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«HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1934 Winner of Colgate-Syracuse Clash Mentioned for Rose Bowl Game UNBEATEN ELEVENS SATURDAY WILL AGAIN FEATURE SECTIONAL FOOTBALL BATTLES HAMPERED BY LOOP, Late Returns in A. P. Poll Serve to | OUR BOARDING HOUSE POSTSEASON RULES SUTHERLAND SEES occa onre oe Emphasize Minnesota’s High Ra’ | a — WINS FOR GOPHERS, KAFF-KARF~PUT AWAY 4 PUT TH RENT Stanford Cardinals Almost Cer-, YOUR SPARE DOLLARS FoR,| MONEY ON A | tain to Represent West ¥ RICE AND ILLINOIS BeSubssinas Pace HORSE 9 Sore reren nant in Annual Classic Pitt Coach Skeptical About GOES ON THE TRACK WHEN HE FINALLY.) LEFT TH" | AGAIN /—HAW, TLE GOT AROUND 0 TH POST—~AN Panthers’ Ability to Stop Navy Aerial Game | || cover Receive 635 Out | _ FOOTBALL THIS WEEK | Maximum of 650 Points; SATURDAY, NO EMBER 17, 1934 Stanford Second t LU ZNO HOME STRETCH, / TH’NEXT T et WILL GARNER { SUB-DIVIDED, % HIM, HE WAS IN YOURSELVES A TIDY ge tha 1933 Score 6-6 At Reading Meadville Amherst Boston .. Home Team Albrigh: . Alleghany . Amherst ... Boston College turns in an Associated Press poll 'Thursday served only to emphasize the belief of the nation’s football ex- Ne 4 , 15. - TIGERS DECLINED IN 1933 te a fae a Frew. pot | 25-0 Authorities May Overlook Red | Raiders’ Defeat at Hands of Ohio State New York, Noy. 15.—(4)—It may be| ‘on to the Rose Bot for the sur- vivors of Saturday's traditional foot- ball clash between Colgate and Syra- | cuse, i It is much too early, perhaps, to’ hazard a guess on the annual ques- | tion—who is going to Pasadena?—but there are strong grounds for belief that either one of the up-state New York teams has as good a chance as any and a much better one than most. Last year Stanford, the far western representative, surprised practically the entire populace by inviting Colum- bia, beaten by Princeton during the regular campaign, to play in the Rose Bowl after the undefeated Tigers had | announced they would decline any} Vids for a post-season game. Now the Cardinals are almost cer- tain to represent the far west for the second year in a row and once more their choice may fall on an eastern team. Game Saturday Important If it does, either Syracuse or Col- gate, depending upon which emerges the winner on Saturday, would be strongly in the running. Princeton, heading toward another undefeated season, probably would be the natural choice but it is doubtful if the Tigers will even be invited in view of old ‘Nassau’s policy on post-season foot- ball. Pitt would be another possibility ‘put the Panthers’ two stunning trouncings by Southern California still are remembered in Pasadena. Neither Army or Navy, in all proba- bility, would be available. Thanks to Colgate’s magnificent performance against Tulane last week, the Red Raiders probably will rule slight favorites on Saturday. If they get by Syracuse and then Brown, Stanford authorities might be willing to overlook the 10-7 defeat by Ohio &tate earlier in the season. Ohio State, as well as undefeated and untied Minnesota and Illinois, automatically are disqualified from Rose Bow! competition unless the Big Ten rescinds its rule against post- season games. Bluejay Grid Letter Winners Announced Jamestown, N. D., Nov. 15.—(?)— Jamestown high school will award ronor letters to 19 football players and two managers, it was announced Wednesday by Coach Ernie Gates. ‘The letters will be given to only those who are scaolastically eligible at the end of the semester's class schedule. Of the 19 gridders, 10 will return | to the gridiron next fall and nine will graduate. The nine graduates are Captain Merrild Augspurger, tuckle and fullback; Charles Maxine, and end; Bud Germain, guard; ‘Willis “Red” Deery, halfback and full- back; Ted Barsten, halfback; Ray ‘Miller, guard; Leonard Amundson, tackle, Martin Wolf, center. - Lettermen who will return to school for next year’s schedule are Gerald Cysewski, tackle; Floyd Ho- muth, end; Philip Schnieder and Ar- thur Schauer, quarterbacks; Robert Funda, Macvin Greenstein, and Her- bert Jenkins, halfbacks: Paul Willa- man and Andrew Lux, guards; Gor- don Baker, fullback. Robert Brastrup and Alvin Elhard will receive letters for manager and assistant manager respectively. ‘ Louisiana Is ‘Tops’ \ In Huey’s Selection ——— ——_____—_—_#? Baton Rogue, La., Nov. 15.—(?) —Louisiana state university and =t Minnesota is the nation’s in, football team, believes of half a uy Long. Jature if hisse his pet Louis- thing hatsity eleven (un- igluag nee) was placed It ts clumsy teams made up interests find 1t ‘ports editors, an unfair shursday and can exercise sn top. “far be- ‘, “he sports ‘Tee people of Nebras beaten reform. Heredirst place. have a small and com accorded body. Not only willine, Stan- function more efficierPtinceton, j Dickinson Providence Lewisburg . Brunswick Pittsburgh Ithaca . Carlisle . Brown .. Bucknell Bowdoin Carnegie Tech . Cornell .. Dartmouth Frank-Marshall Purdue «+ New York . New Hampshire ..Cambridge St. John's (Annap) Baltimore . Muhlenberg Bethlehem Villanova .. Brooklyn Rensselaer . Amherst Vermont ... Middlebury . Susquehanna Chester ... Lafayette .. State College Columbia Philadelphia . Princeton . .Kingston .. .N. Brunswick Springfield Swarthmore yracuse . Fordham Harvard . Johns Hopkins Lehigh .. Manhattan Mass. State Middlebury Pa. Mil. Coll. . Penn State . Penn .... Princeton . Rhode Island . Rutgers ... Springfield Swarthmore . Syracuse Army . Navy .. Ursinus . Wesleyan .. Davis-Bikins . Hamp, Sydney . -Collegeville Rochester ... -Middletown . Middlewest +. Lawrence .. +» Beloit .... Valparaiso . Indianapolis Western Reserve .Cleveland Ohio Wesleyan ... Cincinnati Cedar Rapids . Beloit . Butler Case .. Cincinnati . Ce Creighton . Dayton . Depauw Heidelberg Towa State Indiana . Kansas Knox . Marshall Michigan Minnesota . Columbia . .Evanston . Oberlin . -Ada .. -Columbus . -Norman .. Sioux Falls . .Morgantown Madison .. -Buckhannon Ohio Northern Ohio State .. Oklahoma ... So. Dak. State W. Virginia . Wisconsin . W. Va. Wesleyan Xavier ......+6 6. * gpcipihis friends have long hoped to ar- 0-84) -Vir. Mil. Inst. South Carolina Kentucky . Loyola (N. Orleans) Mercer . Miami .. Mississippi New Mexico No. Carolina Roanoke .... So. Methodist . Southwestern . Texas A. & M. . Texas Christian . Tulsa -New Mex. State ., Albuquerque -Duke ... -Chapel Hill . -Baltimore . Arkansas Vanderbilt Nashville. Va. Poly Inst. Wake Forest William-Mary «Tennessee . - Virginia . Blacksburg -Richmond Charlotte . + Washinglon-Lee .. Williamsburg . California California Agri. Coll, Pac. .. Colorado Agri. . Colorado Coll. Sarazen Takes Lead |", In Australian Open champlonsip. Hey Cooper Melbourne, Australia, Nov. 15,—(%| ed for second place with 70's. —Led by Gene Sarazen who barely American professionals placed among| North Dakota conditions the leading eight scorers Thursday grown in Nebraska and low! | OUT OUR WAY 20° 6 ‘position with 438% points. Back of ~T the opening round of the 2-hole golf! and Ezar, both of the United States, Cherries and apricots are being de- nia eatin, te _Meneatiae: veloped at the State ‘Agricultural Cole record @ swzzling 69, |lege which promise to be as good for Lee those slowly developed and unthrifty pul- 7-19 perts that Minnesota’s Gophers are ie ‘the most powerful team in the land. Out of a maximum of 650 pdints, other 15 who participated in the poll Placing them second. Ranked second by the experts were Stanford’s Cardinals with 468 points, ;While Alabama was placed in third these three leaders trailed Pittsburgh. , |420; Princeton 300%; Illinois 183%; Navy 182; Colgate 18112; Ohio State, 2|170%2; Syracuse 130!2; Santa Clara 1119; Rice 106; Louisiana State 52; Army 44; Temple 21. .| Of the 15 first-place votes which “Minnesota did not get, 8!2 went to Stanford; 51; to Alabama and 1 to Pittsburgh. The results of the poll was marked by several peculiar placings. Stan. ford and Santa Clara, both unde. feated, each tied once—the 7-7 draw to which they played one another— yet Stanford was placed second in the iist and Santa Clara no better than 11th, Ohio State's only defeat of the ‘7- 0; campaign was a 14-13 setback by Iili- 4- 0 nois, yet the Buckeyes were placed in 9-14! ninth position and Illinois sixth. Col- \gate’s Red Raiders, whom Ohio State 14- O{defeated 10-7, were listed eighth, a notch ahead of the Buckeyes. i: Badgers to Honor | Immortal O’Dea ! 3\Former Wisconsin Grid Hero, Who Dropped Into Obscur- ity, Returns Thursday Chicago, Nov. 15.—(#)—To the out- stretched arms of his old cronies, who once mourned him in “death,” Pat O'Dea, Wisconsin's football hero im- mortal, returns Thursday. Casting aside the modesty which r caused him to adopt an assumed name and venture into obscurity to escape the plaudits of hero worshippers, {O'Dea is coming for a homecoming range. | Banquets, round-table discussions with the men he once played football, , and then a rousing welcome at Madi- 1 Son, Wis. scene of his great gridiron exploits, are on the program for the man who came back. At the railroad station when O'Dea’s train comes rolling in from California, where he dropped into ob- ;Scurity as a lumber clerk, will be ‘prominent Wisconsin alumni from Chicago, Madison and Milwaukee, who will take charge of him until af- jter the homecoming football game against Illinois Saturday in Madison. Thursday night, he will be guest of honor at the annual Wisconsin Alumni Club banquet. ———— | Fights Last Night t (By The Associated Press) Dallas—Lew Massey, 136, Phila- delphia, outpointed Tracy Cox, 138, Indianapolis. Chicago—Joe Louis, 193'%, De- troit, knocked out Stanley Po- reda, 208%, Jersey City, (1); John Vorce, 179, Detroit. outpointed Red Johnson, 176, Chicago, (6); Jack Kranz, 190, Gery, knocked out Eddie Anderson, 205, Detroit, (1); Frank Ketter, 204, Chicago, outpointed Danny La Marre, 191, Chicago, (5); Bert Paxton, 180, Detroit, outpointed Merril (Red) Tonn, 190, Chicago, (5). Late hatched, undernourished, ‘Nets never will be profitable egg pro- ducers. By Williams pets, ssure, ble for the voter to — main ty ormey FOE AN interest himsew vam eNG ME it that he We have fs thinks Gene Mako rad fying: doubles on the ying les on ec paar uad in 1935... It ' about that Jockey Nebraska has will succeed Mack itably be eam for Isabel Dodge by the voters i110" surt that big ah. Washington There's Need Nang him hard. Constructivesc in tumbling A political party. to learn how through which qjtjurt.. .. Young will on their Goren ter of oMiinying on. is erate through @ her! pau! Rucker. holders and small ¢.,Ai- Herris, background. é es ‘Once in a while it na otbal! men (patty machinery willy back, but Mirection while the gry sign of a People are traveling sige oD PICKS PRINCETON, PURDUE the Gophers received 635 with fifty newspaper observers placing them at |Alabama, Tulane and Louisiana the top of the ranking list and the State Should Annex Vic- tories in South By JOCK SUTHERLAND (Head Coach, Mage of Pitts- ) burg! Pittsburgh, Nov. 15—Late Novem- ‘\ber football gives us few intersection- al battles, but to make up for this lack, there are plenty of outstanding sectional games. The east leads in this respect, Saturday, with our own game against Navy at Annapolis as one of the headliners. Here is a game that is a tossup. We beat Navy last fall, and under ordinary circumstances, would be favored to repeat. But circumstances this year are not ordinary. The Mid- dies have been playing the most sen- jsational football in the east, and my scouts tell me their aerial game is to be greatly feared. Our power attack will have to score frequently to beat Navy— and Buzz 5 | Another game worthy of attention is the Syracuse-Colgate fray. Both teams are unbeaten by eastern foes and both have great attacks. I think Colgate will be a little too fast hand- ling the ball for the Orangemen. In other eastern frays, Princeton, of course, must be favored over Yale, Duquesne should take Carnegie Tech, ‘Columbia should have an easy time with Penn., and Holy Cross may be expected to overpower Brown. ‘The one intersectional game in the east should be a corker. It brings to- gether Purdue and Fordham at New WAND OF u o GRSIGHT-FROM- THE-FEED-BAG” HOOPLE = CURRENCY, ~Q Layden at Mercy of Wolves If Irish Lose to Wildca’ Notre Dame Alumni Demand Victery Over Northwest- ern Above All Else Z Chicago, Nov. 15.—(#)—The Wolves have been silent during these York. The contest is a tough one to pick, and it is my hunch that the breaks will decide it—and perhaps in favor of the Boilermakers. South Takes It Easy , There is little cause for alarm among the leaders in the south. Ala- bama will have no trouble in hand- ing Georgia Tech another defeat. Tu- lane and Louisiana State should have lcomparatively easy hurdies in Ken- tucky and Mississippi State respec- tively. In other southern games, Duxe and North Carolina meet in a game that will be the closest in years, but one in which the Blue Devils must be given the edge. Tennessee is a decided favorite to win over Vander- bilt. The middle west’s big game will be between Minnesota and Chicago. The Maroons seem to be the last formida- ble opposition left in the path of the Gophers, but they hardly can mus- ‘ter enough defensive strength to keep Minnesota at bay. However, their offense will be the best Bierman’s team has faced in the Big Ten. Illinois Given Edge Other games in this section have decided favorites. Notre Dame will be too powerful for Northwestern; Michigan State should beat Detroit; Tlinois will outrun Wisconsin, and Ohio State should take Michigan. In- diana and Maryland meet in an in- tersectional struggle, and the Hoosiers must be given the edge, due to super- jor man power. In the Missouri Valley, Nebraska in the battle for runner-up honors by whipping Kansas State, and lows State will win easily over Drake. ’ Interesting Southwestern Confer- ence battles will bring together Ark- ansas and Southern Methodist—and this one fs in for Rey Morrison's —and Rice and Texas A. & M. In the latter game the Aggies cannot hope to injure the title claims of the Owls. 4 On the Pacific Coast, both Califor- nia and Southern California have comparatively easy games and should get by Idaho and Oregon without dif- ificulty. Science broadens religious think- ing. The more man knows the less superstitious he becomes.—Dr. Robert A. Millikan, famous scientist. Peti For Allow- Repert and Ace Final Distribu- TE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- of Burleigh. ss. § COUNTY €OURT, Before Hon. 1. €. Davies. Judge. In the Matter of the Estate of Gun- der K. Osjord, also known as G. Osjord, Deceared. Selma’ Browning, STA t Petitioner, vs John 8. Kittlesen, Jeanette Kit- tlesen, Carl. Kittlesen, Filla Krahmer, Josephine Troster, Nina Kittlesen, Jeanette BE. Kit- tlesen, Ida Qhompson, Clara Kittlesen, and \Gladys Kittlesen, Respondents. The State of |North Dakota to the Above Namdd Petitioner and Re- spondents: fou and eath of you are hereby cited and required to appear before at the Court marck, in sald{ County and . the 28th day of November, A. D. at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day, to show cause, if any you have, why the final re- port account filed by Fay Hunt- er, the administrator of the estate of eee as G. G ‘e named peti- sin the shares made of this citation as require law. i ‘Dated, this 3rd day of November, Bey "By the \Court: (SEAL) \ Le, Judge of the Co 11-85-45. ——-- orien ennimeemnmannntee days for Elmer Layden of Notre Dame, but they'll snarl and howl from coast to coast if the fighting Trish fall to uphold tradition with a conquest over Northwestern Saturday. That's one game, a battle bringing together two of the bitterest rivals of football, that Notre Dame must win if the weary Layden is to get by a highly-disappointing first season without being engulfed in a flood of Wentz, wealthy Oklahoma oil pro- ducer, the expected transfer of the | kn controlling interest in the St. Louis Cardinals baseball club from Sam Breadon to Wents may be effected Thursday: Wentz was apparently re- covered from his brief illness Wed- nesday night, and he indicated plain- ly that he hopes to become the next owner of the St, Louis club. Detroit, Chicago Stars Top Pro Grid Leaders New York, Nov. 15.—(#)—Earl (Dutch) Clark of Detroit, in total points, and Beatty Feathers of the Chicago Bears, in ground gained, are the National Professional Football League's current leaders on offense. Feathers, piling up 915 yadrs in 88 attempts, has averaged better than 10 yards every time he has been given the ball. Clark has scored 72 points on eight touchdowns, 12 points after touch- down and tour field goals. Follow- men with real money 1 actually ow.” Gopher Students Ask Game With Princeton Minneapolis, Nov. 15.—(#)—Claim- ing 3,000 signatures as a starter, sup- porters of a petition seeking a Min- nesota-Princeton post-seasonal foote ball game Thursday continued cir- culating the request among students, It is planned, said Charles Baker of Fergus Falls, @ sponsor of the peti- tion, to hand the signatures over to the “M” club, organization of athlete alumni of Minnesota, or the general alumni association. Either or both of these, Oaker said, would be asked to place it formally before university authorities. A blue grass lawn should not be covered in the fall with any sort of a mulch, outspoken criticism. Defeat by North-|ing him is the Bears’ great kicking | eee western would be the unkindest cut of all to the Notre Dame alumni, gen- uine and synthetic, who demand vic- tory over the Wildcats beyond any- thing else. The late Knute Rockne always used to reach down into the Ceepest re- cesses of his big trick bag to beat Northwestern, admitting that he had to win that game to @ comfort- able winter. Last fall, before the op- ening of the current campaign, Lay- den also voiced the same sentiment. Since that time, the demand is even western Winners Since 1901 Although the Notre Dame-North- western battles always have been hard fought, even vicious at times, the fighting Irish haven't lost one to the Wildcats in 33 years or since 1901, long before the glorious era, when Northwestrn won by a safety. ‘The 1903 and 1920 games resulted in ties, but all other engage: ments brought victory for Notre Dame. Probably the greatest game of them all, the 1924 battle, was clinched by Layden himself when he in & pass and returned it for a touch- down to give the four horsemen a 13-' 6 triumph. The largest margin roll- ed up by the Irish was when George Gipp led them to a 33-7 conquest. It ‘was Gipp’s last game. A few days lat-, er he contracted pneumonia which spectators, a good half of them Notre Dame root- | ers, will watch the battle at Dyche Sadhu. ESneeae and Elmer ir start duc! if the score board has the wrong totals. Wentz Willing to Buy St. Louis Cardinals St. Louis, Nov. 15.—(#)—Delayed a day because of illness of Louis H. CLARK star, Jack Manders of Minnesota, whose 58 points have been gained through three touchdowns, 25 points after touchdown and five field goals. Dodger Sale Rumors Denied by Manager New York Nov. 15.—(#)—Brooklyn, where the Dodgers always are re- ported about to be sold, rises again to deny these rumors vehemently, and at the same time cast one strong vote for Louis Haines “Lew” Wentz, the Ponca City, Okla.. millionaire who ig dickering for the St. Louis Cardinals. “I guess he’s about the only guy who wasn’t mentioned as a possible purchaser of the Dodgers,” sighed Bob Quinn, Brooklyn business man- ager, “and yet he’s one of the few R Convenience and Privacy W. E. Perry 208 Fifth St. Phone 687 | “HANES UNDERWEAR is my anti-freeze” Qup Maw Suiver, he don’t do nothing, if you just keep buttoned in Hanzs! Get hold of a Heavyweight Champion, and smooth your hand around inside . . . let the thick, rich your body. It’s the most com- fortable feeling in the world «+. to have that warm, fleecy fluff softly rubbing your ribs! You won't feel all cooped up in Hangs. There’s nothing to hold you back, when you bend or stretch. 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