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BEGINNING T0 GET ' SEASONED RESULTS; Hubbell, Ott, Ryan and Terry Stood Out Like Beacons’ | In Series ' OTT HOMER COST $200,000; Peceipts Disappointing as Champs Crushed Senators | in Five Games | New York, Oct. 9.—(#)—The clamor | and thrills of the Giants’ world series triumph trailed off Monday into his- tery as baseball bowed its way out the sports field clear for the king of fall for another season and left pastimes, football. But from now on until the major Series Leaders (By The Associated Press) Batting—Ott, Giants, 389; Davis, | Giants, .368. Hits—Ott and Davis, Cronin and Schulte, Senators, 7. Runs—Terry, Ott, and Jackson, | Giants, 3. Runs batted in—Ott, Giants, and | Schulte, Senators, 4. Doubles—Moore, Terry, Mancuso and Jackson, Myer, Goslin, Schulte, and Bluege, , Senators, 1 each. Triples—None. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 2; Ter- ry, Giants, Goslin and Schulte, Senators 1. Stolen bases—Sewell, Senators 1. | Pitching—Hubbell, Giants, 2-0; Schumacher and Luque, Giants, World Champion New THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1983 York Giants Look Ahead to Five Great Years YOUNGSTERS Us? INTERSECTIONAL RIVALRY TO BE IN FULL BLAST THIS WEEK OUR BOARDING HOUSE SNUFFY, MY PAL—THE MUSE OF SCIENCE AND INVENTION BECKONS MY RETURN TO THE LABORATORY f-HAR-R-RUMF- HERE |S $50 FOR YOUR KIND ASSISTANCE, AND TL AM TURNING OVER THIS PET STORE TO YOU, LOCK STOCK AND BARREL? AND, FOR YOUR FIRST SALE, TLL BUY A COUPLE OF CANNES By Ahern FIFTY BUCKS! 1 NEVER SAW THAT MUCH SUGAR IN ONE LUMP IN 25 . YEARS OF HAT PASSIN'S GOSH ,MASOR, THANKS! NOW, I CAN WALK IN TH’ HOUSE WITHOUT DUCKIN® CROCKERY? AN’,AS FOR GIVIN ME TH STORE (TOO — SAY —-THATS TOO MUCH PIE ON a, STANFORD-PURPLE, | CORNELL-MICHIGAN | GAMES SCHEDULED Vanderbilt's Eleven Will Battle TO BE CLASS SCHEDULE Is a BALL IN FAVORITE PLAYS OF FAMOUS COACHES BIERMAN’S PET PLAY 18 Pitt-Navy, St. Mary’s-Trojan, Oregon-Washington Con- OF WEST COAST Great Array of Line and Back- field Material Noted By Spaulding BY BILL SPAULDING (Coach base of California at Angeles it, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) Los Angeles, Oct. 9—With great personnel, plenty of experience and logy, the Trojans of Giants, \ tests Coming Up New York, Oct. 9.—()—Intersec- tional rivalries flare up in earnest this week, battling for recognition in another heavy schedule of football “naturals.” Principal intersectional interest will center on Cornell’s invasion of Ann Arbor for a tussle with Mich- igan and Stanford’s journey eastward to play Northwestern in Chicago. Michigan, Big Ten champion last year, opened its cafsaign last week with a 20-6 triumph over Michigan State. Stanford’s Indians, with three vic- tories already behind them, probably will start as favorites over North- western, which absorbed a stunning defeat at Iowa's hands 10 days ago. Only Vanderbilt's duel with Ohio j and Whitehill, Senators, 1-0. | Teagues gather again in spring train- ing camps, there was material! enough for the hot stove league ses- sions through the long winter nights | _ to challenge any intervening excite- | ment in the feats of the tall thin southpaw from Oklahoma, Carl Hub- hind superb pitching first to the league title, then a world series triumph over the highly-favored Washington Senators in five games. . iF | _ “Furthermore,” warned Terry Mon- Series Highlights ||day, “this is a team that should be ca jgood for five more years. Pitchers (By The Associated Press) \like Hubbell, the best in the world Greatest pitching—Hubbell’s rec- | \right now, Hal Schumacher, Roy Par- ord of 20 innings without an earn- |!melee and Fred Fitzsimmons will be ed run scored against him. even better next year. Everywhere Most effective batting — Ott’s || else on the team are youngsters just home runs in the first and fifth games. Minimum of pitching effort—By ‘Whitehill in the third game, when he retired side on four pitched balls in fifth inning. Most important fielding play— The double play, Ryan to Critz to Terry, which ended the 11-inning fourth game. Most surprising plays—Two bunts, one by Mancuso in the sec- ond game and another by Jackson in the fourth. Best pinch-hitting performance —O'Doul’s single with the bases filled in the second game. Unluckiest pinch hitting perfor- mance—Bolton’s grounder in the fourth game which was turned in- to a double play, ending the game. Most important single pitch— The third strike Luque pitched to Kuhel, ending the series. Greatest infield play—By Myer in the third inning of the third game when he snared Ryan's pop fy. Luckiest play—Terry’s pickup of Goslin’s savage smash down the first base line in the 10th inning of the final game. Terry himself | called it lucky. bell; the home run hitting of little, getting good. The best days of out- | {fielders like Mel Ott, George Davis |;and Joe Moore are still ahead of jthem; Ryan is just a kid; Gus Man- ||cuso will be an even greater catcher ||next season; and I know Travis Jack- son, Hughie Critz and myself still are far from through.” ‘The success of Terry's strategy, and the failure of just about everything Joe Cronin tried. left the 26-year-old manager of the Senators looking just about his age as a big league pilot from the moment he Started left- \handed Wally Stewart against the Giants in the first game until Mel Ott, with two out and the bases empty in the 10th, sent one of Jack Russell's fast galls into the center field stands with Fred Schulte tumbling after it for the home run that won the fifth encounter, 4 to 3. | The failure of the Senators to pro- long the series beyond five games | |cost the magnates considerable money. “That hit of yours,” said Charley Stoneham, of the Giants, to Mel Ott after the final game, cost me exactly $200,000 and was worth every penny of it.” |__ The series was one of the poorest fi- nancially in modern history, the | Players’ pool dropping below $300,000 jfor the first time in 11 years as the crowds in Washington never exceeded | | | i Melvin Ott, the boy wonder of Louis- | 28,000 and the Giants failed to sell jana; the flair and color of New/out in two games here. England's blonde John Ryan, and the | master-minding of Memphis Bill, Terry. | Rarely have newly-crowned cham-| The Giants’ winning shares were only $4,600 each, the Senators $3,400. GAME GAINS POPULARITY pions of baseball's realm presented such a varied cast of heroes and near-heroes as Gas amazing group that came from nowhere through the national league season, universally | J#Panese spectators. branded a second division ball club A recent night baseball game be- \tween the Waseda varsity and the school’s freshman squad drew 30,000 | ‘and through sheer fight, spirit, OUT OUR WAY AGAINGT ME and mastery in the pinches, climbed be-| Pyramid. ORAGGIN' You ALONG, IF YOURE It took 76 years to build the Great 'NOTRE DAME IS LUCKY TO GET SCORELESS TIE WITH KANSAS. Hanson Leads North Dakota State _ Bison to 7-0 Win Over Morningside State will be able to compete on even terms with such sectional struggles as those between Pitt and Navy, St. Mary's (Calif.) and Southern Call- fornia, Oregon and Washington; Pur- {due and Minnesota, Duke and Ten- — and Georgia and North Caro- tina, winning Southern California look like repeat- ers to win the Pa- cific coast cham- pionship. Practically every school along the coast begins the 1933 season with a better outfit than last year’s. And the Trojans have kept right in step with the im- provement pa- rade. True, TROUBLE TO BIG TEN BY ART KRENZ (NEA Servive Sports Writer) A newcomer to the Big Ten circuit last year already has mapped out a successful ground-gaining play after ‘one season of watching defenses of Western Conference teams. | He is Bernie Bierman, Minnesote | mentor, who tells me the play de- seribed here is “one of my favorites.” “The team lines up with the strong side of the line to the right,” Bier- taan explains, “And here’s what hap- “The ball is passed to No. 2 back. No. 3 pivots and fakes, taking the ball from No. 2, while No. 1 fades wide as if to receive a lateral. “No. 2, however, continues with the ball through the line, with No. 6 and 7 blocking the opposing player ‘D,’ and Ernie "| Tow-Headed Halfback Grabs Pass for Only Score in Second Period Fargo, N. D., Oct. 9.—(7)—Thanks to the individual brilliance of Fritz Hanson, the speedy, rythmic tow- head halfback of the North Dakota is leading the North Central foot- {ball race, defending a title it won Agricultural college Bison, the Herd ‘@ year ago when the rabbit-like Han- son also was a star. Hanson raced to a touchdown mid- ‘way in the second period of the Bi- son's opening conference engagement | Jayhawkers Threaten to Score Seven Times; 20,000 Fans | Astounded South Bend, Ind. Oct, 9.—(7)}—A/ Kansas football cyclone roared out of | the western plains Saturday to shat-! Cornell-Michigan and Stanford- |-America Northwestern games dominate the adiee tis Sasoen maven ronal midwest program, marked by five good in his position as the other regu- other intersectional contests. Ohio lar guard. Youell is as good # cen- State, 75-0 victor over Virginia last ter as any one could wish for. He is week, plays Vanderbilt; Mississippi @ senior with two years of pivot ex- encounters Marquette; Carnegie Tech perience behind him. and Kentucky invade Cincinnati tor | Southern California is well-fixed battles with Xavier and the Univer- for ends, Palmer eee epee precctetae seactad Notre one, and an ming rant meanee at the » lucky to get @ scoreless tie with Griftit Kansas in its first start last week, Warburton, Howard, Clem Ol, Plays Indiana, equally lucky to tie Minnesota, 6-6. Minnesota makes its second Big Ten start against Purdue’s Boilermakers while Illinois and Wis- consin tangle in another conference feature. Big Six conference competi- gridiron tradition that has stood like a Gibralter for 32 years. Before 20,000 astounded fans, most of whom fully expected to view a football slaughter, the fighting Uni- versity of Kansas team battered down tradition with surprising ease by holding the highly-vaunted Notre Dame to a scoreless tie. It was the first time a Notre Dame team had been tied in the opening game of the season since 1901, long before the Ramblers became one of the mighty hordes of college football warfare. With a little luck, just a small , break, the bristling Jayhawkers might have had a victory Saturday. But fate seemed against them every time they blasted the Rambler defense works with a line that wouldn't be stopped and a set of backs that made spectacular dashes only to offset many of them by fumbles. As it turned out, the Jayhawks were moral victory they ever carried away from a football field. Five times the Jayhawks shook the Ramblers back on their heels in their cious score. Twice, they tried to kick their way in with a placement only to have the infuriated Rambler line crash in to block one attempt and hurry the kicker on the second so that he miss- ed. Only twice did Notre Dame make serious threats and both came at the start of the game and the cept for a long pass that was called ter and topple a prized Notre Dame | possessors of probably the greatest: gallant but futile drive for the pre- '! ‘cotah field Saturday night, and his \fensive left halfback, and then out- against the Maroons of Mi le lorningside|tion opens with Nebraska meeting college under the floodlights of Da- Towa State and Kansas State play- ing Missouri. Mandan Gridders Defeat Dickinson gash was the direct cause of @ 7-0 victory the Bison scored. Hanson, in that one brief dash, was even more brilliant than the flood- lights which cast his flying shadow upon the ground, after he had made @ spectacular catch of a pass pro- pelled by George May, pivoted away from Denton Dean, Morningside de- Mandan defeated Dickinson, 12 to 6, at Mandan Saturday in a wild game marked by sensational runs by Ferderer, Mandan left half, and Cul- Ti speeds snes cnn (eer grated‘ Dickiagon a er . Pass ery si and Just as Dean appeared to have the | at the 30-yard line and raced 70 yards heed be Gprogscitigpndoa venice well with subs. Colburn, a Pass blocked, Hanson scooted in,/for @ touchdown in the third period. |to block out the opposing left half, |Smashing fullback and should be as reached over Dean's shoulder, and in|Culbertson had scored first with @/.> Nos, 10 and 11 cut through for |800d as Schwarts who played on the the same motion landed on the /30-yard run. the safety, ‘K’. cham} ip Cougar team. Sarboe, ground, pivoted away with lightning} Dickinson, with a giant line, made “This play can be used in connec-|®" experienced back, fine kicker and rapidity and then rythmically crossed |long gains in plunges by Schiff and tion with companion plays, such as «| >asser and dynamite in the open. es penne ee tw enficreeen ae ae are lineup: lateral from No. 3 to No. 1, or a paas| W' \—Better off than in a extra point on a rom placement, i Dickinson 3 t number of years. Two good ends, and the Bison, held to » scoreless | Stumpt le Rau | UY with No. 3 dropping back to dolWent beianced line. Some of the best deadlock by Concordia in its opener | Berry It Ashbacher s backs on the coast. Sulkosky, the best ‘and to a 7-7 tie by St. Thomas last | Zahn Ig Nasset ft since Tesreau. Ahonen, fine week, had satisfied the pangs of a|Murphy c prenal|SOuth Dakota Loses _|in the open tied. Muczynski, fine all- 'victory-hungry following. Dietrich rg Weinch To U of Cincinnati former. Hanson's touchdown was only orie | Schmidt rt Patricks Oregon—Had steam at the end of of many scoring gestures both teams | Partridge le Hannel Cincinna nega last year and may keep right on go- ee ep cpg EE eg Gelis and inoe Onis modes at |e, ch Agnew | Williams gave the University of Cin-|heavier and fester, though lacking ex- lg ar raereeee yer osteey ug Clark |veraity of South Dakete Gaturday, |" 'Otegea, Btate—Cireat possiblities tasted the Chat nt ce te ice Chi ‘The Bearcats kept the ball in South |Held the Trojans to 10 last Sorard line just: preceding Hanson's |CMiSOX Make It Four | |pakotes territory and the Coyotes|year, the touchdown from a| touchdown dash, and later out on the Straight From Cubs}? reaten once. Cincinnatt sub- |long forward. Fine triple-threat play Morningside 2-yard line, was one of piensa stitutes were used freely. expected from Franklin. Coach Lon half. All the rest of the ptcgrey ithe fine features of an improved Bison Chicago, Oct. 9.—(P)—The Chicago team. White Sox ruled supreme in city base- \ LIDGERWOOD BEATS MILNOR Lidgerw THaT TREO , BOT. DONT BE LEANIN ANO Poin’ CoWN ON, 5S Ano Bronze ‘Company, |Alert Indiana Eleven, Outplayed Throughout, Ties Minnesota 6-6 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AGAIN | | Lyons, Indiana End, Grabs Fumble in Midfield and Races to Goal Minnet Oct. 9.—(P}—An alert | Indiana team, outplayed in every de- ~ partment for virtually the entire | game, converted a costly Gopher fum- | ble into a touchdown to tie the Min- (Mesota eleven, 6 to 6, in the Big Ten ‘opener for both teams Saturday. Minnesota, led by its tow-headed star, Francis (Pug) Lund, made & desperate effort to pull the game out of the fire in the last two minutes of the final quarter, but an offside penalty cost them a touchdown after Beise had knifed through Indiana's ae tackle for 10 yards to go over the Lyons, Indiana end, who stood head and shoulders above his Hoosier mates, scored in the third period, to tie the score. Carl Tengler, Gopher fullback, fumbled as he ploughed into the line just past midfield and Ly- ons was on the ball like a hawk. He streaked out of a mass of players for @ dodging, snaking run for 60 yards that gave the Hoosiers their only score. Not a Gopher was near enough to touch him as he crossed the line. Deuer, who had a chance to win for Indiana by kicking goal, missed. In the waning minutes of the last Period, the Gophers loosed as aerial ~ attack that, starting on their own 45- yard line, carried them to the 10- yard marker where, momentarily ¢ | Stopped in the air, they resumed their rushing game and Beise dashed into the line. He eluded several Hoosier tacklers and went over for a touch- down. Minnesota was offside, how- ever, and the play was called back. With barely a minute to play, Lund started throwing passes again but the second one went over the goal line and it was Indiana’s ball. The game ended a couple of plays later. ric asaitly Football Scores -—$_—_____-_. Hamline 14; Augsburg 0. Huron College 8; Southern Nor- mal 0. a Wesleyan 20; Spearfish Nor: Haskell 0; Creaighton 0. Cincinnati University 13; Sou . kota University 0.7) South De EAST hola pagan and Lee 7; William and Mary 0. Pitt 21; West Virginia 0, Washington & Jefferson 19; Way- good because of interference on the| The summary: ball circles Monday after having ad- last play of the game, the Ramblers, 'N. D. A. C. Morningside | ministered four straight defeats to advertised by many observers before Newman le Kronick|their old enemies, the Cubs of the | Saturday as one of the most power- Meyers Mg Dooken| National League. ful teams in a decade, were busy, Miller Ig Pauley) It was the 13th series won by the staving off an attack or drilling away | Thomas Y Hodaway'gouth-siders in 20 meetings. in territory far from the Jayhawk House id Popevis| ‘The Cubs, undoubtedly dis-spirited Lon Peschel rt Paulson |by the death of thelr president, Wil- Olson re Peterson liiam Veeck, lost the final game 5 to May q Dean}? Sunday. ee ee Gerteis , Des! és e feated Crosby 7 to 0 here when Dres-|ner in the conference outside of War- H . A = vv. 4 | Bede C.0 700-1; Morningside} Meet Perroni Tonights! plunged over tor « pedis burton, Leo Calland’s Vandals slways| tion O° Arkansas 13; Texas Chris- Ne gi ot oes —— from the one-yard line and then|put up a great fight, at Montana,|" Louisiane State 40; Millsaps 0, ier tires Fre ae New ‘York, Oct. 9—(®)—Don Me- Plunged over for the exiza point. | Bunny Oaks will have a farily heavy ROCKY MOUNTAIN Reschel, , South African - team, but lacking speed. Wyoming 0; |Sehranz for Hanson, m for leight, will make his American de-| _ STARS ON GRID, TOO sy Uiah Aggies 40; Montana Stary |Peschel’ for sag Jobervict p [but in a 10-round battle with the) Walter , ete the football ie te ae ae year with aided 18, 10; Western State |Platt, Maynard for Sloan. Morning. | outing Cievelander, Patsy Perront, : ton ae pee weight in the line. Much depends on| "3 : \ wunderson for Venson, Runchy |, Madison Square ody | ee ee tees at ee ttt | tackles, MoGue and Rafferty, Muller,|,,7 ye" Teachers 14; New Mex. for Pauley, Hileman for Dean Dean Unknown Winston, Hartford, Conn., at right end, should be one of the best: FAR WEST tor » Childers for Dey, Day!neavywelght, is paired against Bob on the coast, with Lott pressing him) southern California 33; Washing- for Childers, Verison for Saunderson. |Ouin'or New York and Al‘atiore, he| FROM AFRICA {tor position.” Boyer consistentiy 004 |ton state 0. Scoring: Touchdown—Henson. Point, at left guard, and Coats an outetand-| rovole (Ui; a fellow from Philadelphia, against Joe (Uos Angeles) 14; Arizona after touchdown—May (placement). Doctor of Buffalo, in six-rounders. ing center. Backfield is experienced University 13. Offcials: Referee, George Lynch, i with | Keeble, Clark, Livesay and} College of Pacific 26; Modesto Jun. 'St. Cloud Teachers: umpire, Cub me Frankovich, losing Decker and Berg-| tor College 0. . id | Boek. seems: ead Voeenan, = Football Stars | Geems 34; as poe Vee ‘Bt, Mary's—Blip Madigan says he| govgee 9: ; Sante Clara 0, Modern agricultural implements are| (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) | has the biggest team St, Mary's ever! t4sho 6); Whitman 0. used by those engaged in rice grow-| La¥orge, Arkansas—Scored twice on had. When Gaels meet Trojans Oct.| gen Francisco Olympic Club 14; ing in the Murrumbidgee trrigation | runs of 90 and 35 yards, to beat Texas 14, there will be more than two tons| wevads 0. area of New South Wales. Christians 13-0. of football humanity on the gridiron) " California 16; St. Mary's 12 Resign St Mary's best seasons, Many ubs| 4° Of 18h0 7; Alblon State Wore Blower, California—Scored touch- force in coast | Gree) down and point in last three minutes vale, ce Wa be 8 Senne Green Bay Packers to detent Bt. Mary's 14-13, ants Clara—Under Clipper Smith Back in Win Stride Ofte cate irene Gans Was an excellent team last year, and pe against St. Lawrence. means no good to the others. a per Prac one of the good teams of the| League race with rot ie je ie Sas oe toamie’ tans to thee ne a mat From South Africa comes fastest backs coast. Der-;feated once, ‘ Ran 60 and 75 yards for touchdowns! no, McCorkindale, another | mody and O’Brien can hold their own/ The Chicago oF ankiia, Roosevelt ran Washington sate, heavyweight. threat, to. wage | wth’ any ofthe est wing me. Kipp, | puted possession ticket with James Cox of Ohio, | prop kicked field goal to beat Ni war along the highly remunera- f ee Re ay a defeating the 1920 Democratic presiden- sity, 3-0. lew! tive American ring front. He | Nudist Will be as 0 for their tial candidate. DENSMORE | YOFE univer rian will “meet Patsy Peroni of) | paris tem opto gM deine ya La irag Mere SHUTE, Philadelphia pro. peta ade Fie dot tena ct | Thee we'll 0 tos AWE IRMA OF) fire guase by a | ai | “