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*’ we iat 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER z#, 1935 ’ National Title Dispute Doomed to Remain Unanswer GOPHERS, RS, PRINCETON SMU T.GU,NY, STILL ARE UNBEATEN Two Undefeated Texas Teams: to Clash in Crucial Game This Week TIGERS WILL BATTLE YALE - Dartmouth Figured Capable of Eliminating New York U's Eleven New York, Nov. 25.—(?)—A double dose of competition this week will settle most of the remaining sectional arguments stirred up ‘by a frenzied football campaign, but the biggest dis- pute of all never will be answered to everyone's satisfaction. The list. of national championship contenders—just about as mythical as the championship itself—consists Monday of Minnesota, Princeton, Southern Methodist, Texas Christian and New York University. Minnesota, unbeaten in 24 games over three seasons, has wound up competition for the year and thus rests its championship case on its 1935 record of eight successive triumphs. Princeton, apparently, is ‘certain to wind up with a perfect record, and so too, it seems, will either Texas Chris- tian or Southern Methodist, depend- ing on which wins its crucial duel this week. N., Y. U. is conceded scarcely a chance to get past Fordham, but if the Violets win, they will have some part in any argument over national honors. Rose Bowl Game May Help The Rose Bowl game at Pasadena New Year's day may eliminate one of the remaining contenders, but there seems to be no real hope that a generally acceptable champion can be settled on. For this week, last major program of the season, the prospects appear about as follows: East: Princeton’s smashing 26-6 victory over Dartmouth in a blinding snowstorm at Palmer stadium left the ‘Tigers in a spot where, they will be generally recognized as eastern cham- pions if they get past Yale Saturday. Yale disposed of Harvard, 14-7. N.Y. U., with a great aerial attack built around Ed Smith, one of the country’s finest passers, meets Ford- ham in the Yankee stadium Thurs- day. For color and pageantry the Army- Navy tussle at Philadelphia Saturday tops all the rest, even though it will bring together two beaten teams. Sioux Play George Washington The intersectional program sends Syracuse against Maryland; Catholic against North Carolina State; George Washington against North Dakota university, and West Virginia against Loyola at New Orleans. Midwest: Big Ten-Minnesota’s 33- 7 conquest of Wisconsin and Ohio! State's 38-0 rout of Michigan left Gophers and Buckeyes lopked in a tic for the conference title with the sea- son completed. Indiana, which whipped Purdue 7-0, wound up in a percentage tie with the Boilermakers for third place. Northwestern and Towa fought to @ scoreless tie and Chicago, led by Jay Berwanger, spill- ed Tilinois, 7-6 in other closing games. Big Six-Kansas’ 21-12 defeat by| Iowa Etate left the Jayhawks with al chance only to tie Oklahoma for sec- ond place. Kansas plays Missouri, which tied Kansas State 7-7, in the final conference game on Thanks- giving Day. On the same day Ne- 4 braska, loop champion, meets Oregon State and Oklahoma plays Oklahoma A. and M. * Irish Close Great Season Independent—Notre Dame closed its most successful campaign since the Knute Rockne era by outpointing Southern California 20-13, South — Southeastern conference: Louisiana State will clinch the title outright if the Tigers defeat Tulane Saturday. Both played “breathers” 4 last week, L. 8. U. swamping South-|siag western of Louisiana 56-0 while Tu- Jane was winning from Louisiana Norma] 13-0. Alabama and Vander- bilt, beaten only once within the con- ference, play on Thanksgiving Day. Southern Conference—Duke, fol- lowing {ts victory over North Caro- lina with a 7-0 conquest of North Carolina State, captured the confer- ence crown with five successive trumphs. Rocky Mountain conference—Color- ado's amazing 6-0 defeat by Wyom- ing, left the title chase wide open again with Colorado, Denver, Utah and Utah State given a chance to win, Each‘has'been beaten only once, ‘They'll settle it on Thursday when Denver entertains Colorado and Utah Five ‘Minnesota Stalwarts Place on Coaches’ All-Star Big Ten Team MINNESOTA PLACES FIVE ON ALL-BIG TEN TEAM FOR 1935 MERLE WENDT Ohio State-End CHARLES WILKINSON Minnesote Guard fsirresode ist WOseTH fsirresode ist ~Tackle l nates the “)(ALL BIG TENE Minnesota’s Gophars, placing five players on the Associated Press all-Big Ten football team for 1935, selected by Conference coa.ires, domi- tar lineup with three linemen and two backs. Northwestern and Ohio State each have two men in the lineup, while lowa and Chi- cago each placed one. Jay Berwanger, standout Chicago back, was the only man to reccive unanimous vote of the coaches. The lineup thus rep- recente five schools. with no players from Purdue. i\linolg Wisconsin. Michigan or Indiana. (Associated Press Photos) VERNAL LeVoIR, Minnesota Quarter JAY | SERWANGER Chicago “Gillean BUCKEYES, WILDCATS 'BACH ON AP ELEVEN Jay Berwanger, Chicago Star,| Is Only Unanimous Choice of 10 Mentors Chicago, Nov. 25.—(#)—Minnesota’s mighty array placed five men on the jAssociated Press Western Conference all-star football team selected by the 10 coaches for the second straight year. The Gopher representatives are Tackles Edwin Widseth and Richard Smith, Charles Wilkinson, guard; Quarterback Vernal (Babe) LeVoir, and Fullback Sheldon Beise. Jay Berwanger, of Chicago, one of the greatest backs in Big Ten grid- iron history, and rated on the midway in the same bracket with the late) Walter Eckersall, was the only unan- \imous choice, a honor rarely accorded. Ohio State, which shared the con- ference championship with Minnesota and Northwestern, gained two places each on the first team. The other Position went to Iowa’s star Negro, Oze Simmons. ‘Two Bucks Get Berths i The Buckeye stars are Captain! Gomer Jones at center, and Merie| Wendt, end. Northwestern's Henry W. Longfellow won the other end posi-} ition, and his team mate, Paul Tan- gora, took a guard. Three members of the mythical! eleven, Berwanger, Widseth and! Wendt, were honored for the second | Three Lettermen Back at Dickinson Squad to Be Trimmed to 25 for! Opening Tilt of Tough 15-Game Slate Dickinson, N. three lettermen are among the squad of 80 candidates for the Midget bas- ketball team which began wana, here last week. - Lettermen around which Coach| Lloyd Denton will build his 1935-33 quint are L. Tanberg and E. Agnew. forwards, and C. Agnew, guard. The 6, when the Midgets open a 15-gam: schedule here against the Mott hign school team. The schedule: Dec. 6—Mott, here; Dec. 13.—Watford City, here; Dec. 20— Dec. 28—New Saiem, here; Jan. 3I— Williston, her Jan. 10—Glendive, here; Jan. 17—Mandan, there; Jan. 18—Bismarck, there; Jan, 24—open Jan. 31—Glendive, there; Feb. ‘T— Williston, there; Feb. 12—New Salem, there; Feb, 15—Bismarck, here; Feb. 21—Mandan; here; Feb. 28—Si. Mary's here; Mar. 6—open. Capitol Cafe Downs . Nov. 25.—() Only | squad will be trimmed to 25 by Dec.} Bowman, here; Dec. 27—Mott, there; | | Robertson’s Bowlers, cien unin «ad Martin High, 17 to 1 SATURDAY’S FOOTBALL SCORES igs od gd INTERSECTIONAL ! Western Maryland 13; North Da-/ kote 7. | Notre Dame 20; Southern Calif..13.! Duquesne 26; Nevada 6. BIG TEN | Minnesota 33; Wisconsin 7. | Ohio State 37; Michigan 0. | Indiana 7; Purdue 0. | Chicago 7; Illinois 6. | Towa’0; Northwestern 0. | | | MICWEST Evansville 19; Valparaiso 14. Kansas State 7; Missouri 7. Georgetown college 55; Hanover 0.| Towa Teachers 22; S. D. State 13. Akron 13; Mount Union 0, Toledo 31; Heidelberg 0. Ohio U 13; Ohio Wesleyan 0. Dennison 27; Ohio Northern 13. Glen Ullin Cagers Defeat Elgin, 33-9 Glen Ullin, N. D., Noy. 25. — The Glen Ullin high school basketball) team opened the 1935-36 cage season with a convincing 33-9 victory ay the Elgin quint. Play was exccption-| ally fast throughout and the game was} searcely as one-sided as the score in- dicates. J. Fischer, center, and F. Dinyer, forward,’ took high scoring honors with eight and five field goals, respectively. The summary: ‘Western Reserve 40; Oberlin 0. Washington 39; Oklahoma Aggies 13. Marquette 26; Creighton 0. Omaha U 28; Chadron Normal 0. Cornell 18; Grinnell 13, Towa State 21; Kansas 12. St. Louis U 6; De Paul 0. Hastings 26; Neb Wesleyan 12. Dayton 27; Wittenberg 0. EAST Princeton 26; Dartmouth 6. Yale 14; Harvard 7. Southeastern 0; Union 0. Thiel 7; Grove City 0. Bethany 27; Fairmount 6. + Colgate 27; Rutgers 0. Army 34; Vermont 0. Maryland 12; Georgetown 6. Dickinson 13; Muhlenberg 6. Lebanon Valley 18; Delaware 0. Albright 9; Franklin & Marshall 6,! West Virginia 51; W. & J. 0. Columbia 18; Brown 0. Mass Siate 19; Tufts 13. Springfield 19, Allegheny 0. Susquehanna 34; Swarthmore 0. Lehigh 48: Lafayette 0. Boston coilege 25; Boston U 6. Haverford 7; Johns Hopkins 6. Villanova 21; Temple 14, . SCUTH Newberry 14; Erskine 0. South Carolina 2; Wash and Lee 0. St. Vincent 9; Davis-Elkins 0. Auburn 19: Georgia 7. Georgia Tech 39: Florida 6. tackles Utah’ State. , Giants Down Phillies; Packers Trounce Pitt Chicago, Nov. 25.—(P)—The defend- “ ing champion New York Giant the Green Bay Packers probably will meet in the, National Professional Football leagué title playoff. The Giants conquered Philadelphia Sunday, 10 to @. Green Bay gave another great exhibition of power in walloping Pittsburgh, 34 to 14, at ® Pittsburgh: Two field goals by Bill Smith gave the Cardinals 2° 6 to 0 decision over Boston. The Chicago Bears and De- troit Lions staged a 20 to 20 thriller in the other, game at Chicago. Erickson to Captain Bison Football Team Minneapolis, Nov. -25.—(%)—Bob Erickson of Larimore, all-conference fullback, is captain-elect of the North “qDakota State football team for 1936. On the train coming home from the 14-0 victory over Wichita, the Bison took the captaincy ballot with Coach’ Casey. Finnegan announcing Erickson’s Erickson will be a senior next year. FG PI PF 5 : sd knit Minnesota line, he scored six |S. Finck, rf ... 1 0 0 RTS EH aucune A | jtouchdowns, and when not so occu- The Capitol Cafe team won two F. Dinyer, If 5 0 2 pe line siete ®. 1 St. Mary's: Angels \pled, turned jn an A-1 job of block- 3, Miss State 25; Sewanee 0. | out of three games from Robertson's; J Fischer, c - 8 0 3] | B jing. Sunday in a City Bowling league | F, Hermes, rg 1 © 1| Randolph Macon 14; Hampden Syd-} eat Driscoll, 26-6! Second team: | match postponed from Nov. 12. Klein! a. Muggli, ¢ 1304 2 ney 6. i Ends—Matt Patepelli, Michigan,! and Huss, with three-game tctals of K. Monagle . 0 1 1! Mississippi 6; Centenary 0. | St. Mary's Angels, high school re- ge Ettore Antonini, Indiana; tack- 610, tied for high scoring honors, J. Schatz . o o OF yg é U. 56; Southwestern Louisiana’ Se"Ve team, won its second game in a!les—Charles Hamrick, Ohio State, while Klein and Slag each had a high! E Horner ... a 6: 2 {Du Saturday night by defeating] and Charles Galbraith, Illinois; 246 in one game to tic for single-game) F, Mormann ...... o 0 0 patie Driscoll at Driscoll, 26 to 6. guards—James Karcher, Ohio State, honors, “The ecores: ; — = =| eget? Tech 25; Louisiana col-'” the angels jumped to an early lead and Edward Gryboski, ‘Illinois; cen-| : eeEPEPrereyne | | 1 7 SOUTH ;and held a comfortable margin|ter—Dale Rennebohm, Minnesota; | Cate WEST | throughout the entire game. Consid-|quarterback—Stanley Pincura, Ohio; 163-171-201— 535) Elgin (9) FG FT PF) Southern Methodist 10; Baylor 0.\crable improvement over their play|State; halfbacks—Richard Heekin,| 199-165-246— 610} G. Lipelt, f + 1 1 1) Texas Christian 27; Rice 6. the night before when they won from| Ohio State and Walter Cruice, North- 183-177-138— 498) C. Wittner, f 1 0 2] Arizona 38; New Mexico 6, Solen in an overtime contest was|western; fullback—Richard Crayne, 194-213-203— 610| A. LaMarre, c 0 0 0 a og | noted. cawe 140-140-140— dived A. Neal, g . o o 0 Maynard Eniringer and Nicky Oech Named Among Guards i aoe en ea G. Reinke, g 2 0 0 isploeade State 0; Colorado college} Schneider were outstanding perform- Honorable mention: | sseeeees 879-866-928—2673 | L. Roberts 0" 05.0) ers for St. Mary's. Anton Schneider] gnas—Frank Loebs and Howard Rove: ,R. Rivinus 0 Oo 0 Wyoming 6; Colorado 0. was best on defense with B, Heiser) Gyirl, Purdue; Ray King and Dwight rtson's |C Phal ... 0 ©. 0! Brigham Young 13; Arizona State 0.! also showing up well. Y hee ++ 121-159-170— 450) SENS | Pet the bi | feed, Minnesota; Trevor Rees, Ohio 172-158-176— 506 | Wig on ge PACIFIC COAST Driscoll attack, periae? his An othe State; Robert Lannon, Iowa; Kenneth 246-167-143— 556 Rae r | Stanford 13; California 0. ia De ee. ‘Nelson, Illinois; Robert Null, Wiscon- see» 198-150-163— 511! Score by auasiert: Oregon State (; Montana 0. = j sin, 218-158-205— 581 +. 812 6 733] Oregon 7; Washington 6. 1 St. Mary's ae FG FT PF} Tackles—Forest Burmeister and) Handicap .. + S1- 31- 31— 93) a 222 3-9 ..C. L. A. 14; Loyola &. iN. Schneider, f 6 0 0;John Woltman, Purdue; Floyd D2 -— —- -— “——} Referce, ‘L. “Muggll. Umpire, R.| Pacific University 6; College of | J. Simonitsch, f 2 0 1)Heer, Iowa; Harry Wright, Michigan; Totals ....se00e 100-BSL PE Aer Meissner. Puget Sound 0. 'M. Entringef, c .. 4 1 0)Ted Livingston, Indiana; Merritt g 5 H A Bush, Chicago; Joseph Chambers, pp BOARDING HOUSE B J. Schnelder, f'. ae y Ahern |? ; ah age : es ‘Totals ...... crow aaapn © Bam oer OUT OUR WAY Zz) { AW~DONT BE A RABBIT, FAT Im ZA we 4 Driscoll «6 FG FT PF! GWAN OUT AN’ BET 25 SLUGS ON mE [{ BRAVO, ROSCOE! ue se 1 a TO BEAT OLSON~YOULL WIN MORE YOUR RING TRUNKS | peterson, o': Liao. | THAN TLL GET FOR RASSLIN TH Bic. WILL CARRY THE ‘Colton. g 0 0 1 MOOSEI~ HES SES GoT A REP FoR ). NOBLE HOOPLE | [Kent's ih ees THROWIN’ LOCAL CHUMPS WHO EVEN COLORS ~ ROYAL (Sie 0 0 of GO INTO A CLINCH WITH TH CURTAIN IN“ BLUE AND GOLD!) = Olsen age A SHOWER BATH I-LOOK+TM GONNA | EGAD, FOR, fee) ne eee COME OUT AN’ SMACK HIS CHINSTHEN STAND HIM ON HIS HEAD AN SPIN HIM 2 THEY NEVER ONCE BALD [-— HAS 1 WISH IT WAS TONIGHT I~ UmPF - FIVE CENTURIES HAVE DIPPED IN COMBAT, TO " DEFEAT /, Denhoff, N. D., Nov. 26—Denhoff' high school cage quint got off to eee year. Statistically, the 1935 team shapes {Up as @ powerful unit. The line with Smith at 225 pounds as the biggest} iman, would average just a shade over | 200 pounds from end to end. The backfield, with Berwanger and Beise} 1 's a LAND TWO POSITIONS : George (MINNESOTA SURVEYS FOOTBALL Blazing Path of 17 Straight Victories Hit Climax Against, Badgers Minneapolis, Nov. 25.—(4)—Minne- sota’s Gophers gazed back along the victory trail Monday, and from the heights surveyed: an amazing football conquest of three years with- out defeat. Twenty-four games without defeat, 17 of them consecutive victories, were stretched along that blazing path that reached its climax Saturday in @ 33-7 victory over Wisconsin, Along that route lay the broken hopes of Pittsburgh, Nebraska, Michi- gan, Purdue, Northwestern, Indiana, Tulane, Wisconsin, Iowa and others who fell before the speed, power and deception of Bernie Bierman’s of- fense. In those 24 games over a three-year period, Minnesota scored 528 points to their opponents’ total of 116. By seasons, in 1933 with four ties on their record the Gophers counted 64 points to 32, the great 1934 team rolled up 270 points against 38 for all opponents and in the season just ended the count was 194 to 46. During the 1935 season the Gophers defeated North Dakota State 26-6, Nebraska 12-7, both champions of their respective leagues, then Tulane 20-0, Northwestern 21-13, Purdue 29-7, Iowa 13-6, Michigan 40-0, and Wisconsin 33-7. The 1935 team did not have its Stan Kostka and its “Pug” Lund, but it had the same hard-charging line plus a crew of fast, elusive backs in Roscoe, Clarence (Tuffy) Thompson, Andy Uram, Rudy Gmitro and Mal Eiken and a smashing full- back in Sheldon Beise. Without the services of Captain Seidel after the| Tulane game, Vernal (Babe) LeVoir, went to quarterback and did what j good start with a 17-11 victory over) {Martin in the opening game of the season playcd at Martin. The game [vas typical of the early season play with both squads missing, many sct- ‘up shots. F. Naubauer, Martin center, captured high scoring honors with three field goals and a brace of gift {Shots, while E. Heib and W. Korus, jDenhoff center and guard, were stand-out performers for the victors. jat 195, Simmons 180, and LeVoir ati 175, averages about 186 pounds, The Gopher tackles, Widseth and Smith, epparently lacked nothing of/| the requirements for first rate line-| Charles Wilkinson and Vernon Oech men. Wilkinson’s work at guard for Min-iat center and Dwight Reed and Ray nesova was outstanding and his speed qualified him as a back on the rare occasions when Minnest help in that departm@nt. needed any Tangora; and Rennix, Beise, Smith, Oech, Ren- coaches and critics alike agreed was a masterful job. In the line, Dick Smith and Ed Widseth at tackles were the key men. were at the guards, Dale Rennebohm King flanked this line. . Eleven lettermen will be graduated, Captain Seidel, LeVoir, Roscoe, Eiken {The Martin (11) FG FT PF| western. {W. Sate ft. ae 0 0; Jones, the Buckeye center, was a |C. Huber, a, 60 1| standout in every game. iP pita: c eo 2 LeVoir Sensational C. Schmidt, ¢ O 63> 1! {Edwin Michac! - 0 0 1)nesota backfield, who became a regu-| | — > -t!lar when Captain Glen Seidel was in- Totals............4. 4 5 5) jured, was a sensation at quarterback. i ‘Lynn Waldorf, Northwestern's head} penne ED. t rr coach, described the Gopher star as |W. Engel, f .. 0 1 OMe of the best pilots he has seen. IR. Bodewin, ¢ 0 |LeVoir shared the passing and was E. Heib, g 0 gi the leading kicker of points after! W. Korus, ¢ 1 7 | touchdowns with 13. iR. Heib, c 0 Berwanger did everything a half-j 1B. Engel, f . 0 1 | back is supposed to do. | i ee | Simmons, somewhat of a bust after: | 'Yotals. . a 4 |@ sensational start last year, came} | lback with a vengeance. { Score by quarter: Beise, the old-fashioned line smash- {Martin . + 6 0 2 3~—11!ing type of fullback, led the Big Ten enhoff 6 2 6 3-17|scorers in conference games with 37 Referee, V. Ne baucr. Umpire,| points. Operating behind the tightly | Magnuson. summary: | |played steadily all season for North-| nehom, Dallera and Freimuth. To continue its unbeaten rush Min- nesota must face the University of CONQUESTS FROM ’35 HEIGHTS. N. D. Sioux Suffer Setback in East Western Maryland Rallies After Searight’s Touchdown to Score 13-7 Win Baltimore, Nov. tae onl ‘Western land college shoved over two touchdowns inthe the second quarter Saturday to hand North Dakota its first defeat of the 1935 season. The score was 13 to 7. Barely 5,000 fans braved cold weather for the intersectional game. The Dakotans got off to a running start by driving to Western Mary- land's 14-yard: line and keeping the ball deep in Terror territory. West- ern Maryland held, however. Jerry Searight, Dakota center from Minneapolis, provided his team’s lone touchdown and the biggest thrill of the cold day. Searight intercepted Lathrop's pass on the Dakota 40-yard mark, went down the field behind good blocking, cut back sharply on the Western Maryland 15 and crossed the goal line untouched. Charbonneau placekicked the extra point. Terrors Come Back Western Maryland came back with |@ bang. A lateral, Draper to Benja- min, on the kickoff, sent the ball from the 10 to the Western Maryland 46- yard marker. A series of line plays took it to the Dakota 26 as the quar- ter ended.” Western Maryland opened the sec- ond period by driving to the Dakota one-foot mark where the Sioux: halt- ed the charge and Robert Campbell Kicked from behind the Dakota goal , to his own 23-yard line. Two plays © later Leroy Campbell passed to Ben- .. jamin for 20 yards and a score. Bren- ; nan’s place kick was blocked. Lathrop laid the groundwork for |the second Maryland score when he punted over the goal line. A kicking exchange put Western Maryland on the Dakota 28, rs Lathrop and Leroy Campbell alter- ° nated in short gains through the line’ _ and a lateral, Lathrop to Benjamin, sent the ball to the Dakota two-yard line. In two plays, Lathrop scored and Brennan passed to Draper for. the point after touchdown. Sioux Pass Fails The third quarter was an unevent- Washington next September 26, ‘then! ful kicking duel, with most of the , ss. ‘meet Nebraska October 10. Others | play in Dakota territory. LeVoir, the handy man of the Min-|0n the schedule include Michigan, The visitors kept the ball in West- October 17, Purdue, Oct. 24, North-!ern Maryland territory throughout western, Oct. 31; Iowa, Nov. 7, Texas,|the final period but were unable to Noy. 14 and Wisconsin, Noy. 24. ‘Second City League Tilts Slated Tonight Schedule of this week's games in the City basketball league, was an- nounced Monday by “Doc” Heer, di-| rector of physical education classes at the World War Memorial building. Games scheduled: Monday—Piggly-Wiggly vs. Para- mount Theatre and Knights of Col- umbus vs. Capital Commercial Col- lege. Wednesday—Regulatory Depart- ment vs. Company A and Klein's Tog-} gery vs. Aces. Volley ball will be played only on! Tuesday night of each week instead) ae |pire, Ogden (Swarthmore); lin of twice a week, according to Herr. Northwestern; John Golemgeske, Wis- | consin; Gilbert Harte, Ohio State. Guards—Wayne’ Sandefur, Ted Fehring and Fred Cross, Purdue; James Kelley and Floyd McDowell,} |Towa; Vernon Oech, Minnesota; In: wood Smith, Ohio State; Robert Keck, Indiana; Clifford Kuhn, Illinois. Centers—Reed Kelso, Indiana; A! Lind, Northwestern; Elvin Sayre, Ili- nois. Backs—Glenn Seidel, George Ros- coe and Clarence Thompson, Minne- sota; Frank Boucher, William H. Dye and Joseph Williams, Ohio State; John Drake, Wayne Gift and Cecil Isbell, Purdue; Lester Lindberg, Wil- bur Henry and Lowell Spurgeon, Illi- nois; High Duvall and Don Heap, Northwestern; William Renner, Mich- igan; Vernon Huffman, Indiana; Ed- ward Jankowski, Wisconsin. a 5 4 e on ne Ho Referee, |Maple Leafs Beaten Three Times in Row New York, Nov. 25.—(4)—The sud- ‘den deflation of the Toronto Maple Leafs brought the usual early-season wrangle for places in the National Hockey League standings last week, with owly the Chicago Blackhawks left as ‘a standout team. The Blackhawks’ 4-3 victory over! Toronto Thursday, after the Leafs head started the week by whipping the Canadiens 7 to 2, was the turning point.. The Montreal Maroons and Detroit Red Wings followed by trim- ming the Leafs 5 to 2 and 2 to 1. Chicago defeated the Maroons 2+1 Sunday night. The New York Rangers won Sun- day night's third game, turning bact | tbalt ae rivals, the Boston Bruins, to 0, 4 Books made by the natives of the interior of Persia even today have pages ot palm leaves, with the words inscribed with a pointed instrument. | | pass the 15-yard line, Their most po- tent threat ended when Brennan ~ knocked down Robert Campbell’s pass on the Western Maryland five. Western Maryland piled up 11 first © downs to Dakota’s eight and gained ’ 167 yards rushing to 98 for the Sioux. The summary: N. D. Pos. W. Maryland | Falgren. le Benjamin Chumich It Forthman Sowl Ig McPherson . Searight c Reith | Amich te Ortenzi Gainor, rt Campofreda Bjorkman re Lassahn Rowig qb Brennaa. R. Campbell lh Lathrop !Charbonneau = rh L, Campbell Blanchette fb Dray per Referee, Armstrong (Tufts); um- ~ lesman, Lilly (Delaware); field judge, Kelly (Holy Cross). Thanksgiving Game Will Not End in Tie Aberdeen, S. D., Nov. 25.—(P)—A tied game is going to be next to im- Possible in the engagement Thanks- giving Day between Minot and Rapid City high school football teams. Should regulation playing time end in a deadlock, each team gets a chance. for four more plays from the 50 yard line. The eleven to negotiate the most ground gets a point, and any Scores will count. Loss of the ball on a fumble or in- tercepted pass ends the series of - downs. Crushed ants are used for smelling salts in India, By Williams WHEN THAT GIRL OFFERED YOU TH! SECOND DISH OF LCE CREAM, YOU SHOULDA SAID, NO THANK YOU LIKE A GENTLEMAN. THEY MAY BE SHORT ER SUMPN, AN’ SHE JUST OFFERED IT TC: YOU TO BE POLITE — BUT YOU'RE 700 OUMB ‘TO BE WHY IS IT IMPOLITE TO TAKE SUMPN YOU WANT, WHEN T'S OFFERED, AN! POLITE TO OFFER SUMPN YOU DON'T WANT TAKEN?