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ae THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 198f ~ Dozen Outstanding Games Feature Nation’s Football Calendar « MOON WL | ATHLETICS’ STRATEGY IN SECOND GAME IS QUESTIONED | ENCOUNTER BISON | .our BoarDINe HOUSE TD START SEASIN CONNIE 1S ACC IS ACclSz) [Mandan Smothers Dickinson, 39 to 0 OF MAKING MISTAKE |""cire wis onsuugn ot Sips Siew TWO TIMES RUNNING EQOTBALL By Ahern | A EGAD, HASSENWEATZ., My aoop 4 FELLOW ~ER-UM~ KAFF- KAFF -- A Be BoVS, UPSTAIRS INTHE QWL’S CLUB, HAVE BROUGHT tT To MY ATTENTION “THAT Vou ARE SORT OF IMPATIENT ABOUT “THE RENT NoT MAKES ME MAT, HOOPLES, A \ss WHEN I Go UP “To COLLECT A DER RENT UND DER FELLERS GIF mE HA-HAS $=. D&T HA-HA STUFF GETS DER GOAT SO MUCH, I COME DOWN YUN DAY Z 7 ee anEEEES =EEREERE ESR | Proves Sensational | Proves Sensational | Bra: | Displaying the best football they | have shown this season, the Mandan Interest Braves smothered Dickinson, 39 to 0 BEING OVERDUE SOME ELEVEN UND SPOIL ZWE! DOZEN Ail Hands Agree A’s Must|'2,* sme played at Mandan Friday i i MONTHS ~. HAR-RR-RUMPE = SELLY ROLLS MIT NO DELLY Speed Up to Cont ee FOOTBALL SCORES JOPHERS §=PLAY AGGIES, ~~ You KNow How “TIMES ARE, IN 1 BAKE DEM! ~~ UND peed Up to Control deine, te Buse one ere ee vet " HASSENWENTZ —~ BUT, AS EY NUMP UP AN’ Down Cardinals unable to cope with onslaught of the WE Dakta Beale tee weocibend a) ecapsnenst'| PRESIDENT OF THE OWL'S UND DER PLASTER FALLS Braves. °. . orthwestern on ‘Gridiron Spo’ S N DER DOUGHNUTS ' Mandan used a varied attack to In Contest With | CLUB, I ASSURE ON DE EARNSHAW is BEATEN |score in every quarter. Straight foot- In Contes: i Vou M-otHose SO tT LOOKS LIKE ball and an occasional forward pass Nebraska «a aie aes on POWDER SUGAR! constituted their offensive attack. S Contest Ends Dramatically Aft-| ,7ckinson threw a scare into the i >. DELICIous | 3 Warriors on the first play after re- ‘New York, Oct. 3.—(P)—While the e er Wilson Makes Pecul- beled the Leta ae the ast’s major football elevens had iar Error Meeneinel eanisn LiOWeYeS 18 tab the annon-fodder in small college op- ball on downs. After an interchange ‘/onents Saturday, leading teams in c of punts, the Braves started a for- ae midwest, far west and south mes ee pater peti Mccd potcc Bite tt aha the field to push : ar 3 i | re lerkle failed to touch second touchdo' itl EL eae base nor since Gene Tunney took the| Catching their stride in the sec- Mere icaly was expesed to “long count” has the sports world|0nd quarter, the Mandan team rode Rr oaie Ac the mamblers! found more to argue about than the |Tough show over Dickinson for three cess Notre Dame in the eaPAEE® strategy, or lack of it, in the second |Counters. A series of brilliant runs, rst start under coaching leadership game of the world series. passes, and ‘ine smashes accounted bs > Hunk Anderson, but Ae ee - If the Athletics had come through |for their touchdowns. “p's Wildcats, co-c! Sees to beat Hallahan and the Cardinals,{| The Mandan forward wall per- igan of the Big Ten, “| with the bases full in the ninth, after |formed according to expectations and ye ab least a handful with the Catcher Wilson threw to the broke time and again to Service and Quality omhuskers of Nebraska, base on Jimmy Moore's strikeout, the |smear the Dickinson plays before they “ac tab ase 107 3rd Street The Iowa Haw keye took Sheet St. Louis backstop would have been |got started. Offensively they did not si i, ated 311 4th Street and at Iowa | City eae oe nominated for a place with Merkle|look as powerful, although occasion- (10)5 Next te Bismarck Hotel Pitt Panthers and Min-| among the “goats” of baseball his-|ally they opened wide holes that let re setsia, hes, dd no day of Icisure} tory. But the Cards survived this] the backs through for substantial ions LL wigvelas if aber ag and the second-guessors to- | gains. La ee ocenapeioe Sar n the southwest sh} lay took none less than the old mas- score standing we cane, onl < the day sent Texas against Mis- ter, Connie Mack, to task for ques-|the end of the tall, the Braves plod: | MeBittie Slat Cinies” hated HEADACHE? par as the Ee Six, IR ae tionable tactics. ded through the third and fourth| o™t Evert LT Rg ristian’s duel with he ang | Mack made the same mistake twice, icage—Barney ‘The latest scientific, -fail- ulsa,clevens of the Oklahoma “Big PASH eeasoned ‘baseballhiehy HAAIMe: ee to earns touchdown in each) om gutveintea Glen Camp, Kewanee, Ine remedy for hewldche, neural a our,” also attracted attention ed, when he allowed George Earnshaw x aa is ia, head colds, rheumatism The south came forward with one; to’ take his turn at bat, instead of |piagnté® than their opponents, the Estmehorrfoeal’ pains (pains itersectional contest involving ozen southern conference ducls. Bison Meets Badger ‘The University of Wisconsin's so onal football program will be s ith a doubleheader against Brad astitute and North Dakota State. Coach Glenn ‘Thistlethwaite will} se some 50 players during the aft- ‘noon. The squad has -not been Srmally divided into first and second ering material. «Because the North Dakota team eld Minnesota to a 13 to 7 score last eek, they are expected to give the vadgers a strong fight. Bradley | ‘lays the first game. *'The University of Minnesota faced, & first intersectional foe in Okla-| oma A. & M. of Stillwater, Okla,, the Gophers’ third football game f the year Outweighed 23% considerably despite , The Aggies were without the serv-| $es of their regular fullback, Hubert «win. He is with the team but is) @ffering with an injured leg. In ‘is place was Ross Hall, 18 pounder. | {With the exception of Walt Hass,| @ifback, and Pat Boland, "ho may have trouble with ankles ‘jured several days ago, the Goph- 5 are to top strength. Football's biggest question of 1931, at will Notre Dame do without tockne?”’, receives its first reply saturday. ‘Ate master but as husky and ambiti as ever, Notre Dame's big fcot- all team makes its first start of the) ‘ason today against the “fighting {oosiers” of Indiana. .No one really expected a victory the! exas Aggies and Tulane, and a hai! tackle,! “Minus the guiding genius of their) | NODAKS RUN WILD TO PILE UP | — ALTOTVIC TORY OVER DE PAUL' | Simmons Breaks Jinx By Winning Stops Blue Demons at Every Turn | \ | Grand Forks, N. D., Oct, 3—)— | The University of North Dakota paid) |Paul university gained by defeating Detroit something over a week ago. opening moments of the fourth quar- ter when Babcock, North Dakota isafety man, fymbled a punt on his jown 25-yard line and De Paul recov- Jered to put Anderson's team in scor- {the ganic, A pass, Ed O'Brien to Condon, put the ball over after two tries at the line gained one yard. | Jablonowski placed kicked for the ex- jrolled into action early in the first| quarter when Ralph Pierce, elusive left half, went over from the four jyard line after the Sioux drove; ‘straight down when they got posses-* ‘sion of the ball for the first time. Four times in succession big Lloyd! {Richmond, plunging halfback, roared ,{through the De Paul line for touch- |downs and four times he booted the |ball between the crossbards for extra jing position for the first time during | « pionship cf the National League. The final semi-official lists credit Hafey with a barely visible margin over the 1930 champion, Bill Terry of New York. Hafey’s final mark was 3438 and Terry's .3486. Hard on the heels of the leaders, | Powerful Defense of Sioux) Haley Is Apparent Batting Champion For National Loop | no attention to the reputation De!Cardinal Leads Bill Terry .3488 | * to .3486 in Semi-Official Sunny Jim Bottomley, 8t. wound up with an average of .3481. Trailing him were Klein, cago, .331; York, .328. Lloyd Waner, who made more hils than any other player, connecting (safely 214 times to beat out Terry by one, set a new mark when he went to ‘bat officially 681 times. nati Reds, by completing 195 double Ss, bettered by one their old major 1e record sat in 1928. leag Cuyler, Chicago, .330; Al-| len, New York, 329; and Fullis, New Philadei- The Cincin- dnd Title In In Row Philadelphia Slugger Hits at 390 Clip; Babe Ruth Sec- ond With .373 Chicago. Oct. 3.—()—Al Simmons, clean-up man for the championship average of .390, making him the firs: champion to repeat since 1919. Sim- mons’ average was the highest’since 1927 and nine points higher than his winning percentage of 1930. Babe Ruth finished second with .373. For all-around hitting _perfor- mance, however, Lou Gehrig led the field, leading in four departments with 163 runs, 211 hits for a high} total of 410 bases, and a record- Louis, run championshiy by belting out 46 circuit smashes. | Earl Webb, Boston, crashed out Ti two-base hits for another new Amer- ican League record, while Benny | Chapman of the Yankees proved that base stealing isn’t exactly a lost art by pilfering 61. Johnson, Detroit, led in triples with 18. As usual, the pitching race was ali) “Lefty” Grove. The Athletic south- sending in a pinch-hitter, with the tying run on third base and others in the offirfg. Connie explained after- ward he had confidence in Earnshaw’s hitting ability, especially against a left-hander, but the facts were, first, that big George hit into a double play in the fifth with the bases full, and second, fanned in the seventh with men on first and third. A’s Must Sneed Up The Athletics, all hands agreed, will have to speed up their control of the Cardinal base-runners, especially Pepper Martin, if they are to stop@he National Leaguers from galloping ‘away with the series. Right under the noses of the finest defensive club in the American League the Cards Fri- day ran wild. It seems that after all the National League champions are not a sort of beautiful but helpless trilby of the baseball world. Cards Win tor. To add to the impressiveness of the occasion from the Cardinal viewpoint, the Athletics’ hurler was none other than “Big Jarge” Earnshaw, Connie Mack's right handed ace. While the’ pitching duel of Earn- shaw and Hallahan, whose wildness after the third inning kept him con- stantly pulling out of desperate holes, ever put to a world series game sent the fandom wandering homeward wondering in a daze if the Brooklyn Robins hadn't somehow crept into the Cardinal uniforms. To open the ninth inning, Hallahan issued his sixth base on balls to Jimmy Foxx, and with one out he gave his ; seventh to Jimmy Dykes, Young Dib | Williams, over anxious, fanned and Connie Mack, making his capes soon Dickinson boys proved to have plenty of fight. Unable to gain consisten' against the stalwart Mandan line, they occasionally broke through for substantial gains. Their best offen- sive weapon was a wide end run. Boehm and Spellman proved to be the scoring aces of the Mandan ag- gregation, each scoring two touch- downs. Smith and Eckroth account- ed for one each. Eckroth, Speilman and Eckroth each tallied a point after touchdown by line bucks. Mandan was penalized 20 yards while Dickinson was taxed 45. Both drew a penalty of 15 yards for using hands on the offense. Mandan was taxed only once for offside while Dickinson was punished five times. John W Reel, bismarck, was referee and Opie S. Rindahl, also of Bis- marck, was umpire. Bi ifornin, outpointed Jack Brooklyn (10). | Demons Plaster Reserve Outfit Line Shows Improvement as Regulars Pile Up 59 to 0 Score TRIOPHEN TABLETS “the better Mark They do give relief. They are harmless, They Ace t depress the 250-650-1.00 At all up-to-date druggists. P. 0, Bugge, Ph. G.. Bisbee, N. D. Distributor for U. A. and Canada. Send for free samples. Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant French & Welch Hdwe. Co. The Gophers will play Stanford at!) ” phia, 337; O'Doul, Brooklyn, .336; had the crowd of 35,000 in a state of ‘alo Alto, Calif, next Saturday, | "4 Point. Fe, ee DaRC taunt ears, Ghat | ESONIE HEREE. of 106) runajattad iu, | Hae Cael aaict Some tn a steer TOM NOW ON... e ‘ Football’s Big Question 1 Net GDB R Gia eect. be enone He also tied Babe Ruth for the home your bill will be ‘eent changes in the Gopher ean A. West's 1931 Sioux ran. wild Averages Philadelphia Athletics, has broker! The Cards, to be sure, suffered from lar football. Murphy at center and shich have brought lighter gridders| seainst the Blue Demons from Chi- ; beseiged American | dizziness a few moments in the ninth Shepard at end proved to be the aces pio the lineup, the Aggies depended’ cago in their third game of the sea-| - —- the Jinx thet has bese\ge< vince the(inning of Friday's game, Wefore the of the line by smearing play after or $3. fh their high specd to offset the son nore Friday night, piling up a 41| New Yrok, Oct. 3—cP)—Althougin| League batting champions since the) ik itching of Wild Bill Halla- play. @ ¥} feight disadvantage. to 7 victory as they prepared to open the flgures still must be checked a| days of Ty Cobb. han, the hitting and baserunning of| CAST The reserves were unable. to All Repairs at sapeoapeats a7 i Newcomers to the Minnesota var~|their drive for a third straight |few moze times before’ they become! Final unofficial averages Saturday|“Pepper” Martin, and the defensive EGET | with Dohn who ran wild every Prices Sty this week are Oon at center! Nevtn Gentral Conference * ampion-| Official, Chick Hafey, the bespec-| ‘ the batting title for|skill of Jim Bottomley finally broke ‘i oS Mepmerly at fight guard and Bur Pyip next week. = tacled St. Louis outfielder, seems to] Baye Simmons cite Pear with an|the spell and brought St. Louis stag-| geen, Aatibinkes mesnsety, Siwy | An aerial attack launched by Phone 141 jick, a blocking back. De Paul's lone counter came in the|have won the 1931 batting cham- gering to the finish line a 2 to 0 vic-| York F subs. failed to net results ¥ Terry took the role of leading ail- around slugger. In addition to his 213 hits for second place, he ‘led the league with 20 triples ard shared first place in scoring with Klein, with paw’s unofficial and final record was 81 victories and four defeats, a new record for southpaw pitching. “Lefty” also led the league again in strike- |121 runs, and was second to Klein | cule with @ ed ee Re elie ‘game with a team of Nodak reserves | With 114 runs batted in, championship with an unofficial per-| ea ea et ae the field, Neunschwander, sopho- | (ee came Fouls, took the! centage of 99 while the Athlevies|¢ ‘ear, built its hopes of stemming the;More fullback, plowed over after | CN ret place in ing with 45] 4nd Washington tied in team ficid- {lsh tide on its'pass attack against| Pierce had placed the ball on the| doubles to his credit, Another bat} ing at 976, one point shy of the all- Beret inexpcrisnasd Notre Dame | three yard line. A pass, Gustafson to pe record was established when St. time American League fielding mark. ea |Pierce, scored the extra touchdown, | Louis and Chicago hit 23 doubles be-| “The jeading hitters and their final| Coach “Hunk” Anderson had four} The Play of Cherne, big tackle, was| ‘Ween them in one game July 12, | unofficial averages: cutstanding in the De Paul line while! The Cards’ pitchers took nearly alll “Simmons, Philadelphia, 390; Rutt Ul teams available for action and) Si°rron was head and shoulders above | the leading roles. Allyn Stout won or sveland, “| points. Be Bu ine asl ehegeecaea Two came in the second quarter, > learn what can be expected, ‘and | One in the third and another in the fourth. 9 see if another national champion-/'°71.0"rinal North Dakota touchdown ter on the ball, Hallahan swept two strikes past Moore. He whipped over a third but Jim tipped it for a foul and Jimmy Wilson, Card catcher, fail- ed to hold it. Then Hallahan tirea] and yet the famed BLACKSTONE eervice standards remain unchanged! @ curve ball that seemed to break fully a yard. Moore lunged franti- ies al cally, missed, and the ball bounced in- Jame. to break the ‘defense, sent the Jim Moore, to hit for trees Moore Fouls (1) e Putting everything he could mus- = a to the dirt at Wilson's feet. Moore, realizing the third strike had not been caught, dashed for first Roomrates NOW begin at Bs rey cA oe " New York, .373; Morgan, Cleveland, | base and to the amazement of ed 7 + revailin: hed: also Peon of “Nick Lukats, "aurea |S mates in the backfield, jabs stralantt eames for 8 Deriect avers '961;" Cochrane, Philadelphia, 3:9; | crowd, Wilson, insted of tossing HE LOWERED rates which $ P g schedule ee North Daketa’s powerful defense i anes. vane | Gehrig, New York, .341; Webb, Bos-| first for a simple putout, “red ene H ita tem idea thin; Be eee oe. tony |stopped the De Paul running game at|"ominal leader with a 706 average| ton, 334; Averill, Cleveland, 333; |ball to Jake Flowers at’ third base. now prevail make it a temp- a da fates theidea that fine things Yould run its “victory march” to 29/eVerY turn, ‘The Demons made but | yBainee on raetpenl ang ee Goslin, St. Louis, .328; Dickey, New | Apparently he chose to make a force tation to stress the economy iy +must also be the most ex- tealight, tying the former aoe ‘one first down by carrying the ball. | ‘s Ber! York, .328, play of Foxx, who had dashed for Long played a strong game for the | Was credited with the actual leader- Pleasant rooms with bath and ‘ade in the days of the immortal] the bag with the pitch. of a stay at THe Brack- pensive. THE BLackstong Eee sn Me line qhlle Knaat was| 20D. with 18 -vislories ape’ alebh des a ° 1a As soon as Flowers caught the ball, well located. In the Blackstone ‘ Bian fore Pe Gn nas, maa une the une he wo (Se mae | Cardimal Fielder |e‘, feceds father ne] sone. Rate have been re, | Givrer erwan sq | ia well within the means of _Rernweiints Mest ane 8 pasa | ns 2 Be aN "average. and + _jien'raced for the‘dugout aad eren| duced... . substantially! | UetImmdwen's - *° the most budget-minded t 8 ee struck out 157 men and walked 102 I H £S st contenders for the next national! ,, Nort ‘eeeneaul |to lead ‘in both, S TLEFO OF SELES move stopped in his dash to fitst| Room rates are down! Food traveller. Tae Buacxstone ‘sotball championship, found them-|Felbe Jes Reeds | ase. Only Eddie Collins, le i ae ‘ives confronted by a’ notorious crew LOMS + Barskis Me : = { coach, visualized the situation im- charges have been reduced! ‘ inaugurates this new era of “ft giant killers from Nebraska as|G-Dablow 1g Cowhey Elks Nine Will Face | ggunj .__|mediately. Frantically he shouted to i < z Bee coeced'their $931 campaign, (Bourne ¢ G. Dorski i epan ay aN _|Connie Mack Pays Glowing | Dykes and Foxx to hold their bases Laundry prices... and all ply throughout the hotel... lowered costs without lower- E Bi ie Gelb cf Geen ang(Malo = * «te McLane Grove Giants Sunday| trigute to Pepper Martin | While he chased Moore to first. ede miei f 4 : : ast performance, the Wildcats were | Wick rb Cherne : | PP! artin The dazed Cards wandered ue ae those “Incidentals” which not on just a room or two. ing a single service stand- . | Merback re Delaney | ‘The swan song of the 1931 baseball | of St. Louis and finally received the umpire's de- sndivi ‘ . Sees Poe Pace fhe, Cardinat | Revell ale Flood | scason in Bismarck will be sung Sun-| * [sion that all hands were safe, Th look small individually but On an average this makes ard. For to make a single i. | Pierce h Steffen |day when the Bismarck Elks and ~ Feame wasn't over. ‘The bases were i accommodation ¢ i Be eed (tae Mone et |Richmond == rh McGivern [Grove Giants mect in their closing! gt, Louis, Oct, 3-—UP-—John Leon filled And Max Bishop was at bat, total noticeably ++shave the 5 tions of oné sacrifice would be to destroy ‘heather fll down on the big 0, Burma —_f_Jablonowski [game on the state penitentiary dla} [ard “Pepper” Martin, the young man ee seen Seen: Bee been refigured with asharp- of the world’s finest hotels that which classes Tue eens, fel eheuna a nee ° aa The two teams met once before hla | MES. GR Re aula BAe ind of ticid boxes in far right field. Jim) — ened pencil. The point is available to you at a dis) Buacksrowe among the tarting lineups revealed a aifference| aint aul Meets season, the Elks club winning handily. | had to offer, and has proved it so far, Boltomley raced over dua Seanad the Giants are confident they will ‘today stands out as the world series | ee Ah Pee preemig ener oes R n things up in Sunday’s tussle. \nero to date. ochester Again | “ctenn Giant ace, wil pitch Tor the| | |__No less an authority than Connie § |prisoners while Lefty Klein will be |yrack himself paid ais teikute te “xe Woman Defends jfrom that position after Sunday’s | running yesterday helped Wild Bill | 6 Series game. | Hallahan to subdue the A’s and! Toronto, Ont. Oct. 3.—(?)—Two [on the mound for Bismarck. jsensational young Cardinal outficld- | square the series, was not even count- | members of the younger generation of Clarence E. Orton, manager of the | ighthanders Slated to Start in! Giants ter several seasons, has an- ee octane Deen the ed on as a starter in the classic, be- | golf, both of them veterans so far as cause of injuries. But he was a live-;tournament play is concerned, were count of around 20%. The __reallyfinehotelsoftheworld. downward rate revisions ap- f only two-elevenths of a pound per layer in average weight. Nebraska” tad the edge in the line while North- vestern outweighed its rival in th: ackfield, “ Northwestern was strictly on th ‘football spot” for its opening batth f the 1931 wars and the situation as a large handicap. Thirty-five thousand spectators ere expected to watch the game. Third Contest in Minor | Bounced that he probably will retire | Martin, whose tempestuous base | Chicago Cubs Take Texington Park, St. Paul, Oct. 3.--} | i * A well in'Los Angeles county came! © with a 7,500-barrel output of water | nstead of oil. The water was claim- d to have medicinal properties that nade it worth more a gallon than oil $ @ barrel, + The average feed cost per dozen eggs produced by 23 North Dakota farm Soultry flocks in August was 6.1 cents. ‘The average number of eggs laid per aen was 11.8. * About 90 per cent of the potato tarch used in the United States is in Maine. (P)—Two right paws were selected by | | managers of the St. Paul and Roches- | ter clubs today to hurl their respec- | tive clubs to victory in the third game | of the little world series here. William “Slim” Harriss, elongated Saint mainstay, was selected by Man- Bill Southworth, director of the desti- | nies of the Rochester team, placed} his faith in Ray Moss, former hurler | for the St. Louis and Boston teams | of the National League. Both teams have won a victory. Series from Rivals! Chicago, Hornsby’s Cubs Saturday were the! | hitless wonders of the 1931 Chicago to the Athletics every time he came|the United States while Marjorie Oct. 3-H) — city series championship. Although they have been able to jand immediately stole third. ager P. Leifield to take the mound for | collect but hits in three games off the |seventh he singled for his second hit! the American Association champions. | pitching of the White Sox mounds-jof the game and his fifth of the se-|to Canada after sevearl years’ ab- men—Red Faber, Vie Frasier and Ted jries, and a couple of pitches later!sence. The match is at 36 holes. ‘ly cripple when he stole two bases on {Mickey Cochran and scored both Car- Rogers dinal runs in the shutout victory. Yesterday he was a leaping misery ‘up. In the second inning he doubled In the Lyons—the Cubs had a two to one | plunged head, first into second base edge in the series, They were blanked |for his second stolen base. An in- 9 to 0 by Faber in the first game, field out put him on third and he captured the second 1 to 0, and third |scored on Charlie Gelbert’s neat sac-; in as many as three successive hori- rifice, \ yesterday, 2 tol {finalists Saturday in the Canadian ‘women’s golf championship. | Maureen Orcutt of Englewood, N. J., \the defending champion, represented |Kirkham of Montreal, holder of ae j Canadian women’s closed cham} |ship, attempted to bring the title back | Wells drilled at New Orleans have jencountered standing cypress stumps es some as deep as 610 feet. »