The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1933, Page 8

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SOA ORME NeWAUO OM SO emosz soe CARNEGIE, ALABAMA COLUMBIA, FORDHA Says Southern California Will Win; Gives Edge to Brown Eleven SEES REAL TEST FOR IOWA Doubts If Chicago’s Improved Team Is Prepared for Purdue Yet (Associated Press Sports Writer New York, Oct. 20.—(4)—On the theory that one man’s guess is as good as another's, here's the way the out- standing games on the week-end foot- | ball schedule look in advance: Michigan-Ohio State — Michigan piled up 60 points against, Michigan State and Cornell; Ohio State 95 on Virginia and Vanderbilt. The Big Ten title may rest on the result, mak- ing it tough for both teams as well as the prognosticators. Stringing along with the champions, a timid vote for Michigan. Army-Ilinois—A young fellow nam- ed Les Lindberg may turn this inter- sectional duel into an Illinois victory. | The lightest Army team in years has, not faced a major foe yet while Illi-; nois spilled Wisconsin last week. Pitt-Minnesota—A vote for Pitt's rampaging panthers but only after a; terrific struggle with one of the Big} Ten’s most powerful elevens. Notre-Dame-Carnegic 9Tech—How- , ARE OTHER CHOICES) Expert Picks Michiga THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1933 : n, Illinois and Pitt to Win. Leading Games | OUR BOARDING HOUSE Y DISGUISE —<THAT IS WHY NOW, LISTEN, I PAID OFF THE DEBTS I OWED You LADS, £77 \ AND YOU PROMISED TO HOLD ! IT A SECRET THAT T HAVE A | FEW HUNDRED DOLLARS — WELL THERE ARE SO MANY: FRIENDS OUTSIDE WHO WANT To BORROW MONEY i OFF ME, I HAD TO ASSUME A | T SHAVED MY MOUSTACHE TO | LOOK. LIKE MY BROTHER JAKE? WELL, YOU COULD PASS FOR SAKE, WITH ANY COP, BUT KEEP YOUR DERBY ON! YKNOW, SAKE \S AS BALD AS A GRAPEFRUIT, AND YOU HAVE A FULLTHATCHED By Ahern a YOU LOOK SO MUCH LIKE SAKE HOOPLE TO ME, IM _| GOING RIGHT UP AN’ HIDE MY NECKTIES, | TOOTHPASTE | AN Razor | BLADES / Th ard Harpster has primed Carnegie | for this game, building his hopes on a sturdy line and clever passing at-/ tack. Notre Dame, unimpressive in) its first two games, will need to show i improvement or take a beating. Princeton-Columbia—Two of the | east's major powers collide here with | Columbia's experience perhaps more | than offset by the Tiger's man power.) Alabama-Tennessee—Some _ south-| ern critics have labelled Alabama a! “perfect team” and this, coupled with | Tennessee's defeat by Duke last week,! inspires a hesitant ballot for the crim- | son tide. | Fordham-Boston College — Boston college usually is one of the east’s. finest defensive outfits but this looks like the spot for Fordham to avenge last year’s 3-0 defeat. Southern California-Oregon State— There's nothing to do here but to trail along with Southern California's men of Troy. Yale-Brown—A pair of strong de- fensive teams, neither of which has shown much scoring power so far. there's an edge at all, ii seems to be-| Jong to Brown, although the Bruins! -2parently are not as formidable as aj Year ago. | Chicago-Purdue—Chicago has made | a comeback under Clark Shaughnessy | but it's doubtful whether the maroons are ready for Purdue yet. | Iowa-Wisconsin—This one should; determine wh r Iowa's victory over) Northwestern was a real sign that the! Hawkeyes are about to regain their | former standing in the Big Ten. | Berg Is Beaten in Surprise Contest: New York, Oct. 20.—(4—The unex-} pected defeat of Jack ‘Kid) Berg led, boxing experts to take another hurried | . look Friday at the relative fighting) merits of Billy Petrolle and Sammy} Fuller, who will clash at the Ridge-| wood Grove here tomorrow night Berg, an odds-on choice when he}! stepped into the ring against Tony Falco of Philadeiphia at the Broad- way arena Thursday night, dropped @ split decision. The British whirl- wind took the first three rounds and: the last two but Falco, landing the) heavier punches, captured the other five and got the referee's nod after the Judges had disagreed. Steady Demands for Matches During Contest Belie Jones’ Outward Cal DIXIE FOOTBALL MEASURES UP, COACH MEHRE BELIEVES Southern Teams Leave South for Tough Competition BY HARRY MEHRE (Coach, University of Georgia) Athens, Ga.. Oct. 20.—There was & time when southern football teams had to go east or north to prove their true ealiber. You can see just as much football in; the Tennessee-Alabama, Georg ia-| Georgia Tech or Vanderbilt-L. 8. U.} games as in the Harvard-Yale, Army-| Notre Dame or Michigan-Northwest- | ern tilts. | The only reason southern teams go, out of the land of cotton for games) now is to get a cut in the bigger gates and so that their hard-driving backs and stellar linemen may be ap- praised by sports writers in other sec- tions, | * ok O* The chances of Dixie's brand of, football improving is excellent. Prac- | tically all the stars on southern teams are native boys. Many of these ob- tain coaching positions in high schools | and prep schools where they develop, Players that are ripe for college) careers when they graduate. | The time was when southern coach- es had the greenest sort of material. because high schools and preps play-| ed mediocre ball. Now freshmen inj leading schools need only polishing | and instruction in the intricate de-; tails of whatever particular system | their respective coaches use. There is a belief in the south that. its gridders are tougher than those in other sections, and here's the reason: Seldom does a team from the south play an intersectional foe without be- ing outweighed considerably, especial- | ly in the line. Despite this fact, But it is not so now., | Petrolle remained a 7-to-5 choice to southern teams get their share of vic- | tories, not necessarily because all whom he fought a sizzling draw at the ter instruction, but because the taas| whip Fuller, the Boston gamester with Hub a few months ago. “Taking the nation as a whole, an} 80 per cent sign-up of the total acre- age, representing more than seven million acres reduction in 1934, will ™ean the success of the wheat cam- paign to reduce acreage.”—M. L. Wil- son, chief of the wheat section. | are in there battling with every mole- cule of energy. * * * This fact is further borne out by the showing of teams which have smaller squads than many of their Opponents. Many Dixie squads num- ber around 40 men (and some coaches think that is large enough if the qual- | OUT OUR WAY ity is there) but among those 40 there Need Not! are possibly only 18 or 20 the coach could send into a hard game with the assurance that they would play well. So the result is that often as few ,28 15 rugged players will see service lin the toss-up battles. Any coach or starts, hope “Slip” Madigan’s husky; player knows that it takes a real man to play 60 minutes of a strenuous game without weakening considerably. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) (By The Associated Press) New York—Tony Faloc, 140's, Philadelphia, outpointed Jackie (Kid) Berg, 140':, England, (10); Varias Milling, 127, Chicago, out- pointed Pete Hayes, 1251;, New York, (8); Al Cuillo, 132;, Brook- ly, and Benny Britt. 1331,, Phila- delphia, drew, (6); Lew Feldman, 130, Brooklyn, outpointed Jerry Mazza, 127, Brooklyn, (8). Denver — Baby Joe Gans, 146, New York, outpointed Andy Cal- Jahan, 142, Boston, (10). Fargo, N. D.—Sherald Kennard. 149. Fargo, N. D., outpointed Al Pahl, 143, Sioux City, Ia. (6); Clayton Ness, 13413, Grand Forks, N. D., outpointed Harry Larson, 135, Staples, Minn., (6); Ray Cos- sette, 150, Moorhead, Minn., out- pointed Everett Roe, 148, Alta- mont, 8. D., (6); “Wild Bill” Bourbon, 153, Sioux Falls, 8. D., stopped Don Atchison, 148, Jamestown, N. D., (6); Tag Jen- son, 153, Bruce, 8. D., stopped Rud Larson, 152, Jamestown, N. D., 6). Dayton, O.—Kid Speaks, Louis- ville, outpoinied Midget Mike O'Dowd, Columbus, (10); Paul Lee, Indianapolis, outpointed Harry Ward, Dayton, (6). Sacramento, Cailf. — Young Peter Jackson, 135, California, outpointed Kid Moro, 133;, Philip- pines, (10), Seattle — Huerta Evans, 12413, Los Angeles, outpointed Benny Gallup, 12242, San Francisco, (10); Corporal Ben Shaves, 168%, U. 8. Marine, outpointed Jimmy Slavin, 173%, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., (6); Bub Welling, 116%, Fargo, N. D., outpointed Chris Angeles, 113, Philippines, (6). RESIGNED FROM “THAT cLuUB- DONT B'LONG NO MORE ~ TL HANEN'T Wee A By Williams YOU'RE GOING RIGHT BACK Lt WEEK INTO IT— IFTHE MAN WHo OWNS THAT VACANT LOT 1S GOINGTOLET THAT CLUB REMAIN AND RUIN HIS, BEAUTIFUL NEIGHBORHOOD, YOURE GOING TO REMAIN A MEMBER AND KEEP “THAT DLACE CLEAN — YoURE THE ONLY ONE T CAN MAKE Do IT ——————— | Fights Last Night 5 daar oe incon easeeeeeagg eee ie j An Veteran Mentor of Southern California Shows No Oth- er Emotion ! By ERSKINE JOHNSON Angeles, Oct. 19. — Bedlam reigns as 60,000 fans cheer the start ‘of the University of Southern Cali- ‘fornia-St. Mary's football Classic. | The Trojans, undefeated in 23 ,Gaels will be just another stepping ‘stone to thetr third consecutive na- tional title. “Slip” and his crew are out to knock over the champions if {they can. | Down at the bottom of Olympic :Stadium on the Trojan bench near the 40-yard line, Coach Howard Jones jeans forward. His brown fedora is Flaced back, revealing graying hair, imuscles ripple across the jaws of his ‘tanned face. A half smoked cigaret jhangs listlessly, precariously from the jside of his mouth. He might be a gambler, awaiting the turn of a card, iastead of the nation’s “Emperor Jones” of football. * eK | He soon ciscovers that the Gaels are plenty tough. They. stop numer- ous highly touted Trojan power plays. ‘The “headman” grows nervous as Madigan’s boys make first down in two line plunges. He lights a cigaret from a lighter which he fails to re- turn to the owner, and jerks violently at his hat as a St. Mary's reverse gains six yards. “Did you see that?” he asks the re- serve quarterback seated near him. A team doctor asks him a question, but he doesn’t hear until the physi- cian pokes him in the side not once but twice. Troy has the ball again. A faked l:teral and the ball is on the Gael five-yard line and first down. * “I thought that would work,” Jones thinks out loud. He jerks at his hat and crosses his legs. Two more plays and the ball is over. Jones, outward- 4y unmoved, holds an unlighted cig- aret in his hand as the conversation 1s made. “Gotta match?” he askes an assist- lant. He sits down and forgets to re- turn the matches. The tide of battle turns. St. Mary's has the ball on the Trojan 48 after marching from the 25. Jones nerv- ously lights another cigaret, again asking for and failing to return a box of matches, He walks up and down in front of the bench with his hands on hips. with his team. He sits down. A St. Mary's man throws a long Pass, Jones leaps to his feet. The pass is good for 47 yards and a touch- down. Th2 Saints convert. The score 4s tled. Jonés sits down, pulls his hat a little lower, but retains a poker tace. And he doesn’t say a word. A itttle later three substitutions for ‘Troy are ready to be sent in the / game, ! * Oe ; “You know what you're supposed to , do,” he says. | In three plays, S. C. makes 25 yards. (Qn the next play Jones is watching {enother part of the line. | “Who broke through that time?” he asks an aide. | ‘The Gaels tighten up and Troy has i third down and eight to go. “What would you do now?” he asks hfs reserve quarterbacks, jerking his ‘hat around and tossing away a cig- Jaret with a neat flip which would «make any pool room shark envious. Before the players can answer, it's first down. Ten plays later the ball is over, Troy gaining 73 yards in 13 . ‘The kick for goal is good. aH) » Previously written all over his face, is gone. * * * Eventually, after the Gaels unleash desperate attack in the ae quarter which has Jones jerk- \and on his 25th straight “Thanks, thanks very much,” he “Have gotta match?” |One can see he's playing the game! Again Jones is unmoved, but the ten-/ NODAKS MAKE BID FOR CONFERENCE TITLE IN RABBIT GAME WILL BE UNLEASHED ~INBROOKINGS GANE Aerial Attempts ‘RUNNING ATTACK IMPROVED) | (Pierce and Charbonneau Ex-/ | pected to Fill Air With | ‘| i He Has Big | \ Sioux Worried Over South Da-| kota State's Showing With Minnesota | | i ! Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 19.—Head-; fed by the flashiest halfback in the |Northwest, Ralph Pierce, 26 members | {of the University of North Dakota/ football squad, bent on recapturing: the North Central conference foot- | ball championship which they lost to; North Dakota State college last fall; for the first time in five years, lett here Friday morning for Brook- jings, S. Dak., where they meet South | Dakota State college Saturday after- noon. | Hobo Day, the largest collegiate {celebration in either of the Dakotas, j'8 expected to draw a capacity crowd | to the Sioux-Jackrabbit game. The conference championship may be determined in this battle inasmuch jas Jack West's Sioux decisively} jtrounced the University of South Da-} kota 41-0 last Friday and South Da-! ;kota State cased North Daxota A. C.: lout of the picture 13-7. | The University of North Dakota; {plans to unleash its three-ring aerial! circus with Capt. Ralph Pierce and. Jack Charbonneau throwing the ball | on any and all occasions. On the re- | ceiving end, Coach West has Pritz Falgren, star halfback, and Harold} Tait, Don Smart, Roger Reichert and! {Woodrow Shepard, all ends. These/ combinations have worked effectively; for the Sioux in past games. The Sioux running attack which function- | ed almost perfectly against South Da-! kota university has been perfected and polished during the last week! and probably will be in midseason form against the Jackrabbits. Due to the excellent showing the! South Dakota State team made} against Minnesota three weeks ago,’ the Sioux mentors are worried con- siderably about the outcome of the game. The powerful defense exhibit-) ed by the Jackrabbits in their previ- | ous encounters has caused the Sioux to be classified as the underdogs in! this battle. { Injuries to Capt. Ralph Pierce, half- back; Roger Reichert, end; Sid Schwartz, guard; and Irv Kupcinet,: fullback, have seriously handicapped | the Sioux offense. Although Kupcinet is the only one who definitely will not play, the others will be bothered con- siderably by injuries incurred in the past games, | The Jackrabbits will be seexing the | first victory over the Sioux in six; years. \ The following players will make thé trip to Brookings: ends, Reichert, | Smart, Tait, Winslow and Shepard; tackles, Meinhover, Sowl and Cohen; guards, Goethel, Schwartz, Behrke, Braverman and Olson; centers, Sauer, | Bentz and Hoffman; quarterbacks, Dablow, Jacobs and Dehn; halfbacks, | Capt. Pierce, Falgren, A. Johnson and | Cope; fullbacks, Charbonneau, Neuen-| schwander and Huddelson. BISON WILL BATTLE SUPERIOR TONIGHT i Fargo, N. D., Oct. 20.—Testing for the first time the strentgh of their northern rival, the North Dakota Ag- ricultural college Bison line up against Superior State teachers’ col- lege eleven at 7:30 Friday night at “he Superior home field. Strong competition is expected from. the Superior team in the light of their recent victory over St. Olof, in the came after that Northfield team trounced Macalester college, 39-0, ac- cording to Coach C. C. Finnegan of the Bison. The actual power of Ted Whereatt's 1933 squad, however, only can be determined after playing starts Friday night at Superior. This intersectional tilt is expected to be valuable experience for the in- experienced Bison since Superior utilizes the dotible wingback Warner system, employed by Jack West's Sioux from North Dakota university. ‘The Bison play their traditional rivals tne following week-end, Oct. 28, at Memorial stadium at Grand Forks. Rapid improvement in playing has been shown by the Agricultural col- lege eleven since early this fall, when the loss of 14 regulars from the 1932 North Central Conference champion- ship faced the Bison coaches, Finne- | zan and Bob Lowe. An entirely| changed line and backfield have been | developed from the short squad, jstrength and bright offensive possi- | | bilities. { One of the most pleasing features | lof this year’s steadily bettering team ‘is that only two of the first string j lineup will be lost through graduation 'next spring, Coach Finnegan says. | The first naval observatory in the world for advancement of navigatiion and nautical astronomy was built at Greenwich in 1675. ‘conference game this year, while the itaking a 21-to-0 lacing from Illinois, |Coach Spears has been gloomy over which has shown improved defensive | Coach Harry Kipke of Michigan ‘fill the shoes of Harry Newman * this year, He fs Bill Renner, counting on the lad above to as the Wolverines’ quarterback hort-shooting passer from Youngs- town, O.. serving his first year on the squad. UZCUDUN IS UNPERTURBED AS Pessimism Rules | As Big Ten Teams Await Skirmishes. Favorites Have Yet to Win Game; Underdogs Boast Only Deadlocks | Chicago, Oct. 20.—?)—Who is go- ing to win the Big Ten football games Saturday? If you read and believe the state- ments of the coaches, the answer is: The other team. | This week there has been a verbal broadside of tears. Even a coach with @ 1-to-10 shot qualifies his statements with ‘ifs.” The reason for the extreme caution is quite apparent. Most of the games figure to be pretty even contests. Then too, favorites have not won a best the underdogs have done, with one exception, is to secure ties. Experts have been splitting hairs trying to pick the winner of the Ohio tate-Michigan game at Ann Arbor,! where 85,000 are expected to attend. | Breaks undoubtedly will play a big part in determining the winner. The Wolverines are known to play for breaks. Purdue will be favored to whip Chicago at Stagg field, but there is enough dope to make one hesitant} over picking the winner. Northwestern, a team that has yet to show an offense, tackles Indiana, which has one of the best defenses in the conference. Dick Hanley says the Wildcats, one down in the title race, will show a real attack. Towa gets the call over Wisconsin although Ossie Solem, the Hawkeye coach, can’t see it that way. After the Badgers’ future. The other two games Saturday are nois and the army at Cleveland and non-conference affairs involving Illi-; BATTLE WITH CARNERA NEARS, Basque Is Given Little Chance, Except for Kayo tn Ctos- ing Rounds Rome, Oct. 20.—(#)}—Paulino Uzcu- dun is conceded little or no chance of heating Primo Carnera in their heavyweight title fight here Sunday ‘but the Basque and his managers, outwardly at least, are unperturbed. Paulino and his handlers insist that Uzcudun is a good financial risk and ' state their opinion the veteran Span- iard will wear “da preem” down to jhis own size in the first 10 rounds and jthen wallop him over the last five, perhaps even knock him out. The wish seems father to the | thought in this connection and Primo faces the issue confidently. He boxed 10 rounds with Harold Mays of Bayonne, N. J., and Arthur Huttick did some road work as well. Paulino, at Rome, worked six rounds against a pair of sparring mates and wound up calisthenics, Carnera was to wind up. training Friday and fnake the trip to Rome by airplane Saturday. road accidents in England during the last half ot 1932; only 33 of the acci- dents were absolutely unavoidable, 85 per cent of the rest being due to per- sons losing their heads. The Gothic cathedral at Seville, Spain, was begun in 1401 and occu- pled more than a century in building, with workmen constantly on the job; An adequate store of honey and protection from the cold are the chief requisites to successfully wintering bees. If either is lacking, the bees have a poor chance to survive the winter. Minnesota and Pittsburgh at Minnea- polis, The Gophers will be meeting. a team every bit as big and powerful as they are, and it looks like a rea} battle. There have been predictions of victory for both sides in the Tlini- Cadet game. (By The Associated Press) WILL USE ROUGH BALL Columbus, O.—Sam Willaman, Ohio State coach, is sure of being on the safe side no matter what kind of foot- ball he selects to use in Saturday’s Michigan-Ohio State game. The Wolverines have been using a new type of “rough” ball, having irregular sivallow depressions on the surface, in practice but in games they let their opponents choose between that and the old smooth-covered ball. Ohio has been using the old type but switched to the rough ball for this week's workouts so the players would be accustomed to both. WILL PLAY RUBBER GAME Philadelphia — Coach Earle “Greasy” Neale of West Virginia and “Pop” Warner of Temple have a tle to play off when their teams meet Friday night. In 1921, Neale’s first year as coach at Washington and Jefferson, the Presidents beat Warner's Pitts- burgh team 7-0. The next season Pitt won 12-0: The coaches haven't encountered each other in action since then. WILL START SHOCK TROOPS South Bend, Ind.—Hunk Anderson, Notre Dame coach, has decided to 1 back on one of Knute Rockne’s favorite stunts in the with Carnegie Tech. Before leaving for H4ttsburgh he indicated he would start a reserve eleven of “1 is.the president of Harvard Uni- versity. RUSSIA had an army of 12 million men. . Teguci- galpa is the capital of HON- DURAS, JAMES BRYANT CONANT | ‘shock troops” against the Tartans but that ey mee FU Cees NERDS. fF 10) acl ———— TOO LATE TU CLASSIFY The California Wave Nook, 102 Third Street, Bismarck, fp com- REAL STEAM: Perma- nents, No » no kinks; comes down dripping wet; done 2 hours, $3.50 unt) NRA requires raise. Get yours betore the raise. Harrington's, Phune 190 ———<<<———————4 | ' Punts and Passes | i i) i of New York at Sequals Thursday and | with rope-skipping, hag punching and :. Over 3,129 persons were killed inj it is the world’s largest Gothic cathe- | dra. FOR RENT Two very desirable unfurnished - apartments, kitchenette, living room, bedroom and bath, - electric stove, electric refrigerator. locker in addition. Fireproof build- ing, good downtown location, rent reasonable. Inquire at the Bismarck | : Tribune office. Inuper. [Paavo Nurmi’s Devotion to Sport TREE GRO | Responsible for Divorce Steps i | Wife Says Great Runner Anti- Social; Disappointed Over His Son |. Helsingfors, Finland, Oct. 20—(#)— Paavo Nurmi and his bride of less than two years have separated and, despite denials, it has been learned Mrs. Nurmi already has taken steps toward obtaining a divorce and cus- {tody of their year-old boy, Matti. ‘The Associated Press correspondent interviewed the wife.at Turku, native town of the world famous foot-racer. and verified the reports the couple disagreed on Paavo's interest in ath- letics as well as on the future of their son, whose feet caused disappoint- ment to a father anxious to develop another runner in the family. “I have never engaged in athletics {and they do not interest me,” said Mrs. Nurmi. “I haye never seen Paavo run. For me, he is a man, not a sportsman. His concentration on ath- letics at last forced me to go to the Judge for a divorce. You see, an ath- lete should never marry, unless he is toes to forego much of his activi- 2S. “Marriage is a matter for two peo- {ple but to Paavo it seems there is nothing else but the track and his training. An athletic star is anti- soctal and it seems he cannot think of anything but himself. I was aware {of thts when I married Paavo because ‘e had kept company for years. I ven once broke off our engagement r that reason but Paavo promised tto-leave athletics so I could not re- ie him. I should have known bet- ter. | “If he is not allowed to train every sday he becomes so nervous that one {cannot understand him. My belief is there are very few people who really know him at all. He is a restless spirit who cannot stay long in the same surroundings or the same job.” The baby, Matti, who is just able to toddle about, came into the room while the correspondent was talking to his mother. “My boy can decide for himself what he wants to be,” she continued. “Besides, I am not afraid Matti will become a great runner. Paavo meas- jured his feet when he was born and he was not satisfied with them. He even tried to arrange the. boy’s food so that Matti would become an ath- lete but those fect have not streteh- ted at all.” iCadet Student Body { Will Not See Game Cleveland, Oct. 20—(#)—The grid machines of Illinois and Army con- verged on Cleveland Friday to test | their cleats on the turf at Municipal , Stadium, where Saturday they meet in intersectional rivalry. Although the cadets from West }Point will not move en masse to the scene of the battle, Illinois’ 160-piece band and a squad of 47 Army planes | rom: Selfridge Field, Mich., were ex- pected to enliven the meeting of army and the Illini. The cadet cheering section is ab- {sent for the first time since 1930 for |@ game with Notre Dame. The veteran Bob Zuppke planned a jlight workout for his 34 charges Fri- day and indicated Herm Walser, cap- tain of the Illini, will be ready to take the field against Army. Influenza and the common cold are responsible for nearly half the time lost to indusiry through iilness. Laundry and

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