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i i i sa at serait THE BISMARCK TRIBUNK SA’ TURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1932 | Lightweight Champi CANZONERIBLASTS GEORGE WASHINGTON TROUNCES NORTH DAKOTA STATE 20-0 QUT VICTORY OVER VALIANT EXPRESS Associated Press Score Sheet Gives Titleholder 12 Out of 15 Rounds 18,000 .FANS WATCH FIGHT Fargoan’s Lack of Stamina In- dicated Possible Effects of Making Weight y, the pride of t K up the feud F ‘ at mous 5 h the final round. In Superb Condition he fou he puny five round possible ef- fects of mi t t limit, which he did by shade, at 1341: pounds. Canzoner hed 1 —— | Grid Questions as | Seen by Jack West Ss Answer s lineup in such a advise a good d pa plays. Or- team waits till third down it hasn't made its yardage hat time, the surprise element first down. their quar passing at es on fir: throw forw surpris has been eliminated. The defense is well prepared for a third-down p GRID RULES Question Team A punts from near its own! goal line. The kick is blocked and is} tree in A’s end zone. Player of Team B is att to recover the ball} when the kicker, the only one of his side in position to recover the ball, tackles the Team B man in the end zone. Team A then recovers the ball. What is the decision? | ‘Answer | This is a touchdown for Team B (the non-kicking team). Team B was deprived of recovering the ball which! would have given them a touchdown , and consequently is allowed the touch- | down. | Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 5.—(®)—| Gene Tunney, who has been cam-| paigning for the Democratic ticket, | Friday lost his fight to vote in Stam- | ford. Judge Frank P. McEvoy of su-}| perior court refused his application for a mandamus writ to permit his| name to go on the roll of registered voters. Tunney was ill in a New York hospital when registrations closed. ee FOTHER” isi the por- trait’s name) Mee JAMES Me; NEILL WHIST- weighs 8 OUNC/ ES. JULES VERNE wrote) “Twenty Thou- mand Leagues Un- er the Sea.” ne vast {Whe Towa din’t icok strong enough in the last !to handle Nebi : | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern TWO TOUCHDOWNS IN “DEAR BOX TI WITH YOUR#800 AND MY #75 WE “LAND WITH YOUR, #800 I CAN COMPLETE THE WORK ON MY WINTER MERRY-GO- TROUND THE MONEY TO BE USED To INSTALL A STEAM HEATING SYSTEM TO HEAT THE MERTeY-co- TEOUND PONIES FOR COMFORTABLE RIDING DURING THE WINTETe- You WILL HAVE A HALF INTEREST, HAMBURGER. SANDWICH STAND, SHAPED LIKE A HUGE MEAT | GRINDER CAN BUILD A NOVEL “1 HAVE A & DIVING SUIT AND A SECRET CHART To SOME SUNKEN GOLD, OFF THE COAST OF FLORIDA “+. NOW, IF YOU WILL GO IN WITH ME,WITH YouTe LAST PERIOD CRUSH | Team to Cross Goal But | | Ball Is Called Back | BLOCKED KICKS DISASTROUS | Fullback Carter and Halfback M'Carver Lead Colonials | | . to Victory Washington, Nov. 5.—(#)—George Washington university's aggressive eleven handed North Dakota State its first defeat of the season, 20,to 0, Fri- day night in an intersectional battle. Outplayed in the first quarter, the Colonials came back with a strong } offensive, scoring on the last play of the first half, and shoving over two touchdowns in the final period. George Washington received the | kickoff in the first period but was un- | able to gain and punted. North Da- kota promptly launched an offensive! from its own 45-yard line which click- | ed off two first downs, with Hansen and Gove tearing through the line Blackstcne, Colonial center, halted |the drive by intercepting McKay's Nodaks Favored to Beat INDIANA-MICHIGAN GAME HAS SPOTLIGHT ON BIG TEN SLATE ‘Give (Hootie ~ Wrecks Express Dopesters Give Hoosiers Only Outside Chance to Beat Undefeated Wolverines — \P) — Indiana's y had the best of the rest of the Big led Michigan's unde- op game of the all program ly an out : the Wol- verines, but a real battle was the out- :. Purdue, behind Michigan in the v margin of a tie game. Chicago, and was ar. to defeat the 3 at Northwestern ail of a first conference eason. and Illinois was The Ohio State-North- acked up as even atching running t Wildcat passes. Wis- red capable of CHAMPION CANZONERI care ther two members, Minnests | 6 ————————— . had outside competition | Football Results phers, showing improvement pomcati oc riages e than any team in the d to be up to four than Mississippi, The The (By The Associated Press) North Dakcta State 0; George Washington University 20. Augsburg 0; Macalester 24. a's versatile attack ers 32, Martin Luther (New Ulm) 0; »\—Minne- chester Junior 38. intersectional football, Jamestown College 33; Valley City game of the season brought Missis- Teachers 0. sippi to Memorial stadium Saturda: Superior Coach Bernie Bierman of the Go- |Teachers 0. phers, looking ahead to Big Ten/| games with Wisconsin and Michigan in the next two weeks, hoped for “breather” and 2 workout for many | erve Be Four of his first-stringers were not |appendicitis Friday. in the best of condition, three be- | well. cause of injuries and one due to a cold. | Ro- Teachers 26; Duluth JOCKEY HAS OPERATION New York, Nov. 5.—()—Earl Sande merica’s premier jockey of the las‘ iecade, underwent an operation for He was resting It was “Dad’s day” and the uni-| Herrington c Oen versity expected a crowd of about! Trapp re Koski 15,000. Game time was 2 p. m. Flowers rt ‘Wells Probable lineups: | Swayzee re Robinson Mississippi Minnesota | Casper ab Griffin Sw le Tenner | Burke th Lund Turnbow It Gay | Haynes rh Hass Britt ig Bruha | Hutson fb Manders Crookston A. C. 0; Bemidji Teach- | —_ pass and was downed on his 39-yard s s |line. A George Washington pass net- Morningside « 26 yards but the attack bogged jdown. The period ended with the 4 \score 0-0 and the Westerners on the Colonial 30-yard line. Punting Duel Develops | | George Washington took the ball on ‘downs as the second quarter opened jand a long distance punting duel fol- {lowed. Jacobson punted out of ————— bounds and gave Washington the ball Grand Forks, N. D., Noy. 5—(@)—|on the North Dakota 30-yard mark, University of North Dakota was to|but a fumble ended that threat. An its last home game of the season |Off-tackle slice by McCarver just be- Saturday afternoon against fore the period ended gave George Morningside college, with the Nodaks| Washington a touchdown after push- favored to hang up their second jing the ball up to the Bison goal and {North Central Conference victory. |Baker converted. The half ended | Jack West had every one of his No- | with the score George Washington 7; |daks available, with the squad in its|North Dakota State 0. jbest condition of the season. The! Third: The Bison received the! |Nodak coach planned to start a new {kickoff and then were forced to punt. | jlineup, however, keeping six of his|Carter, hard-driving Colonial full-! ‘regulars on the bench while opening |back. charged through center for two jwith a reserve backfield and two re-|straight downs but North Dakota jrerves in the line. State held for downs on its 20-yard Sioux Mentor Expected to Start! Reserve Backfield Against lowa Team HOPES OF INVADERS) sal jHansen Runs Through Entire jtne titte hopes of a halt fozen of the Pitt, Brown, Virginia Poly, Louisiana State and Tro- | jans Face Trouble | New York, Nov. 5.—(#)—November's first series of crucial football engage- ments brought threat of disaster to nation’s leading elevens Saturday but found twice as many others in little, if any, immediate danger. Where Pittsburgh and Brown in:the | East, Virginia Poly and perhaps Louisiana State in the South, and Southern California in the Far West expected to be tested to the utmost, a clear path seemed to lie immediately ahead of Colgate. Columbia, Mich-}; igan, Purdue, Notre Dame, Texas, Tennessee, Auburn and Utah. Pitt and Brown battled Pennsyl- vania and Holy Cross at Philadelphia and Providence, respectively, in the twin head-liners of an eastern pro- gram that also included such other pivotal duels as Army and Harvard. Columbia and Navy and Boston col- lege and Villanova. New York gained a virtual strangle-hold on intersec- tional interest with the Fordham-St. Ma and Georgia-New York uni- versity, clashes in which’ the invaders were favored in each instance. Col- gate anticipated no particular trouble with Mississippi college and Syracuse and Penn State were favored over Oglethorpe and Sewanee respectively. Michigan, unbeaten and untied, was a “hot” choice over Indiana in the Big Ten race and Purdue likewise seemed to pack entirely too much power for Chicago. Wisconsin and Illinois and Northwestern and Ohio State were paired in other games. Virginia Poly, one of the four un-| beaten and untied elevens in South- ern Conference ranks, tackled a erip- | pled Alabama eleven that neverthe-; less was given almost an even chance of winning. “Biff” Jones’ aouslsoe | State Tigers took on South Carolina and were ready for trouble. Tennes- see and Auburn had visions of easy} triumphs over Mississippi State and | Howard respectively. FERGUS BEATS WAHPETON | Fergus Falls., Minn., Nov. 5.—(®)— | Fergus Falls high school football | team, coached by Win Brockmeyer hung up its seventh straight victory | by defeating the Wahpeton, N. D. high eleven here Friday, 27 to 0. Wah: peton was held for four downs on the Fergus Falls four-yard line when the | North Dakotans made their strongest | scoring threat. Fergus Falls will play | Moorhead here Armistic Day instead | of at Moorhead, it was announced. | Coach J. M. Saunderson with 23 line. A pass by each team wassin-| Morningside players arrived in Grand tercepted and the period ended wit Forks Friday evening. Saunderson ' the Colonials holding the ball in mid-{ \also had every player ready for duty field. still leading 7 to 0. \ jafter two weeks of preparation for the | Early in the final period, Hansen of | |game. North Dakota raced through the en-| |” The probable lineups: itire Colonial team and across the [North Daketa Por. Morningside | goal line, but the ball was called back | Winslow Je Perry |because he stepped out of bounds. | j Wick jt Wyant} Bleck Bison Punt i | Malo Ig Bones! Washington scored its second | Sauer e Asmussen j touchdown on a two-yard line buck iGehrke rE Pauley | by McCarver after Steward has block- Meinhover rt Bollmznjed Jacobson's punt and Captain {Tait Te Strom | Chambers recovered on the Bison 15- | Revell ab Day |yard mark. | Thorson Ih Venson! Fenton zig-zagged 15 yards for the Gustafson rh Sherwood | third touchdown on the climax of a Cope fb Haenfler |62-yard march. Baker place-kicked | | | ¢ ———_ ———_ ——®{the extra point to make the final | | \| Fights Last Night | |score: George Washington 20; North |} o—_____________—_—_¢ | Dakota State 0. (By The Associated Press) Lineups: New York—Tony Canzoneri, world |N. D. State Pos. Washington lightweight champion, outpointed | Meyers le Mulvey | Billy Petrolle. Fargo, N. D., (15) re-|Peschel It Ww. Parrish | jtained title; Prince Saunders, Chica- | Jahr Ig Stewart go, outpointed Billy McMohan, New | Paris © Blackiston~ York (8); Bobby Pacho, Los Angeles, |Orness rg Pearce ‘outpointed Joey Costa, Jersey City. | Platt rt Slaird |(8); Manny Candia, Mexico City, | Jacobson re Chamber knocked out Danny Dempsey, Scran- | Selliken ab Baker ton, Pa., (1). McKay Ihb McCarver Boston — Primo Carnera, Ttaly, |Hansen thb F. Parrish knocked out Les Kennedy, Vernon, |Gove fb Carter Cal., (3). oO Troy, N. Y.—Feeling antagonistic | one morning Louis O'Brien resented being prevented from crossing the| street before a funeral cortege by a/ “fresh” stranger. His resentment | took the form of fisticuffs which re. sulted in his being hauled to Central ! Police Station. Ordinarily a blow; with a fist constitutes third Gegree assault, but since the “fresh” strang: er was a police officer the charge! automatically becomes a second de gree assault. HE MUST NEED A JOB | Columbus, O.—It's at least to the! credit of Calvin Sager of Saginaw,} Mich., that he’s trying to get a job. Even if the job is that of “electricu- tioner” at Ohio penitentiary. Gov- ernor White, who received Sager's; application informed him that Ohio! is not looking for an “electricution- | er.” The law provides that the peni- | tentiary warden shall fill this post. | JUST LIKE FATHER i President John Adams, and his son, President John Quincy Adams,| were both born at Quincy, Mass., both lived there when elected, and) both are buried in that city. | [Records of Grid Leaders Threatened SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark | Ew. U.S. pat OFF. Lo 1932, BY REX SAWICE inc “Have you any othev mystery stories? She is very fond of ‘Who Killed Cock Robin?’” THIS CURIOUS WORLD ~IN RUSSIA... es OURING 1924, WOLVES DEVOURED 52,000 HORSES, 50.000 CATTLE, AND 25,000 ~ > ALLECLIOSES REPEAT THEMSELVES AFTER A PERIOD OF APPROXIMATELY 18 YEARS AND TWELVE DAYS © 1932 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. “gee THE NOISE CAUSED BY OYSTERS CLICKING THEIR, SHELLS, AS THEY OPENED AND CLOSED “THEIR, VALVES, CREATED SUCH A DISTURBANCE WITH UNDER- WATER RADIO: ACOUSTIC EQUIPMENT THAT THIS METHOD OF SURVEYING HAD TO BE ABANDONED ALONG THE (NORTH CAROLINA COAST. | 5 Todine State is a recent nicknamej of South Carolina. | season Coach “Hunk” Anderson at Notre Dame employed 21 backfield; ATT. ACK IN men. | St. Mary's college alumni are spon-| soring a special train to carry coast football fans across the continent to i see the Gaels play Fordham in New, | Valley City Teachers 33 York Nov. 5. i to O Drubbing OUT OUR WAY Valley City, N. D., Nov. 5—(?)—Dis- Playing a versatile attack, Jamestown By Williams | THERE'S A GOY wrHos TRUIN' TO HURRY THATS NO CRANKSHAFT! THATS A. MAP OF TH! ROAD To TH’ CIDER MILL ~ TH’ OFFICE BOY SKETCHED ON Tri’ BORDER,] WoRK — TRYIN’ TO | UES-OH NES! LT SEE WHAT YOU MEAN , BUT WHAT DO YoU THINK OF THIS IDEA?- SAY We TAKE THIS 4 | CRANK SHAFT AND~ TavIn' GET BIGON © 1902 PROMOTION ~ WIND, STIODA college Jimmies defeated the Valley City Vikings here Friday night, 33 to 0. After being held scoreless in the first period, the Jimmies pushed over two touchdowns in the second quar- ter, two in the third and one in the fourth. Schwartz made four place- kicks, but one was not counted when a Jamestown man was holding. Egstrom and Thunem were the most effective ball carriers for James- town, with Schwartz doing some stel- lar punting. Roberts starred in the YOu CANT BLAME HIM FER TRYIN’ To MAKE. IT BEFORE. HES TOO OLD. A FRIEND O' MINE SAYS, [WHEN A GUYS YOUNG ENOUGH TO STAND BIG WUONTIN' TRips HE CANT STAND TH EXPENSE! ~ Ar!’ BY TA’ TIME HE CIN STAND TH EXPENSE, HE CANT STAND TH TRIPS, joutstanding players for Valley City. The summary: Valley City Pos Jamestown Peterson le Barton Haines It F, Hall Schoonover Jig Mean | Lee ce Roberts ; McCann rg Edick Hagglund rt Chamberlain Ferguson re Winters q | Bale lh Morris th Halvorson f McClain Substitutions: Valley City—Pierce for Peterson, Hoster for Haines, Mc- Kay for Hoster, Siem for McCain, Simonson for Hagglund, Erickson for Ferguson, Rahrer for Winters, Mc- Kenzie for Bale, White for Morris, Moordale for Halvorson. Jamestown —Judson for Barton, Herzig for Jud- son, D. Hall for F. Hall, Lipert for Egstrom, Thunem for McClain, Touch- downs—Egstrom 2, McClain, Crouse, Schwartz, Officials: Referee, Wilcox, Macalester; umpire, Miller, N. D. A. C.; head linesman, Gussner, James- town college. Hilden Egstrom Crouse Schwartz Jones’ eighth year at Southern Call- fornia his football Trojans had run up a total of 2,563 points to 417 for .their opposition. VIRWILUAMS, BY NEA SERVICE, WIC.RES. U.8. PAT.OFF._I/- “am gaavaacwe s| JIMMIES DISPLAY VERSATILE BEATING VIKINGS Jamestown College Forces Hand | }line. Winters and Moordale were the | In mid-season of Coach Howard | (sp, i | i | WIFIE TO THE RESCUE | London—Frank Cooper, amateur} lescape artist, almost didn’t escape,! | while giving a performance for the | | Railwaymen’s vaudeville show at} | Manchester. The object of his act| jwas to escape from handcuffs, al | mailbag and a padlocked barrel. The ‘fumes from the old port wine cask! |be used in the act overcame him be-| ore he could escape and his wife,| | who is his assistant, had to rescue! | him, | | 2 i AIN'T THAT SUMPIN'? | The girl of Bonda Porjas, in South- | ™m India, takes her chosen man into} {the jungle where she applies fire to | his bare back; if the pain draws a | yell from him he is rejected. | 10N OF NOTICE OF EXPIRA’ | REDEMPTION | | STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh, s: s i OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR, | D: ney, St. Paul, Min- | Bismarck, To Leslie-S, H . nesota. Union Investment Co,, No ad- dress given on abst: * You are hereby notified tha jtract of land hereinafter described | and which was assessed in your name | for taxation for the year 1926 was on | |the 13th day of December, 192 sold, as provided by law, fo1 |linguent taxes of the year 1926, and that the time for redemption from said | Isale will expire ninety days from the {completed service of this notice, Said land is described as follows: | South West %, Section 15, Township | 137, Range 76. | Number of Acres 160 more or less. | Amount sold for, $28.16. Subsequent taxes paid by purchaser. | Amount required to redeem at this’ date, $41.89. In’ addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice and in- terest as provided by law and unless you redeem said land from said sale before the expiration of the time for redemption as above stated, a deed thereof will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provided by 1 S WITNESS my hand and official seal this sind day of October, 1932. t the) A, C, Isaminger, County, North Da- 10-22-29 11-5, Auditor Burleigh ta. (First Publication | 1932.) ASK HIM ANOTHER More than 125,000 horses are London—During the last session of | he House of Commons, Major Wal-/| meueniered a Deena under federal ter Elliot, financial secretary to the| Meat inspection every year. Most of treasury, answered 666 oral questions! this meat is exported. Be a 233 columns of Hansard, e official report. After Major El-| Exclusive of tire: liot, Sir Stafford Cripps of the Labor| automobile on ineReenet eee % party was the most locquacious. | pounds of rubber in its construction. if you have an apartment or a room for rent, a used car to sell, or a radio te exchange, place a want ad in The Tribune. No matter what. your want ad requirements may be—The Bis- marck Tribune want ad will deliver results, Our ad-taker will help you. Phone 32 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WANT-ADS | } { } on Hands Billy Petrolle Artistic Lacing’ |”