The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1935, Page 8

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1 BUCKEYES OR IRISH, } fanke of Unbeate n Elevens to BEARS ORU.C.L. A. CERTAIN T0 FALTER Temple, Army, Dartmouth, Princeton and Syracuse Survive in East TARHEELS ‘TOPS’ IN SOUTH Gophers, Marquette and lowa Are Other Undefeated Teams in Midwest New York, Oct. 30.—(4)—The ranks ot 18 unbeaten and untied major col- lege football teams are certain to lose at least two members this week-end. Further depletion can be expected later when more than half of them get together for crucial games. t—Temple, Univer- The list, by sectic Army, Dartmouth, New Yo sity, Catholic Universit and Syracuse; West Ohio State, Notre Dame, © and Towa; South —- North Carolina; Southwest — Southern Methodist, | Baylor and Texas stian; Far] West—California and University of | California at Los Angeles. Saturday's pairings find Notre Dame matched against Ohio State in} the standout game of the nation, and California against U. C. L. A. Only two of them at the most can retain their place in the race for national gridiron honors. Among the survivors of the hurly- burly season, North Carolina appears to have the best chance of going ICHIGAN PINS HOPES ON RENNER | 4 The often-Injured Capt. Wiillam Renner, shown here throwing ene of his famous passes, is the key man in the Michigan attack and directs his team from the quarterback position. Injuries kept him out all fast through unscathed. Tarheels year. (Associated Press Photo) meet North Carolina State’s wolfpack Saturday in what ms to be the climax game. Tough Assignments Southern Methodist has the tough-{ est assignment. The Mustangs are down for successive engagements with ‘Texas, U. C. L. A., Arkansas, Baylor and Te: Christ They wind up ns | inelr I2-eame season against ‘Texas|Notre Dame Coaches Prepare Boe eee, 7. ; Special Defense for Ohio | Army’s chances depend on the Ca- deis’ ability to get by Pittsburgh and State Attack Notre Dame on ve Saturd and then, of course, Navy. Temple iienee, Oct 30. »)—The 37,000 meets Michigan State Saturday and two weeks hence the Owls take on Marquette. Darimouth and Noy. 23 at Palmer si football-daffy souls who will jam Ohio | State's big stadium Saturday may be} expecting to see the Buckeyes make! their bid for triumph over Notre Dame with fancy lateral and forward Princeton collide | lium but before | RAMBLERS PREPARE TO HALT | BUCKEYES’ RUNNING OFFENSE) if Cart Transports | Coach and Bride \ | * | Town Talk Fives Victors in Loop iComan Tourist Court and Cap- ital Cafe Bowlers Drop City League Matches Robertson’s trundlers captured all three matches from the Coman Tour- ist Court five and the Town Talk team took two out of three from the Capital Cafe in City League matches bowled Tuesday. high three-game score with 202-196- 180-—578, while John Nelson for Co- man’s collected 216 pins in the second jround for single game honors. Cervinski led the Town Talk to Isis in the first two games but they lost the third. Louie Klein was best for the Cafe five with 163-181-207— 551. | Nelson blasted the maples for counts ‘of 158-216-159—533 to pace the Co- man outfit while Ole Nordlund wes {helping provide Robertson's with the {three wins by his scores of 161-202-192 —555. Scores: Coman Tourist Court [igh Talk, chalked up the evening's Nelson + 158-216-159— 533 Roehrick + 135-136-167— 438 Weisenburger ...... 140-170-151— 461 Coman .. + 132-148-170— 450 {Sioniker ... 100-152-102— 354 |Kandicap .. SMe 11-1 33 | Totals ........... 676-833-760—2269 ! Robertson's Morlan .. « 148-163-175— 486 }Winistorfer + 140-182-198— 520 [Slag ..... + 156-170-132— 458 Patera + 149-151-179— 479 Nordlund .. + 161-202-192— 555 se seeeeee '754-868-876—2498 Town Talk Cafe V. Cervinski 202-196-180— 578 S. Goetz .. « 146-190-169— 505 fees G. Smith « 135-192-158— 485 Lanesboro, Minn., Oct. 30.—(@) |Q. Baldwin + 180-146-146— 481 —R. E. (Whitney) Nicholson, {H- Larson « 188-161-190— 539 high school athletic coach, chart- {Handicap + 28- 28- 28— 84 ed his marriage course after any man’s method except he entered it on cart wheels — vehicle, not acrobatic. When Nicholson, former St. Olaf college star, and his bride, formerly Olive Boyum, came home from their wedding at De- corah, Iowa, fifty students and 888-913-871—2672 Totals ........ a | Capital Cafe E. Davis . « 160-140-175— 475 S. Walery .. « 210-158-154— 522 L. Klein . + 163-181-207— 551 jA. Brown + 169-183-177— 529 {D. Huss 160-153-212— 525 Robertson’s and — Victor Cervinski, bowling for the! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNK, WYUNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1935 ‘Memorial Building Physical Education Cl | | ' i VOLLEY BALL LOOPS Ed Heer Will Direct Male Pro- gram; Mrs. Themar Simle | inv Charge of Women Basketball and volley ball classes women will be organized next week, E. M. Davis, manager of the World War Memorial building, announced Wednesday. |. Edward “Doc” Heer has been placed {in charge of the men’s physical edu- jcation classes and Mrs. Themar Simle {wi direct the women’s activities. Organization of the men’s basket- ball classes will be completed at a meeting called for 7 p. m., next Mon- day. Basketball classes will meet jregularly from 7 to 11 p. m., on Mon- day and Friday nights. Players will be put on teams and organized into a league for the season's play. The business men’s volley ball league will be launched again this year at a meeting called for 7 p. m., Tuesday. The volley ball classes will meet from 5 to 7 p. m. on Mondays and Wednesdays and from 7 to 10 p. m., on Tuesdays and Wedhesdays. Heer urged that all men interested in either volley ball or basketball re- port for the first meetings so that an idea as to the number of teams in jthe various leagues could be ascer- tained. Prices of admission to the men's classes, including use of the showers and lockers, are as follows: Basket- ball teams (seven players), $20 for the season: volley ball teams (eight play- ers) $20 for the season; individuals, $6 for the season or $3 per month. The full schedule of classes at the World War Memorial building fol- lows: Mondays: Lower gym — Business men’s volley ball, 5 to 7 p. m.; men's ' basketball, 7 to 11 p.m. Upper gym— Women’s volley ball, 7 to 10 p. m. Tuesdays: Lower gym—Women, 9 to 10:30 p. m. Upper gym—Men's volley ball, 7 to 10 p. m. Wednesdays: Lower gym—Bysiness men, 5 to 7 p.m. Upper gym—Men’s volley ball, 7 to 10 p. m. Thursdays: Lower gym—Women, 7 to 10:30 p. m. Fridays: Lower gym—Business men, 5 to 7 p. m. Men's basketball, 7 to | PLANNED BY HEADS for men and gymnasium classes for |. | 1 that Dartmouth er Yale Satur-| D8! aa day in another attempt to break the |P8s Maneuvers, but the Irish ap-/ “bowl jinx” and Princeton plays | Parenily are expecting as much} Nav *"| trouble from the Ohio running game. | Si ; olgate and Co-!, Each of Ohio State's four games| lumbia to ¢éontend New York | #8 been watched by the eagle eyes ot | University’s chief obstacle seems to be {Scouts Tom Conley and Chet Grant. eta And North ia State | Details of the famed sleight-of-hand may prove to be Catholic University's | stumbling block. | townspeople made it ceremonious. At hosts’ orders, the newlyweds climbed into a two-wheel cart to be drawn through town streets by ponies with a parade by cars fol- lowing behind. tricks with the football been | duly noted. But when Notre Dame settled down to work for the all-important struggle. "PE Line Coach Joe Boland was ready! Pro Game Tougher, have 862-815-925—2602}11 p. m. Saturdays: Lower gym—Women, 2 toS p.m Beulah Eleven Wins Fifth Grid Victory H | Totals ....s+seeee i ‘Mahoney Airs Olympic, Participation Views j__New York, Oct. 30.—(4)—Jeremiah | ''T. Mahoney, national president of the} j with a special defense for the batter: | jing the Irish forwards probably will |\get from tackle to tackle by Di | —|Heekin, Frank Antenucci, Dick Beltz, Who caught the short- {John Bettridge, Frank Boucher and} rf 5 far did ib Duets of the huge array of Buckeyes . for- | 2% Thi Sports Round-Up| (By the Associated Press) end al Michigan, was the he “Scarlet Scourge” will not catcher and the boot actually tray-|¢ carrying all its egss in one basket Bieauautslwo:tect jwas indicated by Tuesday's practice | mn. More time was fashioned running plays ent on old- Rill, new a physician in Detroit | tells about Asserts Ex-Gopher 'Amateur Athletic Union, pushes his ifight against American participation lin the Berlin Olympics in the current Minneapolis, Oct. 30.--(#)—An old|issue of “Opinion.” issue, revolving around comparative 1s of professional and college ‘on the inside of the athletic situa-!cepted pass, toward the end of the Wednesday found George jiion,” Mahoney writes, “know what|second quarter. i football, “We, who for a lifetime have been Svendsen, experienced in both, inclin-{j; in back of the game that is being ing toward the pros, Harder line play |offered by Svend Shapley | had gone back to | Navy halfb: punt behind | T tore in fast | it I was so close to him I thought | I would be kicked in the stomach ++ 80 as J clesed in I turned my slightly toward him. ... 1 nm have to raise my arms ile T had my back to the Play Shapley punted right into me—between my right side and my arm, ... 1 managed to hold | the bali and all I had to do to {| get the touchdown was drop to my | knees.” i Gregory Mangin, the tennis star, is/ known to his friends as Old Lady| Luck’s fair haired boy... . the other} day one of his Wall Street pals had} $2 on a horse’s nose. . . . As post} time neared ihe plung n to! weaken... . ory | “I'l give you $1.50 for your bet.’ | So without knowing the horse's name, ; he bought the ticket and the nag came | in paying $20 to $1. H Ford €. Frick, smart young | president of the National League, | is deing things... . Right now he has two men and a woman walk- ing the strects asking Mr. and Mrs. Average Person their reac- tions and getting valuable slants. ... Flushed with its 7-0 victory over Indiana, the University of Cincinnati is angling for a game with Wisconsin next year. ... Also one with Pop Warner's Temple team,... Mississippi State's No. 1 candidate | for all America honors is Charles Galatka, an end from Chicago. . . Maj. Ralph Sasse and rival coaches say he’s tops... . Jimmy Braddock makes autographing easy by carrying @ bundle of rubber stamped cards and passing them out... . the Settle club of the Pacific Coast League will build @ new park this winter. Fritz Crisler, Princeton's coach, is feeling proud of himself now that he knews the names cf all his numerous backs... . “They're all good,” says Fritz, “but if 1 had to pick the four best I'd name Pepper Constable, Ken Sandbach, Homer Spofferd and Garry Le- an. power and blecking than was de-| Minnesota's 1934 national champions. | voted to } and the line was! 25 va testimony in favor of the paid} drilled.on its part in land-going bal! | Performers. ennai ize “I used to think,” Svendsen said, | i ef The Big Ton teams which have as-|“that @ good college team could beat signments this w started speeding a pro outfit, but I’m not so sure now. yy. rence 4 The pros just watch cach other too up Tuesday. Clarence (Tuffy) Thomp- son, hero of Minnesota's victory over |Cl0s¢ and smack too hard. When: Northwestern, was moved up to the |82 of us come Out: of half a game varsity left halfback job and prob- | Ro", were covmred with bruises and ably will start against Purdue. The | io O° ‘geen aia: Ont Boilermaker’s hopes rose when Tony | ‘That's panies : Jack of litt Wright, veteran halfback and kicker, |oiner he onphasien reported in condition after being ab- Peis anaes eee sont because of an injury last week. Iowa worked on its running offense Houston Wrestler : | in preparation for Indiana, whiles % Coach Bo McMillin of the Hoosiers Conquers Joe Coxi Minneapolis, Oct. 30.—(4)—Paul sought a kicker to replace Reed Kelst The Illini divided their time betwe: a offense and defenss in a long scrim- | JONes of Houston, Tex., tossed Rough- | mage, house Joc Cox of Cleveland at the} An injury to John Viergever, regu- ,@uditorium Tuesday night, winning in lar left tackle, forced Harry Kipke to 49 minutes and 13 seconds of a sched- make revisions in the Michigan line. Wed one hour one-fall conflict with Viergever may not be able to play his famous hook-scissors. Jones against Pennsylvania. weighed 2138 and Cox 212. In the semi-windup Otto Kuss of Pine City, Minn., 220, and Frank Speer, Atlanta, Ga., 240, went 30 minutes to a draw. 1 The surface of the human body is approximately 16 square feet. \played by the people who pretend saying through the press in the last few weeks. “They have one aim and that is to let nothing interfere with the Olym- pics in Berlin even though the rest of the world is convinced that it is a travesty upon sport to hold the Olym- pic games in a city that stands out before the whole world as having ended fair play and sportsmanship throughout all Germany.” Foster’s Commander Wins British Stakes Newmarket, Eng., Oct. 30.—(@)—G. R. C. Foster's Commander Third Wednesday won the 96th running of | the Cambridgeshire stakes. Mrs, V. D. Sainsbury's Man’s Pal was second and Lady Rallis Finalist third. Forty horses ran, The race, run over a course of a mile and one furlong, was for a purse of 1,000 pounds with extras. Some $6,000,000 in sweepstakes prizes hung upon the outcome of the race, a bulk of the winning tickets being held in the United States. OUR BOARDING HOUSE TELL YOU WHAT, DOC -~~ GIVE ME A COT, AN’ TLL SHARE TH ATTIC WITH TH MICE,AN” ° TAKE CARE OF TH FURNACE AN DO ODD JOBS FORTH MIssusS, AROUND THIS MILL, FOR MY CAKES AN’ COFFEE J-~You BE MY MANAGER, AGAIN AN GET ME SOME SIX-ROUND WALTZES WITH TH’ LOCAL HEAVIES, AN* YOU HAVE A HALF SLICE OF ME! AN, LOOK-—~- [VE ADDED RASSLIN® TO MY ACT I~ ~WHAT DYUH . ¥ Fights Last Night ‘ (By the Associated _ Akron, Ohio—Lioyd Press) Pine, 122, ~EGAD, TLL GET You By Ahern A BARGAIN ROSCOE! SOME GOOD MATCHES! LAND TLL PREDICT THAT, WITHIN A YEAR| YOULL BE IN A CORNER AWAITING THE BELL, AS A CHALLENGER FOR} THE CHAMPIONSHIP CROWN BY Jove! | a ce Beulah, N. D., Oct. 30.—Beulah’s high school eleven ran its string of victories to five with a 6-0 triumph fover Hazen last Friday. Beulah’s jscore came as a result of an inter- The first half, of the game was played almost entirely in Beulah’s of the pros Was to be impartial lovers of sports, but territory with the exception of the n, center for the! whose real purpose is shown very ri 1 i z i Yjone offensive thrust that netted the based on|Green Bay Packers and member of! clearly by the taings they have been Hazen kicked once to Beulah’s 10 and blocked the at- itempted punt. Failing to gain on three tries at the line, Hazen at- tempted a place kick but it was wide. j Another place kick later in the per- {iod also failed. Hazen completed three passes, one \for 30 yards, and Beulah made good a like number, Both teams knocked down several other attempts. Beulah made 12 first downs to Hazen's five during the game. Outstanding players for Beulah were Mounts, Perkins and Thompson. Standouts on the Hazen team were Fandrich, E. Reichenberg, Link and Schwartz. Reichenberg looked par- ticularly good at receiving passes. winning counter. |Michigan Holds Grid Records in Big Ten Ann Harbor, Mich., Oct. 30.—(?)— Athletic Director Fielding H.. Yost has calculated the all-time football records of Michigan and other ‘west- ern conference football teams from Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc, By ART KRENZ (NEA Service Sports Artist) Kentucky opened its Southeastern | Conference season with a 25-6 victory over Georgia Tech, and, in the light of subsequent developments, looked formidable in holding Ohio State to/ @ 19-6 score. The above forward-lateral is one of | 1Coach Chet Wynne’s best. It was jused successfully against Alabama a Jee New FOOTBALL | year ago and was good for long gains against Ohio State this fall. THiS BLOCK HAS - THEO ERSVE MAN OTL ONS. FEET, CAN MAKE A TACKLE, By JIMMY DONAHUE Sketch by Buzz Wetzel There is a great deal of football played on the ground when the ball is in the air. Watch the players on the turf next time you see a pigskin soar into the ozone and you will see for yourself. On the kickoff, especially, do you get a chance to watch ground action. Notice that the five men who. are within 15 yards of the ball will not try to block and knock down defen- sive players rushing downfield under the kick at the first possible point. blocks and knocked down their men at the earliest possible point of con- | themselves up and figure in the play, Perhaps tackling the runner, is to knock off his feet a man com- ing at full speed downfield under a kickoff or punt. The most effective block in this case is to follow close to the man, bumping or driving him to the sidelines. When the defensive man is close to the receiver, the of- fensive player throws a good body block, knocking him out of the play. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Asia, with its 16,700,000 square miles, is the most populated conti- nent. It has more than 954,000,000 inhabitants, or over half the popula- tion of the world. Although all bugs are insects, not tact, the defensive men still could plek| 1895 through the 1934 season. His statistics, announced Wednes- day, show that Michigan leads the insects are bugs. ja°“Pug” Lund from left half will be other combination to aid him. If these five players threw their)” Bud Wilkinson, when he is ready,| The most difficult stunt in footba!l| either combination, running behind | It starts from a regular Notre | Dame formation, with balanced line | and backfield shifted to right. As diagrammed here, the center, Myers, passes the ball to Davis, who; throws a long forward over the line to Capt. Jimmy Long, the right end.; McMillen, the quarterback, runs at) foe's left end, and goes past him in- side. Hay, fullback, runs at left end and goes past him outside. Both men effectively box that defensive man, McMillen goes on down to block de- fensive halfback, and Hay the safety. Bert Johnson runs wide to his right, jand takes a lateral from Captain Long. Ellington, Wildcat left end, follows Johnson around to cover poss sible fumble or take @ second lateral from Johnson. Kentucky’s right guard pulls out to block opponent’s left tackle. Thompson to Step | Up Gopher Attack Sophomore Star Adds New Note| to Minnesota’s Vaunted Power Offense \ Minneapolis, Oct. 30.—(4)—Minne- sota, with Clarence (Tuffy) Thomp- son running at left half against Pur- due Saturday, will be equipped with the flashing speed it usually has faced across the black and gold scrimmage line. | Long noted for their power, the: Gophers, -in their previous meetings! with Purdue in recent years, have met the swift slashing touchdown run- ners” that Purdue’s Notre Dame sys- tem features, but this year they'll have one of their own. Under the new setup, the power of | missing, but Thompson will have the speed. George Roscoe, who will shift to right half when Thompson is in the game, will supply drive and ver- satility, and Sheldon Beise and Ver- nal LeVoir will have the blocking and bucking punch. Thompson, because of his slender build, may not be @ble to stand the rigor of 60 minutes of football thé way Minnesota plays it, and for that rea- son Roscoe probably will do plenty of! tunning from left half with some will get his turn at right half. If he fits in, he will give the Gophers one; of the biggest backfields they ever; have had without slowing it up in the; slightest. the line that Minnesota has exhibited thus far, will be extremely hard to; stop, in the opinion of Gopher coaches. Tuesday the Gophers lined up with! Thompson, Roscoe, Beise and LeVoir | in the backfield. In front of them} Dale Rennebohm was at center, de-| spite his still sensitive shoulder, and Lew Midler and Vernon Oech were guards. Tackles were Dick Smith and Ed Widseth with Ray King and Ra; Antil at ends, SERIES DIVIDENDS | Chicago, Oct. 30,—(?)—Sixty-two checks worth a total of $59,604.40 were on their way via the mails Tues- Yankees and St. Louis Cardinals in payment for their 1935 world series cut as runners-up. Under the Swedish marriage law, wives are placed on an equal footing with husbands, a sure cure for those cold weather jitters @ There’s no need to worry about what freezing weather will do to your car if it’s properly pro- tected with du Pont ZERONE. “Your dealer can tell you, to a spoonful, just how much ZERONE is necessary to protect your car to any temperature. ZERONE is sold by good dealers everywhere in sealed, tamper-proof cans (or in bulk) at $1 a gallon; 25c a quart. Comparatively little is needed for complete protection. Look for this blue and yellow 7, col DWTS day to members of the New York big ten in percentage of games won, lin scoring and on defense. Miche igan’s all-time winning percentage is 152. Percentages of the other schools through 40 years were: Chicago .590; Minnesota .585; Illinois 558; Wiscon- sin 532; Ohio State 504; Iowa .418; Northwestern .376; Purdue .374, and Indiana .260. Michigan leads in scoring with an average of 15.86 points per game. The Minnesota offense is second with 14.72 points per game. The Wolverine defense has allowed ‘an average of 5.65 points in confer- ence games. Defensive records of the Jother schools 4nclude Wisconsin 8.50, | Minnesota 8.53. Cleve Coaching Team He Beat, 97-0, in 1921] Northfield, Minn. Oct. 30.—()— Alma Mater or his own men, which aeserves his loyalty? Although Coach Frank Cleve of Concordia may decide in favor of the latter, he will be thinking of the former when he brings his team to 8t. Olaf’s homecoming Saturday. Many.a coach has played against the team he now coaches, but rarely! has he drubbed his own team to the tune of 97 to 0 in their own homecom- ing, as Cleve did 14 years ago. i After starring for St. Olaf 14 years ago Coach Cleve will find himself sit- |. ting on the bench on the opposite side of the field, putting his strategy against Ade Christenson’s, the other star of that spectacular game. y It was in 1921, at Concordia’s home- coming that Cleve, halfback, and OUT OUR WAY THIS IS SWELL, BVEV THIN’. /\ STUMMICK AN' A wu i On top of that Cleve made 13 of the 14 kicks for points. i AWRIGHT. WHIPPED. CREAM -NUTS AN’ is Y'KNOW, ONE MINUTE IN) YOUR MOUTH, TWO HOURS IN YOUR LIFETIME ON YOUR | SAY! WILL YOU MAKE HIM. SHUT THOSE THINGS SO LL LEAVE MINE AnD HE CAN EAT EVERY TMG WE HAVE A SWELL DESSERT. By Williams UP! HE JUST SEZ HE DOES THAT TRawinons 10-20, Be Depleted Saturday asses Will Organize Next Week MEN'S BASKETBALL, [Kentucky Wildcats Gain on Forward-Lateral A

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