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‘Minnesota P GOPHER COACH HAS.» “™* - POWER, DECEPTION, - > SPEED AT DISPOSAL Wily Bierman Has Brought anj End to ‘Beautiful But Dumb’ Vikings | WIN 16 STRAIGHT GAMES . All-American Candidate Loss of 13 Men Last Year Fail- ed to Slow Down Power- house Offense By HARRY GRAYSON Chicago, Nov. 21.—(NBA) js qualified an Al team this f he he remarkab! of the Universi Minnesota eed, many expel would name entire Maro: Gold varsity and let it go ¢ "They could do much w If there i legiate outfit the 35,000 crush Mi see it deployec who dealt the worst defeat in is doubtful if any professi: could have repelled the Mi creation of that afternoon All that 5) hands of such a sk as Bernice Bierman fair. Minnesota i Sng record a of competition only to repulse V their third cot season. Minnesota even in the past two ye phers haven't They have cl victories since th No Longer Bea No ot arr in the ful drillmaster 5 positively Wilson, fleet, elusive Southern Methodist university half- is one of the leading Southwest Conference candidates for All-American honors. a rommpiling the tot Gophers have; sin to complete undefeated | d sal < MAINTAINUNBEATEN FOOTBALL’S LITTLE FELLOWS RECORDS It used to be said that Minnesota! = % H St L teams were beautiful but a bit thick |Spearfish, S, D., Normal Among FHOL STOVE eague headed, but there will never be al Nation’s Undefeated, dumb Swede in Maroon and Gold as} Trading Reported Jong as wily Bierman is about. | Untied Elevens There is a touch of deception at-| ia oe tached to practically every play run{ |) —_—_——- | by the Gophers. Only once, late inj New York, Nov *iGiants, Cardinals Linked’ in the second period f passing of Bill Renne Rumor; Players’ Names ‘i Are Kept Secret are never considered vita ti group of undefeated and 1 college teams, such as %, Middle Ten- sota defen: all | Besides a untied sr Dayton, O., Hot Stove hoi Thursday Nov, 21.—(?)—Base- gue was not so ere being made pear in New Yor of the larger c : 7 als 30 crowds | nes big New York ish (S. D.) nor- Wy. A aN | an -oneer Ohiy | at the minor league ing here, but don’t know mae) yeni side t stronger Ohi) tne information was being kept un- Minnesota t n’s records show! Go cover 4 é +, dex cover. top team last lot of teams whose slates pro! y New York and St. Louis National would be clean in their own cla: ion xamples are Wil- af and Franklin ana: Desday. Bill Tervy, Giant skipper,! american football institute has laid Mlinois of the 1934 combina- | N the east, Furman and gone tor sayay whee se we much of the responsibility for death Loui: % nidn the soublicWest consisted of. Branch Rickey, vice land injury on the gridiron to “prac- Chicag pW it Was good |Reserve and De Feul in the’ midwest, Precicert of Sepak qu an tunnel Cee seal inansing ab oae Jay Berwanger, who has maae a through,” as-/and Idaho, Southern Branch, in the! (.. beties h a aad AINE a ol al a md division team feared -grown Minnesota ! Rocky Atounbain ReRIBe N even adinitting that a deal had: beers/jeges. Spree iets oer an present team worked | boast a record, but all Sener said the princi- 1 and ott nea: ecg a ia Id bo announced at the Chi- igan and other opponents re- | : nnounced at the Cl fuse to take Bic word for the good argument) “23 Hine, everyone sles Waal fact that his 1934 team was more | bety ve, one of ina a bee aes eae powerful than the current one, how- nati @ teams, and Ds, Hebe. eecond -sacken for jtue Catt Roar Along Des: . ee BI ss Fitcher Bud Parmalee. Minnesota lost Aa nae nS ee A report, partially verified, was that the rumored three-cornered deal 2g the New York Yankees, Bo: jton Red Sox and Washington would bo effected and thet Al Simmons, star b} Pug Lund. Four ng the on, and made transfer Stan Ko: “on only by the White Sox outfielder, was on his way headed eu: AiR ” ~~. to the Detroit Tigers in another deal gon, the lefthe am, ani “In the three-cornered deal, the Red terman failed to re nuit doe SOX obtain Outfieléer Heinie Manush Then Julius Alp a “el. and Pitcher Jack Russell from Wash- halfback, became ington; the Yankees would get Out- scholastic difficul: rg mae GS j fielder Roy Johnson from Boston and Glenn Seidel, w! - Flareup Over Duke’s ers the fi J le as, e suffered 2 arhone in tne) — SCOUtIng Dies Down) Washington's “cus” would be Out- tussle with Tulane. | = fielder Ben Chapman and Pitchers| But Ver LeVoir filled in for the, Charlotte, | Jimmy Murphy and Jimmy DeShong accomplished Scidel, and Tuffy, flareup over outing North, from New York. ‘Thompson was developed to fill the Ca As the White Sox entered into a vacancy. Bierman did not come ay apparently/ huddle with Manager Mickey Coch- with Andy Ur; losed incident! rane, it was learned on good author- tle, LeVoir lity that they wanted Outfielder Gerald | Minnesota’: North previously w f# share of an upsot which shattered the latter's) St, Paul of the American Associa- ging the leather, passing, and punt-/ hope of a southern conference titl:|tion announced purchase of Right) a land a Rose Bow! bid | Handed Pitcher Art Herring and Out- There will be more bad news for} Coach Wallace Wade of Duke ad-/ fielder Henry Steinbacher from Sac-| Minnesota’s riva 1936. Much} mitted his scouts used the cameras,’ ramento of the Pacific Coast League. nore than the of another adding: “Aren't the others doing the — ampaging corps is to return, and the | s ing? What agreement is there, Frogs spond tie winter buried in Gophers me of the best-lool Ang talent that ever reported in their freshman squad against it?” ithe mud, near a body of water. League clubs completed a deal Wed-; Pitcher Bump Hadley and Outfielder| *. pounder. \Genatnengerere een Woshington, | Sterling, Basketball problem by assigning two men Carolina’s| Walker, Third Baseman Gilbert Eng-| eleven 25 to 0 in lish and a young pitcher for Simmons. \Large Crowd Will Witness Second Legion Program| Hall Is Confdent Demaray Will Stop Duluth Battler Here Friday Bismarck Bakery bowlers swept all three games with the Junior Asso- ciation of Commerce five and. the First National Bank captured two out of three from the Service Elec- tric in Commercial League matches Wednesday night. Pete Verduin blasted the maples-for counts of 202-163-180-545 to win sin-. gle and three-game honors and set the pace for the bakers’ three wins. Eayl Kuehn was high pin-getter for the Junior Association with scores of 158- 151-131—440, Rallying after dropping the first game, the First National took the re- maining two, partly on the strength of a 78-pin handicap, Haney was num- ber one man in the bank rally bowl- ing games of 159-134-117—410 while Callan with counts of 164-178-133— 475 was best for the electricians. The One of the largest crowds to wit- ness a Capital City fight card in re- cent years is expected to watch Dick Demaray and Jock Moore settle an argument in the squared circle here Friday night. | Advance ticket sales indicate a j;much larger attendance than at the first Legion-sponsored program sev- eral weeks ago, according to Match- maker Fred Thimmesch, who has 'charge of the sales. The curtain- raiser will go on at 8:30 p. m., at {the World War Memorial building. | Demaray, who stands head and jshoulders above any claimant to the ; Northwest welterweight crown, is in Splendid condition and Isham Hall,| scores: jhis manager, predicts that the Bis- Junior Association jmarck scrapper will win by a knock-|Dummy ........... 154-164-154— 462 out. Last year Sir Richard and the/Warner . « 140-115-145— 400 1 Duluth battler fought eight bruising jfounds to a draw. Dummy |. Jack O'Brien, manager of the Du-|Kuehn . |luth stable, Moore, Wes Lambert and|Handicap . {one other fighter were expected to larrive here sometime Thursday. Lam- \bert fights Rusty Gramling in a four- |round preliminary and the other boy | will be matched with LeRoy Purtell|Verduin jin the four-round curiain raiser. Faubel | “Wild Bill” Hasselstrom and Otto|Hektner Petroskie meet in the six round semi-|Baker {windup to the main go. Young/Patera .. | Deatherage of Fort Lincoln and Kid Brookér of Mandan will trade punches jin the fifth bout rounding out the 26- ‘round program. Hall, who Wednesday took Erniz|Haney .. Hetherington, Rusty Gramling and/Boise . | Vern Gramling to Aberdeen, 8. D., ex-|Cook . jpected to be back here early Friday|Samuelson . Koeneke 105-136-129— 370 124-124-124— 372 158-151-131— 440 89- 89- 80— 267 Totals ........... 770-769-772—2311 Bismarck Bakery + 202-163-180— 445 181-158-156— 445 121-143-142— 406 186-188-152— 526 173-189-157— 519 seeeee 813-841-787—2441 Total ...... | First National + 159-134-117— 410 136-124-123— 383 + 118-106-102— 326 123-122-137— 382 morning. Lawyer ... eee 90-127-149— 366 "Tonight Hetherington faces the|Handicap .......... 78-18 -78— 244 \stiffest test of his fight career when ~— —— the battles Larry Udell of leer Totals .... '104-691-706—2101 iveteran middleweight who startet i os ox Service Electric boxing as a stable-mate of Demaray’s iponaiaison 128-128-125— 881 at the South Dakota city and later Calla gained an enviable reputation in Twin bee bo , City rings. eee . Hall is confident that Hethering- jton is ready for a big test and Udell jpromises to furnish just that. The ‘former Winnipeg boy will be out to {lengthen the string of victories he has [built up since joining the local stable \last spring and many of the persons | who have watched him in action are jcertain he can do it. 124-178-133— 475 137-130-124— 391 ++ 164-104-162— 439 eves 158-107-117— 382 ++ 751-647-661—2059 Berwanger Feared sri he cm 60s Player in Big Ten False Economy Given ! i Blame for Fatalities|‘Flying Dutchman’ to Play Last i Game for Chicago Against Philadelphia, Nov. 21—()—The by first division foes for three sea- sons, bows out of Big Ten ‘football Saturday—to the not very great sor- row of the rest of the conference. Since the “flying Dutchman” from Dubuque, Iowa, the Big Ten’s liveli- est candidate for all American hon- ors this season, became. a regular halfback in 1933, the Maroons have won only three conference games, against 10 defeats and two ties. But in every game, regardless of the op- Position, Chicago was a definite source of worry, solely on Berwanger’s account. Saturday he will play. his last col- lege game of football against Illinois, and all week the Illini have been planning and working on ways and means of stopping the strapping 190- Last year they solved the to “play Berwanger” every time the Ma- roons had the ball, but are not espe- cially confident that the same dodge will work again. Against the Illini, Berwanger needs to gain only 33 yards from scrim- mage to round out a solid mile of travel with the football in his three years of competition. To date he has carried the ball 415 times for a total of 1,727 yards, an average of 4.16 yards a lick. Statistics reveal he has fired 143 forward passes, completing 50 for a total advance of 921 yards, and an average of 6.4 yards per toss and has received 12 shots from team mates for 189 yards. The workhorse has punted 213 times The institute, headed by John Da jGrosa, said in a report Wednesday that “false and dangerous economy” practiced by school authorities is a ‘major factor in the football casualty jtoll every year. The report of a national survey by ithe institute also said high school re- {presentation on national rules com- |mittees in all sports is necessary if ;schoolboy competition is to be con- rolled properly and if accident ha- zards are to be reduced. It urged school authorities to select coaches carefully, insist on the use of proper protective equipment, de- mand that coaches train players in “sound fundamental principles,” and establish safety clinics. Prospects Are Poor’ H Sterling, N. D., Nov. 21—Prospects ; for the high school cage team at Ster- ling are not very encouraging, re- ports Coach C. I. Olson. Only two 'players with previous experience are out for practices which began this week. Because of the difficulty of se- curing a practice floor, the schedule has not been arranged, Olson said. Players on the squad are Robert Brownawell and Dale Sherman, each with a year’s experience, Clifford Hanson, Gerald Long, Roy McCloskey, Lloyd Hanson, Harold Hall and Beuhl Shermah. Prospects for the girl's team are encouraging, Olson said. Guard to Play Quarter in Bierman will Tt next fall with; potential All-America backs in Al- Phonse, who no doubt will be eligible and Thompson and Uram. His present plan is to pull Charley | Wilkinson, an exceptionally fleet 210-| pound junior, out of a guard position | | _ te do the quarterbacking. Wilkinson| | | has been used in the backfield in| | | practice. The mere suggestion that| | Wilkinson can so readily be yanked | | 36 OUR BOARDING HOUSE ~ SES LET ME ONCE GET OLSONS NECK IN Tr VISE LIKE THIS, AN? HES FINIGHED IS KNITTIN’ FOR TH EVENIN | CMON ,DOC~— PUT UP A LUTTLE FIGHT, LIKE out of the line to play quarterback | &-ves you a fair idea of the capability | and versatility cf this Minnesota club. SL All five Minnesota ends return, YOU WANT TO PULL OUT OF Dwight Reed, Ray King, Ray Antil,| ; THIS HOLD,AN TLL SHOW Dominic Krezowski, and’ Frank | ; YOU HOW LINCREASE % TH VOLTAGE | Warner. | Minnesota loses Dick Smith, a 200- | pound tackle worthy of All-America} consideration and Ed Widseth, his! even more daring running mate, but their first understudy, Louis Midler, 4s a sophomore. Dale Rennebohm, 175-pound center, | and Vern Oech, superlative guard, | graduate, but Bob Weld is ready to step in. | Minnesota has been able to do} everything and has done everything ~~ ktelading czme fram behind — for | ‘wo seasons, and there is no sign ef a| Jetdown. | Every Christmas from 1813 to 1931, the King of England was presented ‘with “four and twenty woodcocks “baked in 2 ple.”. The custom was begun by Lord Talbot and continued by viceroys ‘and governors general general of the send the for 7,986 yards and. an average, from the scrimmage line, of 37.5 yards. He By Ahern P Scores! 5 has scored 21 touchdowns, kicked 19 points thereafter, for 145 points. Minnesota All-Star Grid Teams Chosen St. Paul, Nov. 21.—(?)—A backfield Sy NOWS YouR, 4 SUP THAT HOLD ON_ HIM,LIKE YOU THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 193 OUT OUR WAY any ( Hy > ih MiaA\\\, T.M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. © 1928 BY NEA SERVICE, WC. resents Many Candidates for Bowing! tut AY NA \l # ge All-American OU CLEANED iT Just \/ On,GOOD GOSH! LIKE YOU CLEAN YOUR | PIGEONS AN’ STUFF RABBIT COOP—ALICK | DON'T NEED PLACES AND A PROMISE! YOU'LL] CLEAN, LIKE YOU FIND THEM ALL. DEAD LIKE. WiTH AN EPIDEMIC, SOME OAY/ GET UP i ERE WITH A BUCKET || PLACE. 15 FILTHY! | OF WATER ‘AND SOME /| SOAP ‘N’ WATER ~ mit SOAP! SOAP ‘N’ WATER! THAT'S ALL 1 HEAR, | il Ru i AROUND HERE! *) Mey ! \ Records of U.S.Grid Leaders|| Sports Round-Up| 3 Georgetown, Bucknell, C. C. N. Y. Ho- bart. Texas Christian Howard Payne, Denton Teachers, Ark., ‘Tex. A. & M., Tulsa, Centenary, Bay- lor, Loyola of South, Texas. 1 By EDDIE BRIETZ ‘Team Has Beaten TP OP Games “| California Calif. Aggies, Whittier, U. C. L. A., St. To Play || New York—Why will Harvard not ‘ Mary’s, Santa Clara, 8. Calif., Wash., let its starting lineup pose for pic- ve We College of the Pacific. 163 9 Stanford |itures on Friday before the Yale 4 game? ... All Boston is agog over 8. M. U. Denton Teachers, Austin, Tulsa, Texes Chris- |!the mystery... . Jack Dempsey is 9 | Wash. U., Rice, Hardin-Gim., ‘Texas, tian, Texas || judge at Francis Albertanti’s pet | U.C. L. A, Arkansas, 213 18 A. & M. | |show, } Dartmouth Norwich, Vt., Bates, Brown, Harvard, Princeton, || ‘ Babe Herman, the original man Yale, William and Mary, Cornell. 289 25 Columbia || om the flying trapeze, hit the first i Princeton Penn, Williams, Rutgers, Cornell, Dartmouth, | aad oe in oy Hite’ ¥ Navy, Harvard, wh. 192 19 Yale j{ leagues at ig! +. + Minnes as ee oe. |] looked like the same old jugger- | Minnesota N. Dak. State, Neb. Tulane, North- |! maut in rolling over Michi- western, Purdue, Iowa, Michigan. 161 39 Wisconsin | gan... N.Y. UL Bates, Carnegie Tech, P. M. C. i! Dr. Charles B. Beury, president ot Temple, often makes football trips 3 with the Owls. . . . Don McAllister, Yo head coach at South Carolina, rivals ' 206 26 Fordham | i) se me | Slip Madigan as a promoter and 211 39 Clara showman. .. . He invited the entire {Furman student body to see the S. C. Returning Lettermen Bolster Taylor Quint Nov. 21.—(P)—Chicago’s|_ Taylor, N. D., Nov. 21—Return of; three lettermen from the team that) last year won the Northern Missouri | {Slope conference and entered in the) state Class B tournament gives Coach Joe Tele a good start in building the} 1935-36 basketball quint to represent Taylor high school. Varsity players from last year’s squad are Pemmer Halverson, a three-. year man; and Walter Fuchs, Arnold Erbstoesser and Grant Vranna, each Grad- uates from the reserve ranks that are bidding for a place on the first five are Lipyd Fixen, Ray Marcusen and Harry Hutchinson. James Galla- gher, Charles Hecht, Donovan Benzie and Wayne Peterson make up the bal- witht wo seasons’ experience. ance of the squad. Practices were started last week in order to get the team in shape for the initial game with Almont here The schedule: Dec. 6—Al- 16—Richardton, here; Dec. 19—Almont, there; Jan. 10—Hebron, here; Jan. 17—New Sa- lem, there; Jan. 24—Glen Ullin, here; Jan, 31—open; Feb. 7—New pemen 5 ere; Dec. 6. mont, here; Dec. here; Feb. 14—Richardton, Feb. 21—Hebron, there. Nodaks Leave to Play Two Contests in East Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 21.—(#)— Dakota Sioux again ‘Thursday for the last time this sea- son, looking for scalps in the east. The Sioux, who left here Wednes- Twenty-two North gridders were on the trail George Washington University at the Na- tional capital Thanksgiving Day. The game with Western Maryland is the first encounter of the two teams. |sessions, the Si. Mary’s reserve bas- game. ... Furman took him up, Saint Reserves closed up shop for the day and made the 150-mile trip to Columbia. | Cincinnati’s youthful Reds stole Slate 10 Games: more bases last year than the Giants and Pirates combined. .. . Parochial School Quint Will} Twenty-one of Merquette’s 22 touchdowns have been made by Open Cage Season at | Solen Friday men standing up and without a hand being laid on them. After nearly a month of practice Do pro footballers keep that old college spirit? . . . Joe Lintzenich |says they do... . He played with the } Chicago Bears during the days of Red Grange, Bronko Nagurski and Link Lyman, . . . And swears he saw the burly Lyman cry like a keyed-up sophomore at such an old time per- formance as a coach's exhortation at half time... . Joe says the pros would rather win than collect any time, ketball five is ready for its first game against Solen at the Sioux county gymnasium Friday night. Coach Clement Kelley Wednesday announced the 10-game schedule al- ready made out but intimated that a return games with many of the teams Few Notre Dame players make will be arranged as soon as the final} the grade as professionals. ... slate of the Saint first team has been}; They prefer coaching. ... An drafted. exception is Jim Leonard, hard- Members of the reserve squad who; cracking fullback of the Philadel- is are vieing for positions on the| phia Eagles. starting five are Nicky Schneider, Jake Simonitsch, Maynard Entringer,| Steve Hamas now runs a lunch if Anton Schneider, Bernard Heiser, Joe; Schneider, John Geiermann, Clar- ence Ressler and Bud Cunningham. The schedule: Noy. 22—Solen, there. Nov. 23—Driscoll, there. Nov. 29—Menoken, there, Nov. 30—Almont, there. Charlie Bachman of Michigan Dec. 6—Braddock, there. State says Temple is the best Dec. 17—Strasburg, there. ! eastern team. ... All of which Jan. 3—Steele, there. makes Michigan State look pretty Jan. 10—Wing, there. good, ... Why import your foot- Jan. 21—Wilton, there. ballers? . . . Thirty-three of the Jan. 25—Menoken, there. 36 men on New York’s U's un- defeated squad are New Yorkers. room in Jersey. .. . California scribes are burned .up because some crack- pots jeered Bobby Grayson when he was taken out after being injured in the Stanford-Southern California game. In the old Gevangenpoort prison of The Hague, Netherlands, prisoners condemned to starvation were tant- alized by food aromas conducted from the kitchen into the “‘hunger cham- ber” through air passages. The annual journey of the earth around the sun covers approximately Legend has it that “cocktail” ts . an Aztec word and that “the liquor was discovered by a Toltec noble who i sent it by the hand of his daughter, { Xochitl, to the king, who promptly ‘ named it ‘Xoctl,’ whence ‘cocktail.’ Chinese art is noted for its preci- In engaging the Colonials, North @ plays ® “rubber match with Dakot the capital eleven. It is the fourth clash between the two, North Dakota having upset the Colonials, 7 to 0, YOU plenty of power and speed, |last year at the capital. Previously, hed eed oar hee that could be improved | Washington had won here and one NUT AMAZON, TO upon were gleaned from votes of eight | game was tied. KNOT UPA ! coaches of the Minnesota College con- the trip, fourth eastern 4 ference in selecting the 1935 all-con-|visit in five seasons, were ference team. B: Bablarz Smart, ends; ‘The weak spots in the line devel- oped when the mentors insisted upgn placing tackles at the guard’ posi- tions; guards at the tackles, and cen- ters at either of those two spots. They were fairly well sold on the tackles, however. St. Thomas, undefeated but tied twice ‘in conference play, gained four of the first team places; St. Olaf, the 1935 champions with an undefeated and untied record; St. John’s and Gustavus Adolphus, also undefeated but tied, each placed two men on the team, with the other spot going to Concordis. of the schools shared the post- Mackenroth, tackles; man, Johnson and Sowl, Braver- Amick, guards; Searight and Edick, centers, and Sul- livan, Rorvig, Blanchette, Campbell, Burich, Monsrud, Charbonneau and Halvorson backs. Willie Hoppe Will Not Challenge New Chicago, Nov Titlist .21,—()— Willie | Hoppe of New York, said Thursday he had no intention of demanding a title match from Welker Cochran of San Francisco, \ new world’s cushion billiard \champlon, within 60 Ty second in the tourna- right to challenge, would ~~ and By ment, but sald attempt to defeat Cochran 1936 tournement, hass he probably three the 584,600,000 miles. sion and attention to detail. | chest! THE ANTI-FREEZE UNDERWEAR FOR MEN AND BOYS SER PST IA TATE OTL SOL EST OE IEEE