The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 28, 1933, Page 8

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Pea a aren ree arees oocoe ( MOCETS OUPLY FOOTBALL BID OUR BOARDING HOUSE y kept deep in their own territory. | = Prehal son, after the Mandan ol atouson mee Reveser THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28; 1933 Bismarck and Dicki nson Elevens Battle to Scoreless Deadlock DEMONS BUT LACK PUNCH FOR SCORE: Westerners Make 11 First) Downs to One for Capital City Youths BISMARCK THREATENS ONCE, Stark County Crew in Scoring; Position Twice Only to | Be Stopped Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 28.—(i—Bis- marck high battled Dickinson to a scoreless tie in a game featured by Spectacular punting and strong de- tensive work on the part of both teams Friday Despite their 11 first downs to one for the visitors, the Dickinson squad was unable to puncture the Demon forward wall when, in the first period | the Midgets advanced twice to within feet of scoring touchdowns. In the first serious threat, Dickin- son had the ball on the one-yard Mine with a foot to go for first down. A few minutes later the local again had advanced to the two-yard line by Clarke’s well-placed kicks. In the second half Rau, Dickinson end, blocked Kanz’s punt and fell on the ball on the four-yard line, where} the Midgets took it only to lose it on; \ HER HE UP, IN MY MUG 7 AGES SS ay TAXIDERMIST) downs, | Bismarck’s only advance into Dick- inson territory came late in the game when the midgets, in possession of the ball on the 45-yard line, confused. their signals. A pass from center! rolled back 20 yards and was recover-; ed by the Demons. A pass. Agre to Logee, took the ball! Pre iKiINc UP MATTERS EECA! By Ahern HEY,CHUMP, LISEN (—1F You (A&M HMF-You CUT OFF YOUR MOUSTACHE To LOOK LIKE ME, THERE AIN'T NO FEDERAL LAW AGIN ME GROWIN’ A LIP BRUSH TO LOOK LIKE YOU —~EXCcEPT THAT THEY MIGHT KEEP ME OFF TH’ STREETS,ON ACCOUNT OF FRIGHTENIN' Kips J——— ‘Y'KNOW, I GOT USED TO MY FACE IN THY MIRROR, UNTIL CLYDE CALLS MY ATTENTION TO HOW MUCH ME AN You LOOK ALIKE -—-THEN ,SEEIN* You, CONVINCED ME I OUGHT To GO TO A FACE LIFTER AN* GET TH. SLACK TAKEN SovE-IF HE RAISES A MOUSTACHE, To 100K LIKE ME, IT WILL BE SPLENDID FOR ME, IN EVADING a) thrilling 80-yard run by M. Ferderer, | Mandan halfback, behind good inter- | ference. He was brought down from | behind 15 yards from the goal line. | Outstanding were the team’s two cap-/ tains, Mandan’s William Partridge, | to the Dickinson four-yard line for|and Johnson, Blue Jay lineman. the visitors’ only first down of the| Summary: game. A fumble recovered for Dick-| Mandan inson by McKenzie gave the Midgets Stumpf their opportunity to punt out of dan-}E. Berry LT Augspurger House LG y Percy c Dietrich RG Schmidt RT Bismarck | Partridge RE Schneider | Helbling QB Dohn' R. Ferderer LH Gorman! M. Ferderer RH Wilson] Ordway FB J. Berry LaRue} Substitutions—Mandan: Braaten Lawyer |for House; Sneland for Stumpf; Nel- Logee|son for Schmidt. Sorsdahl; Score by quarter: Agre Mandan ... Pagenkopf Shafer'Jamestown Clarke Kanz Substitutions—Dickinson, Schiff for! GRAFTON CRUSHES Agnew. Bismarck—Elland for Dohn,! DEVILS LAKE 13-0 Elofson for Lawyer. Devils Lake, N. D., Oct. 28.—(7— | Playing in freezing ee Devils JAME N {Lake suffered a crushing 13-to-0 de- SEVENTH W feat at the hands of Grafton in the Scoring its seventh consecutive vic- final appearance of the season Fri- tory, Jamestown’s Bluejays defeated ‘day. Mandan high school 13 to 0 at Man-| Grafton capitalized on Evans’ fum- dan Friday. ble of a punt to march to a score Playing on a field of snow, the two from the 20-yard line in the second teams fought a closely-matched bat-'quarter. Everson scored on a quar- tle, each completing but four first terback sneak and tossed a Pass to downs. Jamestown’s alertness on two Maxwell for the extra point. breaks of the game proved the mar-; The teams Played on practically gin. ‘even terms in the first half, with Jamestown chalked up the first six Devils Lake making a scoring ges- Points shortly after the game got ture on Smith's Pass to Burckhard but! underway on a pass, Westby to John-| was stopped on the 10-yard line, The center tossed Lakers were badly outplayed in the the ball over the head of the punter second half as Grafton took Burck- on a fourth down when the Braves hard’s kick after kickoff on its 30-yard prepared to kick, On the next play, marker and completed four consecu- Jamestown passed to Mandan’s 10- tive first downs, led by Schrank and yard line and then scored on another Whalen, to score. Whalen’s six-yard pase. [dash on a reverse around end brought The elevens played without scor-'the score. Schrank’s place-kick hit ing the rest of the half, Mandan hold- | the crossbar. ing the advantage in punting due to, Ted Whalen, their efforts to return punts while’ Schrank, fullback, led Grafton’s of- Jamestown played a cautious game in fense, which netted three first downs catching kicks. lin the first half and six in the second. A blocked Mandan punt was con-' Maxwell and Burns were powers in verted into a touchdown in the third the line. quarter when Johnson prapped his, Devils Lake was led by a hard-driv- arms around the kicked ball, which ing fullback, Bill Burchhard, who was Settled against his chest, and he responsible for four of the Lakers’ dashed 25 yards for the tally. Westby six first downs on runs and two more drop-kicked the extra point. jon the receiving end of Smith’s pass- Mandan threatened twice in the es. Whitbeck and Johnson were out- third period. With four yards to go standing linemen. for first down on Jamestown's 20-| yard stripe Mandan fell a yard short | SONS PLAY FOR DADS and lost the ball on dow Another, Bill Spaulding, Jr., and Harry Trot- scoring drive fell short when James- ter, Jr., sons of the head coach and town took a pass from Stumpf, Man-, ‘he assistant mentor at the University dan end, on the 20-yard line. |of California at Los Angeles, are play- The last play of the game was a'ing under their dads’ instructions, Pos LE Ingstad vr. In the last half, the Demons were! ‘The lineups: Dickinson McKenzie Ir Ashbacher It Nassett Ig Stebbins Richmond Westby Graham Nelson Wiench Patricka Rau Baggenstoss Agnew 0 0 0-0 07 0 6 0-13 JAMESTOWN halfback, Jamestown and| { Those English fighters are hard to discourag in the American ring. they continue to invade Above, at right in search of glory and gold. Despite he United § is the latest En; ilures lish importation, one Jack Pettifer, a heavyweight on Carne! PROGRAM S FAREWELL TO OCTOBER IN GREAT | Just Another Family Man MINNESOTAJOWA G0 GRASPS ATTENTION OF MDWESTERNERS Southern California Is Slight Favorite to Beat Califor- | nia Bears |FORDHAM PLAYS ALABAMA! ‘ | | |Michigan-Chicago, Purdue-Wi consin, Northwestern- Ohio State Play New York, Oct. 28.—()—Marching jsteadily toward the climatic battles of November, the giants!of college football bade farewell to October Sat- urday in a series of glamorous sec- | tional and intersectional contests. The program was dominated by such svectacles as those pitting South- ern California against California, Yale against Army, Fordham against Alabama, Minnesota against Iowa, Pitt against Notre Dame and Penn against Navy. At Berkeley, California's Golden Bears hoped to hang up their first victory since 1929 against Southern California but the Trojans were favored despite their scoreless tie with |Oregen State a week ago. Yale and Army were prepared for a stubborn ;New Haven. The Fordham-Alabama _intersec- | duel between undefeated elevens at} In summer, home means that | clouts a four-bagger. Just now, | my Foxx, the Athletics’ clouting | in his farmhou: home—and he's shown.above with his y at Sudlersville, Md. rubber plate he crosses when he with baseball out of season, J!m- first baseman, thinks of another wife and son, Jimmy, Jr. ALL-AMERICA PROSPECTS AN See G & Anderson of Colgate By JIMMY DONAHUE (NEA Service Sports Writer) | Winnie Anderson was a fine end Hast year... and this year not enough ‘superlatives can be coined to describe his play . .. Winnie captains Colgate’s Red Raiders . . . and deserves some i; Kind of medal for his pass-catching ability. ... On three occasions he has -—j caught 50 successive passes in prac- | tice, and has yet to drop a ‘spiraling ‘oval in a game. .. . Brown pointed tional test at New York brought to- jgether another pair of undefeated POOR elevens in what looked like the closest ; sort cf a match. The big ten hopes! {of Iowa and Minnesota hung in the; balance at Minneapolis while the past: history of the sensational rivalries of | Pitt and Notre Dame on the one hand and Penn and Navy on the other con- spired to shadow the fact that all four | previously had been beaten. H Sharing the intersectional stage ; were the meetings between Michigan ; State and Syracuse at East Lansing. | * of Princeton's undefeated Tigers and | Washington & Lee at Princeton and By JOCK SUTHERLAND ' of Georgia and New York University | (Football Coach, University of Pitta- at Athens, fe reer) i burgh) | Fighting Iowa ant innesota for} the ‘Bie Ten headlines were Michi-}, Pittsburgh, Oct. 28—Proper teach- gan’s mighty Wolverines, facing Chi-;ing Of football fundamentals, super- | cago; Purdue's unbeaten Boller- | ision of the training routine and, makers, who clashed with Wiscon-/specially trained medical attention ; sin; and Northwestern and Ohio State,/ Will in the greater majority of cases battling at Columbus to get back Aes = sufficient barriers to grid in- the conference race. i 5 ‘The Big Six, playing strictly among! In the first place, football coaches themselves, paired off Nebraska's |Si0uld have their candidates report in champion Cornhuskers against Okla- #5 good physicial colon as is pos- homa; Kansas against Kansas State; ‘ible. It is advisable that the coach and Towa State against Missouri, with jlet his men know a month in advance only the last two apparently cut of Of the training season what sort of the champicnship race. ‘exercises they should follow in getting Eee ‘into shape. The players should be {urged to follow them as faithfully as Proper Training and Medical! Attention Antidote, Says Sutherland MINNESOTA EXPECTS MAJOR CAUSES OF INJURY Mayville Comets Beat Valley City Valley City, N. D., Oct. 28—(a)—- The Mayville Comets defeated the a@ North Dakota intercollegiate con- ference game. Early in the fourth quarter, Ror- vig, stellar Comet back, intercepted ja Viking pass and twisted and dodged his way 55 yards for a touchdown. A placekick for the extra point was successful. A few minutes before the game ended, a pass, Rorvig to Luk- ason, was good for 25 yards and the Comet’s second counter. Rorvig was the spark plug for the Comet offense, consistently gaining through the Viking line. Spriggs starred for the Vikihgs, dashing around end for numerous long runs. Otherwise the Viking offense was ef- fectively bottled up throughout the game. for him last season in the game that would decide the championship of | the east ... put three ment on the job | >t covering him ... but in the second quarter. with no score, he leaped high between his watchers to grab off a 45-yard heave from Whitie Ask... after whici Colgate scored and went on to win. ... Handsome Winnte gets ja lot of good pointers . . . Johnny Orsi, an All-America end himself, is helping Andy Kerr at Colgate. .. An- ‘Valley City Vikings 13 to 0 Friday in! derson deserves a lot of credit for the success of Kerr's squad . .. for the ends play an imporiant part in that ;fast, deceptive style of football that ‘Kerr is noted for, . ABERDEEN WOLVES WIN Aberdeen, 8. D., Oct. 28.—(>)-- Stopped cold outside the 50-yard line by the powerful Northern line, Dako- ta Wesleyan was crushed by the championship-seeking Wolves of | Northern normal Friday night 13 to 0. { BEULAH BEATS STANTON ; Beulah, N. D., Oct. 28—()—Cold , Weather caused numerous fumbles as |Beulah high school football team blanked Stanton by a 26-0 score Fri- day. trail. He is posed with his manager-trainer, handle him in this co’ "GOOD MAT PRACTI —___ Three of Penn State's wrestling | Kootball Scores squad get good practice playing in the o¢—_—__—_—_____-—- —- —--- 4 line on the football varsity. They are COLLEGES Cole. a tackle; Kriezman, guard, and (By The Associated Press) Rosenberg, end. Milton College 0; Whitewater (Whitewater, Wis.) Teachers 47, De Kalb (De Kalb, Ill.) 40; Wisconsin School of Mines 0. St. Olaf 25; Augsburg 7. Luther 6; Simpsen (Indianola, Ia.) 13, River Falls 0; Superior 6. Mayville Teachers 13; Valley City Teachers 0. ‘Western Union 0; Augustana (Sioux Falls, 8. D.) 30. Hamline 3; Gustavus Adolphus 7. Creighton 6; Grinnell 0. Macalester 0; St. Thomas 30. Jack Kearns will WATERTOWN, ABERDEEN TIE | Watertown, S. D., Oct. 28,—()— Watertown and Aberdeen high schools ; Played to a 13-13 tie here Friday. HIGH SCHOOLS BISMARCK 0; ‘Dickinson 0. Grafton 13; Devils Lake 0. The sketch is of the late THOMAS R. MARSHALL of Indiana. BOOTH TARKINGTON wrote the book. Edwin Booth was a FAMOUS AMERICAN ACTOR. Beulah 26; Stanton 0. Fargo, N. D. 16; Moorhead, Minn., 0. FARGO BEATS MOORHEAD Moorhead, Minn., Oct. 28.—(?)— Fargo high school’s Midgets defeated Moorhead high’s Spuds Friday, 16 to | | | | Jamestown 13; Mandan 0. { OUT OUR WAY in the annual inter-city struggle {between these two teams. The half nded in a scoreless tie, but the Mid- By Williams LOOKIT, WOULDJAY “THE BULL'S WALKIN' HOME WITH ALF! FIRST TIME: LEVER KNOWED HIM TO WALK OUTA THE PLANT WITH ANY OF US. ALF MUSTA COME INTA MONEY, ER SOMETHIN OH, NO! THE BULL'S COMIN’ INTA SOMETHING=~ ANICE HOME - COOKED: MEAL! ALF TOLD HIM THE WIFE WAS GONNA HANE ROAST DUCK TENGE THES WALKIN' HOME WI’ A HIM, ALL RIGHT~, AND VA I LTHE WAY gets’ superiority showed up in the final half. FISH FOR FUTURE The U. S. Bureau of Fisheries has YEAH, AN! T } | jtaken more than 28,000,000 eggs of KNOW HOW (TILL WORK OUT~—— THE BULL WILL cutthroat trout from Yellowstone EAT “TOO MUCH, | Park waters for hatching and plant- AN! GET SICK! | ing in other parts of the country. THEN HELL GE | CRABBY, BACK | ON THE JOB— “should a man want to live to be 90 if his brain dies at 70?” Be- cause it takes him 20 years to find out. BOARD OF STATE CAPITOL COMMISSIONERS OF NORTH DAKOTA ENT FOR PROPOSALS | i { | STAT ADVERTI | Sealed p. s for furnishing and jinstalling Window Shades or Blinds in the new State Capitol Building |Bismarck, North Dakota, will be r ceived by tol Commi Secretary, in Bismarck, North Dakota, thirty o'clock (9:30) A. BM. lay, vember 6, 1933. Specifications for this work pre- ared by DeRemer, Kurke, Holabird & ‘oot of Bismarck, North Dakota, may be seen in the office of the Secre- tary at Bismarck, North Dakota, in the offices of the Architects at the Capitol Building in Bismarck, North Dakota, in the offices of Holabird & Root, Architects, 333 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, and in the following Builders & Traders Ex- changes: Minot, Grand Forks Fargo, North Dakota, and Minnea} olis, St. Paul and Duluth, Minnesota, The Board of State Capitol Co missioners reserves the right to ac- cept or reject any or all bids or parts of bids as it may deem best for t interest of the Btate of North Dakota, » BOARD OF STATE CAPITOL COMMISSIONERS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA R.M. RISHWORTH,- President Bismarck, North Dakota PRANK I ANDERS, Secretary lsmarck, North Dakota Oct. 7-14-21-28 ps ——/they have not tasted victory since Teachers | sf SPECTATORS Minneapolis. Oct. 28.—(#)—Invad-| ing the Gophers’ football camp, where | 1921, Iowa's surprising Hawkeyes | urday sought their third Big Ten win in a game with a_ highly-regarded Minnesota eleven. | A crowd of 40.000 spectators. larg- est of the year. swarmed into Memor- jal stadium for Minnesota's home-/| coming. exhorting the Gophers to: “shock Iowa,” the homecoming theme. Game time was 2 p. m. A pair of backfield aces, Joe Laws) and Dick Crayne, were pointed to as the probable producers of the most | trouble for the Gophers. FOLLOW | BALL IN FAVORITE PLAYS OF FAMOUS COACHES i | : { | possible, * * A man in good shape seldom gets hurt. It is When he is either tired, out of condition—and these two go together—or when he is careless that he is most liable to suffer injury. We have on our varsity right now a youngster who weighs 150 pounds, yet because he is always in the best of shape, he never gets hurt. I am assuming, of course, that the ‘athlete has good muscle control, and that he can handle himself with ease under certain situations. Until he has gained his control, he is open to ine Juries during the training process, un- Jess carefully supervised. A football player should be given, regularly, enough exercise of caisthe- nics before practice to guarantee his symmetrical development. This elim- inates ® lot of danger at the begin- ing. and technique of the game, blocking and tackling, prevents undue hurts. as I have said before, live blocking and tackling is preferable to work with the dummies, but not too much so that the player becomes careless, Mistakes should be corrected on the spot, and the candidate made to un- cerstepd that he should learn the | aie: jskill as much for his own protection | 'a8 for anything else. The right kind of equipment is very necessary. The individual's protec- tion should be neither too heavy nor too light. If too light, it will not give the right eort of protection, though it may shave a split-second off a play- er’s time. If too heavy, it the athlete and expose him to | \ + RENTNER NEN DICK HANLEY GIVES SCORING PLAY ~ 1 “Pug” western against Ohio State in 1931 when the beore stood goose-egg all. culs, and players suffering from one or the other must have their workouts limited to certain kinds of drill, snapped on “GO,” wi the quarter when he is sf g g right half. eee ih g 5 i be u an 8 * * * q Proper teaching of the mechanics { | i { } | : Club Breakfasts 25 and 35c Noonday. Luncheons 35e and 40c Chef's Special Evening Dinner POWERS COFFEE SHOP THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Read always get their paper at the News & Stand in the POWERS HOTEL, FARGO, Perhaps you haven't even thought of Christmas cards yet, but you are going to order some between now and Christmas, so why not have it over with? Our stock is all clean and fresh, beautiful new designs, Now is the time to get this much of your Christmas shopping out of the way before the holiday rush. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . PRINTING DEPARTMENT PHONE 32 Quality Printers Since 1813 b 4 Fourth and Thayer ae ape a Ee Oe SET i ee Oy

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