The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 29, 1935, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1935 Bout to Headline First Legion Card . Boilermakers Primed to Stop Vaunted Gophers; 1934 Champions Favored Demaray-Jaramillo 98 - ROUND PROGRAM ARRANGED FOR NEXT} MONDAY NIGHT HERE Ernie Hetherington Will Meet Joe Betto of Deadwood in Semi-Windup AMATEUR BOUTS SLATED i i Gramling-Munyer and Purtell- Deatherage Mixes Booked for Preliminaries Dick Demaray, Bismarck’s south- paw welterweight and claimant of the Northwest crown, will battle “Jolting Joe” Jaramillo of Denver next Mon- day night in the eight-round head- line bout on the first American Le- gion card. Twenty-eight rounds of boxing have heen lined up by Fred Thimmesch, matchmaker for the Lloyd Spetz posi of the American Legion, which has taken over the promotion of boxing in_the Capital City this year. In addition to Demaray, Ernic! ‘Hetherington, Rusty Gramling and! LeRoy Purtell from Isham Hall's lo- cal fight stable will appear on thej! card, which will be staged at the ‘World War Memorial building. Hetherington, who came here from Winnipeg last spring, will meet Joe Betto of Deadwood, 8S. D., in a six- round semi-windup. Gramling will trade punches with Eddie Munyer of Rugby and Purtell will tangle with ‘Young Deatherage of Fort Lincoln in two four round preliminaries. Plan Amateur Bouts ‘Two three-round amateur bouts will round out the card. Participants in the amateur bouts have not yet been chosen. Jaramillo was one of the three fighters who cefeated Demaray last year. The Denver dynamiter won a technical knockout over the Capital City puncher at Deadwood but later in the year, Sir Richard came back to punch a clear decision over his chief rival for the Northwest title. Since then Jaramillo has defeated Kid Rippatoe of Fargo, Charlie “Black Panther” Tate of Portland, Glenn Flanagan of Butte, Hershey Wilson of Denver and fought Young Schmel- ing to a draw. The only decision he Jost during recent months has been to Christie Lewis of Phoenix, Ariz. Demaray has always been a favor- ite with the local fight crowd. His hard-punching and willingness to mix has made him one of the best drawing cards in this section but hej will be extended to the limit to beat Jaramillo, who, employs the same tactics. f \ Wins by Knockouts Dick if recent, out-of-town appear- ances has'knocked out Speedy Mou!- dens of Great Falls, Battling Munn of Huron and several other foes. Last year here after blasting Eddie Kline of Winnipeg, Stan Christie of St. Paul and Hetherington out of the fight picture, he exploded his left in the face of Sherrald Kennard of Fargo; and won the Northwest championship in @ knockout victory. Demaray will weigh in at about | 145 pounds and Jaramillo is expected to tip the scales at 147. Hetherington will meet the tough- est foe since he fought Jack Gibbons at Grand Forks a year ago when he steps into the squared circle against Betto. Befto some time ago fought eight rounds with Mickey Walker and| lost @ decision by a shade. Recently | he whipped Al Webster of Billings and Jack Perry of Cheyenne, Wyo. Hetherington has been coming along | fast under the tutelage of Hall and) gives every indication of becoming as| colorful and as popular as Demaray in local fight circles. I Fights Last Night jt (By the Associated Press) * New York — Eddie Zivic, 134, Pittsburgh, and Honey Melody, 134, Boston, drew, (8). Chicago — Billy Celebron, 147, Rockford, Ill., stopped Laddie To- nielli, 146, Marseilles, Ill., (1). Pittsburgh — Anson Green, 169, Pittsburgh, stopped Mike Baz- zone, 163, Pittsburgh, (7). Paris — Marcel Thil, France, outpointed Al Diamond, Paterson, Nu J. (10). On the Oshima islands, near To- ikio, women carry their children in bs on their heads. A species of cane grown in Mar- eilles, France, is the source of saxo- SUMMONS TATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- F TY OF BURLEIGH. IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH UDICIAL DISTRICT. The Federal Land Bank of Saint ul, a body corporate, : Plaintiff, vs, George Harding, Marsh Wilton, he First National Bank, Bis- marck, North. Dakota, a Banking oration, and The Sterling ational Farm Loan Association, corporation, Defendants. 4 action, ‘Office of the Clerk of the District jurt: in and for the County of Bur- h, State of North Dakota, and to '@ 2 copy of your answer upon the criber within thirty days after service of this Summons upon exclusive of the day of service, in case of your failure to appear answer, judgment will be taken inet default for the relief of a mortgage the County of Burt and North Dakota, more” parti- follows, to-wit: ne Northwest Quarter (NW%) Principals in First Legion Card Gamble -Robinson, Klein’s Bowlers Win in City Loop Woolworth Five Drops Three Straight; 0. H. Will Loses Two Out of Three | Klein's bowlers swept the boards in a three-game match with the Woolworth team and the Gamble- Robinson crew, aided by a good hand- jicap, took two out of three games from the O. H. Will five in City | League matches rolled Monday night.! | Frank Hummel won individual hon- lors for the evening rolling 204 in his first game for the Nursery and then ‘adding 187-173 for @ high three-game ! jtotal of 564. Wilhelm, rolling the last ‘two games after a dummy 140, chalked ‘up a 472 total to pace the Gamble- !Robinson victors. | For Klein’s, it was Fox and Frolund Dick Demaray (right) and Ernie “Jolting Joe” Jaramillo of Denver two outstanding fighters, will appear in the first local card sponsor- I! ed by the American Legion here next Monday. ton will engage Joe Beito of Deadwood in the semi-windup. { Hetherington (eft), Isham Hali's Demaray will meet, H in the main event and Hethering- i Navin Field Gets $500,000 Repairs i Reconstruction of Tiger Park; Is Begun; Club Broke Even | on World Series | Detroit, Oc (®)\—Those poor ‘Ole Detroit Tigers threw $500,000 Tuesday at the wolf that started hanging around during the world series. i Mr. Wolf didn’t have a chance toj prowl around the Tiger den during the regular season. Attendance which | surged past the million mark made} the turnstiles click so fast and the} money bags jingle so merrily that the noise kept him away. came that world series, and the wolf, sniffing the thousands of dollars in| expense of which only the boss Ti- gers knew, came padding around the Bengal bailiwick. But when he poked his. nose inside the door at Navin Field Tuesd>y, he took it on the lam, routed by a crash of concrete as workmen began wreck- ing eperations which started expendi- | ture by the Detroit club of a cool half million dollars to pep up business hereabouts next year, Charles J. Navin, club secretary, | said Tu lay that the Detroit club; didn’t even break even on the 1935) fall classic. “The expenses in getting ready for‘ a world series are terrific, consider-! ing the fact the players take the big| share of the first four games,” Navin pointed out. “It cost the Detroit Baseball company more than $55,000 just to get the park ready by improv- ing the field, moving the scoreboard and building the temporary bleachers | to seat about 20,000.” Navin pointed out that extra ticket | sellers, ushers and other attendants | had to be employ: while about 40 young women worked for weeks tak- | ing ticket applications, Extra ground} men were hired, and when the se- | ries began, the club entertained mem- | bers of the working press at a Detroi hotel. Ticket printing also was heavy expense. Navin said the past season was one ; of the best the Detroit club ever has enjoyed and the enlargement of the| park is an effort to accommodate the | fans who loyally have supported the club, Brigham Young university's foot: ball team at Provo, Utah, has pro: quced the unusual this season by starting an all-sophomore backfield in most of its games. Lou Gehrig of the Yankees made} three homers last season off School- | | Minnesota Backfield | }Clarence (Tuffy) Thompson, sopho- | positions, and Sheldon Beise, a slash- But then jj lliner pointed out during Monday’s ; j halfback, a brand new hero. jers did pretty | Clarence W. Spears. Gets Down to Cases, Minneapolis, Oct. 29.—(?)--Minne- | sota’s “elastic backficld” featuring | more left half, George Roscoe, who plays either side of the backfield. Vernal LeVoir, a top-notcher at three ing fullback, got down to cases Tues- day for Purdue. The team that had its followers mys- tified from day to day last week as Bernie Bierman tried out various de- vices, including that of making a ‘half- j back out of a guard, apparently has steadied down. Bierman was expected to do a lit- tle more concentrating for Purdue than he was able to do for the Wild- cats, although he indicated that the experimental work is not completed Wilkinson, although he probab- | ly will continue to see service at! guard, also will be given a turn in| the backfield just in case of further | emergency, and with an cye to the | future. i Despite the fact that the Gophers; pulled the Northwestern game out of ! the fire with a crackling line assault | plus some big-league running. by! Sophomore Thompson, the emergency | period is fax, from over. | Any further injury or loss will simp- | ly cause more juggling, which will keep | the Gophers from hitting their real | stride. The true measure of the; present Minnesota team, as one sid practice period at Northrop Field, is| the fact that they have been able to accomplish what they have with a team that haven't yet started a major game with the lineup coaches select- ed in September, With Purdue coming up Saturday } and an undefeated group of revenge- ful Hawkeyes lurking just over the; horizon, Gopher followers are hoping | for a turn in Minnesota's luck. NAMES MEAN LITTLE TO GOLDEN GOPHERS Minneapolis, Oct. 29.—()—What names might suggest, cuts no ice with Minnesota's Gophers. Back street lads view a “Clarence” with scorn, but Tuesday football fans ere saw in Clarence—whose nick- name is “Tuffy"—Thompson, rookie Over a period of years, however, Minnesota has produced gridders who, like Thompson, twice a touchdown] runner against Northwestern, made; names of that sort count for a lot. Of recent note there were Clarence Munn, all-American guard; Francis und, all-American halfback, and Herbert Joesting, all-American full- back. Then, too, it’s recollected the Goph- well under a coach For best engine results, spark plugs boy Rowe. should be replaced every 10,000 miles. |M. Hummel |thousand, a big baseball tournout in hat came through with the high Fox rolled 156-206-169 for a 1531 total and Frolund toppling the} maples for counts of 171-185-144—500. | Fox's second game was the evening’s high single game score. Fritz had counts of 133-177-133—443 to lead the Woolworth five. The scores: Gamble-Robinson e 147-184-106— 437 112-141-115— 368 153-142-139— 434 117-143-112— 372 140-184-148— 472 200-190-190— 580 Dettman Sedevic Erickson . Amery .. Dummy . Wilhelm .. .. 869-984-810—2663 H. Will & Co. 204-187-173— 564 157-169-163— 489 150-148-212— 510 153-) 1 159-193-187— Totals .. F, Hummel — 48 L. Schneider .. 539 eae. +.» 823-844-916—2583 | Woelworth 138-108-132— 373 140-140-140— 420 135-171-126— 432 129-135-104— 363! 133-177-133— 443 - 1 1 2 682-736-642—2052 Klein's 171-185-144— 500 156-208-169— 531 111-121-133— 365 ++ 140-140-140— 420 137-130-207— 474 Cawelti Dummy Olson Goehner Fritz ... Handicap Norbury Dummy Warnish .. + 715-782-793—2290 TT YOURE it TELLING ME: Wally Fromhart was employed as @ guard at a West Virginia prison camp last summer... . Accounting, no doubt, for the fact that he is a splen- cid safety man for Notre Dame... . In nominating El Sayre for All- America honors, Bob Zuppke says that most centers are fatties between good guards. . . Pepper Martin and his midget automobile racer is the the terror of St. Louis traffic cops. + . Charley Massera, Pittsburgh’s eavyweight, is doing parts in pic- tures. . . . Southern Methodist has three gridiron captains. . . . Eight England, took in a game between London and Liverpool clubs. Moral Victories Get Irksome to Wildcats Evanston, Ill, Oct. 29—(@)—These “moral victories” are becoming tire- some to Northwestern's football team, as Illinois may learn Saturday. Northwestern lost to Purdue, Ohio State and Minnesota but the Wild- cats did so much better than ex- pected in each defeat, as to qualify for “moral victories. Wally Cruice, halfback and co-cap-, tain, expressed it for the squad yes- terda: “We've had enough of these ‘great| showings in defeat.’ Now let’s go out and win a few—starting Saturday.” A blimp is the only lighter-than-air craft now stationed at the Sunnyvale, Calif., dirigible hangar. OUR BOARDING HO EGAD ,MPET, FIGHT UNDER nT 0), Townsh: ernie? ad ear ix ‘eat, E One Hundred Sixty ore or leas, accord- ernment survey his 14th day of Octobe: ee 4 Da : x. 2. 1. ‘North HERE !-- SURELY, YOU RECALL ROSCOE THE BOXER, WHO WAS WITH US SOME YEARS AGO! "REMEMBER “e-HE USED TO OF "BAD NEWS BURKE’——~ © I CHANCED UPON ROSCOE » ENTERING A LUNCH WAGON -~ —LEGAD-~WOULDNT THINK OF LETTING A FORMER PATRON OF HOOPLE MANOR -=*” DINE AMID STRANGERS, F-6 EH? USE LOOK WHOS Y THE DROLL TITLE y, ad 6 ( OF NS HOWDY ,MRS,.HOOPLE ! 4 TH DOC, HERE, PUT TH’ Y{ PRESSURE ON ME TO COME OVER AN’ SNATCH A BISCUIT WITH You FOLKS !-.HONEST, AT FIRST SLANT, I THOUGHT YOU WAS TH MASORS By Ahern GZ DAUGHTER | HELLO (ROSCOE! 4. WELL THERES A POT BEANS AND HAM SHANK IN THE KITCHEN ~ THE TWO OF YOU CAN WOLF THAT! ‘<n il wal c s1 OOO PURDUE OVERLOOKS (Temple’s Forward CARNEGE CONTEST HS FIRST DEFEAT Buckeyes, Ramblers Waste No Time Getting Ready for Hard Struggle Chicago, Oct. 29—(P)—A victory for Purdue over Minnesota’s power- house Saturday would be considered an upset in most places, but not to the Boilermakers themsleves. This is the battle for which the boys from the banks of the Wabash have been winding up all season.. In fact they had their hands on the Go- phers all last week to a point where they almost forgot all about Carnegie Tech. The oversight cost the Boiler- makers an undefeated and unscored on record. Mal Elward, Purdue’s cunning line coach, said the Boilermaker board of strategy “couldn’t get the squad to concentrate on Carnegie, All they were interested in was Minnesota.” The remark was not in the nature of an alibi, for Elward made it before the Northwestern - Minnesota game which he attended as a scout, Regardless of how high Purdue hopes are for the struggle, the 1934 champions will be favored. With Clarence “Tuffy” Thompson, sopho- more halfback, having demonstrated prowess as a “climax runner,” some- thing the Gophers appeared to lack when Julie Alfonse became ineligible, Minnesota appears to have too much all around strength. Purdue, how- ever, expects its speed and passing to match the Minnesota power. Purdue Scrimmages While Minnesota’s squad drew a Monday holiday, Purdue got down to business with a long scrimmage in the rain. Coach Noble Kizer gave particular attention to his line, which will be on the receiving end of the Gopher running attack. The parties to the big game of the day, Ohio State and Notre Dame, wasted no time in getting in hard licks, both drilled on pass defense, and the Buckeyes unfurled some plays which have not been used in their previous four games, Illinois ran through new plays in starting preparations for Northwest- ern, but the Wildcats were given the afternoon off after looking at movies of their battle against Minnesota. Indiana and Iowa, which tangle in the other conference game, also were excused from heavy duty, as were Wisconsin and Chicago which have open dates Saturday. Irked because his Wolverinés dis- play a collective tired feeling on Sat- urdays, Coach Harry Kipke ran the Michigan regulars through wind sprints and a long signal drill in an effort to make “60 minute” players out of them, Sports Round-Up (By the Associated Press) New York—Scoop: Temple prob- ably will not resume athletic relations with West Virginia... . Temple won't confirm this, but’ Pop Warner is burned up because the West Virginia stands cheered when the injured Dave Smukler was carried off the field last Saturday. .. . Smart foot- ball men say that while Larry Kelley is the most spectacular, Yale's real end candidate-for All-America honors is “Choo Choo” Train. . . Fritz Crisler thinks all the “slow whistle” has done for football is,to increase the fumbles. 1 Mr. Edward J. Neil, your fa- vorite fight correspondent, Sails tonight to become a war corre- spondent at Cairo... The Boston Braves will be rebuilt with Wally Berger as spearhead. . Only three or four of the present roster are certain to be retained. . . . The ancient Rabbit Maranville is due for the gate unless he wants to stay on as coach... . Look for some wild and wooly baseball trading during the off-season, Bill Terry has rented a yacht to entertain the correspondents while the Giants train at Pensacola= next spring. . . . Alabama Pitts collected $1,500 for 27 minutes of play with the Philadelphia Pro Eagles this year, ++. Why did the Detroit Lions let Father Lumkin go? ... Was it be- cause Coach Potsy Clark has a preju- dice against wrestlers? Rey Welton is the only man who ever sprinted all the way in & marathon. . . In the 1908 Olym- pic games he ran the entire 26 miles on his toes, . . and finished eighth. . . Dan Melinkovich of Tooele, Utah, brother of George, former Notre Dame star, is burn- ing up the woods with the Gon- zaga freshmen this season. — Bill Keefe reports that Biff Jones is so popular in the southwest that Arkansas fans divide their time be- tween rioting for their own Razor- backs and Biff’s Oklahoma team. ... For the first time in years the Cin- cinnat! club wrote off the season in black ink. ... Was night baseball re- sponsible? . IN FINAL PERIOD... rw Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc. “FOOTBALL GAMES THIS WEEK | FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 Central Grinnell (0) vs. Drake (8) ......... Mississippi vs. St. Louis ...... Centenary (17) vs. Loyola (6) SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 Mississippi State vs. Army . Dartmouth (2) vs. Yale (7) . Boston College (7) vs, Providence (13) Carnegie Tech (3) vs. Duquesne (0) .. Columbia (14) vs. Cornell (0) Pittsburgh vs. Fordham .... Rice vs. George Washington . Brown (0) vs. Harvard (13) .. Holy Cross (22) vs. St. Anselm (0) . Lafayette (6) vs. Rutgers (27) ...... os Manhattan (21) vs. City College of N. Y. (0) . Boston University (13) vs. New Hampshire (12) ..... Bucknell vs. New York University Navy vs. Princeton .......... Penn State (0) vs. Syracuse (16) . Michigan State vs. Temple .... Baltimore vs. Western Maryland West Virginia vs. Washington & Notre Dame vs, Ohio State . Purdue vs. Minnesota ........ Pennsylvania vs. Michigan ... Mlinois (14) vs. Northwestern. ( Indiana (0) vs. Iowa (0) .... Nebraska (13) vs. Missouri (6) . Creighton vs. Washington University Towa State vs. Marquette .... N. D. U. vs. Morningside ... South Alabama (34) vs. Kentucky (14) ........sssseseee Alabama Poly (6) vs. Louisiana State (20) .. Florida (0) vs, Georgia (14) ........... Georgia Teck (12) vs. Vanderbilt (27) . Tennessee (14) vs. Duke (6) .. Colgate (20) vs, Tulane (6) .... Maryland (20) vs. Virginia (0) . North Carolina (7) vs. North Caro! South Carolina (20) vs. Virginia Poly (0) V. M, I. ‘13) vs. William & Mary (6) ........ Washington & Lee (0) vs. West Virginia (12) ‘Texas-A, & M. (7) vs. Arkansas (7) .......... California (3) vs. U. C. L. A. 0) . Santa Clara (7) vs. Stanford (7). Montana vs. Washington ............. Gonzaga (13) vs. Washington State (6) ... Pacific University vs. Oregon ....... California Aggies (0) vs. Nevada (0) . Oregon State (39) vs. Portland (12) Southwest Kansas (7) vs. Oklahoma (7) ...... Oklahoma A. & M, vs. Texas Tech Kansas State (0) vs. Tulsa (21) . Oklahoma City (6) vs. Arizona (26) Texas Christian (34) vs. Baylor (12) Texas (7) vs. Southern Methodist (7) . Rocky Mountain Colorado State (21) vs. Utah State (21) . Wyoming (26) vs. Montana (6) .. Utah (43) vs. Brigham Young (0) Colorado College (0) vs. Colorado (31) . a (N—Denotes Night Game) Des Moines (N) +». St. Louis (N) New Orleans (N) | -Lateral Beat - Vanderbilt { By -ART KRENZ H (NEA Service Sports Artist) | After being held scoreless for three periods, and being placed on the short end by a field goal in the second quarter, Temple executed the above forward-lateral midway in the fourth period to repel Vanderbilt in Phila-- delphia, 6-3. Kusko, substituting for the vaunted ;Dave Smukler at fullback, tossed forward pass to Walker, left end, just short of midfieid. r When Oliver and Dixon of the Commodores, who had been decoyed . West Point:@way from the spot where pass was New Haven +». Boston + PittSburgh .»» Ithaca . New York! ‘Washington | » Cambridge | .» Princeton | +s... Syracuse . Philadelphia | + Westminster ; . Charleston | H +++. Columbus | . Minneapolis Ann Arbor Evanston Iowa City + Columbia + St, Louis | . Milwaukee | + Sioux City:| »»» Birmingham . Baton Rouge Charlottesville | .. Raleigh ....Blacksburg + Williamsburg + Charleston +» Fayetteville .. Los Angeles | +ese+. Norman + Lubbock (N) Jacksonville } caught, saw where the pass was go- ing, they converged on Walker, who. lateralled to Jim Hall, reserve quar- ‘terback, as he was being tackled, Hall sprinted 37 yards to a touch- down. The Owls of Pop Warner, the old. master, executed the play with the skill and precision of great Warner. coached teams of the past.- ‘Tie Games of ’34 Will Be Replayed. Saturday's Slate Brings To« gether 21 Teams That . Deadlocked Last Year New York, Oct. 29.—()—Although they represent only a small part of Saturday's college football program, 21 games will be played by teams which tied each other a year ago. What makes them important, howe ever, is the fact that three of the combatants will go into the games undefeated and untied. In two cases they will be blue-ribbon sectional games, The outstanding contest’ will feae jture Carl Snavely’s North Caroling | Tarheels against Hunk Anderson’s North Carolina State Wolf Pack. Last fall the Carolina rivals played a 7-7 | Texas and Southern Methodist, who | stopped scoring last year after getting 7 points each, rival the Baylor-Texas Christian. game for southwest inter- est. The S, M. U. Mustangs have hung up six in a row, numbering Rice and Tulsa among their victories, and rule strong favorites to take Texas. Still another game in this category is the engagement between Okla- homa and Kansas State—rivals in the |Big Six. The one gauge here is Neo isa | braska, Kansas State held the Corne huskers to a scoreless tie, but the them Saturdray. There appears little chance that Iowa, with Oze Simmons oozing all jover the place, and Indiana will re- peat their 1934 scoreless tie. An overheated motor may indicate q loose fan belt. OUT OUR WAY OH, ICK FOO SOMETHIN’ TO ATTRACT HIS ATTENTIO! TL LT ae By Williams

Other pages from this issue: