The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 27, 1932, Page 8

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‘uncrossed Same ay iaints gainet hone tor its ‘ eating Reeder THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1932 BISMARCK MACHINE TO ENTER CONTEST ASFAVORED OUTFIT, Weather Conditions Have Ham-} pered Both Delegations in | Practice Sessions GAME SCHEDULED FRIDAY Captain Gus Schlickenmeyer Still on Injured List With Bad Ankle against Hughes Field parate invading delegations at Friday. inson Frida were perfec heir attack HOE an engagement W Washburn Friday afternoon. The sen go into tion will Demons Prepared to Resist Invasion of Dickinson Gridiron Forces STAGG TO BE CHICAGO HEAD COACH ANOTHER YEAR ATLEAST OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern WHATS THIS? SOUNDS LIKE TH OL Boy 1S HAVING A HIGH ‘PRESSURE WEB SPUN ON HIM!) “NONE OF WY my Music, bi THE ONLY THING THAT HAS BEEN HOLDING ME UP MAJOR —~OR IS IT GENERAL? L MUSTNT CONFUSE YOUR HIGH RANK Pur WELL, AS I WAS SAYING, L HAVE BEEN HELD BACK THRU LACK OF WORKING CAPITAL ~<NOW, IF I CAN GET SOMEBODY WITH FIVE ~SIX “SEVEN -EIGHT, OR NINE HUNDRED DOLLARS TO INVEST — SAY THAT THE FIRST YEAR SHOULD CLEAR 20,0009 ~~ MY i heir oppo- position during the the season Garerut, instal ! © 1032 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. RED. U.S. PAT. OFF. reristered aga of 20 to 0. 4 | its first three starts, bc Give, 14 to 6, Beach, 13 to 0, and Man- | dan. Weath both clubs i week, wet scrimmage ov aR es to be on the in-/ ained a 23 era’) to} has aay him weeks. The treatment but stil Bismarck leade: action until the next week. sen! ‘go who su villis- he lineup! ame but Coach ed to hold contest. ‘The Bismar ently satisfied with Ss is charges during the w lack of opportuni it difficul provement made mestowr since the s a, Brauer kK, Lee and Jos! lahl at cente Imps to b junior del Washburi the starti The juni for a hard burn outfit ner-up positio football conference. McLean county! ee f ‘Another Williams | Is at Minnesota * Minneapolis other Dr. He come to Minn famous as a medical m He is Dr. Henry Jr., son of the Mi iginator and director of the Goph 1990 Oct. ers on the gridiron from through 1 Dr. Willi: recent addition to the University of Minnesota hospital staff, has a football back- | ground too, not only ciation with his pare player. He cherishes a Minnesota “M” won in 1917 as center on a team coached by his father. | He does not plan to follow the rough asso- t, but asa | coaching career of his father, now dead. ae ; Puntsand Passes | een (By The Associated Press) New Haven, Conn.—If Yale's old/ grads are feeling pessimistic about. their football team, they should listen to Coach Mal Stevens. “There has been great improvement during the last week,” he said Wednesday. “It the boys carry on Saturday as they have since their defeat by Army, Yale will be no easy mark for Dartmount.” Princeton, N. J.—If Princeton has trouble solving Michigan plays Saturday it will not be from lack of coaching. Earl Martineau . has been playing thé part of Har- ry Newman on the scrubs’ “Mich- igan” team for the last couple of days and Campbell Dickson and Tad Wieman, a former Michigan coach, also have been in the backfield. Iowa City—The Jowa football team which is on its way east to play Gecrge Weakington Friday has aj good precedent for victory. The las: time the Hawkeyes invaded the East they defeated Yale, 6 to 0. BOWMAN BEATS REEDER Bowman, N. D., Oct. 27.—(AP)— Defeating Reeder, 40 to 0, here, Bow- man high school scored its fourth consecutive football victory this sea- son and gegen to maintain an line. Bowman has |the outstanding Big Ten game of the | Badgers. ithe Middlewest ‘Teams May Sweep Decks | Have Chance to Win iSeveral In- tersectional Games From East, South NORTH DAKOTA GRIDDERS END HEAVY SCRIMMAGING Will Take It Easy Until Game With South Dakota State |Minnesota Colleg e i Stars Are Injured Chicago, Oct. 27.—.P)\—Middlewest- ern football teams will have the rare, opportunity of sweeping the decks in their numerous intersectional battles Saturda: Opens Friday In eve . with the probable exception of Iowa. the middlewesten | Grand Forks, N. D. Oct. 271i? a eea. es entries anticipate victory in the foot-| North Dakota's Sioux wound up| Marry Newby of St. Olaf and, ball wars against the East and South. | strenuous practice Wednesday for Bill Arth of St. John’s Out of Lineups Outstanding among the favorites were Notre Dame to defeat Pittsburgh and Michigan to run up a sizeable total against the invading Tigers from Princeton at Ann Arbor. Purdue, rated as the finest block- ing team in football today, was faced with a lively tussle in meeting New york university but was expected to n, Michigan State was a favorite Syracuse, and Marquette of Mil- their second conference game of the season Friday against the Jackrabbits + of South Dakota State college. Thurs- | day's drill was to be only a generat checking up on both defensive saa offensive work of the week. The Nodaks looked over State's tor-| ward pass formations. The freshmer: | presented the entire list of Bunnie i a passes to date ina passing scrimmage | Ventre par eat oe peed kee planned a victory march over | While Conch C. A. West gave both his initely out of the Gustavus Adolphus t Virginia, Iowa, one of the weak- |Feeulars and reserves a chance 9) encounter at Northfield, with torn, er teams of the Big Ten race, had a| | work on the defense. The Sioux vat-! shoulder ligaments. He is in the! E jay with George Wash- ‘sity continued its airtight play and) coliege hospital and while he says he! sity at Washington, D.| few were completed. will be ready for the homecoming Taking the role of Clarence Pofahl. : 3 : game with Luther, others believe he lanes middlewestern team, involved | }ig left-handed back, Don Smart. in intersectional play Friday night,|Yeatling half from Minot, tossed s Detroit university against /George- | southpaw passes at the Nodaks whil?| expected to be in uniform is Bill, own. |Kupcinet made the orthodox heaver.! arth, a second-string backfield man While the middlewest has held its) West used Gene Revell, first line) at st. John’s, state champions. An own with the East and South in inter- | reserve signal-caller. in the place of X-ray late Tuesday revealed two sectional football wa , Not even Pierce at safety. Revell worked all) chipped bones in the foot injured in St. Paul, Oct. 27,—(P)\—Key offen- ive men of two state college foot- ball teams are believed lost for Sat- urday’s games and one may be out | for the season. e -and anything can happen at night. The other offensive ace who is not its staunchest supporters can recall a/ afternoon with the regulars while) the Augsburg tilt last week. day in which this region swept the| Pierce took up his duties wth the s sec~| Coach Elmer Lampe’s Carleton s with victory in as many games,/ond string outfit. The only other} squad came out of the Ole affair in Northwestern will send its full fight- |change in the regular lineup was a‘! good shape and has opened hard drill jing front into the important Minne-| right guard. where Gehrke played {r| for the South Dakota university tilt |sota game at Minneapolis Saturday in| the place of Mahowald. | at_Northfield Saturday. It begins to look as though the reg-| Macalester and St. Thomas college day with Bob Gonya back at tackle| ular guard may not be in shape for/ freshmen teams will play a prelim-, {while the Gophers threaten to do| the clash with the Bunnies. Maho-| inary to the varsity game at St. likewise with Captain Walt Hass,|wald has a bad shoulder. Muscles} Thomas Friday night. It is the home- |Bruhn and Gay in the skirmish. As| pulled in the Bison game have pre-! coming game for the Tommies and the Wildcats ended their hard work| vented him from taking any part In| Coach Joe Boland’s squad rates as a for the game Wednesday night, Coach] practice this week and it is very|big favorite to down the Snelling Dick Hanley was pleased with the| doubtful if he will be able to play| Avenue squad. great showing of Fullback Ollie Olson! Friday. and planned to use him plenty against; Schwartz, regular right end, took} DILWORTH BEATS INDIANS he northmen. }an active part in Wednesday's work-| Dilworth, Minn., Oct. 27.—(#)—De-| Ohio State didn’t feet so confident | out. He was at his post with the re-|feating the Wahpeton, N. D., Indian of defeating Wisconsin Thursday.|serves against the pass drill, but his} school. 35 to 0, Dilworth completed its During a tag scrimmage Wednesda! jknee seemed little improved over | football season with a record of four Marshall Oliphant, understudy for|'Tuesday, when he reported for the/ victories and three defeats. | Quarterback Carl Cramer, fell and in- | first time this week. jured his ankle so severely that team | West continued to use Tait and} physicians announced he would be! Frederick at right end, while Ted lost for Saturday's game against the Meinhover also took the position for Meanwhile, Coach “Doc”/a brief time in accordance with the Spears speeded up the preparation for |coach’s program to fortify that wing the Buckeyes, centering his attention | —- jon defense and power plays Coach A. A. Stagg drilled his team on| A sing game was in prospect for! pass defense. ‘inois-Chicago duel. Grand Rapi Mich.—Wesley Ra- mey, Grand Rapids. outpointed Tom- my Grogan, Omaha, Neb., (10); Pee Wee Jarrell, Mishawake, pointed Pete Petroskey, Mich., (6). Oakiand, Calif. — Young Tommy, Illinois tuned up its| Manila, outpointed “Midget” Wolgast Philadelphia (10). By Williams | Freemoni. At Chicago, | pass offense. OUT OUR WAY MEARS FROM Now, REMEMBER ones or Vues tu THAT I WARNED YoU ~ HOT \S- SOME! BE YOUR FAULT, pried WILL Ruin YOouR STOMACHS) YOU MANS iT Gost Ou cant BREAD ,1T EXPECK A FELLER |WoOULONT BE TO RESIST SUCH | HoT GOOD BREAD, WITH via tas ZONE, GI? & ORWILAMS, BORN THIRTY YEARS “mo SOON. nieve min aa peas may be through for the year. at Ind., out-| GRAND OLD MAN OF ~ FOOTBALL PROVES IN GOoD GonDmio |Medical Examination een! Veteran Mentor Has Blood Pressure of 130 | SCHOOL UNJUSTLY ACCUSED ‘Athletic Director Knew of 70- Chicago, Oct. 27—(P)—A worried | jold man, the lines of uncertainty | written all over his brow, stepped in- to a doctor's office for a physical ex- amination. An hour later, his eyes ablaze with determinaticn, he strutted out to hand Father Time another licking. | It was Amos Alonzo Stagg, 70-year- lola patriarch of American football. “Through? Through?”, he repeated. “I guess not for a while yet. I'm in good physical condition. My blood pressure’s 130. A lot of young men would like to be that healthy.” The physician's pronouncement of physical fitness has fired the come- back spark to a roaring flame in the Staggian heart. And Thursday, cheered by thousands of alumni. stu- cents and an admiring administra- iton, he appears to have clinched his campaign to stick as head football coach at Chicago, almost certainly for another year and probably for the rest of his life. Three luring offers from universities have come his way since his “retirement” under the hard | pad fast 70-year rule was announced two weeks ago, but he has turned |them down to stay at Chicago. Nothing ever stirred University of Chicago alumni and supporters as much as the announcement of Stagg’s jretirement as athletic director in fa- | vor of Thomas Nelson Metcalf, Oct. 113, Although Stagg was but one of several faculty members affected the retirement rule, offered an ad- |visory post at his same salary and |given the right to go elsewhere with a guaranteed pension of $3,000 a year Year Rule as Early as | Last January | | gain around end in the 7-' 1 ' | } ' | Ernest “Pug” Rentner, 7 tie his team played with Purdue. RENTNER SWEEPS mug IN NORTHWESTERN-PURDUE TIE Northwestern university halfback, is shown (tight) as he started a five-yard Manske (54 » dell. end, and Olson (25), back, are Rentner’s mates leading interference while Lowery (95) is arses tight end Teekay it} make the tackle. (Associated Press Photo.) Ice Hockey Program to Open Nov. 10 Toronto Maple Leafs, Holders of| pay their first game since they sus- pended operations at the end of the Stanley Cup, Will Meet [Tisp-s1 campaign with the Maroons Boston Bruins jand the Montreal Canadiens enter- tain Boston. The New York Ameri- cans start off the next night aidi New York, Oct. 27—(@}—Six of the| in Chicago's home opening. oa National Hockey league's nine clubs,!" Boston gets home for the first time including the Toronto Maple Leafs,| Noy, 15 to play the Maroons, while holders of the Stanley cup, open the|the Americans and Bruins give New National Hockey league season for! York its first taste of hockey two 1932-33 two weeks from Thursday {days later. The Rangers come home night. Nov. 20 to play the Maple yc fr | The Maple Leafs, starting the de-| their opponents in the Stanley cup fense of the famous trophy they won! finals last spring. last spring for the first time, play! The schedule calls for 48 games for their first game on their home ice! each team. against the Boston Bruins. Other | opening night games are the New i York Rangers against the ‘Maroons| Mohall and Crosby H at Montreal and Chicago at Detroit. Elevens to Clash| Openings for the other teams Saturday, Nov. 12, Ottawa's Senators! Mohall, N. D., Oct. Oe Feta straggle along for three more days. ‘for the rest of his life, the university \ was unjustly accused of releasing him | without notice. { Stagg was surprised that the an-! nouncement was made during the! football season but knew of the pla ‘as far back as last January and had! a series of eight conferences on the! retirement rule with President Robert | |M. Hutchins before its announcement. | "Says 3 Notre Dame || About to ‘Click’ i SS South Bend. Ind., Oct. 27—(P) j —Coach “Hunk” Anderson of Notre Dame doesn't go posing as a big bogey man but what can he | mean? ‘ In talking over Notre Dame's chances to beat Pittsburgh Satur- day, “Hunk” said: think the boys ready to start clickini All “the boys” have done this | season is to roll up 177 points or almost one for each minute of play. | if Football Teams _ To Use 1 12 Men _—__—_ 1—(P)—It re about i | oe | \"Tos Angeles, Oc \ | the fans happen to count 12 men { on each team in the game Nov. | 4 between the clevens of Occi- dental college and Santa Barbara | State, they need not be puzzled. Twelve-man teams will be tried out by the schools in their , game to test the feasibility of the plan. The twelfth man, acting as a field general, will not enter the actual physical contest but will run around with the referee as an observer, advising his team in the huddle before each lineup where weaknesses appear to crop { out in the opposing team. On | defense he will stand with the | head linesman, taking no active | part in his team’s functions. | Seen en by Jack Jack West | TACTICS A AND STI STRATEGY | Question The ball is on your opponents’ 24 |gain for first down. What would you three minutes left to play? Answer A quarterback should always re- membér that his lead is safe as long as his team has possession of the ball; it is impossible for your opponents to score if you keep possession of the the saying that a powerful offense is the best defense. In the above.situa- tion, the wisest thing to do would be to attempt to make the firs down, maining three minutes. An interception might prove disas- buck the line and circle the ends, But above all, attempt to keep the ball away from your opponents and thus deprive them of another chance to} score. GRID RULES Quaterback reaches in under the center for the ball, passes it back- ward to a halfback, then goes out and receives a forward pass from the half- back. Decision? If the quarterback was less than one yard behind the line of scrim- mage when he took the ball from the center he 1s ineligible to receive a for- ward pass. The penalty is loss of ball at the spot where the ball was put in play. Seattle — Freddie Steele, Tacoma. outpointed Tommy Herman, Chicago | (6). PE ees Sacer f Grid Questions as fl | yard line, fourth down 1-2 yard, to} call if your team is ahead 7-6, and | pigskin, and therein lies the basis for | and then retain possession for the re- | Try to score | again, but do not throw any passes.) to attempt to make the first down, | again earns Marshall, Ill, (5). and Crosby, two teams undefeated in the northwest conference football race, will meet here Saturday in a game which will see some out- Standing gridiron work. Johnny Mach’s Mohall outfit holds three conference victories, one of which is a 72 to 0 victory over Sher- wood. His outfit lost a non-con- ference game to Minot. With its goal line still uncrossed, Crosby will be fighting for its fifth win of the season and its fourth con- ference victory. Crosby's line aver- only 142 pounds, but has been able to open up holes on the offen- sive and has allowed no opposing ball ‘carriers to score. Vincennes, Ind.—Pat Murphy, Dan- ville, outpointed Garfield Rice, Evans- ville, Ind, (10); Charles Gordon, Vincennes, knocked out Harold Farris. E COST" U.S.Navy award for Sinclair HE U.S. Navy tests all oils submitted by oil companies that compete for the annual Navy oil contract to deter- \” mine whether they meet the Navy’s rigid specifications. The results of these tests | determine the relative quality or “work factor” of the various competitive oils. Then, when competitive bids are sub- mitted, the Navy takes into account both the quality of the oil and its price in order to determine which company’s oil has | the lowest service cost per gallon. and in the ai i For two consecutive years the U. S. Navy has awarded to Sinclair the major | . Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.) i SINCLAIR OPALINE MOTOR OIL L pert of the annual lubricating contract because Sinclair oils showed the lowest service cost per gallon. Under the terms of the 1932-33 con- tract, Sinclair will supply more than 1,600,000 gallons of Sinclair lubricants to fill government needs ‘on land, sea Government equipment using Sinclair lubricants will include battleships, destroyers, submarines, navy aircraft and all Government equipment at Atlantic ports as well as Army fight- ing tanks, artillery tractors and trucks in 33 States of the Union. Tune in Monday evenings » 37 NBC Stations » SINCLAIR MINSTRELS Makers of SINCLAIR PENNSYLVANIA MOTOR OIL

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