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; 4 { { THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1937 Four Regulars Out; Demons Hopes for _ Minot Win Jolted Reserve Guard Declared Inelig- ible as Squad Drills for Homecoming Friday An injury-ridden team will take the field for Bismarck high school against Minot here Friday afternoon in the Demons’ homecoming contest. Injuries and an ineligibility have chilled local fans’ hopes for a revenge victory over Glen Jarrett’s Magicians. Bob Bowman, who was to have filled in at a regula: guard position, Bill McDonald, regular guard, Bill Koch, regular tackle, and Chuck Murray, running and passing haif- back, will see little or no action Fri- Gay. Dick Westphal, reserve guard who showed up well against Fargo last Friday, is ineligible for at least a week, Potter in at Tackle To fill these holes Coach Glen Han- na has had in practice this week Al Potter at right tackle, Roswick at cne guard post, and Larry Kern tn the backfield. Kern, on offense, holds down the wingback position while Harold Smith drops back to fill Mur- "s post at tailback. in addition, Hanna has had Ernie Paul, another reserve, in at left tackle. Ossie Solem One of 3 New It was at this key spot in the line that the Demons looked weakest against Fargo. Bowman, regular guard last year, aggrevated an old back injury that has kept him out of the lineup so far this year, and is probably out for the Donald to tackle. Syracuse Eleven by lucrative offers or given an open- season. Hanna had planned to use him at guard while he shifted mc-|!0S when thelr wn superiors went ‘Sportsmen’ Invade Minnesotan’s Farm Austin, Minn., Oct. 20.—(#)— Ask Charles Heald, farmér living one mile west of here, for the dif- ference between @ hunter and a sportsman, Saturday night nimrods, appar- ently drunk, shot holes through the Heald screens and into some outside woodwork, Sunday morning Heald locked up his chickens, but huntere fired on three domestic white ducks 150 feet from the farm house, killing one and wounding another. They ran off with the dead fowl. Sunday after dark, Heald called the game warden when hunters killed three pheasants. Now Heald wants his land des- ignated a state game refuge. Still Undefeated Coaches Whose Teams Have Unblemished Records New York, Oct. 20.—()—Attracted lsewhere, some 30 college football McDonald has 9 bad ankle. Mur-|C#ches began the current season with ray has two of them, which will prob- | and new jobs as “head man. ably confine his efforts Friday to throwing, if he does that. halfway mark of their first campaign a Hoch tins Bad Shoulder and others just approaching it, only Koch's shoulder injury, which has| three of the 30-odd starters have sur- Today, with some already past the kept him on the bench all fall, has! Vived in the elect—and select—set of also been aggrevated. He, too, is|those whose teams are unbeaten and likely to be among the non-comba- | untied. tants Friday. Reading in the customary order, A long session on defense was in|they are Ossie Solem of Syracuse, store for the Demons Wednesday, |‘ with a light signal drill intended to} George Sauer of New Hampshire, smooth out a couple of new plays scheduled for Thi sible replacement for Captain Asa Dawson, Harold Van Every At Uram’s Position )> Oct. 20.—U)—Coach Bernie Bierman put his charges through an opening session of two weeks of intensive training prepara- tion Tuesday for their Notre Dame encounter Oct. 30. Harold Van Every took over the first string position left vacant by the dis- sbled Andy Uram. The Gopher coach first sent the players through a series of limbering up exercises and then concentrated work on pass defense and line play fundamentals. Moving into the fieldhouse, Bier- man started scrimmage with the first and second teams stressing offensive Play, while third and fourth stringers sctimmaged under the tutelage of assistant coaches, Fire Levels White Bear Yacht Club White Bear Lake, Minn., Oct. 20.— (#)}—Fire destroyed the White Bear Yacht club at Dellwood Monday, causing damage estimated at $100,000. ‘The blaze was out of control by the time two trucks of the White Bear fire department arrived at the scene. Punts and Passes (By the Associated Press) La—If you figure it's an “upset” when Centenary, a mem- ber of the “minor league” Southern Intercollegiate Athletic association, whips @ rival from the strong South- west conference, take a look at this record. Over 13 seasons the gentle- men have won 24 games, lost 17 and tied five in competition with teams from that loop. Baylor, the team that locked Centenary last Saturday, has been the Gents’ particular cou- Bey yinaing only three games out of Notre Dame, Ind—If Navy and Notre Dame make any serious mis- takes in their game Saturday, their future opponents should be well in- formed about them. Bernie Bierman, ‘whose Minnesota Gophers have a day off before meeting the Irish, is due to scout Notre Dame personally from a seat in the press box. Army will have six scouts on hand to watch both teams, two in the stands behind the goal posts and four in.the press box. ———————— NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN THE MATTER OF THE ES’ OF Elizabeth Coleman, Dec Notice is hereby given by thi iT Elsie C an, as the ad- ministratrix of the estate of Elizabeth Coleman, late of the township of Ghylin in the County of Burleigh, and State eriorth paxote, dece: ing claim deceased, administratri; 602 Eighth Str residence City of Bismarck, Burleig' unty, f the “Hooks” Mylin of Lafayette and jursday. Minnesota, system, and New Hamp- In practice this week Hanna has/shire, taking to the tactics tought by experimented with Brophy, husky|Sauer, former Nebraska ace, will be freshman tackle, lugging the ball/ favorites against Maryland and Ver- from the fullback position, as & pos-| mont, respectively. noon slong Broadway:: Red Caps }| for Philadelphia -| shocked Gene Tunney. 01 North Dakota, Judge f lel, a chi In the Bur- th Dakota Court City of Bismarck in sald County and State. by further notified that n. LC. Dav’ judge of the County Court within and for the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, has fixed the 27th day of April, A. D. 1938, at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon of sald day, at the Court Booms of said Court, in the said Court House, in City of Bismarck in sald County and State, as the ti place for hear con! which have been duly and reg arly present. 4 a8 hereinbefore provided. his 2nd day of October, A. D. isabeth Coleman, ed. Geo. M, Register, Atty,, of said administrateis, Bismarck, N. Dak. on the 6th day of 1937. unty, | i They Really Bet New York, Oct. 20.—()—“You hink one comment to make regarding the ‘ ee neoie £0) his sour cynamic Gmitro., “I regret that I man can play him in only one position at ey Pelcpegter rents a time” which is a fair commentary be and laughed way down deep |°2 the value of the little back to the was General A.C. Critchley,-the | Minnesota squad. gamble? Haw! Haw!” millionaire czar of England's Greyhound racing industry. “Why,” he said, controlling his pounds.” ; Editor's note—Jumping cats! |minnesota’s only touchdown. Against zi Michigan he started at quarterback ‘And what, General, do you get |and then moved to right half, scor- ing two Minnesota touchdowns. (That's $50,000,000). out of that?” he was asked. “Oh, we take only six per cent,” both left and right half and then served a part of the game a we mirth, “ Gopher quarterback. Despit ni ean tratieg you know how much | rultiple duties, he played an out- on the totalizator (pari- | standing game in turn at each posi- mutuel) alone at my eight tracks tion, running back a punt 20 yards this year? About ten million |through a maze of Hoosler tacklers Lions’ Pa Just in passing Sid Luckman, Columbia university's 187-pound back, is a sensation, but he also excels in running plays and all-around football ability. Even in defeat by Army, Luckman shone bril- ssing Ace liantly. His big test will come when Lou Little’s team meets Cornell Oct. 30, GOPHERS’ ‘LITTLE GIANT’ PACKS PLENTY OF PUNCH |= Totals ....... 902 883 840—2534 Playoff in Six-Man Football to Be Nov. 6|rain Handicaps Northwestern, D,, Oc Ohio State, Preparing for Feature Clash Minneapolis, Oct. 20.—He's the “lit- ]touchdowns, a portent of what was tle giant” of een footie 8 Syraci beorb stocky little fellow built along the poe uk to 8 Ellen lines of a pint-sized fullback, who blocks and tackles with the impact of a 200-pounder and who runs like a wraith, Coach Bernie Bierman has only Against Indiana, Gmitro played ‘0 put the ball in scoring position for Gmitro came up to the university he said, airily, “but of course we |along with his lifelong pal, Andy charge an admission price, too, |Uram, four years ago from Minneap- about 60 cents a head, and the |olis Marshall high, which is adjacent average attendance for 104 nights |to the Minnesota campus. At that at White City, my biggest track jtime, he was so ridiculously small his season was a little over 20,- |that he was counted out of the 000.” Gopher picture although he had been @ high school star. ¢ ia But size meant nothing to Gmitro, | Fights Last Night | who tucked the ball under his arm on numerous occasions and scamper- (By the Associated Press) ed for touchdown runs against his New York—Carl (Red) Gug- |freshman teammates. In his sopho- gino, 134, Tampa, Fis., outpointed more year, he still avoided stepping Johnny Morro, 135%, New York, |cn the training room scales, saw lit- (8). tle action until late in the season Lendon—Walter Neusel, 203%, |when in eight attempts he carried the outpointed Maurice /ball 127 yards for an average yardage Strickland, 187%, New Zealand, |of 15.87 which was enough to lead ail (12). other Gopher backs. Against Wiscon- Houston, Texas—Tony Bruno, |sin in the final game of the season, 157, Milwaukee, stopped Bill Rag- | Rudy dashed 80 yards on a punt re- sit, 167, New Orleans, (3). New York, Oct, 20.—(P)—An after- scrambling to tote Joe DiMaggio's bags as he takes off for dear old "Frisco. . . . Al Schacht, the baseball clown (who has just emerged from a one-arm lunch room) picking his molars in front of the tavern.... Hya, Al.... Mark Hellinger, the col- umnist, and one of the shrewdest pickers of fight winners in town, visiting his lawyers before leaving for Hollywood to become s movie exec. . .. A famous world’s boxing cham- pion and his manager teeing off for in the smoker of @ day coach. . . Such going ons would have +.» You smack down +». If you pick ten winners out of ten, you collect 100 berries... . Nine out of nine, 90 cart wheels, and Lots of Familiar Sport Faces Turn Up in a Stroll on Broadway —Says Eddie Brietz. ston, ex-Garden Maestro, entirely surrounded by free loaders as he pre- sides at high tea at Child's. ... Eddie Brannick, secretary of the Giants, buying a new fall lid at one of those exclusive places....Jack Dempsey, freshly shaved and manicured, com- ing out of a tonsorial emporium near 50th street. ... They say Jack now is sole owner of his famous eatery... . Joe Jacobs, the fight manager, ing like the “Wreck of the Hesperus” heading full speed for a Turkish bath. “Soup” Gordon of the Charlotte, (N. ©.) News and the fastest sports page make-up man your. agent ever worked with, admiring pictures of the lovelies in front of a W. 42nd 8t. bulesque joint... . “I don’t get up here often and the lid is off,” says “Soup.” .. . Col. Jake Ruppert, owner of the Yanks, getting his mustache trimmed in the basement of one of his Fifth Avennue buildings and looking like the cat who has just inhaled the well known canary. ... Yep, that gent across the street is none other than old Mike McTigue, looking even better than he did ten years ago. Al Weill, new. matchmaker for the 20th Century Sporting club, 35 pounds lighter after three months of careful dieting. ... “Yeasir,” says Al, “for the first time in years I know which shoes I'm wearing.” .. . Hank Greenberg, Tiger first sacker, spotted in a news- reel theater where Fordham-Pitt pic- tures are featured... . (Col. Ruppert still calls him ‘Hank Goldberg’)... . That was Horace Stoneham, owner of the Giants, who just raced by in a the better known ticket speculators, says business is brisk for Fordham and Texas Christian, but that it was lousy for the World Series. "I drop three grand,” mourns Broadway Sam, who frequently blows half that amount for an evening's entertain- ment, to come. frequently as an alternate right half- back and again when the season's yardage was totaled, he Gopher ball carriers with a total of That's a capsule portrait of Rudy |195 yards in 20 attempts for an aver- Gmitro, the diminutive jack-of-all- trades in the Gopher backfield, who is carrying on this season the our standing record of ball-carrying v In Jolly England he set up in his first two seasons on the Minnesota squad. age of 9.75 yards, Last season he was in action more led the Today, the rugged little senior is the handyman of the Minnesota backfield. On offense, he explodes through the-line with scant clearance |, and then gets under way in the open field. On defense, he can cut down ball carriers with skill equal to his bigger teammates. He puts his weight turn to score one of Mirnesota’s|down on the chart at 165 pounds, but. . better guess would be 10 pounds less, Saturday’s Minnesota victory over Michigan at Ann Arbor dissolved a touchdown partnership of six years standing between Rudy and Andy Uram, as the latter suffered a broken left wrist that will probably keep him out of action for the rest of the sea- 80) One-Legged Golfer Pluck, not luck, enables Frank G. Platt of San Francisco to shoot consistently in the 70's. He wants @ national meet for one-legged golfers, teams. Individual scores: Hamm’ J. Stoltz R. Brown J. Aller L. Brown E. Davis .... Schroeder, University ticket manager, asserted the scalpers receive books f seats in Memorial stadium the 40 and 50 yard line, : ‘ Women’s Bowling Verduin, Schmidt, Roll Best Totals In Monday’s Play Wonder Loaf Sweeps 3 Games From Hamm's Beer; Wills Beats Schmidt's Beer two ‘squads. rol single-game total of 245 as the seed- eoriee pas store squad took two out of three!ne found his way around, Snavely games from Schmidt's City Club Beer-|nas returned Cornell to telescopic His three-game total of 540 led both heighte—has Ithacans singing as they sang in the glorious days of coo strom, and George Face. a When the speedy Negro end, Brud 156 121 161— 438] sojiand, ran wild against a good Col- 130 116 145— 391] gate team in routing the Red Raiders 198 153 146— 497/by the amasing score of 40-7, the ane 157 156— 468] result was attributed to things. Colgate’s employment of the old + 771 119 167-2257 | double wingback was listed as one 's Boer ~ 173 191 144— 508] ing, drifted, and so were go! 172 133 163— 468] direction Cornell wished + 895 803 812—2520| expected & push-over, and SIU) 118 138 115— 366] simply played the ga ++ 123 120 178— 431}1 would hate to play oe ee peop the next few 148 147 1 u tae SH prove for us and for everybody Notre.Dame Will Play Underdog Role Against Midshipmen Saturday selves a big piece of gridiron lime- light Saturday. Don"t be too hasty about ticketing Harry Stuhldreher’s team for its first defeat in five starts. Pittsburgh was ranked third this week in the As- sociated Press’ nation-wide poll, but scrappy Badgers, with a stead- wing game, must be rated a chance to upset the Panthers and Schmidt's City Club Beer Charges Scalpers Get |! Gopher Grid Tickets ‘Tuesday downtown gamblers and pro- fessional ticket scalpers.are able to obtain large quantities of season ath- letic ticket books at the University of Minnesota. ‘ Mr. Mendow, in a letter to L. Event in Febr Hurt Husker Can’t Remember Playing By BARRY GRAYSON [Sports Eaiter, NEA Service) out- This bulge ts no) accident, and has had much to do with Byron built his league well, and in step iy é ls i Carl Snavely Lifts Cornell From ‘ Grid Depths to Heights in 1 Year we have lots more weak points than) Once more the Cornellians were q ints.” pot But if a Colgate array, with nine regulars of last season, numerous let- termen for the other two positions, ‘and reserves, could do nothing with Cornell, nothing more could be By HARRY GRAYSON Editor, NEA Service) ‘source. Gil Dobie—had been in the dumps paigns. Yet after only one season, in which 126 166 159— 45: — 12 Rout of Colgate of an inexperienced Prince- outfit with four sophpmores in Princeton fell before this re- ited Cornell team, 20-7, with the confining its pyrotechnics to +» 166 179 167— 512 +. 170 183 181— 534 ++ 177 159 147— 483 149 169 164— 482 By WILLIAM WEEKES Chicago, Oct. 20.—(7)—Elmer Lay- Pitt's scoreless tie with Fordham that “clean up spot” Sat- Indiana, which meets Cincinnati this week, emphasized blocking, Coach Bo McMillin having found much to criticize in tHe Hoesiers’ downfield -| ‘Granary’ Plan’s Cost Eg Se af i | By Bi ifr i il lH He i if ie ity 8 i g i Ee A Ht il at since before the left halfback, ine for $700,000,000. Fj i i i | | z sl £ ? i : a BEE i Search for Arms Jerusalem, Oct. 20—(/P)—Unsuccess-! warned ful in a search for rifles stolen in an} League of Nations entanglements in on the police sta-| the Sino-Japanese conflict and called JUNIOR CIRCUIT’S SHOWING Distributed by NORTHWEST BEVERAGES, INC. MINOT FARGO EE happy revelation to thousands of the school’s loyal alumni who saw theig teams slaughtered by Princeton fog three years hand running and whe had waited seven years for a victory over the Tiger. And so Syracuse, Yale, Columbi Dartmouth, and Pennsylvania, w! remain on the Cornell schedule, have tightened their belts in anticipation of headaches from an unexpected Snavely Just Starting Snavely got a break at Cornell, for three years ago the institution openly announced that star athletes were welcome and would be given assiste ance. They were asked only to meet the professors half way. So with tha: understanding ang Snavely, Cornell may be -:xpected 7 remain on top or thereabouts for quite ‘a spell. . A winning college coach has to be astly more than a capable instruce tor in these years of high-pressured football. He has to be an organizer and a hustler, and in addition to having these qualities, Snavely is o1 of the best procurers of talent in the land. It is said that he keeps a card index of every promising preparatory school athlete in America, and keeps in touch with a great many of them. ed his football the hard way—on the battlefields of western Pennsylvania, He played at little Lebanon Valley, and first established a coaching repue tation at Bellfonte Academy. A success for seven years at Bucke nell, he gave the south a taste of his skill for two autumns at North Caro. lina, and then arrived for bigger pers formances at Cornell. Nothing succeeds like hard work, and Carl G. Snavely is a worker from *way back. RACE TRACK EMPTY IN RHODE ISLAND Both Men and Horses Barred From Grounds by Ring of Guardsmen Providence, R. I., Oct. 20.—(?)—A ring of bayonets and machine guns Tuesday held sway for the third day over empty Narragansett racetrack— denying admission to horses and, barring and unforeseen circumstance, halting racing for another day Rhode Island national guardsmen took precautions against any eventus ality at the track. They were backed by the expressed approval of Gov, Robert E. Quinn, who Saturday nigh declared a state of “insurrection” existed at the track—one of the world’s richest—and proclaimed mare tial law. Col Earl C. Webster, commanding the riot squads detailed to the mare tial law sector, instructed his men to stop all incoming horses, owners and trainers. This order brought from Walter B O'Hara, president and managing die rector of the $3,000.000 track, the dee claration that 200 horses were in transit from New York, Chicago and Baltimore and the new instructions would work # hardship on them. May Exceed Billion Washington, Oct. 20.—()—Associae has| tes of Secretary Wallace said Tuesday the “ever-normal granary” which they advocate may cost more than any idle this week, was let! other crop control program ever un- Illinois which goes| dertaken by the administration. They @ week from Sat-| disputed, however, the contention of urday against Michigan, got down to| critics that the cost would exceed @ Jay | billion dollars a year and said it probs baly could be financed the first year Johnson Warns U. S. on Entanglements San Francisco, Oct. 20.—(7)—Senae tor Hiram Johnson . America Tuesday against President Roosevelt to explaig ppers Tuesday] upon three Arab homes at Da-| “just what he will... and not do’ for the promotion of world peace.