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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, UCTOBER 10, 1932 Bison Loom as Threat in North Central After Beating Rabbits 12-6 NORTHDAKOTAA.C. BIG TEN OFFERS TWO E HASTWOVICTORES Sectional Tit at Stake This Wee IN 1932 LOOP RACE! Outplayed Decisively in First Half, Finnegan’s Team Came Back Strong | | PASSES ARE RESPONSIBLE) Viv M’Kay, Slashing Halfback, | Scores Both Counter’s in Hard Struggle Brookings, S. D., Oct. 10—The| North Dakota Agricultural college Bi-} son retained their North Central, lead as they scored a 12-8 y over the South Dakota State Jackrabbits here Saturday. SPRINT STAR OUT FOR FOOTBALL | Pitt Meets Army in East; All Unbeaten Teams in South | to Clash | i New York, Oct. 10.—(P}—Sectional | championship hopes will be at stake all along the football line next Satur- day in the season's most brilliant ar- | ray of important games. North and South, East and West. | highly touted elevens are paired off | in a series of contests that may go | far toward determining the eventual | sectional champions, | | In the east, the Pittsburgh Panth- | ;ers and Army, both of whom play | schedules entitling them to consider- | jation in national ratings, clash at | | West Point in a battle of | clevens. Pitt walloped the Cadets | 26-0 last year, and apparently has all kinds of power again. In the Big Ten, the Michigan Wol- | | verines, triumphant over Northwest- | ; ern, tackle their traditional rivals, the | Buckeyes of Ohio State, and Purdue, | championship MICHIGAN BUCKEYE, WISCONSIN- PURDUE TILTS ATTRACTIVE Wolverines and Boilermakers Will Be Seeking Revenge For 1931 BOTH UPSET LAST SEASON Last Saturday's Program Mark- ed By Purple, Gopher Defeats Chicago, Oct. 10—(?)—The list of fayorites somewhat half, the Bison came late minutes of the scored a touc! n the Jackrabbits can close of the g ed bid by triumphant. rd passes paved the way for all three touchdowns, but the Bison ttack was much more y le | h ends and three backs t eiving. outplayed in the first ck in the very | nd period and © put them out ni put on their longest of the afternocn to r minutes before the | me, staving off a be- the home forces after | off to march off the} | ing bbits had the edge in! more decep' with | hollander, Viv McKay and Milton sbson on the passing end, and | for a coaching career. Frank Wykoff, one of the nation’s sprint kings, has reported for football at the University of Southern California, and may get a chance at quarterback. Wykoff says his main idea is to get gridiron knowledge (Associated Press Photo) | another highly-rated contender, meets | altered by what happened last Sat- | Dr. caters pants’ Wisconsin Badg-| Utday, the Big Ten will present at ers, conference “dark horses.” | least two more extra-special gridiron The elimination of at least two of | battles this week. the contenders for the Southern con-| The brace of games—Michigan at ference title seems certain with the | Ohio State, and Wisconsin at Pur- j duels involving Tulane and Vander- | due—will be in the nature of grudge bilt, and Alabama and Tennessee, all | Meetings, with the Wolverines and unbeaten thus far. Despite its close | the Boilermakers seeking revenge. call against Georgia Saturday, Tu- | Last year Ohio State, the underdog, lane, defending champion, will be fav- | #!most ruined Michigan's champion- ored over Vanderbilt, but the Tennes-| Ship plans by winning their annual see-Alabama battle looks like a toss-|@2me, 20 to 7. Wisconsin did the ite, surprise 21 to 14 desislons ne Out® California and Washington State “g . will meet in the biggest game of a Had it not been for the post-sea- ' Pacific t conference schedule and |S0n set’ of charity games, their de- [ERE MALHISTOE Sacer CHEREIRET attr | feats wwotld “have lene “Npeiiacier Texas A. & M., heads the southwest |i" undisputed possession of the title. conference slate. As it turned out, Michigan, North- western and Purdue shared the championship. North -estern, bea’ Football Stars _ | Photo) If the University of Pennsylvania takes to the air In the fall foot» ball drive it may be in the manner shown above. Nick Treretola, candl- date for halfback, swept into the air and landed In the arms of Howard Colehower, tackle, during practice In Philadelphia. (Associated Press 13 to 10, but seven of red up in the second the Jackrabbits had a on chalked up only one first down in the first half. this com-! ing on a dangerous play in the sec- ond period when Jacobson, the Bison | DIMINUTIVE DICKINSON ELEVEN BEATEN BY MANDAN TEAM 34-0 punter, broke away for 16 yards from behind his own goal to give the Bison Saunders and Dahlquist Lead Braves to Victory in on the Bison 2 | Claeolete and | | (By The Associated Press) Herm Manley, Florida—Took ball behind goal and ran 105 yards to score against Sewanee. Harry Newman, Michigan—Recov- ;ered a fumble to pave way for one! touchdown, passed to Fay for an- | other and kicked field goal in 15-6: victory over Northwestern. Cliff Montgomery, Columbia— Scored twice and was Columbia's; i 15 to 6, Saturday, back trail against Illinois at Cham-| paign while Indiana, which caused| | more than a little meet Iowa at Bloomington. Off the Hoosiers’ showing against Ohio, they should hit the victory column at the expense of the Hawkeyes, who took @ 34 to 0 lacing from Wisconsin. ten by Michigan, will take the come- h surprise by hold- ng Ohio State to a 7-7 draw, will Louisiana Tech, 46; Union, 7. Rice, 13; Southern Methodist, 0. Southwestern, 20; Millsaps, 0. Mississippi State, 18; Mississippi col- lege, 7. Tulane, 34; Georgia, 25. Kentucky, 12; Georgia Tech, 6. Non-eonference opponents will oc- for causing loss yardage, but the some Bison to kick on fourth down while si deep in their own territory, had two fine scoring opportunit the second period, but bot! Bison line braced and termina’ Jackrabbits’ bid for touchdowns, The running game of both teams was stopped effectively in the si period, but the Bison made charges at right tackle before bert Peschel, sophomore from Peton, plugged the hole the Jackrabbit advantage. The Bison used a seven-man against the Warner sy by the Jackrabbits, but the Sout especially | were in dire straits several times in! the second period when they refused till | | ted the: but diminutive Dickinson high scl touchdowns here Sat-| « The visitors added another econd | two points by blocking a punt for a three | safety. Her-| line | touchdowns to their credit stem employed! der one. h Dakotans found little difficulty in Piercins; the forward barrier for; but came too 1 Yardage until they reached scoring territory, where their attack was met with fierce charges. The Bison employed a six-man line |son, The summary: in the second half, with Clarence! Mandan Dickinson Orness, veteran guard, backing up| Syvrud Ie Rau! the wall with far more effectiveness | Berry It Patricka than in the first half. | Roman Ig Wiench The kicking of Clarence Pofahl,|C, Boehm c Versatile Jackrabbit back, kept the| Dietrich rg Nassett Bison in the hole throughout the’ Partridge rt first period, and then the Bison Byerly re Rase failed to take advantage of the wind! Dahlquist ab Huncovsxy at their backs when they gained pos-| Friesz th Amdahl session of the ball, and from here the Saunders rh Delaney Jackrabbits marched for their first | Eckroth fb Clarke scoring threat which was halted at! the goal line. The summa South Dakota Olsen Strong Schoenfelder ford for Prehal. Mandan—Ferder for Bromberg Jahr'Eckroth, Helbling for Dahlquist, Kummer € Faris) Percy for Partridge, Eckroth for Salem Ig Orness| Friesz, Stumpf for Percy, Reese for} Rott It Platt} Sahn, Dietrich for Toman, Farr for Palmer le Jacobson | Ferder, Partridge for Syyrud. Douglas qo Selliken Pofahl th Schollander| Harold Ely, 275-pound tackle on Johnson dh Fisher the Chicago Bears’ pro football team, Baza fo | North Dakota Agricultural scoring: Touchdowns — McKay, South Dakota State scoring: Touch down—Pofahl. Referee, Thompson, Drake; linesman, Leo Harmon, Wisconsin. North Dakota Meyers} Wiench, Ash McKay | is being referred to as the “heavi college | active football player in the worl 2. um-| universit: pire, Doyle Harmon, Wisconsin; head | Fro} Western City ‘ough a scra) hoo! | squad for five urday. The final score was 34-0. |quist and Eckroth each An aerial attack by Dickinson, 1; in the last period, proved effective a score. Syvrud of the Braves was outstanding in the line. Agnew and Baggenstoss played Substitutions: Dickinson — Agnew for Amdah!, Baggenstoss for Delaney, Robertson for Huncovsky, Handl for Rase, Olson for Nassett, Altman for bacher for Rabe, Craw- He played at the University of Iowa. | The nickname of Texas Christian Y atheltic teams is Horned so the freshmen are “Poly- | wogs.” YOU SHOULDN'T MIND A BUMP ON TH’ HEAD, AS LONG &S YOU CAN THINK ABOUT YOUR BANK-ROLL OF $900 J IF I HAD GONE DAFT? Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 10.—?}— State Led by the powerful combination of | ies in’ Saunders and Dahlquist, the Man- h times the dan Braves drove thr The broken field running, accurate | Wah-/ passing and jong punts of Saunders New York St and stopped! was the feat ure of the game. Dahl-!way of had two, throne is v: and Fer-! winner of WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT ~“HAVE YOU | Feldman to Mix Thursday Nigh PPS Will Fight For Vacant Feather- weight Throne, Says N. P. Commission New York, Oct. 10.—(®}—To the ate athletic commission’s thinking, the featherweight acant, awaiting merely the the Kid Chocolate-Lew Feldman match in Madison Square ate. Garden Thursday night. Tommy Paul of Buffalo won Na- late in the game for tional Boxing association recognition as 126-pound title-holder when he emerzed the winner of an elimination ll for Dickin-' tournament at Detroit after cham-| ;Pion Chris Battalino found he no | longer could make the weight. But the New York State commission | declined to recognize Paul and now has designated the 15-rounder be- Prchal| tween Chocolate and Feldman as a| championship affair. Chocolate al- Rabe | ready holds the somewhat synthetic | junior lightweight title and seems cer- , tain to add the featherweight crown to his collection, at least so far as| New York State is concerned. The postponed non-titular match between Tony Canzoneri, lightweight | Petrolle of | Schnectady, will be held in Ebbets champion, and Frankie Field, Brooklyn, Wednesday night. Maxie Rosenbloom, recognized in this state as lightheavyweight king, faces Jack Redman of Indianapolis, in the 10-round non-title semi-final. George Nichols of Buffalo, holder of N. B. A. light heavyweight champion- | ship, meets Tait Littman of Cudahy, Wis., in another overweight affair at ; Milwaukee tomorrow night. ELACKHAWKS AT WORK Chicago, Dec. 10—(4)}—Chicago's en- |trant in the National Hockey League, the Blackhawks, started practice Monday at Duluth, Minn., without. knowing whether Charlie Gardiner, the leading goal tender of the cir- jcuit, would show up. OUR BOARDING HOUSE WHY, YOU HAD A ROLL OF $900 AN’ HID \T IN THIS HOUSE A , COUPLE DAYS cupy Chicago and Minnesota. the Maroons meeting Knox at Chicago, and the Gophers entertaining Ne- braska, In last Saturday's big battle, Mich- igan operated in familiar Style. The | Wolverines made only four first leading ground gainer against — ton. Ernie Koy, Texas—Scored four | touchdowns in 65-0 rout of Missouri. | Orville Mohler, Southern Califor- Exped 40-yard pass | Omaen ane een neanne downs, but got two touchdowns and |~John “Hurry” Cain, Alabama—/# field goal out of them, while North= MINNESOTA COLLEGES Concordia, 13; St. Olaf, 7. { 1 BIG TEN Chicago, 7; Yale, 7. Wisconsin, 34; Iowa, 0. Purdue, 7; Minnesota, 0. Michigan, 15; Northwestern, 6. Indiana, 7; Ohio State, 7. Tilinois, 20; Bradley, 0. MIDWEST Minot State Teachers, 7; Jamestown College, 6. Oklahoma, 21; Kansas, 6. Northland College, 6; Michigan Col- lege of Mines, 0. Lawrence, 7; Carroll, 0. Beloit, 25; Northwestern college, 0. Michigan State, 27; Grinnell, 6. Notre Dame, 73; Haskell, 0. Nebraska, 12; Iowa State, 6. St. Mary's college (Mich.), 0; Adrian college, 0. Monmouth, 6; Coe, 6. Western Union college, 15; Sioux Falls college, 0. River Falls Teachers, 9; Stout Insti- tute, 6. Washington, 39; Drury, 7. Creighton, 0: Marquette, 0. Cincinnati, 13; Butler, 7. | Made all of Alabama's touchdowns| Western made only one touchdown | ington. Wisconsin, given little heed in the George Sauer, Nebraska—Inter- championship scheme, declared itself winning score against Iowa State. Were favored, but not by any such i Vic ‘baniin, Chicago—Made bril-|™Margin as 34 to 0, over the heavier! os i a |7 to 0, but its own mistakes and Min- touchdown that tied Yale, 7-7. neaota’s inspired! ‘delete ie Expect Judge to Rule “Shaiana's stand against Ohio was a | sad blow to the Buckeyes, of whom | |not only earned the tie, but actually | Chicago, Oct. 10. — () — Rogers vin é | Hornsby: ABGGaaH RAR ET OLE CHI: |came closer to winning than the high: result of his appeal for a share Of | & ————__» the Cub's world’s series money. | Football Results j expected to return to his office, after | * ka a week's illness, due to a cold, to give! North Dakota State, 12; South Dac plea. The Cubs voted to divide a pot| _ kote State, 6. of $101,870.24, in 24 shares, leaving leased Aug. 2, There were rumors in baseball cir- Hornby's appeal and that Hornsby himself anticipated an unfavorable With the disposal of the Hornsby case, Commissioner Landis will mail gold to the defeated Cubs and also to the victorious Yankees. The Yanks Imps Ride Rough ps go | ShodO od Uver rorces | ismarck Reserves Score 40 to! 6 Victory in First Game |in 28-0 victory over George Wash-|°Ut Of 11 first downs. jcepted pass and ran 65 yards for|!% by walloping Iowa. The Badgers | liant catch of Zimmer’s long pass for! Hawkeyes. Purdue got by Minnesota, held the score low. ’ | On Hornsby’s Plea =<. was expected. The Hoosiers y-rat keyes. cago Cubs, may know Monday the, ¥T#ted Buckeyes Baseball Commissioner Landis is) NORTH CENTRAL CONFERENCE immediate consideration to Hornsby’s South Dakota, 6; Morningside, 0. out Hornsby altogether. He was re- |cles Commissioner Landis would deny decision. checks for the world’s series pot of will split $152,805.35 into 30!: shares of Season { | | | | | In their first skirmish of the season, the Bismarck Imps ran rough shod over Turtle Lake for a 40 to 6 victory in a football game played under the floodlights at Hughes Field Saturday} night. The locals piled up an impressive EAST Army, 57; Carleton, 0, Drexel, 13; Delaware, 10. Virginia Poly Institute, 23; Mary- Vanderbilt, 26; Western Kentucky, 6. FAR WEST Centerville Independence of Butte, 0; Intermountain Union, 0. mal, 0. Southern California, State, 0. St. Mary's, 12; California, 12. Montana, 14; Carroll college, 6. Nevada, 6; Utah, 6. New Mexico, 6; Northern Arizona Teachers, 0. Colorado Aggies, 39; Colo. Mines, 0. Stanford, 14; Santa Clara, 0. Gonzaga, 20; Idaho, 7. Washington State, 30; Willamette, 0. Idaho, southern branh, 0; Montana State, 0. Oregon, 0; Washington, 0. Colorado, 26; Utah Aggies, 7. 10; Oregon HIGH SCHOOLS Casselton, 20; Hope, 0. Grand Forks, 25; Thief River Falls, 0. Lakota, 30; Aneta, 0. Max, 13; Washburn, 0. Valley City Teachers’ Valley City, 0. Lisbon, 7; Hankinson, 0. Mandan, 34; Dickinson, 0. Slope County Will Decide Agent Issue Amidon, N. D., Oct. 10.—The ques-| | | i | reserves, 6; | | | | jtion of whether or not Slope county will retain the services of a county) agent will come up for decision at! the Nov. 8 election, it was announced | Saturday by County Auditor O. F.| Metcalf. Petitions bearing the names of 326 residents of the county were pre- sented to the board of county com- missioners by J. E. Pfeifer of Ami- don, who was assisted in circulating | the petitions by August Krenz, De- Sart; John Hanson, Ranger; M. Tripp, Marmarth and William Lien of Amidon. F. A. Garfoot is at present county agent of Slope county. Leading Scorers (By The Associated Press) Casey Kimbrell of Auburn has tak- en the lead in the race for national individual football scoring honors, The Southern Conference halfback has piled up a total of nine touch- downs and four points after touch- down for a total of 58 points in three games. Four points behind is Ralph Graham, fleet Kansas State fullback. Eight football captains of Wash- ington university were in the line- Southern Normal, 19; Eastern Nor- | "| String o | { if | | 1 | SOUTH DAKOTA COYOTES TRIM MORNINGSIDE IN LOOP BATTLE f Four Successive Wins For Sioux City School Is Broken Vermilion, S. D., Oct. 10—P)— Outplayed through the first half, the University of South Dakota Coyotes took to the air in the third period to make the only score of the game and defeat Morningside, 6 to 0, here Saturday. The victory for South Dakota broke a string of four successive wins for the Sioux City school and gave the Coyotes their fourth con- | test in the last 14 games. Freeburg, sophomore fullback, drove over for the touchdown from the 5-yard line after Clinker, quar- terback, had hurled a pass to Dunn, who scampered to that point. The attempt for the extra point failed. Again in the fourth period, the South Dakotans threatened to score. Hansen tore off three runs of 20, 7, and 10 yards each and Freeburg tossed a pass to Adkins who reached the 1-yard line. There Wyant crashed through to throw Freeburg for a 5-yard loss after three previ- ous efforts to score had failed, and Sherwood punted out of danger. Morningside narrowly missed a touchdown in the second period, the Coyotes stopping a drive on the l-yard line after Litterell, Haenfler and Sherwood had joined in a sus- tained offensive from the middle of the field. With only three feet to go, Haenfler, big Morningside full- back, battered himself against a stone wall defense that held him without gain for four downs, and Hansen punted out of danger. Michigan Halfback Is Leading Big Ten Chicago, Oct. (P)}—Stanley Fay, Michigan halfback, Monday ranked at the head of the Big Ten’s individual football scoring list, in conference | games only, Fay scored two touchdowns against Northwestern Saturday for 12 points. A. | Joe Linfor, Wisconsin halfback, rank- ed second with eight points. Linfor scored a touchdown and kicked two points thereafter, in the Badger rout of Iowa Saturday. STARS BEAT TWINS Fargo, N. D., Oct. 10.—(#)—A barn- storming major league baseball team Scored a 12 to 8 victory over the Far- g0-Moorhead Twins in an exhibition game Sunday. Home runs were hit by Joe Judge, Ralph Kress, and Luke Sewell. The Twins scored most of their runs off Rube Walberg and Lefty Grove, after Earl Whitehill had checked the local club with two runs in the first three innings. Nine of 13 wingmen on the Ala- bama football squad are six fect or over in height. #900 I WOULDNT FEEL A BUMP ON MY KNOB, }°} EVER HAVE \F IT WAS AS BIG ASG AN i ~ INDIAN MOUND /~~ WHY, I'D SELL MY NOODLE RIGHT WHEN-DID L ~“SURELY, YOU / HAVE LOOSENED BEFORE You BUMPED YouR HEAD Po~ TH’ ACCIDENT MUST Shafer at fullback and Neff az | Quarter were the spark plugs of the | Bismarck attack, repeatedly tearing into the opposition for long gains. Cornell, 27; Richmond, 0. Miami U., 33; DePauw, 13. Detroit City college, 3; Toledo U., 0. Holy Cross, 32; Maine, 6. ;Margin over the McLean county con-| land U., 0. ups in the 1932 alumni-varsity game. | tingent by a series of plays that skirt-/ nw. y. U., 2 Rutgers, 0. ‘ed the ends, slashed the tackles and Brown, 13; Springfield, 0. pounded the center of the line. Harvard, New Hampshire, 0. Lae Dy GOSH;~ HAS HE LOST ‘ Use the Want Ads Jenkins at guard and Schneider at tackle proved to be bulwarks of the |Imp forward wall, both on the offense and defense. The forces from Turtle Lake fought valiantly but were unable to cope with the power of the Bismarck attack. They rallied in the second quarter, however, and launched an attack of | their own which put the ball over the {line for a touchdown. The Imps got away to a flying start Soon after the opening whistle to tally | two counters in the first period. They scored another in the second quarter and came back at halftime to push ever two more touchdowns in the third stanza. The sixth marker was chalked up in the fina] stanza on a | sustained march down the field. A. C. Van Wyk, Imp mentor, made numerous substitutions to give his charges @ chance to see action under fire. In his starting lineup were Bey- lund and Wallace at end, Lawyer and Schneider at tackle, Enge and Jen- |kins, at guard, Anderson at center, ; Gorman and Guthrie at halfback, Néeff | at quarterback, and-Shafer at full- | be ! Pittsburgh, 33; Duquesne, 0. Colgate, 47; Niagara, 0. Oberlin, 13; Marietta, 7. Bowdoin, 7; Williams, 0. Dartmouth, 6; Lafayette, 0. Ursinus, 7; Dickinson, 0. Pennsylvania, 54; Swarthmore, 0. Carnegie Tech, 19; Western Reserve, 0. Navy, 33; Washington & Lee, 0. Washington college, 6; Gallaudet, 0. Boston U., 7; Rhode Island, 0. Johns Hopkins, 13; St. John’s (An- napolis), 0. Ohio Wesleyan, 19; Syracuse, 12. Providence, 13; Vermont, 0. Villanova, 31; Gettysburg, 0. Columbia, 20; Princeton, 7. Waynesburg, 7; Penn State, 6. Fordham, 30; Bucknell, 0. Amherst, 12; Union, 0. SOUTH ‘Texas, 65; Missouri, 0. Centre, 21; Transylvania, 7. Wake Forest, 6; South Carolina, 0. Tennessee, 20; Alabama, 28; George Washington, 6. North Carolina State, 13; Clemson, 0. | Auburn, 18; Duke, 7. by final of ciated Press Photo.) CHICAGO GIRL WINS GOLF TROPHY Virginia Van Wie (lett) ot Chicago ‘is shown with the trophy she defeating Mrs, Glenna Collett Vare (right), 9 and 8, in the the National Women’s Golf tourney at Peabody, Mass. (Asso. Defending Champions Set Down Washburn, 13 to 0, to Command League Turning back Washburn, 13 to 0, in @ football game Friday, the Max Cossacks worked themselves out of a first place tie into the pole position in the McLean County Conference. Washburn dropped into a triple deadlock with Wilton and the Garri- son aggregation which continued to play good football in trouncing Tur- tle Lake, 41 to 0. Wilton added Un- derwood to its list of victims, handing the losers a 13 to 0 defeat. The Cossack's victory was earned more easily than the score might in- dicate. They scored in the first and third quarters and were content to hold their offense machine in check during the other two periods. Washburn made little impression on the Max defense, registering only two first downs. Garrison's one-sided victory was scored by a series of end runs and line smashes which netted one coun- ter in each of the first two quarters and two touchdowns in each of the last two periods. The fourth round of championship play in the circuit will see Max paired with Underwood, Washburn invading Turtle Lake and Wilton and Garrison battling for the right to stay in sec- ond place. Team standings to date are as fol- lows: Won Lost Pct. Max ..... - 3 0 1,000 Garrison + 2 1 666 Wilton ., 2 1 666 Washburn . 2 1 666 Underwood 0 3 ~~ 000 Turtle Lake 0 3 000 —— | SPORT SLANTS + ———____________, By ALAN GOULD The move to eliminate boxing from the program of the Olympic games, t while it may consist merely of earnest | Conversation in the official family, has gathered more momentum than ever before, troversies. Boxing, of course, is a controversy to start with, no matter what shade of animosity may be displayed by the combatants or noncombatants. It has been the cause of several of the most unfortunate incidents of the last three sets of international games. CLOUT FOR COURTESY It involves a wide Tange of differ- ences in rules as well as judgment. jIn Germany, for example, it is the custom among amateur boxers, after being separated from a clinch by the referee, to shake hands before they resume sparring. The Olympic rules do not sanction this much courtesy, but one Campe, a good lightweight from Germany, reverted to native habit in the final bout and got a stiff clout on the ear for his politeness {from a South African named Stevens. Stevens won the decision and the Olympic title. Campe came out of the bout with a bad ear and had to receive hospital treatment for a dan- gerous injury. Under the Olympic scoring system of figuring a 20 point maximum for each man in each of three rounds, many baffling results are obtained. | IMPROVEMENT POSSIBLE Judges and referees, all participat- ing in the verdicts, represent many different nationalities. Rules and customs, as well as viewpoints, differ accordingly. Much as the Interna- tional Boxing federation has sought to reconcile these various competitive interests, it has been unable thus far to prevent controversies. It would seem, however, that the job can be better done. ‘ It would, of course, be a rank con- fession of weakness to toss Olympic boxing overboard, entirely, rather than seek uniformly acceptable meth- ods and regulations, understandable to all officials as well as fair to all participants. On this account, the fistic sport seems likely to survive the aftermath of dissatisfaction, left by the 1932 Olympics, but the settlement of dif- ferences should not be left to the week before the 1936 games at Berlin. Walter Hagen Victor Tn St. Louis Tourney St. Louis, Oct. 10—(—Walter Hagen of Detroit Monday had added the St. Louis open golf champion- ship to his list of titles. Clicking off four birdies and an eagle on the last 18 holes Sunday and going over par only once, Hagen staged a whirlwind finish to over- jeome his score handicap from the first two days of play, and won the tournament with a card of 281 for the 72 holes of medal play. ‘Tze Detroit professional shot a 65 fon the last 18 holes, six under par, jafter having carded a 69 for the 18 jhole semi-final, which he entered | trailing in 10th Place. Hagen’s 281 for the 72 holes of medal play over the Meadowbrook course was five better than his near- est opponentsMacdonald Smith and Tony Manero of New York, who tied for second with scores of 286. Tom- my Armour of Detroit, who started as leader in the final, and Abe Espi- nosa of Chicago tied for fourth Place, with 287, When Georgia Tech invades Flor- ida Nov. 19, it will be the first time the Golden Tornado has played foot- ball on the ’Gator campus. Fred Tauby, Beaumont center fielder, helped his team beat Dallas in the Texas league play-off by bat- ting .538 for the series. W. P. MacMicking, secre! of the St. Paul American teense club, thinks the major coming back to playing ratagers Laurie Vejar, uarter! andi= date at Notre 3 mes Orville Dame, teamed up with of Playa) Califor: XTRA -SPECIAL GAMES SATURDAY Max Takes Lead in McLean Grid Loop ‘PENN STARS DON’T NEED WINGS @ due to a long series of con-" Pl 4