The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 9, 1931, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1931 Northwestern Virtua lly Assured Conference Championship HOOSIERS AND IOWA NODAKS AND BISON TRIUMPH OVER MINN ESOTA OPPONENTS ONLY OBSTACLES IN Promising Crew of Fighters Appear on Elks Card Tonight AGimng TOMES PATH OF WILDCATS Only Startling Upset Can De-| prive Evanston Team of Big Ten Supremacy GOPHERS GIVE THEM SCARE Intersectional Tilts Give Way to Sectional Clashes This Week-End Chicago, Nov. 9—(?)—Unless the, biggest upset of the western confer- ence football season has not yet been recorded, Northwestern’s Wildcats can spend the rest of the campaign working on the business of becoming All-American selections. Northwestern crushed Minnesota Saturday, 32 to 14, to remove the last high ranking threat from its path, and have only to take care of In- diana and Iowa on the next two Saturdays. Iowa and Indiana have a combined record of one victory and three defeats, along with a mutual- ly owned tie, and nothing they have done would lead to suspicion that either might upset the untamed Wildcats. Beside the Northwestern-Indiana game Saturday, six other Big Ten elevens will meet in conference com- petition, Ohio State and Wisconsin, Participants in a four-way tie for third place in the ranking, will tangle at Madison; Iowa will meet Purdue at Lafayette, and Chicago and Ili- nois will stage their renewal at Champaign. Michigan, holder of second place, entertains an old, and often very troublesome foe in Mich- igan State college, while Minnesota will take @ workout on Cornell (Iowa) college at Minneapolis. Notre Dame will make its second excursion into the east to meet) Navy at Balti- more. Minnesota was even tougher than advertised against Northwestern Sat- urday, and for 30 minutes it looked as though a stunning upset was in the making. The Gophers led by 14 to 7 at the half, but after Pug Rent- mer ran back a kickoff for 95 yards and a touchdown, following it up ‘with an 80 yard return of a punt for another score, it was a Wildcat parade. Michigan gained temporary pos- session of second place by mauling Indiana, 22 to 0. Wisconsin defeated Dilinois, 7 to 6. Ohio State found Navy easy and scored a 20 to 0 victory. Purdue spot- ted Centenary of Louisiana, six Points, then cut loose for seven touchdowns and a 49 to 6 triumph. Chicago came within three min- utes of winning its first victory since the first day of the season, but wound up in a 13-13 tie with Arkansas. Iowa lost its fifth decision of the season, 7 to 0, to Nebraska. For the first time this season, in- tersectional football competition will play second fiddle this week to strict- ly sectional combat with the south and east as the principal storm cen- S The south, in fact, becomes ‘he football capital of the nation, at least for a day, with the crucial encoun- ‘ters between Georgia and Tulane on tthe one hand, and Tennessee and Vanderbilt on the other. Georgia, ‘Tulane and Tennessee all are un- i .OUR BOARDING HOUSE GUY Yous EVER Grand Forks TO CONTINUE AS Leading Scorer Associated Press Photo Ralph Graham, halfback on the pace-setting Kansas State eleven, led all individual point-scorers in the Big Six conference at midsea- beaten and untied while Vanderbilt,| son. after accepting beatings from Tulane ‘and Georgia, has come along fast in recent weeks. These two games not only will have a vital bearing on the southern conference race but also . will affect the mythical national! standings in which the three un- beaten southern outfits rank close to ‘the top. In the east, in spite of such in- ttersectional contests as those involv- ing Notre Dame and Navy, Georgia ‘Tech and Penn, and Washington & Lee and Princeton, far greater in- terest will center on a half dozen sectional struggles. Of the major un- eaten eastern teams, Cornell, Har- vard, Syracuse, Fordham, Temple and Bucknell all face possible trouble. The Big Ten and Pacific coast con- ference titles virtually have been clinched by Northwestern and South- ern California and apparently nothing can stop Utah from annexing the Rocky Mountain crown again. A wide open fight between Southern ‘Methodist and Texas Christian feat- ures the southwest conference and ‘Nebraska, Iowa State and possibly Kansas State all have a chance for the Big Six championship, 7 | SPORT SLANTS By ALAN GOULD » In a certain sense the tragic death ‘of Cadet Richard Brinsley Sheridan two days after his neck was broken’ in a desperate tackling dive in the ‘Yale-Army game is a blow to foot- ‘ball comparable to the loss of Knute Rockne. It may have a far-reaching effect at a time when the spectacular col- lege sport, for various reasons, al- ready is under considerable scrutiny and some fire. It is a shattering blow to the gal- lant forces at West Point, coming as! been am« the bitterest i | it did a week after Harvard's return! t display Peden tee to the gray citadel had served to re- call the equally tragic death of Ca- det Gene Byrne the night after the 1909 game between the Crimson and the Army on the plains. The show, of course, will go on. It! pitchers, but Max has the talent and! ‘always does, somehow, on or off the Crage. Notre Dame has sustained! ‘the victorious traditions and meth- ods of the great Rockne. Army, Guided by Ralph Sasse, “Biff” Jones and “Phil” Fleming, will play out the 1931 season and continue to de-| ‘velop strong football teams. Wisely, West Point’s judgment was fo “carry on,” rather than to yield to @ more emotional impulse. To have abruptly halted Army's foot-| bball season would have been less a tribute and dealt a bigger blow to contests with Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Navy. IS IT WORTH WHILE? The sport, nevertheless, may feel! @ widespread reaction, due to a trag- edy upon which such nation-wide at- tention ‘has been focused. It will prompt many to wonder whether the game is worth the hazard of such sacrifice. The irony of the situation is that this feeling grows mainly from the fact of Sheridan's being a cadet in our national military academy and his fatal injury occurring in so con- spicuous a game as the Yale-Army contest, played before 72,000 people. Scant attention and no. agitation| whatever arose from the report on’ the same day of the death of a foot- ball player in Rhinelander, Wis., due to @ fractured skull. CAREY THE ORATOR When the National league held its Golden Jubilee celebration in 1925, Max ‘Carey represented the . players by delivering a talk of such polished excellence and appropriateness that it made the “hit” of a very large evening in baseball history. Carey was on the same dais with Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania, Governor Ritchie of Maryland, Sen. George Wharton Pepper and others of note in and outside of baseball. but his eloquence did not suffer th: least by comparison. As the new manager of the Brook- lyn Robins, Carey brings an unusua | background and shrewd judgment in- jto a spot that has rare possibilities | for him. He succeeds one of the game's | greatest characters and most popular Personalities, Wilbert Robinson. He steps in where factional strife has |He must display his leadership be- fore one of the most critical and vo- ciferous audiences in any big league | town. Carey has yet to show he can com- pare with Robinson as a judge of experience well suited to reorganiz- ing Brooklyn's awkward squad for the contingencies brought about by the new ball. | It is safe to assume he will seck a better combination of speed, alert- greatest base runners of his time and @ keen student of defensive skill as well as of offensive strategy. LARGEST CANAL The Grand canal, or Yun ho, of the morale of the squad and the|sand miles through the coastal plain game a5 a whole than to play the Bemaining ‘games, including major of ‘this country and. is the longest [artificial waterway in the world, YEH » TLL BRING HIM OVER SOME NIGHT --Yau"Le FIND HIM “TH” MOST INTERESTING A SOLDIER OF FAaRTUNE-AN ADVENTURER ~~ BEEN ALL QVER “TH”? WORLD, CAN TELL YOU SOME “TALES THAT'D MAKE “TH” HAIR OF A RACCOON COAT STAND an ness and slugging. He was one of the! China, rambles for almost a thou-|' “ZG ZW SURE! ~~ BRING Him OVER !-+-100 BAD TH” MADOR HAS LARYNGITIS Ze AS? HAS “TEMPORARILY LosST TH’? USE OF HIS Voice WHAT A Time THEY"D HAVE, MATCHING CHINS ! aw TM AKKIOUS “% HEAR OF CAPTAIN DEXTER'S ADVENTURES ~nAN' I Kious “TH” MASOR if MET $ HES as* HE Beats Moorhead, 18 to O HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL SLATE contrat coos into tie with Minot For Lead in Sioux Land Conference IN OTHER YEARS Board of Athletic Control An- nounces no Changes in Policy Contemplated Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 9.—(P)—A powerful Grand Forks high echool football team, generally recognized as North Dakota state champion, added —_— @ share in the Sioux Land Conference Fargo, Nov. 9—(?}—Consolidated|TO™™ to its laurels Saturday, crush- graded schools and first class high Hed igh ind moor panielaventis i % a schools in North Dakota will continue corre red on the same basketball scheduled as ie Stason aie ee) Wet in previous years, B. C. B. Tighe,|"0t 20° {he 0D cnet of Fargo high school principal and|the time, Moorhead was powerless to president of the board of control of|stop the brilliant running game led the North Dakota state school ath-/py Captain Ben Blanchette. Moor- letic league, has announced. Tighe|nead’s big line was split wide open returned from the meeting of the/by the fast -c! Maroon for- board held oe cenieetien dene the err, | wards snd Central's well-balanced cent annual gathe: of the No backfield swept throu; consist- Dakota Education association in Bis-|eng gains. ised marck. first than G. W, Hanna of Valley City, chair- laren Te Ssatee ee pais open- man of the committee in charge Of}eq Grand Forks marched to the redistricting the state, reported in-|spuds’ 10 yard line but was stopped vestigation revealed a change W85/by @ penalty. Knauf attempted to not advisable at this time, and the/kick out of danger but the punt was plan for conducting basketball elim-|piocked by Wiseman and Morque re- nator will be the same as in past/covered on Moorhead’s one yard line. first , Blanchette plunged Harold Wakefield of, Le, Moure pie easton: y chairman of the committee delega' A pass for extra point > ie. comple ® list of competent of- plete. ae — icials, found no unanimity among Maroons staged anoth schools regarding the same officials en to Moorhead’s 12 yard tine but and will continue the investigation! were again stopped by @ penalty and and report at the next meeting of the! Knauf period ended. board in March or April. Speen Tighe was renamed president of By Ahern | DEMBRAY 10 MEET RAY COSSETTE IN HEADLINE BATTLE Both Men Have Impressive Rec- ords; Aberdeen Man Never Beaten HORWITZ TO BOX KLINK Howard Shiek of Fargo Will Tangle With Tuffy Mosset of Bismarck Fight fans in Bismarck will be given an opportunity of watching two of the most promising young sluggers in the Northwest tonight when Dick Demeray .of Aberdeen meéts Ray Cossette of Fargo in the feature bout on the Elks card at the World War ‘Memorial building. Demeray, who beat Lee Cavanagh in his initial appearance in a local ring recently, has angaged in 60 bat- tles in his ring career without losing @ single fight. .The Aberdeen flash has collected the scalps of a dozen fighters who are regarded as “tough mugs” in fistic circles. In recent fights Demeray has knocked out Al Brown of Huron, Gunner Smith of Moorhead, and Bushy Diamond of Minneapolis. In addition he had tak- en decisions from Harry Greb of Minneapolis and Irish McKenna of Sioux Falls. Ray Cossette comes to Bismarck from Fargo with an inpressive record earned in fights in the eastern part of the state and in Minnesota. The Cass county lad has never been knocked off his feet and in 38 fights has lost only two, those by close de- cisions. He showed he had plenty of stuff in the Golden Gloves Tourna- ment in Minneapolis, advancing to the semi-finals to lose by a shade. He knocked out Denny Wells in the sec- ond round at Grant Forks and re- cently won from Battling Cheski and Eddie Fahlgren, two hard hitting Forkers, by newspaper decisions. George Horwitz of Fargo, another Golden Glove semi-finalist, meets Joe Kling in a four round bout which will precede the main attraction. Kling has been winning consistently ‘but Horwitz is the best man he has been. called upon to meet in a local ring. The Fargoan has won from Bad Boy Knight, Sioux City, Iowa, and Bai Cheski, Grand Forks, as well as hav- ing won one and lost one to Cos- sette. The second semi-windup has aroused considerable comment among fight fans who are expected to turn out in great numbers to see Howard Shiek of Fargo tangle with Tuffy ‘Mosset, unorthadox mauler from Bis- marck. Shiek, pride of the Fargo gas house district, has indicated that he intends to flatten the local man in short order. Mosset’s friends say that he has resented the allegation bitterly and will attempt a little flat- on his own account. Shiek, however, will go into action ‘as.a heavy favorite. He has fought ‘Demeray to a draw on two occas- ions and has an impressive string ‘of knockout victories. In the preliminaries Jimmy Todd, ‘Medina spark plug, will meet George Perman, a slugger from Hebron. ‘The curtain raiser will feature Kid Engles of Tappen and Wildcat Dietz ‘Hebron. ‘No fighters on this card will be lasked to give away weight, promoters said Monday, the greatest difference three-year term. C. L. Robertson the board after being reelected for a of Jamestown also was renamed for a three-year term. The other mem- fee " a bers of the board are L. A. White of!” 4 60 yard kick by Knauf that rolled Minot, secretary and treasurer; J. C./out of bounds on Central's one yard Gould of Mandan, vice president, and|}ine put Grand Forks in a hole short- Leo Dominick of Wahpeton. ly before the half ended, but Blan- B fine,’ naut een fe Duvall for a J wn ea down and Phillips went to the Moorhead’s scoring threat was Park Region Team 22 After being stopped on the 18 yard Tmacgiuad be vaste’ ta it titel ec iter, stealita y 4 mareht counter, Jimmies Take Third Game in As! Bionchette ‘Piangioe ‘over from ine Many Weeks, Winnin; three yard shortly after y i | period opened. 27 to 21 A reserve Grand Forks eleven Jamestown, N. D., Nov. 9.—(?)— Jamestown college won its third jgame in as many weeks when it de- \feated Park Region college Saturday, 27 to 21. Jamestown scored all of its points in the first three periods ‘while holding Park Region scoreless. The Park Region eleven came back jstrong in the final period and gave the Jimmies a scare by scoring 21 Points in the final period. The Jimmie coach used his reserves during most of the game, saving his \regulars for the annual tussle with Valley City here Armistice day. Tommy Loughran To Meet Uzcudun New York, Nov. 9—@)—Tommy Loughran, who has fought some 130 ring battles since he began his fistic career in 1919, this week will tackle The lineup: he never es Lid in - business way— gion |Paulino Uzcudun Spain, The eee nue ee jother two are champion Max Schmel- Huey It Ferguson [196 and Primo Carnera and Tommy Sunderland lg Brantvold|May get @ shot at both before many Roberts c Gansrud|months have Busch rg Lydéen| Loughran, a strong favorite as a F, Hall rt Hague |Tesult of his string of eleven succes- Stone re ‘Bestel |Sive victories, meets Paulino in the Egstrom q Mohr |head-line ten rounder in Madison Laugen lh ison Square Garden Friday night, Purdy th Erdah —_—_—__ | Waene fo Jacobson| Carnera Agrees to Substitutions: Jamestown—D. Hall, {Rouzie, Russell, M. Morrison, L. Watne, Smith, Lippert, Kneeland. Freeks, Bechel, Bauer; Park Region— ‘Adamson, Hanson. Officials: Referee—Gates, Moor-! head; umpire—Gussner, Jamestown | college; headlinesman—Stone, James- town college. Take on Levinsky Chicago, Nov. 9.—(#)—King Levin- sky, powerful punching young Chi- cagoan, will fight Primo Carnera. ‘That match was in the making for the Chicago staium Noy. 19. Levin- sky, the reformed fish peddler, has signed for the ten-round bout. Carnera has agreed to terms and the only hurdle to be passed is sanction of the Illinois state athletic commis- Rubber pneumatic tires are re- Placing the steel wheels on nora on aj motor cars now in French line. ‘in avoidupois between fighters in any ‘bout being three pounds. Dickinson Ties Minot Savages Savages Display Stubborn De- fense to Thwart Seven Scoring Threats Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 9.—()—The Dickinson Savages and Minot Bea- vers battled to a scoreless tie Satur- day. Dickinson displayed a stubborn defense to repulse the Minot eleven seven times when the Beavers had four downs to make 10 yards for a touchdown. The Beavers’ blocking ‘was good but they lacked the punch to shove across @ counter when the opportunity presented itself. Dickinson was late in its pass at- tack today and failed to connect |, in this department once. Grulke and Harsch, featured Dick- inson’s play. ‘The lineup: Dickinson Pos. Minot Harrington re eplisoere rt x Campbe! Te iverson Jaeger c White ‘Harsch tf W. Johnson Siverts It Lund Peltzer le Stott q Verry Grulke th Bunnell Banke th M. Johson | Holten fb McGee Japs Lose Contest With American Contest Tokyo, Nov. 9.—(?)—Waseda uni- versity’s baseball team lost to the barnstorming American major leaguers yesterday, but gave the vic- tors an a capacity a crowd of more than 65,000 persons a thrill before surrendering. The score was 8 to 5. Lefty Grove, stellar hurler for the Philadelphia Athletics, struck out six ‘Wasedans. The Japanese used seven pitchers, STATE COLLEGES N.D. A ers 6. Jamestown 27; Park Region 21. Dickinson Teachers 0; Teachers 0. HIGH SCHOOLS Grand Forks 18; Moorhead 6. Larimore 18; St. James Academy 0. Cavalier. 24; Langdon 0. BIG TEN Northwestern, 32; Minnesota, 14, Nebraska, 7; Iowa, 0. 3 Navy, 0. Purdue, 49; Centenary, 6. Wisconsin, 7; Illinois, 6. MIDWEST St. Olaf, 20; St. Mary’s, 0. Macalester, 14; St. John’s, 13, Carleton, 33; Coe, 2. Concordia, 41; Gustavus, 6. Hamline, 12; Augsburg, 0. Mankato, 7; St. Cloud, 0. Virginia, 0; Eveleth, 0. Oberlin, 6; Akron, 0. Haskell, 26; Emporia, 0. Notre Dame, 49; Pennsylvania, 0. Mt. Pleasant, 13; Detroit Tech, O, Ohio U., 27; De Pauw, 0. Luther, 32; Upper Iowa, 14, Huron, 0; Sioux Falls, 0. Tulsa U., 89; Mexico U., 0. Valparaiso, 39; Wheaton, 0. La Crosse, 25; Platteville, 0. Hillsdale, 14; Olivet, 0. Case, 52; Hiram, 6. Monmouth, 32; Lake Forest, 7. Wesleyan, 12; Bradley, 0. Cornell, 9; Knox, 0. Whitewater, 7; Stevens, Point, 0. Baldwin Wallace, 26; Ashland, 0, Cincinnati, 33; Denison, 0. Lincoln, 27; St. Paul, 0. Lawrence, 18; Cornell, 12. Ohio Northern, 37; Marietta, 0, Mich. Normal, 27; Ferris, 0. Milliken, 32; Illinois College, 0, Iowa State, 7; Kansas State, 6, Defiance, 26; Detroit C. C., 7. Mich. State, 100; Ripon, 0, St. Lawrence, 6; Clarkson, 0, Marquette, 13; W. and J., 6. Wittenburg, 10; Miami, 6, Otterbein, 7; Kenyon, 13. Wisconsin B, 14; Illinois B, 7, Oklahoma, 10; Kansas, 0. Franklyn, 27; Wabash, 14. Western State Teachers, 14; State Teachers, 0. Simpson, 34; Morningside, 13. Lowa Wes., 17; St. Ambrose, 14, Okla. Aggies, 20; Creighton, 0. EAST Towa ‘Temple, 13; Villanova, 7. West Liberty, 88; Bethel, 0. Rhode Island, 34; Worcester, 0. Syracuse, 33; Western Reserve, 0. Lehigh, 19; Princeton, 7, Georgia, 7; N. Y. U., 6. Army, 20; na, 0. Calif. Tech. 6; Clarion, 0. Williams, 29; Wesleyan, 7, Columbia, 27; Virginia, 0. Holy Cross, 12; Duquesne, 0. Yale, 52; St. John Annapolis, 0, Cornell, 54; Alfred, 0. Harvard, 7; Dartmouth, 6. Long Island U., 14; Hobart, 6, Navy B., 0; Pitt. B. 0, Rennselaer, 7; Vermont, 0. Colgate, 32; Penn State, 7. Fordham, 39; Detroit, 9. Lafayette, 22; Rutgers, 0. Temple, 13; Villa Nova, 7. Penn Military, 2; Baltimore, 0, Notre Dame B., 33; Buffalo, 6. St. John of Brooklyn, 13; C. C. N. ‘4 0. Dickinson, 0; Gettysburg, 0. Drexel, 12; Ursinus, 7. Haverford, 18; Hamilton, 6, Catholic U., 19; Manhattan, 6, Middlebury, 32; Norwich, 6, Morgan, 19; Howard, 8. Providence, 13; Niagara, 6, Amherst, 33; Trinity, 6. Brown, 26; Ohio Wesleyan, 13, Delaware, 26; Swarthmore, 0. ~ Pittsburgh, 14; Carnegie Tech, 6, Y. Catholic U., 19; Manhattan, 6. Rhode Island State, 34; Worcester, New Hampshire, 49; Conn. Aggies, 0. Cornell Frosh, 46; Penn Frosh, 0, ; St. Thomas, 0, ~ Springfield, 21; Miss. Aggies, 3. Alal 41; bama, 41; Florida, 0. No. Carolina, 19; Georgia Tech., 19. Vanderbilt, Maryland, 12. W. Virginia, 12; W. Va., Wesleyan, 0. 8. M. U., 8; Texas Aggies, 0. Hampden Sydney, 18; Lynchburg, 0. De Paul, 46; », 0. Lake Forest, 12; Presbyterian, 0, Va. State, 42; Va. Union, 6, Sewanee, 7; Miss., 0. Tenn., 31; Carson-Newman, 0, Davidson, 14; Citadel, 7. U. of Texas, 25; Baylor, 0. “N, Mex. , 18; N. Mex. U., & Ae ee WEST : Brigham Young, 6; Utah Aggies, 0. Utah, 28; Colo. College, 6. Colo. Denver U., 6. U. 8. C., 19; Stanford, 0. Columbia, 12; Whitman, 0. California Fresh, 7; Stanford Fresh, 0. Oregon State, 19; Méntana, 0. Nevada, 18; San Joe State, 0. Wash. State, 9: Idaho, 8. FOOTBALL N. D. Universtiy 36; St. Thomas 6. C. 18; Moorhead Teach- Minot Loyola Frosh, 20; Vanderbilt Frosh, : Heads Coast League Associated Press Photo Hyland Baggerly (abo. paperman of Los Gatos, named president of the Pacific coast baseball league following a deadlock in the contest between Harry Williams, incumbent, and Wade Killifer, former manager of the San Francisco Missions, STATE'S RESERVES POUND OUT VICTORY OVER DRAGON GREW Wind Up Home Season For Fargo Team; Regulars See Little Action Fargo, Nov. 9.—(?)—The last glance at the 1931 North Dakota Agricul- tural college football team for home fans resulted in a 19 to 6 victory for the Bison over the Moorhead state teachers college Dragons here Satur- day. It was @ dull contest with the Bison reserves catrying the burden most of the way and doing equally well as the regulars who took over duties during a part of the closing half. The only thrills provided were those of Johnny Fisher and Fat El- lingson, pony backs of the Bison reserve force. Captain®Cy . Lons- brough also broke away for some lengthy runs on neat cutbacks, but Hank Boher provided the biggest thrill of the game in the last 45 sec- onds when he picked a Bison pass out of the ai rand scooted 77 yards to tally for the Dragons. Lyman Davis, Dragon speed merchant, re- turned a kickoff 43 yards in the final period. The Bison reserves pushed over a touchdown in the first period and kept the situation in hand during the first half, The Bison pounded out 17 first downs to three for the Dragons. ‘The Bison lacked scoring punch in MAKE GREAT STAND DURING FIRST HALF Sioux Get Bearing in Finat Stanzas and Pile Up 23 Points CELEBRATE FAIRMONT DAY, St. Thomas Scores on Fourth Play After Start of Game; Cadets Fight St. Paul, Nov. 9—(?)—North Da- Kaota University’s powerful tribe of football players swarmed over St. Thomas college for a 36 to 6 victory Saturday. A crowd of 3,500 saw the game, An inspired St. Thomas line, back- ed by @ vicious secondary defense, tossed back almost every Sioux of- fensive thrust in the first half, and but for an intercepted pass late in the second quarter, the Tommies might have gained a tie for the first two Periods, Once North Dakota got its bearings in the second half the Sioux display- ed the potent and wily attack that has brought them through the season undefeated. It was Fairmont day and just be- fore the contest opened Fullback Burma, End Felber and Guard Malo, all former Fairmont, Minn., high School stars, now on the North Da- kota squad, were given wrist watch- es by a delegation of Fairmont fans. St. Thomas scored four plays after the game started. A long pass, O’Hal- loran to McGee carried the ball to the Sioux 23 yard line and two plays later, O'Halloran passed to Egan to score, Not for long were the Sioux on the short end of the scoring. On North Dakota's second offensive play of the afternoon, Pierce darted off St. Thomas's left end, on a run of 79 yards. Richmond failed on his place- kick try for the extra point. Pierce dusted off right end for the second Sioux score and this time Richmond booted the extra point. The opening of the second half found the Tommies unable to rally from the physical beating they had taken in the first two periods, Dur- in gthat rest, however the Sioux had found themselves. With Richmond driving through the line for ten yards at a clip, the Sioux pushed back the Tommies to within 15 yards of the goal line where Marter recovered Richmond's fumble, saving a score. After a Tommy advance was stop- ped the Sioux marched from the 40- yard line for another counter. Rich- mond kicked goal for a 20 to 6 lead. Pierce with a run of 28 yards and Burma with one of 23 added another touchdown. Richmond ran 15 yards to the St. Thomas 30-yard stripe and then in two plays counted another touchdown. ee esi “gre another of its ig passes just after the subsequen' kickoff, but Long and Malo ceded Kasner for @ safety that ended the scoring. the first half, but they staged two successive sustained marches in the second half to count Lensbrough and Blair Seitz plunging for the touch- downs on short thrusts at the Dragon line. Ellingson scored on 2 long pass from Fisher in the first period. The lineups: N.DAC pos. M. 8. T. C. Thomasson le Ireland Thompson t Nelson Dvorak ig McAllister’ Gray c Moberg Hoviand wT? wv. Krajeck Platt rt Bailey Berdahl re Booher Lonsbrough qb Gilpin Fisher lh Davis Ellingson Th Dahl icEssy fb H. Krajeck, Score by periods: Booher. Substitutions: N. D. A C.—Paris' for Gray; Jahr for Dvorak; Schoen-' felder for Thompson; McMillen for Platt; Psnt for Fisher; Selliken for Berdahl; Meyers for Thomasson; Platt for McMillen; Seitz for Lons: Thomasson for Meyers; Flynn McEssy; Toman for Miller; Ostran- der for Jahr; Berdahl for Selliken. 3; B. Ruegamer for H. Krajeck for Bisek. Officials: P. E. Mickelson, Morn- ingside, referee; C. H. Kimball, South’ Dakoté, umpire; Jim Garrity, Wis- consin, head linesman. Gridiron Stars in Saturday’s Games (By The Associated Press) Nollie Felts, Tulane—Smashing through Auburn for three touchdowns. ? ane lineup; . Thomas pos. North Dakota Merek Felber wWachtler . Long Coyne le D. Dablow Vesovich It Bourne Shetka lg Maio 6 North Dakota— Knauff for Pierce, Revelle for Wex- ler, R. Dablow for Knauff, Wexler for Revelle, Revelle for ‘Wexler, Knauff for Dablow, Pierce for R. Dablow, Meinhover for Wick, Nel- son for Merback, Thomas for Burma, Murray for Felber, Willis for G. Dab- low, Klipsteine for Long, Stablein for St. Thomas—Delmont for Marter, Walsh for O'Halloran, Flynn for Coyne, Marter for Delmont, Coyne Flynn, O'Halloran for Walsh, Jackelen for Egan, Hegert for Merek, Neihart for Vesovich, Rice for Wiedes, Kasner for McGee, Gorilla for O’Hal- Joran, Lane for Shetka, Larson for Adams, Murphy for Wachtler, Schnel- der for Jackelen, Delmont for Mar- ter, Frawley for Lane. ‘ cede tee Dakota: touch- lowns, Pierce 2, Richmond, Burma, Revelle. St. Thomas: Egan, Points after touchdown—Richmond, Nodaks Second in| | National Ratings | > See Press) feated football teams to 26, eliminat~ ing ten colleges who boasted perfect @ |records a week ure. Still out in front is Davis & Elking college of Elkins, W. Va. which twice and 80 yards. Ernie on runs of 95 Jans’ victory over Stanford, Buster Mott, Georgia—Ran 97 yards | to touchdown. Bob Campiglia, West Liberty—Scor- ed ten touchdowns and eight points ale touchdown against Bethel of ‘The first legal execution by elec- tricity is said to have been that of William Kemmier at Sing Sing, on | August 6, 1890. Pug Rentner, Northwestern—Scored | talli against Minnesota sactions not so different from those | our present time were carried on four or five thousand years ago,

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