The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 16, 1933, Page 6

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6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1933 Intersectional and Se ction Grid Program This Week Glitteri \ ng pit-MINESTA +MICHIGAN AND OHIO STATE TO CLASH IN BIG TEN FEATURE AND ARMY-LUN, GAMES TOP CARD Michigan-Ohio State and lowa-| Wisconsin Tilts Will Be Interesting | NOTRE DAME PLAYS TECH | Princeton-Columbia, Penn-Dart- | mouth and Yale-Brown Are Scheduled New York, Oct. 16.—(4)—A demon- stration of just what happens when an irresistible force collides with an immovable object will be given with variations on dozens of football fields this week, Glittering intersectional pairings headed by Carnegie Tech and Notre Dame, Pittsburgh and Minnesota, Army and Tllinois contribute added spice to a program dominated by such important sectional contests as those involving Michigan and Ohio State, Princeton and Columbia, Penn and Dartmouth, Yale and Brown, Tenne- see and Alabama, Texas Christian and Texas A. and M., Washington State and California. Pitt's “suicide schedule” takes the Panthers to Minneapolis to face Min- nesota. Fordham will play Boston} college with the rams favored against a foe that always is tough. | Princeton’s sophomore backfield stars undergo their first real test in| the meeting with Columbia's crack; eleven. Carnegie Tech has not a little; hope of overturning Notre Dame's dis- appointing eleven. i Victor over three preparatory oppor- ents, Army should discover its own strength, or weakness, against Illinois. This game will be played on neutral/ battleground at Cleveland. The col-; lision of Michigan and Ohio State at Ann Arbor tops the Big Ten program but Chicago's debut against Purdue and TIowa’s second conference start,; against Wisconsin, will be watched) with Interest. | Southern Gridders Lead U. S. Scorers (By The Associated Press) Ralph Graham of Kansas State and Harry Craft of Mississippi College have gained an early lead in the race for national football individual scor- ing honors. Each has scored seven touchdowns for a total of 42 points. Other leaders: Everhardus, Michigan ... hb 25 5 0 Berwanger, Chicago .... hb 26 5 0 35 a | Puntsand Passes | (By The Associated Press) GAME PUZZLES FANS Ann Arbor, Mich—The Michigan- Ohio State game Saturday, which may turn out to be the deciding bat- tle in the struggle for the Big Ten championship, has the fans puzzled when they try to pick the winner. Both have strong teams; Michigan has lost only one game in three years but that was to Ohio State in 2931; an dthe Buckeyes have won the last two games played in the Michigan stadium while losing the last two on their own field. 35 HAS PERMANENT JOB Oakland, Calif.—Here's one ™man who seems to have a perma- nent job. Professor James L. Hagerty, head of the philosophy department at St. Mary’s college, has been the official timekeeper at St. Mary’s-California games for the past 15 years. IRISH PRESERVED RECORD South Bend, Ind.—Notre Dame didn’t look especially impressive in beating Indiana 12-2 Saturday but that was more than enough to pre- serve one college record. No Notre Dame team ever has gone through three successive games without scor- ing and the Ramblers had lost their last game of 1932 to Southern Cali- fornia 13-0 and played a scoreless tie with Kansas in this year’s opener. | OUT OUR WAY | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern SAY~I KNOW WHY TH MASOR tS GOIN’ | AROUND ACTIN’ LIKE HES TWO JUMPS AHEAD OF A SQUIRRELY I THATS qg HEARD HIM TALKIN’ TO A GUY NAMED SNUFFY ABOUT $500 THAT TH’ MASOR GOT, SOME WAY, WITH HIS PET SHOP ~ AN’ HE DOESNT WANT MRS, HOOPLE To GET HER NOSE ON TH'SCENT OF So, THATS 11 HE GLUED ME . AN) THOSE TURKEYS, CALLING HERE TO SEE HIM, ARE AFTER A TOUCH, OR WANT J7 TO COLLECT~AN’ TH MASOR IS GOING IN FoR OvVER- GREAT OPPORTUNITY IN CONFERENCE RACE lowa Will Resume Its Battle for Title Against Wisconsin DISSUISES @ WELL, IT HAVE | HIM ON TH HOB de, H FOR #9-—~AN’ HELL PAY, OR TLL SOUND THY TRUMPET? Gravvarry GETTING HOME = Zz Minnesota Outplays Purdue But Pe q 5 f Ssh) 5) aA AS) i-) 10-16 \ 7p tn BEA San. WORRIED That upset 0-0 tie that the Kansas Jayhawkers pulled on Notre Dame, had Hunk Ander- sop plenty worried. The Ram- blers, figured to be the best team Anderson has handled, could get nowhere against the Big Six team. Hunk sat on the sidelines and sprouted gray hairs as each Irish threat failed. Ten billion dollars in paper money is shoveled into a Washington, D. C., ta Game Winds Up in 7-7 Deadlock MAX ELEVEN SOARS NEAR TOP BY WINNING FROM WASHBURN jhigh school’s football team is stalk-'stopped dead by a Gopher forward jed over for a 6-0 verdict. Not Until Fourth Period Are In- dianans Able to Put Pig- skin Across Garrison, However, Still Has: Comfortable Lead in M’Lean Circuit Minneapolis, Oct. 16.—(?)—Purdue, ‘oewildered for three periods by 8 ‘strong Minnesota team’s dazzling ‘rushing and aerial attack, intercepted a Gopher pass in the last half Sat- urday to pave the way for a touch- Garrison, N. D., Oct. 16—Smoulder-|gown and tie the Maroon and Gold ing under its early-season defeat at gridders, 7 and 7. the hands of Garrison, its first con-; The famed backfield of the Boiler- ference defeat in four years, Max | makers, a Big Ten title favorite, was (Tribune Special Service) s ing the Troopers in hopes the leaders yall that outplayed its veteran op- in the McLean county conference will Mone alge ptgunn of the game, saa run into trouble. lit remained for a second string back- Thanks toa hard victory over field to supply the punch that put Washburn last week-end, the Cos-'yver the tying touchdown in the final naan — aa second place in the period. league Monday. Max scored in the uncovering first four minutes of play when Sam-! Albee ee cain toaeen Aerie fon ran 50 yards to the seven-yard cntly with the flashy Pug Lund, Min- Ine, from where the Cossacks crash-/resota out-tricked, out-maneuvered | and frequently crossed up the Purdue | Samson, halfback, fractured his arm veam, The Gophers’ work paid divi- in his long run. With Pullback | jter being held to a tie by Minnesota, Badgers ¢ CHICAGO’S HOPES SOARING Indiana and Surprising Purple of Northwestern in Re- maining Clash Chicago, Oct. 16—()—The western football conference settles down to serious business next Saturday when four title-bearing contests, one of which will go a long way toward de- ciding the championship, will be played. The schedule is supported by two intersectional games of vast im- portance. Ohio State and Michigan play the stellar conference attraction at Ann Arbor. The winner will be regarded as the potential Big Ten champion. ‘The big bad wolverines, picked as a| ers 2. title threat before the season started, opened their champaign by slapping Michigan State, 20 to 6. Last Satur- day Coach Harry Kipke threw the Wolves’ scoring machine into high gear and they rolled over Cornell university 40 to 0. Ohio State clearly demonstrated its right to first division ranking in two preliminary games. Its well-balanced eleven showed a tight defense and a Clever offense that overpowered Vir-/ ginia and Vanderbilt. After two weeks of preparation, WINNER WILL HAVE (Champion Bison Dethroned When. Rabbits Win Homecoming Contest BILLY PETROLLE AND SAMMY FULLER TO FIGHT SATURDAY! : —+ Football Scores | ¢——_—_—_—__ —-—+ “Concordia 26; Macalester 0. NORTH CENTRAL CONFERENCE Morningside 79; Western Union 0. Winnipeg 21; South Dakota U Re- serves 5, BIG TEN Ohio State 20; Vanderbilt 0. Michigan 40; Cornell U. 0. Purdue 7; Minnesota 7. Tllinois 21; Wisconsin 0. Chicago 40; Washington 0. Notre Dame 12; Indiana 2. Stanford 0; Northwestern 0. MINNESOTA COLLEGES Hamline 0; St. Johns 0. St. Olaf 14; Luther 0. . Itasca Junior 7; Eleventh Junior 7. La Crosse Teachers 33; Winona, Minn., Teachers 7. River Falls Teachers 7; Eau Claire Teachers 0. Virginia Junior 6; Duluth Teach- Cloud Teachers 6; Bemidji 0. Junior 15; Waldorf Jun- jor college 13. Coe 19; Carleton 0. St. Paul Luther 18; gies 0. St. Morris Ag- EAST Colgate 25; Rutgers 2. Dartmouth 14; Bates 0. Yale 14; Washington é& Lee 0. Pitt 34; Navy 6. Princton 45; Williams 0. Carnegie Tech 3; Xavier Y 0. Towa will resume its fight for the title against Wisconsin at Iowa City. The fear of Purdue didn’t leave Chicago with Stagg, but they are not expected to be quite so menacing when they tackle the Maroons at Stagg Field. Purdue lost much prestige af- 7 to 7. On the other hand, Chicago gathered a great deal of respect by knocking over Washington U., 40 to; 0. A victory over Purdue would give the Maroons an excellent chance for the crown. z Indiana and Northwestern play the other championship affair—at Evan- ston. The Purple came back last Sat- urday and surprised fans by holding the powerful Stanford team to a scoreless tie. The Illini, victor in their first con- ference game, go to Cleveland to play the Army. Minnesota, the team which knocked title hopes from un- Ger Purdue and Indiana with ties, takes on Pittsburgh at Minneapolis. ALL-AMERI Boettcher also out of the game, Max resorted to a defensive game and kept the Washburn team at bay for the, dends in the second period, when for “he third time they drove to the Pur- due 10-yard line and finally went over for a score. Not Until Fourth Period It was not until the fourth period that Noble Kizer, Purdue coach, abandoned hope that his backfield veterans would start clicking, and remainder of the contest. Wilton and Underwood battled to a 6-6 draw. Wilton scored first wien | Quarterback Polonsky returned aj my 95 es for a counter. Under- wood scored on a pass from Evenson to Sayler which netted 20 yards, _;Sent in a new set of backs. A min- Scoring a touchdown in the last four Ute before Hecker had rushed into a minutes of play, the loop-leading Gar-|mass of players to intercept a Min- rison eleven defeated the Minot Beav-|nesota pass and this was the turning er Kits 6 to2. Both teams were Point. With the Gophers temporarily robbed of scoring chances by fumbles.'demoralized, the fresh ball toters, Garrison's touchdown came midway |Dailey, Basker, Keegan and Peelle in the final period after a 30-yard run swept the ends and worked spinners by Luck and a reverse in which Behles into the line time and again for gained 25 yards put the ball on the gains. one-yard line. Luck required four; Starting from the Minnesota 40- attempts at the line to go over. jyard stripe, Basker and Dailey crack- Luck accounted for all but one of ed the line to bring the ball to Min- Garrison’s first downs, making two mesota’s 4-yard marker, from where runs of 25 yards, one of 30 and an- Basker smashed over two plays later. other of 40 yards. iPardonner, taken out in the backfield The McLean standings: shakeup, was sent in and Won Lost Tied Pct.ithe tying point. 1.000! Minnesota scored as a result of a 666 brilliant catch of Lund’s pass by Lar- 500 son, Gopher end, who went up into 500 the air between two Purdue men to 333 snag the oval. It was good for 30 000 yards and placad the ball on Purdue's Seat |21-yard mark. Another heave, to Sei- Pure hydrogen does not have any el, made it first down on the 11-yard furnace every year, odor, taste or color. stripe and two smashes at the line gave the Gophers a touchdown, Al- fonse going over. Bevans kicked the extra point. Purdue resorted to WHERE 1S Wis WALNUT TRee “Ov Matline i YU, Quite AWAYS YET ~ Quite A Desperately, ipasses as the half neared a close, Purvis throwing one 55-yards that ‘Haas, substitute end, narrowly missed |while in the clear near the Gopher {goal line. Penalties Nullify March | Penalties nullified budding Minne- iseta marches in the third period as jover-eagerness and a fumble had thwarted their chances in the first {period. The play see-sewed back and {forth during most of the third quar- |ter and it was not until Purdue had By Williams | —) knotted the count that the Gophers) made a determined effort to march : i Hay ees "le ot MATA OMEN a EO WIAY, tp, BINT taree plays. Statistics of the game follow: Pugicd downs: Minnesota 10; Purdue sota 182; Purdue 96. Forward "PROSPECTS pound Olympic Army 52; Delaware 0. Lehigh 14; Johns Hopkins 7. Columbia 15; Virginia 6. Fordham 20; West Virginia 0. Holy Cross 14; Providence 0. Harvard 34; New Hampshire 0. Syracuse 40; Ohio Wesleyan 0. Penn State 5; Muhlenberg 3. Mary 7. jt. Johns (Annapo- lis) 0. Brown 13; Springfield 6. N. Y. U. 13; Lafayette 12. Boston U 9; Colby 7. ; Manhattan 20. > West Virginia ‘Wesleyan 6. Bucknell 19; Villanova 17. MIDWEST Jamestown College 12; Dickinson Teachers 0. et mm Normal 12; Sioux Falls Col- lege 0. Huron College 7; Dakota Wesley- an 0. en State 20; Illinois Wesley- an 12, Stout 8; Superior State Teachers 6. Mississippi 7; Marquette 0. Georgie Tech 16; Alabama Poly In- stitute 6. Chattanooga 13; Ogelthorpe 12, wvidson 6; V. M. I. O. 0. University of Plorida 0; North Car- South Dakota State 13; N. D. A.C. fi | North Dakota State Takes Early Lead But Eventually’ Falls 13-7 Oct. 1 Leading Welterweights, Who|paos sistes so atta eon Drew Recently, in Return Engagament New York, Oct. 16—(%)—A return battle between Billy Petrolle Sammy Fuller headlines the national boxing schedule this week. ‘These rival welterweights, leaders in the class, fought @ sizzling draw at Boston recently and will pick up jwhere they left off in a 10-round tmeeting at the Ridgewood Grove club here Saturday. Otherwise mediocre schedule is| Converted the marked only by a 10-round heavy-|° thelr own to tie weight duel between Lee Ramage, young Californian, and Hans Birkie of Germany, at Holyoke, Mass., Mon- day night and Jack (Kid) match with Tony Falco of Philadel- ‘Thursday night. Jimmies Defeat Dickinson Eleven jEddte Agre of Bismarck Goes Over for Final Touchdown in Game Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 16—The Jamestown college Jimmies, launch- ing a scoring attack which netted two (touchdowns in the second period in a right game here Saturday, defeated the Dickinson State Teachers college Savages ih a North Dakota College conference setto, 12 to 0. The first touchdown came midway in the second quarter, Tommy Crouse passing to Al Schauer for the count- er after the Jimmies had carried the ball for four successive first downs from their own 45-yard line. ‘The second touchdown came short- l-yafterward as the Jimmies marched 52 yards, Eddie Agre crashing through the line to score. Both extra points ‘were missed. opened up with an aerial crashing Standing for the Jimmies, with Crouse’s generalship also a feature. Gus Schlickenmeyer and Reslock were strong defensively. Jamestown gained 218 yards from scrimmage to 10¢ for Dickinson. The Te Ib GRIDDERS HAVE TWO SUITS Northwestern university's football squad home use and one for road use. The FAR WEST Southern California 14; St. Mary's Washington State 13; Montana U 7. Oregon 6; W: 0. : California 23; Olympic Club 0. Oregon State 12; San Francisco U 7. State 12; College of Pa- . RING LARDNER was a BASEBALL REPORTER. RESI- DENTS of WASHINGTON, D. C., , do not have the right to VOTE. | MONTANA has more MEN than fis i ‘abdication of the North Dakota Agri- cultural college as ruler of the North Central conference football domain Dacotah field in the coming encounter ge eae the only ‘Period gone, down and a vantage of center, one most serious scoring the Bison during ther into a Bison Following the init Jackrabbits were unable to gain after two plays after Paul Miller Berg’s the phia at the Broadway arena here roll possession of the ball on 28-yard line. The Jackrabbit registered a first down on the 16, and a pass from Fred Johnson Miller accounted for another down on the Bison four-yard the fourth play of ment. The Bison kicked off and exchange of punts the Bunnies off three successive first ending on the Bison nine from their wide. May Returns ‘The Bison msde their best scoring threat in the third period, May re- turning a punt to his 41-yard line. 'This was followed by 9 15-yard pen- alty for piling and the Bison cracked the Jackrabbits wide open with Leo Gerteis shooting through openings in the forward wall for two successive the ball went over from Schranz’ head to the 38-yard line where Sol Kramer recovered as the ended. 8. D. State— Pos. N. D. State— LE. Marquardt ‘son (sub for Baxa), Peschel. Poin! after touchdown—May _ @lacement), will have two uniforms, one for |ompson; Drake; ae YOUR DRESS You DON’T call: in a. SURGEON You call YOUR CLEANER _ that’s the only way to get ‘ RESULTS re cing reef mage Brito “Ad'Teker : aod she helps vou be PHONE 82 The Bismarck Tribune

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