The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 18, 1934, Page 8

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LOGALS MUST STOP WHEELER, STELLAR Invaders Boast Record in Season’s Grid- iron Encounters GAME CALLED FOR 8 P. M. McLeod Polishes Up Offense for Coming Battle; May Spring Surprise Probable starting lineups: MIDGET FULLBACK t Undefeated: T. HE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, 'THUKSDAY, UCLUBKK 18, iyg4 By Ahern WITH CLASS Neepens) Demons Midgets Hedstrom Te Olson ‘Woodland " Shamp ‘Wilson Ig Morgan Lips e Bennett Neff tr Othus ‘Whittey rt Cortwright Davis re Kreig Sorsdahl q Eddy Elofson rhb Darch Shafer Thb Sexton Kanz ft ‘Wheeler Fargo's Midgets, outstanding con- tenders for the mythical state high school footbail title, invade the stronghold of the Demons Friday for a@ battle that will have important bearing on the standings of North Dakota teams, especially if Bismarck should upset the pre-game figuring j and turn back the mighty visitors. Coming here with an unbeaten and untied record in state gridiron en- counters, the Midgets will exhibit a power-house offense that has repulsed Valley City, Minot, Moorhead, and East Grand Forks and gained a tie with the Detroit Lakes, Minn., eleven. The Demon's job will be to stop the thrusts of Ernie Wheeler, hard-driv- ing fullback who scored three touch- downs in the game against Valley City last Saturday. Wheeler, besides be- ing the sparkplug of the Midget of- fense, is a strong defensive player ‘and a deadly tackler. The game has been called for 8 p. ™m., Friday, under the floodlights of ‘Hughes Field. Polishes Up Offense Coach Roy McLeod drove his charges in long. hard drills this week spending considerable time in polishing up his offense for the coming encoun- ter. Bud Kanz, fullback and captain of the Demon squad, will get a call to start in Friday's game. He was in- jured in the early season game with Jamestown and has seen little service since. Keyed to a fighting pitch, the De- mons may spring a surprise when they oppose the Midgets. Elofson, Shafer, Sorsdah) and Kanz pack plenty of backfield punch and if the forward wall performs in the manner they are capable of, they will give the Midgets plenty of trouble before the game is over. Reserves Play Carson Assistant Coach Arnold Van Wyk will take his team of Demon reserves to Carson, Saturday for an engage- ESQ (eee ene re. See [OUR BOARDING HOUSE (A WELL, KID-~YOUVE GOT A DIAMOND RING-¢ YOU CAN NOW REACH ; AUTHORITY / THIRTY-FORTY~ FIFTY—-UM-m- NOT BAD-THAT GIVES ME¥20 PROFIT / ‘AN* THAN ONE I USED TO HAVE ~HAD TO CARRY A FLASHLIGHT, TO MAKE (T SPARKLE! BZ OW,ITS ALL RIGHTS 4 A LITTLE BETTER I HM-M-IF SAKE KNEW TH JEWELER SAID THIS STONE WAS WORTH $300, HED Oze Simmons, Grid Wizard of lowa, Hailed as Second Red Grange Towa, City, Ia., Oct. 18—(NEA)— Another galloping ghost of the grid- iron runs rampant o'er western plains. nois who rose up to plague the Big Ten a few years back. Now a dusky- hued boy from Fort Worth, Tex., is performing antics on the gridiron for Towa that have the Big Ten hailing him as a back potentially greater than Grange. ‘ “Simmons, old” is the way the Hawkeyes had him tabbed in the roster before the season started. But since the boys the sophomore in action, he’s ticketed as being the gent who is going to wreck a lot of Big Ten championship hopes and possibly lift the Hawkeyes into the coveted seat, Averages Six Yards Here's what the whirling, twisting, | ment with the strong Grant county aggregation. The Demon second string showed unexpected power last week in hold- ing the St. Mary's cleven to a 7 to 7 deadlock and with the added polish of a week's drill they will be diffi- cult to stop. Van Wyk has a heavy forward wall to clear holes for his hard-driving reserve backs. While the starting lineup for Saturday's game is not known McGuinness, Monroe, Cart- ledge, Erickson, Grinnell, Bailey, Register, Snyder, Dohn, Burckhardt, ‘Wedge, Baker, Brauer, Zimmerman, Tilchen, Welch and O'Connor are cee really sure of getting into the Dizzy’s Wife Tells on Cardinal Hurler Mrs. Dean Recalls Time When St. Louis Star Took Um- pire by Nap of Neck New York, Oct. 18—(?)—Take & seat, please, beside Mrs. Jay Hanna Dean, pert, pretty young wife of Big Dizzy, and hear something more of the Dazzling Deans, pitching cham- pions of the worid. Dexter Park, in the far reaches of Brooklyn, is packed, so Mrs. Dean home plate, while her weary husband makes his Mctropolitan barnstorm- ing appearance with the Bushwic! Versus the Black Yankees, Dizzy is} pitching his three-inning stunt as though he were still facing the Tigers in the’ world series. He's arguing with the umpire, who seems to take great delight in calling them against Ducky Medwick, Paul Dean, whose arm is so sore he can't pitch but plays right field, and the ‘Dizzy one. “Diz is mad,” she confides in her Texas drawl. The umpire had just called a Ne- gro runner safe when he stole home after dropping a flyball in to right ‘that Paul Dean kicked into a triple. Olz_was roaring. “You know what Dizzy did once in St. Louis when he got mad at an umpire? It was Ernie Quigley or ‘Charlie Moran. He ran in from the ‘box, grabbed him by the back of the neck, bent his heed over the plate “*Can you bend over, you old blank- ety blank? Can you see it, you blind 60 and 50? Well, take a good look. T ain't pichin’ for your amusement.’” “The umpire just laughed. Wasn't Paul and: Dizzy are golig to share | | $30,000 profits on this tour, Mrs, Dean | Proudly. It's divided evenly. of this luck, she says, comes of her finding a four-leaf clover near ithe, Cardinals’ dugout in the Polo Grounds the day Dizzy and Paul beat | ithe Giants twice and started the | ‘New Yorkers’ collapse. ‘Mosquitoes reached the Hawaiian by breeding in water barrels sailing ships that were leav- Ming U. 8. ports for Hawaii; 4 must sit in the press box back of] @ fighting colored boy has done in his first three games for Iowa: Averaged six yards a trial from scrimmage in his intercollegiate de-| SAINTS TACKLE HIGH-SCORING LINTON ELEVEN THIS WEEK-END but against South Dakota, returning one punt 61 yards, and another 32, and scoring after a side-stepping, cat- footed dash of 22 yards. Raced 47 yards through the North- western Wildcats for a touchdown and averaged nearly six yards a try against some of the best tacklers in the Big Ten to give Iowa a 20-7 victory over Northwestern. Nebraska boasted it had him stopped last Saturday—but he tore off runs of from 10 to 25 yards, and punted and passed with the nonchal- ance of a third-year man. Dick Hanley, Wildcat coach, knows @ football player when he sees one, and here's what Dick said after Ozzie had, almost singlehanded, scalped his squad: ‘Tops’, Says Hanley _ “All T have to say about Simmons is ‘tops’—absolutely the best I ever have seen. He either is the greatest running back in my experience, or Northwestern has the worst bunch of tacklers in the world. ing isn't so bad.” Simmons is said to have entered Towa after Duke Slater, former Negro Player with the Hawkeyes, and one of the greatest linemen of all time, had urged him to, Slater is a leading col- ored attorney in the southwest and, after seeing Simmons perform at a | OUT OUR WAY It was a red-haired wraith from Illi-| Oze E.—Back —170/ pounds—5 feet 11 inches—20 years: from the tall corn state have seen/ And our tackl- | COLORED COMET OF HAWKEYES FEARED BY BIG TEN SCHOOLS | Fort Worth high school, right away | commenced to work for his alma ma- ter. Ozzie and his brother, Don, hopped a freight train to make the trip here, and arrived in rags and tatters in August, 1933. They managed to sur- vive until his football season opened, and then reported for practice. | Ossie Solem, Hawkeye thought Ozzie was just another soph- cmore until he started against South Dakota and the Wildcats. Now Ossie thinks Ozzie's all that Dick Hanley thinks he is. ‘Gophers to Invade Lair of Panthers National Championship Future | Hangs on Game for Pitts- burgh-and Minnesota Minneapolis, Oct. 18.—(#)—Familiar ‘already with the taste of Panther ig! meat, the Gopher whirled out of town ; Thursday over the rails toward Pitts- ‘burgh with a glint in his eye and coach, | jwhetted appetite for a football fight down east. Educated to know the Panther at- tack and well equipped in ambition, Minnesota set out on its first journey of the season under orders to take an- ~ other bite out of Pittsburgh in the nation’s gridiron headliner Saturday. Whether the Gophers oan repeat their triumph over Pittsbugh of last year hinged on a number of factors, any one of them vital, but they clam- bered into private train cars this noon with a full load of armament and heavy man power, Coach Bernie Bierman, selecting 36 gridders for the largest invading horde Minnesota ever sent away on a foot- ball errand, kept his public sentiment cool about victcry as compared with rising hopes of unofficial Gopher backers. Facing a foe fairly aching for a chance to avenge the Minnesota suc- cess last year, the Gophers go after ithe Panthers conceding it to be a big Job, but indicating strong confidence of their own. A national champion- jship future hangs on the game for jboth Minnesota and Pittsburgh, = | Fights Last Night 1 (By the Associated Press) Cincinnati—Roughhouse” Glo- ver, 136, Jacksonville, Fla., outpointed Carl Knowles, 168, Savannah, Ga. (12) tAerial Game Likely to § ely .to Be Deci- sive Factor in Winning Team's Margin Plenty of opportunity to use every play in Coach Meinhover's “bag of tricks” will be given the St. Mary's football team when they tackle the high-scoring Linton Lions at the lat- ter’s field Friday afternoon. Functioning smoothly behind a fast-charging forward wall the Linton backs, led by the brilliant Harold Dobler, have compiled a consecutive string of victories this year and are determined to keep their slate clean against the Saints Friday. While working hard to perfect a pass defense for the Lions’ aerial game, the Saints spent many hours tuning up their own overhead game and Friday doubtless will find both teams taking to the air before the game is very far along. The Saints were held to a 7 to 7 tie by a fighting Demon reserve team last Uji HEROES ARE MADE aan while the Linton cleven steam- rollered its way to a 58 to 0 triumph over Ashley. Scintillating with Dobler in_ the Lions’ backfield are Lauringer, Blore and Volk. In the line, Balliet will give Guthrie, St. Mary's center, plenty to think about whenever the ball is snapped. ‘Tommy Lee, fullback for the Saints who was out of last week's game be- cause of poor health, has returned to the Saints’ lineup and will be in the fray Friday to team with Erickson, Fisher and Hazen. Probable starting lineups: By Williams WHERE'S, SWILLET, ~,NOT BORN TW LARD, TRWittians, Tm REG US Pay OFF 2 1936 Br wea SERVICE IWC 1048 PITT OR MINNESOTA MUST WALK PLANK IN SATURDAY’S TILT Barring Ties, Alabama or Ten- nessee Will Also Have Record Smeared COLUMBIA TACKLES NAVY Touted Holy Cross Eleven Will Get Reat Test in Battle With Harvard New York. Oct. leud detonations you'll hear around dusk Saturday will be the explod- ing of at least four of football's un- defeated and untied records at Pitts- burgh, Birmingham, New York and Cambridge. Barring ties which would cut both ways, either Pitt or Minnesota will walk the plank-of defeat in Pitt stadium. At Birmingham it will be either Alabama or Tennessee whose record is smeared. Columbia and Navy stake perfect records at New York; Harvard and Holy Cross at Cambridge.. Incidentally, it is a significant tip- off on a topsy-turvey season that there are so few major games involv- ing undefeated and untied teams on sy early a date in the campaign. Six Big Ten Teams Beaten If you don't believe it, take a look at the Big Ten where the fun has barely begun yet, Michigan, Purdue, Indiana, Iowa, Ohio State and Northwestern all have been walloped at least once. Or the Pacific Coast conference , where Washington’s huskies alone have escaped defeat or tie Minnesota. coached by Bernie Bierman, has been hailed by mid- western critics as the outstanding team of that section, the Big Ten’s main contender for the national championship, mythica: or other- wise. Pitt, already victorious over Wash- ington & Jefferson, West Virginia and southern California, should sup- ply the answer to the question: “Just how good is Minnesota?” There's power in that Gopher running at- tack but Jock Sutherland’s knack for ceveloping tough-fibred forwards is too well known to need re-state- ment. Alabama Is Favorite The Alabama-Tennessee struggle Stands out like a headlight on the southern program. Alabama has been rated a prime contender for the scutheastern conference crown from the start of fall training, Tennessee, rated far below in pre-season fore- casts, has been @ distinct surprise. Columbia is the majority choice against Navy but the Lions’ problem will be to step Buzz Borries, spark- piug of the midshipmen’s attack. Holy Cross has been touted for weeks as one of the east’s most pow- erful arrays but the Crusaders have not been seriously tested. The Har- vard game should be an adequate measuring stick not only for Holy Cross but for the Crimson as well. IN. D, COLLEGES 10 PLAY FOR ALUMNI Three Homecoming Celebra- tions Headline Intercollegiate Program This Week (By The Associated Press) Games in the North Dakota inter- collegiate conference Saturday will St. Mary's Linton {headline three homecoming celebra- Schultz. le + Meier |tions on that day—at Mayville, James- Dolan It Bender | town and Valley City Welsh Ig Busch| Saturday's contests: Guthrie c Balliet ieee vs. Massie. ner qr Sheirmeister vs. Balser a Quast} Wahpeton vs. valley “city. Reef re Flegel| In conference contests, undefeated Fisher c Dobler|records with one win are held by Hagen lhb Blore| Minot, Wahpeton and Jamestown. Erickson rhb Lauringer | Valley City, also undefeated, has been Lee ft Volk | tied. Results of circuit pla Won Lost Ticd T.P. Ont: Minot ......1 o 0 Wahpeton .. 1 0 LJ 19 Jamestown . 1 o 0 Valley City. 1 0 1 Ellendale...0 1 0 Dickinson 1 1 Mayville . 2 0 —_—_———————— “NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE Katherine Lyons, Deceased. Raine is heseby: given. by the ‘une dersigned, ‘Margaret Moriarty, admin- trix of the estate of Katherine [yon late of the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the estate of said de- ceased, to exhibit them with the ne- cessary vouchers, within six months after the first publication of this no- tice, to said Margaret Moriarty, ad- ministratrix, at hey residence at 200 Mandan Street, in city of | marek, in Burleigh county, North Da- kota, or to the Judge of the County Court of Burleigh county, North Da- kota, at his office in the Burleigh county, North Dakota Court House in the city of Bismarck, in| Burleigh county, North Dakota. y further notitied that Judge of the Coun- and for the county ot Burleigh and State of North Da- Kota, has fixed the 30th day of April, A. D, 1935, at the hour of ten o’c in the forenoon, of said. da Court, Roomn of said C Seid Court House Inthe city’ of Biss marck in Burleigh county, North Da- kota, ag the time and place for hear- d_adjusting all claims against ing éstate of the said Katherine Ly- ons, deceased, which have been duly and regularly presented as hereinbe- fore provided. abated the ghd day of October, A. D, Margaret Moriarty, the ad- ministratrix of the estate Katherine Lyons, Bacensea: Dullam & Young Attorneys Co ‘Administrateix, Bismarck, N Dakota, Firat publication on the 44h day of October, A. D. 1934, 10-4-10 ‘Demons Will Test Fargo’s State Title Hopes Here Friday Night — Undefeated Williston and Dick- inson Elevéns Play; Grand Forks M Lakers EIGHT UNDEFEATED GRID TEAMS | MARCH INTO FRAY SATURDAY (Clashes of State’s Strongest Prep: Teams Add Color to Grid Schedule (By the Associated Press) Some of the strongest teams meet on North Dakota's gridirons this week to give added color to the high ‘school competition now approaching the end of the season. Matching two undefeated teams, the game at Williston between the Coyotes and Dickinson's Midgets at- tracts much attention. Williston’s four victories include a win over Bismarck 14-6. Dickinson has scored five consecutive wins, one 7-2 against Mandan. Fargo, four-time winner, and tied once, will be the favozed eleven in ite contest with the Bismarck ma- chine. The Grand Forks-Devils Lake en- gagement finds the Forkers’ un- beaten aggregation carrying the scalps of five warring opponents. One of those scalps is that of Grafton, a team which previously defeated Devils Lake. Minot will be resting over the week- end. Jamestown takes on Casselton; Mandan will be at Valiey City. Besides Williston, Grand Forks, Dickinson, and Fargo, undefeated squads include those representing Areta, Lakota, Larimore and Rugby. High scoring laurels are retained by Williston. It has scored 182 points. Dickinson, second in line, is 32 points behind. New Rockford, journeying to Leeds, takes with it a record of five wins and an uncrossed goal tine. Games this week-end: iy Aneta at Portland. Bowbells at Sherwood. Hettinger at Bowman. Drake at Carrington. Langdon at Cavalier. Crosby at Ray. Devils Lake at Grand Forks. Edgeley at Enderlin. Aberdeen, 5. D., at Ellendale. Lidgerwood at Fairmount. Fargo at Bismarck. Harvey at Fessenden. Garrison at Underwood. Grafton at East Grand Forks. Page at Hatton. Washburn at Wilton. Hazen at Beulah. Hillsboro at Mayville. Larimore at Cooperstown. New Rockford at Leeds. St. Mary's, Bismarck, at Linton. Lisbon at LaMoure. Turtle Lake at Max. Reeder at Marmarth. Milnor at Oakes. Mandan at Valley City. Rugby at Cando. Saturday Bismarck Reserves at Carson. Dickinson at Williston. Park River at Lakota. Kenmare at Mohall. Parshall at Watford City. Available complete results for the season: 2 L T TPOTP 200 3 0 221 53 2 030 3% 83 Devils Lake 3.11 11 SL Dickinson 5.0 0 150 2 Fargo ....+..+ 401 8 19 Grand Forks -5 00 7 10 Harvey . -13 0 19 55 Hazen -140 6 58 Jomestown ~3 11 73 32 400 1277 13 200 61 0 +120 4 -4 10 131 26 220 @ Minot 22221 pind Rockford ....5 0 0 .3 el -320 Williston. ..........4 0 0 Los AN RES ge pa QUAKE Los Angeles, Oct. 18.—(#)—Sul ban communities Touth and west of Los Angeles were shaken by @ mild earthquake at 1:40 ednesday. No damage was reported. A meteorite picked up in New Mex- lamounts of gold. J. W. CALNAN Funeral Home Phone 23 208 Main Ave. SBiemarck, N. D. | emma °° out,” moaned Kizer. Although Bill Millar, one-man “rebellion” against Spears, ico was found to contain minute) 'Purdue Takes Clue| From ‘Doc’ Spears’ Pre-Game Troubles Always Hard to Beat, Wiscon- sin Teams Are Dynamite When Coach Is ‘Down’ Chicago, Oct. 18—(%)—The “old doctor,” Clarence Spears, is having his troubles with just fair material to work with and a one-player rebel- lion on his hands, but that's what is|his worrying Wisconsin's rivals in the Big Ten football championship race. Big Ten coaches, to a man, always approach a game with one of Doc’s teams with suspicion and fear be- cause he's a tou in to beat, but when the doctor's “down,” he and his ball clubs are dynamite. It’s always been that way with the: doctor. A big fellow, he inclines to complacency and contentment when everything is going along swell. He calls sports writers by their first names and swaps stories with them by the hour. It’s when his football skies cloud up with discouraging in- juries and setbacks that he arouses himself, digs in furiously and comes up to strike a devastating blow to some team’s championship dream. It was like that with the doctor when he was at Minnesota and it has been that way with him since his re- gime opened at Wisconsin. Kier Takes Precautions No one knows it better than Coach Noble Kizer, whose Purdue Boiler- makers hope to start their belated ‘comeback at Wisconsin’s expense at Saturday's homecoming battle at La- fayette. one et you can’t figure ‘Wisconsin's has turned in his suit, the Badgers to be in high spirits Thurs- day for their Purdue engagement. Minnesota, confident and ready, packed up for its big battle at Pitts- burgh with every man in fine shape. The Gophers were keyed to a high fighting pitch by Bernie Bierman. Forward passing drill, secret and public, occupied most of the other Big Ten teams. Although Northwest- ern and Illinois have no football dates for Saturday, their coaches drove them along at high speed. State Tag Mill Finds Use for Scrap Steel A new use for scrap steel has been found by operators of the state tag mill at the state penitentiary. Pieces of steel are being pressed irto bookends, which are sold to the state supreme court and library. Approximately 300 pair have been COCHRANE GIVEN AMERICAN’S _MOST VALUABLE PLAYER AWARD Tiger Manager Wins Spirited Duel of Ballots With Charley Gehringer Chicago, Oct. 18,— () — Mickey Cochrane, the “Iron Man” who led Detroit out of second division to the pennant in his first season as rin} master of the Tigers, Thursday was named the most valuable player in the American League for the second time since 1928, The 3l-year old Detroit manager won the honorary award, voted an- nually by an eight-man committee {representing the Baseball writers’ As- jsociation of America, after an un« heraretd spirited duel of ballots with star second baseman, Charley Gehringer. Cochrane polled 67 out of @ possible maximum of 80 votes to 63 for Gehringer. The result of the voting follows: Gordon 8. Cochrane. Detroit, 67, Charles Gehringer, Detroit, 65, Vernon Gomez, New York, 60. Lynwood Rowe, Detroit, 59. Lou Gehrig, New York, 54. Harry Greenberg, Detroit, ordered from the plant, at @ cost of 7 cents per pair. The driver ant, a blind insect, is the real king of the African jungles; every creature flees in terror before an army of these insects. The honor of serving you at a time when expert and efficient service is so badly needed obligates us to do everything as near- ly perfect as possible. You can rely upon us. WEBB BROS. Funeral Directors aoa * Phone 687 ty Hal Trosky, Cleveland, 18. Wesley Ferrell, Boston, 16. Marvin Owen, Detroit, 13. James E. Foxx, Philadelphia, 11, Al Simmons, Chicago, 9. William Werber, Boston, 8, Roy Johnson, Boston, 8. Leon Goslin, Detroit. 6. Sam West, St. Louis, 5. Mel Harder, Cleveland, 4. Frank Higgins, Philadelphia, 3. Earl Averill, Cleveland, 3. Bill Knickerbocker, Cleveland, 2. Hayes Will Replace Berry With All-Stars Trenton, N. J., Oct. 18.—(*)—Frank Hayes, youthful catcher for the Phil- adelphia Athletics, was named to re- place Charles Berry on the American League team which leaves Saturday to play in Honolulu, Manila and the Orient. Berry had his appendix re- moved at Valley City, N. D. GUNMEN GET $2,000 Lexington, Neb., Oct. 18.— (P) — Three gunmen Wednesday held up the Lexington State bank here and escaped with approximately $2,000. The meat-eating lily is nearer be- ing an animal than 8 plant, GOOSE-FLESH IS DUCK SOUP ro® HANES UNDERWEAR AND we mean hot duck soup! Winter winds have no more nip nor zip than a zephyr—when you get yourself buttoned in Hanzs! Mister, you'll stay thawed-out all Winter. This is the Heavyweight Champion! Poke your hand inside a Hanes and get the feel of that warm, fleecy fabric. Roughen it up and pat it smooth—even the seams are soft! Nothing itches and noth- ing hitches. HANms sizes are cer- tified—bound to fit without bind- ing, no matter how much you bend and reach. Cuffs, collars, and but- tonholes are sewed with the best of intentions and thread! See your Hangs dealer today, and go through the Win- ter without goose- flesh! A dealer near has HAN: Suits pei tna <2 Wholesale Distributors HANES WONDERWEAR SMITH, FOLLETT & CROWL Fargo, North Dakota em wee, , an agp Se ee ee on ik enn ae eee See Rey

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