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Si THE BISMARCY TRIBUNE, WEDNE SDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1932 alter Johnson Released as Manager of Washington Senators BASEBALL WORLDS THREE NEW SURPRISEDBY CLARK oe poaiiNe nous GRIFFITH'S DECISION Fans Thought Spurt By Club’ Had Assured Former Star Hurler His Job i CINCINNATI DROPS HOWLEY) Neither Organization Has Given Any Inkling As to Its New Pilot GZ, Yo Zl A FOR-THIS ROLL OF MONEY? I FOUND IT ON YOU WERE SLEEPING ON TH’ coucH | I WAS GOING To HOLD IT OUT ON You FOR AWHILE, BUT I NOTICED Your BLOOD PRESSURE RISING TO TH’ POP-VALVE /—~ BETTER PUT THIS WAD IN STORAGE BECAUSE TH’ NEXT GUY WHO PICKS LEA . g OH, MY, MY 1-~THAN KS, IS THIS WHAT YOURE LOOKING ape! wand, t MUST REWARD You! ~™UM~ WHAT {IS IT YOU CHEW, LICORICE GUM’? WEGAD!~THAT MONEY \S TH? CAMPAIGN FUND} OF OUR POLITICAL TH FLOOR. WHILE IT UP MIGHT SEND You TH’ RUBBER. JUST GOING TO HAVE A BIG TEN COA By Ahern PaN\\ Minneapolis and Newark Clubs’ Failed to Swat Properly So Far Have —(AP)—Newark noved into the fifth : Series Teams Have Been Hitting Ligh HASKELL TEAM NO MORE THAN TEANS COACHED BY SPEARS AND SOLEM NET IN ONE CANE Wisconsin and lowa Are Pitted Against Each Other in Loop Opener BIERMAN WILL MAKE DEBUT Minnesota, With My UbI Lost ; to Eleven, Expects Tar- tar in Purdue { Chicago, Oct. 5—(7)-—-The Big of Minnesota, and Dr. other. | Solem, after a long successful! career at Drake, will pit his Hawk-! eyes against Wisconsin and Spears | in their opening important contests. | | The experience of directing a Big Ten team will not be new to Spears, | | however, for he served a hitch at) | Minnesota, before going to Oregon ;and bouncing back to Wisconsin. | Neither Iowa nor Wisconsin has | been figured as championship cali- | ber, but Bierman, at Minnesota, has) a squad of very dark horse rating. | | His championship hopes may die! ; Quickly because the Gophers, upset! by the critical illness of Myron Ubl, | meets Purdue, sharer with Michigan and Northwestern of the 1931 cham- pionship. irdue appears about as strong as’ last year and Minnesota will be go- form of dummy scrimmage against | What opponents are expected to use.! | Fights Last Nig! oS | HIGH SCHOOL CLUB THIS YEAR #2.'222"208 ta CHES WILL DO BATTLE SATURDAY ‘Petrolle Boys Are Poison in Class EXPECT NEW DOWN RULE TO | _ INSURE SAFETY IN FOOTBALL { —e {Runner Down When Any Part of Body But Hands or Feet | Touches Ground (Because of widespread com- | ment on the 1932 football rules, the Associated Press requested | William 8. Langford, secretary of | the national football rules com- mittee, to clarify the principal changes in the playing code. Fol- lowing is the first of a series of four explanatory articles by | Langford.) | New York, Oct. 5.—(@)—Players and the football public generally always have expected the man carrying the Ten's three new football coaches, Os- | ball to fight for every inch of ground |sie Solem of Iowa, Bernie Bierman |that he can possibly gain until the | Clarence | bal becomes dead. Spears of Wisconsin, will get into, Under the former rule when any championship competition Saturday | part of the player in possession of the with two of them pitted against each ! ball, except his hands or feet, touched the ground, while he was in the grasp of an opponent, the ball became dead automatically and play stopped. This year’s rule reads as follows: “The ball is dead and shall be a0 declared by the referee: (A) When & player having the ball goes out of bounds, cries, ‘down’ or is so held that, his forward progress is stopped, or (except the holder of the ball in a place-kick) when any portion of his person except his hands or feet touches the ground.” The change made was in the elim- ination of the erent nna he cure grasp of an opponent,” an - pose was to do away with the dangers that came from “crawling” and “pil- ing up.” This year if the man with the ball stumbles so that his knee touches the ground, or if he bowled over by an opponent, or if he falls on a loose ball, it is instantly dead. Although it is the referee's duty to announce that the ball ils dead by blowing his whistle, any “crawling” which occurs, even before the whistic is blown, is to be penalized by the loss of 5 yards. battling hard for places. The Buck- eye lineup has been shifted around, with Keefe taking Carroll's plate in the backfield, but it is expected In- diana will face the same starting! ¢ eleven that mowed down Ohio Wes- leyan last week. Chicago took an easy workout Tuesday in its preparation for Yale, but Illinois scrimmaged, with the reserves having the better of the var- sity. Of the traveling teams, Chi- cago, Northwestern and Purdue will set out Thursday, with Indiana and Towa moving into hostile territory \ Friday. eo —<s ht | ° (By The Associated Press) Detroit—Kid Chocolate, Cuba, out- ‘Marathon Baseball | Classic Is Started ———__———__—$» ‘Wymore, Neb., Oct. 5.—(AP)— The championship of the Blue Valley Baseball League was not meant to be a marathon, but it has started out that way. Teams representing Wymore and Fairbury already have played 26 innings, and they are going be? continue at Fairbury next Sun- ay. In their first meeting they played 13 scoreless innings and then decided to resume some oth- er time. Last Sunday they play- ed 13 more innings, and darkness halted the contest in a 4 to 4 deadlock. Brothers Have Been Softening Up Opponents For Each Other Lately New York, Oct. 4—()—The Petrolle boys, Billy of Duluth and Frankie of Schenectady, are “ganging up” on the ring’s leading lightweights who will tell you the only thing more deadly than one Petrolle is a couple of them. Billy “softened up” Christopher (Bat) Battalino in two battles before Brother Frankie took a couple of de- cisions from the former featherweight champion. Wednesday night, Brother Frankie will try to repay the favor in his 10-round non-title match with Tony Canzoneri, lightweight cham- Pion, at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn. If Frankie can hand Canzoneri a trimming, then Billy .may have a much better chance of winning when he meets Tony in a title bout in Mad- ison Square Garden next month, Canzoneri, howevef, rated a 2 to 1 favorite over the Schenectady battler, who will be substituting for Ray Mill- er, Chicago southpaw. Miller came down with an attack of boils and had to withdraw. Maxie Rosenbloom, recognized in this state as lightheavyweight cham- pion, will meet Jack Redman, South Bend, Ind., Negro, in the 10-round semi-final, also a non-title affair. SAFETY BUMPER A. J. Grafham, of London, has ia vented a safety bumper for automo- biles. When a pedestrian is struck he is knocked into a sitting position, falls gently on to the seat-shaped bumper, and is carried on until the car stops. Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant Vacuum Cleaner, paint the castings, inspect the grates and smoke pipes, all for $3. e averages 178 pounds, the’ N tern worked against Mich-/ y ;|. Friend Charley, owned at Lexing- sses Tuesday, and the Wol- | Pointed Johnny Farr, Cleveland (10); ton, Ky. has been ridden to six Fines put in a vigorous session on|George Riley, Detroit, outpointed| straight triumphs on. the running a defense calculated to halt Pug Wilbur Chevalier, Milwaukee (6). tracks this season. Series Wed-|School Being Reduced; Oldest Te 18 oping for a) i ting which| Indian Is 21 and Young- All Repairs at Reasonable Prices ar: regular campaigns to est Is 18 Rentner, Ollie Olson and the rest of, Berlin — Vincez Hower, Germany, Phone 141 ound v cats backs. stopped Raul Bianchi, Argentina (4). January is named from the Latin 2 in diana's candidates were told the aca god, Janus, god of gates and doors; French & Welch f a squad of 33 men to go; Tommy Yarr and Marchmont/ hence of be: ‘ Hd Co. for the Ohio State bat-| Schwartz, Notre Dame coaches, are we. Co. 23 years old, and Frank Hoffman, an- other coach, is 22. Use the Want Ads Dan Howley s aeneaiciapinamaaaimaanel |p ’ n i 7 " | department denote the warlike ten- 2 Sioux to Play in Two | cencies of their predecessors—knocks i . Off Two, Whirlwind Soldier, Hits Intersectional Games, Enemy, Brave Heart, Charging Bull, | ; Jumping Panther, Hungry wWolf,| Tomahawk, etc. The statistical chart | tells the story in a more accurate, if | less picturesque way. The oldest squad member is 21, the youngest are high school youths of 18. ce sho: stop, and Sam Rice, long a Ws ton fielder. —- Except for one year as manager of t fo 3 iager 319 ‘orks, N. D., Oct, 5.—(Pi— ie eeark club in the International | a pei of Fear will apa phiean Played only with | take part in two colorful football ‘ashington from his appearance as 3! games on the national intersectional ee ig old rookie from| program this fall. They will par- Seen te (ae clscoyer *, CL ticipate in two northsouth clashes, | eas ah at one of which will be played in the in aa ba Hees te | wheat-lands of the Red River val- throwing the ball, because if he didn’t, dey ape Salinee Olcue stra pane Eee would be Agree ‘lead bodies The first one will be between Jack From his first eet? Of tdaho.” | West's Sioux and Howard university Toot te Derst ame in 1907, which | of Birmingham, Ala., scheduled for he lost to Detroit 3 to 2, to his final Grand Forks, Oct as a feature| im that inning and won the game in| hurling in 1927, Johnson blazed his| of the Nodak homecoming, Howards! the seventh on Babe Herman's home Way through a trail of records. His | snappy football club, which last year| "U2 with Heinie Manush on base. strikeout mark of 3,487 still stands jost its only game to Wallace Wade's|, Lefty Brown, colored youngster for the boys to shoot at, | Alabama Crimson Tide, will be the| {0m Hartsville, S. C., hurled for first southern team ever showing in Samestown, walle for. the: stars, Wal: NO MORE...NO LESS! Jamestown city team, 3 to 2, before approximately 1,800 persons. The local club scored in the fourth, when Red Haley hit a homer with one man on. The stars got one back | America’s biggest Cigar Value ..-Certified Cremo now 5 cents straight...3 for 10 cents...same quality...same size...same shape ee Grid Questions as elther of the Dakota's, and will give| Bere. Brown, Whitehill and Grove 3 the fans 4 Seen by Jack West ee Ganed ae pea Members of both teams and the ¢——_—_—_ se mae TSE state junior baseball champions of | ote: This is the third © | : % = | Cooperstown were guests of local 3 Of articles on football | now Ovieans ietecen tie gatt| service clubs and the chamber of Fules ‘and strategems written for | 504 rovola, the fleet time any club| Commerce at a banquet. The Tribune by Jack West, head from the north has invaded the Gul! Lefty Grove pitched the last in- football coach at the University | city Loyola has been interested in| 2inS and threw “‘so fast three batters of North Dakota.) the Sioux ever since they started| *HO faced him could not see them” TACTICS aie STRATEGY their upward cli b. They were want: and all three struck out. uestion Pip. Te e eh, ‘ .< ¢d in 1930 for the Times-Picayune Hf you have been using flank plays Christmas charity game, but eth LEE HARD AT WORK | @ number of times, and now the op- ponents are beginning to cut down the size of your gains, what can be done to make your flank plays more ef- fective? Answer In a situation such as described Dakota's game in Los Angeles on the! same date made it impossible to ac-| cept. 1 All-Stars Defeat Mayville, N. D., Oct. 5.—(?)—Coach | Lewy Lee of Mayville teachers col- lege is having his troubles plugging | five vacancies in the line and two in| | the backfield of his 1932 eleven but) he's hard at-it and expects to show; We are very happy to make this im- methods of manufacture and our large volume sales. The great savings thus effected are now passed on to you. No matter where you live, in city, country, town or village, you will find Certified Cremo Cigars of the same fine uniform quality that you have always enjoyed ... the same in above, it would be wise to smash the middle of the line in order to draw the defensive team closer together, and thus make your flank plays more successful. good results by the end of the sea- Jamestown, 3 to aie Lee is developing a center, two! = | tackles, two ends, and two backs to Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 5.—)—A! take the Place of those who grad- touring teem of major league base-| uated or were lost to the squad ball stars Tuesday night defeated the| through failure to return. portant announcement to the millions of smokers who want a fine, long- filler cigar of modest price. Certified Cremo at 5¢ has for years been America’s greatest cigar value. Now at 5¢ STRAIGHT—3 for 10¢, Certified Cremo ushers in a new and still greater Question = Where are the badlands and why | should they be avoided? | Answer The badiands are along the side | (ines and in any of the four corners | of the field. It is wise to keep your team away from these territories be- | tause your offense is hampered in “having little choice, and thus the de- fense can concentrate on stopping the | plays selected. | GRID RULES sgh what oeeasions is time taken cigarvalue.Thisismadepossiblebyour size and the same famous perfecto Answer @ In a few short months a vast army of men have switched to the ee etree a Gillette BLUE BLADE. Lear eeeeats pay is for acy! why this is the nation’s favorite blade. Shave with the Gillette What is the penalty for delaying} Blue Blade tomorrow morning. tremendous reserve of fine long-filler , tobacco, our modern up-to-the-minute shape. Finished under glass for your sanitary protection. Time shall be taken out while the ball is being brought out for a kick- off; during the try-for-point after touchdown; after a touchdown, safety, or touchback; after @ fair catch has been made; after an incomplete for- ward pass; during enforcement or the game? ‘The penalty jaying th for delay! the game by the offensive team is loss of five yards, the down and point to be remaining the same; delay by & defensive P.S.—Listes to important Cremo announce- ment, N. B, C. network, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, during Lucky Strike program. PRESIDENT...THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY team is loss of five # Yards, the sctimmage following the! ‘wanalty to be first down. ro