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TH BUCKET By John Aijelle Tip your bonnets when you meet Irvin W. Huss in the street... anybody that can pick 17 out of 20 winners in this football sea- son so replete with upsets deserves the plaudits of the admiring rab- ble . . . and those second place winners didn't do so bad either. .. nor did several others for that matter... * * * ’Sfunny how this business of picking the winners gets you... there's a young fellow, for example, who came to Bismarck from Fargo after being graduated from the NDAC last year . . and now helps keep the business affairs of the local telephone office in order... Well, he carried his list of pickings right with him all day Saturday ... And when he heard an- cther score he checked that one off ... At about 6:15 p. m. Saturday he had the final scores of some 12 games... ‘and was doing pretty well .. . some of the remaining games he was “sure” of... and of some of ’em he wasn’t .. « “Well, if so and so only beats blank, and that outfit socks thisin (etc), I'll have a pretty good chance of winning,” he declaimed . . . “How many winners would that give you?” we asked ... “Eighteen,” was the answer ... Evidently some of those teams done double-crossed him .. . * * * ARE BLUE JAYS IN? Well, well, well! Ain't ‘that some’n ... Fargo knocked for a row by the Valley City Hi-Liners . + When everyone figered it was only a question of how bad the Midgets would whip last year’s state champions ... Which leaves Jamesown pretty much the favorite to cop the state title this year... Practically in a class by themselves in N. D. circles, the Jays have only three games re- maining on their schedule .. . but none of those three will be push- overs. We don't like to say it. but they will be favorites to trip Bismarck’s Demons there next Friday ... and after that they take on Valley City and Fargo . . . On successive week- ends ... It’s.a cinch neither of thow two games will be walk-aways . . Not for any high school club... But it seems as though the Jays should be able to turn the trick... Wahpeton, still unbeaten by a North Dakota team, lost prestige by dropping its first defeat to Moorhead Friday, 13 to 12... But will get a chance to avenge this against Fargo Nov.5... Just how Fargo and Wahpeton com- pare may be guessed at after Friday —when the Midgets play Moorhead— on the none-too-trustworthy basis of comparative scores, ... x kK DEMONS MIGHT HAVE WON Bismarck fans who turned out in goodly numbers to see Coach Glenn Hanna's Demons lose to the Minot Magicians 12 to 6 here last Friday went away disap- pointed . but nevertheless satis- fied with the fight put up by their boys ... The Magicians probably had a slight edge, of- fensively, but that was largely because the Demons allowed themselves to sit back on the de- fense and take things easy on occasion ... Neither of the two touchdowns the Magicians did get should have been scored ... The first came because the Bis- marck secondary got careless and allowed an offensive man to get between it and a» goal line -.. The end-around play that won the game was harder to stop, but could have been smeared had the defensive boys been a little more wary ... Just & second-guesser ... * * x MAGICIANS PULL BONER It wasn't magic the Magicians pulled just before Bismarck scored its lone touchdown early in the third quarter ... On the fourth down with one yard to go and the oval on their own 40-yard stripe, the Minot quar- terback called for a line play... And the Demon forward wall, which played heads-up football all the way through, stopped it dead... From then on the Demons wouldn’t be stopped ... They went down the field to the 11-yard stripe, where Mi- not held for downs ... but after Mi- not booted back toward mid-field Hanna's boys really opened UD... 5! and in one-two-three order they pushed over a touchdown ... With Just @ little luck they might have got- ten another in the closing seconds of the game when they were knocking at the Minot goal posts again, but then they appeared too anxious .. . And maybe aiinot parieans weren't, NO SECOND RATE CLUB Those Demons aren’t any sec- ond-rate outfit... They've done more than well this year after last year’s disastrous season . . . Take a glimpse at the record: First they beat St .Mary’s and Mandan, which was to be ex- pected... Then they ran into the top-notchers of the state... They held Valley City to a 6 to 0 triumph . . . and sideline specta- tors agreed the Hi-Liners were lucky to get that... lost to the powerful Fargo eleven, heavily favered, by a count of 12 to 0... which was no mean ac- complishment... and then to Minot, about which enough has already been said. .. * * * MIGHT SURPRISE BLUE JAYS It's been done before and it might be done again... Maybe those De- mons found themselves just enough against Minot to step out and dump that Jamestown powerhouse off its heretofore unshaken pedestal . , With every man in shape, and with & will to win, they might give the Jays a mighty good scare ... Just see what Valley City did to Fargo... —___ WALKER STREAK LONGEST Detrolt—Gerald Walker, Detroit ‘Tiger outfielder, had the longest hit- ting streak of the past baseball-sea- son when he batted safely in 27 con- ecutive games, RETAINS TIGER TITLE Princeton—Gerard Bernard Podesta of Montclair, N. J. retained his Princeton university tennis cham- plonship with a 6-4, 6-0, 6-2 victory over Calvin D, MacCracken of Pough- iceepate. 21 Eleven |11 Major Colleges Dumped From Ranks of Undefeated Over Past Week-End By HERBERT W. BARKER New York, Oct. 25.—()—Eleven ma- jor colleges buried their hopes for an unbeaten football season with ap- propriate ceremonies Monday. Twenty one others gratefully postponed the obsequies for at least another week. The white-haired guy who wields the football scythe unceremoniously lopped Wisconsin, Northwestern, Tu- lane, Louisiana State, Texas Aggies, Harvard, Navy, Syracuse, Boston col- lege, George Washington, and Rutgers off the undefeated slate last Saturday, not a bad day’s work for an old fel- low. Monday, with the season barely past the halfway mark, the unbeaten list had dwindled to these teams: East—Dartmouth, Holy Cross, La- fayette, Yale, Pitt (tied) Fordham (tied), Villanova (tied), Temple (tied twice). South—Vanderbilt, Alabama, Au- burn (tied twice), Duke (tied), North Carolina (tied). Middle West-Detroit, (tied). Southwest—Baylor. Far West—California, Santa Clara. Rocky Mountain—Colorado, West- ern State, Gunnison, Montana, Another reduction in the list is cer- tain this week with the following pro- gram on tap: Dartmouth Plays Yale East: An ivy league “natural” sends Dartmouth against Yale at New Haven in a clash of undefeated, un- tied elevens. Yale maintained its perfect record with a 9-0 conquest of Cornell. Dartmouth handed Harvard its initial defeat, as Sophomore Bill Hutchinson scored all three touch- downs, two of them on long runs. Pitt, paced to a 21-0 victory over Wisconsin by Marshall Goldberg and Sophomore Dick Cassiano, tackles its intra-city rival, Carnegie Tech. Holy Nebraska -| Cross, hard pressed to win from West- ern Maryland, 6-0, plays Temple while LaFayette, upset conqueror of New York university, 13-0 meets Franklin and Marshall. Villanova, after an easy 21-0 triumph over Bucknell, invades the middlewest for a joust with powerful Detroit, whose Titans removed Boston college from the unbeaten list, 14-0. Ford- ham’s Rams, who pulled their game with Texas Christian out of the fire in the last two minutes of play, 7-6, face North Carolina, victor 13-0 over Tu- lane. Harvard, Princton Meet The first of the big three games will pit Harvard against Princeton, which finally pushed over stubborn Rutgers 6-0. Columbia, victim of the season's biggest upset in a 7-6 defeat by Browns’ mauled Bears, invades Ithaca to play Cornell. Navy, beaten 9-7 by Notre Dame's rousing last quarter rally, meets Penn, held to a scoreless draw by Georgetown when a substi- tute ran out on the field in the clos- ing minutes and nullified a successful Quaker field goal attempt. Georgetown plays Manhattan, soundly whipped by Kentucky, 19-0. Colgate, well beaten by Duke, 14-0, tackles New York university next. ‘Syracuse, spilled by Maryland’s clever aerial attack 13-0, meets Penn State. Army, which routed Washington university 46-7, plays Virginia mili- tary, and George Washington, whipped by Alabama 19-0, encounters rugged Tulsa, South: Vanderbilt's stirring 7-6 vic- tory over Louisiana State sent the Commodores into a tie with Alabama for the Southeastern conference lead, with Auburn, 21-0 victor over Georgia Tech, just behind. Vanderbilt meets Georgia Tech this week while Alabama is playing Kentucky. Auburn travels to Texas to play Rice. Tigers in Action Louisiana State takes on Loyola of New Orleans while Mississippi State, barely able to squeeze out a 14-13 de- cision over Florida, plays Centenary. Middle West: Despite a four-game Big Ten conference schedule, the big game of the week sends Notre Dame against Minnesota, idle last week. Wisconsin, tied with Minnesota and Ohio State for conference lead, plays Northwestern, outpointed 7-0 by Ohio State, Chicago plays host to powerful Ohio State. Michigan, 7-6 victor over Towa, tackles Illinois while Iowa is meeting Purdue. Indiana invades Lin- coln for a shot at Nebraska’s Corn- huskers, Missouri, beaten by Nebraska 7-0, meets Iowa State and Oklahoma, sur- prisingly tripped by Kansas,, 6-3, on the final play of the game, faces Kan- sas State, in Big Six conference com- petition. Kansas, the leader, plays Michigan State, which whipped Mar- Clara at Chicago. Baylor Cops Title Southwest: Baylor, which proved its right to the Southwest conference lead by whipping Texas Aggies 13-0, on Billy Patterson's passes, plays Texas Christian. Texas, upset by Rice, 14-7, tackles Southern Methodist, beaten 13-0 by Arkansas. Texas Aggies and Arkansas are paired. Far West: California, headed straight for the Pacific Coast confer- ence crown and the Rose Bowl after its convincing 20-6 triumph over Southern California, finds U. C. L. A.’s erratic Bruins next in the way. Wash- ington State, victor over U. C. L. A. 3-0, in a mild upset, plays Southern Cali- fornia. Stanford, which cashed in on its scoring chances to trip Washing- ton, meets Oregon State, which tal- lied twice in the fourth quarter to win from Oregon, 14-9. Washington plays Idaho, Unbeaten Montana plays Montana State. Rocky Mountain: Utah's surprising 13-7 defeat by Denver left Colorado and Western State in a tie for the con- ference lead. Colorado, which swamped Colorado State 47-0, meets Colorado Mines, beaten 14-6 by Colo- rado college. Western State, 7-0 con- queror of Greeley, plays Brigham Young. Utah State, which routed [ State. quette 21-7, Marquette plays Santa Wyoming 34-7, faces weak Colorado s Still |Undue Emphasis Is Removed From ‘Importance’ of Game Real- ized, Says Director Pittsburgh, Oct. 25.—(#)—The Uni- versity of Pittsburgh, whose football teams have made four Rose Bowl appearances in the past decade, ap- parently decided to reduce any un- consulting its veteran football coach, Dr. John Bain Sutherland. “All I know concerning the policy shift at Pitt is what I have seen in the newspapers,” was the comment made by Dr. Sutherland, who had been in charge of the school’s gridiron teams for the past 13 years. Announcement that Pitt inaugu- rated a program of athletic reform and strict amateurism effective last August 1, came Saturday night from Athletic Director James (Whitey) Hagan. Hagan was named to his post last Spring 2s the result of a feud between Dr. Sutherland and W. Don Harrison, which led to Harrison’s resignation. Hagan said, in making the an- nouncement: 4 “The fact that a boy. is an athlete should not be held against him if he needs assistance in getting a college ecucation. But no boy should ever be given the idea he is being paid to play football. “We realize the importance of foot- ball and this isn’t an attempt to ‘de- emphasize’ it. What we are trying to co is to bring it into a proper plane with other college educational ac- uivities.” The new policy states intercollegiate athletics should be conducted always on a “strictly amateur basis” without special grants to students, made sole- ly because of athletic ability, al- though reserving right to secure em- ployment for students with such ability on the same basis as help is given other students, The training camp near Greensburg, Pa., will be discontinued and coaches are forbidden “at anytime to initiate contact with any prospective athlete.” | SATURDAY’S | FOOTBALL STARS (By the Associated Press) Charlie Holm, Alabama — Gained steadily from scrimmage and ran back intercepted forward pass 30 yards for touchdown against George ‘Washington. Marshall Goldberg, Pitt — Scored two of Panthers’ three touchdowns against Wisconsin, one on a 63-yard jaunt. Greer Ricketson and Joe Agee, Van- derbilt—Ricketson pulled out of line from tackle post and ran 50 yards for touchdown, Agee kicked point that beat LS.U. Karl Kaplanocff, Ohio State— Blocked Northwestern punt to give Buckeyes the ball in Wildcat terri- tory and touch off scoring march. Dave Colwell and Clint Frank, Yale —Colowell placekicked: 39-yard field goal and Frank dashed 67 yards for touchdown in defeat of Cornell. + Thurston Phelps, Nebraska—Threw touchdown pass as Huskers trimmed Missouri. Fred Yorke and Herb Ht Duke—Blocked Colgate kicks to set up two scoring plays. Bill Hutchinson, Dartmouth — Ran 62 and 55 yards for two touchdowns aud. plunged for third against Har- vard. Bill Wallace, Denver — Recovered fumble which led to winning touch- down in 13-7 triumph over Utah, ..Chuck Sweeney, Notre Dame — Tackled Navy back behind goal to porre safety that gave Irish 9-7 vic- ory. Bullet Bill Patterson, Baylor—Flip- ped two touchdown passes one for 40 and the pther for 35 yards, as Bears clawed Texas A, & M. Vic Bottari, California — Paced Golden Bears to triumph over South- ern California with two touchdowns’ in opening quarter, scored ‘both touchdowns as Carlina ore uc] ms as Ci trimmed Tulane. New York, Oct. 25.—()—Footbail fellas having a fine old time knock- ing each other off... Cornell went home with only one “L” left. . . So did Bucknell. .. Tulane didn’t have any. - Ditto Colgate, Southern Cal., Columbia, and Louisiana State. Fair Harvard was just that against Dartmouth... Our Navy was sunk, but F. D. R. managed to bat .500 for the day when Army went to town, 47-7 against Washington U., which must of thought it had got to Min- of ears were pinned back on the old gridiron Saturday. Two teams with plenty on the ball are Auburn and Detroit U... and time ain’t marching on a bit faster than Ohio State. . . Too bad Big Ten tules make the Bucks ineligible for the Rose Bowl... Still looks like Alabama and California out there. . . At the head of the “step up and take a bow for yourself” class Monday are the coaches of Brown, Lafayette and Maryland who let Columbia, New York U. and Syracuse have both bac- tels... And wasn’t it nice to find fellow nameg Sweeney in the Ram role for Notre Dame instead o! Pile cidio am yl ap ig. Our ides of a character with college spirit is the guy who bicycle 150 miles over those New land hills to see Dartmouth Harvard ... (he was a Dartmout man) ... Southern papers want know how they're to leave going Kilgrow of Alabama off the All Amer- ica? ... Zipp Newman of mingham News calls the boys who ueapolis by mistake. . . Yessir, plety|.. . the old a Boast Unspoiled | Season Records Football at Pitt Sutherland Ignorant of Change; usual emphasis on athletics without Notre Dame staged one of its characteristic last period ral- les, scoring 2 touchdown and a safety in the last period, to defeat Navy, 9 to 7, at South Bend. Forty thousand persons watched the game, which was played in a snowstorm. Lem Cooke, Navy back at left of picture (top, left), is shown here carrying the ball for a five-yard gain through tackle. Fullback Thesing of No- tre Dame stopped him. No. 52 is Skoglund of Notre Dame and Ne. 30 is Bergner of Navy. Delish (15) and Lezouski (white jersey facing camera) of Pitt are shown (top right) stopping Weiss of Wisconsin in the first quarter of their game, won by Pitt 21 to 0. Weiss can hardly be seen in pic- ture. No. 77 is Bens of Wiscon- sin and No. 62 is Daddio of Pitt. Ohio State turned a blocked punt into a touchdown jaunt at Columbus to defeat Northwest- ern, 7 to 0. Charles Ream, Ohio State end, is shown here in cen- ter of lower picture taking a nose dive after stopping a Northwest- ern runner for no gain in hte first, period of the game. E BISMARCK TRIBUNE. _ MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1937 Action Shots from the Football Front Giants Win Fifth Straight Victory Whip Brooklyn 21 to 0 in Pro League Play Sunda: ars Defeat Detroit Chicago, Oct. 25.—(7)—The New Bison, Sioux Clash in Week’s Grid Headliner, North Central Title at Stake; Bismarck-Jamestown Im- portant Prep Game (By the Associated Press) Championship of the North Central Intercollegiate conference will be at stake Saturday when Casey Finnegan's Agricultural College Bison collide with Jack West's University Sioux in the York Giants, who've been sailing smoothly through the eastern division waters of the National Professional Football league, may run into quite a blow from the west next week-end. The Giants whipped Brooklyn’s Dodgers impressively Sunday 21 to 0 for a fourth straight victory and have, lost only one game . But they'll look at storm signals next Sunday when the Chicago Bears, only undefeated club in the circuit, invade the Polo Grounds. The Giants lost to Washington in their opener. ‘The Bears won their fifth game in’ as many starts by downing Detroit 28 to 20. The score looks closer than the battle actually was, Chicago lead- ing from the start to finish with Bronko Nagurski, Ray Nolting, Jack Manders and Bill Karr playing great offensive games. Green Bay won its fourth straight game, walloping Cleveland’s hapless Rams 35 to 7. ; Chicago's Cardinals won their third game, defeating Pittsburgh 13 to 7 before 8,963 chilled fans. Riley Smith’s toe came through for Washington as the Redskins nosed out Philadelphia 10 to 7. Bob Feller fanned 30 Yankees in the five times he faced them. Jesse Taken Alive Plays in Lineup of Fort Yates Team —Says Eddie Brietz. pick football winners “ nae Jesse Taken Alive, a Brave from the Sioux Indian reservation, played end for the Fort Yates team against Car- son the other day... Pitt is going to stop football just to make stressing ./il interesting for its opponents. University of California is a 188- pound outfit no matter how you look .. As a team the Bears aver- tackle to tackle—you guessed it—183. Sam Francis, ex-Nebraska ace, 7. A ey Gee atl Tee a et i featured attraction on the upstate school’s homecoming program, Three special trains will carry en- thusiastic alumni and supporters of both teams from Fargo, Minot and Bismarck to the traditional highlight of the North Dakote gridiron season. Gov. William Langer has declared :s holiday for all state, county and city employes. Once again the loop title will be in- volved with a Sioux victory insuring return of the conference bunting to the university camp. A Bison triumph would throw the conference race into a several-way tie. No Jess important are scheduled |Glen Ulin to See [Playoffs Will Decide First Grid Game Debut Against New Salem Team Tuesday a E qe ag ie i 4 ¥ Z ts 8 aE clashes in the North Dekota interool- | 7: legiate conference where the Wahpe- ton Science school Wildcats bid fair to annex their second consecutive football pennant. ‘The Wildcats tangle with the El- lendale Dusties Saturday while the Valley City Vikings are playing host to the Minot Beavers. Nonconference college games will pit Mayville against the university frosh, Dickinson against Polytechnic institute of Billings and see against Augustana of Sioux 5 Highlights of the Class A prep en- counters will be Fargo'’s annual tilt with Moorhead and the Friday Moorhead, Minn. at Fargo. Bismarck at Jamestown. Grand Forks at Wahpeton. Lidgerwood at Wahpeton Indians, Mobridge, 8. D., at Linton, Dickinson at Beach. Parshall at Watford City. Marmarth. N. D. Bowling Meet to Open at Minot Nov. 26 Minot, N. D., Oct. 25—(P)—Ex- team it meet in a return game st New Salem Nov. 5. PRO GRIDDER STUDENT New York—Jerry Dennerlein, New York Giants tackle, is studying ped- agogy at Columbia university. ‘Alabama 19; George Washington 9, Butler 12; Washington and Jeffer- son 0. Centenary 18; Arizona 13. St. Louis 7; Cetolls U2. Big Ten Ohio State 7; Northwestern 0. the | LaFayette Mublenberg 6; Ursinus 0. N. D. Six-man Titlists Fort Yates to Represent District One in First Round Unless Challenged here Monday. Fort Yates, victor over Flasher last week 33 to 12, is the only district two school which has made « bid for the honor thus far and apparently is the only district member of the consoli- dated league which has had a six-man aggregation in the field this fall. Nomination of the ays lecm ea® coteee gi & Albright 25; Moravian 0. John Hopkins 13; Haverford 12. ‘Williams 13; Tufts 0. Amherst 12; Wesleyan 3. 3; Ithaca 7. Holy Cross 6; Western Maryland 0. Army 47; Washington U. (St. Louis) 4 "5 Georgetown 0; Pean 0. Beuth North Carolina 13; Tulane 0. Centre 8; Davidson 0. made at a meeting of league meme at the annual convention of the Minot Oct. 28, when nominae will be ie Els i FERGRIGEE fetal ogee g Sykeston was awarded the state tie tle last year. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Count@, OFFicH OF COUNTY AUDITOR, Bismarck, N. Dak. on To Harry G. Johnson, kes jand which was assessed in your name {& taxation for the year 1929 was on the 9th day of December, 1930, duly sol rovided by law, for the delingus of the year 1929, and that the time for redem; will expire nii pleted ar Said land Each Und. Block 59, Mc! dition to thy of Burle! AT Am for, $31.12. Subsequent tax Pa paveed es paid by purchase Amount eat peaulred to redeem at thie y the its of thi of this not! rovided -b nd ‘unless yousres leem said 0 e: will issue to the i x will issue 0) Certificate as provided Siew < and official seal my hand thle ne day of sea 1937, Auditor Burleigh County eorte ry (Kirst, Publication 10-2 10-26 1h sea kafe)