The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1936, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SEASON'S OPENER FOR BOTH SQUADS WILL START AT 8 Demons Show Real Fight in} Final Scrimmage Ses- sion Thursday HANNA "ANNOUNCES LINEUP; Bismarck Will Outweigh Lin- ton Aggregation 15 Pounds Per Man | Bismarck and Linton will raise the! curtain on the Capital City’s football | season tonight when they mest under the Hughes Field foodlights at 8 p. m. It will be the opening game for both| elevens. Coach Glen Hanna's crew wound up preparations for the encounter Thursday night with a light signal erill and a short, hard scrimmage against the second team. Again the Demons concentrated on defensive play, and showed for the| first time signs of the fight which, Hanna has been looking for. Only twice did the second squad register gains of any consequence, and their total vardage would have revealed a net loss. | Opening Lineup | The opening kickoff tonight will probably find Koch and Clausnitzer at ends; Monroe and Rishworth at! tackles; Jordan and Bowman at guards; McDonald at the pivot post; Welch and Kallenberger at half: Murray at full; and Bowers in the} signal-calling position | Welch or Murray will do the De- | mons’ punting and passing. Trys for) the point after touchdown will prob- ably be via the fleld goal route, off Welch's educated toe. The red-head- ed back has shown up well in drop- kicking practice. Murray will probably lug the ball a) good share of the time tonight, and will play the safety position on de- | | | | fense. ‘ i The speedy fullback has given every ; Indication in practice of having what it takes to go places. | Will Not Substitute Hanna does not expect to use many substitutes in the game tonight unless it is absolutely necessary. Asa Daw-| son, regular fullback who has been| out with a knee injury, will probably | see action, however, and Penner, rez- ular quarterback, may also get into) the game. Penner received a groin injury in practice, and has not been; in a uniform all week. | Linton is bringing a squad cf 17 to Bismarck for the game, seven of which are veterans. Coach J D. Moriarty‘s starting lineup is not defi- nitely known, but it is assumed that these veterans will be in it: Dobler, back, Vetter and Bosch, tackles; } Captain Bill Daly, who plays end; and Kremer, Coon, and Leuwer, backs or ends. | Pressnell and Brenzel. 'Grand Forks High | Bismarck Meets Lin THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1936 ton Tonight Under Hughes Field satriniesett 0m \ Lights STs = ! Lead in Playoffs Each Holding Two Straight, Victories Over St. Paul, Kansas City ting stock of the Milwaukee Brewers and Indianapolis Indians rose Friday each club held a second straight vic-|and tory in the series to determine the | American Association representative Carl the International League winners. jenyt Yesterday afternoo the Indians! tne 7-1, behind the seven-hit pitching of | only Lefty (Bob) Logan. Last night the! year Brewers, new circuit champions, de- | the feated Kansas City had beaten the Blues 4-1 and the|and Tribe started out Wednesday with an | < GIANTS LOSE TO REDS WHILE CUBS AND CARDS ARE WINNING Indians, Brewers |New York Leads st. Louis Only 3 The pitching problem, which has ibeen the biggest kind of a nightmare ‘to Frankie Frisch all season, finally has caught up with Bill Terry. | And now the pilot of the pace set- Chicago, Sept. 11—(P)-—The playoff !enyy of the league for weeks, is in ‘al for the National loop flag—Fri This hurling collapse, in which only in the little world series clash with'seem able to hold their own, has made again took the measure of St Paul.! which they s most “crucial” series between 4-2. The Brewers | Cards in their three-game set Sunday VY, Games; Leaders Meet Over Week-end (By the Associated Press) Giants, whose hurling was the as much of a hole as his closest isch | his Gas House gang of Cardinals. Hubbell and Freddy Fitzsimmons hing but a song and dance out of Giants’ current homestand, to returned triumphantly | a week ago, and points to the! New Yorkers and the battling Monday. 8-1 win over the Apostles. | The Tribe, led by Frex Berger and} Dick Seibert, who had four hits each, pounded Lou Fette, league’s leading hurler for 15 safeties, including two home runs by Buddy Bates. The teams play again today at St. i i | | hurl for the Tribe, and either Ira} Hutchinson or John Rigney for the Apostles. The Brewers and Blues play at| Kansas City tonight with Jeo Heving! expected to pitch for the Brewers and | John Neggeling for the Blues. | Indians Win Second | St. Paul—Indianapolis won its sec- ond game from St. Paul in the play- | off series, 7-1. RH E} Indianapolis ....020 100 220— 7 15 St. Paul.........000 001 000-1 7 Logan and Riddle; Fette and Fen- sin} Paul Derringer, Reds — Stopped Giants with seven hits. Hal Trosky, Indians—His ninth inning homer with mate on base beat Yanke: Paul, with Jim Turner scheduled to|| Stan Hack ‘| eighth Phillies. Tommy Bridges, Tigers—Limited Senators to five hits. Finky Higgins, homer Browns. Frankie Frisch, Cardinals — Hi against Bees, Paul Waner, Pirates — His two singles drove in three runs against Dodgers THURSDAY'S STARS bs—Hit homer in for winning run against Athletics — Hit with two on against | | | gle started winning rally || ner. Brewers Take Another | Milwaukee—The Brewers defeated ley Kansas City 4-2, | pes! Kansas City....100 001 000 ne Milwaukee . 200 002 00x-- 4 9 0! Page, Moncrife and Madjeski; | the t run ‘Green and Light’ Three Big Lettermen Return to cay, years has been building football teams} for Central high school here, looked Ith The Linton team will average only | 140 pounds, and wili be outweighed | by the Demons nearly 15 pounds per} man. Bismarck line averages 157 pounds, and the backfield, 150. over his squad Friday and termed it “very green, and light in too many key positions.” 1 There are only three returning let- termen on the Grand Forks eleven this season but they are big fellow: lund, 160-pound guards and Robert 600 Candidates at | Big Ten Practice Bierman Running Six Full) Teams Through Signals at Minnesota <a | 4 Chicago, Sept. 11.—(\—-The lid was} a off the 1936 western conference foot- ! ball season Friday, with some 600 grid- q iron hopefuls reporting at opening Big Ten practice sessions. q While a portion of the initial work-/ outs yesterday were devoted, as us-| ual, to newsmen and photographers. | @rills for the most part were strenuous ; enough to indicate that every mentor is taking the campaign seriously from At Minnesota, Coach Bernie Bier- | ,man had six full teams running sig- nals in preparation for the opening } game Sept. 26, against the powerful i Washington Huskies. Veterans at Ohio Offense was the word at Ohio State | as Coach Francis Schmidt concentrat- ed on his veterans in preparation for 4} * awinning start. At Illinois, Bob Zup- pke sent 74 candidates through a long workout and had material today for “bear stories” in the injury of Lowell Spurgeon, veteran back. Spurgeon fractured his nose in a signal drill mixup and will not be able to scrim-| At Wisconsin, the Badgers’ new men- tor, Harry Stuhldreher, greeted 45 can- didates, but one of them may not see much action this fall. John Budde. yeteran Milwaukee end, dislocated a) 1 knee catching a pass and may be on the sidelines through most of the cam- ai Solem Switches Lineup Five University of Iowa elevens trot- ted through practice and a dummy scrimmage drill, Coach Ossie Solem changing men frequently from one post to another. Coach Clark Shaugh- nessy, at Chicago, put 35 candidates through a seven-hour session under 2 sun and indicated that drills the start. { “ mage for some time. would get harder as the season pro- Lynn Waldorf also “bore down” on his Northwestern squad of 58, holding Grills in the morning and afternoon and a blackboard session in the eve- ring. At Michigan, Harry Kipke greeted 54 candidates, reporting that the squad showed a gratifying increase in weight and Coach Bo McMillan had his Indiana | Forks at Fillatrault. who this fall weighs 165) tive pounds. Bohnoff says he will have at|_,™ least five good prospects, the heav- iest man weighing 180 pounds. estimated the team average at about! 150 pounds. The schedule: Sept. 18, St. James; at Grand Forks: Sept. 24, Grafton at} Grand Forks; Oct. 1, Dé Grand Forks; Oct. 15, East Grand Forks; Oct. Wahpeton at Wahpeton and Noy. 1 Fargo at Fargo. ils Lake at 25,| ive Raleigh Wins With Ninth-Inning Rally! ninth inning enabled the Raleigh 4-all baseball team to nose out Mcintosh, | S. D., 4-3, in a game here Sunday. | Raleigh's winning margin came as a} result of two bases on balls, a single, hits and fanned 14, Katers, McIn- ber of hits, and fanned seven. i best freshman football team since the | Chic ciass of 1936 first enrelled. The pitching passed out again in Garbo Gabler. their second close one in a row over dangerous Cubs nosed out the Phillies by the same margin on Stan Hack’s eighth-inning homer, This left the Giants only 3!2 games| jin front of the Cards, with both the {Gas House gang and the Cubs coming; {up in the next four days, starting oe lined up this way: Help Fill Important Key Games! te Games to Positions Club W. L, Behind Play aa = Giants 82) G4 SAB Grand Forks, N. D,. Sept. 11.—(#)—|Cardinals .. 78 57 Bt 19 Coach Ed Bohnoff, who for eight/Cubs ... % 6 5 16 | When Gabler was belted out in the eighth inning yesterday, it marked the {Giant pitching has failed to go the ‘route. The Pirates, whose chances to catch up are almost non-existent, finished Albert Raschik and Gordon Setter-| their season's series at Brooklyn with jan 11-5 win, behind Bill Swift's effec- } though the Yanks have sewed up the; He | Pennant, the warfare remained plenty | hot yesterday in the battling for sec- jond and third place. The second-place | | White Sox were idle, while the Tigers moved up into a third place tie with | | Washington by bowling over the Sen- Grand | 2tors, 5-2, as Tommy Bridges chalked jup his 20th win of the season with a Derringer and Lombardi; i tosh pitcher, allowed an equal num- Coffman and Mancuso, i Philadelphia Reds Win 2 Straight late innings yesterday and the y Reds made it two straight over Giants with a 7-2 decision off The Cards pulled out roublesome Bees, 3-2, with a two- rally in the ninth, and the still and juggled the situation till it time in their last 18 games that Pirates’ Chances Poor pitching. the American League, even jof “famous runs.” Williston Football Mentor Is Through Joe Cutting Resigns After Giv- ing Coyotes 3 State Ti in 21 Years Williston, N. D., Sept. 11.—(4)—For the first time in 21 years, Joe Cutting, veteran Williston high school football coach and former University of Min- nesota halfback, is not leading the Coyote pack. The veteran mentor, known as “Dean” of North Dakota high school coaches, resigned from the Williston athletic staff saying, “I’ve been at the game long enough.” He was suc- ceeded this fall by Johnny Mach, basketball and track coach, who came to Williston from Mohall two years ago. Won 3 State Titles Cutting sent his boys through their first workout in the fall of 1915, Since then he has always had a team in the field until this season which would have opened his 22nd year as coach. The Williston veteran guided three j teams to state championship honors in 1917-19-20. Cutting, who today is a prominent Williston druggist and member of the state pharmacy board, first donned the moleskins as a boy in Sleepy Eye, Minn., high school in 1900. He has been actively connected with football since. Upon being graduated from the University of Minnesota, closing a bright football career, Cutting worked with Gil Dobie, nationally known grid mentor, at the North Dakota Agricultural college at Fargo. Later he followed Dobie to the University of Washington at Seattle where he | handled the young Huskies who later saw action under Dobie. Ran 80 Yards Cutting is still on the record books As a halfback for Minnesota in 1905 he raced 80 yards from scrimmage against Wisconsin to help pull the Gophers out of a bad hole, He will journey to Seattle with Ber- nie Bierman’s Golden Gophers to see Minnesota and Washington clash on Sept. 26. It will be a homecoming for Cutting. . . . “My old team and the school I once gave the frosh their Six-Man Football Will Be Played on_ ISTATE BOARD WILL SPONSOR SPORT IN j Clinic Being Held at Sykeston Tonight; Will Have Tourna-' ! ment in October Six-man football .will be played on 'North Dakota high school gridirons, this fall. three men on the line of scrimm and a compulsory forward or lat pass of at least six feet after the ! gested at the spring meeting of the state board of control in Bismarck last year as a possible solution for those schools in the. consolidated high school league whose enrollment was not large enough to permit them to play regular 11-man football. Board to Sponsor Sport This fall the board will sponsor the sport in the consolidated league. The state is being divided into {our dis- tricts. District champions will be chosen by a daily newspaper in each area on a basis of percentage and seeming strength, and the four cham- pions will mect in a state tournament in Jamestown some time late in October. Friday night in Sykeston a six- man football clinic will be held, at which mean prominent in state ath- letic circles will be present to explain the game. The clinic is being sponsored by A. W. Larson, superintendent of the Sykeston public school. Among the men who will partici- pate in round-table discussions will be C. H. Kimball, Fargo, former Fargo high school coach; Tom Scott, athletic director of Concordia college, Moorhead; E. J. Cassell, athletic di- rector of Jamestown college, James- town; and Don Gates, athletic direc- tor of Horace Mann school, Fargo. White Wil! Be Present 1 L, A. White, secretary-treasurer of the North Dakota high school league, will be present, as will Robert Mof- fitt, president of the consolidated league. first football fundamentals. ... A fellow can’t help but be a little ex- cited,” he grinned, Bob Smith of the Boston Bees says he didn’t learn how to pitch until after he was 40 years old. Lee and Hartnett; Grace. Cards Win From Boston Boston — The Cardinals again de- feated Boston, 3-2. RHE St. Louis. «+000 010 002— 313 0 Boston .........200 000 000— 2 5 5 Johnson, Haines, Heusser, J. Dean and Ogrodowski, Ryba; Chaplin and Lopez. Walters and Pitt Wallops Dodgers Brooklyn — Pittsburgh walloped the Dodgers, 11-! RHE Pittsburgh .430 010 021-11 14 2 Newspapers in the four districts which are to pick the champion teams, together with the member of the consolidated league chosen to aid the paper in each district are as fol- lows: District 1: Minot Daily News; I. EB. Solberg, Des Lacs; district 2: Bis- marck Tribune; T. Hickey, Fort Yates; district 3: Devils Lake Jour- nal; A. Morstad, Tokio; district 4: Fargo Forum; D. Hill, Ayr. Schools Must Enroll Solberg, who is also secretary- treasurer of the consolidated league, asked all schools intending to enter | SWALLER SCHOOLS! The game, which calls for at least) e ball has been put in play, was sug-! N. D. Gridirons This Fall ST.MARY’S WILL OPEN SEASON _[Navy Expects to AGAINST MANDA joach Ted Campagna Drilling Squad of 26 in Daily Workouts The 8t. Mary's high school football team will open its fall campaign here Monday when it meets Coach Leon- ard C. McMahon’s Mandan Braves. Coach Ted Campagna, beginning his first year as the St. Mary grid mentor, has been putting his squad of 26 candidates through stiff scrim- mage sessions daily in preparation for the contest. Campagna will not reveal even a tentative starting lineup for the twin city fray, but he has these players to Cavisino, tackle; Weisgeiber, bacl Jundt, back; D. Schneider, back; J. Woehle, end; Litt, guard; A. Cam- | pagna, tackle; C. Ressler, center; B. | Garske, guard; Schmidt, end; En- tringer, end; Heiser, tackle; Griffen, center; G. Garske, tackle; tackle; McCusker, end; Bobb, Frank Fuller, back. Duane Neuenschwander, former University of North Dakota halfback, is coaching the backfield. The remainder of the St. Mary’s schedule is as follows: Bismarck high, Sept. 18; Beulah, Sept. 25, there; Linton, Oct. 2, there; Hazen, Oct. 9, there; Turtle Lake, Oct. 17, here; Linton, Oct. 23, here. There may be another game with Beulah at Bis- marck Oct. 30. Sports Round-Up | By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, Sept. 11—(#)—Coach Harry Kipke would give his right arm to have Jack Blott back at! Michigan as line coach, but athletic director “Hurry- up” Yost won't come up with the price... Boy, how they miss Tad Wieman out there. + .. Looks now as if the Wolverines) will trot out a very good line and a lot of flow-back. ... Jimmy Brad- ; dock comes home = next week with the arthritis just about cured. . . His hand must be in pretty fair shape if he can out- last a 350-pound shark. . . There is no doubt about it—the New York football Giants are going to miss Tod Goodwin to snag Ed Danowski’s the tournament competition to enroll| passes. . . Goodwin thought $150 per with him as soon as possible. game was not enough for a star end Six-man football is played on aj and just about decided to sign with gridiron 80 yards long and 40 yards| one of the new American League wide. Players wear standard equip-| teams. ment with the exception of tennis] Dod Painter, Yankee trainer, took Brooklyn . .000 013 000— 5 11 2 Swift and Todd; Frankhouse, Jeff- coat, Winston and Phelps. AMERICAN LEAGUE Yanks Lose Cleveland — The Indians scored three times in the ninth to beat the Yankees, 5-4. RHE New York,......021 100 000— 4 13 1 Cleveland . .001 100 003— 5 14 0 Broaca, Wicker and Dickey, Glenn; Allen and George. hit performance. | Hal Trosky came through with a jgame-winning homer in the ninth to) ton, 5-2. \give the Indians a 5-4 win over the Washington . !Yankees. The Athletics fired a 18-hit | Detroit j attack at the Browns for a 12-7 victory | in the opener of a doubleheader, but Hayworth, !the nightcap was called in the ninth | Raleigh — A two-run rally in the | because of darkness with the score at! NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Lose New York—The Reds defeated New Philadelphia and a sacrifice fly, Ole Nesja, on the; York, 7-2, RHE mound for Raleigh, won his sixteenth | Cincinnati . 000 101 320— 715 2 gama of the season. He granted six; New York.. -001 000 100-2 7 2 Gabler, Cubs Nose Out Phillies a See M.iladelphia — Chicago nosed out St. Louis....... Princeton university looks for its, the Thillies, 3-' RHE 000 002 010-3 8 1 01k 000 0OO— 2 7 3 ago. Tigers Beat Washington Detroit—The Tigers beat Washing- RHE .000 010 001— 2 5 0 100 020 02x— 5 9 0 Hogan; Bridges and Newsom ai A’s Win and Tie St. Louis — Philadelphia defeated St. Louis, 12-7, in the first game, while the second ended in a 4-4 9- inning tie. First Game— ° RHE .400 141 101-12 16 3 St. Louis........100 300 300-7 8 2 Archer, Gumpert and Hayes; Ja- nucki, Van Atta, Liebhardt, Kimber- lin and Hemsley, Second Game— Philadelphia ....020 200 000— 4 10 -100 200 010-4 9 O (Called end 9th, darkness) RHE Fink and Hayes; Knott, Thomas ing Fargo-Moorhead, holder of fifth and Hemsley. EGAD/1 AM GOING IN FOR A BIT OF MY SERVICES HAVE BEEN SOUGHT FOR Bf YEARS BY LEADING IRUMF-F —~ iS STAR HALF-BACK AT YALE BEFORE YOUR TIME, L GOAL TEN TIMES IN ONE GAME AGAINST University gridders kick, pass, tackle do some dummy blocking in a Grill. while 65 candidates report- Purdue and proceeded to lose as Noble Kizer put them FOOTBALL THIS FALL—~ P FANCY—~1 WAS KNOWN AS “TOUCHDOWN HOOPLE’) HAVING CROSSED THE Our Boarding House With Major Hoopie Y HID TH’ BALL IN THEIR WHISKERS! FOOTBALL STARS WORE DOUBLE , UNIVERSITIES / uMPHY BEEF -AN-BRAWN WAS TRIMMED WITH SHIN- GUARDS AND RUBBER NOSE-PROTECTORS/ shoes, which may be substituted for] a day off to doctor Helen Jacobs’ the regular cleated shoes. ailing thumb. .. Alabama Pitts went Ted Campagna, Burlegh county} back to Sing Sing to visit old pals recreational director, is seeking to] the other day and announced he will stimulate interest in the game this] play with the New Rochelle Bull- fall. He has already sent informa-| dogs next season... Which means he tion to every consolidated school in| will have to perform against his old the county. mates, . . Lawson Little isn’t get- “Six-man football is a fine thing for| ting fat “financially” as a golf pro. . . schools whose enrollment is not large; Shanty Hogan is an ideal fit in enough to permit them to play the| Washington. . . As one scribe re- regular game,” said Glen Hann: Bismarck high school football coach, “Tt will allow hundreds of buys who 1| engage Winnipeg in the semi-final would not otherwise be able to engage in the sport to do so,” he said. Jamestown Captures 1st Place in Northern 8t. Paul, Sept. 11.—(4)—Jamestown Friday had cinched first place in the Northern League standings as Wau- sau also had practically assured it-' self of getting into the Shaughnessy Playoff which starts next Monday. Should the standings remain the same at the completion of the regular schedule Sunday, Jamestown would play Wausau and Eau Claire would seven game series. Wausau, in fourth place, was lead- Place, by a full two games with only three days of scheduled play remain- ing. Wausau Thursday shut out Su- perior behind the three-hit pitching of Joe Rogalski, who has been sold to the Beaumont team of the Texas League for next year. In the only other game of the day Jamestown spilled Fargo-Moorhead 6 to 2, de- spite being outhit 11 to 7. The Eau Claire at Duluth game was postponed because of wet grounds while Crookston and Winnipeg had an open date. Cox Pitches One-Hit Ball for Regan Team Cox pitched a one-hit game for the winners when a softball team com- posed of west Regan farmers defeated @ combination team of Regan towns- people and east Regan farmers at Regan Sunday. The score was 4-1. In two preliminary games, the east farmers defeated Regan 10-7, and the west farmers defeated the east farmers 14-5. 6 Americans Left In U.S, Net Meet Forest Hills, N. Y., Sept. 11—(®)— The chips were down Friday in the} U. 8. singles tennis championships with the pressure on the six Ameri- can survivors, * Fred Perry of England was a top- heavy choice to repeat his recent triumph over Bryan (Bitsy) Grant Jr., of Atlanta, and his compatriot, Kay Stammers, the slashing south- paw, was held on even terms with Helen Jacobs, the four-times title- holder in the outstanding matches of the four semi-finals. In the other semi-finals, Don Budge, x ; marked, the town needed another monument, anyway... Tarzan Taylor, assistant coach at Marquette, is expected here soon to scout around for a tackle. . . Inci- dentally, no less than five former Marquette stars are training with Na- tional football teams this year. The Yankees didn’t lose the Amer- fcan League lead after May 10... Jimmy Foxx goes for Yale pitching, he has garnered four round trippers off Johnny Broaca this year... Lou Little takes a dozen or more tablets daily for his ailing hip, which pains continually. . . The CCC camps are the latest hunting grounds for major league scouts, . . Sixto Escobar says Geh- the bantams who want a shot at his crown may just as weil battle it out period of grace is up... Where were all the big schools when little Jor- 200 pounds from end to end? . Major League | AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Averill, Indians, 376; Ap- ringer, Tigers, 131. Hits — Averill, Indians, 210; Foxx, Red Sox and Trosky, In- dians, 37. Yankees, 13-4; NATIONAL LEAGUE Runs—J, Martin, Cardinals, 112; Ott, Giants, Home Bees, 24. to decide the best man. . . He's going to sit tight until his six months’ dan college of Menominee, Mich., got together a line averaging more thi Leaders ea (By the Associated Press) pling, White Sox, 372, - Runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 153; Geh- ringer, , 204, Home runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 45; Pitching — Hadley, Pearson, Yankees, 18-6. Batting — P. Waner, Pirates, 369; Medwick, Cardinals, 356. 08. z Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 200; Her- man, Cubs, 194. runs—Ott, Giants, 30; Berger, a Fights Last Night } —— ee Fia., outpointed Beaupre, 194, Dallas, (10). Jersey Ciis, N. J—Joey Fer- Oakland, Calif. redhead, engaged Frankie Parker of Spring Lake, N. J.. and Alice Marble of San Francisco opposed Helen Pederson of Stamford. Conn., with Budg: and Miss Marble favored to gain in the final. | ‘Beat the Army’ “I'd Let Someone Else Step in If 1 Couldn’t Do It,” Says Middie Coach (Editor's Note: This is another of a series dealing with football prospects of major college teams.) N HERE MONDAY (By the Associated Press) pees Wee Annapolis, Md., Sept. 11.—(#)—To @ 3 a] » ” » U1 ae boule . HH Hy Navy man’s way of thinking, the Chicago ... 78 60 Army gridders got away with murder ae aa Ges [> as yee last fall and the Sailors are just itch- Senet ee coe ee ing for an opportunity to get at the Brooklyn 5678 “Kaydets” and “rub it in.” Philadelphia 45 (90 Here in Crabtown By-the-Bay they're worried over perhaps the stiffest schedule in Navy history. “If I didn’t think we could beat the 337| army, I'd step down and let someone 325 | else do the job,” says Lieutenant Tom 1522|Hamilton, the 30-year-old head iw York Chicago . Washingt Detroit. Cleveland . ee Ree coach, Philadelphia’ 4989 Captain Rivers J. Morrell, a husky guard, adds, “we decided long ago to NORTH! take the Army. Now we're figuring Jamestown We as Pet | on how to bowl over some of those Eau Claire .. ‘! 63 51 ‘560 | other big clubs before we manhandle os 53 the Cadets.” Bit ate 1| "Army's artillery shelled Navy 50 Superior oe quickly last fall the Cadets had the Crookston 52 66 game in the bag before the Sailors BMAES 30 soda 37) could get up a sweat. The Tars fought AMERICAN ASSOCIATION futilely all afternoon trying to catch vee ween this year tackles William Ww. Lb. Pet, The Navy year and Mary, Davidson, and Virginia, Kc ee 2 0 1.000 Tndlunapelis 2 0 1,000|then bangs into Yale, Princeton, St. Paul .... o 2 -000| Pennsylvania, Notre Dame, Harvard Kansas Gity 0 2 10001 ang army. “We're going after ‘em all,” Lt. Hamilton asserts, “There's one thing you can always say about us. We shoot the works. We may lose but the other fellow knows he’s had a battle.” Sneed Schmidt likely is the most dangerous of the Sailor runners, He was last year’s star. The schedule. Sept. 16— William and Mary; Oct. 3—Davidson; 10— Lisbon Grid Squad Has Four Lettermen Lisbon, N. Sept. 11.—()—Coach Jack Lynch’s Lisbon football squad, which is closing its first week of fall practice Friday,- will begin a six- game. schedule Sept. 25, when the gridders meet Fairmount high school. Suffering heavy losses through graduation, Lisbon has only four let- termen back in suits this fall. There are about a dozen “good prospects” whom Coach Lynch is looking to for his heavy games. Returning lettermen are Robert Brunton,- Malcolm Campbell, Dale Dahlstrom and Tommy Dann. Brun- ton, halfback and 1936 captain, is an all-conference back of the southeast- ern division. sylvania at Philadelphia; Nov. 7— Notre Dame at Baltimore; 14—Har. vard at Cambridge; 28—Army at Philadelphi The work at bat of John Czarnecki, pitcher in the Detroit federation, won his team the championship last year when he made one hit—a home run in the last half of the ninth inning of the championship game. ea Fixture! THE BOSTON BEES attribute @ good part of this successful season to Al Lopez, their great catcher. Al is the “old reliable” —having caught an average of 126 games per season for six years! , No wonder Gluek's know how to brew extra fine flavor into their beer .:s They've bad three gener- ations of continuous family brewing experience! ENJOY 4 BEER CLOTHIERS *FURNISHERS BISMARCK ND Distributed by Nash-Finch Company Bismarck, N. D. STUDENTS Here’s a Buy New Revised Edition Webster’s Practical DICTIONARY Based upon the eriginal founda. 4 Reg. $1.00 ton ald by NOAB WEBSTER, Mles- veles treated profusely While with tall color vppdiocs f and half - tone only plates, Contains mewly complied appenéiz which includeg many pages of easeful facets an@ tnfor- mation, rales for punctuation, for- elise werds, @hrasen, latest U. 8. conenn, denene c (Plas 2c sales ta:, v ° .

Other pages from this issue: