The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 2, 1931, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER , 1931 Minnesota Is Last Obstacle in Path of Northwestern Wildcats MEETING SHAPES UP ASCRUCIAL CONTEST «| OF BIG TEN SEASON 1 Expect 50,000 at Dyche Stad- ium to Watch Two Unde- feated Elevens BADGERS TO PLAY ILLINOIS | ‘Indiana's Hoosiers Will Take on} Michigan Wolverines at Ann Arbor Chicago, Nov. 2—(P)—If North-} western’s march to an undisputed western conference is to be stopped, it looks as though Minnesota would have to do it Saturday. | The Wildcats from the shore of Lake Michigan have beaten two Big Ten opponents, Ohio State and Illi- nois, After Minnesota they must meet Indiana and Iowa, neither of which has done anything to indicate they can cause Northwestern any more than a minimum of difficulty. So, it apparently is up to Minnesota. They will meet Saturday in Dyche stadium, Northwestern's home park, and a capacity attendance of around 50,000 will be present to watch the two remaining undefeated elevens of the league in what shapes up as the championship clash of the campaign. Two other strictly Big Ten offer- ings are on the schedule, while the other three members of the league will meet non-conference opponents. Wisconsin will go to Champaign, to meet Illinois’ well mauled eleven, and Indiana's Hoosiers will tackle Mich- igan at Ann Arbor. Amos Alonzo Stagg’s Chicago team will entertain Arkansas, Ohio State will be host to the United States Naval Academy eleven, and Iowa will meet Nebraska's Cornhuskers at Lincoln, Neb. Notre Dame will have Pennsylvania's un- defeated eleven as its opponent in the new brick stadium at South Bend. Northwestern Wins Northwestern won its second Big ‘Ten game of the campaign at the expense of the most forlorn team Il- linois has had in many, many years.| 9 The Wildcats, featuring a 66 yard! touchdown canter by Pug Rentner, and an 88 yard dash for another; score by George Potter, piled up 25 points on the Illini in the first period, and were content to coast there- after. Minnesota kept.its record clean in a thrilling 14 to 0 triumph over Wis- consin. The defeat virtually blasted) Wisconsin's title hopes and left the Gophers as Northwestern’s big threat. Minnesota outplaved Wisconsin; throughout the first half when both touchdowns were scored, and had enough left to turn back a sensation- NODAKS CLINCH CONFERE OUR BOARDING HOUSE . EGAD, MADDEN, I'm Not DEPENDING ON RAFFLES,OR GAMES OF KENO “TO WIN A “THANKSGINING TURKEY THIS NEAR €-~ WITH A LITTLE MONEY I HAD, I BaulGHT THIS TURKEY AND,7THRU A { By Ahern FEED "IM WHAT Nou EAT ANT HELL PUT ON A LOT OF VEST FAT! I TRIED FATTENIN’ UP A “TURKEY ONE NEAR, AN’ OUST TH’ NIGHT BEFORE “THANKSGIUIA, WHEN, IT WENT ~“% BORRY A AXE, SIOUX COMES FROM BEHIND 70 DEFEAT GREAT BISON TEAM | SPECIAL DIET, I Will FAPTEN \T UP SO-THAT IT WILL BE AT LEAST-TEN POUNDS Y THANKSGIVING SOME MUG STOLE TH” | TURK ~~ NoT EVEN LEAVIA’ ME A COUPLE FEATHERS FoR A DUSTER ' First Time This Season Univer- sity Lags During Part of Contest SCORE TWICE IN SECOND co NCE TITLE IN DEFEATING BISON | BRUSHING UP SPORTS - -- - - - - - -- By Laufer | BARRY S=) ww ATHLETS OF 7S CREE One of Most Thrilling Contests in 40 Years of Intense Grid Rivalry Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 2—(P}— The fighting Sioux of the University of North Dakota outfought and out- Played a great Bison team from the North Dakota Agricultural college Saturday and hung up their fifth victory of the season, 20 to 12. It was cne of the most thrilling contests in the 40 years of football competition between the two schools and play ran the whole gamut from ridiculous to sublime. The Sioux clinched their fourth consecutive North Central Conference championship as a result. West's athletes have but one more loop con- jtest to play, that against Morningside, an opponent North Dakota is figured to beat without much trouble. But jeven if they should lose to the Ma- {roons, no other conference team now could tie their record, all having been {defeated twice. The record of the No- howd still is unspoiled by defeat. 4 { For the first time this season the |Sioux had to come from behind to win. The game was only well under | Williston Team Trips Minot, 6 to O Kenyon, 44; Capital, 0. Defiance, 15; Bowling Green, 0. Miami, 19; Denison, ¢. S. Dakota, 10; S. Dak. State, 0. Butler, 13; Wabash, 0. Detroit, 21; Loyola (New Orleans), Jamestown Beats Science Wildcats “Oklahoma Aggies, 13; Kansas, 7. way when Gordon Dablow punted! straight up and the Bison took the; the. ball on the University 30 yara/| Hline. After two passes Cy Lons-! brough scored. Richmond deflected {Schoenfelder’s place kick for the ex-! tra point. ‘The Sioux crossed the goal line twice in the second quarter. Felber intercepted Bunt’s pass on the Uni- versity 45 yard line and the Nodaks’ attack wound up with Wexler sprint- Joe Cutting’s Charges Score Lone Touchdown on 15 Yard Pass ALMOST SINGLE-HANDED, HE WAIPPED TE AR ND OB MAKES HIM 7 LE Bice eR UNRERBICK POSITION» Rs WHEN) pe unines xt Sane A. ONIN REGAL, HOSKEY AND BASEBALL REPORTS PERSIST THAT JACK puree rie Football Stars in Contests Saturda Ripon, 33; Carroll, 0. La Crosse, 13; Eau Claire, 0. Western Reserve, 7; Oberlin, 0. Iowa State, 13; Okla. U., 12. Cornell, 9; Coe, 6. Depauw, 1 Simpson, 12; Iowa State Teachers, Monmouth, 7; Augustana, 6. Albion, 13; Alma, 2. Milwaukee Tech., 12; N. W. College, 0. Hope, 19; Hillsdale, 19. Ill. Wesleyan, 19; Eureka, 0. Carthage, 14; Ill. College, 0. | Franklin, 7. \ Jimmies Win 27 to 7 Before Homecoming Crowd; Out- play Visitors 1 Jamestown, N. D., Noy. 2—(P)-> Outplaying the Wahepton Science | Wildcats throughout the game, the Jamestown college Jimmies defeated’ the Science team, 27 to 7, in a home-| coming game here Saturday. The Jimmies made frequent gains, Williston, N. D., Nov. 2.—(P)—Wil- liston high school triumphed over; Minot Saturday, 6 to 0. A 15 yard run by Carney and a yard long pass, Cartwright to Carney, put the ball on the 2-yard line. Sikes carried the ball over on the next play. Carney’s kick from placement was wide. The summary: { Minot (Myers picked the ball out of the air Rakness; Mackenreth | Williston. Keffrey Booke ing 13 yards around end for a touch-j down. Richmond converted. Once more before the period ended | the Sioux crossed the Bison goal line after recovering an Aggie fumble on the 20 yard line, Pierce making the | counter. Early in the fourth quarter Rich- | mond fumbled on his 47 yard line and and raced to the seven yard line.! from where Lonsbrough passed to y | — (By The Associated Press) Albie Booth, Yale and Bill McCall, Dartmouth—Each ran wild to score three touchdowns in 33-33 tie. Mark Temple, for both touchdowns in defeat of New York university, scoring one- himself and tossing pass for the other. ox Oregon—Accounted | Stanley Fay, Michigan—Led . Wol-| WEST WILL LEAVE SIOUX POST Word Received That Nodak)" Dick. at Northwestern, may be : | West's aid at the California school. Mentor Will Succeed Spauld- | Rumors West would leave North | ing at V.C. L.A. Dakota university after the present | Season were first heard shortly before | |the game with Oregon univeristy 4 ‘week ago. At that time it was under- Minneapolis, Nov. 2.—(#}—Notwith-| stood West had been approached by Compton McGrath Rappaport McKay for a touchdawn. The Bison failed in an attempt to tie the score when Richmond again blocked Scho- : Kanz| DeMots| Ramsey y t,/Officials of the California institution verines to victory over Princeton with |St@nding denials by C. A. (Jack) West, | O! u 2 irae Pentel | rts persist the North Dakota uni- | 8nd that the Nodak tutor favored 2 Marchemont Schwartz, Notre Dame| versity athletic director and head} change in positions. ally desperate passing barrage by the} Cotner, 12; Buena Vista, 6. on line smashes and passes while the) Cersonsky ADahi|enfelder’s try for the extra point. |—Gained 188 yards in 23 attempts| football coach will resign his positior: | Badgers in the last two periods. Purdue conquered Chicago, 14 to 6 decision. Ohio State eliminated Indiana, 13 to 6. Iowa scored its first points of the season as well as its initial vic- tory, in defeating George Washington university of Washington, D. C., 7 to 0. . Michigan and Notre Dame, the major midwestern teams playing in the east, each turned in satisfying victories. The Irish whipped Carne- gie Tech, 19 to 0, and the Wolverines defeated Princeton, 21 to 0. In the Pacific coast race, Southern California, with four conference vic- tories, will clash with Stanford, un- beaten but tied by Washington. With all other conference teams beaten at Jeast once, this struggle virtually will’ determine the 1931 champion, Not Clearly Defined ‘The situation is less clearly defined in see major conferences, stand are Georgia, Tulane and Tennessee in the south; Southern Methodist and Texas Christian in the southwest; Harvard, Pennsylvania, Cornell and Syracuse in the east; Nebraska and Kansas State in the Notre Dame again involved in’ the most important fray, The Ram- will stay et home at South to entertain Pennsylvanta, un- feated and untied. Georgia will come north again, this time to tackle New York university; Detroit will battle Fordham, undefeated but tied; Chicago and Centenary will play Purdue. Brown and Syracuse will play small-college teams from the midwest, Ohio Wesleyan and ‘Western respectively, ET f Leading Scorers in | | Nation’s Football | te North Dakota Uwe Dak jo1 of . 20; North ta, State 12. " Moorhead Teachers 50; Valk Normal 0. sald epee ceashers 6; Mayville 6. jestown, lege 27; Science 7, J wehohe, High Schools Dickinson 0; Glendive 26, Williston 6; Minot 0. Carrington 32; Max 0. Moorhead 16; Jamestown 0. Mohall 18; Crosby 0. Harvey 53; Drake 0. Big Ten Minnesota, 14; Wisconsin, 0. line yielded but few first downs to the Wildcats. Eggstrom carried the ball through the line for a: touchdown after a march to within five yards of the Wahpeton goal line, Schauer’s: drop- kick for the extra point failed. Purdy heaved a 25-yard pass to Stone who carried the ball over the goal.| Schauer's dropkick was good. The Jimmies worked the ball into Science territory where Mead re- ceived a pass from Eggstrom and: scored. A line smash was good for the ex- Lebanon Valley, 7; Mt. St. Mary's 0.|'ta point. Eggstrom carried the ball Yale, 33; Dartmouth, 33, lover from the 1-yard marker for the Franklyn-Marshall, 20; Geneva, 0. |Jimmies’ fourth counter. A. pass. Western Maryland, 7; Loyola, 7. eee Stone was good for the , 19; rd, 0. jaa aoe Pacey 1. Wahpeton made its touchdown in Boston College, 20; Georgetown, 2. {the fourth qurter after a Wildcat Boston U., 25; Rhode Island, 0. |Punt was fumbled by Eggstrom and Johns Hopkins, 19; Hayerford, 0. {recovered by Wahpeton. Franke car- Holy Cross, 33; Brown, 0. ried the ball over for the counter. Lehigh, 33; Muhleberg, 0. |Franke placekicked the extra point. Worcester, 7; Bxeter 0 \Bison Halfback Is Claimed By Death Albright, 20;'St. Joseph, 0. Members of Football Squad Will Pennsylvania, 3; Lafayette, 0. Penn Military, 20; Gaulladet, 0. Accompany Body to Aber- deen For Burial East Notre Dame, 19; Carnegie Tech, 0. Villa Nova, 0; Bucknell, 0. Harvard, 19; Virginia, 0. Oregon, 14; N. Y. U., 6. Kansas Aggies, 25; West Virginia, 0. Worcester, 0; Arnold, 0. Williams, 7; Union, Wesleyan, 13; Trinity, 0. Colgate, 27; Miss. College, 0. Dickinson, 18; Swarthmore, 12. Army, 27; Colo. College, 0. Navy, 0; W. Virginia Wes., 0. Mass. Aggies, 13; Amherst, 12. Fordham, 33; West Liberty, 0. Gettysburg, 6; Ursinius, 6. Bates, 40; Bowdoin, 0. St. John, 14; Hampden Sydney, 7. Navy Plebes, 28; Georgetown Mili- tary, 6. Pittsburgh, 41; Penn State, 6. Drexel, 44; Washington, 0. Rutgers, 6; Delaware, 6. New Hampshire, 9; Tufts, 0. H N. Y. Aggies, 25; Coopers Union, 13. | Cornell, 13; Columbia, 0. | Norwich, 26; Vermont, 7. Maine, 19; Colby, 7. Lehigh U, 15; Perkiomen Sem., 0. Fargo, N. D., Nov. 2.—(?)—Duane |Murner, 22, halfback on the North| | Denote. Agricultural college football am, died in a Fargo hospital Satur- Yale Lights, 6; Princeton Lights, 0./ day night after a fortnight’s illness Princeton Frosh, 8; Columbia Frosh, | trom pneumonia. 6. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman R., South Murner, Aberdeen, 8. D., Murner was Tulane, 59; Mississippi Aggies, a junior at the college, registered in| W. and L,, 0; William and Mary, 0.! civil engineefing. Besides his par- Gentz, a Lua & est Virginia, 0. ents, two brothers, Wesley and ansas Aggies, 19; » “| Harold, an sister, Mi: ‘ie, a Davis Elkins, 33; Bowdoin, 0. vee en nies, Me soe. Tennessee, 25; Duke, 2. Fargo and will accompany the body Mex, U. Frosh, 26; N. Mex. Mines, 0./to Aberdeen where the funeral willl N. Carolina, 18; N. Carolina State, | be held. Members of Murner’s fraternity, |Delta Kappa Sigma, will attend the | funeral which probably will be Tues- ; day. Among those who will go are eae Schoenfelder, Paul Bunt, Joc | Blakeslee, Vern Goodwin and Malve Texas Mines, 18; McMurry, 7. |McKoane. Schoenfelder and Bunt 16. Vanderbilt, 49; Georgia Tech, 7. Alabama, 9; Kentucky, 7. Georgia, 33; Florida, 6. Maryland, 20; V. P. I., 0. «Texas Aggies, 7; Centenary, 0. No. Texas State, 19; Austin, 0. \arp trom Aberdeen: { ae Far West 5 Wash. State, 7; Oregon State, 6. | Carp, Buffalo Fish California, 25; Nevada, 6. Are Taken from Lake Montana U., 37; Mont. State, 6. : Young, 0. carp and buffalo fish from Spirit-. Olympic Club, 7; San Francisco U,| Wood and other lakes in the state has; 1. been instituted by the state game, Idaho, 7; Gonzaga, 6. and fish department. { Denver U., 25; Western State, 7. wood lake, where the firm of Kowles Colo. Mines, 7; Kearney, 0. and Lipinski of Winena, Minn, is His parents and sisters are in| J Mickelson Carney Smart} The Sioux nursed their single point} Hannaford lead until midway in the period. against Carnegie Tech. at the Grand Forks school at the CARRINGTON TRIMS MAX Johnny Ferraro, Cornell—Scored | close of the 1931 season and accept} Max. N. D., Nov. 2.—(#)—Carring- Cartwright Nelson Gardner Seviand Sikes, Lierbo} Substitutions—Minot: Fawbush for{ Mackenreth, H. Dahl for Sevland,} Bowles for Rakness, Olson for De-| Mots, Amick for Kanz, Johnson for Rappaport. Williston: +©McMachen| for Jeffrey. i Officials—Umpire: Hagen; referec, Bowden; head linesman, Lazenby, Hovland Dickinson Earns sami: _ Tie With Comets = Overconfident Mayville Eleven; Deadlocked in Homecom- ing Game Bourne intercepted a Bison forward! Pass on the University 43 yard line. { A few plays later Burma passed t1! ‘Wexler fer a score and Knauf kicked | the extra point. | The Sioux linemen played # big; part in the victory. j The lineups: N. D. State Pos. Selliken Ie Jahr Gray N. D. Univ.) Felber; G, Dablow Bourne Malo; Meinhover | Merbaci: Wexler | Knaui | Richmond ° Burma. 0 0 0 6-12 013 0 7—20 , touchdowns, Lnos- brough, McKay. University, Wex- ler 2; Pierce (sub for Wexler). Points | after touchdowns, Richmond, Knauf. | (place kicks). Officials—Referee, Lynch, St. Cloud ‘Teachers; umpire, Thompson, Drake; head linesman, Michelson, Morning- side. Coyotes Triumph Over Jackrabbits South Dakota University Win Dakota Day Engagement 10 to 0 Mayville, N. D., Nov. 2—()—An/ overconfident Comet football team was held to a 6 to 6 tie by the Dick- inson Savages on Mayville’s first! homecoming Saturday. Mayville was) unable to stop the aerial attack em- Ployed by the Savages. Dickinson scored first in the open- ing quarter when Haughton passed to Quammen for the touchdown. Their pass for extra point was in- complete. In the last quarter Fred-/ erickson received a pass from Luck- ason, Comet fullback, for the tieing counter. Frederickson's kick for the! extra point went wide. | The summary: i Mayville Pos. Dickinson { 1 Pelzer Siverts | Harsch Jaeger Vermilion, 8. D., Nov. 2—(#)—The fighting Coyotes of South Dakota Campbel, |Wiversity. won their Dakota Reichert /homecoming game Saturday 10 to 0, from South Dakota State. ! For Coach Backman’s boys it was! glorious SECOND a Luckas oe ” Ostlund, veteran ote | a Baniincy: Substitutions Mon | halfback, the sole survivor of all who! Groth, Brewster, Johnson,’ Soren-'Played in the last game won from son, | Dickinson—Basset, Banke, | State college by the University four, loom. ‘pei "years Aa meat Waihieeo ae Ra Is: 7 .| In the rd quarter, after i BON oe Sarees. Reeth pe ‘begun to look as though neither team | kota A. C., umpire; Miller, Mayville,| Would score, Ostlund dropped back: head linesman. tand kicked squarely over the goal! Titleholders Risk es eed tres ih bes aise | itleholders Ris Crowns This Week imoments of the contest and raced 40) Battalino and Maxie Rosen-| ‘yards for the only touchdown of the | ;game and he kicked the extra point.! bloom Enliven Midwestern Fistic Program Wrestlers Clash In Charity Match) Chicago, Nov. 2.—()—Ed (Strang- ller) Lewis, and Wladek Zbyszko will | meet tonight, in what will be a match | for charity—and for the heavyweight --w York, Nov. 2.—(7)—Title de-| wrestling championship of the world, ‘New Mex,, 20; No. Arizona, 0, | Stanford, 12; U. C. L. A., 6. Colorado Teachers, 6; Brigham! A program of removing German Loyola U:, 7; Occidental, 6. The first contract let affects Spirit- Washington U., 77; Whitman, 0. seining the waters. The state game < uses by Christopher (Bat) Batta- as far as the Illinois State Athletic one of Cornell's two touchdowns | the position of head coach at the Uni-j ton high school won its sixth consecu- against Columbia and passed to Jose | versity of California at Los Angeles. | tive victory Saturday defeating Max Martinez-Zorrilla for the other. | Word was received from California; 32 to 0. Carrington outplayed Max Dusty Allen, Stanford—His 35 yard'Saturday that West would succeed| Olson, Footitt and Postovit were the pass to Don Colvin in last nine sec-/|Bill Spaulding, former Minnesota! outstanding performers for the Car- onds of play gave Stanford victory! football coach, as head mentor at U.| rington eleven, over U.S. L. A. ‘C.-L, A. with Spaulding being re-| Rip Slusser, North Carolina—Scor-' tained as athletic director. From ed three touchdowns against North|the same source it reported that Pat Carolina State. Joe Hall, right end on the Floridé | football team, never played high \Hanley, assistant coach to his broth- | school football. Rooms for Rent Houses for Rent Personal Service Miscellaneous for Sale Household Goods for Sale Flats and Apartments for Rent Automobiles and Trucks for Sale The shortest and quickest road to a sale in southwestern North Dakota and in Bismarck . .. ..The Bismarck Tribune classified page There are times in life when a quick sale of something one possesses enables a Person to grasp an opportunity for an advantageous move in business or domestic life. The Bismarck Tribune Classified columns are the shortest and quickest road to a sale. By using the Bismarck Trib- une with its coverage in practically every home in this territory you will find people who are able to buy what you have to sell. Refer daily to the classified columns of the ‘Bismarck Tribune for necessary information leading to good buying, selling, renting or trading. fill your needs. ‘i «to Michigan, 21; Princeton, 0. {and fish department receives 20 per lino, | Towa, 7; George Washington, 0, | pal Per lino, king of the featherweights, and! commission is concerned. The match DICKINSON LOSES (cent of the gross receipts from the Maxie Rosenbloom, light heavyweight! will be held in the Chicago stadium| Ohio State, 13; Indiana, 6, Northwestern, 32; Illinois, 6. Purdue, 14; Chicago. 6. Midwest | St. Olaf, 26; Gustavus, 0. | Knox, 7; Beloit, 0. Case. 7; Wooster, 6. Svrecuse, 15; Mich. State, 10. palo U., HH Ohio Wes., 0, orningside, 32; Western Union, 6. Nebraska, 10; Missouri, 7. Glendive, Mont., Nov. Glendive high school defeated the Dickinson team Saturday, 26 to 0. Dickinson was outplayed throughout | the first three quarters but came back | strong in the final period to threaten’ aquatic plants will have an oppor-' round encounter. the Glendive goal. But it was only a | threat and the game ended, 26 to 0. Fifteen states now sterilize ‘Wittenberg. 14; Heidelberg, 6, feeble-minded. the! ‘sale of fish. champion, enliven an otherwise un- as tc E. T. Judd, supervising the carp] interesting fistic program this week. ; removal for the department, says the | seining of the rough fish from the ‘lakes will make the waters adaptable for game fish in that vegetation and Rosenbloom, the Harlem clown, puts his crown in jeopardy at Kansas City tonight when he faces the Birming- ;ham slugger, Battling Bozo, in a 12- | tunity to grow. All game fish, such} 'as northern pike, wall-eyed pike,’ | bullheads, crappies, and perch, are re- Battalino may have his hands full retaining his featherweight toga when he clashes with Earl Mastro, turned to the waters without dam- speedy Chicago veteran, at the Chi- age by exposure or handling, {cago stadium Wednesday night. ‘ with the receipts going to Gov. Em- |merson’s unemployment relief com- mission, as well as Lewis’ share of the purse. | COBBERS TRIUMPH | Valley City, N. D., Nov. 2.—(P)—A | smooth powerful Moorhead Siate col- jlege team raced up and down the gridiron Saturcay to score an over- lwhelming 50 to 0 victory over the , Valley City State Teachers college. Phone 32 The Bismarck Tribune Want Ad. Department

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