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T HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1929 + THROUGHOUT GAME Bismarck Line, Despite Fighting Attitude, Is Green and Often Ineffective SPIELMAN IS BRAVE STA\ ¢ Capital City Touchdowns Scored ‘Grand Forks orks Youth Mz Makes firs 0g 62, 40 and 10 Yards for Touchdowns R UNIVERSITY WINS 26 TO 6 Standings Ray McGettigan, Former Bis- i Wor marck Performer, Runs 60 i nd O'Hare; " Philadelphia. ....... 102 ee ae: ard Oa | Yards Through Flicks New York - 88 Safety Counted {Cleveland + 80 2 eT 'St. Louis mee = perior, Wis., Sept. 30.—Gienn | Washington ....... 71 With a backfield apparently every | | dee DaRett ait lots OF runGING of Detroit : to bit as good as that of the 1925 unde- | Gates field here Saturday afternoon. Chicago 2 8E feated team and a line which was! in fact too much for Superior State | Boston : 56 green and not as effective as it migis, | Teachers college, and when Red got SENSATIONAL RUNS .RED JARRETT RUNS WILD AS NODAKS TROUNCE SUPERIOR (STANDINGS! HASPINCHATPLATE | |) | Strong Demon Backfield and Mediocre Line Trim Mandan 21 to 0 EDSPROGSHAKES ROGERS HORNSBY MAKES CUBS WINNING OUTFIT, EVANS SAYS INFIELD STEADIED BY oe SACKER WHO, Veteran diners; However, Does | Not Mean That Cubs Are One- yl baelt n Lost | a ioe are ppl ileiah lec BS Le a4 Playing With the Rajah at Sec-; EM ond Has Improved Mc- 95 Carthy’s Sackmen | s200,000 in real money. and to make | ‘the deal more interesting from a Bos- !ton standpoint, had turned over five, i players in addition to the heavy cash. ‘The players involved were Cunning- ham, Maguire, Jones, Seibold. Boston, since the three pitchers, Cun- eet Jones and Seivold have won | | araene iin the fieldbut hasdonenothing much | ‘at the bat. {as a Cub. by. he was worth it. nant winner out of what was just a good ball club. ito better than a million people at} home, which means Hornsby has paid his way at the gate. it in the world series. series, his second chance in baseball's | classic? jhe rather disappointed with a .250/ batting average. ferm in world series. Penn, State 16, ie Lawrence nko NORTH DAKOTA BISON BLOCK _ PUNT TO NOSE OUT COBBERS achere 7. 18, Winons Fort S ele Leggett and . Hlinois Wesle Thomas 15, Sout no State ran for a touchdown after receiving a punt on his own 20-yard line. He reversed the field neatly. May made a 35-yard return on the next kickoff but the Cobbers held and May punted over the goal. The Bison came right back and May scored | after a 14-yard dash. At the begin- ning of the fourth quarter, Hilts blocked Wambach’'s punt near the Cobber goal line and Fairhead took | it over for a touchdown for the Bison. * Football Results | It certainly wasn't a bad deal for Hilts Stops Kick, Fairhe Kick, Fairhead Car- ries It Over, in a Hard- Fought 13-6 Game e Teachers 0. field 7, Island’ 0, salevan ‘Arnold 0, t Aggies 0. ich.) 0, ears between them, while | Maguire has performed very capably | That was his weakness H pitol 4, Whatever Chicago paid for Horns- a He made a pen- |AGGIES PROVE POWERFUL ‘The Cubs will play | Mally Anderson Runs 80 Yards in First Quarter for Go- pher Team's Score 2 He will add to| i “What will he do in the 1929 world ws With the Cardinals in 1926, | Cooperstown 0. ndale 0. rwaukan 0, Fargo, N. Dak., Sept. 30.--Gridiron | {warriors of the North Dakota Agri-| cultural college opened their 1929 Stars seldom run true 0 compaign Saturday with a 13 to 6 tri- NEXT: ‘gt ting spirit, Bis . stood. panes i proche ieee ;umph over a sparkling Concordia { Mandan Hig Oat Sebckue a eupeane | Gamen FT yp) ners Soc, Tae thet Te Douchbo ; eer (INCLUDING GAMES OF SEPT. yin the first of |” qr was Jarrett who ran 62 vards 1 St. Louis ey RR ee | wo Voug: VS — tne “ageicutturat college's "history | i “ween the inter- | tne second quarter for a touchdown Clevsland 2.4... 48 Eraite, the ‘toknike theese Saupe | ° e,§ gathered for the struggle, more than $ | (By The Associated Press) t 7) en. it; Ferre | f is rm 4 rs a $i ! pool representatives te yates blige eles Atel eee snd Schang: Ferrell and) umpire. ‘The articles arc written Signed by Smi ie TEI treated Ou hei a OE Tae: | ceoalin as H National es not, keaien a Bismarck team in | {irq quarter for another touchdown. | Tie | especiall for The Bismarck sibs | Wall Which: would: have ‘been present: z Yankton’ og | Batting—O'Doul, Phillies. .395, vas Jarrett who ran 10 yards | nr on. ¢_ Tribune. from Fort Lincoln | able fer a midseason attraction. ausora State | Runs~-Hornsby, Cubs, 151. efter receiving a lateral pass for an- | philadelphia 0 4 0 a have caught the eye of Fromoter Fred! Concordia. outweighed considerably, | Homers—-Ott, Giants, 42; Klein, cther touchdown in the third quaz-— 1 #17~CO«OO By BILLY | J. Smith and will fight a preliminary | made a gallant cffort but was un- les (Hel- | phillies, ‘ ended his scoring by runnin ‘Rommel and Coch-| ‘The addition of one player very) ¢ round hout on the Jack McCann- i able to stem the tide of hard linc university 18, Indiana Re-| Stolen bases—Cuyler, Cubs, 40. end for an exira point. Ruffing, M. Gaston |often ma pennant contender of |eny Brown card at the Dome pavi- | smashes hurled at them by Casey ih | Pitching—Bush, Cubs; Root, Cubs, North Daketa made 17 first down t was good team. Rogers | ticn, Oct. 17 |Finnegan’s husky backs = Play won 18, lost 6, th OHsre and Captain while Superlor made two, the Nodat: nsby has played that role in the} ‘They are Kid Pequette and Claude {throughout the greater portion of y in play Was noticeable d the line plunging method to ad- | R H ie of the Chicago Cubs of 1929. Hunter, welterweights. the struggle was in Concordia terri-, American ! ¢ the ball, but in the final quat- | now york 3 7 1|_Don't get the impression that the| goldiers in the past have been | tory, chiefly because the Bison had + -Fonseca, Indians, .373. ! t» the air with little succy | Wohinetan e 0 2 1) Cubs are a one-t team. Far from) erowd pleasers here and Smith says the power to advance the ball and chringer, Tigers, 129, t and Jorgens; Brown and )i. Yet Roge ns sutra Joc| these two boys will put up one of ; because Leo May and Sam Westgate Homers—-Ruth, Yanks, 46. j er and rain % McCarihy with just ai his club} the best fights on the card. The two came through with some remarkable 1 Stolen bases—Gehringer, Tigers, nat he returned he flash for Superior in the | “°° é inseded, more power at the bat and aj men belong to different companies punts. ier th Tennsy Is for a touch- | nza, North Da- The referee blew | Cucan? istle, but McGettigan continued | OTE pana. jto run. Superior took the score in- | Weatt, Whitehill a | stead of North Dakota takin the | La | penalty. id 4) yards. John i scoring po: ten by returning a punt 40 yards. Linemen had opened up a nice hole for O'Hare and he cut Bo} Adkins, steadying influence at second, for an infield inclined to be a trifle erratic. | The Cleveland world champions of | ‘ort of # combina- Di are. Before cured from the Boston the Indians were just a fair nd Her back after get.ing throuzh the hole. — = i NATIONAL |team. Speaker's coming gave the mot a Mendan would-be i Standings |team the best center fielder in base- touchinz nim. nicest run of the Won Lost ball. He in ” Sikes li yee FOOTBALL Chicago 51 G31 ‘confidence and there came to Cle urn, in which he gave a neal X= | 64 land a pennant and a world series. Is hibition in reversing the field. Spriggs a6 Rovers Eos by to play a similar role} itiso was untonehed when he ran the | aia % 7 with the Cubs? A lot of experts are | "ball 31 yards for a counter DrVaL Philadelphia 7 Bl inclined to that opinion. Hoffman was the one shining light | 1) 1 | Brooklyn a . ra Backing up the line and passing as a pere. The Boston 54 97 a lot of ball pla and even more | ra! ni X , i be ae wees aug cash for the wisdom of the | ee nie pene’ eeeaircs ag) | een _ Games Yesterday : Y ly discussed. Most of : y Guev oelditiae aged ne experts shook their heads in the. Pittabltrg Dane negative. In a few shori years Horns- St. 2 opening trough Kremer and Her hotes, Jer, each mace a wild pass es; Grabowski 1 ‘ho had won a pennant for St.; Louis in 1926 and followed it up by| lot of people are trying to paint him. Satie mos e: her i sand Wilson. taking the world series, had been eet Pea nariay | _, Second Game: RHE ‘shunted first to New York, then Bos- ill develop Pittsburgh aye 1 ion and finally Chicago. If Hornsby St. Louis .......- 10 15D couldn't get al h McGraw. how | Meine. French, Fussell and Homs-j would he hit it up with Manager Joe | ley; Hallahan and Wilson. McCarthy of the Cubs, an equally! mao fiery leader and one ‘ho brooked no | R HE interference? Many critics believed | : }Cineinnatt . 6 the trade would break rather than the ficld. He proved the only man ps a . ke the Chicago team. who could ie his runs were , and Sukeforth; Root) “Joo meCarthy smiled at the opin- | “short, did all of the pzssing for his Wr lions that the coming of Hornsby was | team, and puated well. Mandan was Murphs ee ia mistake. | parcicluarly ‘ ¢ HE" «1 won't heve any trouble getting | dunrhey Hy : ; q in 1 Joe, “I know, “a : him w a first two ce: yilloughby, ‘Sweetland: and: Davies/ at well. He isn't the bad actor | Walker and Hogan. counted for large losses. Pats went over Spielman’s head and! behind the goal line, the signal-caller putting the ball down behind the | goal for a safety early in the game to spot the Demons two points. . The Brave line was cutweighed, green, and rarely effective oifensive- Jy though they often held the heavy | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION He's been the victim of a lot of cir- cumsteantial ev! eu lence and the reaction has been unfavorable. But, looking at the other side of it. what a ball layer he is! Iam willing to. gamble Ww the Cubs in a geles this spring. T capital city backs for no gain. Standings ply couldn't ¢ up my mind In the nicest Mandan ee of the Won Lost whether or not Hi y we s offs yards; the le! jSt. Paul . 1024 the spring. he nei fielded“ nor @uarter passed to Boehm for an 18 }Minneapolis . 8 78 batted up to fi However, every | f yard gain; and Spielman returned a: | Indianapolis 36 8 now and then he would hit a ball cn} F punt 19 yards. : ue a | Louisville 1 20 the nose to remind you he still was Mandan was in scoring position ay ‘Columbus GBT he great Hornsby. Incidentally he twice. Two unnecessary roughness Milwaukee 69 «98 ‘ould pull off some play in the field! Penalties on Bismarck gave the 67 100 that would make you change ycur Braves 30 yards free of charge and put the bal! on the 10 yard line. In dhe las: quarter Bismarck again was Penelized 15 yards for roughing and j Mandan had the ball on the 20 yard; #mark but could not eain in four; p plays and lost the pigskin. An inter- cepted pass ruined the first thrust. | Bismarck might have scored onc , more touchdown had the first half B been @ few seconds | The De- mons had the ball on the 5 yard line , when the period ended. ! q O'riare Punts Poorly O'Hare wes deadly consistent with | hhis Kiekofic, sending the bail to the | 9 yard linc on every occasion, but, except for two or three instances, punted poorly. The burly Demon had Gifficulty in sending the oval ahead ce; him rather than to his side. gent one punt 55 yards, however, in the ak Eocoerter but the ball was) called t: ° eects biggest feult appeared | 2UP' Bee pemeiity $0 open up line holes | H the powerful bac’ Dokken, Tiews rdnumell, F 7 Game: dach for ,Coiumbt ‘ | Milwaukee ..... mia wAtisAy o | Jobnson and Devine; ».--With Young. Second Game: /Columbt 4 ~ | Milwaukee wilt line, Oss for Mohall— ote 1 id ran through the catching Winters and Shefflott Roman. First Game | Indianapolis (8 Paul . Wolf and Riddl ‘wre and Hargray Second Game: Indianapolis .... Jacque, (St. Paul x for Rap- | Daney. Sortie, Himrich for | and Fenner. Mineman —thern netic 1rgaard a ntague for r, Engbree Paulson, —-Neunschwander. ton. fvety the team played nice game, t weakness was the Demons’ habit of loafing after they had the game won, making the lact half “Bismarck next Saturday meets Wil- ee Suche eld. Williston, un- First Game Louisville Minneapolis . to score 18 "po Period, Casselton submerged ¢ fown here 31 to 0. The lineup: Co Casselton H. Anderson eat Game: ville .. Aesceapuis Ariiol and McMullen, Kenna. ir (coperstown — Lima ohu for Iverson, Sharpe for ima, ‘asselton—Lebus for Jahnke, Eherhardt for Tise, Bautz ‘ahnke for Lebus, Lebus Eberhardt, Jen- fH. Anderson, Reteree-Ben . Umpire—Gri Linesman—Hi: Burns and Second Game: ‘olede % ace eeWishek ishek, x. pt. Schmlerer tor inet ea victors were the'o outatand! OLR ED for aad ae aa Pina oat Mae! o ‘Were Flasher's out- loure hlers, » eeeeier rah 30,-— Games Yesterday R (Called in 6th. account clubhouse fire). 1 and MeMenemy, Spring; -Mecarter foutfi Moss and "Thompson: Morgan and Griffin, Kenna. Williams and. Tesmer, Thompson; Benton, Benson, Ferguson, Dumont Parks, Duteher and Mecuray; Day, Peters. 01 {mind about his slowing up. Befcre I departed from Los Ange-} H E les, after having seen the Cubs play 4 5 3 perhaps a half dozen games, I was; 2 etty well satisfied that Hornsby was! eet good as ever, that he was delight- id ‘ed with his new job under Joe Mc- Carthy and that he was certain to be 0 heipzul to the Cubs. Despite | oithis, I was hardly satisfied that fornsby would be able to sdd the ment touch. * ke T wasn't quite satisfied that the] ‘third base and shortstop side of the FE Chicago infield was of pennant cali- oder. I had seen McMillan in action ith several American League clubs nd knew his possibilities. fnglisi at: nortstop at times played brilliantly | y, but erratic. Recently T saw the Cubs 1. in action and to me English seemed | ae mest improved ball player in the! Playing beside Hornsby seemed add confidence that had been Faas Most. of his erratic tenden- TI ietes had disappeared. MeMillan also | 3 {showed far better'than he ever had 2/as en American Leaguer. Perhaps it {as lacks ef opportunity that had hurt ;his play in the American League. Fj __Frier to the opening of the 1929 Rr H 6 1 7 9 H 12 Brillheare R H 6 10 | National League season, 1 saw Pitts. 4 8 giburgh and New York in a number of games. Tne Giants played our Cieveland club two games at New Oricans, each winning one. Mc- Graw’s club looked to have the class. E| The pitching of Hubbell, Walker and j Benton featured, while at the bat the Giants showed real power. 1 liked MeGraw's club better than the Cubs and felt that Pittsburgh looked just as good as Chicago, if not a shade | better. Then there was St. Louis to consider. Having won the pennant R H H and are anything but fellow-soldiers in the ring, the promoter says. ania 6. q Ohio. Weslexan ~ Pitching—Grove, 20, lost 6. Concordia scored first. In the sec- Athletics, ond quarter, when Mally Anderson won There is no fancy name Don’t let this “lip-opera- tion’’ have a part in mak- ing your cigar. 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