Has Returned to Old Form Fred Hovde, North Dakota’s con- tribution to the Minnesota gridiron juggernaut, is one of the two letter- men on Doc Spears’ machine who are sure of backfield berths. Harold Barnhart, Washington product, is the Twin City scribes are unanimous in their statements that the Devils Lake flash is fully as brilliant as last year when his squirming off- tackle dashes, his accurate pass and his ability to receive the seria! tosses, made him one of the m feared neat the Big Ten. He is a ek. nother aes boy is re- as promi \° ‘an hana eet can . tit Burdick of Will ‘who ie erinte oe Ris weight may handi- bee hi till another aoe Dakota - ce grade on Giants of the North. Paul Grand "Forks. “deplayed meteors ‘orl teo! form in spring practice. "He has looked even better this fall. Andy Goer, Crookston, and. Dutch | y ‘ston, Arendsee, Aberdeen, are other back- field candidates who familiar to North Dakota moleskin followers. Geer been erratic during his previous two years on the Gopher rene He Te non tae runner and passer wi ett! washout when off. aves tite . a runnin, It has been many years since ‘ast fans, scribes and coaches had dif- fieulty in naming who would be in the maroon and gold backfield. The of Joesting, Almquist, Lid- fall the case is reversed. The ine is almost a certainty while. the backfield is problematical with the go of Hovde and Barnhart. Bob Tanner. and Kenneth Ray- craft are almost certain to play out where the — Wayne Ka- kela has cin spot left by MacKinnon, the fighting ee ee : mastod opponents. aptain George Gibson and Les’ Pulkrabek seem certain fixtures at rds. Bronke Nagurski and Edgar ‘Ukkel- feet ve loomed most prominent at s. Of course, there are other linemen i it is fall but it is doubtful if it will come up to his bone-crush- ers of 1927. Heas’s « hat that expresses the snsp and vigor of an _- the Lenpher dealer's. ‘utumn day. Beautifully made from the finest im- ported fur. Soft, smooth, stylish. You'll find it et Popularly priced at five to ten dollers | Safe and Sane Transportation Bismarck to Minot Lcnaed Pane For Reservations o¢ Information, Phone All Hotels and Association of Commerce ser sn Daily Schedule: arck, at 18 noon. atl p.m. Leave airport, Minot, Fare - $18.50 \