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iDemera OUTH DAKOTA MAN SEATSFARGO NEGRO IN HEADLINE FIGHT’ pproximately 1,000 Fans Watch Bouts at Municipal Auditorium Thursday ROCEEDS ARE FOR CHARITY eorge Horwitz and Mickey O'Day Fight Four Sparkling Rounds in Semi-Final Dick Demeray, Aberdeen, S. D, teed the fighting during all six vunds to defeat Kid Rippatoe, Far- » negro, in the headliner of the Elks larity fight card at the city audi- rium Thursday night. Rippatoe substituted for Sherald ennard, Fargo, who was injured in| y Defeats Ki TULANE 1S BOOSTED INTO CHAMPIONSHIP POSITION IN SOUTH Pittsyurgh Shows Amazing ‘ower to Smother Ne- braska, 40 to 0 CORNELL DEFEATS PENN Unemployment Relief Funds in Seven States Will Bene- fit By Games ‘The Thanksgiving day football pro- gram served to boost Tulane into in- disputed possession of the Southern Conference lead; give the Utah In- dians a chance to win their fourth bout at Grand Forks recently. Demeray won all but the fourth ‘und from the dusky Fargoan who ected to cover up and let Demeray | > all the fichting. The Aberdeen} xy had difficulty in getting past! ippatoc’s defensive armour and issed badly at times, as the negro| »bbed his head to let punch after! inch land in thin air. , Demeray did his best fighting in! 1e fifth and six stanzas handing| 1e Fargoan a neat pasting in those; intos. He caught Rippatoe with a/ .zzling right in the closing seconds; ’ the fifth that staggered the lean} dlored boy, and hammered him re-/ ntlessly in the sixth. | Rippatoe came out of his crouch! vo or three times during the fight » nail Demeray in the head but he, uled to do the South Dakotan any farm. The best Rippatoe could do} fas to earn a draw in the fourth, He was in distress at the! O'Day of Aberdeen and/ veorge Horwitz of Fargo fought four; sarkling rounds in the first semi-/| Findup. Both fighters were in there| Lwinging lustily to put on a exhibition | lf boxing skill that pleased the cus- Ssmers. + Ray Cossette of Fargo rallied in the; fourth round to earn a shade over Had Boy Knight of Aberdeen. Cos- tte won the second and fourth founds, Knight the third, and the fscond was even, The match was illed as the second semi-windup. Kid Kramer, Yorkton, Sask., won ‘rom Tuffy Mosset of Bismarck in ‘our wild rounds in which slugging ind wrestling featured. The Cana- lian forced the fighting and won the ‘ast two rourids ‘to take the decision *rom the Bismarck mauler. } Kid Engles of Dawson finished trong to beat Kid Forsythe of Bis- ‘narck in four oneyminute rounds. *orsythe substituted for Lee Thomp- tor. of Dawson at the last minute and sppeared to be out of condition. } Jimmy Todd, Medina sparkplug, shaded Ben Minish of Aberdeen in a ‘our-round preliminary. They fought three rounds to a draw with Todd ‘Sarning his shade by a strong finish. ) Kid Brooker of Mandan shaded 3onny Schlosser, also of Mandan, in curtain raiser that pleased the crowd. Although no final check of pro- seeds has been made, A. W. Mellon, xho promoted the show, said Friday attendance totaled was between 1,000 and 1,100 and a substantial sum was sealized for charity. Proceeds will be used to buy coal jor poor families in the community. a Williston Has But One Cage Letterman ‘illiston, N. D., Nov. 27.—()—John was the only returning mem- ver of the last year's regular Willis- mn high school basketball team, oach Coulter found when 80 aspir- @nts answered his call for basketball men, | Coulter is arranging a schedule for iwo teams for the season and the ten- ‘ative schedule is: Dec. 11—Alexander at Williston. Dec, 18—Wildrose at Wildrose. Dec. 19—Crosby at Crosby. ; Dec. 20—Alumni at Williston. Jan. 8—Minot at Williston. ; Jan, 14—Rugby at Williston. Jan. 15—Ray at Ray. | Jan. 15—Grenora at Grenora. | Jan. 29—Tioga at Williston. ‘ Jan. 30—Crosby at Williston. Feb. 5— Watford City at Watford | Feb. 11—Stanley at Stanley. } Feb. 12—Minot at Minot. Feb. 12—Grenora at Williston. Feb. 19—Ray at Williston. Feb. 19—Tioga at Tioga. * Feb. 26—Watford City at Williston. , Feb. 26—Alexander at Alexander. March 4—Stanley at Williston. Fr TS LAST iGHT (By The Associated Press) Muncte, Ind.—Farmer Joe Coo er, West York, outpointed Peter Mike, In lis (10) Herbie Anderson, cle, ntopped ay A O'Connell, Ft. Wayne. Sheboygan, Wis.—Frankie pets taxila, Winnipeg, kn _, YOU'RE WISE, JOE Joliet, Ill—Although eligible for parole, Joseph White, convicted rob- ber at Joliet prison, asked the parole board if he might remain behind the bars for another year at least. His for the odd request was that to go out into the world depression. enemy pilots. being tested straight Rocky Mountain Conference title; and establish Pittsburgh as possibly the strongest of eastern teams. Tulane, although idle until Satur- day, automatically gained sole pos- session of the Southern Conference lead when ‘Tennessee’s unbeaten! eleven found the Kentucky Wildcats entirely too wild and had to be satis- fied with a 6-6 tie. Tulane has Louis- jana state to beat in its final con- ference game tomorrow. Utah buried the Utah Aggies, 34-0. Pittsburgh, beaten only by Notre Dame, showed amazing power and a versatile attack in crushing Nebraska, 40-0. Nebraska had expected to make it close but had no chance to stop the Panthers. Pitt finished its sea- Son unbeaten in the east. As a general rule there were few surprises in other holiday results. Colgate, Holy Cross and New York university, favorites all, had to come from behind to win, Colgate turned back Brown, 13-7; N. Y. U. nosed out Carnegie Tech, 7-6, and Holy Cross just made the grade against Boston college, also by a 7-6 count. Cornell, beaten only by Dartmouth, wound up a highly successful season by whip- ping Pennsylvania, 7-0. Maryland had little trouble with Johns Hop- kins and won, 35-14. North Dakota and George Washington fought to a 6-all tie. Three encore numbers to the west- ern conference football program will be played Saturday, and the unem- ployment relief funds in seven states will benefit by the athletes’ extra labor. Charity will receive all the receipts after actual expenses have been paid, but the athletes will be thinking more about the Big Ten champion- ship, than of the gate and relief funds. The battle between Purdue and Northwestern, the keystone of the title situation, has grabbed most of the interest, but the meetings of Wisconsin and Michigan at Ann Ar- bor, and Ohio State and Minnesota at Minneapolis, are expected to at- tract patronage in sufficient quan- tity to give charity another big boost. Michigan and Ohio State welcome the opportunity to make one more stab at the championship, but to Northwestern, the situation is not an entirely happy one. The Wild- cats have fought their way through eight games without defeat. Five of their triumphs were over Big Ten op- ponents, and under ordinary circum- stances, Northwestern would be the undisputed holder of the title. Re- laxation of one of the conference's strictest rules—limiting its members to eight games each season—has left the Wildcats with their biggest job. Should the Boilermakers trim Northwestern on Soldier Field to- morrow, Michigan, by defeating Wis- consin, and Ohio by overcoming Min- nesota, along with Purdue, would earn @ share of the title. Michigan is Lovemed to whip the Badgers, and Ohio rates just the faintest edge over the Gophers, while the Purdue- Northwestern game appears to be a tossup. Charity was enriched abdut $13,000 yesterday when Indiana outlasted Chicago, Iowa and Illinois to win ATHERE WAS OUST OF You ICE BoX GY PUT THE CLAW ON “TURKEY LAST NIG ENOUGH “TURKEY, LEFT QVER FROM YESTERDAY, FoR DANER “THIS EVENING ™BUT,OF COURSE, SOME AND WHAT REMAINS LOOKS LIKE “THe HULL OF AN OLD VIKING SHIP te THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1981 the round robin tournament at/ I “preliminary” game; Indiana out- pointed Illinois, and the Hoosiers de-| feated Chicago in the playoff. Chi-| cago defeated Iowa, 7 to 0, on an 80-} yard touchdown run by Pete Zimmer, and Indiana got by Illinois by out: Tushing the Illini, eight first downs | to four, with neither scoring. The} Hoosiers finished the midwest’s most unusual football afternoon by beating! the Maroons, 6 to 0. — | SPORT SLANTS | | By ALAN GOULD a! Commissioner Landis and I sat in Manhattan’s mid-town roofs. We talked about baseball and the depres- sion. “Now I'll tell you,” said the judge, “I’ve played this game for 35 years and I can’t figure it out. “Sometimes the going is good and sometimes it isn’t. A fellow who fig- ures to be just an old man will go out there—the way Charley White did the other day—and, by golly, he won't; miss a putt. Or any shot, for that | matter. Judgment, timing, ‘a steady | hand and a good eye. “And then you will take a strong young fellow, who ought to be sup- ple and swing easily and what will he do? [I'll tell you, if you don’t realize what you are doing yourself. He will slice all over the premises.” ‘But, Baseball...’ Did the judge think baseball had survived conditions pretty well, con- sidering the circumstance of both 1931 pennant races being all over early in September? “Now, take this example,” he went on. “I’ve seen a good deal of this thing. About two years ago I finally got it under control. I grapsed it, if you know what I mean. I broke 90 three times in succession. I stayed awake for a time the night after I scored an 86. “Yes, it was all quite simple. T didn’t know just why, but at last, after more than 30 years, I had caught the main idea. I could hard- ly wait to get out there again. I didn’t wait until a Saturday or Sun- day. No, I was right out on the first tee early the next day. I took exact- ly 110 shorts at the ball for 18 holes.” ‘Was there prospect of any general retrenchment for 1932 oe would ex- pansion be the program’ “I’m certain of one thing,” the white-haired chieftain of baseball went on. “I can stop slicing by keep- ing my htad down and my eyes on the spot from where I hit the ball; I mean, keeping on looking at that spot for a second or two after com- pleting the shot. “I will go so far as to say, sir, I cannot slice at all if I do that. Yet in my early days I was as consistent @ slicer as anyone I ever saw. My ball would hit the ground and finish up its journey by traveling at right angles to the proper line of flight.” ‘New Ball?. Now About...’ ‘There was still an unsettled matter. there is nothing I can do for you. You have played too long to try any new styles. “‘No professional can help you be- yond few minor points and you will enjoy the game no more because of any instruction. Go right ahead and don’t pay any attention to other ad- vice these fellows will try to hand you’” More than 40 aspirants will report for boxing at the University of Mary- land. Shaw Buck, 150-pound sophomore, is the lightest man on the Florida football team. He is a quarterback. | .OUR BOARDING HOUSE Do Not suSsPECT ME? ~~ EGAD, You KNoul “THE PSIES THAT AT ae OF GOUT IS EVER BEFORE ME! “Tis THE WoRK OF KNAVES [I WOULD T STooP Ice Bax ! Placement kicking specialist, Tushed in to try for the all-import- ant final point, but failed, as had North Dakota earlier. SURELY, M'DEAR , You WARNING FINGER ~~ VERILY, M'DEAR, “TO PILFERING. AN George Washington Ties Stage ie, as predicted, Chieoi (MT ONTALS COUNTER AT CLOSE OF GAME TQ EARN DEADLOCK | Sioux Aggregation Scores Early in Second Quarter on 71 Yard Drive a hotel room overlooking some of|LARRY KNAUF IS BRILLIANT Flickertails Repulse Opponents’ Scoring Threats Time After Time ‘Washington, Nov. 27.—(AP)—A touchdown in the last minute of play gave George Washington a 6-6 tie ‘Thursday in a hard fought game with the husky North Dakota university football team. North Dakota scored early in the second quarter and then staved off. half a dozen Colonial thrusts. Just before the end of the game, however, George Washington- opened up a desperate air attack to carry the ball over from the 38-yard line in four plays. Jack Jones, George Washington's) was Neither side was able to gain un- til just before the first quarter ended when North Dakota started a 71-yard. drive which culminated in a touch- down early in the second period. Captain Burma and Larry Knauf, substitute halfback, did most of the gaining on beautifully executed spin- ners and reverse plays through the Colonial line. George Washington held on the one-yard mark, but Burma tossed a lateral pass to Quarterback Wexler for the score. A minute or two later North Da- kota made another thrust, carrying the ball from its own 46-yard line deep into enemy territory. George Washington regained the ball on an incomplete pass into the end zone. From that time on, the local team took the offensive, only to be repul- sed time after time within the No- dak 20-yard line, once after a 60- yard drive. Its successful march started from North Dakota’s 38-yard line. Carlin, who led George Washing- ton’s attack, passed to Parrish, full- back, for an ll-yard gain to open the drive. On the next play he ran/ for a 12-yard gain and then passed to Chambers for the touchdown. Lineups: North Dakota pos.Geo. Washington le Felber Mulve: Did the judge have any statement to ae It Niele make about the new ball. G. Dablow lg Stewart “The only time I ever seriously | Bourne c Blackistone sought out a professional for sound} yyaig rg Dike golf advice was when I met Walter Wick tt Chambers Hagen one winter in Florida. He in-| werback re Slaird vited me to play @ round with him. | wexier qb Fenlon Throughout the 18 holes he made no} gnaur th Carlin comment on my game. It was just 8) paplow rh Carter game of golf for both of us. Burma fo Parrish “afterward he said tome: “There!” score by periods are some things about your golf that! worth Dakota ........0 6 0 0—6 are too atrocious to mention. But| George Washington ..0 0 0 6—6 North Dakota scoring—Touchdown, ‘Werler. George Washington scoring— Mich- Touchdown, Chambers. Referee, Paul MacGoffin, igan; umpire: Dr. E. Cummings, Bos- ton college; field judge: Capt. Frank Goettge, Ohio university; head lines- man: C. A. Metzler, Springfi¢ld. University of Nevada has won only one football game and tied one in 32 years’ competition with the Uni- versity of California. The average elephant can haul 15 tons, lift half a ton and carry three tons on its back. QUT BURNING LEATHER AT A DANCE LAST NIGHT! —~ BUT, USTEN HERE, MADOR, WAS “THAT CoLD CREAM ON YouR MUG WHEN I CAME IN; OR “TURKEY WING IL 2 {at Cambridge and Detroit will play | Notre Dame Will Meet Army Outfit i} - |Stanford Will Clash With Dart- mouth; Detroit Will Play Georgetown New York, Nov. 27.—()—The foot- ball season draws toward its end re- luctantly enough to assure the na- tion’s fans more than a dozen out- standing attractions Saturday. Heading the list in general interest Perhaps is the battle at the Yankee! Stadium, New York, between Notre Dame and the Army. The Ramblers, beaten by Southern California, prob- ably will enter the game fighting mad and there is doubt all along the line whether Army’s defense can stand up against Notre Dame's varied attack. Stanford will clash with Dartmouth Georgetown in other intersectional! games in the east. The domestic} schedule is headed by the renewal of | the ancient rivalry between Yale and Princeton and the clash of two other old rivals, Washington & Jefferson and West Virginia. Lehigh and Penn State will be foes in a charity game. | Toronto “Maple Leafs Are Bad Last in Canadian Division Standings Sa apavEaTaPpeEEaT { New York, Nov.. 27.—(#)—Hockey | trouble appears to be brewing in To-! tonto, The Maple Leafs have not won{ @ game so far and ate a bad last in| the Canadian division standings. It is reported that the fans already ; have their “hammers” out for some of! the players and the knocking prob-; ably ‘will increase . after Thursday} night's game. The Leafs, lost to the| champion Montreal Canadiens inj their second game of the season last night, 3 to 2. The Boston Bruins gave the Chica- go Blackhawks their first defeat, 1 to 0. At New York the Americans and! Montreal Maroons played a 1-1 tie. | ge | Ramblers Denied | : Holiday Turkey | o~— Cleveland, Nov. 27. (?)—What, {| no turkey? ere Maybe that’s what the Notre Dame football team thought ‘Thursday when they sat down to their Thanksgiving dinner. They dined on spinach. i The Irish, who passed through here en route to New York to bat- tle the army, got a better break |_ Devils Lake, Fargo and Valley City jlars. Grand Forks and Minot each Trouble Brewing r'rsdater For Hockey Team |se72.2 Messceome ote. {time in their high school careers in Inaford, Vic Nelson, Melvin Sevland, ||Rostberg. Jack Turner, Al Morque, || Tommy Boyle, Abe Farmer, Bill Mor- jTow, and Jack Daly. Carnera Favored to Beat Campolo HIGH SCHOOL ELEVENS WILL Two. Behemoths of Ring to Meet in.15-Round Bout at Madison Square { i |Captain Dale Hanson, Milton Weber, [feu Aggregation “ll Lose! C Bae, ft Senmitt, Eight Regulars; Six Lost | Stewart Sorenson, and Everill Millar. to Mandan Weber, Bauer and Sorenson are New York, Nov. 27.—(2}—Two be- hemoths of the ring, Prima Carnera and Victorio Campolo, clash in the feature 15-round bout in Madison Square Garden tonight with Carnera @ heavy favorite. Indications were Primo would enter the ring the public choice at odds at least as good as 2 to 1. The rush of Carnera money perhaps best can be explained by the poor’ showing Cam- polo made against both Tommy Loughran and Ernie Schaaf. Tommy boxed the South American giant dizzy to win a decision while Schaaf knocked the big fellow out. The physical advantages will be rather evenly divided. Carenra, at about 260 pounds, will outweigh Cam- polo by close to 40 pounds but the ;South American will have advantages jin height and reach. Carnera is the better boxer but Campolo packs the harder wallop. j backs, Ce Sa eae taunt strong line displayed by Man- this season will find six vacancies (By The Associated Press) | when the footballers report next fall. Major high school football teams in| coven veterans are graduating. They North Dakota will be hard hit by| i are Lloyd Dietrich, Ephriam Owens, graduation when the 1932 football! 4 Kuebker, Frank Boehm, John season rolls around next fall, @ sur-|tWwee and William Fleck, linemen, vey following the close of gridiron ac- : -s is and Byron Spielman, back. tivities at state high schools revealed. James Sadler, Mervyn Russell, Roy Mawhinney, Johnny Hoff, Adolph Remillong and Willard Hennings are the six men who have played their last football game for Dickinson. Russell was “all-conference fullback twice and Sadler placed on the all- conference team twice. Dickinson is in the north Missouri Slope confer- ence, Probably will receive the severest jolts, with Valley City losing all but one regular from this season’s eleven. Fargo and Valley City each lose 10 regulars while 11 lettermen graduate at Devils Lake, seven of them regu- lose nine first sring men. Coach R. D. McLeod’s Bismarck outfit will assemble next fall with eight first string men missing while seven will be lost from the ranks of 3 the Mandan and Jamestown elevens,|@3tes from about 30 clubs in eae Dickinson reports that six of its men |St#%es are expected here Dec. 6 when the Central Ski association holds its annual convention. The states are North Dakota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Towa, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, and South Dakota. The schedule for the coming season will be arranged and plans completed for the Olympic tryouts for the central districts. SKI MEN TO MEET Madison, Wis., Nov. 27.—(?)—Dele- Bob Greason, North Carolin state end and leading punter in his state, has not had a punt blocked in two At Valley City those graduating are years. Lund, Fred Colby, Wilfred Jeffrey, Jay White, Robert Keating, and Mor- ris Embertson. Midgets Lose 10 The 10 Fargo football players lost include eight linemen and two backs. Those graduating are Bill Breiten- bach, Lynn _ Frederickson, Dana Smith, Vance Jones, Billy Purdy, Paul Norby, Williard Still, Gordon Aamoth, linemen, and Jack Char- bonneau and George Moore, backs. The nine Minot gridiron warriors | who donned the moleskins for the last Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 “Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. YANKTON WINS Yankton, 8. D., Nov. 27.—(?)—Play- ing in a blinding snow-storm, the Yankton Greyhounds and the Wes- leyan Tigers played to a scoreless tie here in their annual Thanksgiving Day battle. FALLS TO FAME Seattle, Wash.—Dr. Joe Brugman is the talk of hunting circles in this city. Out for deer recently, Brugman heard a shot and then saw his guide run- ‘hing back with the information that he had shot at and missed a big bear. Brugman hurried to the scene of the battle and, in doing so, tripped and fell over a cliff. He picked himself up at the bottom to find himself con- fronting the enraged bruin. Without taking aim, the doctor fired and kill- ed the bear. the game with Fargo are Don Smart, Alvy Dahl, Jim Rakness, Milton Han- Paul Bowles, John DeMots, and Bill McGregor. The backfield bears the hardest blow with only Ronnie Lierbo of the four regular starters returning. Captain Ben Blanchette heads the list of nine graduates on the Grand Forks eleven. Others getting their diplomas are Scott Wiseman, Bernard Seven regulars are among the elev- en lettermen and four others who Played in games this fall that will be lost to the Devils Lake football team through graduation. Regulars lost in- clude Captain Phil Sheridan, Donald Barton, Helmer Christianson, and/ Vernon Weaver, linemen; Howard | McLean, Larry Street, Ray Young, and Woodrow Moylan, backs. Jenson, Redmond, Reslock, Reardon, Swen- ATTENTION, FARMERS! Bring your hogs to Bis- marck any day of the week. We will be located at the Bismarck Auto Parts, next in the evening, however. Every- body had a wee bit of roast beef and a baked apple. AN APT STUDENT | Charlotte Hodgkinson, 19-year-old | lass, made her first solo flight after! only two hours and 27 minutes of in-/| structions. She practiced imaginary | flying while perched on a chair with | a broomstick as the “stick” of her, plane. ;Seven veterans, to the N. P. stock yards. We are also in a position to serve you at McKenzie son, and Hector Wilcox, reserves, also will graduate. | Eight Demons Graduate i Modern White Gold Frames With comfortable pearl pads First string Bismarck high school| i gridders lost to the 1932 aggregation || > _<e cally, by graduation are Gilbert Benzon, Joe saccahhiotechly if Prices paid will be equal to Byrne, Robert Stackhouse, Lloyd} Murphy, Robert Edick, Eddie Agr, Lester Dohn, and Woodrow Shepard. Coach William Gussner of James- town says his Bluejay squad will lose Robert Rishworth, any market. L. E. Heaton & Son Phone Bismarck 154 or Call Us at McKenzie, N. D. DR. MacLACHLAN’S Health School and Eye Clinic DR. A. 8. ANDERSON Optometrist—ye Specialist Lucas Block Bismarck A HUNDRED MILLION Nos but Bra MELLOWED While ferns grew high as trees in PENNSYLVANIA oil—one of the few crude oils formed in the Devonian Age, one hundred million years ago—is used in the manufacture of Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oil. Sinclair refiners de- wax and free this crude from petroleum jelly at as low as 60° F. below zero—Sinclair Penn- sylvania is a year-round Pennsylvania grade oil. Ask the Sinclair dealer. _ SINCLAIR | Chnsylvanta NOTICE TO PARENTS | No streets have yet been des- ignated for coasting. Your cooperation in keeping children from coastire on the streets is asked to avoid acci- dents. Signed: Board of City Commissioners. dford-Allegany crude Book Lovers Attention Special Offer The Way. of Smiles By J. W. Foley Red Leather Flexible Cover Postpaid any place in the U. 8. each 50c. Send money order or stamps with order. The Bismarck Tribune Printers - Stationers - Publishers NORTH DAKOTA d Rippatoe on Elks Charity Fight Program > FOOTBALL AGGREGATIONS PREPARE FOR FINAL ENGAGEMENTS _Nodaks in Eastern Tilt ree 4