The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1932, Page 6

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SFIS EEO ST a e ? “ t ? Beane THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1982 North Dakota Begins Hard Work in Preparation for South Dakota ° THOBSWARKWEN NORTHWESTERN WILL STAKE AL CONTINUE IN LINEUP IN SPIE OF SHPTS.- e=-——— Harold Tait and Ted Meinhover Probably Will Start Against Coyotes FIND NEW BACKFIELD STAR Clyde Huddieson, Promising Sophomore, Expected to See Service . Nov. 8. Dakota's their moup was ho went 4 lay of th for two plays. The the bs sliced when Ted Ni ck 3 de ball to the dieson in t in with Huddleson Cope him: into run while Cope varryin: did fine ball- some Worlds of Drive both e on was exhibi in: vicious on every M Rip Daplov fe defense sensatior in a Coyotes ments, i face an offense x the 1 riday t ractics best this ‘d without season, ar additional in, Fri be the celebrat: north cent: on will e day he final gement for both y loop engagement will have no effect on! nding of the teams, since the 2 pected to} week and | defeat Morningside cinch the title. next | Grid Questions as | Seen by Jack Wes TACTICS AND STRATEGY Question | A long run has brought the ball to | the eight-yard line and out of| bounds. If you have a normal of- fense how far will you bring the ball in, and what kind of play you call? Answer | ‘You should have the officials bring the ball in 15 yards from the side- line where the ball carrier was forced offside. Then begin a concentrated attack for the goal line, remembering all the time that you must score this time, and that as you get closer to the goal line, the center of the de- fensive line gets stronger and more determined. Your offensive meas- ures will be governed to a large ex- tent by the success you have had in your previous attempts to gain by running. If you have noticed that the defensive tackle plays either in too far or outside of your end, then you know that you can run a play ‘at him; or perhaps the guatds have been charging out, or the ends have been waiting on the line of scrim- mage. Perhaps one of the defensive backs has the habit of coming up fast to back up the line, disregard- {ng your passing attack. Such man- nerisms should be noticed by the quarterback, and it is his duty to take advantage of such misplays. GRID RULES Question On a try-for-point the kick is blocked but is recovered by the kick- ing side and is carried across the goal line. What is the decision? Answer The point is not allowed. If the | kick fails to score a goal, the ball be- comes dead, and there is no second! attempt, such as described above. of the si scored OUR BOARDING HOUSE M7 High Schools to Bismarck-Mandan Game Fea- tures Undefeated So Far (By A score North Dakota opponents. Fs Mandan do not meet this will orth = hampic n, 6 son 0. Standir ‘andan ‘and Minot Hett Mayville Sherwor Edgeley St. Ma Enderili: Linton Lemmo: Reeder Bree! LARIMORE BEATS LAKOTA Lakota, N. D., more high school {here 12 to 6 ina Captain Walter Hass of Minnesota The Southerners were trounced 26 hool foo tradit AFTER GOING OVER ALL THE REPLIES TO MY OFFER. TO INVEST $800 ,I HAVE DECIDED THAT THE BEST PROPOSITION 1S THE ONE FROM MR NERTLES, THE MAN WHO PROPOSES TO PUT ON THE MARKET AN ICE CUBE WITH GINGER. ALE FLAVORJo~T WILL GINE HIM AN YA INTERVIEW DECIDES ON THE GINGER ICE CUBES WELL,USE YOUR OWN JUDGMENT , BUT SINCE NOT 6O FOR THAT GUY GRAVY SPors | ? ALE YOURE GOING TO TIE YOUR. MONEY ON A BALLOON, WHY WITH THE TRANSPARENT SLIRCOVER FOR NECKTIES, TO PROTECT THEM FROM By Ahern Program; Braves Are End JACK MANDERS HURTS ANKLE __AND MAY NOT PLAY SATURDAY *: = The Associated Press) » of football games Armistice b to a close the 1332 all season. onal battle between Bis- nd Mandan at the Morton y heads the list of games The Minot-Fargo clash at o will be an battle sof Larimo: an in important | first s s out as the only n to be undefeated as the Ss an end although Fargo. nalked up against by out-of-state teams req efeated in contests with and 13 to 6 victory over the Coy- annexed the Central; g:. paul, Nov, 7—(4)—The Minne- _ The injury Ds football conference | soza college football season will c defeating Fessen-| to a close this week with the te: . . playing in a six-game pi a heir first other results: Fergus Falls’ § oul apithic these Goohers in their fir ton 0; es 7, Hankin Gu: fos a Valley City 0:| ‘The 9. Moorhead 0; Carson 7; Bowman 20, Mott 0; yibaux, Mont., 0; Mino’ model high 7, Kenmare 6; ¢ Bismarck 0; Sisseton, S. D.,. ¢. d marek 13, Dick homecoming ngs include: ) Arm Won Lost at 6 ico Di Tomr OUP REE HS k at Mandan. at Fargo, at Bowman. | le at Cooperstown. od at Crosby. t La Moure. one. 's, Bismarck, at Elgin. in at Lisbon, | title. at Hankinson. e at Mohall. at Eureka, 8. D. n, S. D., at Mott. at Rhame. | the title. nridge, Minn., at Wahpeton. ; ; Tecord clear. Nov. 8.—(P)}—Lari thrilling gridiron Tennessee. ied Mary's, won from Coe, ind Major Bill Stopping a L: s short of a sco contest. ned the length of the fie! the winning counter. » fullback ran 60 pass for hi the Macalester And Hamline to Meet Rivals in Contest Featuring Six- Game Program in Minne- w sota Conference i 13 Adolphus hpeton Indians are due for selon final league tiit, and Hamline—will be a du: affair mes will be outside the state | in the final midwest loop game. Two games are booked for Pris with St. Olaf pla: nd Hibbing Junior college clashing with Concordia col- lege at Moorhead. ers will be at St. John’s Saturday The second Sunday game in his- | servatively over Minnesota's possib' jtory of the northwest is slated for the St. Thomas field when DePaul! gives his team an “outside chance” of Chicago comes here to play the to win next Sunda: Adolphi St. Olaf lost its homecoming to ning pl Luther college of Decorah, Towa, to 0, in the last period while Carleton | He hurt a leg Saturday. ; 20 to 6, at Cedar | Rapids, Iowa, to keep its midwest | : Another win Saturday , | will give the Carls at least a tie for | won a drive three in the closin: Larimcre Bob E Nov. 8. ner ota, ders of Minne: sthe student with not get into urday. ilit the nkle curing onday. nC a down, d to the training from tl ler will take e regul: season, and Augsburg aves 1 oe and all o' for he in ing, St. Cloud teach-| Minneapolis, Nov. Bernie Bierman, which held twice over that . Gives Team ‘Outside Chance’ at Victory: 8.—(P)—Coach' speculating co! ities of downing Wisconsin Saturday. 4—One leading contenders for big Jack Man- as a casualty in health service Tuesday. might. Wisconsin game next he Grid Year Friday . Minnesota Fullback Injured in) W Passing Play During Mon- day Workout Manders severely sprained his left s ard pass practic? /¢rilied hard for Illinois. big fullback collided | rl Tengler, a reserve player Manders had to be quarter: p to the health service. was the second f the season for Manders. and In injured his knee and s activities with the three game: Manders’ for the rest of t before Minne: sday night for Madison. | Wis. Whether Manders will get into ame with the Badgers will de-| upon his response to treatments place A victor now four times straight, conference opponents. to a scoreless tie last week,| Minnesota will try to keep up the| and St. Thomas finished the teague | march over Wisconsin with whatever schedule in a tie for second place. helping momentum was acquired in ; The Tommies downed Hamline, 20|the defeat of Mississippi, in which! ing a forfeited game by Warren to to 6, to win the Twin Cities college | game Bierman thought the Gophers] its list of six victories and one defeat, Each team won three games|! were “a little fla land lost one, while the Gusties tied back who gained 241 yards in run- 7 be rea Lin’ defi ball game here. LINTON BEATS HAZELTON . D., Nov, 8—(P}—Linton s fifth victory of the season by ing Hazelton, 28 to 6, in a foot- . i . “ Jack McDowall, coach of football,| defeated Laxota! coaching staff of the University of| basketball and baseball at Rollins Dame, is a brother of the famous ‘eollege, is preparing to coach golf. Gopher Captain Rips Off Long Gain shown above reeling off a Jong run which gained 23 yards in ‘Mississippi quarierback, is shown just as he was of WILDCATS WILL TRY 10 REDEEM SELVES | thing to Gain and Noth- | ing to Lose Drill Preparing For ’ Pennsylvania | Chicago, Nov. 8.—(4)—Northwestern |Tuesdav started rallying its football |strength for one big win or bust ven- ture t Notre Dame at South Bend Saturday. on three times and tied once own league, Northwestern finds thing-to-gain and g-to-lose spot. and Coach Dick has decided to shoot the in an effort to rescue some- thing from a bad season. Notre Dame, bac! innit ride after losing to Pitt in the biegest upset in years, fig- ures the Wildeasts feel that a tri- umph will atone for cther disappoint- s. and is preparing accordingly. v let his regulars off Monday, but ordered them out for a big week of practice starting Tuesday. Roy |Aucuston probably will be the quar- ! Hanley y 1 be tried at Coach Hunk Anderson coun- | sending John Robinson to) last. Saturday, red by icenter. demoting Kitty Gorman and Ben Alexander to the second and |third teams respectively, and moving tain Paul Host back to end on the got right down to busi- s Monday, Coach Harry Kipke see- a need of plenty of work. on the lverine running game before Chi- iin the last two games of the season. ‘Purdue. the runnerup in the confer- nding. got an afternoon off 11 go to no extra trouble for in spite of the Hawkeyes’ im- nroved showing against Nebraska last Saturday Monday rest was mps. Wisconsin while Minneso- t foe, drilled on State got a brisk of- the start of prepara- sylvania, and Indiana The Illini missin mmaced Mond: got off with al drill. Iowa's regul: were excused and the Chicago varsity watched a dem- onstration of Michigan formations. “Heffelfinger to Play Once More = — neapolis, Nov. 8—)—P. W. c) Heffelfinger, of Minne- all-Ar can guard for | three years bac turning to the gridiron wars. On | Armistice Day he will play at | guard with Alumni of Minneap- olis Central high shcool in their clash with Minneapolis South + High Alumni. Pudge. 64 years old. was chosen | for Walter Camp's all-America in | 1889, 1890 and 1891, when he | played with the Yale university | eleven. He has agreed to play five min- utes in the Armistice Day encoun- | ter—all the time coaches of the Alumni team would allow him. FORFEr TO GRAFTON Grafton, N. D., Nov. 8—(#)—Graf- ton high school's football season has come to an end with Grafton add- | Coach Leo I. Schweinfurt said. Bierman said Francis Lund, half-| Grafton was scheduled to play at Warren, Minn., Saturday, but War- against Mississippi, would | ren forfeited. to play against Wisconsin. In the first four games this seasor Purdue's packs, all together, averaged 4.28 yards per try or running plays from scrimmage. The team had com- pleted 12 out of 29 forward passes for a total aerial gain of 255 yards, an Linton has lost two;average of 8.8 yards per attempt. Three former West Pointers—Ma- games and tied one. | reernemenen jor Bob Neyland, Col. Paul Parker Britton—form the | Mike Layden, a member of the freshman football squad at Notre Elmer, fullback of a few years ago. Saiurday’s game with the University of Mississippi. ~ BY DEFEATING RSH Dick Hanley’s Team Has Every-| | MICHIGAN TO FACE CHICAGO Ohio State Gets Brisk Offensive *| n the '90s, is re- | Valley City | Edick, Former Bismarck High| L AGAINST NOTRE DAME | | | | HOW PITT SMOTHERED NOTRE DAME’S FAST BACKS |Three Will Play’ Out-of-State] Elevens; Two Conference | Games Planned (By The Associated Press) | State colleges mark the Armistice! | Day wind-up games of the North Da-| | kota Intercollegiate Conference foot- | | ball teams. | Minot invades South Dakota to |clash with Aberdeen Normal, while Spearfish, S. D., journeys to Dickin-| 0 and Minnesota are encountered | the Scientists at Wahpeton. In con-| Eastern ference Valley City plays at Ellen-| on the Jimmies gridiron. | has completed its schedule. | tilt with a view to continuing its rec- | Jord of being undefeated and untied| jin conference play. Minot has not| | marred by a 6-6 tie with D 8 | Savages. ! | town’s Jimmies downed Valley |33 to 0, the Wahpeton Scient | handed Concordia college a 39 to This picture graphically illustrates how the powerful University of Pittsburgh team achieved the lead- ing upset of the gridiron season by winning 12.0 from Notre Dame. Several Pitt players are shown swarm: ing on Brancheau, Notre Dame halfback, with much gusto. (Associated Press Photo) N. D. College Teams to be Busy Friday PITT, COLGATE OR BROWN MAY GET ROSE BOW \ = hae | _ Engagements with three out-of-| Appear Leading Contenders For! spectively, this week. The winner ot ‘the Thanksgiving day game might | well be invited west in the event that Invitation to Play New Year's Day son and the Crookston Aggies meet} now it appears that one of three} football | Pitt meets defeat. — | The South has produced two out- petra =a | standing teams in Auburn and Ten- New York, Nov. 8—(#)—There are) essee but both have played South- other possible nominees but right, €™ schedules exclusively and thus probably will be considered for the machines — Pitts- | Rose Bowl game only if all three of burgh, Colgate or Brown—will re-|the Eastern contenders prove un- Ellendale prepares for the Viking) Bowl game at Pasadena New Year's day. dale, and Mayville meets Jamestown! ceive the bid to play the Far West-| Vailable. Bottineau | ern representative, probably South- \ern California, in’ the annual Rose| included in the list of available clev- ens except for the fact that the Big Ten conference definitely frowns on Of these, Pitt, on the basis of its; Postseason engagements. more tasking schedule, seems most| | been defeated although its record is! likely to win the nomination, pro-| Atlanta wrestling fans Michigan or Purdue might well be enjoyed a vided the Panthers, conquerors of | fee show when an old state law re- feat. Pitt has had no luck in two previ-| | Southern California's 10 to 0 , Notre Dame and. Pennsyi-| Wiring the promoter to pay $20 tax In games last Week-end James-/ Vania, can get by Nebraska, Carne- | Per Show in addition to city and fed- .|gie Tech and Stanford without de-, ¢Ta! taxes was unearthed. de- setback and Dickinson blanked the | US appearances in the New Year's|feat of Stanford in 1928 was accom- day classic, bowing to Stanford by plished without making a first down | Mayville Comets, 12 to 0. Bottineau | | and Ellendale c: Ellendale because of bad roads. | | Conference standings town follo w. | ence Sap, OPO Minot . - 4 0 1 } | Wahpeton . Ree ase e TT Dickinson - 2 1 1 Jamestown ad: Sots Mayville an 3 0 | 4 0 Bottineau | 3 0 | i Jamestown Team Arrives For Tilt | With Dickinson’ School Player, Slated to | See Action Here Two visiting collegiate football teams arrived in Bismarck Monday prepared to go into action at Hughes Field at 3:30 p. m. They are the Jamestown College Jimmies and the Dickinson Teachers College Savages. Bismarck was selected as the neu- tral field on which the game would be played after it was postponed earl- jer because of bad weather. Jamestown, a fast and aggressive eleven, is expected to prove a close match for the Savages who have shown late season improvement. Larimore, fleet back, is an outstand- ing Dickinson performer in the back- field which includes Maule, Gruelke; and McDonald. Jamestown’s line in-| | cludes two freshmen, Edick and Jud- son. Edick, a former Bismarck high | school player, is the Jimmies’ light- | est performer but his aggressiveness has overcome his lacx of weight. | ‘The probable lineups: | Jamestown Pos Dickinson | Judson . le Quammen ' Chamberlain It Sieverts Travis Ig Harsch Roberts c Hammer Edick rg Glennen F, Hall rt Childers Hilden re Boering Egstrom qb McDonald Crouse Th O. Maule , Schwartz rh Gruelke | McLain fb Larimore | A questionnaire submitted to mem- | bers of the Notre Dame football squad | showed that most of them get thei greatest thrill from their first scrim. mage as fresgmen against the varsity | Vinson Sahlin, brilliant University ; of Chicago quarterback, won recogni- tion during his high school days in Chicago as one of the best young.) speed ice skaters in the mid-west. Purdue, in getting 20 first downs against Northwestern, piled up a Jarger figure than any opponent in Dick Hanley’s seven years a3 coach game, which ended 7-7. Lowell Mason, Duke quarterback, and Zene Wall, Wake Forest field general, have called signals on op-, posing teams since high school days. They met again this year. j | Al Espinosa, golf professional. is to remain with the Portage Country | about to make the tackle which brought down Hass. ! club in Ohio again next year. i ot the Purple, yet failed to win the i California in 1930, huskies. | the field of possible winners of the/ award in their battle at Providence | Thanksgiving day, both come Herat MY Motto’ through | against Syracuse and Columbia, re-| ketball and other sport: neelled the game at/cne point in 1928 and to Southern|by rushing and with but four Perhaps announced | Panther believes his luck will turn Monday by E. J. Cassell of James-|if he can get the bid this year. + Pitt will be heavily favored over L. ‘T, both Nebraska and Carnegie Tech’ but the battle with Stanford Nov. 26) may be the game which will decide | whether the Rose Bowl invitation | will go to Jock Sutherland’s crew of | the/ downs from passes. teams, first Trainers estimate 17,500 fect of tape, 35 gallons of alcohol and 5,000 feet of gauze are used each autumn by Kansas City high school football ork Sutherland's crew of) Capt. Ed Kostainsek of the Vir- feat by inford would | ginia Military insti nin gil Pies chames, {8 ary institute football team, has played at guard, tackle and cen- Colgate and Brown should reduce| ter and this year is at fullback. | Since January 1, Virginia athletic assuming that| teams have won 71 victories against games| 36 defeats in football, baseball, bas- FORGET That Want-Ad in The Bismarck Tribune You'll want that recently vacated room taken by a reliable tenant as quickly as possible. You can’t pos- sibly find a better result ‘producer than the Classi- fied Want-Ad Section of THE x"

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