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Shaughnessy Predicts Four-Team Race for Big Ten ~ RIINNESOTA-PURDUE, ~ OHIO STATEALLNOS GAMES WILL DECIDE, Chicago Coach Skeptical on; Chances of Upsetting Great Boilermakers FORDHAM TILT IS PROOF. Powerful Buckeyes Will Have, Full Afternoon If They Conquer Ilini Chicago, Oct 17.—()—Clark | Shaughnessy is a fine football coach| at the University of Chicago, carrying | on where Amos Alonzo Stagg left off, but he confessed Thursday that he was an “inevitable coach” who would! like to be a fan at two particular gridiron duels this fall. “Why am I an inevitable coach? he asked. “Because it seems I'm al-_ ways facing inevitable defeat like this coming Saturday against, Purdue.” | “And the two football games Id} like to see.” he continued, “are Ohio} State against Tlinois and Purdue} against, Minnesota.” Outlook Is Blue | With a shake of the head, the; coach of the Maroon forces revealed his observations on 1935 football et the Big Ten. “Four of the gr st football teams —if not the greatest—of today are; Purdue, Ohio Staie, Ulinois and Min Shaughnessy began. “Bi he like*to spread bear stories, but take a look at the figures and show me, where we have a chance. “They had cnough punch to win} easily and such a superb defense th Fordham, I believe, was held to thre first downs and a total gain of only | 48 yards. Purdue has everything this} year—87 players and three or four! men for every position i Four-Team Race “It’s a four-team race in the Big} ‘Ten this year and what would I give| to see Purdue play Minnesota and | little Illinois tackle big Ohio State:| ‘Those games will decide it and they should produce two of the most thriti-! ing contests in all football history “Ohio State is going to cee one of the fastest and smartest teams that) ever handled a football. Ohio State) is powerful but it’s going to have ree tough afternoon against Bob Zuppke's| tricky, boys. + “Next to Ohio State and Illinois, val like to see the Minnesota—Purdue, game at Minneapolis. That will be a/ struggle of sheer power and specd with} plenty of reserves on each side to care, for the toughest going. Minnesota must have a great team to beat a great Nebraska team at Lincoln.” Tulane Hopes to Raise | South’s Grid Prestige: Minneapolis, Oct. 17.—(P)}—Tulane, | the team that uses the same style of | play as Minnesota, will arrive in the Twin Cities Friday morning primed | for action and ready to prove that| southern football is a match for the) best the Big Ten can produce any time. The Green Wave squad of 49 men,! the eleven starters of which average better than 190 pour a match for the Gophers in size, are eager to prove their mettle to the folks up aera) They haven't forgotten the North western game of 1930 when the Wild- | cats defeated them. 14-0 to break a! long string of victories. Bernie Bierman was coaching the greenies then and “Red” Dawson,, present Minnesota backfield coach,| was playing quarterback. This year, although they already have dropped one game to Auburn, the boys from the south are anxious to regain their prestige at the ex-) pense of the Gophers. Starting for the wave will be Hal, Memtsas and Fred Preisser, a pair of | 170-pounders at the ends.’ Tackles will be Bill Moss and Roy Ary, a pair of 200-pound youths, while guards} 1 will be Norman Buckner and Charley 9 Smither, 198 and 210 pounds, re-} spectively. Noel Loftin, a six foot! three inch 205 pound youth*is att center. Dougie Johnson is at left half, | Capt. Barney Mintz, at right, while | at fullback will be Johnny Andrews. Page will direct the team from the) quarterback post. Since October, 1928, Tulane has won 55 games, lost nine and tied four. | m YOURE wm TELLING ME American League umpires are scheduled to wear summer garb similar to their National League brethren next season .. . with the; cumbersome chest protector done up} compactly and concealed under their jackets. . . . Jock Sutherland, Pitt} coach, says that George Delich, a sophomore from Gary, Ind. who came to Pittsburgh as a guard and was converted into a tackle, is the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1985. - Head Over Heels‘in Football Paul Whitney, Univer tactics to pave the w touchdowns against Western State Teachers’ College of Kalama- Mich.. in a game at the Midway Here he doing a topsy- turvy act as the Maroons directed a play into the Teachers’ line Chicago won, 31-6, a rather top-heavy score : 120 Galfer Open ° 200. * No. One Net Aces Dutra Only Nationally Celebrat- ef Pro Star Not Entered in Tourney Oklahoma City, O ‘mighty men of golfdom went hope- fully Thursday to their business of deciding who will be the noxt to wear the crown of the National Profession- | en jal Golfers’ association, Bars, BEOCY For the next six days it will be one} New Yor ‘round after another of gunning for | Wills Mood: the championship of the Wimbledon coui over rough and narrow, World's best tei fairways, in the authorit: Until sundown Wallis Myers, British court expert. tonight 120 of the’ Mrs. Moody, who probably greatest profes- receive any ranking in th sionals in game will follow|the women’s nat: the 26 hole grind. was placed above her California rival, seeking their Helen Jacobs, on the s places among the yictory in the Wimbledon finals, 64 low — scorers hea (i qualified Myers, whose “world’s first ten” match play, ginning Friday and ending with the finals on Perry Oct. 17.—(?)—Mrs. Helen the “comeback” queen and Fred for giving equal rank ot the two Helens. Runyan j Tuesday. Every nationaliy celebrated golfer ‘in the pro division was entered in the fray, with the single exception of Olin Dutra, 1933 open champion. There was Walter Hagen, there was |Gene Sarazen, too, determinedly out. ‘for the title which he has declared | he needs. Little Paul Runyan, the Arkansas boy, was defending the crown he won last year. finally Moody. Perry, Germany retained the first places in the men’s first ten. Jim Braddock ¥ Escapes | Battaglia Knocks Out German at Winnipeg | dock, world heavyweight champion, escaped injury Wednesday Winnipeg, Oct. town, paid its first fighting visit byj |Frankie Battaglia in more than two y ditch 12 |e1. Lautenschlager of Germany as a sat-| car. isfactory homecoming. Battaglia, wrestling show here. finding little trouble, put the German | out in the third round with his hard \ Tight. Battaglia weighed 169%, (paar 154. London County Council @ metropolitan district. |\ Evans . Twin Hills’ Perry of Australia are rated as the | Handicap . players for 1935 | tive rankings of A. won't United: the States beceuse she failed to play in nal championships, | ength of her Injury i in Car Mishap. 3) i a Duluth, Oct. “4 —(/P)--James Brad-! boxing contains | more than 1000 cows, although it is| Ei \Dakota National, Asscciation Win Commercial Tilts Highway Department and Bis- marck Bakery Five Drop Matches Wednesday Three straight wins for the Da- kota National bank and two out of three triumphs for the Junior Asso- ciation of Commerce bowlers marked play in the Commercial League Wed- nesday night. Sparks was the high pin getter for the Dakota National team that an- nexed all three games from the High- ; way Department crew. Sparks rolled games of 158-192-169—519 for the high three-game total of the evening, tying with Patera of the Bismarck Bakery team for a high game total of 192. Schlosser rolled games of 155-176-148 to top the Highwaymen. Haskins pounded the maples for counts of 166-148-144—-458 to lead the Junior Association team to two vic- tories over the Bakery five. Patera was. best for the Bakers with 155-169- 192—515. The scores: Highway Department Schlosser . 155- 176-148— 479 Olson .— 153 W. Bol |Mannerow . Berg .... Cc. E. Rohrer . | 144-117— 405 100-137-139— 376 + 151-138-119— 408 Totals .... 701-704-681 —2086 Dakota National Bank » 140-151-155— 446 « 134-165-149— 448 149-132-143— 424 + 158-192-169— 519! 134-134-134— 402} 54- 16- 59— 129 i Donnis | Mayer Sparks rummy Tendicap + 769-790-809 —2368 Lismarck Gakery 150-168-165— 483 « 154-106-107— 367 159-160-125— 444 176-119-129— 424 154-169-192— 515 Vite . cock Totais ... Junior | Haskins iwi arner Koenek cum » 166-148-144 458 + 109-146-115— 379 + 116-125-117— 358 + 110-110-110— - 713 822-733-2328 Toials ...-. _— Round-Up New jw ork - Dan Howley, former ‘major and minor league manager, i woud like to buy the Albany Senators is generally accepted as the “official” | uc. A be-| selection, admitted having considered {Of the International League. - jdeal is reported cooking... . The U.; 's. L. T. A. is grooming Wilmer Hines Her great performance at Wimble-iof South Carolina and Henry Culley} don, when she trailed Miss Jacobs 2-5’ of California for Davis Cup doubles; in the third set then rallied to win! duty next year.... swayed him in favor of Mrs. The former dou- |bles team of Don Budge and Gene | Mako has definitely split. Jack Crawford of Australia! and Baron Gottfried von Cramm of | Gene Sarazen is the one to watch in the P. G. A, tourament starting at Oklahoma City today —he is without a title and wants one badly.... Bill Keefe, New Orleans Times- ‘icayune sports ed, pulled a fast one on his friends the other day and joined the benedicts. ... Note to Mrs. : Bill is the best. cook in the sports , writing profession. . | night when a car in which*he was al 17.—(®}—The_ home | passenger blew a tire and ran it into aj; miles from here on Highway } Braddock was riding with his! rs, Thursday hailed the middle-| manager, Joe Gould, and George Van/| jweight’s knockout victory over Karl) Allen of Minneapolis, driver of the! Later the champion refereed ay Eddie Mader, who may meet Joc Louis soon, is a former choit boy. ... Johnny Revolta’s putting touch has deserted him, and the Milwaukee pro is in the worst slump of his career. Witnesses in French courts are per- mitted to tell more than the truth. Even their imaginations may be re- sorted to in testifying. { OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ER-~AK~M DEAR ~UM- KAFF- AH+KUMF-F-—~A FRIEND OF ° MINE tS LEAVING TOWN UNTIL SPRING, AND HE ASKED ME IF TL WOULD AH~uUM-—HAR-R-RUME = \E LT WOULD TAKE CARE OF HIS ‘PET MONKEY UNTIL HE RETURNS! —REALLY MDEAR, YOULL ADORE THE LITTLE FELLOW I-—.HES A Vy RING-TAIL, AND AS BRIGHT AS > A BUTTON /-EH, WHAT SAY SHALL L GO FETCH most improved player on the squat . Dr. Charles Strub, general man- ager of the Santa Anita race track, vance played second base for Sacra- mento in the Pacific Coast League. , » Pitt and Nebraska will continue their gridiron rivalry through 1938, ‘which will assure three more years the best football in the country having in the National Football League. Ethiopis, borrower and lender chained together until the debt aa ee obligations. % A MONKEY oud BETTER | SHIELD YOURSELF WITH THAT CHAIR ! —~. JUST YOU TRY BRINGING IT IN THIS HOUSE AND YOULL 6oO OUT ON ALL Fours wm iT! 25-125-125— 375} ERNIE HETHERINGTON KAYOES BLACKIE MILLER AT GLENDIVE (COACHING IN PREP SCHOOLS PROVIDES BETTER BLOCKER Best Interferers Players Who Willingly Sacrifice Head- lines for Headaches By LAWRENCE (BIFF) JONES (Coach, University of Oklahoma) * Norman, Okla., Oct. 17.—The qual- ity of blocking Jn football is much improved today over what it was‘sev- eral years ago, chiefly because high school boys now come to us better days. Speaking generally, high school boys from the east and Big Ten areas know more about line play than boys from any other sector, because block- ing and defensive charging are stressed more by high school coaches of those territories. But when it comes to ball-handling, as typified in the forward and lateral pass, and deception, as practiced in the open game, we have to pin the blue ribbon on the high school boy |from the southwest and west coast, because he is outdoors more and, con- sequently, develops finer co-ordina- tion. Our greatest blockers usually have been great team players who were willing to sacrifice headlines for headaches. The importance of their work seldom is appreciated by anyone except the true expert. Tough Assignment Technically, the blocker’s job in intercollegiate football is very diffi- cult. He has to hit and tie up a imoving target in the open; a moving target that is experienced in defend- ing itself. Moreover, the blocker has to keep his feet while doing this, making the opponent “show” first, 1f possible, all of which takes precise timing and delicate judgment of dis- tance. Year in and year out, I believe Notre Dame has the finest blocking teams in the, nation. I think the finest team blocking feat I ever saw was Rockne’s so- called “perfect play” of 1926, when in the third period of a scoreless game with Army, Christy Flanagan ran 63 yards for the game's only ‘score, every Army man being entire- ly blocked or screened out of the play. It was a perfect example of beau- tiful timing and blocking, the twc things that really make a running game click, Great Blockers I think the greatest blockers I ever saw were Britton for Grange of Illi- nois, Murrill of Cagle of Army, and Layden for Crowley and Miller of Notre Dame. Occasionally you see little men who make good blockers. I recall three, Metzger and Law of Notre Dame and Chick Harding. Army's 145-pound quarterback of 1926. All were skill- ful, unselfish team players who made | the ball-carrier’s path to the last | doube stripe much easier to traverse. A man is not a halfback until he goes {five yards beyond the line of scrim-; mage. i" The cross block and swing are com- |paratively new in football. Before} the war, guards were rarely pulled | jout of the scrimmage line as inter- ferers, Jess Harper's old Notre Dame teams and Pop Warner's Carlisle In-; dians being among the first to prac- tice this. Layden Fools Army End My first sight of crossblocking was; against Larry Bankhart’s great Col- gate team of 1915, when I was playing tackle for Army. Colgate beat us that day, 13 to 0, and I spent most of the afternoon on the ground, punch- drunk and confused as a cop nailed from behind with a black-jack as he innocently strolls past a dark alley. I believe a fine block stands out in a coach’s mind almost as vividly as a long sensational run. Speaking per- sonally, I never shall forget Elmer Layden, now coach of Notre Dame, once feinting to block an Army end who was out of position, and then completely disregading him, leaving the end standing there flat-footed just a completely out of the play as though he'd been splattered all over the landscape. “Next time he comes by, wave a red i posed to block you!” the gruff Army Charbonneau May Be Out of S. D. S. Game Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 17.—()—A threat appeared Thursday that North Dakota’s football team must play South Dakota State Saturday with- out its ace passer and quarterback, Jack Charbonneau, who still nurses a sore shoulder, se Charbonneau’s absence, the Sioux are promising a much stronger offensive for the Brookings, 8. D., battle in the drive for a second straight conference triumph. Practice work during the week apparently assures that. Sullivan will start at quarterback if Charbonneau ts unavailable while Coach Jack West is grooming fullback Blanchette for the same position in case of further emergency. NW Bowling Tourney Set for Jan. 19-28 D, Oc Oct. 17.—(7)—The 19, 20, 21, 26, 27, and 28, tig Belo re-elected President and R.|° . Marks secretary at the business 12-Gange, per box. coached than they were in the old: i { flag at him so he'll know he’s sup-j{ line coach advised the end, after the game, | (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) i Ted Warapunia Draws With Montana Fighter in Four- Round Semi-Windup Ernie Hetherington of Bismarck, middleweight stablemate of Dick Demaray, stopped Blackie Miller of Aberdeen, Wash., in the third round of their scheduled eight-round head- Une bout at Glendive, Mont. Wed- esday night. Hetherington swarmed all over Miller in the first two rounds and had} him groggy and bleeding when he de-/| livered the knockout punch early in; the third canto. Ted Campagna, also of Bismarck i and former Mayville State Teachers! college star, drew with Carl Hanson of Wibaux, Mont., in the four-round semi-windup. In a four-round preliminary, Cow- decision over Kid Zap of Dickinson. Princeton, Yale Top ‘Old Guard’; Eastern Group Has Eight Wins, Four ‘Defeats Against Outside Foes New York, Oct. 17—(#)—The East lacks a big football conference such as the major western and southern groups, but a couple of times each sea- son it’s interesting to see how the “old guard” is faring within its limits and against “outside” opposition. The “old guard” is the term gener- ally applied to the seven universities in the eastern baseball and basketball’ leagues—Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Columbia and Pennsylvania. Princeton and Yale, each with a victory over Penn, are the ranking teams of the group, as no others have engaged in internal competition dur- ing the “tune up” season, ‘With Cornell and Harvard down in the doldrums, the group has recorded eight victories and four defeats agaitist outside opposition, This week’s program should give an even better line on its strength. Penn is favored to beat Columbia in the only .old-guard game of the week. Yale stacks up agajnst Navy. & powreful team to all appearances and one which might be included in th “conference.” Harvard, trimmed by Holy Cross in {its only major game so far, clashes with Army and appears to be due to take it on the chin again. Princeton faces its neighbor, Rutgers, in a re- newal of football's oldest rivalry. Dartmouth, winner of three minor games, faces a downtrodden Brown eleven while Cornell, thrice beaten, has a week off before meeting Prince- ton, Columbia, Dartmouth and Penn in succession. ae ee ese i. ;. i Fights Last Night i e (By the Associated Press) New York — Pedro Montanez, Puerto Rico, outpointed Steve Halaiko, 138, Buffalo, (10). Winnipeg — Frankie Battaglia, 160, Winnipeg, knocked out Karl Lautenschlager, 154, Germany, 3). San Francisco— Phil Brubaker, 177, Dinuba, Calif. outpointed Leroy Brown, 171, Charleston, 8S. D. (8). Oakland, Calif—George Simp- son, 174, Spokane, Wash., stopped Nash Garrison, 176, Mexico City, (6). Sioux City, Iowa — Everett (Young ) Rightmire, 126, Sioux City, outpointed Frankie Genaro, 130, New York, (15); Jackie El- verillo, 149, Davenport, outpoint- ed Petey Mike, 164, Chicago, One species of Australian kangaroo is more at home in the trees than on the ground. | OUT OUR WAY DION’T WE, EMORY’ "Peters ington Bar boy Ray of Livingston, Mont., got a! ! J New FCO TBALL GUARDS HAVE BECOME BACKS IN MODERN GRID- TRON PLAY POSSIBLE BALL no INMOD- ERN FOOTBALL, By JIMMY DONAHUE Sketches by Buzz Wetzel comes the fifth man in the backfield, pulling out and running interference close behind the line, or sweeping wide and cutting down the secondary on offense, Little credit do these play- ers get for an invaluable service. Heretofore, a guard’s sole duty was to make a hole for a plunging back, ox get through and smear defensive men. Now, however, he sometimes is called upon to take the ball from a back who has faked into the line, and smash off tackle, or shoot an un- der hand lateral to the tail back. On certain types of defense, a guard is dropped back. This‘is usually in the 6-3-2 defense, where the backs are secondardy ends. The duty of the guard in this instance is to cover the center zone, picking up trailers who might be pass receivers. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Mott Eleven Wins South Slope Title Mott, N. D., Oct. 17.—(?)—Mott high school, holder of every south slope conference football champion- ship since the circuit was formed, added another chapter to its book of victories by defeating Elgin 24 to 6 for the 1935 title. Although snakes prefer dry land, all of them are able to swim. No one has ever seen a snake which has been drowned. Diamonds can be made to phos- Phoresce by means of radium as well as high tension electricity. In modern football, a guard be-|{ Title Alabama Takes Grid Losses With ‘Grin’ Tuscaloosa, Ala., Oct. 17.—(7)—It's been quite a drop from the football pinnacle for Alabama's Crimson Tide, but they can take it. “This is a part of the game,” said Frank Thomas of Alabama's loss to Mississippi State close on the heels of the deadlock with little Howard college. “We just haven't got going yet. We feel that we'll come right back when the geam gets in good shape.” Last year the elephants went through an undefeated season and }climaxed the campaign with a sweep- ay orale over Stanford in the Rose ow! Until Alabama lost to the Mississip- plans, the Tide had not been defeated on the campus since. Tennessee won in 1928, 15 to 13. rr NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That by virtue of a Cee us on At ment entered Aa Crit 9th day of ltember, A. Dy 1935, in an action in ithe District Goure of Burleigh Coun ty, Fourth Judicial District of the |State of North Dakota, wherein the Regional Agricuitural Credit Corpot- lation of Minneapolis, Minnesota, = corporation ts the plaintiff, 5 DeLong and Clark Vice are th fendants, and an execution again ;the property so attached, issued ther jon, the undersigned, Sheriff of Bu leigh County and State of North Da- kota, will sell at public auction at the front door of the Court House at Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh, day, that certain real property des- cribed In said judgment on attach- ment, situated in the County of Bur- leigh, and State of North Dakota, di- Fected in sald judgment on attach ment to be sold, and more particular ly described as follows: ‘The Southwest ‘Quarter (SW%) of Section Twenty-five _ (25), Township One Hundred _Forty- One (141) North of Range Eighty- One (81) West, Burleigh County, North Dakota, or so much thereof as may be neces- sary to satisfy sald judgment and costs amounting In all to the sum of $407.25, with interest thereon from date of said lidgment and the ac- cruing costs 0! Dated October" Toth, FRED 8, ANSTROM, Sherite ot Burleigh. County, Bismarck, North Dakota, Geo. F, Shafer, Attorney for Biante, Bismarck, N. Dak 10-10-17-24. SUMMONS eer Bey NORTH D DAKOTA, COUN- URLEBIGH. OIstTRICE COURT FOURTH guDictAy DISTRICT. Irene Christensen, Plaintiff. Wilara A. Simons, Francis J Bold, Harry A. Williams, E. Ruble, BE. C, Ruble, First Natio: Bismarck, al Bank of . DD, @ corporation, North Dakota Co- operative -Wool age GE Asso- inte clation, a corporation, estate of son, and John L. Mil trustees of the Helvig, Deceased, and all other persons unknown clalming any estate or interest in or lien or en- cumbrance upon the property de- scribed in the complaint, Defendants. |THE STATE OF NORTH | DAKOTA THE ABOVE NAMED DE- FENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to an swer the complaint of the. plaintite in the above entitled action, a copy of which sald complaint is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your An- Swer upon the subscribers at their office In the Dakota National Bank & Trust Company Building in ths City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you exclusive of the day of such service. And in case of your failure to appear or answer as above required, plaintiff will take judgment against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated at Bismarck, N. D. this 11th day of June, 1936, Hyland & F Attorneys for. ‘Slainute Oftice hae You and each of you will pl take notice that the summons ‘and complaint in the above entitled ac- tion have been filed in the office of tho Clerk of the District Court, Bur- leigh County, N, D. and that this ac- tion is brought for the purpose of quicting title in plaintiff and in ex- cluding the defendants from any right, title interest to and in the fol- lowing described premises, to-wit: Northwest Quarter (NW%) of tion 20, Township 141, Range 80 West of the 5th P. M. Burleigh County, North’ Dakota and no personal clair is made against the sald defendants. Hyland & Foster, Bismarck, N. Dw ttorneys for Plaintitt. 26 10-3-10. WHEN [ HEAR THAT, C SEE RED ~~ LIKE PLE ALL THAT, SuRSECES, -79¢ | French & Welch «now 69C Hardware ‘PHONE ta