The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1932, Page 6

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Cincinnati THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1932 Reds Want Veteran Rabbit Maranville for Manager BOSTON BRAVES 1) CHICAGO ELEVEN IS OVER-CONFIDENT FOR FIRST TIME IN YEARS LET SHOND-SACKER GOIF HE WANTS JB, President Weil Talked Only Re- cently With Bill M'’Kech- nie on Subject 'N MAJOR LOOPS 21 YEARS Failed as Pilot of Chicago Cubs in 1925 But Flop Didn't Disappoint Him the the de too q player team some al prov tion, W pital Thur victory over West | The Golden onl, two the last 12 Lafayette, Ind—Purdue is claim- ing a couple of record Boiler being blanked and Paul Parde star drop-kicker. has been successful} in 16 out of 17 kicks for points after touchdowns. | Ranger Hockey Team Trains in Mountains Lake Placid. ¥., Oe! the New York Rangers, now training for the 1932-33 season, fail to retain the National Hockey League cham- pionship this winter it won't be be- cause they don’t know their moun- tain climbing. Coach Lester Patrick follows the daily workout on the Olympic ice | arena with a jaunt into the moun-; tains, for the extra wind and leg-! strength that mountain-climbing can | give. On the heights far above the! jake, the Rangers battle cold winds | and look down on the arena, where | the Springfield Indians also are in| training. Plenty of road ‘work, and an occa- sional round of golf also is on the daily program. Biwabik Halfback | | Has | Quaint Record Pit i : Biwabik, Minn., Oct. 26.—()— Football statisticians will have lo make a place in the records for this one. Saapi, halfback on the local high school football team, has in- tercepted at least one forward NODAKS MAY BE BEST ELEVEN lage his National League team next | OUR BOARDING HOUSE OH I TRIED ON A FEW THINGS —BUT T SuUST LOOKED LIKE A SOFA WITH A NEW SLIP COVER J-~T THINK TLL BUN ONE OF THE LATE MODEL STOVES, AND PUT THE BALANCE OF THE MONEN IN THE BANK ~~ MONEY IS ALWAYS IN ie 1 SAY,.M'DEAR, WHAT { DID YOu Do WITH THE #300 I GAVE YOU A COUPLE OF WEEKS AGO &—L THOUGHT YOU WERE GOING OUT ON A SPLURGE OF CLOTHES BUYINGI~I EXPECTED To SEE YOU ALL FRILLED UP LIKE A LADY IN WAITING, Tne BALANCE WHEEL. THAT NEVER WOBBLES 10-26 1932 BY NEA SERVICE. INC.” Orville Mohler, fornia Quarterback, Is anized for a surprise against} by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, presi- Baan The Buckeyes probably | dent of the universit rdered to Quit e up the same as against Pitts-| The committee will investigate par- Pe viaiinatieni niin and a Weds will be spent on | ticularly charges that members of the Working Hard in Preparation! for first string assignments before Los Angeles, Oct. 2 Orville |* wedi esatine oe Hedi alien es Eat | long. The Nodak coach crossed up every- one Tuesday and called over Assistant Coach Siarbeck with the freshmen. The yearlings were not scheduled to d | appear until Wednesday, but West is orth Dakota was a ina hurry to get scrimmage out of the t the North Da-| way as early in the week as possible urday, it ma id he had the frosh use Sot the conference kota State running play Dakota State varsity until it was too the bail. The freshmen had not ‘d the time to learn all the pass but : Fri- they used a couple of them to advant- age, Jacobs taking two for touch- ting tougher downs. Outside of a few lapses the eserves are classy yearling outfit got nowhere They are with the running game, however. replacements. It was the linemen who showed to They ripped the sturdy frosh forward wall apart and Mav Be Pilot Again "spilled backs all over the gridiron. Mohler. one of the greatest quarter- backs the University of Southern Cal- ifornia ever had, was rudely pushed cut of the football picture Wednesday by the injury jinx. The slight but staw er, who was so instrumental in the Trojans’ climb to the Invasion of South Dakota State For the guiding hand in their string of tive victories this season, was ordered off the gridiron by school officials to avoid possible par or even death. Mo! S Southern California's game against Stanford last Saturday while leading interference. In the piay he hurt again the ti: the m Tuesday after- the one that outpl 1 it will be even bett sufficient West's club is get beca thems: no but fifth and ‘hh vertabrae in his neck, pulling them slightly apart. he was struck on the nec in the pile-up that followed a pi | West had his regular line in the scrim- ———#!maze with the exception of Maho- | wald, right guard, who is out with an injured shoulder. Gehrke toox the | vacant place and with Malo made life of competition two rd Thurber, team phy amounts to miserable for the yearlings. tween the two vertabrae. This | West switched Meinhover out to coupled with a certain amount defensive end and the big fellow xation of the neck ligaments looks as though he would be able to take care of that job too. if necessary | The coach filled up the line with reserves and they did even better |than the regulars. The second string! | forwards had worlds of drive and be jfore the scrimmage was over they had demoralized the frosh attack. lowed his regulars, the 14 men who bore the brunt of the burden ainst the University of North Dakota hei Saturday. to go in ear | West did not use any of his regular tinued the scrimmage with the re- backs in the scrimmage. Pierce,! mainde squad, brushing up on {Knauf, Rip Dablow and Leidholdt new pl | Watched the battle from the sidelines.| Finnezan had decided to give reg- | Huddleston. Thorson, Cone and Revell ulars half of the burden against the worked behind the regular line. | Dragons. of the eomparative- Schwartz, regular right end, took! ty which will be in effect part in a light signal drill, but his this week, following last week's prac- jkneevis in such condition that he has tice sessions when the workouts we small chance of playing Friday. prolonged. he squad will be en jroute to Washington to play Georg | Washington next week and the pra PLAY HALF OF CONTEST i & result, will be comparative- Fargo, N. D., Oct. 26.—()}—Scrim- | ly sh He does not care to risk tw mage was prescribed for the Nortn{such weeks. believing the sudden let- Dakota Agricultural college footbail| down will have a bad effect on the squad Thursday as it went through | squad. its second day of preparation for its} final home appearance of the seasoa| against the Moorhead state teachers | ‘college Dragons here Saturday after-| noon. Casey Finnegan, the Bison coach | BISON REGULARS WILL Sidney Weil, president of the Cin- cinnati Reds. would like to have Rab- bit Maranyille, pictured above, man- St. Louis.—-Tom Heen New Zealand, and John Se ke, St. Louis, drew (10); Johnny Mile St. Louis, knocked out Pat Ken- nedy, Indianapolis (5), season. The Boston Braves are will- | ing to let their veteran second-sacker go should he want to enter the man- agerial field again after his flop as pilot with the Chicago Cubs in 19: OUT OUR WAY By Williams GO ON GIT OUT! You HOLD, UP TH’ GAME TOO LONG, GITTN UHOURSELF OULTA HOLES. WHEN I GWE “TH SIGNUL To Go THRU A CERTIN, HOLE , YOU GO INTO TH BIB OF ONE O THESE FARM BOYS CVERAUS, You ANT I;K\NO GooD TO WiN\ THIS TEAM. MES T Am! Coz WHEN IM TANGLED. VP IN HIS OVER ALLS, IT KEEPS HIM FROM BEIN' ANY GOOD aed f aw f\ 4 ap i 4 \ 7 | yest le fos | Al pass in each of the last five games his team has played, each time scoring a touchdown. His runs for counters in such cases have averaged 75 yards. ete” Joe wiLuams ©1892 6Y MEA SERVICE, INC. NEG. u. 6. PAT OFF. 10-2 be abe |ISTAOGBISY TRYING Trojan ‘Star ; Southern Cali- 8 signal-shout- | ; mythical na- ‘py, tional championship a year ago, and j ocxed unconscious in; ues which hold together , ' cated the Milbank Hopes to , but he con-, P% | Minnesota teams, Ortonville and Ap- &°\ pleton. took beatings of 14 to 0, and ET gt PITT-NOTRE DAME BATTLE PROMISES ACTION JOE SKLADANY bt TO TALK TEAM INTO FEARING ILLINOIS Following Victory Over Indiana | Last Week, Maroons Think, Illini Easy | PETE ZIMMER WILL BE OUT} Badgers Hope to Beat Ohio | | State; Purdue Prepares For New York University AZO. Cet. 26.—(4)—It_ has been ; g time since over-confidence on | versit of U of Chicago foot- | ed A. A. Stage. | t busy this | Maroons out Ulinois will be a pushove: but he The Notre Dame Ramblers, who are hard to get along with in football wars, will mix with the Pitts- burgh Panthers, one of the east’s strongest elevens, at Pittsburgh Oct. 29, Warren Heller is Pitt’s star halfback and George Melinkovitch is the Ramblers’ powerful fullback. Ed Krause, shifty Notre Dame Y. dup b, ast weel their victory over In- k, the Maroons are in- d to think Tlinois will be rather tackle, and Joe Skladany, Pi , i \. oe SR | @ Skladany, Pitt end, are outstanding linesmen, (Assoclated Press Photo) r attitude by Indiana last week as- the Hoosier’s downfall. Pete er probably will be held out of | > Illinois game, to give his injured knee plenty of rest before the Purdue | game. Pat Page, Jr., however, will be! Football Players Are Alleged to in action, partly off-setting the ‘ Have Been Favorites in Probe ‘Professionalism’ at Columbia FOOTBALL SCHEDULES, OCT. 29 | loss of Zimmer's passing and return- | | EAST 1931 | ing kicks. \ A Teams Place Score Illinois worked in the rain Tuesday | Securing Jobs | pittsburgh vs. Notre Dame ttshursch i : ch. 1 gain there were frequent changes | Yale vs, Dartmouth « | Harvard vs. lineup as Tumbia vs. Coach Bob Zuppke} New York, Oct. 26.—(4)—Investiga- r steady his defense and tion of charges of professionalism in dup the attack. There were more! athletics, particularly football, at Col- at Wisconsin where Dr. Clar-|umbia Universitacias been undertak- ears is trying to get his Badg-!en by a committee of seven appointed nell Michigan rd passes and! jin securing employment and favorit- substitute for Roy |ism from the college faculty and that workhorse fullback, is!alumni scholarships were granted Coach Kizer at Purdue.' some football players in order to in- mann has played all but two | duce them to come to Columbia. There ites of the Big Ten games and jalso have been suggestions the foot- ed help. Halfbacks Fred Heck-| pall coaches were receiving salaries i Duane Purvis were tried at full! out of proportion to their dutie nd one or the other will get| Lou Little, head coach, who has de- | university if} veloped a strong team in his short} t. tenure of office, had no comment to ‘ota also is being drilled on! make on that phase of the inquiry. defense for the Northwestern! +] am paid to coach the team and The throwing of Pug Rentner have nothing to do with the executive Ollie Olson has Coach Bernie ‘side of the matter,” he said. Bierman more worried than the func-;" yeanwhile there was a report Little | | 8 of his own attack, ‘The Wild-! aieady had signed a new three-year + regulars rested again Tuesday, but! contract with Columbia, starting | e due for @ ful ‘ |the end of the present season. It was ne ree ae Indiana squad was split | said he had taken a salary cut of up by Coach Billy Hayes, who indi- |; 500 annual: best blockers would start | {°Ub $300 a! Mississippi State Saturday. Iowa was due to leave Wedne: for W n, D. C., to meet Ge Washington in a night game Friday. Michigan worked on new plays and them out against Princeton Amiers! fates vs, Bowdoin. hington U. ys. Lo’ Nebraska vs, lahoma again: vs Mi Covington, Ky., Oct. {bert Elston, sensational 17-y jockey, lay unconscious from a skull ‘fracture in a hospital Wednesday af- ter a fall from his mount at the f tonia race track Tuesday. Defeat Moorhead Elston had not regamed conscious- Je ness since his fall, and his condition } aes eeninesd fer ibuke | cutstanding high schoo! football game | “4S Pronounced sews, a tna} will be played here Friday night with | 4.00 card. Elston’s mount, Black! Moorhead, Minn., as guests of Mil-|av's card, ; ! Milbank, S. D., Oct. 26—(?)—An won all losing 0. nk, Dust, fell while in close quarters on! 3 Grand Fé ‘blamed for the accident and suspend- | ‘two blocked punts largely responsible. Already looked upon as the year's Fans r ont H s r Jockey Monte Parke,} ’ . Moorhead hia bub one of ije| > eee mene games this ye: only to East who rode Lady Couven on to win, was e y (1) roves (1) 1cemen \ wards for the remainde ° | The Milbank Bulldogs have lost only \¢4 by the stewards i | R: id B one game, to Watertown 13 to 0, with |of the meeting. n japan ADI aseda: jogs c pir grea {best on American tracks, the Helena. See eee nes belt arealest 7A. youth. woo additional fame Strength in trouncing the hi rs ‘Tok fe} (P\—Th ; Lefty x a ieee . ey Hast week when he rode four horses to Yokye. Oct. 26.—P}—The boys ty did the explaining at the fauted Deland tenn) 32 to 05 ae Abehoge Bisa day who put the facts in baseball's | stationhouse, and after everybody ton went down to defeat. 46 to 0. Two! Viet t Who's Who can put down a cou- was identified all around. the po- liceman apologized to the base- ball stars and gave the party per- mission to take all the pictures they wanted. This they proceeded to do on the way back to their hotel, but were nabbed again by another of- ficer of the law. This officer took them to a strange stationhouse where explanation didn’t come in so handy. But Lefty again rose to the occasion. Finally he was permitted to mount a police bi- cycle and ride back to station house No. 1. Lefty found his way back, got Policeman No. 1, and brought him to station house No. 2. There were explanations again, and the party was freed with some more apologies. Japan also likes its baseball. ple or three more entries under | the name of Lefty O'Doul. With the ink hardly dry on his accomplishment as champion | batsman of the National League, , it will be necessary now to add, photographer, bicycler, and all around fixer upper. | 'Twas thus: Lefty and Ted Lyons, the Chi- | cago White Sox pitcher, accom- | panied by Joseph Cohen, a San Francisco racing news man. em- j barked on a little amateur movie | | taking expedition along the Tsu- Ray Cossette, Moorhead, weller-] jan "cee it's Tokyo's water- | | weight, had a decided advantage over) front) | Moorhead Feather 34 to 7, respectively ‘Sioa ae With’ “Pug” Manders, brother of Wins in Fargo Bout Jack, the Minnesota fullback, in thé; — fullback position, Milbank has one of| Fargo, N. D., Oct -—Bud the hardest-driving teams ever sent | welling, Moorhead featherweight, had | onto a local field, an edge in his six-round feature bout Other men who have put Milbank! with Juan Cordova, St. Paul Mexican on the map this year are the Lu-| youth, which topped the opening ama- jpinex boys at opposite ends, Phil teur boxing program at the Fargo Elks Manders. a brother of “Pug,” Dame- | ojub Tuesday night. | a hard-smashing halfback and! “"Wejing won the third, fourth and footed runner, Schiesman at, gyth rounds, with the fifth going to jeenter, Captain Trapp at guard and | Cordova | |Reeves and Ochler in the backfield, | C | The largest crowd to attend a local |game is expecte ‘Dutch Clark Snares Professional Honors 2 Eddie-Griffin of St. Paul in the fea-| “TAT came a policeman and lure four-rounder. Cossette won all] promptly arrested the picture four rounds, using a varied attack’ takers under the photographic es- |sanich had Griffin bewildered from the! bionage laws, which are strict in start. Japan. | Johnny Schneider of Rugby, & pro- ______ Siege eas | eoutehy Ole nar e fe of ae He ot Ea ee ee initial Coach Walter Steffen of Carnegie Says Pitt Will Be Tough For Irish | Portsmouth Spartans of the National showing here, defeating Billy Russell, | Professional Football League, has|an experienced Moorhead middle- “Notre Dame was the only team to defeat Pittsburgh last year,” taken a wide lead over the field in, weight. he said, “Immediately after the the race for ground-gaining honors. The former Colorado college star season coaches and players began planning on how to even it up has gained 314 yards in five games against 277 for Ken Strong of Staple- ! this year. Team psychology is in Pittburgh’s favor.” 5 A | Outboard Champion: ton. Bronko Nagurski of the Chicago ' |Bears and Jack Grossman of Brook- ! The judge, however, was not ready to go on record as predict- ‘: New York, Oct. 26.—(@)—Jack May-, lyn stand third and fourth with 244) 610” j5-year-old youngster from] and 242 yards respectively. i} ing a Pittsburgh victory over the Notre Dame horde. |15-Year-Old Is New Chicago, Oct. 26.—(Pi—Judge Walter Steffen, whose Carnegie Tech foothall team was soundly beaten by Notre Dame last week, figures the Irish will have all | kinds of trouble with Pittsburgh this week. ‘ He likes the Pitt backfield, says the line is powerful and thinks the Ohio State tie last week was | River Forest, Ill., has won the nation- Clark also is staging a merry race | a1 outboard motorboat championshit | with Benny Friedman of Brooklyn ang will receive the Townsend meda.,, for passing honors. The Portsmouth | emblematic of the titie, at the annual! ace has compicted 14 of 42 attempts | omen oe show here in Jan- for 199 yards and Troman 13 of 38) Hany | ihe Ob, ene Ho tae meer for 168 yards. Maypole scored 11,738 points during) ers the psychological edge. © Nokona Maca “| the 1932 season, according to a com- ee. Glad Newman, Moss : union by the American Powerboat . | On Different Teams i jand National Outboard associations. \ —+ ny SS-H-H-H. Budapest—In a short time you BOUT IS CANCELLED Detroit, Oct, 26—(P)—Matchmaker EVs fe 1% Nick h pin drop in Evanston, Ill, Oct. 26.—(#)— H a Scotty Monteith announced cancella- | should be able to hear a AULGHEH His aan teed io gue |, Fights Last Night | tion Tuesday of a 10-round bout here | Budapest. Prominent citizens have a victory in playing Michigan and | *——— cro Oct. 27 between Kid Chocolate and | decided to rid the city of noise cause by loudspeakers and street traffic, especially the sounding of automo- bile horns. They have formed sa anti-noise league, and the first step in their campaign has been to secure the cooperation of all inhabitants in reducing noise to a minimum. Harry Blitman because of Chocolate’s failure to arrive in Detroit Monday in conformity with the rules of tne state boxing commission. Chuck Klein and Pinkie Whitney, Phillie stars, will devote part of the long winter holiday to hunting and | fishing together in South Texas. (By The Associated Press) Clinton. Ia—Sammy Mandell, former lightweight champion, outpointed Billy Hoon, Rock Island, Ill. (10), Indianapolis—Tracy Cox, In- dianapolis, outpointed Pfince Saunders, Chicago (10); Sammy (Kid) Slaughter, Terre Haute, Ind., outpointed Jackie Purvis, In- dianapolis (10); Willard Brown, Indianapolis, outpeinted Danny Delmont, Chicago (10). Covington, Ky.—Cecil Payne, Louisville, Ky., knocked out Babe Peleco, Indianapolis (3). and tying the Boilermakers last week, Coach Dick Hanley has found something over which to be thankful. “I am glad he didi't have to play against Harry Newman's passing and the pass-catching of | Paul Moss of Purdue in the same } game. It’s lucky they're on dif- ferent teams or they would never | | stop scoring,” he said. i | Purdue, Icsing to the Wolverines | The ancient Greeks as far back as 800 B. C. ate three meals a day on the breakfast, dinner and supper schedule. Soviet Russia now has more wom- en than men studying in its medica} schools. A new medical kit on the market is in the form of # small pencil and | contains 100 drops of iodine. France and Mexico now have pro- | fessional women jockeys. Fresno, Calif.—Young Corbett, * Fresno, outpointed Cerefino Gar- cla, Manila (10). Hi Sad es = NZ Wu 2 ¢ ~ | “« » . r . 7 > a -, > cr § e . fos ’

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