The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 12, 1932, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY NOVEMBER 12, 1932 SSA RAM IATTE ND Braves Defeat Bismarck, 13 to 0, in Armistice Day Grid Tilt © MANDAN MAINTAINS ‘SHORT OUTPOINTS BOOMER BROOKER ON FIGHT CARD HERE UNBLEMISHED SLATE By Ahern BY BEATING RIVALS Warriors Surge Over Counting Stripe in First and Third Periods STRENGTHEN TITLE CLAIM| | OUR BOARDING HOUSE 1200 GINGER ALE ICE CUBES US BIOMUMTHATS NOT APIECE ~~NO, DLL MAKE DOZEN FOR FIFTY CENTS Poor Tackling Outstanding Weakness in Play of Local Gridiron Machine | ELECTRICITY TO FIRREEZI | Mandan strengthened its hold on| the unofficial football champion: of North Dakota by sweep: | the Bismarck Demons, 13 to 0. in an| Armistice Day contest on the Mandan | field Friday. Hl The Braves forged over the count | ing stripe in the initial period for| their first touchdown after blocking | @ Bismarck kick and launched a sus-| tained drive in the third stanza for | their second marker. | i Bismarck played a courageous de | fensive game but their offense was, unable to dent an embattled Man: | dan line. | Poor tackling was the outstanding | factor in Bismarck’s defeat the Mandan backs consistently shaking off man after man nt | gains. | The Demons’ lone scoring gesture came in the first few minutes of a . LETS SEE,NOW ~IF WE SELL AT 104 A DOZEN, THAT WOULD GIVE PROFIT TO SPLIT BETWEEN NERTLES AND MYSELF /—~ BETTER SELL THEM AT \&¢ A DOZEN TO GIVE USH7.50 MAKE 316.50 A DAY--NOT BAD? CUBES WOULD BE, I SHOULD SAY, Niagee ABOUT GOFt Zs Ba I KNOW You AINT ©] ASKIN’ For MY WHISTLE ON TH SUBJECT, BuT TUL TELL You WHAT YOURE GONNA FREEZE BESIDES GINGER ALE ICE CUBES aYou'LL FREEZE UP YOUR #800 AN (T WON'T ADA ENOUGH IT THREE AND WE — THE skirmish when they delved deep Warrior territory but Mandan st ed and took the ball on downs ‘Golf a Tees Off i in Capital Open | MOSSET, ‘THIN CITY FIGHTER | EARNS DECISION IN HEADLINE CONTEST George Brooker Hands Denny Wells of Bismarck Pasting in Semi-Windup Mel Engles and Joe Kling Give! Boxing Exhibitions Against Substitutes Wayne Short, St. Paul lightweight, outpointed Boomer Brooker of Man- dan on the headliner of a fight card at the World War Memorial building Friday night. George Brooker, Boom-! er’s brother and protege, handed} Denny Wells of Bismarck a neat pasting in the semi-witdup, Short finished strong to pile up al margin that was good enough to overcome the lead that the Mandan lad had picked up in the early rounds of the fight. The third stanza was} the Boomer’s own and he belted his opponent right lustily with both hands all during the round. Short got going in the fourth frame after a slow start to make things difficult for Brooker during the bal- ance of the fight. Both principals were leg-weary and tired during the closing rounds but Short was able to connect more effectively. Brooker | JACKSON DRAW; | PITT STUDENTS. CELEBRATE NOTRE DAME VICTORY | | | sae caynge 10085 SET Students of the University of Pittsburgh, hilarious after their team’s victory over Notre Dame’s strong eleven, took a day's holiday to celebrate. More than 2,000 snake-danced through downtown Pittsburgh traf- fic, halting street care and automobiles. Part of the crowd ix shown here. (Associated Press Photo) \Leading Elevens i in Great Program Saturday Contests Figured to) Provide More Clarity in Area Titles New York, Noy. 12.—(#)—Back -to the football wars tramped the na- tion’s leading college elevens Satur- day in another drive aimed at clar- ifying sectional and national rank- Dahlquist, Saunders, and Eckroth ————}fought a clever and courageous bat-| 78S. were the aces of the ee “ jat-| Pittsburgh - Nebraska, _Michigan- while Partridge and Sy’ ru aia Plenty of Celebrities After $2,- I ul N ND PURDUE RE (ra tne eeaane Pues Chicago, Purdue-Iowa, Tennessee- DrEcGAEyeeIn the Ine. Big Joe Bo iM ( GA A A FA oe Vanderbilt, Florida-Auburn, C roth was particularly effective in the| 500 in Prize Money For Brooker had Wells reeling around the | syracuse, Brown-Columbia, Sou ed the ball. even Tourney Winners FAVORED IN BIG TEN GAMES: ring and the bell saved the Bismarck | battler from a knockout. During the! first two rounds the fighters battled | California-Oregon and Utah-Den these were the prime pairings so far after bein! Letene > as championship hopes were c n= marck linemen \ shington, Nov. P—Snappy | —$—_$__—_—_—_— jaone on Bee gate ie tise eed Oe ‘A dozen or more others were ‘The first Mandan toubdow aes weather S: se saw ae score Chicago and lowa Not Expect-| The Notre Dame-Northwestern j coast in far ahead. jleast as important on traditional as a result of a break. Vith the ba including many of the na- | game vas expected to prove the most ae I on Bismarek’s 20-yard line, the Braves | tion's best, who are on their annual ed to Give Loop Leaders {attractive from an attendance view-| Tuffy Meeett of Hiserete and O: ile-driving Panthers. eee tee eek fome=tapioreinettie nationale: pial Much Trouble point, 40,000 spectators being the! Jackson of Dawson staged a shugtest | undefeated sooth Lpatibeb eas off the back of a Bismare | Prospect. for four bruising rounds. Both threw |Pational honors, wére favored over open tournament at Kenwood club. This tournament offered $2,500 in| it high ttled in shed over y of Jeather and the result was Nebraska but were not expected to Arms. ¢ Chicago, Nov. 12. rst} MINNESOTA FAVORITE iE come close to the 40-0 trouncing they the goal line standing up. prizes, S709 to top man in the 54) time of the season there was no foot-| TO DEFEAT W |” Mel Engles and Joe Kling appeared ,#nded the Cornhuskers a year ago. “The tena Oe 2 ve ball activity scheduled for Chicago| ison, Wis., Nov. A | against substitute fighters and), Michigan and Purdue, sole con- rite caer cts celebrities Saturday. but there was plenty on tap{nesota’s gridiron warriors invaded | neither attempted to do anything but: tenders for the Big Ten crown, w nwich, Conn... 1931 open champ, | "othe Big Ten points. Wisconsin's Badger lair Saturday for; carry the opposition along. Engles| heavily favored against Chicago and i was playing with Walter Hagen, New! The standout of the day appeared |the 43rd renewal of the midwest's | boxed with Kid Forsythe of Bismarck |Jowa, respectively, while Southern th ir backs Worker: who ian lide mioreradarn to be Minnesota's invasion of Wis-|old football rivalry. land Kling sparred with Tony Wita- | California, Utah, Auburn and Colgate ly on th n, in W tch than medal competi- but bothersome _ nevertheless nd Horton Smith of Glen Oaks, Chi- er big guns who blasted away 2°Wever z conference game this season, to Pur-; tain-raiser, Brown-Columbia contests, involving! course included Johnny! Ranking next was the Northwest-|due, and are tied in the standings. | The headliner opened with both| four undefeated teams, were rated as| Perceive. ern-Notre Dame battle at South Bend.! Dr. Clarence Spears, Wisconsin} men fighting cautiou: s each the nearest things to toss-ups on the Wi piicacs hE Still in the running for national hon- | mentor, formerly coached at Minne-| sought to solve the other's style. No Program. ite of Armour of ley down f ‘thwestern Ann his Chica igan's tion, Pur Abel Golden, Denny Boys Victims of margin of a — Tragedy Hae ite ¥ S of the Badgers, his former pupils from Minne- ta, Minnesota was Dame needed a triumph over A victory square up for three defeats by Ten opponents. Arbor, undefeated but the dope s: 10M: a great deal of trouble.! hich Coach Clarence | was out both teams the result sh virtuagy decided wheth- Was to be a success or | to the favorite,|failure. Eac that Pittsburgh defeat.|sota for years, beating the Bad- gers four times and earning one tic. It will be the first time a Spears- coached team has played against the ! Gophers, tutored this season by Bernie Bierman. to maintai: N ts rank- hwestern “Old Man” Stagg go club hoped to upset and win The probable lineups: | Wisconsin po Ie | | the trailing Michigan e Big Ten standing only by the Minnesota ‘due, lg Koe! nig c M. Pacetu tie, was at Iowa with of trimming the Hawk-| Koski | in his room a mbers of the fan tol shot. man's hea of danger. he wanted to Blondie was Clifton, Dahiquist on a beau touchdown w down on the Braves spent th the period deep Minot Teachers Lose To Northern Normal) 42 « mand the situation | mainder of the half. ange of punts in the final| during the re- of Sat-' |stanza. waski of Glen Ullin. Young Brooker and Sonny Schlos- Mandan youngsters, gave the th has lost one western] fans a neat little scrap in the cur-! as inflicted during the ini- and Brooker had a slight ntage in the exchanges. The second round saw both fight- ers come out from their corners to engage in a spirited exchange after Minnesota was a slight favorite to! Which they settled back to spar until| University, the end of the stanza and honors/Temple-Penn State were other im-! were even. i} The Boomer came out in the third During | had things well in hand and beat The fighters exchanged lefts | {during the balance of the round, and| aoe emerged with ga alight advan- |feced North Dakota State in the first of Los Angeles Saturday was racked jof two comparatively easy games. yp with the other boys that Barney ‘also were decisive public choices in Mountain, South the and Ea: The West, Roc! . respective Tennessee-Vanderbilt and On traditional grounds, none could approe th the meeting between Yale and Princeton, which found the Tigers favored to avenge last y beating. Cornell-Dartmouth. vard-Holy Cross, Fortham-New Yor Lehigh-Rutgers, and| portant battles in the east. The intersectional angle, cut to a Robinson | With a two-fisted attack that stood; minimum as most teams tackled foes) it Wells |the St. Paul lad up in his corner and in their own bailiwick, Bruhn |had him running for cover. en ithe balance of ‘the round Brooker by Penn and Ohio State; Army and furnished | not only by Pitt and Nebraska but | |North Dakota State, Maryland and * Indiana and Illinois, both defeated, | Thurne fa Gay |Short to the punch repeatedly. It|Navy, West Virginia and Washington | but apparently ell-matched, were’ Schneller re ‘Tenner | Was Brooker’s round by a wide mar-/& Lee and Villanova and Detroit. *\ scheduled for actlon at Champaign, N. Pacetti qo Griffin | gin and his best of the fight. ne bet and Ohio State ¢ontributed the in- Peterson Ih Lund } Short Wins Fourth BISON WILL PROVIDE brothers died. tersectional flavor by entertaining! McGuire rh Hass! Short came out to do some fight-| BREATHER FOR ARMY was found nsylvania at Columbus. Smith fb Manders ing in his own right in the fourth! West Point, N. Y., Nov. 12—(@)— Army's gridiron steam roller eased up a bit on the pressure Saturday as it re }method was to be continued at most +) Spearfish Teachers’ college defeated 8. D., Nov, A Norther Normal won its Armistice ar Day game here by defeating Minot, N. D., Teachers college 6 to 0. The Wolves took to the air in the | PiRning and sprinting in to the open | final quarter, and with a 32 for short gains frequently, rd line, 12. — tor od placed the ball on Minot’s 45- | Failing to gain with power the Wolves completed their one | thin scoring distance for vic- G Serie stopped a couple of hard |scheduled to prepare the Cadets for |rights to the head in the fifth round| the Notre Dame and Navy struggle: jwhen he charged in too suddenly in| The Bison, undefeated up to la ‘a corner, The Mandan lad also land- | week, presented a good team but not! ed a few rights but they lacked the strong enough to give Army a real Johnson and Dunnell, Beaver backs, | {steam of Short’s punches and he lost | test. Major Ralph I. Sasse planned to credited with winning every round. the round. The boys fought to a draw in the start his first team. j2p.m. (B.S. T) Game time was were the} NEW SYSTEM OF \ | | One Referee C Calls alls Penalties | While Other Watches For Offsides New York, Nov. 12.—(?}—Further | tests of a new system of cooperation | between the two referees as well as| |the opening games of the three na-/ tional hockey league teams which did | jnot see action Thursday and a strug- | gle betwee the Stanley cup finalists of last spring are on the schedule for | lthe first week-end of big league} hockey. | Referees Jerry Goodman and Euse-| be Daigneault tried a new system of | jhaving one referee call penalties and the other watch for offsides at Thurs- day's Boston-Toronto game instead of having each official responsible for his half of the rink, It is planned to give it further trials, although the old of Saturday's and Sunday's games. ; The Montreal Canadiens and Ot- tawa Senators, who did not take part | in the opening festivities Thursday. | , Will start their campaigns Saturday night while the New York Americans face off for the first time pubes Sunday, | | Spearfish Teachers | Beat Dickinson, 19-6: | speartish, 8, D., Nov. 12—~(}—The |the Dickinson State Teachers’ col- lege Friday 19 to 6, At the end of the first half the two teams had a touchdown each to their credit, but the bruising line plunging ; of the big Spearfish backs told on the lighter line of the Savages in the second half, when the South Dakota team pushed over two touchdowns, Coach Harry Wienbergen's squad took its only North Dakota intercol- legiate conference defeat at the} j hands of Ellendale’s Dusties. Goldie Hess Easy Victim for Ross! Chicago, Nov. 20 (P)—Goldie Hess | Ross, candidate for the world light- | weight championship, has conquered. i Ross Friday night did everything but knock Hess out in their 10-round bout at the Chicago stadium, and was’ Hess had little more than an over- j hand right swing to offer in the way | school championship. A OFFICIATING AT HOCKEY GAMES TRIED OUT ‘Duquesne Trims Jackrabbit ' Team South Dakota State, With Squad of 22, Handicapped by Lack of Reserves Pittsburgh, Nov. 12.—()—Smother- ed under a last period avalanche of touchdowns, a gallant squad of only 22 football players from South Dakota |State bowed to the reserve power of a strong Duquesne eleven by a score of 34 to 12 Friday. The Dukes lost the services veteran star of their halfback, Ben Pawlina, rried from the field with a broken leg after being tackled in the second period. Fighting gamely, the visitors play- ed Duquesne almost to a standstill for three periods, which ended with the score 14 to 12 in favor of Duquesne. A steady stream of fresh men in the final period was too much for the | tired South Dakotans three touchdowns were pushed oy succession, ait South Dakota was the first to score, Palmer racing for a touchdown from his 40-yard line after from Fullback Plihal . visitors’ outstanding player, plunged over in the third period for their sec- ond score. PLAY IN 5 St. Paul, Nov. their cleated footscar by a hard and slippery of Cretin and DeLa schools, rival Twin Ci doffed their shoes a vod annual football game here Friday night in stocking feet. Cretin, the St. Paul school, won 6 to 0 to cap- ture the Twin Cities Catholic high shoe “ was provided whenever a punt was called for and it was returned to the side- lines as soon as the play was com- pleted. field, players ASLEEP IN THE DEEP Denver, Colo.—Glen was not in the habit of playing hookey, so his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lowe, couldn’t un- derstand it when the school principal notified them that Glen had not re- ported to his classes. The police were called and told to be on the lookout for Glen, but they had no luck. That tory. but the nah ; Foals rd Pass.’ major offensive threats for the North /Sixth, both missing frequently. Probable lineups: {of an attack and took an unmerciful | evening Glen’s father called the po- ‘ W lata | to Logerwell, prevented @ | aot ans. | In the seventh the strain was be-| Army N.D. State beating, as the sharp-shooting Ross |lice station and said, “It’s all right; ie nhs seal ek oe )sinning to tell and the zip was lack- | Lawlor Je Meyer | jabbed, hooked, crossed and upper-| we've found him. He's been asleep neat run aoe ee wine omer BAG the | MOTT BEATS LEMMON |ing in the exchanges. Short, however, | Winn ta Peschel cutted him almost without interrup-|in the basement all day.” netted the Di baie ‘3 lrg ee. BY si |landed more frequently and earned |Summerfelt (c) 1g Jahr | tion. . —_—— marck started eine ily inthe initial parts ae opening | he ie Pre 1 NON “ '—A crip-|the nod in the frame. Evans ¢ Paris! Rock forts, used by people of the Berne Ap - x Ep eenool dare best Bev ineer ty imigediatel pees Northern oe 1 i ae high school football team | Brooker came out to a flying start | Jablonsky Te Orness| Never rub an eye that has some-| Far North many centuries ago, are cepted and sta Janeane 2 ae: y 9- | defeated Lemmon, 8. D., high Friday,|in the final round and was the ag- | Armstrong Tt Platt | thing in it. Wash it in 4 boracic acid| reported found in Kodiak Island, eee he the balt| fo championship of the south-| yard line, |6 to. ‘The only counter of the game|gressor during most of the stanza.|Kopesak re Jacobson | solution with an eye cup. ‘Alaska. down close, but on downs | We id trict, Northeyn recovered the bat to com- | came in the second quarter. |Short laid back and laced in a few of | Elliott qb Selliken on Bismarck's 2 ard line The oe soe prepare his own and the round ended all even. | Fields qh McKay mons dropped back to punt. howe J B Willi Brown rh Hanson » Braves sifted through to J é y Wilhams — * Bert Se'Gee et tie | Mo a = | [_— ‘THIS CURIOUS WORLD ya few minutes ! cored the extra! ‘The final pe- | tour | an off-tackle pl | Joe Eckt point on a line bi Hod saw both teams fichti i on neutral territory in the cen the field. Both launched aerial tacks but neither was ef SoSsT~ TH WoTSA MATTER oP Here? TH WHISTLES | THER S A RULE AGInstT GITTN READY TO BLOW game end2d wi ipa! tr BLowin'! BEFORE TH’ possession on its own 45 Go on! WHISTLE BLOWS he news: ‘cai GO WAN! HE KNOWS WE AW CANT BE aU LaRue iz En7en Andvews r Wocdmansee Sohlickenmeyer frredabl Ferderer ean Saunders ieee Eckroth titutions — Bismarck — Burton | arr 5 Lawyer for Welch; Schneider: Welsenberger for LaRue; Beylund tor | Schlickenmeyer; Lee for Joslin, Schneider for Burton; Mandan—| Stumpf for Partridge; Ordway for ‘Toman; Farr for Dietrich: Percy for Partridge; Friesz for Ferderer; Fer- derer for Dahlquist. | ‘Touchdowns: Mandan—Byerly and; faunders; extza point, Eckroth. officials: Gorder, North Dakota State, referee; Claudie Miller, North Dakota State, umpire; Ellison, North Dakota State, headlinesman. DELICIOUS Ligagiaesi A Knoxville, Tenn.—The mice seeme: to like the rat poison which C. P. ‘Tracy, city sanitary engineer, had in his office. The rat and mice exter- minator which was sitting in Tracy's office was so attractive to mice in his office that they gnawed through the | paper container and ate the poison. Burr +t’ Gut LIGHTNIN’ CHANGI GiT BAW OUTA SIGHT AN! ALLOW. Time FER PUTTIN’ HATS AN’ COATS ON, PUNCHIN" TH CLocH AN WALKING % TH BooR~ WHOS WASHED. YR SHoOLLD ALLOW TIME FER THAT. Retains Loop Lead Ellendale, N. D., Nov. 12.—(?)—El- lendale normal retained its lead in the North Dakota intersollegiate con- ference by conquering Valley City Teachers college, 13 to 6, on a snow- | covered gridiron Friday. Schmierer was outstanding for the Dusties. He ran back a punt for the first Ellendale touchdown and bucked the line to convert the extra point. Gronlie scored the Dusties’ second counter on a line smash. Winters |Passed latterally to Motris, who ran {behind the interference of Mooredale and Bale to score for the Vikings. OR: TS a IGHT (By The Associated Press) Chicago — Barney Ross, Chicago. outpcinted Goldie Hess, Los Angeles, (10); Dave Shade, California, out- pointed Sammy Slaughter, Terre Haute, Ind., (10); Frankie Battaglia Winnipeg, Man., stopped Young Terry, Trenton, N. J., (7). POREDA IS SUSPENDED Philadelphia, Nov. 12.—(#)—The state athletic commission Friday an- nounced suspension in Pennsylvania of Stanley Poreda, Jersey City, N. J., heavyweight “for failure to honor his contract with Taylor and Gunnis, Inc., of Philadelphia. Poreda was to have fought George G Ne-| jodfrey, Bob heavyweight, last Monday, but/ fered an injury after being enter-' forced postponement because of in- juriea he said he sustained. 1 ee | ts | Football Results |; ¢— o (By The Associated Press) COLLEGES S. Dakota State 12; Duquesne 34. Milwaukee Teachers 13; Superior Teachers 19. | St. Olaf 0; St. Mary's 12. Eau Claire Teachers 6; River Falls) Teachers 13. | Bemidji Teachers 9; Duluth Teach-j| ers 13. | Carroll (Helena, Mont.) 7; Mon-! tana State 13. | Idaho, Southern Branch, 17; Mon- | tana Mines 7. ' South Dakota School of Mines 0. Wayne, Neb., Teachers 12. | Dickinson Teachers 6; Spearfish Normal 19. Valley City Teachers 6; Ellendale| Normal 13. Minot Teachers 0; Aberdeen North- ern Normal 6. Oshkosh Teachers 0; Whitewater Teachers 12, | 13 Horses Named For Latonia Race Latonia, Ky., Nov. 12—(P)—Thir-| teen horses were named for the La- tonia cup race, which was to ring down the curtain on the fall ‘race meeting Saturday afternoon, but only seven were considered likely to start. Among those expected to go to the post for the two-mile-and-a-quarter event for a $2,000 purse were La; Feria, Border Warrant, Our Cherry Vote, Orchestration and Royal Julian. ; Cee Tee, of the Dixiana stables, sut-| ed and was to be missing, its trainer’ sald, t ar f | I } ‘ i ) ry i i i { tt } aint)

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