The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 2, 1935, Page 6

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-BISHARCK ELEVEN HOPES TO DISRUPT | MINOT WIN-STREAK Local Team’s Chances of Stop- ping Visitors Depends on Alert Forward Wall STARTING LINEUPS GIVEN Elofson, Schultz, Dawson, Beall and Brandenburg Pack Scoring Punch North Dakota’s mythical high school football championship hung in the balance today as Glenn Jarrett’s Magicians encamped here for a grid- fron tussle with Glen Hanna’s De- mons in the featured attraction of Bismarck high school’s first annual Homecoming celebration. Undefeated in seven consecutive games with top ranking state elev- ens, the Minot machine faces its last barrier to an undisputed state title in the battle with the Maroon and White aggregation. It was expected that the Magicians would have to dig deep into their bag of tricks if they expected to keep that record unsullied. The Demons, although defeated in the last two games, figured to throw everything into the game to win and were con- sidered capable of springing an up- set. Feature Tricky Attack Bismarck’s chances of stopping Mi- not depend a lot on the alertness of the forward wall. The Magicians used a tricky hidden-ball play to de- feat Grafton in a game that settled the football supremacy in the north- ern half of the state. Jarrett’s team also has a good assortment of for- ward and forward-lateral pass plays in its repertoire that will take con- stant vigilance to break up. Demon followers are pinning their hopes for victory on the punting and passing of “Fat” Elofson, the line plunging of Asa Dawson, the off tackle smashes of Arlen Schultz and the pass-snagging ability of Buddy Beall and Bob Brandenburg. Victory for Minot would undoubted- ly assure them of a bid to play in the Thanksgiving Day classic at Ab- erdeen, S. D., while a defeat would throw the whole state picture into confusion with Mandan’s Braves the most likely title threat providing they can conquer Bismarck in the last scheduled game for the two teams. Beall and Brandenburg were fig- ured as the probable starters at the erd positions for Bismarck with Law- rence Woodland and Capt. Evan Lips “slated to get the call at the tackle berths. Slattery, Shafer at Guards Hanna said he planned on starting Jack Slattery and Dick Shafer at the two guards with Jim McGuiness at center, In the backfield, Elofson will call the signals from the quarterback po- sition, Shultz will work at one half and either Bob Ilchen or Jimmy Snyder at the other. Dawson will handle the fullback duties and back up the line, Minot’s probable starting lineup will be “Inky” Renstrum and Verle Faw- bush at ends, Iver Davick and Jerry ‘Wynne at tackles, Bud Monnes and Chet Snyder at guards and Grant Carpenter at center to round out the forward wall. Capt. Ray Holmes and Jimmy Grubbs will get the halfback assign- ments, Vern Runnestrand will be quarterback and Bill Stevens will play at full, Seidel’s Injury Heals; ‘Tulane game, Oct. 19. State Title Hang May Get in Two Games| ootball team over Valley City Friday I Fights Last Night 1 WHY SIMMONS IS HARD TO TACKLE | r towa’s “ebony eel,” Oze Simmons, is enjoying a great year at the University of lowa and here is the reason why opposing tacklers are finding him ao slippery. (Associated Press Photo) Winnipeg Rangers Amateur Fighters Slated for Legion me | | Program Monday Jaramillo, Demaray’s Foe, Bitto program here Monday night, were named Saturday by Fred Thimmesch, promoter. trade punches with Kid Bratten of Timmer in the curtain raiser. Both are flyweights. Markham in the other three rounder. Both are from Dawson and weigh in the neighborhood of 140 pounds, and Manager Arrive Here Friday Night Amateur fighters, who will meet in the two three-round preliminaries of the first American Legion boxing Young Jameison of Fort Yates will Al Thompson will meet Tuffy Jolting Joe Jaramillo, Denyer southpaw who tackles Dick Demaray in the eight-round headliner; Joe Bitto, Scottsbluff, Neb., middleweight, and their manager, M. J. “Curley” rived here Friday night. m YOURE i TELLING ME Have Strong Team Winnipeg, Nov. 2.—(7)—Bill and Bun Cook and Frank Boucher, the great forward line, and Ching John-| son, the burly defense star, who were in the New York Rangers’ starting lineup when the club made its na- tional hockey league debut in 1926, and Murray Murdoch, who hasn't missed a game in nine seasons, will be in there when the Rangers start the coming season. With them will be virtually all the players of last season. Some may not be quite so good as they were when the Rangers finished third in the American division last spring, but Les Patrick is counting on the improve- ® Penalty. . . . Max Marek, Chicago ment of his reserves to offset that. [Golden Glover who defeated Joe Little Artie Somers, the colorfu) Louis as in amateur, has turned pro veteran with the windmill knee action,|-- . and won five straight bouts. . . has drawn his unconditional relzase |Indiana has an eight-foot clock on football picture already. .. jannually have a wow of a team, have started practice. . moleskins this fall . . . he’s leading touchdown scoring. . son for emergency duty, has been re- | SPectators just how much time is left turned to the Montreal Maroons. In|‘ Play ... which is a good idea for their places the Rangers procured ther schools to follow. Vernon Ayres and Glen Brydson from ry the disbanded St. Louis Eagles. | aoe, ae ee fee ae || Football Scores 'Gibbons Outpoints San Diego Fighter) ®” ‘te Associated Press) COLLEGES Centenary 9; ola 0. San Diego, Calif—(?)—Jack Gib-| Stetson 18: Ree 12. bons, son of Mike Gibbons, St. Paul| Millsaps 21; Louisiana Tech 20. Phantom, won a 10 round decision} Mississippi 21; St. Louis U. 7. over Stanley Willardson, local mid-| Western Reserve 46; John Carroll dleweight, here last night. Gibbons won six of the ten rounds. Gibbons 13, Marietta 22; Denison 6. weighed 165 and Willardson 159. Evansville 7; Franklin 0. Jays Defeat Hi-Liners Upper Iowa 19; Central 3. Augustana (Sioux Falls) 25; East- On Blocked Punt, 6-0 Valley City, N. D., Nov. 2.—(P)— ern Normal, 0. The third play of the game, on which Lippert blocked a punt and recovered for a touchdown, served the verdict of HIGH SCHOOLS Jamestown 6; Valley City. 0. SCHEDULES PRINCETON Minneapolis, Nov. 2—(#)—Athletic | Director Frank McCormick announced |Saturday the University of Minnesota hockey team will play a two-game in a 6-0 victory by Jamestown high’s Most of the rest of the tilt night. |have met in a hockey contest. OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD , ROSCOE, IT IS QUITE ALL RIGHT FoR THE MADAM TO HAVE YOL) DO A FEW CHORES AROUND THE ESTABLISHMENT, PROVIDING THEY ARE LIGHT AND DO NOT , TAX YOUR STRENGTH I —~ KEEP IN MIND YOUR ‘RING CAREER AND AVOID SUCH WORK AS WILL BRING ON EXHAUSTION AND FATIGUE | s TO ROUNDS 2 28 ° ¥S,° Basketball is muscling into the Great Falls. He outpointed Mickey . Western O'Shea of Chicago and Battling State Teachers, of Kalamazoo, who Stearns of Yankton. . » Frank Patrick, but whether or not he can match the Pittsburgh fullback, is one of the ring cunning and slashing attack of classiest first-year men to shéw in the Canadian boy remains to be seen. the east in scoring, having the ca- sale at the State Recreation parlors, Pability of place kicking to add to his the Patterson hotel, Woodmansee’s, .. Jim Master the Town Talk and the Memorial has been a football official for 32 building, scene of the boxing pro- years, and the Carnegie-Purdue game gram. The curtain raiser is. sched- was the first in which he never called Uled to go on at 8:30 p. m. and Bill McKenzie, engaged last sea- |its football field that tells players and| Minneapolis, Nov. 2—(P)—Minne- ES CLEANIN TH YARD, LIMBER UP, DOC ILwuy, THIS AINT ANV TOUGHER THAN THUMB TWIDDLIN' I-caAy, YOU SHOULDA SEEN ME AT TH. LUMBER CAMP, PACKIN’ THEM LOGS LIKE MATCHES] ‘I BUSTED MY ARM,ONCE, AN THEY. PUT ME ON LIGHT DUTY, COLLECTIN’ TH” ‘DICK DEMARAY, 145, Bismarck | appeared only once at Bismarck and that time he was stopped by De- mi ‘ing end, against Purdue's football Cooperman of Deadwood, 8. D., ar- The two fighters will probably take limbering up workouts at the Memorial build- ing. A great many Capital City fight fans are of the opinion that the Bitto-Ernie Hetherington scrap will rival the main bout for action. Heth- erington, who is now fighting under the management of Isham Hall, has aray. Since then the Winnipeg scrapper has come along fast and his summer fight record includes four knockout victories and two wins on decisions without a single defeat. Among Hetherington’s knockout victims are Jack Perry of Cheyenne, Chuck O'Brien of Great Falls, Blacky Miller of Butte and Speedy Moulden of Bitto also has an impressive record Tickets for the Monday card are on. Thompson Will Start Against Boilermakers sota snapped its “elastic backfield,” a new combination with a romping rookie, Tuffy Thompson, on the sting- team Saturday. , Before 45,000 fans, another big crowd common with Minnesota this fall, the Boilermakers battle the Gophers in a “Dad’s Day” show put- ting both elevens in an emergency status, Big Ten title hopes hung on the game, the Boilermakers meantime trying to reconcile the defeat last week by Tech and the Gophers giving their chief ball carry- ing post to Sophomore Thompson. ‘Threats of Cecil Isbell and Tommy ‘McGannon, Purdue's fast backs, meas- ured against the Gophers’ powerful line in the pre-game analysis, Min- nesota worried over its end defense against the fleet Boilermaker pair. Taking over left half, Thompson furnished the “touchdown runner” angle in Minnesota's plans for its sec- ond defense of the conference title. He got the promotion, with George Roscoe going over to right half, be- Minne: was a defensive stand by Jamestown, | series with Princeton here Dec. 30 and | cause of startling-fast scoring sprints See er eg Mtinnecole ferenn| which failed to get a first down while 31. It will be the first time the two against captain, will be ready for action| Valley City got ten. against Wisconsin and possibly against » Dr. George Hauser, medical advisor for the Gopher gridiron squad said Friday. The Michigan game is Nov. 16, Wisconsin the week following. X-ray pictures taken at the student health service yesterday indicated that his fractured collarbone is mending rapidly. Seidel was injured in the Northwestern, was 2 p. m. Game time By Ahern TWIGS THAT ARE RANBLER-BUGKEYE, BEAR. C.L.A. LTS RATED AS: TOSSLPS Minnesota Faces Purdue, North- western Tackles Illinois in Big Ten Clashes New York, Nov. 2—(?)}—A blocked punt, a fumbled ball, or @ penalty may decide many a football game Saturday. The day’s schedule is loaded down with games in which almost anything can happen. The big interest centers at Colum- bus, Ohio, where Notre Dame and Ohio State meet, and at Los Angeles where California plays the University of California at Los Angeles. Mississippi State team meets Army in an intersectional encounter while Temple engages Michigan State in a battle that is hard to predict. Mich- igan takes on Pennsylvania, Colgate runs against Tulane and Detroit and Villanova clash in other intersec- tional conflicts. Rice was favored to take the measure of George Wash- ington. The East provided several games in which rivals were evenly matched. The. Dartmouth Indians were ready for Yale, Princeton faced the Navy; Syracuse, Penn State; Fordham, Pittsburgh, and Carnegie, Duquesne. Cojumbia was favored to beat Cornell and Harvard had a breather with Brown. In. the South, Alabama-Kentucky, Louisiana State-Auburn; Georgia Tech - Vanderbilt; Duke - Tennessee; North Carolina State-North Carolina set up problems. Buckeyes Favored Ohio State was the general favorite to topple Notre Dame in the midwest. Minnesota faced Purdue, Northwest- ern-Illinois, Towa-Indiana, Missouri- ‘Nebraska, Marquette-Iowa State, Ok- Jahoma-Kansas, and State. The Rocky Mountain schedule found Colorado State and Utah State together, Wyoming and Montana State, Utah &nd Bringham Young, Colorado College and Colorado Uni- versity. On the Coast, the supporting bill to the California-Uclans clash includes Stanford-Santa Clara, Washington- Montana, Washington State-Gonzaga and Portland-Oregon State. In Friday games, Centenary defeat- ed Loyola of New Orleans 9-0 while ‘Stetson shaded Miami 13-12 and Millsaps won by a point over Louis- jana Tech 21-20. In the mid-west Mississippi defeat- ed St. Louis University 21-7, Western Reserve ran over John Carroll 46-13 and Marietta beat Denison 22-6. Evansville beat Franklin 7-0 and Upper Iowa beat Central 19-3. BIG TEN TEAMS WILL PLAY BEFORE 250,000 Chicago, Nov. 2—(#)—Involved in “the” game of the day—Ohio State and Notre Dame at Columbus—and offering. other attractions promising thrills, football as played by the Big Ten figured to be on display before 250,000 spectators Saturday. Every seat in the big Ohio stadium was sold days ago, assuring of an at- tendance of 87,000 or more. Purdue and Minnesote, meeting at Minneapolis in-the spotlight battle of the conference championship card, were expected to play before 45,000. ‘The Gophers were after their second conference victory while the Boiler- makers sought their third. Defeat for either meant probable elimination from the title scramble. - ‘Thirty-five thousand was the pros- pect at Evanston where Northwestern was ranked as the favorite over Illi- nois, however. slight. The Wildcats saw the game as an opportunity for @ first conference triumph of the sea- son, and Illinois was out to atone for last week's 19-0 walloping by Iowa. At Iowa around 25,000 spectators were expected to watch Oze Simmons and Dick Crayne carry the ball against, Indiana. Iowa, still in the champion- ship running, was the choice. The revival of Gridiron relations between Michigan and ePnnsylvania at Ann arbor wes expected to attract crowd Four-H club members in Adams county displayed at their recent coun- ty achievement day program 18 gilts they bought the past summer. The club members will keep the gilts for breeding purposes in 1936, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1935: s in Balance o Breaks May Determine Victors of Nation’s Major Gridiron Encounters f Demon-Magician Game CAR THROWS UP HANDS IN FOURTH Je New FCO TBALL German: Heavyweight Refuses to Be Floored by Ponder- ous, Sweeping Lefts New York, Nov. 2. — Carnera, Italian heavyweight for a comeback, emerged fro1 smoky haze of Maidson Square Gar- den Friday night with a technical knockout victory over Walter Neusel, German heavyweight. « Refusing to be floored under & barrage of ponderous, sweeping lefts, the spindle-shanked victim threw up his hands and quit in the fourth round after Carnera inflicted a deep cut over his eye with a massive fly- ing elbow. As blood from the cut, Neusel’s seconds jumped into the ring with a towel, but he beat them to the draw, walking away from the grimac- ing Carnera to his corner. Before a near-capacity attendance of 12,768 which paid $31,621.53 to wit- ness Carnera’s first public appearance since Joe Louis knocked him out last summer, the former heavyweight champion belted his much smaller opponent all over the ring and easily won every round. The first blow of any consequence in the initial round swept Neusel half way across the ring and nearly through the ropes, but Carnera didn’t pack enough wallop to give the cour- ageous Neusel a good excuse to find; relief on the canvas. Carnera weighed 268; Neusel 201. RUNNING PARALLEL TO THE SCRIMMAGE LINE READY TO SHOOT AN UNDERHAND SHOVEL PASS TO A BACK OR GUARD, By JIMMY DONAHUE Sketch by Buzz Wetzel As a check play for fast-smashing ends, who cause plays to develop too rapidly and force the ball carrier to run laterally while the defensive half- backs come up to nail him on the line NERA VICTOR WHEN NEUSEL | Primo Carnera (above), earned himself another shot at Detroit's Joe Louis when he stopped Walter Neusel, blond: German chemist, in the fourth round Friday night. previous bout knocked out Care nera in the sixth. Ttalian, of scrimmage, we have the shovel pass, or forward back of the scrim- mage line. : This pass is thrown by the tail back, who fakes an end run, drawing the end out. At this point, the back shoots an underhand pass to a short | back cutting off tackle. 10. 8. army ‘The pass also is made as the tail’ airman. back slips directly back several yards; 13 Region. rand shoots a short toss forward to a {3 Impetuous. guard who has pulled out of the line mpe' ready to take the ball on an off-tackie; 14 Amidst. Bre ¢ this is the fullback {ese A variation o! e acl (7 Sarcasm. buck into'the line. The back slips 18 Duration. the ball to a guard pulling out, who in turn, shoots an underhand lateral) 49 Distinctive [$/AiG/S MMU} to. back going wide. ‘ theory. HIUIRIT MES IHIA[P Emm (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.)/ 22 To make lace. [A/R|1 |AMME IRJA|S|E MME |AISIE] ae |. 22 Northeast: MIADIRILIOT IM] ILJOIN[O/O[N Frost_on the windows is not ade-, 24 Natural force. 5 quate proof that the-air in the house| 26Claw of an 49 Copal. VERTICAL contains plenty of moisture. The| eagle. 51 Melody. 1 Native metals. frost collects merely because the win-/ 29 Rolls of film. §3 Welshman. 2 To appear. dows are the coldest part of the room; 32 Silly. 84 Mathematical 3 Auto. jand the moisture naturally condenses| 83 Playing card. te 4Coin. there. 34 Queerer. oe 5 Strife. 35 To combine, 55 Pastries. 6 Self. 36 Every. 56 Hh tee ay to 7 Measure. FLAP! 39 Food container the chief o! 8To attempt. PER FANNY SAYS: 41Genus of army air corps 9 Tanner's shrubs. 67 He now —— vessel. 44 Unclosed. that 10 To eject. 48 Kiln, department, 11 Cleft. An inkling of a secret is enot to blot a clean character. OUT OUR WAY IS 1S NJ SEEIN' O TH' WOODS: OF A SULTAN OF . STEEL —— HE MAY HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle Soldier of the Air > 12 He has a high —— rating. 15 Hated. 20 Military title, 21 Riches. 23 Not any. 25 College 27 Conjunction. 28 Boy. 30 Silkworm. 31 Quantity. 37 Most unimportant. 38 Parrot fish. 39 Heavenly body 40 Monkeys. 41 Classification of birds, 42 Cymbals, 43 Person opposed. 45 Back of neck. 46 Assam silkworm. 47 Perished, 48 Sorrel. 50 Wayside hotel, 52 Onager. he eee Ee eB eae \S EEN Louis in a wW o ih Cong aeons , {Stops Neuse! | o——___—_—_———_* a *, giant official.

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