The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 31, 1935, Page 8

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3 Sutherland Picks B CALIFORNIA BEARS ARE FAVORED OVER UC. L. A. IN WEST set i Pitt Coach Sees Purdue as Threat But Not Good Enough to Beat Gophers TARHEELS ARE CHOICE | | Army, Michigan State, lowa, Princeton, Yale Rule as ‘Tops’ Saturday BY JOCK SUTHERLAND Coach, University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Oct. 31—The foot- ball world will have its eyes turned to Columbus this week-end when Notre Dame and Ohio State put on, one of the big battles of the year. Both Elmer Layden and Francis | Schmidt have big veteran teams. and plenty of reserve material. Both, squads will be at their peaks for the} contest. ! Ohio State is not going to make the j walkaway out of this game that it) has made in others this fall, and the | Buckeyes are going to have their) hands full in stopping Shakespeare | and Carideo. But they will be able; to match the Irish all the way down | the line in manpower, and when it's| all over, I believe it will be Ohio's! game. I do not believe the Trish line | is strong enough defensively to hold; off the Ohio power all afternoon. Dartmouth takes another try at] breaking the Yale jinx this week, ani! while Dartmouth is greatly improved, ! 80 is Yale, The chances are that the! Big Green will have to wait another year for victory, but a Dartmouth victory will not be an upset. Pitt makes its first appearance in} New York against Fordham, and the answer to this one is not yet written Fordham got off to a bad start in the Purdue game, but it has eliminated Vanderbilt and Boston College, and the latter was good cnough to beat; the best Michigan State team in ycars. The rams have a powerful line, and we're still a long way from peak form. Princeton has a real battle on its hands with Navy, which is bigger and faster. But Princeton has more man-} popular favorlte of the Capital City {ci power and more experience, and the} edge. I'm tempted to go out on a} limb and pick Navy, though. 3uckeyes N. D. Prep Footba ll Fandom Focus on Demon-Magician Battle THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCIUBER 31, 1935 to Turn Back JOLTING JOE JARAMILLO ee Demaray to Face Rugged Foe Here Jaramillo, 20-Year-Old Denver Youth, Already Has Stamp of Ring Veteran Jolting Joc Jaramillo, 20-year-old Denver youngster who fights Dick Demaray here next Monday, despite his years is already a veteran of some ring battles that stamp him definite! as one of the coming welterweights of the Northwest. Jaramillo, who only last year was IMPROVING WOLVERINES ARE Three Consecutive Victories Put Michigan in Front Ranks After Slow Start Chicago, Oct. 31—(#)—While Ohio {State and Minnesota are supplying headline news for the football pages, the Big Ten, Gophers and Buck jincluded, is worrying in silence over la familiar but puzzling menace—| Michigan. | ‘The Wolverines are punting, pass- | ing and praying again. When Michigan State licked the Wolves, 25-6, on the opening day of the season, Oct. 5, the Big Ten re- |laxed from that old source of worry jand centered its attention on the Buckeyes and Gophers. Coaches who jdidn't have Ohio State and Minne-! [sota_on thelr shoulders, exchanged congratulations. { But the worry is back operating | {from the old maize and blue stand. j Snapping back after the Michigan {State collapse, the Wolverines played | smart, defensive football to prick the/ big Indiana bubble, 7-0. They caught | {Wisconsin on the rebound and licked | ‘the Badgers, 20-12, by snatching the) ‘breaks at Madison. Last week, play-! ing their punt, pass and a prayer for- ;mation to perfection, they invaded } jand beat Columbia, 19-7. | Nothing very impressive in those | Victories, but the schedule and come- back drive is typical of those that have found Michigan as a mighty team when the season neared the fin- | ‘ish line. , Every great Michigan team of mod- jern day football has had a sensa- \tional passer. Coach Harry Kipke calls Bill Renner a greater passer ;than either Bennie Friedman or Har- ry Newman, a surprising statement in w of Michigan's disastrous start ythis fall. Pennsylvania will invade Michigan Saturday to give the Maize and Blue en acid test before it resumes Big Ten warfare. If Michigan can defeat the Quak- ‘ers, it will be a greater source of LATEST MENACE IN BIG TE i Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) Duluth, Minn.—Frankie Sag- 143, Chicago, and Freddy Chynoweth, 139, Chicago, drew (6); Johnny Erjavec, 188, Duluth, knocked out Paul Atlas, 200, Min- neapolis, (2); Wen Lambert, 146, Proctor, Minn., outpointed Curly Martin, 143, Topeka, Kas. (4). Cincinnati—Tiger “Kid” Wai ker, 133, Cincinnati, stopped Au- brey “Kid” Martin, 135, Hunting- ton, W. Va. (6); Jess Calhoun, 139, outpointed Jerry Martin, 135, both of Cincinnati (6). Louisville, Ky.—Dominic Man- cini, 156, Pittsburgh, stopped Car- los Garcia, 155, Mexico, (8). Lincoln, Neb.—Harold Matthews, 119, Lincoln, stopped Jack Presti, 122, of Seattle, (2). ‘Dakota National, Baking Company i |Service Electric and Regulatory Department Teams Lose in Commercial Dakota National bank and marck Baking company |the Service Electric and Regulatory |department teams, respectively, in! Commercial League matches rolled | | Wednesday. | Sparks led the Dakota National five to victory with games of 199-155-168— 1522, His first game gave him high jsingle-game score for the evening. 'Callan was best for the Service Elec- {tric with 171-176-168—515. Faubel set a fast pace for his Bis- graduated from West high school at;worry than ever to Minnesota, and:marck Bakery teammates rolling upj Denver, is a southpaw like Domaray! and fights with the same aggressive- ness that has made Sir Richard the boxing clan. Since going in for professional box- jing a little over a year ago, Jara-'tant duel | Ohio State, which must play Michi- jgan at Ann Arbor. !” Forward pass defense and drills on id fundamentals occupied Big Ten jteams Thursday. Purdue and Min inesota labored long for their impor- at Minneapolis. There is another service teami that; millo has flattened Kid Hutcherson|worked on new plays and Coach has a battle on its hands this week./of Fort Meade, Colo.: Charlie “P2n-|Noble Kizer planned the use of two| - | alternating backfields t i Ralph | pato of Fargo, and. incidentally. De- | offense. rl Sus ipieprediupseee The Army doesn't have any sort of a/ setup in Mississippi State. Sasse has developed a good enough! team ‘at the southern school, and the Army isn't going to be feeling any too well after the Yale game. Here's | another one that I'm tempted to ca!!! an upset. But I'll let conservatisn: rule and select Army. Favors Penn Over Michigan { Pennsylvania has a chance to up-/ hold the prestige of the cast when it! takes on Michigan, and I'm counting | upon Harvey Herman's team to do! just that. There is power galore ready | to go at Penn once again. ‘ Colgate, having lost its game of the| year, must be established the favorite; over a merely average Tulane team. I look for Michigan State to come; back after that loss to Boston Col-} lege and eliminate Temple from the ranks of the undefeated and untied! teams. H Aside from the Ohio State-Notre| Dame clash, the big battle is go-| ing to be at Minneapolis when Pur-j due and Minnesota meet. This will) be the most serious threat offered) the Gophers since the Pitt game last October, and I believe they have the material to throttle Purdue's great backfield, and enough good backs to! pile up a winning margin. day when Iowa meets Indiana; if he} does, it’s another defeat for the Hoos-| jers. { Tilinois might be down after its) game with Iowa, but it still will have enough to edge out Northwestern. Marquette, a really strong eleven, has entirely too much for Iowa State. Nebraska will find that Don Faurot will be shooting the best Missouri team in years at the Huskers, but with the added incentive of wiping out the hurt of that Kansas State deadlock, Cardwell, La Noue and the Test will be too formidable. | Oklahoma should have compara-! tively little trouble with Kansas. Bears Over Bruins on Coast ‘There is going to be a real battle when-North Carolina and North Car- olina State meet. Carl Snavely’s Tar ‘Heels have been traveling at a rapid clip, and Hunk Anderson’s team might Jose, but it will be a close one. Duke and Tennessee meet in another headliner, but Duke, stil! smarting from the Georgia Tech and Auburn defeats, will be a little too much for the Volunteers. Georgia should have trouble with Florida. Rice shouldn't have any worries over the George Washington game. Southern Methodist is scheduled to give Texas another bad afternoon. On the Pacific Coast, California meets U. C. L. A. and again it will be a story of the Bears’ superior man- power winning over a lighter but well-drilled eleven. Stanford has a tough one in Santa Clara, but the Cardinals have lost their one game to a coast opponent. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) M’Clusky Five to Play Wing in Opening Game very little ther” Tate of Albuquerque, Kid Ri maray. two Were rematched. punched out furious rounds. ‘Clever and Fast’ Charles Reyner, Deadwood. sports writer after watching Js millo and Demaray fight say of the Jaramillo: lad is by far the cloverest. fastest and most colorful fighter seen in this part of the country for a long time.” Demaray has by no means been however, and millo. Out of 12 bouts he has won seven by knockouts. two by decisions in the first round, stopped Al Brown kayoed Sherrald Kennard in fourth and Cannonball Donaiwe and Freddie Atkinson in the fifth. He got two casy decisions over Karl two weeks ago paraded as the Ger- man middleweight champion at Win- taglia, and won handily over Henry Rothier of Chicago. Only Two Defeats ilwaukee and one to Petey Mike of Miami, Fla. the only two engagze- months here. j Dick’s last two fights have been setups for the dynamiting southpaw and he is glad for the chance to get in again with Jaramillo’ where he knows he has to go at his best every minute to win, Ernie Hetherington, who meets Joe Bitto in the six-round cemi-windup of the first American Legion card at the World War Memorial building, 4 since his last appearance est. a decision in eight! Dick Jost one decision to Billy Cele-: | bron, protege of Sammy Mandell’s, at Ozzie Simmons should have a good! Mi Minnesota drilled on passes Dick came beck when th?’ but the receiving was poor, generally. | ‘Feiler Makes Drake Cross Country Team Diminutive Bill iler, speedster, who holds the state mile and half-mile records in North Da- kota, has won himself a place on the Drake University cross country team. | Filer entered Drake this fall as a lidle since his last meting with Jara-|freshman in the school of commerce { ‘after graduating last spring from {Dickinson high school where he took |and lost two on points. He flattened’ his last year of prep school training. | rottsick | Ronnie Malcolm and Battling Munal : The superb little distance runn standing not over 5 feet, five incl |and Speedy Moulden in the third.’ tall, lod a field of 12 over a difficult the one and three quarter mile course by | a good margin of 25 yards to win himself a place on the Drake team.| His time for the distance was 8:47 1- | Lautenschlager of Kansas City, who! yo, His first test in collegiate competi- jtion came last week when the Drake nipeg and was knocked out by Bat-!icam met the University of Missouri. |Evans No Unbeaten Teams, Probability in South Oct. | i Atlanta, 31.—()—The south ments he has dropped in over five: may be without an undefeated major ! ‘team for the first time in 11 years , When this dizzy football campaign jcloses late in November. | Dixie's last hope is North Carolina— an eleven that has not finished with » perfect record in 37 years. The Carolina Tarheels must clear four more hurdles if they are to uphold the south’s streak of producing at least on undefeated eleven annually since While Alabama, Tulane, Tennessee, also facing one of the hardest match-| Louisiana State, Vanderbilt and all | es of his career, but, like Demaray,| other favorites were falling victims of {look outside’ the National gate for a is best when the going is the tougi-| startling reversals, North Carolina has ;job, although he would rather con- won five straight games. EGAD, BUSTER, OF THE WORLD! YOu REMEMBER -—WELL, T AM SHAKE HANDS WITH THE NEXT HEAVY- WEIGHT CHAMPION ROSCOE WHO USED TO FIGHT UNDER THE COGNOMEN _ ; OF BAD NEWS BURKE MANAGING ROSCOES FISTIC CAREER Purdue | Gladstone ® counts of 179-182-184—545, the eve- ning’s high three-game total, while | Doak was best ior the Regulatory five with 146-137-133—416. The scores: Bismarck Baking Co. Verduin . 182-157-195— 534 Faubel » 179-182-184— 545 | Hektner.”. « 128-130-145— 403 | Baker . 446 493 -802—2421 Regulatory Department | Anderson 136-118-117— 371 | Knutson 141-118-114— 373 | Patera yan 92-130-107-- 329 Doak 146-137-133— 416; Fisher 107-117-144— 368 Handicap 116-116-116— 348 | Totals 738-736-731—2205 | Donaldson Toman 143 132-126-123— 171-176-158— Dummy 125-125-125— |Handicap . 12- 12 -12— | Totals....... 698-733-707--2138 i Dakota National Bank | Blness 169-136-156— 461 Dennis 157-136-169— 462 Mayer 142-189-112 443 174-142-124— 440 |Sparks . 199-155-168— 522 Totals. 841-758-729—2328 ‘Babe Ruth Offers His Services as Manager | New York, Oct. 31.—(?)—Babe Ruth iis going to give the major league base- ball magnates one more chance to hire him as a manager. | At a gathering of the Circus Saints jand Sinners. Wednesday, the Babe, |reiterating his statement that he nev- ‘er would play again, said he intends |to go to the major league winter meet- \ings in December in search of an op- jening. ‘tinue in baseball. OUR BOARDING HOUSE YEH-~1 Y REMEMBER 97 You, FAT) WHAT BECOME a OF TW TWO SKINNY GUYS~ ~~ ARE THEY STILL AROUND, OR WERE THEY LOST IN TH: : LAUNDRY 2 MEDT7/! @ ee aD “BAD NEWS BURKE ! GOT SO USED TO BEING COUNTED OUT, HE DOESNT MORNING UNTIL. DONT FORGET, YOU STILL OWE By Ahern Ws GET UP IN TH TH CLOCK STRIKES TEN | HE HAD A GREAT LEFT SAB- —~ AT TH TABLE! N o—e | Bowlers Triumph g tackle berth. If no offer is made then, he will; HOMECOMING CLASH BRINGS TOP-RANKING '-N. D. MACHINE HERE Mandan Braves Will Be Inter- ested Spectators, Hoping for Bismarck Victory ‘The eyes of North Dakota high school football fans will focus on Bis- marck this Saturday where Coach 'Glenn Hanna’s Demons will attempt to halt the victorious drive of Glenn Jarrett's Minot Magicians. A great deal rests on the outcome ‘ot Saturday's battle, particularly for the visiting aggregation. at the Cap- ital City high school’s first annual {homecoming. The Magicians, zooming along to- ward a mythical state football cham- pionship with seven consecutive vic- ‘tories over some of the strongest \teams in the state, will be out to keep [their season's record clear. A victory in this, their last game, would undoubtedly assure them of an invitation to represent North Dakota jin the first annual Thanksgiving Day classic at Aberdeen, S. D., where lead- ing prep elevens of the two sister states will clash in a Sombrero Day ifracas, Among the most interested watch- ers of Saturday's affray will be Bis- marck's traditional rivals from across {the Missouri, Coach McMahan's :Braves have also gone through the Fas, {season with an undefeated record, but : trundlersttheir claim to the mythical title is swept to three straight victories over {marred by tle games played with Val-| ley City and Bismarck. ! Demons On Schedule Should Bismarck succeed in turn- jing back the vaunted attack of the Magicians, Mandan would still need a victory over Bismarck in the final! Armistice Day feature to insure them of a favorable spot for getting the invitation to play in the Turkey Day classic. The Demons have plenty of good reasons for wanting to defeat the Magicians, aside from the fact that it would be a great climax to the Homecoming activities. First, they will be seeking to vin- dicate themselves for two successive defeats at the hands of Jamestown and Dickinson, after an early season start that had placed them among the top ranking elevens of the state. And, second, there is always an intense rivalry between the Minot and Bismarck athletic teams, intensified this year by the “Big Maroon Jug” ‘which will be awarded to the win- ining team for possession until the lelevens meet again next year. | Cold Slows Lp Work Hanna, drilling the Demons as hard as the cold weather will permit, mad2 jseveral changes in his lineup this eek to produce greater strength in idepartments that looked weakest {against the Dickinson Midgets a week ‘ago. Buddy Beall, veteran end who has een playing a tackle position, was moved back to end on offense with Capt. Evan Lips going over to the left Jack Slattery, rangy tackle. has been worked into the left guard post and will probably play that position both on offense and de- ‘fense. On defense Hanna has been work- ling with a combination that finds Bob {Brandenburg and Jim McGuiness, the |latter is center on offense, at ends; \Boall and Lips at tackles; Woodland. regular right tackle, and Slattery at jguards; and Dick Shafer, right iguard, and Asa Dawson, fullback, backing up the line. | Four major engagements are slated [for Friday. They are Wahpeton {at Fargo; Mandan. at Dickinson; Jamestown at Valley City and New Rockford at Devils Lake. Games this week end are: Friday Crosby at Sherwood. Mohall at Minot Model. Lemmon, 8. D., at Bowman. Carrington at Drake. Elgin at Carson. Enderlin at LaMoure. Fairmount at Wahpeton Indians. Garrison at Hazen. Harvey at Fessenden. Hatton at Page. Hettinger at Mott. Hillsboro at Northwood Leeds at Lakota. Lisbon at Milnor. Oakes at Hankinson. Parshall at Ray. Cando at Rugby. Turtle Lake at Sykestc" Saturday Minot at Bismarck. Stanley at Kenmare. NUMBERS WHICH NOTRE DAME Wite HAVE UST ONE OF MANY OHIO STATE AER, * 70 WATCH. = KREN2— ——_-_ Ss Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc, By ART KRENZ NEA Service Sports Artist One of the many more complicated plays that Coach Francis Schmidt | at Columbus, Nov. 2. ‘The Staters line up in a ballanced | forward wall against a 6-2-2-1 de- | m |fense. The ball is snapped by Cap- {tain and Center Gomer Jones to Full- \back Johnny Kabealo, who makes a has drilled into his Ohio State wonder |half-spin and slips the ball to Dick jteam is the lateral-forward diagram- | Heekin, who has moved over to his ed here. It may puzzle Notre Dame | right, oves to the right as the ball is pass- Olin Stakes Crown St. Louis, Oct. 31—(®)—Each with | his pre-fight oral victory tucked Unbeate |tc decoy the opposing secondary Heekin laterals to Pincura,.who also | n Iris ed, and Stan tosses a forward to Tree vor Rees, Bucks’ right end, who had zaced through the secondary to the left_of the play. Merle Wendt, Ohio State left end, crosses over to the right of the play and take the pass in the event that Rees is covered. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) With Lewis Tonight | Sports Round-Up (By the Associated Press) away, light heavyweight champion Bob Olin of New York and John} qj) Henry Lewis, Arizona Negro challen-! ger, rested Thursday for the actual business of battling for the world title tonight. Olin, facing his first test since he took the lignt heavyweight crown from Maxie Rosenbloom almost a year ago, was confident of the out- come. Lewis, who is to be fortified by having the sensational Negro! heavyweight, Joe Louis, as his second, | declared he would win by a knockout; early in the fight. } The Missouri state athletic com- mission at a meeting Wednesday! night adopted a special ruling to eliminate any chance of the match ending in a foul. The ruling speci-| fied a contestant delivering a foul) would automatically lose the round. | Carnera, Neusel Will $7 M — i New York, Oct. 31.—(@)—Some light | 5 on the question of whether last sum- mer’s revival of “million dollar” box- ing gates—as evidenced by the Joe Louis-Max Baer scrap was due to new interest in boxing or merely to the rise of the Detroit Bomber, may come Friday when Primo Carnera and Walter Neusel open the indoor season at Madison Scuare Garden. | Before he ran afoul of Louis’ pun- | ishing fists, Carnera was something of a drawing card among the heavy- weights. Neusell’s greatest venture into big-time battling came when he was knocked out by Max Schmeling. i As far as title aspirations and the|’S like are concerned, it will be just an- other heavyweight fight unless one or the other can win decisively enough sti tenders. Former Wilton Man Is Signed by Bruins &t. John, N. B., Oct. 31—(#)—Har- old Johnson, American-born hockey player from Wilton, N. D., who played with the Winnipeg amateurs. last winter, Thursday saw a chance for “big time” rink stardom. The Bos- He Bruins signed him. during a football game . . ling circles hear Danno O'Mahoney New York—Ouch! Natie Brown idn’t go to England to fight Jack Petersen because his manager, Prof. William McCarney, waved aside an offer of £1500 (about nonchalantly 500) thinking Robert Tredinnick, British promoter was offering him jonly $1500 chicken feed—was Prof. icCarney embarrassed when he dis- | covered his error too late? | Two more candidates for the winter book favorite for next year’s Kentucky Derby are Joseph E. Widener's Brevity and Ogden Phipps’ White Cockade, a stable- mate of Omaha . . . the semi- Pro Brooklyn Bushwicks, compos- ed largely of big league castoffs, averaged 17,000 fans a game last season and several times outdrew the Dodgers. The Mississippi-Marquette game Fight at N. Y. Friday |, week must have been a bruiser | . « Howard Purser reports some of the Mississippians emerged looking as if they had got hold of wildcats|@"d March 31, 1934, the Internal and couldn’t turn them loose. And down in the southwest con- ference, one of the roughest foot- ball leagues in the country, offi- cials stepped off 190 yards in pen- alties in one game—1l15 against Rice and 75 against Texas, Carl (Pop Eye) Ray, Dartmouth’s ar center, always chews tobacco . wrest- soon to be elbowed out of the championship because he isn’t draw- ing up to par . . the printers: to hop into the ranks of the con-/| Place Wojcihovski in the Notre Dame Bp ante. se \packfleld against Ohio State. + good news for Mike Layden will re- Jim Lindsey, a pitcher for the Cardinal farm system, is known as Branch Rickey’s policeman . . . They keep him around headquar- ters and when one of the card farms sends out an SOS for a pitcher, he hops to it . . . In three weeks last season one travel- ing man, without breaking his itinerary, saw Jim twirl for Col- umbus in the American Associa- H \ i | Four Unbeaten Teams Remain in NW League Kenmare, N. D., Oct. 31.—(#)—Four teams remain in the undefeated ranks of the Northern Conference football race. Kenmare, Stanley and Mohall have won two consecutive loop engage- ments and each played in one tie ‘game while the fourth team, Crosby, has won one conference game and played two ties. Kenmare and Crosby failed to elim- nate anyone from the undefeated list by battling to a 6-6 tie last week. other games Mohall defeated Bow- In bells 12 to 0. Stanley beat Parshall 19 to 0 and Watford City 13 to 0 while Sherwood polished off Noonan 32 to 6 in non-nonference games. Conference standings: Team— Won Kenmare . tes Stanley Mohall . Crosby ... Sherwood Bowbells . Lost Tied 1 ooHenys eBusooo repent In the year between April 1, 1933, Revenue Bureau received $145,306,069 in taxes on beer, while the fourth- month period between Dec. 1 and larch 31 brought $52,083,532 in taxes mn. distilled spirits and wine. A clock invented about 10 years ago is run by a tiny speck of radium. The clock ticks every 10 seconds and it has been estimated that it could run for 10,000 years without a change of “fuel.” It is doubtful, however, that. the works will last that long. Although men, many thousands of years ago, hammered meteoric iron: into tools and weapons, it was only @ littie more than 100 years ago that. scientists admitted there was such.a thing as a meteorite. tion, Houston in the Texas and Rochester in the International League. Fritz Crisler thinks a good profes- jonal team would beat @ good cole lege team any day in the week . .« but he'd rather see the collegers play block,” he said. OUT OUR WAY i. Cavalier at Drayton. Notre Dame Is Great Football Melting Pot South Bend, Ind., Oct. 31.—(P)-- The “fighting Irish” of Notre Dame will start one and possibly two Irish- men in their football game against Ohio State Saturday. Jim Martin, right guard, is the one proud son of Erin virtually sure to be in the starting lineup. The sec- ond, a possibility is Mike Layden, right halfback and brother of the Notre Dame coach, Elmer Layden. The rest of the “fighting Irish” starting lineup reads like a League of Nations poll with a half dozen na- tionalities represented. Layden plans to use straight foot- ball against the Buckeye Powerhouse. It- is strange but true that the Irish haven't been given more than a half dozen new plays all season. “I haven't seen a team yet that couldn't be beaten with well polished fundamentals,” he: said. SAGILIO GETS DRAW 31.—)— and ‘ By William: * to-3 CiRCA GRAY cansernaa senior mc “I like the way those boys

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