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~~ PUNDAMENTALSARE |T'O STAGE CAPITAL GOLF T | OUR BOARDING HOUSE STRESSED IN FIRST PRACTICE SESSIONS} Mentor Thinks Line Should De-} velop Into Heavy, Capable Forward Wall FIRST GAME WITH GLENDIVE| Hopes to Get Squad Into Condi-| tion For Scrimmage Some Time Next Week | Approximately 50 candidates for the! Bismarck high school football team are listening to what Coach Roy D. McLeod has to say about gridiron fundamentals in initial practice ses- sions at Hughes field this week. Work has been limited to rudimen-|{ tary drill designed to give the squad a | working knowledge of the games first principals and to get them in shape for more strenuous work later on. | Although the first engagement of the season is only two weeks off,| McLeod said that it would probably! be a week before he would attempt to scrimmage his charges. | Early developments seem to indicate | that a heavy and capable line will be| developed but prospects for balanc-} ed backficld are problema In the front k of aspir ball carrying berths Schlickenmeyer, and All three were lettermen |: combined with Woodmansee, Boelter and Burton in the line, are expected | to form the bulwark around which} McLeod will build his team i} Other candidates with more or less experience are Owens and Shafer, freshman backs last year; lund, Engen and Schneider, Dohn, a guard: Welch and Brauer, tackles; and Jenkins, a back. The first, contest of the sea see the Demons swin against Glendive, S: on will | action THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1982 ‘ Fifty Candidates Seek Berths on Bismarck High School Grid Team ! A WAR RR-RUME! SHOULD 4 YES- SOME HOTEL SOAP, AN* AULTH® _ ANYONE INQUIRE FOR ME, LADS, EXPLAIN THAT T AM AWAY ON A VACATION, AT SOME EXCLUSIVE AND SWANKY RESORT HOTEL, FOR THE FALL SEASON TELL THE MADAM THAT L LINEN THAT WILL FIT IN Your BAG/ SEND US A CARD, UWITA AN ARIZOW SHOWING Ti ROOM YOU WERE EJECTED | nounced WILL BRING HEfe 7 A SOUVENIIe , By Ahern GOT your FELT J { SOLE SHOES FoR 7 SNEAKING DOWN FIRE ESCAPES ? REMEMBER, NOW, VOU'RE TOO FAT For LAUNDRY crures! Y y || LOVES THIS Pe Zn 7 ° 77 1_© 1932 8Y WEA SERVICE, INC_RED.U.8. PAT. OFF. I-9- Bismarck Gridders Have Hard Program Demons to Battle Seven Major North Dakota One From Montana Teams, (By The Associated Press) With football candidates through- out the state trying out for positions on the various high school elevens this week, gridiron mentors have an- schedules which indicate many of the teams face gruelling campaigns this fall. 5) 511 Boston ... 9 496 St. Louis 64 72 471 New York 61 7 455 Cincinnati .. 55 82 406 AMERIC! New York . } Philadelphia Washington Cleveland .. Detroit . St. Louis ... Chicago Boston .. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww L Minneapolis Columbus .. Indianapolis Milwaukee Kansas City Toledo .. St. Paul Louisville . 399 | RESULTS THURSDAY American League | Chicago 4: Boston 3 (10 innings). | Cleveland 2; Ph elphia 1. | Washington 3; Louis 1. H New York 6, 7; Detroit 4. 7 (first game 14 innings; se in tie in seventh y because of darknes ond game ended | hen game called! | Natio Chicago 4, 2; Brooklyn 12; Philadelphia 3: ; Cincinnati-New York, postponed. | St. Paul 5; Kansas City 3. | Indianapolis 5; Toledo 4 (10 inn- ) Loliisville 4; Columbus 3 Minneapolis 9; Milwaukee 7. j a Pacer | | Driverles Is Third in Heat | | St. Paul, Sept. 9—P)—King | William, owned by F. G. Wil- liams, Marshalltown, Ia., won the 2:12 pace for a $950 purse, fea- ture event at the harness races at the Minnesota state fair Thurs- day. King William stepped the three fastest heats on the mect- ing to date, 2:03%, 2:03', and 2:0412. The spectators got a thrill in the first heat of the 2:12 pace when Abby Guy, owned by Dr. T. Williams, Litchfield, Ills. was in- volved in an accident. Abbe {| Guy's sulky locked wheels with that pulled by Direct Boy, the right wheel of Abbe Guy's sulky was pulled off, the shafts torn loose and Driver Harry Fitzpat- rick thrown to thet rack. Al Guy, kept on, however, and com- Pleted the circuit to finish third. The 2:25 trot, $665 purse, was won in straight heats by Irene Lackey, owned by F. V. Kent, Ot- tumwa, Ia. Clara Dear, owned by Perry Rutledge, Storm Lake, Ia., ‘was second. Ruth McElwyn won the 2:18 trot, $855 purse, in straight heats. She was piloted by Jake Mahoney, St. Paul. F TS ‘LAST IGHT York, (3). Ottumwa, Ia—Mike Dundee, Rock Island, Ill, and Eddie Anderson, Cas- i Per, draw (6); Verne Butler, Bo eee Buddy Kearns, ty) While many of the coaches have not yet completed the list of games to be played this season, nearly a score of them have announced what opponents their teams will meet Fight skirmishes to be waged this season by the Bismarck Demons com- Prise an out schedule. In he Demons will! hool outfits with | n of Glendive, Mont., an} te opponent | go is another school with a schedule. The Midgets will four ate teams and and Bismarck. football sched- , Mohall 24—Minot at Minot —Stanley at Mohall, Fessenden at Fe —Sherwood at Mol -Williston at Mohall, 9—Crosby at Mohall Nov. 11—Kenmare at Mohall Bismarck 23—Glendive at Bismarck, 1—Mandan at Mandan, 8—Minot at Minot. ‘Williston at Williston. t. Jamestown at Bismarck. . 28—Dickinson at Bismarck. y. 5—Fargo at Fargo. . 11—Mandan at Bismarck. Carrington Sept. 16—Valley City at Valley City. | Sept. 23—Jamestown at Jamestown, | Sept. 30—Hillsboro at Carrington, | Oct. 7—Maddock at Maddock, | Oct, 15—Harvey at Carrington. Oct. 21—New Rockford at New! Rockford. | Oct. 28—Cooperstown at Carring- ton. Noy. 4—Fessenden at Fessenden, Bowman Oct, 1—Rhame at Bowman | Oct. 7—Reeder at Bowman. | Oct, 15—Baker, Mont., at Bowman. | Oct, 21—Marmarth at Bowman, Oct. 29—Mott at Mott. Nov. 5—Open. Noy. 11—Lemmon, S. D., at Bow-| man (tentative). | Minot Sept. 17—Kenmare at Kenmare, Sept. 24—Mohall at Minot. | Sept. 30—Jamestown at Jamestown, Oct, 7—Bismarck at Minot. Oct, 14—Devils Lake at Devils Lake. | Oct. 22—Mandan at Mandan, Oct. 28—Williston at Minot. | Sept Oct Oct. Nov. 4—Bismarck at Fargo. Noy. 11—Open, Kenmare Sept. 17—Minot at Kenmare. Oct. 15—Crosby at Kenmare. Noy. 11—Mohall at Mohall. Crosby | Cardinals in the only other National League game. Scores by :nnings: | | AMERICAN LEAGUE Chisox Nose Oue Bosox | Chicago—The White Sox edged out | the Boston Red Sox, 4 to 3 in 10 inn- Sept. 23—Alumni at Crosby. | ings. eax Sept. 30—Sherwood at Sherwood. soe Oct. 7—Bowbells at Crosby. | opines: : Aol ae eas em H i 3 Oct. 15—Kenmare at Kenmare. |" Rhodes, Kline and Tate; Lyons and Oct. 21—Ray at Crosby. | Grube. | Oct. 29—Mohall at Mohall —- Noy. 5—Stanley at Stanley. Brown Outpitches Grove Nov. 11—Sherwood at Crosby. Cleveland—Clint Brown outpitched Washburn Lefty Grove in a pitchers’ battle as Sept. 17—Bismarck Imps at Bis- |Cleveland won, 2 to 1. eee marck 4 i} Sept. 24—Underwood at Washburn. {Philadelphia 000 001 000-1 4 2) Oct. 1—Wilton at Wilton, Cleveland.. 100 100 00x— 2 8—Max at Washburn Grove and Cochrane; Brown ‘Turtle Lake at Washburn. Oct, 22—Garrison at Garrison. Hillsboro Sept. 16—Aiumni at Hillsboro. t. 23—Hope at Hope. Carrington at Carrington. - afton at Grafton. 14—Mayville at Hillsboro. . 21—Casselion at Casselton. 28—Mayville at Mayville. Nov. 4—Cooperstown at Hillsboro. tional Battle May Hurt Team { Sewell. | Weaver Subdues Browns i St. Louis—Weaver held the St.i |Louis Browns to four hits and the; |Senators beat out St. Louis 3 to 1. | R HE {Washington 000 102 000-3 8 1 | Weaver and Spencer; \Gray and Ferrell. Yankees Beat Tigers |. Detroit—New York defeated the de- |game was a 7 to 7 tie. the game was/ jealled in the seventh, because of darkness. © | New York—- or Wor eres, a 102 000 000 02-6 18 1 letroit— if 2S 030 000 001 000 00-4 16 2 | Yankees Having Easy Time But and Uhle, Desautels and Hayworth. | Cubs and Pirates Are Struggling (By The Associated Press) Back in the long lean years, those four seasons from 1927 through 1930 when the National League champions couldn't win a world series and sel- |dom could win a game in the great! October classic, the explanation often was advanced that the close races in The same contrast comes up again this year as the National League race |goes down the homestretch with sevea teams still mathematically in th? running, while only three are left in the American, two of them with only the slimmest kind of a chance to overtake the New York Yankees. After checking in with a 14-inning |victory and a seven-inning tie in a| {1ong duel with Detroit Thursday, the! Yanks reached the point where they need only four victories for them- selves. four defeats for Philadelphia | Pittsburgh. 000 010 001-2 8 and Washington or any combinatioa within that figure to clinch the pen- nant. At the same time the Chicago Sept. 30—Eureka College at Eureka, | |S. D. Cubs, leading Pittsburgh by 5t: games with 18 to go, have to work on a 13-game basis to make it a cer- tainty. The perils of the season's last road trip affected the leaders in both cir- cuits Thursday. The Yanks had to go ifive extra innings in the first game | before they put over two runs to de- ‘feat the Tigers 6 to 4, and darkness | Stopped them in the seventh inning of the second clash with the score jtied at T-all. Noy. 1i—Fargo at Fargo. Ashley Sept. 16—Leola, S. D., at Ashley. | Sept. 23—Mobridge, S. D., at Mo- bridge. Oct. 7—Open. Oct. 14—Wishek at Ashley. Oct. 21—Linton at Ashley. Oct. 28—Ellendale at Ashley. Nov. 4—Open. Fessenden Sept. 23—Maddock at Maddock. Sept. 30—Devils Lake at Devils Lake. Oct. 7—Mohall at Fessenden. Oct. 14—New Rockford at New Rockford. Oct, 21—Harvey at Fessenden, Oct, 28—Rugby at Rugby. Nov. 4—Carrington at Fessenden. Noy. 11—Harvey at Harvey. Grafton Sept. 17—Thief River Falls, Minn., at Thief River Falls. Sept. 23—Cavalier at Grafton (ten- tative). Sept. 30—Grand Forks at Grand Forks. Oct. %—Hillsboro at Grafton. Oct. 14—Cando at Grafton. Oct, 21—Crookston at Crookston. Oct, 28—Devils Lake at Grafton. Nov. 5—Warren at Warren. Philadelphia lost a precious game to Cleveland as Clint Brown held|| them to four hits to get a 2 to 1 de-| | cision over Lefty Grove. Another | four-hit performance, with Monte Weaver doing the flinging to ring up his 20th victory of the season, enabled Washington to turn back the St. Louis Browns 3 to 1 and keep pac? with the Yanks. In the fourth American League contest, Ted Lyons, Chicago veteran. pitched a fine 10-inning game and then scored the winning run himself for a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. A divided doubleheader with Boston added a half game to the Cubs’ lead as Pittsburgh took another one on the chin from Brooklyn. Charley Root’s six-hit hurling and a big eighth inning gave Chicago a 4-1 vic- Fargo Sept. 24—Wahpeton at Wahpeton. |tory in the opener, but Bob Brown Oct. 1—Valley Cit; ‘—Aberdeen, Fargo. . D., at Aber- Falls. Oct. 15—Sioux Falls, 8. D., at Sioux Yana duplicated the six-hit feat for Boston in the nightcap and a homer by Wal- led to a 3-2 triumph. couldn't approach Brook- lyn’s hit feats and was buried un- Oct, 21—Moorhead, Minn., at Moor-|der a 12 to 2 score. head. at A Oct. 28—East Grand Forks, Minn. two it Fargo. the TT | i | Pipgras, Moore and Dickey; Hogsett | R E) New York.... 110 200 3-7 11 1) |Detroit ...... 000 060 1—7 11 2 Pennock and Moore, Dickey jJorgens; Wyatt, Marrow, Bridges; and Hayworth. | NATIONAL LEAGUE | Braves and Cubs Divide of pitching duels with the Cubs win- ning the second game, 3 to 2. Chicago won the first. 4 to 1. | First Game jthe senior circuit took too much out}... RH E; of the winners and left them easy cucazo % ae coo ee A a prey for the American Leaguers. Rage andl rimtoste Heneieet| Brandt and Spohrer. | Second Game | R H Chicago ... 000 001 010-2 6 Boston .... 000 200 10x—3 8 0) Tinning and Hartnett; Brown and Spohrer. Fil Dodgers Slaughter Bucs | Brooklyn—The Dodgers buried three Pirate pitchers under a barrage of 17, hits to win, 12 to 2. Frank O'Doul: made two homers. ! HE 3| | Brooklyn 102 05 211x—12 17 4 Chagnon, Spencer, Brame and| |Grave, Finney, Clark and Lopez. R Phils Blank Cardinals i __Philadelphia—A home run by Hurst | in the first inning with two on base | | Save the Phillies a 3 to 0 victory over; the St. Louis Cards. | 7 RH E| jSt. Louis.. 000 000 000-0 3 1| Philadelphia 300 000 00x—3 6 0 | Carleton and J. Wilson; Benge and V. Davis, Cincinnati-New York, stponed, cold weather. srs Linton Wrestler Issues Challenge Ernie Aultman of Linton, mid- dleweight wrestler from Linton, has thrown down the gauntlet, challenging any and all comers in the hope of reviving the mat game in North Dakota. In issuing his defy, Aultman says he is anxious to meet any man of his weight in the North- west. In Aultman’s scrap book are newspaper clippings of his en- counters with some of the lead- ing grapplers of the country in- cluding Jack Reynolds and Ralph Parcourt, middleweight cham- pion of the world. Aultman formerly hailed from Nebraska but now is making his 2) jSt. Louis.. 010 000 000-1 4 11} Stewart, | FIRST ROUND PLAY TO GET UNDER WAY Contestants May Play Qualify- ing Rounds During Next Three Days SEEK BISMARCK TITLE Players With 16 Low Medal Scores Will Be Entered in Championship Flight Bismarck golfers with an eye on the Capital City championship turned to the Country club links here Friday for the first sally in the annual city tournament. Lists for qualifying rounds will be kept open until Sunday noon to give candidates as much time as possible to turn in cards, according to an an- nouncement made by Thomas J. Burke, tourney chairman. First-round matches will get under way Saturday afternoon while match- es thereafter will be played at the convenience of contestants. All matches must be played off by the end of the week, however, Burke said. The 16 players having the low medal scores in the 18-hole qualify- ing round will be bracketed in the championship flight. | Consolation flights have been arranged for those in the lower brackets. The tourney is open to all golfers of the Capital City and the winner will be regarded as city champion. Players wishing to compete will be required to notify Tom O'Leary, club professional, before starting qualify- ing rounds. the finals, which will be played over the 36-hole route. Nine-Game Margin All But Clinches Flag For Millers 1} | and| Minneapolis Team Could Coast! Rest of Way and Still Win Pennant ; Chicago, Sept. 9.—()—Minneapolis jean strat slowing down any day now in the American Association race. With only 19 games left on their schedule, the Millers Friday were ;coasting along with a full nine-game j2dvantage over the second-place Co- jtroit Tigers in the first game of a|lumbus Red Birds and can clinch the! |doubleheader. 6 to 4, but the second pennant with a little better than 500! |baseball even if Columbus desn’t lose pucker game. The ninth game was tacked on theiz while Louisville dropped the Red Birds, 4 to 3. The veteran Rube Ben- ton was hit freely but lasted to ring up his 17th victory of the campaign. St. Paul made it four straight over Kansas City, 5 to 3, in another piteh- ing duel. Munns gave the Blues but | SUNDAY AFTERNOON All matches will be 18 holes except | | OUT OUR WAY You | “To BE GETTING { INTO THINGS | "4 GOING CAR WITH us! I DONT WANT WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY. » -NO — ie. TH CAR, TO BE GiITTN. OUT FER THINGS —' ME IN L KNOow SE, IN THE Hou: GET OvT OURNAMENT AT COUNTRY CLUB By Williams | WOU WANT wHY IM AWS , DRUG ALONG ——"OH, DON, AN' GIT ME A PACK O' GOM~— OH, DON GIT OUT AN’ SEE IF A TIRES FLAT~ _ OH,OON , GITOLT AN’ MAIL. THESE LETTERS — REQ. U. 5. PAT. OFF. Meets Vines in Semi-Finals; Al- lison and Cochet in } Other Bracket Forest Hills, N. Y., Sept. 9.—(#)-- The headlines have been going to other stars but Cliff Sutter, Tulane University youngster, has been play- ling’ a lot of tennis in the national championships, now in the semi-final round. | Sutter's rivals in the round before the final were Ellsworth Vines, de- | fending champion, Wilmer Allison, and Henri Cochet of France, all of in the world’s tennis lists. But the Southerner had earned one | distinction the other three all lacked. \He had progressed to the semi-finals | without losing a set. In succession he jhas bowled over Frank Fiala of Phil- ladelphia, Carl Fischer of Woodbury, jN. J. Eddie Jacobs of Baltimore. }Henry W. Austin of England, and |George M. Lott of Chicago. Not ons of them succeeded in giving him a; battle. Lott went down before the southern flash Thursday in the tournament's} major upset and won only eigh! games, all of them in the first set. {After Sutter had won that chapter. 110-8, he polished off the CHleaenen R H E tead Thursday as they defeated Mil-| With two love sets. waukee, 9 to 7. in a free-hitting game | | Vines, who was to play the Tulane |star Friday, earned his way into the ‘semi-finals by beating Charles Marks, |Gabriel Lavine, Keith Glendhill and Lester Stoefen. Vines trounced Sote- fen in the quarter-finals Thursday. 6-3. 7-5, 6-4. The other semi-finalists, Cochet and four hits and was given 10-hit sup-/@nd Allison, also had dropped only port, headed by Phil Todt, who crack-|one set in gaining the round before ed out a home run and one double. A double down the left field line by 5 to 4 victory over Toledo. Scores by innings: \ — i Saints Trim Blues | St. Paul—Les Munns held the Blues} to four hits as the Saints defeated! Kansas City 5 to 3. 5 al R Kansas City 010 020 000-3 4 1 St. Paul... 031 000 10x—5 10 1 Gabler and M. Snyder, Munns and Guiliani. Indians Win In 10th Toledo—Indianapolis went 10 inn- ings to defeat the Toledo Mudhens| 5 to 4, E RH Indianapolis 010 002 1001— 5 10 1 Toledo..... 010 000 0300—4 11 2 Thomas, Heving and Angley, Riddle; Pearson, Moon and O'Neill. ; Won handily, the finals, and both saw their records of straight-set triumphs cracked ‘Chapman with two out in the 10th to|Thursday. Sidney Wood took the | Boston—The Braves divided a pair score Rosenberg gave Indianapolis a opening set from Allison before bow- ing, 5-7, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4, and Frank Shields accomplished the same feat against Cochet, but the Frenchman | 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-0. Boxers Preparing For Hostilities On Program Here Doc Holly of St. Paul Works Out For Battle With Dick Demeray of Aberdeen Preparatory to opening up the pugi- them holding a much higher rankingy Colonels Nose Out Birds jlistic season in Bismarck, local boxers Louisville—The Louisville Colonels; are working out regularly at Neff's nosed out the Columbus Red Birds 4! gymnasium getting in shape for bouts | | Knott, Hillin and Crouch; Benton i | jto 3. R H Columbus.. 001 001 010-3 10 2 Louisville.. 000 210 Olx—4 8 Lee and Sprinz; Penner and Shea. Millers Win Another Minneapolis — Although outhit, Minneapolis defeated Milwaukee 9 to 7. HE 13,2 R Milwaukee. 101 102 002—7 Minneapolis 105 010 02x—-9 9 2 and Richards. ° Se Yesterday’s Stars | ———_—_—_—_—_——_________4 (By The Associated Press) Sammy Byrd, Yankees — Battered Tiger pitching for five hits, including ;two home runs. Charley Root, Cubs, and Bob Brown, Braves—Each allowed only six hits as teams split doubleheader. Frank O'Doul, Dodgers — Collected two home runs and two singles against Pirates. Ray Benge, Phillies — Beat Cardi- nals on three hits and struck out eight. Clint Brown, Indians — Outpitched Bob Grove, holding Athletics to four hits and winning. 2-1. Ted Lyons, White Sox—Held Red Sox to six hits 2nd scored winning run after singling in 10th. headquarters at Linton. Any wrestler, who may wish to answer his challenge, may communciate with him or E. Vogel, his man- ager, at Linton. Monte Weaver and Carl Reynolds— Former held Browns to four hits, lat- ter collected triple, double and two singles. EE Bt. Louis police get realistic tar- on a boxing program to be staged at Elthe World War Memorial building Sept. 16, according to Fred Thim- 3| mesch, president of the Bismarck Ath- letic Club. “Doc” Holly, St. Paul welter, wired the club management Thursday to the effect that he was conditioning himself at the Rose Room um and promised to be in the “pink’ when he swings into action against Dick Demeray of Aberdeen, 8. D., in the headline event. Wilfred Parrow, Demeray’s man- | ager, writes that the Aberdeen slug- ger is in for the hardest fight of his ring career against the “toughest welter in the northwest.” Local dopesters, however, profess to believe that Demeray will get the nod when hostilities are over. A note of interest has been in- jected into the program with the booking of the “Mystery Man,” whose identity promoters refuse to divulge. He is said to be a lightweight of abil- ity, who for personal reasons, insists that his name be withheld from the public. He has been working out here for several weeks and will be matched with Dixie Miller of Sioux City, Iowa. Efforts are being made to match two local college boys for a special curtain raiser, Thimmesch said. Both are well-known on the gridiron and basketball courts of the state. Pro- hibited by amateur rules from accept- ing money for their services, they will make their debut in the squared circle in the interests of boxing, Thimmesch said. get practice by shooting at actors on { ai Tribune Want Ads Bring Results Sutter Playing (Championship Tennis [Babe Ruth Probably Will Play in Series Despite His Appendicitis New York, Sept. 9—(?)—All's not well with Babe Ruth's appen- dix but baseball's only $75,000-a- year performer probably will be able to steer clear of the operat- ing table until after the world series at least. An examination revealed symp- toms of appendicitis but the Babe’s_ personal physician, Dr. Edward A. King, said his prelim- inary diagnosis indicated there was no necessity for an immedi- ate operation. As a precaution, however, Dr. King ordered Ruth to bed for 24 hours, preliminary to another and more conclusive examination when definite decision will be reached on the question of an operation. Barring a change for the worse in the New York Yankees slug- ger’s condition, it appeared like- ly Ruth would be fully recovered in a few days and certainly in time to participate in his 10th world series, asuming the Yan- would assume even greater pro- portions, from a headline stand- point, than his famous illness of 1925, when he was stricken with the “tummy ache that was heard around the world.” At that time, however, he came back to New York on a stretcher, | & victim of influenza and indiges- | tion. He detrained Thursday un- | der his own power. One interviewer cast some doubt | on whether or not the big slugger ; knew on which side his appendix | Was located. “Well, if I didn’t, I do now,” he retorted. “Anyway I decided the best to do was to come back | home and let Doc King look me | over. He knows all about my in- } sides. He has cared for them like | a mother.” ! Some one else suggested that the Babe might have been eating too many “hot dogs” again. They were charged with partial re- sponsibility for his condition in 1925. “Oh, it couldn’t have been that,” kees win the American League Ruth said. “I’ve been eating pennant. few ‘dogs’ I’ve had lately haven't- For a time it appeared as few “dogs’ I've had lately haven't though Ruth's latest ailment been hot.’ COACH ANDERSON PREDICTS BIG YEAR FOR NOTRE DAME Declares Loss of Last Two Games in 1931 Serves Only to Spur Irish South Bend, Ind, Sept. 9—(R)— Heartly “Hunk” Anderson is ready to stand or fall on his own legs at Notre Dame this fall. Some of his critics, still amazed the Ramblers lost their last two football games in 1931, think he'll fall, but “Hunk” figures to have them on the run by the time the smoke clears from the fall campaign. He has an abundance of material to draw from—almost 10 good men for each position—and a staff of as- sistants picked and approved by him- self to work with. It wasn’t much of a secret all dur- ing last year’s campaign that serious friction existed between Anderson and his chief field marshall, Jack Chevigny. Several times questions of coaching policy came up for dispute. Then as the season ended with two straight defeats, Chevigny left and “Hunk” was given just the helpers he wanted—Marchmont Schwartz, Tommy Yarr and Nordy Hoffman, star members of his 1931 football cast, and “Ike” Voedisch, end coach of a year ago. Catching the big director of Notre Dame's football army in a pessi- mistic mood is harder than trying to |stop the South Bend cyclone on the gridiron. As he prepares for the training grind, he’s more optimistic over prospects than the freshest freshmat! in. “We're going to have another great team this fall and it’s no use trying to play bear,” he replied almost be- fore the usual question reached him. “Of course, any team can be stopped by injuries such as trailed us toward the close of last season but we've got @ great gang of players. They haven't been downheasted because we finally lost a couple games last fall and are raring to start a winning streak. A long winning streak in football isn’t such a good thing anyway. It’s some- thing like a baseball team’s streak. After they win several in a row, the Players get jumpy and don’t play up to their best performance.” “Hunk’s” only worry along with the injury jinx is the “dead ball” rule, which he fears will cramp the style of his vets. Use the Want Ads HARD TO CONVINCE @ Be as skeptical as you like’ —but try the Gillette BLUE BLADE. 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