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| My Sullivan Stages Vicious MINOT FIGHTER PUZZLES RIVAL | WITH METHODS Southpaw Style Gives North Dakotan Wide Advantage in Early Rounds | RATZLAFF DRAWS BLOOD: i] Savage Body Punishment Dealt! Out by St. Paul Mauler To- wards Close | St. Paul, Minn. Oct. 27—(#)— My Sullivan, welterweight of St. Pa joday held a shade newspaper ision over Herman Ratslaff, of | Minot,” as a result of their ten! round bout here last night, but he! nad to hustle in the last few rounds | to win. Ratzlaff started with a rush and had Sullivan on the go for the first four rounds, The St. Paul lad found his bearings in the fifth and carried most of the honors thereafter. Ratzlaff substituted on short notice for Floyd Hybert, who, the state boxing commission ruled, was not oh; lly fit for the bout. Ratzlatt started a stream of blood from his opponent’s mouth early in the third’ round with a thower of short rights and lefts to the head, and Sullivan spat blood throughout the fight. The St. Paul welterweight gained revenge for this.injury, however, when he closed e North Dakotan’s left eye in the final round. Seemingly puzzled by Ratzlaff's southpaw attack, Sullivan was able to do little in the fi four rounds which went to Ratzlaff, who con- tinually crowded in close and shot punches from every angle. Starting with a heavy attack in the fifth, Sullivan showered the North Dakotan with almost every va- tiety of punch. He pumped both hands to Ratzlaff’s body and then gwitched his vicidus attack to the head and for a time appeared to have his opponent bewildered. He wound up the round by knocking the iron man partly through the *BIFF’JONES CAPT. <ARMY SZ “Eppysn2ee It will be the Yale Bull Dog “els the Army Mule at the Bowl Saturday, October 27. The Cadets will be fighting not only one of the Blue’s strongest teams but also tradition which shows that of 27 played Old Eli has captured 17 games and has held the West Pointers to a tie in six others. Both teams have strong lines. Louis Hammack, left guard, is a leading ee seb Captain Max Eddy, right tackle, is one of Yale’s stalwa jinesmen. 27.—(P)—The | Caldwell, now a professional, who booted an extra point after touch. down and a field goal for the decid- ing points in a 10-6 Eli victory. Strong Teams Yale must get along this year without Mr. Caldwell’s - masterful footwork. And the Army is minus Harry Wilson, who received his com- mission last June; but otherwise both teams present first string line- ups that include a surprising num- ber of veterans of a year ago. Consider the lines, which already have been tabbed as two of the best extanct. _ Just as the Army forward wall is built around Captain Mort Sprague, left tackle, so the Yale line has as nucleus Captain Max Eddy, who s been i ing right tackle and consequently should square off to face against the rival leader. Sprague was jolted dizzy in the first few seconds of the, Harvard game and has been handied. with care in practice during the‘ week, ‘but’ the dope is ‘that he will play. Perry, Sprague’s veteran running mate, holds down the other tackle, while Yale has a new man, Marting, in that berth. New Men Important At the guards Yale has Firpo Greene, one of the mainstays of last season, and Hall, who saw service in that Arniy game, while West Point the redoubtable Hammack along‘ with Dibb, who was one. of the replacements in the 1927 fray. Charlesworth, Yale’s giant center, and Hall are to face each other for the second time in two yea Both teams have lost great end pairs, and upon their comparative success at developing new wingmen may well. depend the outcome of the me. Messinger performed nobly for.the Army against:Harvard, with ce work also by Carlmark. Yale on McEwen and Walker. In the backfield.the vets are as numerous as in the line. Supporting Garvey, Yale has Hoben, Decker and Hubbard, while the. Army. backs: up Cagle with Murrel and O'Keefe. New York, Oct. powerful Army football team, which threw off the Harvard jinx on Sai urday by beating the Crimson fo the first time in 14 starts, now. will try to do as much for Over riod of Cre back to 1893 Old Indian sign’ on the Cadet ‘om then on it was Sullivan's fight. Although he fought only in spurts his crushing right hand e rocked Ratzlaff repeatedly and he that Yale has won 17 also dealt out savage body punish-| games to Army’s four." Six were ent. Ratzlaff was soundly cheered | tied. 3 when he left the ring. . Today they’ meet again before Morrie Green, University of Min-| what already is certain to be a nesota welterweight, beat Battling| capacity crowd of 75,000 in the Yale Nelson, Waterloo, Iowa, in six| bowl. bably never did two elev- rounds. Nelson was a willing mix-|ens clash the issue more in er, but Green beat him to the punch| doubt or with more potentially at repeatedly and his blows apparently | stake. At the rate they are travel- tarried more power than his oppon- | ini winner may- well go on to 5 tern or even. national si wmt’s. y. as the Army this season meeting the best in every section FUMBLES COST esata ‘When last they m yea: , the Yale jinx was working over- BOWMAN GAME) "ssi tion in the great kicking of Bruce’ Hettinger Upsets Dope to Win 24 to'12'in Closing Game of Season yw a s ‘Across the Gridiron «‘ ' ** t wie -* ss s-e 8 ¢ Making the Rules Understandable for All” _ (Special to The Tribune) , Hetti N. D., Oct. 27.—Het- By FIELDING H. YOST ever, affect many different sections, Rally to Defeat Herman_ Mandan Braves Take Third Win -of Season by Downing LINTON MAKES HARD EFFORTS : TO STOP RUSH; Emmons County Gang Gets Only. Three Trips Toward | Braves’ Goal NO INJURIES IN GAME McMahan Puts Second String- ers in for Practice Bene- fit (Special to The Tribune) Linton, N. D., Oct. 27.—Romping. over the hard-trying Linton squad 63 to 0, the fighting Braves of Man- dan yesterday hung up their third win of the season. The Linton squad didn’t have a chance. The team members were all light and green, with all experi- enced men from the last year odtfit lost through graduation. Only three times during the game did the Linton lads get the’ ball started toward the Mandan goal line, and on those occasions they were romptly thrown over by their heav- jer opponents. On all the other tries they were thrown for a loss. Although Mentor McMahon of the Braves put all-his green youngsters into the game, his squad romped over the Linton line with regularity. They galloped around the ends at will and took the ball down the line by. ipaies at their leisure. factor J by the huge score iling up before them, the Linton heya tried courageously to get the ball, but to no avail. Besides being a faster, more experienced and bet- ter trained outfit, the Mandan. out- fit could use their weight at any time to throw the Linton men out of the AED) : : Two of the Mandan regulars were out of the game—Wagner, center, with a hurt shoulder received ‘in ractice tilts, and Vosika, who was injured in the Dickinson game a week ago. Vosika has not been on the field for the last week, and Coach McMahon is not sure when he will allow the lad to get back in the game. BIG TEN TEAMS - Winner of Minnesota-lowa) Contest Probable Champion- ship Winner Chicago,. Oct: 27.—(AP)—With Minnesota at Iowa to furnish ‘the feature battle, the big 10 football program today offers a chance of upsets, and a new lineup in the con- ference ratings. Neither “Doc” Spears’ “Gophers 1S COACHES’ JOY “BY BOB MATHERNE. (NEA Service Sports Writer) It is no surprising fact that any football coach, derives immense sat- e isfaction from seeing a . btilliart| * f the great fall’ game. Last backfield performer on his football] }re" pesceme Peigeregpior squad ai nd th faction is doubly the game,-as’far as-its rules were concerned, has reached a point. of ene sath his os ee eae stability;: that new. or. changed rule; eanaar betota him. were unnecessary. Agreement also ¢ Jess Hawley hed such an exper- recodif ience last fall when the galloping:Al reached that ication and Tangement . desirable, and arsters started reeling off lengthy ie gains on various boa idrnes for Dart- away for long dashes around the| mouth. Jimmy Phelan felt the same 8 de rules committee set ends, through the line and returning | W@y about the performances ‘of pon the prbblem of elimination, or- complete’ football season’ and ‘the the in. which “Stump; outstanding backs of their section in ball in October with the news that Ohio. a place with the great backs of the cult if the new arr ers. wi ‘do everything. ‘one. . and it-is obviously impossible:to re- peat the definition with each section one may affect. At almost every turn the present rules will challenge the best minds of the game to find better methods: of classification and simplification. ‘At:seems certain a royal, easy road will:not be foynd to make the foot ball'rules a simple lesson to the w initiated. The rules, however writ- ten or arranged, will need study ‘by enrene who : nes ee ped all: thee may happen in a football game. Ap- parently this will be as necessary in the future as now, and those who have not given such long and care- aa pinty.S0 ‘the Ape abonla not as- ime ave such expert knowledge when officials’ make decisions. se : While a ‘committee has been’ ap- pointed. from the membership of the rules-making organization. to.make the revisions and the “logical ar- rangement,” the committee -an- bonnes in Kad zulee book it will welcome “construct suggestion: from friends of th tod stu dents of the rules.’ jis brings to ince of the committee one Ke of aggressive young men in. the land. today. it are a thoiisand’ college coaches, ten thousand high ‘school coac! y week in. the college games, a: ten thousand officials who aa Tore or less re; ularly in the high lost’ of this army is all have been: piay- a interested in the:in- ation of the football playing the end that it may be-un- (Director. of: Athletics, University of Michigan) ~~ -: Ann Arbor, Mich—(P)—Rewrit- ing and arrangement of the laws: of foot! is the year's labor specified i Ss. committee and: the gaping holes in the old dope. bucket when the‘underdogs larruped Bow- on the Bowman eleven. Six ti he snatched the ball and four times the alert Het- tinger warriors taking advantage of vig break pounced on the rebel in, . Between. the chuckling Doctor and Harold Ryerson, Hettin; scintillating. quarterback, the mian lads put in-a very miserable afternoon. “Time and again, Ryerson broke, Bu y re the mainstays: for the invaders. They advanced the ball for a number of first downs and. scored Bowman’s Sea crense. 1 H land a ‘anous co-starred with the: gallo; Ryerson. Hetti closed its season with a eater two games. won si a two} YALCREW MEN le this year as the one for the Hi “Pest” Welch for . And: we ganization: simplification. This a saps Aperages Seam, 3 that W. A. Alexander “reconsidering period” afterward in about his chores on their sophomore, year. State has a sophomore fom ir year. To use that old phrase, Hal-, ment is.to be forces of e to concentrate don't i period gave ‘coaches and officials a at Geo Tech was downcast, by Thomasson went which.to weigh the questions of rule the football field. All three ~ were betterment. The football world rumbled early, ed. Allen Holman who is destined to take his| ment writing- and reeod nan is one of those footh: mho |, better understood ‘than ‘thé presént files ta Phe’ gai t present i Has Field Leaders | by threo sections: the neal ules Aig ue lack Wilce, i eapey and 70. )inferpretations n 1 interpretatio realizes Holman’s value can’ not in the te esal ee inten bene from the fact that ‘made.at ‘alate dusimer meeting of wider: que imply the & is Who watch, ‘seeki ' Codifie britiging: of: all. items: affecting ‘an flement of the, game 't r. citle| ethntions in the eanera Tues, how | spedta ears back ows J is 35'- years old = This valedictory effort may: pele tn word, "Tt ean act’ that, Ohio tel the nor Bert Ingwersen’s Iowans have tasted the sting of defeat this sea: The winner will have ims. innesota was given the eige but a slow wet field admittedly brought more cheer to the heavy Iowa squad than the fast, sniping, Gopher band. A confident Wisconsin team, eye ing the first Cardinal victory over. Michigan eleven since 1899, and.a Wolverine squad, stung by '.three straight defeats, meet at Ann Arbor today. Unless Michigan flashes. a reversal of form, prospects indicate they may take another. lick’ In guest of its third col victory, Ohio State’s:powerful eleven meets a test of its strenath iin In- r afternoon. ‘ight advant- age of 13 pounds to the man over the diana University before homecoming crowd The Buckeyes held a Indiana forward wall. Inspired by a highly ‘developed attack,” Northwestern’ wild- aeri cats invaded Ilinoi day, confident of upset of the bik We ngage” | the foe tty spectators picked to win. Purdue and score. ” field,| “Bender and Stegmeit passed for season. RACES LOST BY. =| USE OF WHIP it ‘is'true, but also vitally aoarssied why and: how. of ‘the Playing or not to whi most disc for the ty “ihr s | Young Heavies Make Bow; ‘FACE BIG TILTS}é: Illini homecoming: | ina New Orleans, La.—(?)—To whip promises to be the question at the fair’ race track here this winter. aie Os Be : nt was tried last , Ketan on ‘the "Abel using. the whip, inthe improve , their, Ratzlaff Linton FIFTEEN GAMES HOLD FOOTBALL LIGHT IN BAST All Undefeated College: Teath Face Hard Games -- ARMY MEETS YALE Von Porat ‘Tops Newcomers leks S| Three Outstanding Ganes Scheduled in State of Pennsylvania New York, Oct. 27—(#)—Fiftee: undefeated and untied eastern col vs ocala teams today had hard Army and Yale, victorious in all lees) engagements, meet at New choked in the piece de resistance ‘of y Cornell, easy victor over her first three opponents, mcets a Princeton eleven tied by Virginia but none the less a threat to any opponent. e . RU ate kl unbeaten array bat- “er a sone e strongest Harvi ; C TUFFY. GRIFFITH Mi Or fauads of recent years. me ane 7 ¥ 4 liversity and Car- New and unmarked faces will greet metropolitan boxing fans when the ie Tech, both i indoor season opens next month. Topping the pred drafted recipe ie MES Cheer from the west is Otto Von Porat who meets Paulino Uzcudun, Nov. 5.| Pittsburgh respectively. : Tiny Roebuck, heavyweight, appears on the same card. Tuffy riffith, and Penns lavnia. light-heavyweight, may meet Jack Delaney, late in, November. first and second in team scoring. New. York, Oct, 27.—UP)—Fresh skeptics may fallin Ine. Paulino |Play Duke and the Navy respec- foes for the metropolitan heavy-|himself is somewhat of a hitter." "A ong th tai weight favorites are being imported|He recently chopped down Big e smal undefeated from the provinces. .,_|Boy Peterson, who ‘holds’ a -news- The latest consignment consists|paper decision over Otto, only to of Otto Von Porat, Chicago; Tiny Tiss the fight on a foul. Gaitith: Siow: City, ta. Von Porat [past ef Ting’ Roebuck, who makes own Ti! Sioux City, Ia. Von Porat it of Tiny juck, who makes < Ee edges ee wyweights and fis local bow in ont of the J elim ee enough to stop Du- ri is‘a light-heavyweight. nary uts on the Paulino-Von a All three are booked for early|Porat program. Tiny rapped Big wae cane Sgt offers engagements, scheduled as’ preli to sleep in 15-seconds in Kan-| state college S So, Bia At ae te ii eae ie es oy area ster but the Big} State; West Virginia takes cartes nation tournament, whic! one subsequently took a newspaper under headway by, December. —‘ {decision from Tiny. “— bir Adis Bucknell clashes with Outstanding ong the new Disgrace yeburg. members of Gotham’s big fistic| Tiny and his ‘followers stoutly k ‘Ma | family is Otto Von Porat, who held/insist the former Haskell tackle the heavyweight championship of|has lived dowa the disgrace of los- Norway when he came to America and untied colleges, Williams, Tufts and- Duquesne seem most likely to end the oF the wrong side of Williams plays Colum- bia; Tufts meets Bi Geneva The Madison ‘ logue hy and Jefferson at the Square Garden Ci ion, which ‘1 Polo three years ago. Lal net Otto at Disadvantage has a contract with Roebuck, Ae ancterd Hard -bolled Yankee promoters |it was all mistake, for with Tiny's | eccouns with Muhlenberg at Bethle- failed. to fall for the Norway cham- pionship racket, asserting their norance of boxing championships in the Nordic region, so Otto has i a reputation in football ae en and the red skin angle they vision vast. oppor- tunities for some high-pressure ballyhoo. ; Griffith has no Indian blood nor has he ever held any Sept they This parently has done. |s! Making his headquarters in Chica- nythi fc Von Porat won nine of hisjhis future is . Tuffy, they st eighteen fights by knockouts|say, has been -handling, the boys dis heralded by Chicago critics |right raat yan and sround Chica- as the hardest hitting young heavy-jgo. With this in mind the match- weight in the land. ,,_ {makers signed him with rug; Otto will have every opportunity |Pete Latzo, but Latzo had his jaw to-prove his vaunted hitting abil-/ fractured. ity when he makes his metropolitan] They now are angling for Jack debut in‘a 15-round bout with Pau-|Delaney. And the Rapier of. the limo Uzeudun, ‘November 5. If his|North, still somewhat of a fighter inst the second-raters, may blows make any impression on the |agaii Basque wood cutter then local] bring out just how tough Tuffy is. EIAINDEFEATS | ‘FLASHER 6 10 O'zexes games Greening of Hamilton; Ontario, won it with the Rainbow IV. . His boat was disqualified when its construc- tion was protested. The award was given to Baby Boot! of ‘the Comrie ae it club Hibs In turn cup: went ‘to: George Townsend of. the: Indian . Harbor Yacht club, Greenwich, Conn., when his little speedster, Greenwich Folly, outdistanced Bootle; retained it the foll + By “JOCK” SUTHERLAND (University of Pitteburgh Football ay Coach) - One of the real thrills of a foot- ball game is the end run. Like the forward pass, the end run may result in a long gain. It has speed and action and is one of the most spec- Flasher, Outweighed, Puts Up Game Battle in Try for Second Win most impossible to gain ind cause ends, tackles, guards, and the lay so close together that plays and line bucks are a chall Speed is the essential. th end runs. Every team should GOPHERSMREN (staresestares STRONG IOWANS ieapitercocag mt att Nagurski to Meet ‘Cherokee Charter’ in: Long-Expected |; Special to The Tribune). .Elgin,..N.. D.,.. Oct. 27.—Holding the Flasher squad back on four tempts to score.in the last two mit utes of-play, the Elgin football team yesterday avenged a- previous de- feat by a 6 to 0 score. ‘The score was made in the second period by Babe Mindt by a line plunge. Elgin -lost. a chance to score early in the second period through a fumble on their own two ine. ay ie ion of the ame was territory. eh Father. was oe. sacar rang a1) ihe | Out. raat atten outplayed but 2s Cit: | Oct:'27—(AP) rasta tesina ot Re Unirenstsy brought the ball down the field with | 1% taponctal bekite Saday op ry sacle of passes but were held on Tos fie, eters 2 Hromiaed the six-inch line in four attempts to| their western, confererice™ reco: ith the winner « ing very much in the. cham al fre ‘lly threughout® of the final quarter, when tl ai cEse, See i iy “Bender,” right half, Ri Stegmeier, left’ half, 'E. Bender, ght end, F. Krause right tackle, J. ey SEM tnels last game of big ‘schoo Pool featball displayed high j turn the party’ was the outstanding | of favor the EI team, time | 22 meet Ha > jpeedboat Oct. 27. WAN feces a xa a ur ee LE aS a. a | Cit) owe ae | 1 2a.