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Nation ’s Gridiron Paths Are Strew Jackrabbits Battle Nodaks to 6-All THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER n With “Most Valuable |/MICHIGAN, BOILERMAKERS LEAD 21, 1995 aa Major Upsets STANFORD, ALABAMA, | RICE, TULANE, PITT! HUMBLED THIS YEAR BIG TEN RACE WITH TWO WINS Comets, 13 to 0 Football Scores ; Tie in Bitterly Fought Grid Contest ii | Single Promoter . Falgren Falls on Blocked Punt for Long University ze ae °o Nodak Line Star i to Play Wildcats Nine Unbeaten: and Untied| Touchdown Saturday Teams Remain in East; Big Six Race in Doubt GOPHERS, BUCKEYES TOP: California’s Golden Bears Loom as Team to Beat for Pa- cific Coast Title ‘New York, Oct. 21.—()—Right be- such epoch-marking weather phenomena as Ireland’s “year of the big wind” you can write down the side football season of 1935. ‘The campaign still is in its in- fancy, yet such championship out- fits of. year ago as Stanford, Alaba- ma, Rice, Washington & Lee, Tulane, Colgate Pittsburgh, Kansas State and have met defeat. Going into the fifth week of the season, here’s how the situation lines up by sections: East Has Unbeaten Teams No clear picture can be drawn in the East, for the list of major un- beaten and untied teams includes Army, Yale, Dartmouth, Temple, Vil- lanova, Princeton, New York Univer- sity, Syracuse and Catholic Univer- sity. Pittsburgh, Colgate and Ford- ham have been defeated only by in- tersectional opponents. Yale’s deceptive attack, which car- tied the Elis to a 7-6 triumph over Navy Saturday, will be tested anew this week by Army, none too impres- sive, in a 13-0 decision over Harvard. Dartmouth, which rolled up a 41-0 count on hapless Brown, tangles with Harvard. Syracuse, hard-pressed to win from Ohio Wesleyan, takes its turn for a cut at Brown. Pitt, beaten by Notre Dame, 9-6, probably will ruin Penn State's per- fect record. Notre Dame, undefeated in four games and victorious over Pitt, features the east's intersectional program in a clash at Baltimore with Navy. In Each N. D. City {Boxing Commission’s Ruling Not to Interfere With Club S| Matches, However Only one group or person in each city will be licensed to promote box- ing and wrestling matches in North Dakota, Theodore Martell, chairman of the state athletic commission, an- nounced Monday. The commission ruling, however, will not interfere with private boxing matches conducted in club rooms by private clubs, Martell explained. “One promoter—or one promoting organization—in each city in North Dakota is sufficient to guarantee a good show, plus a fair return to the Promoter, the commission felt,” Mar- tell said. A group of appointments of promot- ers in some cities was announced by Martell. At Bismarck, the local American Legion post will be the of- ficial promoting organization; at/| Devils Lake, the American Legion is the promoting body recognized by the commission. Mert Whelan, Martell said, would be the promoter at Minot; the Amer- ican Legion at Williston, and “either | Leo Kossick or the American Legion” at Fargo. t Other applications from Mapes, Jamestown, Grand Forks and Solen are pending. None has been received 8. D. Oct. 21—P)— South Dakota State college Jackrab- bits held the University of North Da- kota, defending North Central con- ference champions, to a six-all dead- lock Saturday in the annual Hobo Day game. Unleashing an early attack, the Jackrabbits scored a touchdown and threatened on two other occasions in the first quarter of the ragged game. | ‘The Sioux counter came in the sec- ond quarter. Martin Gainor, Nodak tackle, broke through to block a punt by Diehl and Capt. Fritz Falgreen fell on the ball in the end zone after it had been kicked around by several players. Replete with penalties against State, the game was bitterly fought. State scored first in the middle of the first quarter after Lassen recovered a par- tially blocked punt on the North Da- kota 10-yard line. Miller raced around his left end for the coufter. ! ‘The second quarter found the Jack- | rabbits playing ragged ball but a Sioux threat for a touchdown was stopped when Goldstein, quarterback, intercepted a pass on his own 24-yard Brookings, HANK GREENBERG. *“* * Greenberg Chosen Best in American World Champion Tigers Is Unamious Choice 8B EDICK- CENTER A mainstay in the Sioux line when the University of North | Dakota eleven clashes with the Agricultural college Bison at the University’s Homecoming Satur- day will be Robert Edick, 170- pound center from Bismarck. Edick, a sophomore, stands ‘five line. feet nine inches and weighs 170 In the final half the Nodaks open- pounds. {ed up a passing attack that com- j Pletely baffled their South Dakota jopponents but failed to gain the touchdown necessary for victory in their second conference start. a Philadelphia, Oct 21.—()—To Hank Greenberg of New York's Bronx has come the honor of being selected as the American League's most valuable baseball player of 1935. The batting star of the world champion Detroit Tigers was the un- animous choice of eight representa- tives of the Baseball Writers Associa- {been overrated by defeating North- Chicago, Oct. 21—(#)—Judging {from the evidence to date, Ohio State iwill elbow into a tle with Michigan and Purdue for first place in the Big Ten football title struggle Saturday, and Iowa and Illinois will stage the big thriller of the young conference campaign. Ohio State—the “scarlet scourge” they call Francis Schmidt's powerful | array over at Columbus, goes to In- ‘diana for one of the four conference ‘games, Tilinois and Iowa bow into {conference competition for the first time of the season at Champaign. ‘Northwestern, having found out about Ohio State, goes to Minneapolis to see if Minnesota is as tough, while Wis- consin and Chicago, both defeated in Big Ten warfare, meet at Chicago. Michigan and Purdue, tied Monday for first place with two victories each, cannot be dislodged as both meet in- tersectional opponents. The Wolver- ines go east to meet Columbia. Pur- due entertains Carnegie Tech at La- Fayette. All the evidence points to a sensa- tional struggle between Iowa and Mlinois. Each will have had two weeks to prepare for the battle, fol- lowing triumphs over intersectional foes of major ranking. The Hawks ‘were good enough to slow down Col- gate’s open offense, and will encounter something at least as tough in: Illi- nois’ versatile, swift attack. The Illini demonstrated cunning in whipping Southern California in their last game. Ohio State proved that it has not western, 28-7, Saturday. The Hoosiers lost to Cincinnati, 7 to 0. Minnesota gave the Big Ten an- | ‘The lineups: tion of America who participated in aed an aoe eppLEaE el U.N. D. 8. D, State |the selection. James ©, Isaminger, Sélen. | Lia ® en chairman of the committee, made the zl cl it njannouncement Sunday night. Maun rotenone Sees aes Sowl Ig Dragash; The voting was on the basis of 10 ow Fargo, ‘and Ronald Davies, ‘Ginna Searight e ‘Trapp points for first choice on the list of orks. ‘Yaitesikeeah “linet 4o secre: Amick by Sundet | 10 candidates selected by each writer, tary if BOO avalina subate boss | Gainor rt Evans {nine for the second and so on down ing col eae THe Boake “Has Smart re Halverson | the list. Seienteraenies both boxing and wrestling | Charbonneau = qb Goldstein} The big first baseman, who was catalina: et - Etc kept nn of er of the world series ‘Marte! * lonsrut ql games by an injury, polled 80 points, ors report Harmbbiel relate Rorvig fb Rouseff | with Wes Ferrell. Red Sox twirler who of athletic contests under its super- By periods: ec teseae on vision probably early next week. m3 sen 206 10 oie | RUDD nee whe ee Ohio, Minnesota Tops Big Ten: Purdue’s powerful Boiler- makers and Michigan's not-so-power- ful Wolverines are the current lead- ers with two victories each, but the real fight for the championship ap- parently lies between Minnesota and Ohio State. Four conference games will be play- ed this week with Ohio State, 28 to 7 victor over Northwestern, heavily fav- ored over Indiana, upset by Cincin- rati, Minnesota is a strong choice over Northwestern, The real fireworks, however, may come at Champaign where Iowa meets Illinois in the first conference test for both. Wisconsin and Chi- cago, beaten last week by Michigan Runyan Looms as | New Yorker Faces Portland | Ace; Revolta, Smith, Armour Y., a brown felt hat cocked jauntily atop the head that wears the crown) 660500058 Joe Vosmik, hard hitting Cleveland cae outfielder, was third with 39 points. Referee, Thompson, Drake; umpire,|Buddy Myer, Washington second Harmon, Wisconsin; head linesman, /»8seman, ranked next with 36. Livingston, South Dakota . Twenty-four players were named in the balloting. Lou Gehrig of the Pirates Upset Only Yankees received 29 points; Charlie Gehringer, Detroit, runner-up last Unbeaten Pro Team Chicago, Oct. 21—(7)—The last of year, 26; Mickey Cochrane, Detroit, the National Professional Football Repeater in PGA| winner last year, 24; Roger rT, Philadelphia 18, Julius Solters and Rollie Hemsley, St. Louis, 16 each, Still in Running By JIMMY DONAHUE League's undefeated elevens, the Chi-| City Bowlii Oklahoma City, Oct. 21—()—Dap- Sketches by Buss Wetzel eerie Masi aed iailen Monday, | CHOY” wling League per Paul Runyan of White Plains, N.| One of the best ways of picking up| upset victims of the Pittsburgh Pi- Standings Announced yardage when a running attack re- rates. The 6,991 spectators who paid to! official team and individual stand- other intersectional triumph, a 20-0 decision over Tulane, but suffered the loss, perhaps for the season, of Glenn Seidel, its captain and quar- terback. Seidel suffered a fractured collarbone. The Gophers remain good favorites however, over Northwestern. Michigan showed improvement, par- ticularly in its forward passing at- tack, in defeating Wisconsin, 20-12. Purdue, using two of its cripples, Cecil Isbell and John Drake, as its chief weapons, whipped Chicago's game, but sadly undermanned Ma- Toons, 19-0. Seidel’s Replacement Is Paramount Issue Minneapolis, Oct. 21.—()—The all- important question of a quarterback to replace the injured Captain Glenn Seidel, lost Saturday when Minnesota beat Tulane 20-0, was paramount at Minnesota Monday as the Gophers began preparation to open their west~- ern conference campaign against Schauer, Agre, Enge and Sun- dahl Star in Jamestown's Conference Victory Mayville, N. D., Jamestown college's. football team scored a 18-0 victory over Mayville Schauer ran 10 yards for the score. ‘The second counter came in the final period when Schauer took s pass to score, Mayville threatened three or four times, advancing once to the 11-yard stripe, but the Jimmies strengthened when the going got the toughest. The Comets had nine first downs to four for the Jimmies. Outstanding for Jamestown were Schauer, Agre, Enge and Sundahl. For Mayville Art Rife, Joe Whalen, Red Elfson and Joe Aasen did the best work. The summary: Jamestown Mayville Lagee Webber Mate Wolf Schlickenmeyer Sundahl Manney Agre Schauer DeLange _ Enge fo . Officials: Referee, P. E. Mickelson, Morningside; umpire, Harry Bridge- ford, N. D. A. C.; head linesman, R. Miller, Hamline. North Zone Duck Season Is Opened Shooting of Waterfowl Began at 7 A. M., Monday, Con- tinues Until Nov. 19 Washington, Oct. 21—(?)—The roar of thousands of guns firing missiles toward groups of fast-flying birds sounded throughout 29 northern zone states Monday as the fall duck hunt- ing season began at 7 a. m. The jingle of alarm clocks aroused hunters with the dawn as the new season opened, all hurrying to their blinds or other vantage points ready for the first ducks to wing their way past. Although this season’s sport will be held under the most restricted regula- Textile 0. Penn State 26; Lehigh 0. THWEST NOR’ U.N. D. Frosh 13; N. D. A. ©. 0, Jamestown 18; Mayville Teachers 0, Huron 6; Dakota Science 6, C River Falls 19; Stout Institute 0, Luther 30; Eau Claire Teachers 6, Carleton 6; St. Olaf 0. ‘5 &t. Cloud Teachers 13; Winona '0. MIDWEST Cincinnati 7; Indiana 0, of South Dakota 13; Morningside 13. Western Reserve 27; Baldwin-Wal- lace 14, Denison 13; Wittenberg 0. Nebraska Wesleyan 13; Peru 0. Ripon 21; Beloit 0. North Central 6; Eureka 0, Dubuque 12; Iowa Wesleyan 7, Valparaiso 14; Defiance 7, Hanover 6; Louisville 6, Monmouth 40; Bradley 0. EAST Yale 7; Navy 6. Army 13; Harvard 0. Princeton 29; Rutgers 6. Penn 34; Columbia 0, Temple 13; Carnegie 0. Georgia 13; N. C. State 0. Dartmouth 41; Brown 0. Amherst 12; Rochester 0. Maine 26; Arnold 0. Boston 6; Bates 6. Mass, State 7; R. I. State New York U 33; Penn Military 7. North Carolina 14; Davidson 0, Vermont 6; Union 0. Buffalo 7; Alfred 0. Mercer 14; Presbyterian 7. Salem 7; Davis & Elkins 0. City College of N. Y. 19; Lowell Mt. St. Mary’s 7; Gettysburg 7. Syracuse 18; Ohio Wesleyan 0, Wash. & Lee 14; Centre 7. Dickinson 14; Swarthmore 7, Ohio U 20; Marshall 13. wn 13; Miami 0, Springfield 13; New Hampshire 0, Holy Cross 13; Manhattan 13. . Miami, Ohio 28; John Carroll 12. of professional golfdom, loomed seri- | {USS to function is by punting. Aj get into Forbes Field at Pittsburgh, tions ever imposed, opportunities for ings in th Bowlin; ve|Northwestern at Memorial stadium Temple 13; Carnegie Tech 0. and Purdue, respectively, are paired Bs e City ig League have in the other conference contest. Pur- due meets well-beaten Carnegie Tech. Big Six Race Wide Open Nebraska's scoreless tie with Kan- sas State and Oklahoma's 16-0 con- quest of Iowa State leaves the Big Six race wide open. New light will be shed on the situation Saturday when Nebraska and Oklahoma tangle at Lincoln. Iowa State faces un- beaten Missouri and Kansas plays Kansas State. Southern Conference: The most ex- citing race of all with Louisiana State, Vanderbilt, Georgia and Mississippi the only teams not yet beaten within the conference, Duke remains at the top of the Southern Conference with three suc- North Carolina and North Carolina State have won one cessive victories, each, Bears Look Good ously Monday as a repeater for the; national P. G. A. title. But the diminutive New Yorker faced a real test Monday in blond Al Zimmerman of Portland, Ore. Runyan Sunday piled up an im- posing 9 and 8 victory over Tony Manero of Greensburg, N. C. The other well-known golfers who entered the fourth round were John- ny Revolta of Milwaukee, who ac- complished the sizeable feat of elim- inating Walter Hagen; Horton Smith, the “Missouri Pine,” who birdied Denny Shute out of the running, and Tommy Armour, who blasted out his fellow Chicagoan, Ky Laffoon. Revolta was paired with a formid- able opponent in Eddie Schultz, Troy, N. ¥., who “beat the man who beat the man to beat” when he downed team with a good kicker can pick up saw not only a 17-13 victory for the from 10 to 20 yards on an exchange | Pirates, but a display of fist swing- of punts. ing, during honeys the battle. = Today, however, a surprise element cent a cayanenen: icy his horn ending the game while the has entered punting, in the form of|Cardinals had the ball on the Pirates’ been announced by John Huss, secre- tary of the league. Team Standings Ave, 63 J the quick kick, that sometimes com-|one bw Sores neue ae 6 3 Bet letely tt . of as the game ended, kick, oars epic ‘ quick | Buzz” Wetzel, Pitt back, was ordered 5 4 555 820 ek, aaareee generally | ™8- ‘trom the field in the final period for 3 6 333 754 tion ae serene ap rae for-\ taking @ punch at Harry Nuuanu 27 222 777 mation. This lone using a a aiian-Ame! spread attack, causing the defensive ae Garis sHemeen, sien 2:7 222 18 backs to move close to the scrimmage line to cover the offensive backs in the flat against passes, or end runs. The safety man is pulled in to cover the zone left by the back cov- ering the man in the flat. With the situation ideal for a quick ‘The New York Giants strengthened their hold on first place in the east- ern division by whipping Boston, 17- 6, scoring all their points in the first five minutes. The Chcago Bears took over the | Names Three games, Nordlund . Single games, Brown . O. H. Will Co., 3 games O. H. .Will Co., 1 game Individual Averages Games 576 234 2617 940 Ave. Alvin (Dutch) Krueger of Beloit, con- queror of Gene Sarazen, one up on anj extra hole, ! lead -in the western section by de- feating 24-14. Jack Man- kick, the play is executed rapidly. The Brooklyn ders scored an 18-yard field goal for kicker takes two or three rapid steps backward as the ball is being passed 180 180 179 WL Pct. Team | weeks, passed a shadow over the en- 847 seeking some way to replace his inval- 840 |uable field strategist. California's Golden Bears, victors Saturday over Santa Clara 6-0, loom as the team to beat for the Pacific Coast Conference title, but Washing- ton and University of California at Los Angeles lead with two victories each. Denver's five straight victories give the Pioneers a big lead in the Rocky Mountain Conference race, but they must face Utah in a@ crucial game this week. (By the Associated Press) ‘Sports Round-Up fo) ‘New York—They ought to call | “Houdini” ... He seems able to reach up his sleeve and pull out a good back whenever he needs one. . . . Two weeks ago he brought Jimmy Craig from nowhere,... Saturday it was “Monkey” Meyer.... Was that boy good? ... Ask Harvard, Belfield Eleven Wins Fourth Straight, 12 Belfield, N. D., Oct. 21—Touch- downs by Smith and Dolyniuk en-/an offensive end who has had plenty abled the Belfield high school fuot- of time to get down the field, or by ball team to defeat Beach here Fri- day, 12 to 0, It was the fourth con- secutive triumph for the Belfield! eleven and puts them at the top ofj the conference standings. four games played Belfield has scored measured and their measurements 178 points to 12 for their opponents, , merged into one statue of the “aver- defeating Sentinel Butte, 65-0; Beach, age American” now in the Natural; more than 27,000 earthquakes in the 19-6; and Sentinel Butte, 82-6. OUR BOARDING HOUSE Ueut. Gar Davidson, Army coach,| 8 the Bears. 117 117 from center. He then kicks a low, M >| Green Bay trimmed the Detroit rolling punt in the direction of the |, 13:9, Dutch Clark's 43 yard coffin corner. The kick generally catches the op- |@f0P kick for Detroit in the opening posing safety man unprepared and |Period headlined. |rolls deep into the its territory| , 1. i ibefore being recovered, or downed by | Dickinson Midgets Beat Ellendale, 6-0 Wi Ellendale, N. D:—Dickinson’s high school Midgets scored a 6-0 conquest of the Ellendale eleven in a foot- ball game here Saturday. going out of bounds. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) A hundred thousand men of the In the American Expeditionary Forces were Japan and Italy have each had | History Museum in New York City. last 50 years. SCOAGCACOSOOHOOUOOOSOASOOOWS HEY, HERCULES/ TAKE A HITCH IN YOUR BELT AND GO UPSTAIRS AND TURN THE MATTRESSES IN THE FRONT BEDROOMS / TOO TIRED TO HOP UPSTAIRS AND FETCH MY ZITHER—=HIMP--FIE ON YOU, MLAD [=m YOU'RE TEN NOW, AREN You'S-.EGAD, WHEN 1 WAS YOUR AGE, 1 DID THE WORK OF A HUSKY ADULT~ MILKED THIRTY COWS, FED AND HARNESSED TEN TEAMS—~ FELL AND SPLIT TREES FOR FIREWOOD~ CLEARED ACREAGE OF BOULDERS AND STUMPS—WALKED NINE MILES TO SCHOOL, WHISTLING GAILY THRE BUZZARDS! —UFAW /THE LADS OF TODAY ARE A FUMDIDDLE LOT AS OF NAMBY PAMBYS | Hea ! Li aP if Saturda: Seidel’s injury, the second blow to fall on Gopher football hopes in two tire squad as Bernie Bierman began First it was Julie Alfonse’s ineligi- bility, but Vernal (Babe) LeVoir rem- edied that situation. Now the “elas- tic backfield” will have to be given another stretch and LeVoir, the ath- lete who contributed most to that elasticity, may be given another task. If LeVoir is shifted it means that Minnesota must find .another right halfback, Bill Matheny, speedy little second string right half, may be giv- en @ chance. If Bierman keeps LeVoir ‘at right half, then Sammy Hunt, an- other comparative lightweight back, vepbaniy, will be used to fill Seidel’s place. Whatever measure is taken the sit- uation is likely to be a precarious one, Seidel, physicians reported, may be able to play in the final game of the season as the fracture of his col- larbone was a clean one, but that is small comfort to a team that meets ‘Northwestern and Purdue in its next two starts. But for Seidel’s injury the Tulane contest would have been a pleasing jone to coaches. The big, fast gold- clad line charged and blocked vi- ciously. A single bee will not collect more than a teaspoonful of honey in an the best sport in years has been pre- dicted by More Game Birds in Amer- ica, Inc, a New York foundation which conducted a “duck census” and estimated that perhaps 65,000,000 birds would fly south. This year’s restrictions include the limiting of the shooting to the hours between 7 a. m. and 4 p. m. daily; the prohibition of live decoys and baiting ducks to kill; a bag held to 10 birds per day and the limiting of all firearms to three shots. Sink- boxes, sneak boats and open water shooting also are taboo, The shooting season, applying to geese, brant, jacksnipe, ducks and coot, will continue until Nov. 19. The lege 10, um Villanova 20; La Salle 0. Bethany 13; Allegheny 0. Johns Hopkins 0; Washington Cole SOUTH Louisiana State 13; Arkansas 7, Alabama Poly 23; Kentucky 0, SOUTHWEST ~— ‘Texas 19; Centenary 18. Southern Methodist 10; Rice 0, ‘Texas Christian 19; Texas A, & M, . ROCKY MOUNTAIN season in the southern sone states | 12. Sy open Nov. 20 and run until Dec. The estimate of the bureau of biological survey here is much more conservative than that issued by the More Game Birds foundation, J, N. (Ding) Darling, survey chief, figures that, 24,000,000 ducks will make the southern flight from Canada and northern United States and that 12,- 000,000 will be killed by hunting or natural causes, ‘The states where shooting began Monday are Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, Penn- sylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Mich- igan, Indiana, Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kan- sas, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, WELL, ITS TIME TO BLOCK IT UP FOR TH' We'LL HAVE TO USE DOBBIN AND TH! BUGGY TILL WARM D\ WEATHER AGAN A Valley City 12; Wahpeton Science 6, Dickinson High 6; Ellendale 0. Washington 21; Wash. State 0.