The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 21, 1933, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1988 ‘ LOOPS ENTER 46TH ARMY-NAVY AND YALE- YEAR WITH ROSIEST OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern BUSTER WAS | TELLING ME ABOUT H A NEW KIND OF CALENDAR YOURE WORKING ON -¢ WHAT \S IT, ONE WITH SIX SUNDAYS, AN’ NO MONDAYS FUTURE IN HISTORY Professional Leagues Are Built on System Similar to Baseball’s GOOD PLAYERS WELL PAID 3 ce Game First Introduced on} Big Scale in United States in 1924 BY JIMMY DONAHUE New York, Nov. 21—When the game of ice hockey was developed from field hockey and introduced in Canada in 1879, originators of the game had no vision of the popular- ity of the game would gain in years to follow. Since then hockey has! developed into a commercialized busi- ness ranking with professional foot- ball as the best paying of the sports. Organized hockey goes into its 46th year with the rosiest prospects in his- NO SESTING, NOW 9 I HAVENT PERFECTED THE CALENDAR NET, BUT IT 1S OF THE TYPE THAT LT HAVE IN MY HAND~EXCEPT THAT YOL) DON'T TEAR OFF THE DATE EACH DAY——WITH MY CALENDAR , THE DATE SHEET, AFTER BEING EXPOSED To THE AIR AND LIGHT FOR 24 HOURS, SHRIVELS UP AND FALLS OFF? National Teams goes To Play Tonight | \\ FAMILY = New York, Nov. 21.—(P)—Every ES : club in the National Hockey || Ph Ar Ae League except the New York 21959 BY NEM SERVICE, mE: unze Americans will swing into action | LooK aT Mo , HOGGIN TH SPOTLIGHT, AS TH INVENTOR OF OUR FAMILY J TM WORKIN ON A NEW KIND OF GLASS, KID 7-—- RUBBER GLASS THAT STRETCHES Jum. THINK OF THROWIN® A ROCK AT A WINDOW) OF MY RUBBER GLASS} — AN’ TH’ ROCK BOUNCES BACK ¢ ; Tuesday night as a four-game | Schedule threatens to bring about | ; ® big shakeup in the standings. The Toronto-Rangers duel at | New York involves the clubs most || { experts picked to finish at the top | jot the Canadian and American | section standings, respectively. { The Leafs have won three games ; in a row. The Rangers are tied || | with Boston at the bottom of the |, | American section standings with |; One victory in four starts. The other games Tuesday night ; send the Detroit Red Wings, | { holders of the second rung in the | American group, against the Sen- | ; ators at Ottawa; the Chicago | { Blackhawks, American division | leaders, against Boston at the Hub, | and the Canadiens against the Maroons in an all-Montreal con- test. Los Angeles, Nov. 21.—(#)—For the particular interest of Notre Dame followers who remember his returns of punts which paved the way for the Ramblers’ defeat by Southern California last year, Irvine Warburton, cotton-topped welterweight of the gridiron, is still on the loose. Only this season, “the scooter,” as his opponents have dubbed him, has done a lot of other things besides stage wild runs—if that isn’t enough. This mighty mite has diffi- culty tipping the beam at 147 pounds and can’t for the life of tory. These possibilities were fore-| cast in last year's Stanley Cup play- off, won by the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League. when! fans flocked through the turnstiles despite an alleged paucity of coin of! the realm. ‘This season efforts have been made} him stretch his height to five- feet-seven. Against Washington State he broke up a tight ball game with dashes of 75 and 80 yards to touchdowns. It was his run on a fake lateral which put the ball on the 5-yard line for Troy's first touchdown against St. Mary's. In the Oregon State game he sponsored the attack which took the ball over to the Beaver 15- yard line in the second period. | Coach Jones took him out to put | more power and beef into the backfield and the drive ended there. ! | | \ | | | i to strengthen the weak outfits in| an attempt to bring about a closer race and a stirring finish. This pro-| cedure is similar to that done in base-| hall the past few years. especially in) the American League, where attempts! New York, Nov. 21. — (4) — The ‘were made to bring other teams on/ Portsmouth Spartans led the rest of @ par with the Yanks and Athletics. {the National Professional Football This action was made necessary by, League both on offense and defense, the formidable lineup of the cham-|the latest team statistics revealed pion Rangers. This outfit boasts a} Tuesday. forward wall in Boucher and the} The Spartans have gained 2,160 Cook brothers that is the best in the! yards in nine games for an average business. The other boys, Ching, of 240 yards per contest, for a narrow In Offense, Defense Johnson, Earl Seibert, Jean Puise,| lead over the Boston Redskins, whose - + + Dillon, Aitkenhead and Art Somers average of 238'z has been gained with fit in nicely with that frontal attack. | 2.380 yards in 10 games. In addition to the switch of sev-} On the defense, the Spartans have eral players, a few new rules haye/allowed the opposition an average of teen added to speed up this game,'156 49 yards per game against 157 which already has the players swish-| 1/10 for the Green Bay Packers. ing along at a speed of more than! a mile a minute. Officiating has been changed so that the two referees have equal! power and each will have charge of half the rink. Defensive areas have | trade in Canada, having batted a been more closely defined, and are; puck around since they were old marked by dots on the ice in frontjenough to wield a club. ef each goal. No attacking player! Among these are Howie Morenz, can enter the area ahead of the man!Lionel Conacher, Bil' Shores, the with the puck. {Cook brothers. Les Patrick, now Another new rule forbids an at-|manager of the champion Rangers, tacking player approaching closer;Ching Johnson. Aurel Joliat, and a than 57 inches of the goal mouth | buneh of othe! unless he is carrying the puck. These oldsters are as colorful as the Hockey has progressed rapidly | college boys who are breaking into the fince its introduction in the United |game—and many of them are draw- States a decade ago. In 1929 more jing down that $7500. which is tops in than 2,000,000 people paid to see pro salary in the National Hockey League hockey games in the United States | now. Players earning their daily bread skating over the ice in chase of a rubber puck are boys—many of them Spartans Lead Loop a jare old lads, too—who learned their . + n a i Around the Big Te: | | > (By The Associated Press) The last time Chicago met Dart-| mouth, back in 1925, Swede Ober- lander ruined the Maroons with for- ward passes . . . Fritz Febel, Pur- |due, guard, has scored a touchdown lin each of his last two games . . . | Towa is boosting Zud Schammel, Joe Laws and Dick Crayne for all-confer- Jence, and even all-America honors Clark Shaughnessy of Chicago thinks Chuck Bernard and Whitey Wistert of Michigan are the best linemen in the Big Ten ._ five of Illinois’ regular linemen played end in prep school . after los- ing to Xavier, Indiana gets plenty of work this week + Wisconsin's freshmen have outplayed the varsity ‘most of the season . . ern loses 12 lettermen by graduation fifteen players have scored for Ohio State this year. PITTS PLENTY GOOD Dr, Eddie O'Brien, noted eastern football officials, asserts that Alabama Pitts, Sing Sing football star, could ‘make any college team in the coun- tury. TITLE GO FOR DUNDEE The Boston Garden is negotiating tor a middleweight title bout between the champion, Vince Dundee, and Andy Callahan, New England cham- | pion, to be held Dec. 8. . Northwest | Brundage Consents to Head A. A. U. Through Sixth Consecutive Season| Notre Dame Interested to Know Cotton Warburton Still on Loose: ' ariiiaceatinta, | will Help Solve Question About { Jews Participating in i Olympiad Pittsburgh, Nov. 21. — (#) — The | Amateur Athletic Union, facing what |may prove to be the most critical year of its history, Tuesday called on Avery Brundage of Chicago to remain as , President for another term. He ac- cepted. Brundage had planned to retire af- 'ter holding the post since 1928, but (the action of the convention in voting {to withhold its team from the 1936 j Olympiad at Berlin unless Germany iremoves its restrictions on Jewish | athletes raised a contentious interna- tonal quesion which he felt he should ‘aid in solving. It will be his sixth successive year as head of the A. A. U. the longest | tenure of office in the 45-year history ‘of the organization. His nomination by caucus was un- ;animous and he was to be elected ;formally as the last business of the convention late Tuesday. Final action on retention or rejec- tion of the metric system for running | events in the union's national track | and field championships also came; up Tuesday. st It is believed the system, adopted ' jby the convention last year, will be iretained. The track and field com- snittee unanimously recommended such action to the convention and the first test vote on the questions in the gen- eral committee showed an overwhelm- ; ine favorable sentiment, eee - ar era '| Declares Big Ten ‘| Tough Defensively i | Beste Chicago, Nov. 21.—()—Coach | Clark Shaughnessy, who finishes his first western conference sea- son Saturday when the Maroons meet Dartmouth, says that de- | fensively, at least, the Big Ten | is the toughest league in the country. | A statistician revealed that | Chicago has gained 1,060 yards from scrimmage against five op- | ponents—and scored only one ; touchdown. ; 1 If reports from the camps are other than bear stories, most of Saturday's games will be played by cripples. Only Ghicago and Tilinois failed to come up with harrowing tales of injured stars. 1 and Canada. Last year it is esti-} mated more than twice that number | vald their dough to see the boys Be. OUT OUR WAY * * * ‘The late Tex Rickard, on witnessing | ‘his first pro hockey game, expressed | the real reason why the game is suc- | | eding. | “That's some game.” Tex remarked. | “You get plenty of action for your | money all the time. That's what) pay for—action. Wouldn't; surprise me to see that game get a) big play in the United States.” | Rickard’s prediction has come true. Fockey was strictly a Canadian’ sport among professionals until 1924- 25, when Charlie Adams bought a Canadian franchise for Boston. Since then American teams have sprung up| over night until the National League troit. In addition to this leaque, there is the Canadian-American League. with ae gg eay taal By Williams | REMEMBER IF THER WAS ANY- BODY IN' TH CAR WITH ME, ER NOT. ST RWiL Liam, By LEY HARVARD | DYED-IN-WOOL FANS WILL BE UNABLE 10 | SRE BOTH CONTESTS j 1 i | Schedule-Makers Deprived En- thusiasts of Traditional Opportunity BOTH SCHEDULED SATURDAY Cadets and Elis Favorites in Games At Philadelphia and Cambridge ! New York, Nov. 21—()—Your real | ayed-in-the-wool Eastern football fan annually sees to it that he is sitting in the stands when Army plays Navy the scheduie-makers have crossed him up this time. They'll be playing both {games this Saturday, the one at Philadelphia, the other at Cambridge, seaving Mr. John H. Fan in a dilemma of considerable magnitude. The renewal of these two bitter clvalaries, among the oldest and most spectacular of the sport, overshadow all other games on the Eastern pro- gram. The service duel at Franklin Field, | Philadelphia, brings Army and Navy together in a regularly-scheduled en- counter for the first time since 1927 and their famous break over Ca ity rulgs. After a lapse of two years, | ithe schools buried the hatchet to the extent of playing charity games in 1930-31-32, paving the way for the announcement in August last year shan an agreement had been reached and that Army and Navy would re-| sume athletic relations in all sports. Navy hasn't been able to beat the Cadets since 1921 and will be the un- derdog again this week. Yale and Harvard, meanwhile, have | settled down to steady work for their 52nd footbail duel. The advantage in vhysical condition probably will rest with Yale for the Elis were idle last week while Harvard was engaging in a close battle with Brown before hang- ing up its first major victory of the campaign, FOLLOW “BALL | IN FAVORITE PLAYS OF FAMOUS COACHES é play is my favorite. It is and one of the strongest.” says Gus Dorais, Detroit uni- re i uE iL ine g E E a z f 8 & g secondary. The’ left halfback’ is to block the opposing e allowed to cuts out of 1 opposing righ! center moves over to oe os jol is é ZE Mr KE “Ef EF z 5 Fs “Power is there,” Dorais says, “ cause we can throw the halfback, RE and Harvard collides with Yale but) Hockey, Affording Plenty of Action, Gaining Popularity Rapidly ‘pune yet ARM GAMES CROSS UP FANS | HEY, GIMME A BOOST, GANG? i Vie Curtin, big Oregon State center, rose to new heights to block this boot, in which he was aided by other iron men of Lon Stiner’s eleven. It is one of the year's most sensational football pictures. Minnesota-Wisconsin Contest Will Be Toss-up, 42-Game History Shows Upsets Have Been Rule; Goph- ers Have 22-15 Margin | in Victories i Minneapolis, Nov. 21—If history runs true to form and repeats itself, the Minnesota-Wisconsin football game at Memorial Stadium Nov. 25, will be the hardest struggle either team has had all season. A glance into the past will show that there is no favorite when these two teams meet because the underdog has come through repeatedly to upset the favorite. Last year Minnesota was the favored one and Wisconsin won. In 1931 Wisconsin was favored and Minnesota was the winner. The Gophers won by a single point, 13-12, in 1929 and the year before that, Min- nesota ruined Wisconsin’s conference title hopes in the final game of the ‘season when Bronko Nagurski ripped The two teams have played 42 games! push behind it | | | (By the Associated Press) Beaumont, Tex.—Manuel Quin- tero, 140, Tampa, Fla., outpointed Tommy White, 145, Texas City, (10); Walter Ketchell, Pitts- burgh, stopped Romeo Leman, 155, California, (6). Chicago—Jackie Sharkey, 128%, Minneapoiis, outpointed Harry Booker, 130, Chicago, (8); Johnny Long, 172, Hammond, Ind.,’ out- Pointed George Williams, 164, Chicago, (5); George Nichols, 165, Buffalo, N. outpointed Larry Johnson, 180, Chicago, (10); Henry Rothier, 148, Davenport, outpoint- ed Pee Wee Jarrel, 146, Fort Wayne, Ind, (6); Tommy Habel, 152, Chicago, outpointed Bobby Bedford, 143, Alliance, O., (4). Fort Worth, Tex.—Tommy Free- man, 160, Hot Springs, Ark., out- pointed Duke Trammel, 157, Fort Worth, (10). Holyoke, Mass.—Frankie Carle- Bryan of Tulane ton, 141, Jersey City, outpointed By JIMMY DONAHUE cn ee NEA Service Sports Writer ‘Winston, 191%, Hartford, out- Up to that Georgia Tech game, Tu- lane’s Green Wave didn’t have much +. . but in that to date, Minnesota winning 22 and/came Coach Ted Cox uncovered little ‘Wisconsin 15. Five were tied. The Bucky Bryan, and that fellow, with a Gophers have scored a total of 569/sprint of 101 yards, the longest run me ge to time. is the reason why E E s & Minnesota and ‘When g it’s the previous has been. and Dr. rival coaches, are of gute B a gE fense is the best : do i] h_ shoot for touchdowns Spears is noted as lines and the g é é ] i & i | PRL. BER SE! E oF i [ i & g Hs g ut | | S e ! B : gz g HE i a ER i i E F d ils ce geetke 228,04 ml i : i i | | j ie i: | tl i Hy i i a ! | f 22 same and Hon Zork, Mov, 31 anetes |PaP, for the Cadets. young man has come to take the I. .C. 4-A cross-country| The number of money savers in title out beyond the Alleghanies for | Russia during five-year plan in- the second time in the 34-year history | creased from 3% to 29 millions, while of the six-mile chase. Mak Sepeie ieee tee 318 he blond from Ardmire, Pa., out-| * : stepped @ field of 118 in the classic) NOTICE—School and coun- Monday suid paved the way or his|ty warrants be taken at all_even, | tind 371 for their opponents dur-|o¢ the year, put some life in the New orien squad . Green Wave fans are looking for Bucky to fill the Paying no attention | stioes of Bill Banker and Don Zim- merman o which is a gigantic . » . but with a run of that thrown in now and then, the kid will more than fill those empty | 8e8-| rector of the National Hockey in Badgers willl tas announced a fine of $100 for any |dise in our store. Alex Rosen when | viayer riding an official. & Bro. . Mike Donahue, coach Dixie, thinks Bryan is the great- back to hit the south in years . A triple-threater, young Bry- in strong at-| an‘ will get a lot of votes this year. COSTLY BACK TALK Frank Patrick, new managing di- League, brogans . . ©.Jof the Auburn Tigers when they rul- | ed thought | est, | pointed Dick Madden, 185, Bos- ton, (12). St. Louis—Cecil Payne, 136, Louisville, outpointed Allen Whit- low, 134, Peoria, Il, (10); Joe Red, 149, St. Louis, outpointed Clem Reed, 151, Indianapolis. (8); Tony Viviana, 121, St. Louis, outpointed Henry Hook, 120, El- wood, Ind. (8). Salt Lake City—LeRoy Gibson, 129, Terre Haute, Ind., and Adriar Elton, 128, Gantaquin, Utah, drew. (6); Babe Colima, 145, Roch Fork, (6); Ray Kizer, 137, Tooele, Utah. and Dick Costello, 136, Wheaton, Til, drew, (4). NOTICE—School and coun. ty warrants will be taken at par in trade for any merchan- Fourth and Thayer Christmas Cards ‘Perhaps you haven’t even thought of Christmas cards yet, but you are going to order some between now and Christmas, so why not have it over with? Our stock is all clean and fresh, beautiful new designs. Now is the time to get this much of your Christmas shopping out of the way before the holiday rush. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE JOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT PHONE 32 Quality Printers Since 1873 Bismarck, North Dakota a wv

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