Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 23 1933 ist of Undefeated Teams Dwindles as End of October Nears PITT PANTHERS AND MINNESOTA BEATS PITTSBURGH 7-3 IN STARTLING UPSET OUR OUR BOARDING HOUSE NOTRE DAME AMONG FALLEN FAVORITES; | WE KNOW TH MAJOR IS STAYIN IN TH HOUSE, SES’ TO GIVE US TH’ DODGE BECAUSE HE OWES US MONEY? WE GOT IT HOT AN LEVEL Southern California Held to Scoreless Tie by Oregon State Eleven $s, WADS OF MALARKY? jh, TH HOOK FOR # SO TELL THAT BIG ‘BUFFALO TO SNORT OUT HERE WITH MY MICHIGAN LOOMS POWERFUL} Nebraska, Duke, Alabama, Princeton, Fordham and Army Teams Cop New York, Oct. 23—(#}—The na- tion’s football legions face the fourth Saturday in October with many per- ennial favorites already overthrown, the list of unbeaten teams dwindling fast and further fireworks le all along the line. ‘The downfall of Pitt's Panthers and | Notre Dame and the tieing of South- | ern California last Saturday proved «mew the shaky foundations on which tootball reputations rest. ‘The usual Monday morning recount. | taken on ihe basis of last week's re- sults, indicates that temporary lead- eiship at least can be assigned to Michigan and Nebraska in the mid- ‘west, Duke and Alabama in the south, Princeton, Fordham and_ perhaps} ‘Army in the east. Arkansas and} Southern Methodist in the southwest, | Utah in the Rocky Mountain district und Southern California and Stan- tord in the far west. ‘The prospects for this week's slate are headed by such pairings as South- ern California-California, Yale-Army, Penn-Navy. Harvard-Dartmouth.| Fordham-Alabama, Notre Dame-Pitt ; and Iowa-Minnesota. Princeton and Syracuse confront intersectional foes. The rampant! ‘Tigers, whose 20-0 rout of Columbia | marked their first major victory since | i628, meet Washington & Lee, who upset Kentucky last week. Michigan, on the basis of its great) showing against Ohio State, looks like | the class of the conference and should | heat Chicago. Iowa's Hawkeyes, con-! querors of Northwestern and Wiscon- | sin, tackle Minnesota’s Gophers, who} wiasted Pitt's national championship aspirations last week. Purdue looks SSS too good for Wisconsin and Ohio : | State will try to get going again! Chicago, Oct. 23—(@%—Having dis- against Northwestern. What looked |Posed of the Green Bay Packers with | Nke one of the season's classics a/a 10-to-7 victory, the Chicago Bears month ago, Pitt vs. Notre Dame at Monday began iooking toward another | South Bend. now is just a game be-! y began iooking d another | tween beate:i elevens. Nebraska car- Loomer inee cuales tani | title bones asainst iin the way—New York Giants, Bos-{ Stat e ton Redskins, and Portsmouth Spar- | Pekeoatceacertiiels, hee eee one of them will | laren Bay It to'0. The Pang Mohall Defeats Williston 13-2 jmed Boston 7 to 0 in their first meet- ‘ing, but the future doesn’t look so Yellowjackets Increase Cham- easy. So far New York has lost only to Portsmouth and Boston. pionship Possibilities With Victory CHICAGO BEARS LOOK AHEAD TO ANOTHER PRO LOOP TITLE "Phil Ball Is ] Is I Dead Giants, Redskins, Spar- tans in Way .lashing in o t ‘The Bears retained their hold of | first place by a fourth quarter fielt | goal to give the locals the edge after, each had scored seven points. Blood, substitute quarterback for Green Bay, | and Johnson, Bear end. accounted for | the touchdowns. Manders also kicked | 23. Aeon one er for the Fecieciey - ie New York Giants, y Harry Nanas ocean Taek ented Wi | eewman, the former Michigan ater, | Year dream of producing an American day to strengthen the Yellow Jack-|Scored in every period but the last to| League pennant winner. The valiant ets’ bid for state championship hon- defeat the Brooklyn Dodgers, 21 to 7.' veteran of baseball died Sunday at ors. Newman, Campbell and Richards Mohall scored in the second and|made the touchdowns. at the age of 69. Since 1916, when third periods adding an extra point; A drizzling rain at Cincinnati made | he became owner of the St. Louis on the latter score. Williston made the Reds-Pittsburgh game a punting| Browns, Ball had cherished the a safety in the fourth quarter after duel that ended in a scoreless tie. thought of winning a pennant with stubborn battle most of the period) In Sunday's other game the Boston | his club. The nearest he approach- inside the 30-yard line, a Mohall Redskins’ shut out the Chicago Car-|+d the pinnacle was in 1922, when the penalty backing the Yellow Jackets |dinals 10 to 0. A touchdown by Bat- | Browns finished in second place, trail- up to the 1-yard line and a punt was|tles and a field goal and extra point|ing the New York Yankees by one| blocked with Mohall player recover-'by Musick made the score. ‘game. With the passing of the pres- ing for the Williston score. ident of the 8t. Louis Americans, } Mohall had the advantage from) Many persons have been seriously | speculation began on the fate of the serimmage in the first half with Wil-|injured in homes by stumbling over club. Monday L. C. McEvoy, vice liston gaining most ground in the!objects left lying about. For exam- ‘ident and general manager, took second half for an approximate tie ple, when pails or brooms are left in| up the reins temporarily and found in yardage for the entire game. Mo-'darkened hallways; when chairs are hefore him plans for revamping the hall made 10 first. downs and Willis- 'left in doorways; or when toys are! team along lines suggested by Rogers ton 8. Mohall was penalized 54 yards scattered about the floor. Almost! Hornsby, manager. Funeral services and Williston 16, with the visitors | every factory has a safety rule: “Keep/ will be conducted Tuesda: suffering two heavy penalties for| passageways clear.” That's a mighty) clipping. Sood rule for the home, too. i Sa Sere Sa eee curities was found wandering in a Bill eenherd, ettern Marsand—| A nee, anim: the London Zoo is|daze in New York. Probably from Scored all his team’s 20 points against called a “tigon,” being the offspring | trying to find a safe place to put her Georgetown. | of a tiger and’a Hones. ‘rae 5 ss | OUT OUR WAY S-S-S-T- GOOO NIGHT! WRECKIN' TH’ HULL PILE,TO GIT TH’ BIGGEST PIECE FROM TH' BOTTOM. GOOD GOSH, |S THERE NO WAY You CAN St. Louis, Oct. 23.—(}—Death has ended Philip de Gatesby Ball's 18- Williston, N. D., Oct. Woman with $40,000 in cash and se- yes! 1F THEY'D MAKE TH PIECES ALL TH’ SAME Size. WE BEEN WATCHIN’ TH SERNT, FRONT AN’ BACK, AN’ HE AINT GONE OUT, UNLESS HE WAS IN A LAUNDRY BASI—~I GOT THAT 2 THAT HE'S LOADED WITH ]/ BIG SLAB OF PORK ON t John’s hospital here of septicemia! : By Williams |)f ' " By ‘Ahern BUT, GENTS- TELL You TM THE MASORS BROTHER SAKE @ 50 7 HE OWES ME AWAY ON ME,TO THE CHICAGO FAIR? = —— VY - EGAD-T |e: Nodaks Surprised by Rabbits as South Dakota State Wins by 18-2) ‘State Negotiates Soore in First Three Minutes and Con- tiues Pace | Brookings, 8. D., Oct. 23.—(@)—With -———-@ |surprising ease, South Dakota State {coliege took the lead in the North , Central conference championship race in the homecoming game Saturday, defeating the much touted University lof North Dakota, 18 to 2. The first three minutes of play told the story. State started a sustained drive, led by its elusive backs and high powered blocking, and in a few series of downs scored a touchdown with ‘Johnson crashing over. Throughout the first half, State took the attack into Nodak territory, both with and against the wind. Only in the third period. when the Nodaks had the wind at their backs, did they threaten, but the best they could do was get invo the danger zone. There they either were thrown for losses or lost the ball on fumbles, With a stiff wind at its back, South Dakota State in the first period, car- ried the ball on a_ series of line smashes to North Dakota's 5-yard line, where Johnson carried it across for the first touchdown. Arndt’s try for goal failed. Johnson Passes to Miller The ball had changed hands re- Peatedly just after North Dakota 'kieked off. Johnson passed to Miller, who ran for a touchdown. The try for the extra point again was no good. The ball see-sawed in the middie of the field for the remainder of the period. As the second quarter opened An- ;dres and Johnson carried the ball to jthe middle of the field and had to kick. North Dakota was penalized 15 yards and Cope fumbled on North} |Dakota’s 15-yard line. Noble of State recovered and on two line smashes Andres carried the ball across for the third touchdown. Arnd’t try for goal failed. Pierce and Neunschwander went in for North Dakota starting the first drive toward State's goal, but it was halted when Neunschwander fumbled on State’s 15-yard marker and Terry recovered as the gun ended the half. The North Dakotans made three drives for touchdowns in the third Period, with the wind at their own backs, but did not have the scoring punch to carry them across. They | blocked Johnson's punt and got two;| \dded to North Dakota’s chaos by fumbling the ball on State's 10-yard E back again because of an off- late in the quarter, Hoken- reserve half, took two wide around right end and it the gun @ certain 4 g touchdown drive Hi ‘gina ete pro- bonneau played excellently for North points on a safety. Neunschwander | Placed North Dakota 5-yard | © sounded, ending what . tn Step EAA De ae car L, SHOVEL PASS FI FROM LUND 10 TENNER IS GO0D FOR COUNTER’ Mike Sebastian Fumbles Near Gcal in Pitt’s Only Scor- clos Threat ‘ Me | LUND htt ALFONSE SHINE|’ Veteran Caught From Behind After Almost Getting Away on Kickoff Minneapolis, Oct. 23.—(#)—Pitts- burgh’s prowling Panthers, whose bark was worse than their bite, were blasted out of the national football picture Saturday by a powerful Min- nesota eleven which scored an as- i Victory Fafted to Increase) | Champion's Prestige in Native Land his native land Monday. huge champion punch out a decisive 15-round victory over Paulino Uscu- dun Sunday, cheered him for a while and then hooed him just as heartily in the last two rounds for his failure to stop the 34-year-old Spanish veteran ot more than 10 years’ warfare against the world’s best heavyweights. tounding 7-3 victory over the tavored | easterners. Unleashing a whirlwind attdck that shook Francis (Pug) Lund leose for a near touchdown run of 60 yards in the second half before 28,000 specta- tors, Minnesota launched a furious assault in the first period to score the winning points and gain a lead that Pitt’s always-dangerous offense couldn't overcome. Except for a bad break in the wan- ing minutes of the second period, the. fighting Panthers might have had a tie instead of a field goal. A costly tumble on the Gopher 4-yard line, to (where Pitt's driving backs had toted the oval from their own 33-yard stripe, thwarted the easterner’s hopes of at least a tie. : Mike Sebastian Fumbles Sebastian let the pass from center yet away, and the Gophers tossed him for a five yard loss. Weinstock. on the next play, scored Pitt's only points with a field goal from placement. Undaunted by the highly-touted in-! vaders, who licked Navy 34 to 6 last sweek, Minnesota commenced a driv- ing, hard-hitting offensive with the opening Kickoff that sent Tenner, Gopher end, over the Panther's goal vefore the first period was eight min- utes old. With the ball on Pitts- burgh’s 16-yard stripe, Tenner took a shovel pass from Lund to dart over for a touchdown. Bevan, guard, kick- ed the extra point from placement. ‘Julius Alfonse, slippery Gopher half. } cuplicated his performance of last week in again paving the way for a Minnesota score by weaving 25 yards tnrough Pitt's right tackle, stiff arm- ‘ing five tacklers and squirming out of the arms of three others wicca he was brought down. i Lund’s Run Great Only the brilliant 60-yard dash by| Lund overshadowed his teammate's feat. The tow-headed star of Minne- second half on his own 2-yard line and dodged his way to Pittsburgh's 28-yard stripe; eluding the entire Pan- her team. He was in the clear and on his way for a touchdown when Munjas dragged him down from be- uuind, Save for the second period threat, Fittsburgh found its attack stemmed in every quarter, smashing plunges | into the line by Weinstock and ayes scnbaugh, long daring passes O'Dell, the hardest man in the field for the Gophers to stop. Lund’s kicking was a big factor in the Gopher victory. Minnesota scored six first downs to eight for Pitts- ourgh and gained 146 yards by, ing to 139 for the Panthers. In total yards gained, however, the easterners were ahead with 230 against 162 for Minnesota. Carnegie Machine | Beats Notre Dame; {Scoring Thrust in First Minute | of Play Spells Victory for Tartans | sota took the opening kickoff in the |¢ 6 couple of rounds, the Basque woodchopper ving with a zipping left and ponder- ous rights, yet never could floor a rival whose courage alone carried him through the full 15-round limit. Of the attributes that once made him feared throughout the heavy-/not only carry on a colorful ris weight division, Paulino took with him into this fight only a rock-ribbed chin and the constitution of an ox. He was on the receiving end from start, his rushes were smothered the Italian's mighty arms, bleeding from the fifth round he never quit trying, never coming into his bulky opponent, was floored. At the finish, bloody bruised, Paulino still was carrying as aggressively as ever, taking best Carnera could offer. Moorhead Teachers 13; Normal 0. Wahpeton 27; Moorhead 7. Winnipeg 14; Concordia 13. North Central South Dakota State 18; North Da- kota 2. South Dakota 18; Morningside 7. ge ais i FE §3 Big Ten an 13; Ohio State 0. Army 6; Mlinois 0. Purdue 14; Chicago 0. Iowa 26; Wisconsin 7. Northwestern 25; Indiana 0. Minnesota 7; Pitt 3. Minnesota Colleges St. Mary's, Winona 0; 8t. John's 0. Ironwood Michigan Junior College 0; Hibbing Junior 0. Rochester Junior 38; St. Paul Luth- St. Cloud Teachers 21; Winona Teachers 0. Gustavus Adolphus 34; Augsburg 0. East Carnegie Tech 7; ame Dame 0. 4 7. Massachusetts 14; Rhode Island 12. Tufts 42; Connecticut 0. Syracuse 14; Cornell 7. Yale 14; Brown 6. Holy Cross 10; Harvard 7. Rutgers 10; Penn Military 0. 3 Lehigh Colgate 7; New York Univ. a Fordham 43; Boston College 6. California 6; Washington State 6. Southern California 0; Oregon State 0. rites ot cal, ates Angeles University of C: at 30; Loyola 7. | ‘Washington 14; College of Puget Sound 6. t Stanford 20; San Francisco 1: California Aggies 13; puree Junior College 6. Pacific 14; Whitman 12. \ South { Mississippi pss Sewanee 0. tate 7; Vanderbt 7 swift, rapier-like scoring thrust in the first minute of play, Carnegie’ Tech Saturday knifed out a 7-0 vic- tory over a big, rumbling Notre Dame team that just couldn't get going. It was “Harpster football”—the ,|@ridiron art as taught by Tech’s 26- Tartan tacklers brought him to earth in a crash that knocked the oval from his Dakota;.while almost all of the wi- | hands. ning team looked good. Miller, And- Johnson and Kramer were the oe | Pittsburgh, Oct. 23—()—In one Teachers 0. creat Caroline.kete #; FERRE Ms “willam & aary 1; Gu Casi tent 9 in i g EE 3 iF ff z z ce z Hf eek hl a4 Hi u f = 2 FY § 5 ai z 5 “ Rome, Oct. 23.—(AP)—Primo Car- Siresuous affair than the spectators nera’s first heavyweight title defense, | suspected. Ed Lewis, Penn halfback, successful though it was, added little/suffered a broken nose to the mammoth Italian’s prestige in spend the night in the hespttal A crowd of 70,000 strongly predis- as bedly bettered hen posed in Carnera’s favor, watched the | turned to Hanover. The best way to protect ‘Canzoneri Begins Another Drive For Lightweight Title This Wi Week CARNERA WINS EASILY FROM PAULINO BUT MISSES KAYO ey | Punts and Passes | een | Former ‘eatin Will Meet Frankie Klick of San Fran- cisco Saturday New York, Oct. 23.—(#)—Tony Can- ‘The Associated Press) ‘WAS beth AND TOUGH ‘The Penn-Dartmouth |, game Saturday evidently was a more and had to while th pl po sim margin to regain it three months later. Now the team re- | -; cisco in a 10-rounder at Ridgewood | Grove, New York, Saturday night just eee that he still is in there scrap- of Freddie Miller, the National Box- ing association featherweight cham- |olon, also gets into action this week to lend a bit more interest to a long but rather dull program) Miller tac- ;kles Jackie Shatkey of Minneapolis in la 10-round non-title affair at Mil- j Waukee Monday night. THRILLER COMING UP Athens, Ga.—If Georgia and New York university clash Saturday in their “rubber” game. When they first met in 1929, New York university ran up 20 points in the first Hl , . |___ Football Stars ea (By The Associated Prem) Bucky” Bryan, Tulane — Returned valry |Georgia Tech kickoff 101 yards for game this week but it also|cnly touchdown of game. Norman Franklin, Oregon State— ‘was played in 1893. The; Intercepted two Southern California stands at 18 Yale victories, | Passes and held Trojans off by fine and eight ties. kicking in scoreless tie. Bunny Burzio, Carnegie Tech—Re- forry about the dan- RIVALRY IS ANCIENT New Haven, Conn.—Yale and Army covered Notre Dame fumble, leading children of falling|to touchdown and 7-0 victory. and for a good reason.| Julius Alfonse, Minnesota—Made t against the| 25-yard run against Pitt to put ball ® gate or a bar-|in scoring position. de’ Red Baumberger, Navy--Intercepted pass and sprinted 95 yards for score Unat beat Virginia, 13-7. Joe Laws, lowa—Tallied twice |. It pays to be cautious. | against Wisconsin, once on 39-yd. run. Northwest prevent Special “7th” Anniversary Rates For the Month of October é Seven Years of Continuous Operation 8,000,000 Miles of Flying Experience NOW—this offer of the whrid’s best type transportation at special low rates. The business world flies today. BISMARCK-CHICAGO Round Trip $48. 00 Via Ate—10-Day Return FAST CONVENIENT SCHEDULES 1:10 PM Lv. Bismarck Ar. 12:20 PM 5:35 PM Ar. Twin Cities Lv. 7:40 AM 11:15 PM Ar. Chicago Lv. 2:00 AM 6:35 AM Ar. New York Lv. 6:00 PM TRAVEL FEATURES Al-metal shipe—air mail pileie see aRe, radio, Complimentary restaurant and hotel accommodations at Minneapolis airport for ‘ ~~ FLY TO CHICAGO UNDER 11 HOURS NEW YORK UNDER 18 HOURS All Ships Comfortably Heated Northwest Airways, Inc. Airport Office Phone 300 NOTICE (To Retailers of BEER All applications for licenses to retail beer | in the City of Bismarck must be filed with the. aes Auditor not later than October