Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ERY Siento vy THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1933 ane ‘ , Midwest, Far West and South Pour Heaviest Fire Against East ATLANTCSEABAR): WALKER APPEARS NEAR END OF ROAD FOLLOWING BEATING all STORM CENTER FOR | ov BoaRDING HOUSE By Ahern | [10-Second and Three-Second Rules | ii | . | Will P il in State This Y = ° i FOOTBALL WARFARE: \F How WILL T EXPLAIN AY inst mine 1DOWHEN 1 EZ reva n ate s ear | MY BLACK EVE TO THOSE GET IN TH HOUSE,IS SHAVE lpn Tee a | rei IN, Meee Ni setsee be Sere uetacrt yen NODAKS HOPE TO RETRIEVE {ews ara ee =] Battle Between Fordham and, AN ACCIDENT !—VEH- , LOOKIN’ LIKE TH MASOR - WITH ROSENBLOOM Follow Official Basket. St. Mary’s Enjoys Top | [X{ THATS IT-AN ACCIDENT! ])) THAT Bic STIFF —coSsT A! SOME PRESTIGE IN SOUTH! ball Rules Position | Beds me we ee J ME 12 , AN’ GOT A PRUNE ——_— : a cs Oth oe. ante \ ° , al =| SSL Minot, N. D., Nov. 4—()—B. 0, ZZ DEEPER pte TH | HUNG ON MY EVE 5—WAIT y Second Straight Defeat for For- RESIGNED? (Tighe, principal of Fargo high school; ’ 4 HIT_ON T ? TILL T SEE THAT RUMMY~ § Welt d Middle Ly Will Play Texas Christian and | _ 2 b.ciected president of the board SIX OTHERS OF FIRST WATER | BUMPER -THATS IT f HELL PAY ME TH #12 THOSE | Ubi ctl ath Maced i Loyola During Next Two {of control of the state athletic league | MUGS, PUNCHED OUTA ME, Champion Weeks Bid, Cemeee w S ay be | mnec! 5 Sectional Contests of First Rate’ OR LLL DOT HIS paigneentg vention of the North Dakota Educa. save Importance All Down mt CHAMP USES SMART ATTACK Grand Forks, N. D, Nov. 4.—Visions gee Tee Donntiick:, Waubieh ‘eas able Li qc“ of the sunny south and two inter-|was named vice president and L. A, trad itd Sectional football contests occupy the white of Minot was re-named secre. Mf oac Referee for Bulldog But Two eae of oe Sey a pias De | tary-treasurer. He 4 foot layers as the pre- 4 inick, Wahj We New York, Nov. 4.—(?}—The Atlan- Judges Give Titleholder pare to invade Fort Worth, Texas, senna sieabee a the Board and pen tic seaboard’ was the football storm Nine Rounds and New Orleans, La., during the/supt. M. B. Zimmerman of Grafton 650, center Saturday as the midwest, far next two weeks. was named to the board succeeding cage ‘west and south poured their heaviest sett wean tor Fort Worth, wire a | St cog oe nizati on 4 y 7 7 ¥ by board, at ie 101 fire of the season against the east’s New Mee ino pnt tl meet ‘Texas Christian University, one neers hres TOLIOW the ttrionnt ay strongholds. as Skee, tise toy Sail bg tren of the South's most potent teams,|pasketball rules during the coming over Granted top position was the battle Pee R .. aTearea to be vey Nov. 11. The following week, the|season, which brings 10 and three. 10g at the Polo Grounds here between close to the finish of his fighting ca- Sioux appear in New Orleans, playing | second rules into play in the state chat Fordham’s undefeated Rams and St. sear atureay, tg aa or [league which did not follow them sive Mary's Gaels from California. Pre- ||. Mickey not only failed to lift the Texas Christian univeralty, the No- | *4;°e°on, ing of the state hi Tat ig of 65,000. ad of Maxey Rosenbloom in tl 5 s ss Ranking not far behind were the Neceurd TAIeA at Madison Square ares pel imepierreeA arin tinue the A and B class plan of play trae ‘Tulane-Colgate, Navy-Notre Dame, Garden Friday night but he showed ponly thetr-loss to Arkanses has marred for state basketball teams. oF ey oe, i ae Game more than ever the toll that time has a fine record. On the other hand, the|, TMS was Meeask bedi aad in eigenen SERS heel 3 taken. It was the second stright de- = Sioux have not maintained the re- festa hel Wi =" tests. % e On the eve of the intersece board of control. helg Irhateryerd section contests of 1st ee eee oc elilewctint cleeee| tonal game with Pitt, a st. {markable record of thelr predeces-|"°Dates tor the two state tournaments J pub rate importance all along the line. weer months ago he took a de.{ Paul newspaper's report stated |8€rS who won the North Central con-| ore set but the sites were not named, | mer In the east it was unbeaten Princeton . leteive trimming roe tat Brouillard, on Bernie Beeb Walkie) ca championship four successive |rne Class A tourney oe ire ian against Brown, Cornell against Co-| a >= W: i| of Minnesota grid coach, above, . March 16 and 17 and ion iuible; ‘Yale’ against ‘undefeated oa eA Some EN 7-4. THINK SAKE IS THE MASOR®& a he een Aistbeet oie had resigned. Bierman denied This Year Disastrous classic March 23 and 24. deal Dartmouth, Washington & Jefferson wae to tatal ap with the shifty Ros- he had handed his resignation This year, South Dakota State de- ‘The league also voted to al a ease against undefeated Duquesne, and! cabtoath and tag him with © winning a Say L. D. Coffman of Hobe the Elie Ld While | -wiing which permitted challenges be. iss Penn against Lafayette. F " i tside of le of je university. Dakota Sioux. |tween winners of the i iar marae ont Fargo-Bismarck Football Game Here iia tic. ce Ba Tah or‘ sean [ene Pwo, he, a a a! lashing blow that cut the champton's less than 13 members of the squad, Joh conquering drive of Michigan and) iP squad. |!tcurnament could challenge Class A Sines corto emai ine = Called Off After Heavy Snowstorm 2.2.22 eight of whom were regulars, were on |egumament could challenge, Class 4 ify race at Northwesterns’ expense. Chi-; oue ‘His best Justo charge ahead the injured lst at one time. to the challenged team to play or mor cago and Wisconsin, Ohio State and “ | rere ar eeepiooal ie as the — Seared forfeit. any claim it might have to Be Indiana complete e conference Ca 0 Cla Ski Ri id i him, flid in biome juries 3 ite ones: Towa deployed against Iowa Lm Four-Inch Fall Blankets Hughes danced aroun . flicking Pierce is suffering from the effects tion ae a lowa deployed ag: sper oen, ssy "i er, eZ cwhenever he felt like it. of a pulled muscle in his left leg; Rip Nebraska looked much too powerful for Missouri in the Big Six but Okla- hhoma and Kansas hooked up in what Jooked like a close duel. Alabama's tussle with Kentucky,! Georgia's match with Florida and the’ Duke-Auburn, Vanderbilt-Georgia ‘Tech, and Louisiana State-South Carolina games topped the program in the south. Texas matched strength with Southern Methodist in the top battle of a southwest conference schedule, California and U. C. L. A. met in the, only Pacific coast conference game. —<$<—___—__-______—__+ Football Scores || —_—_—__———_-— (By The Associated Press) COLLEGES St. Ambrose (Mt, Pleasant, Ia.) 0; Iowa ‘Wesleyan 20. Macalester Freshmen 7; River Falls ‘Teachers Freshmen 0. Eau Olaire Teachers 0; Winona Teachers 25. Buena Vista 19; Western Union 0. Superior (Wis.) Teachers 0; North- ern Normal 0 (tie). Wahpeton Science 0; Minot Teach- ers 0 (tie). St. Paul Luther 0; Waldorf Junior (Forest City, Ia.) 7. : Southern Normal 6; Yankton Col- lege 7. Huron College 0; Augustana (Sioux Falls) 18. Rapid City School of Mines 12; Da- kota Wesleyan 0. HIGH SCHOOLS Hettinger 6; Mott 0. NEW YORKER—14— Minneapolis, Nov, 4.—(}—Charles Considering Turning Professional Casper Oimoen of Minot, North Dakota's leading ski-rider, is se- riously considering turning pro- fessional, he said in Bismarck Friday. Oimoen recently received an of- fer for nis services from the Win- sted, Conn. Ski club. The offer was made by Anton Lekang, 1932 United States ski champion. The North Dakotan said he ex- pects to make up his mind in the near future. If he decides to remain an ama- teur he will defend his Central U. S. ski championship, which he has held for seven consecutive years. Oimoen was captain of the U. S. ski-jumping and racing team in 1932 Olympic contests and was national champion in 1930 and 1931. An injury prevented him from participating in the national contests in 1932, when Lekang took over the crown. Oimoen, 28 years old, has been in Bismarck all summer as a bricklayer on the state capitol construction project. He returned to Minot Friday for a visit but expects to be back here in a week. With bricklaying on the cap- itol practically completed and snow in the air, the ski-rider ex- pects to begin preparations for an active ski season in the near fu- ture. Commenting on Bismarck’s ap- parent lack of interest in skiing, Oimoen pointed out that the ter- rain of the Missouri river valley, | with its high escarpments, affords {many suitable locations for ski | Slides, PEEK-A-BOO. 5 | Football Popular As Winter Sport Minot, N. D., Nov. 4.—()}—Foot- ball is becoming a popular out- door winter sport in Minot. Last year the Minot Beavers and Dick- inson Savages played to a score- Jess tle in a snowstorm. Friday night the Beavers and Wahpeton Science Wildcats re- peated the performance, the re- ue of the contest being the same, to 0. ' Field; Midgets at James- town Overnight Cancellation of the Bismarck-Fargo high school football game, scheduled | for Hughes Field here Saturday after | noon, was announced at 8:30 o'clock! Saturday morning by Roy D. McLeod, | Bismarck high school athletic direc- tor. The game was called off because of @ four-inch snowfall here in the last 24 hours, which blanketed the play- ing field. The snowfall continued ‘here Saturday forenoon with the ‘promise that playing and spectating |conditions in the afternoon would be | Miserable. | McLeod's announcement came fol- lowing a long distance telephone con- ,Yersation with Robert D. Brown, Fargo coach, at Jamestown. | {_ The Fargo team, making the trip to! | Bismarck by automobile, remained overnight in Jamestown, planning to continue the trip westward Saturday | forenoon. | If the snow disappears and weather | clears up after Armistice Day, Mc-/ Leod said, it is probable that the | |Fargo-Bismarck game will be re-} scheduled, probably for. Nov. 18. If; the weather is not suitable, however, | plans for the game will be dropped! | for the season. i | Dizzy Dean Draws i__At Cooking School St. Louis. Nov. 4.—(%)—Dizzy Dean, who boasts of his ability to bring the customers to the ball parks, played to a capacity crowd The referee and two judges couldn't agree very well on calling the rounds, Referee Eddie Forbes awarding Walk- er nine rounds and the judges, Char- ley Lynch and Jim Buckley giving Rosenbloom 11 of the 15 heats. Rosenbloom rode the crest of the victory wave all the way. He kept the challenger off with smart lefts, stung him severely a few times with Jong overhead rights and took things casy in the clinches. A crowd of 10,000 saw the battle. ALL-AMERICA | PROSPECTS — 0 ccm By GRITE PLAYS it FA LAYS OF FAMOUS COACHES \ RIP” LER Dablow, regular ‘blocking back, has a severe injury on his knee; Irv Kup- cinet, regular fullback, has been out all year, first with a broken wrist and later with torn ligaments and muscles in his shoulder; Jack Charbonneau, who stepped into the fullback posi- tion and performed admirably, has a {hip injury that may keep him on the sidelines. Al Sowl, regular left tackle, has been out for two weeks with “water” on the knee; his capable ~ reserve, Don Olson, developed the same afflic- {tion after relieving Sowl; Roger Reichert, regular left end, suffered a ‘broken bone in his foot and missed three weeks of action; Len Sauer, shoulder; and Bill Goethel, handy re- lief man, has two bad ankles that have prevented him from playing. As e result of these incessant in- juries, it has been necessary for Coach Jack West to maneuver his men into new position at a moment’s notice. Now no less than ten members of the Pos: Players will transfer from one post to another in the course of the battle to meet new situations; Built Around Pierce ‘The Nodaks offense revolves about afford their southern opponents some star center, has a torn muscle in his| D Lafayette, Ind. Nov. 4—(P)— Noble Kizer says he isn’t hanker- ing to return to Notre Dame, his alma mater, as football coach. In fact, said the Purdue uni- versity athletic director and foot- ball mentor, the job hasn’t been offered to him, and if it should, he wouldn’t consider leaving Pur- cue. Kizer has been reading the newspapers and is aware he has been mentioned as a likely succes- sor to Heartley (Hunk) Anderson. have read further,” said nd I have come to the conclusion that Purdue has a Pretty good football team.” Fights Last Night | rr ———— (By The Associated Press) ‘New York—Maxie Rosenbloom, 173%, New York, outpointed Mic- key Walker, 173%4, Rumson, N. J., 5); Joe Knight, 171%, Miami Beach, Fla. out Nichols, 168, Buffalo, (8); Fred- die Haverlack, 135, Wilkesbarre, Pa., outpointed Al Jailette, 126%, Jersey City, (5). Chicago—Joe Walker, 150, Chi- ago, outpointed Jackie Purvis, 150, Indianapolis, (8); Young Stuhley, 165, Kewanee, outpointed Jack Moran, 164, Chicago, (6); Paul Lee, 120, Indianapolis, outpointed Lenny Cohen, 120, Chicago. San Francisco—Eddie Zivic, 133, 2 Snow whipped across the field persis f trouble. Pittsburgh, _outpointed c Seaback of Astoria, N. Y., Saturday during the entire game and in j MIS debut os ean oD On defense, the play of Ten Mein-] Hill 128" Portland, Ores tae, an was the only undefeated player in the some places there were drifts Sans Tamed late the aaah: hover, the tallest college football] Fritzi Ziviz, 138%, Pittsburgh, rev National Pocket Billiard tournament | eight or nine inches deep. It was | PrUrOns sitrsty fieldhouse Fri. stopped Gus Vegas, 131, Hayward, wei Seaback broke a deadlock for first , impossible to line the field and | Histon nl’ pee ies ceay tile offer Cal, (2); Babe 150, San E place with George Kelly of Philadel-/ the officials encountered difficulty eet ee so oe poor mA very Francisco, outpointed Tommy che phia when he won his third consecu- | in placing the ball. a oo ing. eae damages pistes After King, 155, Fall River, Mass.; Baby mn tive game by beating Harry Wood, Neither team made any serious ne} a" ane act in Bernard of Michigan No. 2 Manuel, 129, Tampa, Fis, out- F eUiED, Mia 138 fo 81th nine san) scoring gestures during the con- | COUGH Sct OD. ave the instruc- eee. | | Pointed Roy Stice, 131%, Tulsa, bee ig It's not the bogeyman, kiddies, | tSt. On the second play of, the Michigan football ns a Kelly fell in an upset match be-) fore Arthur Church, New York, 125. to 121 in 15 innings. t Marcel Camp, Detroit, won chis game Friday, beating Walter Frank- lin, Kansas City, 125 to 83 in seven, innings. | San Diego, Cal—Swede Berg- Tung, 155, San Bernardino, knock- ed out Eddie Ran, 146, Poland, (3). OUT OUR WAY WHAT'S GoT You SsTucK? nor is it the galloping dervish ‘of nightmares. It’s Tom Sasaki of Brawley High School. Los An- @eles, who has to wear glasses when he plays football. The goggle-gear Tom is wearing con- tains lenses a quarter of an inch thick to give him normal vision and protect his eyes during a game. TWO HEADS MAY St GETTER game it appeared as though Minot would score, when the Beavers pulled a pass play which got Sev- land loose for a 40-yard run, but he was tackled from behind. The ball was slippery, making it difficult for passers and fumbies were frequent. Minot has one game left on its schedule, that be- ing with the Aberdeen Normal | Wolves here on Armistice Day. By Williams | No -THATS WHY WE AIN'T A RACE OF MENTAL tions, Dizzy went to work, “slow- ly and precisely,” as one woman described, it. EY & i 8 Hi } B 33 i AN ILL WYNN i FH i f g. $B ti: i é as H E i g E i gi i i ; by sf Es Ege i i He Rs ri A mee : i i i : i i : i 4 BES. e f Te E E 4" ciel i Reichert, Shep- tackles—Mein- Schwartz, Levitt, i 3 centers—Sauer, Bentz; Quarterbacks—Dablow, Falgren; half- backs—Pierce. Cope, Johnson, Hud- dleson; and fullbacks—Kupcinet, u, Chicago, Nov. 4. — (®) — William Flynn carries a safety razor around ‘with him, and that’s lucky for him. One of the blades stopped a shot- {gun slug fired by one of four robbers ‘who robbed the trucking company areee een is employed. He was Old Football Faces in New Suits DON'T THAT GEAR “THAN ONE, GIANTS. ONLY A FEW Ener op Woe, saned | wae) END oe THAT CES BUT THAT [ CAN AFFORD To Lock age at “Saenes ah | HAT SHAFT?} | CAN'T MEAN | THEMSELVES UP, WHEN “THEY centers . . . when he} ! OH YOU TRIED ANY TWO WANT TO GET AN' 10EA lot of pointers on the play cor THAT = WELL LETS HEADS. ALL THEIR OWN. WHY, center, consequent | SEE “THEN- UH \F YOU STOP AND LOOK OFF pn eaters + | cal A BRIDGE,SOMEBODY ELSE the tar WILL STOP AND BE READY lines f TO GRAB You. fh ] chi tn Br Ge ry Ne 1 A 7 { { ‘ Headed for almost certain G. All-America recognition, Her- le man “Breezy” Wynn, Tennessee pe fullback, intercepted a pass in SIX women havé swum the pn the opening game of the sea- | fgnglish channel, Gertrade TGs Saueed a wioken bons | catntiah ts th ; Wen, : ag peta above on pe adele Mites fellows above, who thrilled crowds:at collegiate football : 8 “erutehes, is considered one of CHARLES EVANS HUGHES 1s afe ascending a new peak of popularity with the tnereasing attendance ene ORY & short time ago, be the best’ defensive fullbacks in CARAT OF tha Ue 8 te {x Paul Moss, All-America end of Purdue last e¢ason who, with Angel fee onal comtente, La dt the soutl i id : : Mary's haltback. is playing tor the Pittsburgh Pirates ight tsilacry New é&