The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 18, 1930, Page 10

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tt om Bt a é A w a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SAT DAY, OCTOBER 18, 1980 + CHANGE MAY AID DEMON CHANCES TO WIN VICTORY Contest Is Set Back Because of Cold Weather and Frozen Ground SEEK TO PREVENT INJURY Regulars on Local Squad, Now on Injured List, May Be Able to Play Postponement of the game between Bismarck and Jamestown high school football teams, scheduled for tonight at Hughes Field, should have the ef- fect of brightening the Demon's chances, in the opinion of local fans. Coach R. D. McLeod said the game ‘was postponed because of the cold weather and the fact that the ground is badly frozen. To have the boys play on an iron-hard turf would be to risk injury to them, he said. McLeod already has three of his regulars on the injured list but the two-day delay in meeting Jamestown may permit them torecoversufficient- ly to get into the game. The injured regulars are Captain Wally Hultberg, end, and Henry Potter and Eddie Agre, halfbacks. The trio was able to practice but little during the week. McLeod, consequently, has worked his reserves overtime in preparation for the game and he expects them to get plenty of service. His opening lineup may find Erlen- tackles, Tait and Spriggs at ends, meyer and Gorman at Murphy and Davis at guards, nell Brown at center. He will have more ay trouble in picking his backfield starters. Dohn will be at quarter and Green at fullback. The halfback posts probably will be filled by Leo Benser and either Gilbert Benzon or Bob Stackhouse, unless the regulars are fit to play part time. 1 ismarck - Jamestown Football Game Post MIDWEST SCENE OF BIG GRIDIRON | In Today’s Major Gridiron Battle Here are soine of the men who will appear in today’s m jor gridiron tilt when Carnegie Tech lines up against Knu: Rockne’s Nowre Dame squad at South Bend. MULLINS Notre Dame - Capt.DRESHER| Carnegie Tech. Aasociated Press Photo Superior Normal Coach Art Gussner, former Mandan high school athlete, will come to Bis- marck Monday with an improved Bluejay eleven, despite Jamestown’s 25 to 0 defeat at Devils Lake last week. Two weeks ago Jamestown defeated Minot 6 to 0. It is significant that Bismarck was able to eke out only an 8 to 0 decision over the Magicians last Monday. Another thing, Jamestown should be a bit more fresh than the Demons, since the Jays had only one gome last week-end compared to two for the Capital City outfit. Bison Boxers Are In Gridiron Team Ten of First 25 Players on Agri- cultural College Squad Are Mitt-Swingers Fargo, N. D., Oct. 18—Do your football boys want a prize fighter? If 80, have them communicate with the North Dakota College Bison at Far- go, for 10 of the first 25 Bison gridi- ron players are members of the col- lege boxing team. “Bock, sock, sock, the boys are marching,” is the tune Bison players hum out on the gridiron. The Bison gridders have been taught to use their hands in the ring and they know how to make a four-inch jolt land with plenty of sting when they get on the defensive side of a foot- ball line. In fact, Coach C. C. Finnegan at- tributes a great deal of the success attained by this year's team to the ring training his players have had. Lieut. Fay Smith, boxing coach, is also assistant gridiron mentor, and he takes keen interest each winter in having football men on the boxing juad. oaemith believes boxing develops stamina as well as footwork. It makes the boys use their hands to best advantage and gives them a chance to assimilate punishment. All these traits, he says, are invaluable to football performers. The Bison team, undefeated this year and “never outfought” believes gs its training will stand it and Ernie Tang and James Slattery, reserve center, also do some mitt- swinging. Eddie Kane, Pilot Of Boxers Is Dead Petoskey, Mich., Oct. 18.--(7)—Ed- Kane, for dest! until recently light- ‘Mandell parted after tne his title to Singer in Beats Jamestown Jimmies Look Best in First Quarter, Which Ends in 7-7 Tie Superior, Wis., Oct. 18.—()—Com- bining a hard plunging attack with a brilliant artay of lateral passes, Su- perior State Teachers college football team swamped Jamestown College teachers here last night, 37 to 6, in the first meeting of the schools on a gridiron. Except in the first quarter when the Jimtown squad battled the Superior Teachers on even terms with a touchdown apiece, the contest was a steady march goalward for the Yel- lowjackets. Both teams scored in tife first per- jod, the visitors via a long forward pass, after Superior had. plowed 60 yards down the field for a touchdown on line plays. The lineups: Superior T. C. pos Jamestown T. C. Barrett le Webber Paciotti It Jensen Seigel Ig Boyd Evered c Pointer Huber rg D. Hall Horysa rt Coons Proper re Stone Horan qb Purdy Rieble ih Swartz Hendrickson = rh Watne Thune fb Larratt . Substitutions—Superior:. Zelesnick, Christianson, Weiner, Mattson, Croft, Giffin, Zastrow, H. Johnson and Schumway. Jamestown: McLean and O. Hall. Officials—Referee: McIntyre, Iowa; Harris, Syracuse. Umpire: Scanlon, Chicago, head linesman. Francis “Shanty” Hogan, New York Giant catcher, was stabbed but not seriously following an altercation with a negro. The negro first tried ecide Title in South Defeat for Either Notre Dame| or Carnegie Will Put Them Out of Running | ! South Bend, Ind. Oct. 18—(")—| The national championship hopes of two of the outstanding elevens of the country, the reformed Ram- blers of Notre Dame, and the Brawny Scots of Carnegie Tech, were tossed into the mill today. Defeat for either virtually meant ruined. seasons, for both aim at na- tional laurels. Each had two previous victories and the winner was expected to be decided only after one of the most bitterly fought games of the campaign. The contest was a battle of wits also, between two of the craftiest coaches jn the game, Knute Rockne of Notre ¢ and Judge Walter Steffen of egie Tech. Notre Dame relied. on a still de- veloping line and a° host of great ground gaining backs and reserves, while the Skibo chances rested of a smart veteran line, and versatile set of backs. Bitterly cold weather had slowed up ticket sales but 30,000 fans were expetced in the new brick bowl. The probable lines:.. Carnegie. Tech Notre Dame Rosenzweig le Koshy Highberger It Hoffman Dreshar qg Pierce Ducanis ce . Rogers Sample Te Terlaak Fletcher rt McManmon \L. Flanaganre . vik Goldberg qb Jaskwich Armentrout. Ih: Koken ;Graveno rh O'Connor Morbito fb Staab Officials: Referee, Very (Penn State); umpire, Hedges (Dartmouth); field judge, McCarthy (Lehigh); head linesman, Lipp, (Chicago). Rogers Hornsby, manager of the Chicago Cubs, gaye his old team mates the St. Louis Cardinals a foot- ball “pep” talk, before the last game of the world’s series, but apparently some of the boys had never been to to beat Hogan with a baseball bat. | college. IT dAveaty HAD A CHANCE NET 1 IN CONVERSATION IT dave STUDIED “HE - MAN AND MADE SoME STARTLING OBSERVATIONS “HANKS-4O MY “TRAINING. IN SCOTLAND NARD ! wee Fins Tw HE RECEASTLY HAD A MUSTACHE !.~ SECOAID, We WALKS A SLIGHT... ENGAGE -HAT MYSTERIOUS NEW BOARDER ws BUT Go LOcKING N"KNoW, We Wit 4: ‘l 6: Muay ee MAGNIFYING GLASS, ¥ INSPECTOR ! ~ Dol HAIR (A HIS ComB, OR FINGER PRINTS IN HIS GLOVES I~ | “THAT Suspicious OF HIM! ae WE DST WANT KNOW WHo HE (S AM” WHERE He HAILS Bend Game Expect Big Score In Badger Contest Red and Blue Slight Favorite to Defeat Wisconsin in Game at Madison ’ Madison, Wis., Oct. 18.—()—A free scoring game was in prospect today as Pennsytygnia and Wisconsin met in the Badger homecoming before a crowd of 40,000. The weather prom- ised to be cold with possible snow| flurries. f Both elevens have waded through weak opposition but are yptried de- fensively. The versatility of Penn< sylvania’s backfield made the red’and blue a slight favorite. t The probable lineup: Wisconsin pos Pennsylvania Cantenbein (c) le Raffel Lubratovich It Morris Swiderski lg ‘Willson Kruger c Engle Kabat Te Barrett Smith rt Olsen Casey re Riblett, Goldenberg qb Gentle (c) Rebholz Th Masters Behr rh Gette Schneller fb Greene Referee: James, Masker,. North- western. Umpire: Tom Thorpe, Col- umbia; field judge, Ed Miller, Penn State; head linesman, Jay Wyatt, Missouri. Crookston Coach Injured in Crash Crookston, Minn., Oct. 18—(P}— Arnold Simso, former Carleton ¢ol- lege athlete and coach of the Crooks- | 78¢t ton high school football team, was tn- jured late Friday in an automobile collision near Argyle. Roy Lindell, a member of the team, and Edward Freeberg, another passenger, also were injured. They were en route to Warren where Crookston and Warren played @ scoreless tie. ZA MATOR tw w APTER SIX MoASTH *s INVESTIGATION, FoR NOTRE DAME AND “RATURED CONTEST Tartans Are Given Edge in Condition as They Invade Rockne’s New Stadium BIG-TEN TEAMS IN BATTLES Michigan-Ohio and Northwest-., ern-lilinois Hold Major In- terest in Circuit Chicago, Oct. 18—()—Your mid- dlewestern football fan today could pick his choice from another sched- ule offering the standout game of the national bill—Carnegie Tech's inva- sion of Notre Dame’s new stadium— as well as critical contests in the progress of the Big Ten champion- ship struggle, 1 The Notre Dame-Carnegie Tech game appeared to be anybody's, the! only certain feature being that of a tremendous battle. The Skibos were given an edge in condition, while Notre Dame had a host of reserves on which to bank if necessary. Of the Big Ten games, the Michi- gan-Ohio, and Northwestern-Lllinois meetings absorbed the interest. The Wolverines were out to add the Buckeyes to their list of conference conquests, but were confronted by a powerful, though somewhat inexperi- enced eleven. Northwestern, a standout for the title two weeks ago, today was an un- certain proposition. The Wildcats, hounded by misfortune in the form of ineligibility arti illness and in the process of reorganization, faced a tar- tar in the green, but rapidly improv- ing Illini. ‘Minnesota had Indiana as its ini- tial Big Ten opponent *at Minneap- olis, and was favored to win comfort- ably, while Purdue also ‘was to emerge successful from its come- back attempt against Iowa. The game was Iowa's only one in Big Ten competition, and the Hawkeyes were out to shoot the works. ‘Wisconsin's surprising eleven had a Eastern Stadia Draw Thousands To See Contests; Harvard-Army Game at Soldiers Field, Boston, Is Ma- jor Tilt ean New York, Oct. 18—(#)—The foot- ball stadia of- the east drew thou- sands of spectators today. Soldiers field, Boston, was the scene of the, biggest spectacle as two unbeaten teams, Harvard and Army, match brain and brawn. Brown's great’ defensive outfit hoped to stop Yale and Albie Booth at New Haven while Cornell invaded -Princeton to battle Bill Roper’s. somewhat helpless New --York university and Navy tackled . intersectional opponents, Missouri and Duke respectively, while two of the strongest contenders for eastern honors, Syracuse and Pittsburgh, had a duel at Syracuse. Fordham, unbeaten since 1928, hoped to continue its streak at Worcester against another undefeated eleven, Holy Cross, while at Hanover, N. H., jShowings this fall. owerful intersectional foe, Pennsyl-| | Towa Purdue vania, as its guest at Madison. Both |Mastrogany ~ rae teams had displayed great power in|Benjamin ; ‘an Bibber early engagements, and no one was he ig oe willing to pick the winner. Chicago's at © a ler chances of defeating Florida, one of | Higdon hd o oo the ranking elevens of the south, ap-|Ely (c) rt But ig peared slim, but the Maroons were | Hay ad se primed to the limit and eager to re-|Loyd Jensvo - deem themselves for their sorry eae aoe Pope showing against Wisconsin, by trim-|Leo Jensvold Purvis ming the sotitherners. Sansen fb Yunevich Officials: Ghee (Dartmouth); ref- eree, Reid (Michigan); umpire, poned Until Monday ‘CLASSICS SET FOR TODAY lege team in football games this fall. Purdue Favored To Defeat Iowa: Hawkeyes Seek Revenge: for Defeat Last Year in Their Only Big-Ten Game Towa City, Iowa, Oct. 18—()— Twice beaten by southern intersec- tional foes, Iowa’s depleted football squad essayed a comeback today against the Purdue Boilermakers, 1929 Big Ten champions. It was the only conference game this season for the Hawkeyes, reinstated into the Big Ten after the schedules had been drafted. The Hawkeyes will attempt to avenge a 7 to 0 Boilermaker defeat of last season and salvage some of the Prestige lost in two unimpressive Although weakened by injuries, Purdue is favored to defeat Burt Ing- wersen's team. Probable lineup: Kearns (DePaul); field judge, Graves (Illinois); head linesman. e—_____—____, | Wops Set New Mark | | In Casselton Game | « Wahpeton, N. D., Sept. 18—(>)— ‘The Wahpeton high school football team set a high scoring record for the season for northwest elevens here Friday when it defeated Casselton 121 to 6. “It was the fourth straight victory for Wahpeton, Valley City Peds Beaten at Minot Beavers Score Twice to Cinch Contest; All Tallying Done in First Half Minot, N. D., Oct. 18.—()}—The Mi- not Teachers college defeated the Valley City Teachers college 12 to 7 in & homecoming game here last night. The weather was cold and a small crowd attended the game. ~ All of the scoring was done in the Columbia hoped for the best against Dartmouth’s high-powered array. Temple entertained Washington and Jefferson and Boston college vis- ited Villanova at Philadelphia while Lafayette attempted to halt unbeaten Penn State at Fase. oe eet hoped to avenge 7-0 beat ‘took last, from Western Maryland at Baltimore. WITH: Some SAW- DUST, Naud “RACE tT BACK 76 A LuMBER ARENT The MADOR HAS Hid. PEGGED Chicago Miss. Meets Defending Champion for Second Time in Three Years Ly oe Fe i Be = ; i # t ze a8 round of the four semifinalists to de- feat her neighbor foes Long Islan, Miss Helen Hicks, five and three. first half. The Vikings the Minot goal line in the first quarter] ® after recovering a Minot fumble on the 20-yard line. McCready went over for the extra point. The Beav- ‘The second Minot touchdown came after the Valley City safety ‘man bal been tackled on the five yard line after receiving a Minot punt. The Vikings attempted to punt the but the ball went to the 20-yard line. Minot carried it over on a series of ine smashes, ‘ FCEAGON ON FISHING: FOR COMPLIMENTS: Now, You'Re: GETING THIS ‘AT WHOLESALE peice « Here are some of the players who are making it “tough” Each is a member of tL Friday’s Football. | ‘Winona Teachers 6, Mankato Teach- ers 6 (tie). South Dakota University 0, George Washington University 0 (tie). Springfield (SD ) Southern Normal 9, Huron College 0. St. Thomas 6, Gustavus Adolphus 0. Dickinson (N. D.) Normal 0, Billings Palytechnic $6, Suptrior (Wis.) Teachers 37, James- DePaul (Chicago) 13 ePaul Chicago; }, St. Mary’s (Winona) 7. 3 h_ Schools La Moure 0, ke 13, Minot 0, Lisbon 12, Valley City 7. Carrington 12, Cooperstown 7. Wahpeton 121, Casselton 6. Kenmare 13, Bottineau 0. Devils Lake High School 13, Minot 0. Dope Is Upset As St. Thomas Beats Gustavus Concordia Enters Minnesota; * Conference Race in Tilt With St. John’s i t St. Paul, Oct. 18.—(®}—Concordia college of Moorhead enters the Min- nesota college conference football race today when it met St. John’s uni- versity at Collegeville. A victory for the Cobbers will give them a tie with St. Olaf and St. Thomas for first place, The big game of the day, however, was staged st Northfield with st. | Oleg, Payne &° non-conference tilt | with Carleton. | St. Thomas upset the dope last night when it ousted the Gustavus Adolphus. crew, a favorite with St. Olaf to take top honors, by a score of 6 to 0. St. Mary’s lost to DePaul beret ity of Chicago at Winona, A forward pass, O'Halloran to Ho- gan counted the touchdown for the Tommies, after neither team had been able to advance the ball by line smashes and end runs. Knives Flash, Guns j { Fire at Negro Game ; », Ky. Oct. 18—()— Someone fired a gun when a touch- down was made in a game between two negro high school teams here, several knives and guns appeared in jthe hands of spectators, most of the crow entered the melee and police were called to quell the riot. No arrests were made, since the of- licers could find no one who would tell who did the shooting. Bruised eyes and broken noses were the only casualties. Dunbar high school of won the game 19 to 0. ing the Georgetown negro institu- lon, —————— Fights Last Night “(By the Associated Press) St. Louls.—Mickey Walker, mid- dleweight champion, knocked out ‘Tiger 3) jon, iy Cline, Los Angeles : — Gaty Deach, Gary, Ind., knocked out Jimmy Moore, New York (7). ~ ew York—Justo i» Ar- gentina, outpointed (Kia) a, Meridem, Conn. (10). Jim~ Slavin, New York. stopped ia Koll, Porto Rico (5). Archie lew York, itpointed ak” cuigetated, : Jeon “arippe, Briton Grows Rabbits With Fur Almost Like That of Real Ermine London, , Oct. _18— (NEA) — Give thanks all ye husbands who are an- | nually. bothered with the request, “I | need @ fur t.” A British rabbit | breeder is to have discovered'a Produce rabbits with fur that from. for as little as $15, it Is said. London Figures Out London, Oct, 18.—(NEA)—London not look for air congestion so but the airways above this city have become so crowded that it has necessary to plan @ one-way of traffic for airplanes, Planes coming into the city must [ the Air Ministry believes that it will |be an excellent safeguard against Air Traffic Scheme| planes crashing into one another head-on. i CARNEGIE TEGH IN iam for opponents of the North Dakota Agricultural col- the state college boxing team. From left to right they are Tang, Slattery, MaMillan, Orness, Bollman, Selliken, Lonsborough, Dvorak. Gophers Are Eager For Indiana Game | | Seek to Show That Sensation- al Showing Against Stan- ford Was No Fluke Minneapolis, Oct. 18.—()—Minne- ig 7 (tie), |sota was eager today in its first Big Ten contest with Indiana to prove that its sensational showing last week against Stanford was no mere fluke. The Gophers, because of their sur- prising upset in holding Sanford last Saturday to a scoreless tie after a poor start the week before against Vanderbilt, were the favorites, Clint Riebeth, speedy halfback, who has been out of the game due to ill- ness, was fully recovered and was counted on to add greatly to the Go- pher’s strength. The probalbe lineup: Indiana Ohlsen Te Dickey Boland It Kutchins Reihsen lg Rehm Allen Teeter ce Spannuth Munn re Zeller Berry rt Jasper Krezowski re Blagrave Brockmeyer qb Brubaker Leksell th Ashby Riebeth th Ross Manders fb Hughes Officials: Referee, Fred Gardner, Cornell; ge W. D. Knight, Dart- mouth; field judge, H. B. Hackett, Army; head linesman, Arlie Mucks, Wisconsin. Students Killed On Way to Game Fredericksburg, Va., Oct. 18.—(>)— Three students on their way to see the Duke-Navy football game at Annapolis today, lost their lives in the collision and plunge down an em- | Perea of an automobile and two moving vans ear here late last \night. Two other students were seri- ously injured and one of the van drivers suffered minor hurts. Five scouts from the Southern con- ference went away from Minneapo- lis muttering after watching Vander- bilt ‘thrash Minnesota, 33-7. ‘ Wild Bill Hallahan, Cardinal southpaw, sells typewriters in the off season, New Fall Suits and Overcoats . $25 0 $55 HOTEL, CHICAGO Under Blaoketone Menagepent Qa

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