The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 26, 1932, Page 10

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THE BISMAR i i 1 { TRIBUNE, SATURDAY,,MARCH 26, 1932 Schaaf Listed as Third Best Heavy Weight ~ SHARKEY IS RANKED FOR SECOND HONORS; Billy Petrolle Rated as No. 2 Fighter in Junior Welter- | weight Division BEHIND SCHMELING| TENNIS QUEEN OPENS CAMPAIGN cc AGO CUBS AND GIANTS 10 DISPUT REIGN OF ST: LOU Burden of Proof Placed on DEMPSEY NOT MENTIONED Primo Carnera Named Fourth Man as Walker Moves Back to Fifth Place Chicago, March 26.—()—Ermie Schaaf of Boston has climbed from, fifth position among the world’s heavyweights to third, according to} the National Boxing association) rankings announced Saturday. | In the new rating, Schaaf replaces | Mickey Walker, who ranked just be- hind Champion Max Schmeling and Jack Sharkey, during the previous quarter. The rankings: Heavyweight— Champion, Max, y; 2, Ernie Schaaf; 3, Primo Carnera; 4, Mickey ‘Walker; 5, Max Baer; 6, King Levin-| sky; 7, Young Stribling; 8, Steve! Hamas; 9, Tuffy Griffiths; 10, poe ino Uzcudun. | Light Heavyweight — Cham pion,! George Nichols; 1, Maxie Rosen-| bloom; 2, Adolph Heuser; 3, Davie! Maier; 4, Billy Jones; 5, Bob God-! win; 6, George Manley; 7, Joe Knight; 8, Baxter Calmes; 9, Harry} “Smith; 10, Lou Scozza. Middleweights—Champion, Gorilla Jones; 1, Dave Shade; 2, Marcel Thil; , 3, Vince Dundee; 4, Ben Jeby; 5,/ Angel Clivelle; 6, Frankie O'Brien;! 7, Jack Hood: 8, Len Harvey; Henry Firpo; 10, Frankie Battaglia. Welterweights j Welterweights— Champion, Jackie Fields; 1, Lou Brouillard; 2, Young} Corbett; 3, Jimmy McLarnin; 4,! Baby Joe Gans; 5, Johnny Indrisano; | 6, Roy Smith; 7, King Tut; 8, Eddie/ Ran; 9, Andy Callahan; 10, Jackie/ 9,) Welterweight — Champion. | k; 1, Billy Petrolle; 2,, 3, Tony Herrera; 4,} Manuel Quintero; 5, Eddie Kid Wolf;/ 6, Jimmie Hill; 7, Joe Goodman; 8,) Billy Wallace; 9, Ralph Lenny; 10, Steve Halaiko. Lightweight—Champion, Tony Can- zoneri; 1, Al Foreman; 2, Tony Her- rera; 3, Christopher (Bat) Batta-! lino; 4, Sammy Fuller; 5, Harry Dublinsky; 6, Ray Miller; 7, Pietro Locatello; 8, Louis Kid Kaplan; 9,' ‘Wesley Ramey; 10, Al Singer. | Junior Lightweights Junior Lightweight—Champion, Kid Chocolate; 1, Eddie Shea; 2, Benny ; 3, Al Foreman; 4, Fidel La + 5, Lew Massey; 6. Maurice Associated Press Photo This unusual action Wills backhand shot during Helen this year is Cal. Cardinals and ‘Chain Store’ System BROOKLYN TO MAKE BID Even Tail Ender Cincinnati Reds Feared in Evenly Balanced Loop Jacksonville, Fla., March 26,—(#)-— The St. Louis Cardinals are world champions of baseball but the burden of proof is placed squarely on them and their famous chain store system this year. The big question to be answered in this season's National League race is whether the pennant club can trade its ace right hander to an outstand- ing rival like the Chicago Cubs and still depend sufficiently on its re- Sources in rookie talent to fill the gap. If Burleigh Grimes, who won 17 games for the Cardinals last season, mostly against first division outfits, can be replaced by the work of Tex Carleton and Dizzy Dean, combined, |the world champions will be as tough Moody, world’s (By The Associated Press) of the Boston Red as ever to beat. ;. It's a large order for a pair of re- cruit twirlers, especially in a league so strongly balanced that not even the 1931 tail ender Cincinnati, can any longer be regarded as a “set up.” Carleton Delivers So far, Dean, the most widely bal- lyhooed young pitcher to move up in a long time, has not shown as much stuff as his former Houston team- mate, Carleton. These two, with Ray Starr, from Rochester, are the chain store “aces,” but for the time being {the “full house” upon which the Sox is spending 2 Cardinals must depend consists of Bradenton.—It may be that Man- lot of time these days with big Bob/Bill Hallahan, Paul Derringer, Syl- ager Max Carey of the Brooklyn Welland, Dodgers will have to play first base himself. Since Del Bissonette’s in- jury, Carey has been trying out Mur- ray Howell at-the initial sack but the rookie's fielding leaves something to be desired. Gaston, the Yankees at St. Petersburg. — Fred Leach, the outfielder recently acquired from the Giants by the Braves, joined the tribe Friday and got off to a pretty good start. Savannah.—Manager Shono Collins lanta Sunday. the southpaw tained from the White Sox for Milt) Winter Haven. — The Phillies face Babe Ruth and the rest of Saturday in the Phils’ last game of the season on Florida soil, then hurry back to Winter Hayen to pack for their departure for At- Fort Myers.—The old law of the survival of the fittest has been ap- hurler ob-|vester_ Johnson, Jesse Haines and |Flint Rhem. ! The Cardinal pitching prospects fare stressed because it has been the chief factor in their pennant victor- iles in four of the past six years. The jrest of the club is un¢ghanged, except ins affected by holdouts. It has not jlooked impressive in training but it |still is strong at the vital spots and lits spirit has a flaming pace setter in \Peter Martin, the Oklahoma power house. Not even the great distance sepa- jrating their training activities can St. Petersburg ; 7, Roger Bernar Ghnouly; 9, Tracy x; ana es |1933 backfield. Featherweight —Title vacant; 1,), There may be Freddie Miller; 2, Babyarizmendi; 3, | 1 the sophomore 8, Joe 10, Davey for Tarlton; 6, Jose Girones; 7, Tommy /8found of victory over Paul; 8, Bushy Graham; 9, Kid|St#lwart freshmen Francis; 10, Johnny Pena. Bantamweight — Champion, lj ered all season. Brown; 1, Pete Sanstol; 2, Dick Cor-| Green material, bett; 3, Young Tommy; 4. Speedy : 6, Eugene 7, Vidal Gregoria; 8, Butch; 9, Jimmy Thomas; 10, Willie Davies. Mose /temnants of a 1, Jackie Brown; 2, Midget Wolgast; | TW. 3, Little Pancho; 4, Mariano Arilla; } Lew Feldman; 4, Pete Sarron; 5, Nel {nto varsity careers with a ba but fast and willing, as a basis for his that step; Columbia's | defeat the Morningside yearlings suf- |major contest last fall, and attempt |to duel successfully with Columbia, Flyweight—Champion, Biron Perez: |Cormell, Navy, Michigan and Yale in, st fall, the only ; | i however, provides | |no exciting prospect for a head coach, | | who in his first year must take the squad that lost every | plied again, and as a result some young players will not help the Ath- letics fight for the pennant this year. something exciting | Twenty-three players will be retained. San Francisco.—Rogers Horns- by is contemplating changes in the Chicago Cub battle front to produce some major league bat- ting power. Fort Worth.—The battle for the third base job with the Chicago White Sox, involving Luke Appling and 'Carey Selph, appears to be going in But the Princeton hope comes of | favor of the latter. St. Petersburg.—It looks like Jack Saltzgaver and Frank Cro- \lessen the fact that the Cardinals’ {two main rivals, the New York Giants jand Chicago Cubs, will move into battle from California, each with pennant winning equipment. | Very likely it will be a three-cor- jmered fight, unless Max Carey can find the right combination with Brooklyn and inject the colorful Dodger cast into the pennant fray. \Of the second division clubs, only the Cincinnati Reds and Phillies have {manifest improvement. Both are out to make it as harrassing as.possible for leaders. | Depend on Youth ‘Youth must come through for both jthe Giants and Cubs to make the ‘showing their partisans expect. Len {Eoenecke, the Indianapolis clouter, ‘Trisco: 0S | SPORT SLANT: By ALAN GOULD If Fritz Crisler’s first day at Pr ton is any indication of what's ahead. the Tigers will come staggering out of the football wilderness by 1933 at least. The big, black-haired fellow from Chicago and Minnesota brought to| ‘Nassau more energy and personality, | more vim and eagerness than the! staid Princeton campus probably has | Seen in all its $3 years of strictly | homebred,coaching. i Cwsler, greeting, meeting, eating, everywhere in Princeton, and with! everyone, in a cyclonic 24 hour debut, not only stirred up more football en- thusiasm than a squad of 50 could muster all last fall, but he impressed everybody with his seriousness and common sense. Fril's Come Last Crisler is a fundamentalist, raised | in the Stagg school at Chicago, and systems to him mean just the bare | outward form of his maneuvers. “Blocking and tackling constitute the only basic system in football,” he asserts. “You can run plays from Warner formations, Rockne forma- | tions, any formations you can devise, | but if your men don't block on the offense, tackle on the defense, no formation is any good.” With that idea as a starter, Cris- ler already has done Princeton foot- ball tremendous good. The boys have had weird plays, strange formations, amazing maneu- vers, and they haven't worked. They failed because these plays, even more than the simpler formations, need the sturdy fundamentals, blocking and tackling. No other system has ever yet been devised for getting a ball carrier past @ defense, no matter how tricky the formations appeared on the surface, and there is still no way of stopping an opponent, other than by grasping him firmly, when he has the ball in bis arms, and depositing him on the! | | been accustomed for the/ years to the brawny ma-j Minnesota, there is some-; @ sinking sensation awaiting | when views bis Princeton | time in spring prac- | April 4. of defeat, the cha- minted ii 5, Valentin Angiemann; 6, Johnny|the record the 33-year-old Crisler; e+ noth have won places in the Goodrich; 7, Happy Atherton: 8, Bob Made at Minnesota, where his 1930; New york Yankees’ infield. Omar; §, Chris Pinada; 10, ‘Babe even won only’ one important match, and after one solid year of fundamentals, last fall had a power- ful team that wound up a fine sea- son with a startling 19 to 0 upset of Ohio State. third, Yankees probably will start the season with Crosetti at shortstop, Saltzgaver at second, Lary at Gehrig at first, Combs and Chapman in the out- \ field, and Dickey catching. \has been picked for left field by John |McGraw. However, the Giants can- not be rated an even choice with the Cardinals, unless Hughie Critz’s ;arm is sound and he is able to play |second base regularly, The Cubs, like the Yankees, have The Ruth, Michigan Tankmen Favored to Win Title : for the National Collegiate Athletic Princeton, association swimming title at the fi- nals of the annual meet tonight in the University of Michigan pool. |‘ Leland Stanford's group of middle distance stars, having qualified eight in Friday's preliminaries, Ann Arbor, Mich., March 26—\4)— meanwhile acquiring seven points in Leland Stanford, and Northwestern to Make Bid For Crown Starters. Princeton still are very much in the running. Northwestern and Princeton each qualified four men for the finals and also have strong entries for the 400- yard and medley relays. Michigan qualified six men and will have two relay teams. Navy qualified three men, Minne- Tanks teams of four universities, one the finals of the 1,500 meter swim. 'sota and Rutgers two each, and from the east, one from the Pacific, perhaps stand the best chance of de-| Southern California, California, Ne- coast, and two from the middle west,|throning Michigan, are in position to make strong bids! champion, OUR BOARDING HOUSE the defending ; braska, Columbia, Ohio State, Cincin- but Northwestern and |nati U and Illinois, one each. 5 i By Ahern | FAUGH !~DRAT THEM, (MS THIS HOUSE ! ~ LAUGHING 516 SCORN MY GREAT HAIR-COMBING HAT INVENTION ~~ HMPF ~ TLL HAVE MY DAY, EGAD! ~T'LL SELL THE PATENT-To A HAT MANUFACTURER FoR A QUARTER OF A MILLION DOLLARS aw THEN, BY Dove, IT WILL SNUB “THEM ROYALLY ! HAW A QUARTER OF MILLION, DOLLARS —~ pq) is MATCH TH’ SAME CLOFF ¥a'-To PATCH Yo" PASTS, BUT HE SAYS IT WONT SHOW, EF Yo" WEARS Yo" SENATOR'S NATIONAL LEAGUE RACE SEEN AS T tity of the old wallop, plus the |fortitude to rely on such kid infield- jers as Billy Herman at second and the sensational on |third base. Otherwise the Chicago joutfit is heavy with age, particularly swith a pitching staff consisting of Grimes, Root, Malone, Bob Smith and Guy Bush. The slogan inspired by the Card- linals—“Street Fears Cincinnati’—is factually typical of the National jLeague outlook. The Reds, even though they gave up two crack :in-; fielders in the trade with Brooklyn, | fortified themselves with Babe Her- man, Ernest Lombardi and Wally Gilbert. There isn’t a “soft spot” in| the circuit now. Brooklyn, unless it gets exceptional pitching from Hoyt, Vance and Clark, | will have trouble keeping in the first division. Phar Lap Revives _ Interest in Derby Blazes Rainbow Over U. S. Turf World Chicago, March 26—()—Australia’s | lightning bolt, Phar Lap, has blazed a rainbow over the American turf | world. Just when everything looked dark for almost every race track after a losing winter season, south and west, the wonder horse from “down under” has arrived to give the sport of kings a new thrill. It is just like another Babe Ruth entering baseball, or a sec- ond Jack Dempsey climbing into the in N. B. A. Rankings HREE-CORNERED FIGHT | Buick’s 3,500-Pound Popular-Priced Sedan | Fleck Motor Sales Installs New Parts Control System For Buicks Plan Eventually Will Be Install- ed For Buick Dealers All Over U. S. ! ‘zone warehouse stocks are kept re- | Plenished by the big Buick parts fac- tory at Flint. The master parts index book and |the new steel storage bin equipment permit a part to be located as quick Installation of the new parts con-j{ ting at his best. “I cannot think of any better pos- sible break to American racing than the invasion of Phar Lap,” said the ‘71-year-old Col, Matt Winn, directing genius of the Kentucky Derby for the last 33 years. “The invasion of Phar Lap and his victory in the Agua Caliente handicap has stripped the imagination of every race fan and given us all renewed en- trol system and equipment devised by! the Buick Motor company has been made in the service department of} Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. | This plan eventuaily will be in-' stalled for Buick dealers throughout ! the United States. The system is de- | signed to facilitate the quick servic- ing of Buick cars where replacements are wanted, and is based upon a two : aR RO Rae Stickler Solution | Ph satcssiisicsra 1. SSOMONSREHTAG ENOTSGNILLORA ° 2. SO, ON, TAG, AGE; NO, NOT, NIL, /LL,LO, thusiasm for a bigger and better turf year.” PROPELLER-DRIVE A Detroit automobile concern is manufacturing a car which is to be driven by an airplane propeller. It will have a 133-inch wheelbase, and be powered by a four-cylinder en- gine. There is no rear axle nor trans- mission. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results P years’ study of parts requirements in| all sections of the country. Features of the new system of in- terest to Buick owners are a master parts index book listing 17,203 parts for Buick cars of all years and mod- els and a monthly balancing of the parts stock under the control plan toi make sure the proper variety of parts is always on hand. Dealers are assured of one-day service from any of the 33 Buick zone warehouses, ! where complete stocks of parts are maintained under the supervision of | the factory parts department. The OR. 3. SO, SOON, ON, TAG, GAG, AGE, NO, ON, NOT, NIL, ILL, LO, Oe No. 1 shows the original sentence in reversed form with the letters connected. No, 2 shows the words that can be found in the line of letters in No. 1. No. 3 shows the words that can be found in the letters of No. 2. J roomy, five-passenger family eight, with new Buick valve-in-head engine, Wizard control and mod< ish 1932 body by Fisher that is extending Buick ownership into a new price field. or quicker than one would select a book at the library. This is accom- Plished by dividing the book into 10 mastér groups, such as engine, elec- trical, etc., and numbering each sep- arate part and its corresponding bin Hire @ decimal system originated by pul The new system, as installed by the Fleck firm, is said the most modern parts control plan in existence. It as- sures Buick owners that the dealer will have on hand every part he has a right to expect, and that it is read- ily accessible. BUSES FOR SCHOOLS It is estimated that 49,000 school buses are in use in rural sections of the United States. 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. D. RODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS WITH WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM BODY BY FISHER THIS BI Es 82 Horsepower—70 to 75 miles an hour—150,000 miles and more of dependable performance—A Buick through and through, with the famed Buick quality features—Extremely low monthly terms on the liberal G.'M. A. C. payment plan. G, LUXURIOUS BUICK eicur sepan ‘995 FLINT, MECHIGAN TWENTY-SIX LUXURIOUS MODELS, $935 TO $2055, F. O. B. FLINT, MICHIGAN THE NEW BUICK wih WIZARD CONTROL FLECK. MOTOR SALES, Inc. Phone 55 100 West Broadway BISMARCK, N. DAK. ~ CITY wie | } \ t !

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