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Gopher 8 ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1935 MINNESOTA GERTAN | LEADER: PRINCETON, NN. D. College Confererice First Team T.6.U. TACKLE FOES; Gould Gets Raspberries From Viking Partisans for | Comparison | COMPARATIVE SCORES CITED Rules Against Post-Season Combat Prohibit Settlement of Arguments By ALAN GOULD | Nov. 26.—(?)-—Deftly | side-stepping any further attempt to; separate the pace-setting inte Jegiate clans, for the time being and} on the basis of latest performances, | here's this week's football rankings: | 1, Minnesota, Princeton and Texas Christian. \ 4. Southern Methodist. 5. Louisiana State. 6. Alabama. 7, Stanford. 8. Ohio St ® Califorr 10. Pittsburgh. So far as this dep: cerned, now that nearly returns have been posted, there’s no; definite difference among the three; teams bracketed at the top. Minne-| sota is there to stick, having finished | its second straight unbeaten season | as the class of the middle west.) Princeton has Yale to pla hould ; win decisively. Texas Christian, gath- ering momentum as it es the! stretch drive, looks now to have teo{ much power for Southern Methodist ) in this week's southwest headliner. | Meanwhile, there’s the debate o ery the respective merits of Minnesota | and Princeton, two teams with spot-| Jess records and claims to national) championship recognition at leas equal to anything the southwest can produce. Since they cannot meet, unfortunately, in pos com- pat, the argument is s emic, partic comparison gether trustworthy. Minnesota thundered down to finish of another great season lo ing every bit as impressive, at least; in its last two games, as the gallop-j ing Gophers of 1934. i schedule is much tougher than Prince- | ton’s but the Gophers have been no} more emphatic than the Ti: handling the November The manpower on the: noi only i: ch as to coaches envious but Gopher gunfire in the this observation pc Gould Gets Raspberries Firsthand ex; ence has convin ed us that nowhere bigger c Wu wn tha 's erop must be i | ] te, | | timent Is con-) all the main | season | the cause of direction of ement, in unusual ! connection manpower. players rid! of each Sz that “there ng the bench at urday’s games who wouid t ¢. I y team you care to mention, in South- ern Methodist and Minne: | Intended as no slap whatever merely to emphasize the mind—namely, that ented squad is or tion's mistake, first, of underestimating the fury of the Minnesota noncom r , of not underlining the start of.” They got the idea all right in St. Cloud, Minn.,| where a sports commentator remark- ed: “Of course he’s right. Minnesota also has men on the bench that could: be starters at Princton. That is pari! of the strategy and what makes foot- ball teams. 1 For this beam of light in a ls of typewritten or typeset thunder, a vote | of thanks is offered from the storm-| cellar. To shorten the exp it and clarify the point. we fe such Princeton stal Levan and Charies in the Tiger scheme of would likely he stringers by most any college in the country—Minnesota now and by re- quest, excepted. Kostka Is We feel that last year, for example.! Stan Kostka would have been useful to Princeton or any other college team @s No. 1 fullback, vet Kostka did not} start for the Gophers and was not considered as valuable an all-around! back as Sheldon Beise, Perhaps Princeton with Kostka could have’ voided the embarrassment of being upset by Yale last year for the only} setback the Tigers have experienced in three years. Within the past few seasons we have seen all the topnotch Big Ten teams, including Minnesota's 1933 ar- tay with “Pug” Lund setting the pace nd this year's Ohio State power- but point in ton’s h the r that Gar |, honstarters | operations, | mpie Minnesota's | © \have been Six Schools Get Berths on All-Star Johnny Max High Cage Quint [Rhame Coach Seeks Has Four Lettermen Max, N. D., Nov. ettermen and several pr enhance the pr ing 1 winning bas’ school, a Sixteen ,c here ther 17 harbo: I Dough Civie League Picks Goph repo Minn’ week to Minnes tropl T 3 fore the the committce w ea P Caz Seidel for house, tied with the Gophers for con- ference honors. Acknowledging the prowess of the Gophers is one thing but the enthusiasm of their backers is another. From a stack of testi- mony this high we learn, for instance, that Minnesota could trounce Prince- ton by 75 points, that the Tiger var- sity would have difficulty making the |. Gopher freshman team, that those! virile Vikings could play Southern Methodist in the morning as a “tune- up” before whipping Princeton in the afternoon! Comparative scores, we regret to gay, have ‘been dragged into this dly discussion. Pennsylvania in the season's ye Micnigan overturned Penn 16-6 and Minnesota Walloped, Michi- Princeton barely | { 40-0. That gives Minnesota at 50 points over the Tigers. But. Navy disposed of Penn, 13-0, af- being manhandled by Princeton, 96-0. pe aha part of Ne ssp, anyway, whether anyone cares. to ge dizrier juggling the figures, Bt. Paul, Nov. 26.—()—Jack Cib- ns, St. Paul light heavyweight SQ SS S Ad ha visions o: D: welcomed as first Souther Mctixcdis OUR BOAR THUMB MY EYE, WILL YOR’? WELL*. BROWN THIS BISCUIT ers Johnny on the Spot | ages, Runnersup, Each aT ee Champions, and Sav- | Place Two in Poll { Minot, N. D., Nov. 26.—(#)—Two: layers each from Minot, Dickinson, |Valley City, Jamestown and ‘Wahpe-' on and one from Mayville were! amed on the all-star team picked | by coaches of the North Dakota in- jtcrcollegiate conference at the week- jend meeting held in Minneapolis, it| {was announced here Monday. ! Rejecting the request of Coach J. ;W. Coleman of Minot Teachers to jconsider the cancelled Minot-Ellen- dale game as a forfeit by the latter school, the coaches officially ranked {cD son @s sole possessor of second e behind the Jamestown ' ch for three successive seasons has} won the loop title. | Valley City ended in third place, ‘Minot and Mayville were tied for conference teams: team: son. — Whalen, Mayville, and ', Dickinson. is—Kellogg, Jamestown, and | Kinzer, Valley City. | ter—Jackson, Wahpeton. 5 | is—Kempf, Valley City; Sev- jl Minot; Bute, Wahpeton; ;Schauer, Jamestown. | Second tean Ends—Patterson, Wahpeton, | Peterson, Jamestown. Tackles—Sherwood, Wahpeton, and | Heath, Minot. | Guards—Schlickenmeyer, ‘town, and Lipp, Mayvil | Center—Morsch, Valley City | Backs—Elfson, Mayville; jstoss, Dickinson; Aasen, Thunem, Jamestown. eee | The faculty governing body of the Harvard {conference elected O. 4K. Banks of Ellendale president for the coming} year. G, W. Haverty of Wahpeton wa. \named secretary-treasurer. | | ‘The faculty group voted to re-admit | (ee ee |the. Bottineau School of Forestry to New Ferward Wall ine conterence after an absence of |several years, The application of the Prospects | forestry school was made last year. it at the iocal/and the entrance of that institution Coach Alven Thor-' again raises the membership to eight. | 9 moid a new forward; ee | ve power from | ail candidates | Non-Participation ete | Hopes Are Blasted id Russel Milton, y two lettermen! Two otirer and | James- reasons why al Blue-Crimson classic —Four return- | mising | a ball team at M of the McLean and the Reserva- | Anderson a re the Chicayo, Nov. 2 {posed to United States ‘in the Olympic +—Groups op- part ion games at Berlin nex ect the boycott gues- ition to be threshed out on the floor nnual meeting of the Ama- ic Union at Now ¥¢ Der.} ic Maken | Oo ee: a 2 Souths | 7 Der , id the} { ion has no parliament: and ing and that there is little probabil-| y that efforts will be made to force propaganda,” Steers many to believe that ’ Hanley, Kerr to Pilot the boycott proposal is to be the mai: East Team at "Frisco | of the A. A. U. meeting. The jtruth is, it ha. no parliamentary (Standing whe There is nothing in the co , bylaws, general les or precedenis of the A. A. U. to support such , propositior in the arid | ie faa in Andy Kerr of Carnera Outpoints | CER ARE Smith in Comeback' : 26.—(P)—Pon-} ra held a come- in in each of his huge paws lay and looked around for bigger 1 as Champs Noy. 5 picked a ley i i second comeback bar- rier in stride last night, outpointing ; but hopelessly, outweighed cowboy from Moniana, in; | 19 rounds. Smith who we against 26712 —(@)—The only in the fi clubs of the} that Carna League ie Colgate coach se- linemen, while he| Ford Smith, pluck ger number of the mid- backs. ighed 209 pounds or Carnera, threatened t three rounds, After weight and heavy left Monday) jay had the “giant-killer” from Mis- |soula in trouble until the 19th. DRISCOLL WINS Driscoll, N. D., Nov. 26.—Driscoll’s y Plait,| hig school b: ball team scored a yet to be| 27-8 vi: over Avena in the sea- j son's opener, ganized Super-! Jo! a rabie n MING HOUSE ' By Ahern IN YouR PAN | 1 MY worp | s, Tigers, Horned Frogs Lead Nation Stanford Hunts | Rese Bowl Foe, Winner of Southern Methodist- Texas Christian Game | May Be Named - MAJOR N. D. PREP CAGE FIVES OPEN SLATES IN TWO WEEKS ’s Grid Parade Sy Bowling i} Scattered Tilts Have Already; Coleharbor Cagers Marked Calendars of Win From Mercer} ‘Scores Tye }Rose Bowl annual football dilemma— Smalfer Schools Coleharbor, N. D,, Nov. 26—Before |the largest home crowds a ta years, Coleharbor’s high school bas- NY ued ere eae | ketail team nosed out Mercer, 6 to 5. ‘ | Scattered tilts already marked the on selecting a suitable eastern opponent | sports calendar for this week as the |e iis Teal eat Yiu cients wan for the 21st intersection game here |pyik of North Dakota high school! 7 % re i een the ex- New Year's Day—confronted Stan-|pasketball teams continued practice | povo’sP Pougine bora fe to 20 score. ford Tuesday. sessions for the general opening of While Stanford officials scanned | tp, n vo week: . the grid horizon for the team of their ee eaty ure wee ee Pasadena, Calif., Nov. 26.—(4)—The ; ‘oleharbor trailed 4-5 at the end of| the third period but a field goal in! Jin the City League Capitol Cafe and O. H, Will bowler: annexed two games out of three from the Wool- worth and Coman Tourist Court five, respectively, in matches rolled Mon- day night. The Cafe team rallied after losing the first to cop the second and third with Adam Brown setting the pace team} 7 choice, a poll of the paying public suggested the western representative take the buli by the horns and name} the winner of the Texas Christian- Southern Methodist tussle at Fort} Worth Saturday. There were reports, lacking con-! firmation, that Stanford would make ther attempt to get Princeton. was in the face of a rebuff from | the unbeaten eastern team in 1933} when Columbia was named. | Members of the Class A circuit have allowed themselves more than a month of preliminary training and warmup games before launching into} the intra-class competition in Jan- uary. major bracket by eliminating one of the Big Eight teams. Though not Menderlen, f . A week of fundamental work als mates vate ready has been completed by Graf-!Robinson, ¢ . ton’s defending Class A champions, & | Nelson, g Class B team that like last year’s | Garison rannerup, Wahpeton. advanced to the; saidin, T., Guenther ... \the fourth quarter decided the issue | with scores of 203-147-172—522, El- in the locals’ favor. The summary: Coleharbor (6) jmer Olson and Enelen with scores jot 517 and 516, respectively, were high FG FT PFjfor the Five and Dime store trund- 0 | lers, . 0: Dan Schneider swept both the high 4{single and three game honors with 2{his counts of 215-180-178—573 to lead Oj the Nursery team to victory in the. 0|second game on the margin of one - 0: pin and by @ safer margin in the 0/third. John Nelson was best for the —}Coman crew with counts of 176-162- \fourth, Wahpeton was fifth and Ellen- 7 Tip to Billy The general cpinion prevailed that h ye te, Grafton’s sc ! uld New. York University defeat |25t wetted Geese lta Mc Totals .....sseeeeeee Bl Steccuace al esseeuer ulecosested tal some aoee Byron Neison. | By EDDIE BRIETZ | New York—(P)—If Charlie Dres- 4 sen hadn't come to terms with th Reds, he could have had a coaching job with the Giants ... Biil Terry made him a nice offer at Dayton . Evans: If Bob Quinn go: to Boston, get in teuch with “Judge” McKeever of Brodklyn. Columbia alumni are afraid Lou | Little, who gets $20,000 per year and owas 36 suits of clothes, may. { quit use of poor material... Hawt banged up Harry Dul :M’Clusky Cage Hopes i—Far; t Grand Forks. S—Kast Grand Forks at ( and) McClusky, N. D., Nov. 26—Prospects als at Thief! depend on the development of inex- hake at Devils {Perienced material, according to Coach {Lloyd Adler, who is tutoring the high school athletic teams for his second ils Lake. |year, . Jimmy Leio was all fight with that mert, veterans of the 1934-35 cam- paign, form the nucleus of the squad + {from which Adler must mold this ieee combination. Other members of the squad are Emil Bauer, Herbert Miller, Rayburn Lang, Robert Aichele, Edwin Grimm and Elif Carlson. McClusky is a member of the Cen- tral North Dakota Conference which t Jamestow. y at Valley Cil between Temple and Marquette” will net be continued next year Sai2 2 the real thing, boys. eds at Leeds, ndo at Devils Lake. ] De Lake. Good for the bascball men for al- most doubling the salary of Judge W G, Bramham, minor league czar . He may be the next Judge Landis if)) a successor is ever appointed which we doubt... Glenn Cunn Kansas’ great miler, firss inv Bowl track meet at New Orleans nex! moath, Devils Lake. own at Devils Lake. | Maddock. Minnewaukan, Fessenden, the league. t Fargo, {in | The cage schedule: (Starred games atiore both girls and boys) Nov. .22— j Denhoft,* there; Dec. 4—Denhoff* jhere; Dec. 6—Wing’, there; Dec. 13— Mercer, here; Dec. 17—Anamoose* there; Jan. 10—Carrington, there; nd Forks. | Jan, 14—Velva, here; Jan. 17—Drake, i “here; Jan, 22—Mercer, there; Jan. 24 at Fergus Falls,|—Velva, there; Jan. 31—Carrington, ie ety eT ee ake | mee Feb, 7—Fessenden*, here; Feb. Me=Minoe- at alings, Rees taere; Feb. 21—Anamoose Bellboy Could Manage Majors, Says Brown Terra Hauie, Ind., Nov. 26.—(?)— | Mordecai (Three= Fingered) Brown, hpeton 1 rmount Detroit Lakes, Minn, 2 tclls tris one cn Minnesota full- back ... When ise was called of the field with to the center Dick Crayne in the Minnesota- Iowa game, the referee said: “Mr. ‘Becsy’ as visiting captain, you get the choice of the coin.” , To which Beise ‘replied: ‘Boise, pleasy, not Beesy”. .. Notre Dame fans are finding it pays to stay in their seats until the last whi: tle these days. STOW 1 t Bismarck. i t Devils Lake. =O. | Wahpeton, | t Valley City. Young Alfred Gwynne venderbitc| is the leading money winner of the! Amorican turf thi ear. and Aga |i*eb. Khan, one of she world’s richest men, | N¢P tops the winners in England... . Jus. | 41 goes to show that them as has gets! M ... Bernic Bierman and Harry Kipke .VALUEY Crry have opposed each other as Spaciies Nav. | Be sag pon and four times... . The total score is 74], Valley City, to 3 for Minnesota . .. Michigan has Bec: $,-Badetin at Valley City, et to pacs or carry the leather past Dec. 2 the Gopher goal line. Jan, Fe Mandan, inot at Minot. 1 €a | Chicago Cubs than any other pitcher, ; Says a bellboy could manage a major See ee an dnD. ston. | eauue, baseball team,” Brown, ‘whose ch 11-—Devils Lake at Devils Lake. | Pitching hand has only three fingers, | hunting. | ’PEGGERS WIN Minneapolis, Nov. 2.—(P)—A team }of Winnipeg, Man,, amateur boxers | defeated Minneapolis fighters, four Farmer Burns, the former wrestling champ is getting ready tive). —Bismarek at Valley City. dan at Valley City. ‘o at Fargo. —Wahpeton ‘at Wahpeton. stown at Jamestown, AFTON | ‘orks at, Grand Forks.| on at Grafton, at Deviis Lake. sicoges ... the Yanks will part with Bill Bickcy in a pinch... Good for o!d Spearfish Normal it’s still in the Rese Bowl ning, : i | | i (By the Associated Press) \ Philadeiphia—Primo Carncra, 26732, Italy, ‘outpointed Ford Smith, 209, Missoula, Mont, (10). Paris, France—Marcel Thil, 162, France, outpointed Lou Brouillard, 158, Worcester, Mass, (12). ec, 20-—Grand Wah: Devils Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 26.—(P)— | f} The annval North’ Dakota bowiing J. (10). 8 at Grafton, | ty at Grafton, ; Newark, N. J.—Lou Ambers, t Grafton, | 126%, Herkimer, N. Y., outpointed 0 at Grafton | Georgia Levy, 13514, Trenton, N. and Forks./for a winning basketball team here! | \" Emil Riha and Alvin Berg, each! Zana {with two year's first string experience.|p, geh . and Leland Rohrer and Claude Mum-' a Schneider 1 ! 1 | pevils ' Harvey, Drake, Velva and Anamoose.| Last year the cage five placed pecona| { {Roy Gile, 1 i 'Nelson . at Rest on Development: 6|170—508. The scores: 802-799-839—2440 itis f cight Class A engagements. | cer (3 Woolworth dham Thankselv ag Day, it would "to tne Olnae B ranks Aneta wit ve} “TO pripr pach ree reel Hina OF tk Pe dena defending the state championship| grug, ¢ 0 | Goeh: °°. 4§8-119-129— 406 ted Waris 7. ing {won by a 27-20 victory over Minot! Brown, f .... 0: Walker [192-136-121 409 fo bid wane ba Teas ; Model in the 1935 tourncy finals while | Helle, c .... | Olson . 213-159-145— 517 Y ducted by a Southern je, Consolidated League's title de-|rittle, g 1... 0 Enelen . + 193-171-152—"516 mia ‘new paper fav ek the oan | fender is the Grand Prairie aggrega-!Stradinger, g 0: Handicap « 58- 75- 90— 223 lection of the victorious Texas eleven, |40n with Grandin, runnorup. | Peterson, E - 0! ee with 1 For: U. and Notre Dame.!, Amons early schedules announced | peterson, J. ..: be 0 Totals...... 914-782-784—2480 peate and tic “running | PY coaches are: | Just 1 Capitol Cafe beaten 0} tied once, running | | Davis 146-177-187— 510 neck and neck for second place, | GRAND FoRKS rétenn lee TIT” 165-168-176— 509 a a Ser erg || Technical fouls: No! + 203-147-172— 522 | lr Score by quarters: . 148-167-164— 479 por ts Round- Di Coleharbor ........2 4 4 2 140-140-140— 420 BE Mercer ...... 0 4 5 yo ee 2 * Comans Tourist Court 176-162-170 508 Roehrick « 151-182-154— 487 Weisenburger .... ° 175-166-147— 488 Coman .,.... + 111-147-102— 360 Sloniker «+ 150-157-183— 490 Handicap 86- 86- 86— 258 ++. ,849-900-842—2591 H. Will Co. + 150-203-170— 523 158-182-189— 529 163-156-135— 454 215-180-178— 573 189-180-153— 522. 215-901-825—2601 Totals. F, Hummel M. Hummel. Totals. Elgin Cage Five Drills Hard for Second Tilt Elgin, N. D., Nov. 26.—After two un- iincludes Carrington, New Rockford, |4efeated conference seasons when they won both the South Slope and Grant. county titles, the Elgin high school guint was drilling hard this week in the hope of avenging a setback at the .. hands of Glen Ullin received in the season's opener. The two teams meet again at Elgin on Dec. 4. Gordon Reinke, three-year lettermen, and Grant Lipelt, regular :|from last year, are heading the squad jof 13 candidates. Other players with experience are Archie Neal, Clarence Wittmer, Leonatd Gustafson and Bernard Meyer. William Eisenbarth, Clarence Pahl, Rinhardt ivinius,* Harold Lewis and Leslie Roberts round out the squad. In the last two seasons, the team won 40 out of 43 games played. Flash- er, Carson, Leith, New Leipzig, Mott, Regent and New England are other members of the conference. The schedule: Dec. 4—Glen Uilin, here; Dec. 6—Carson, here; Dec, 13— |who won more baseball games for the | New England, there; Dec. 18—Flasher, there; Dec. 20—State Training School, here; Jan. 8—Leith, here; Jan. 10— Flasher, here; Jan, 11—State Training School, there; Jan. 14—New Leipzig, jOperates a gasoline service station| there; Jan. 17—Regent, there; Jan, 24 ate ¢jhere, but he is quick to turn that/—Mott, here; Jan. 29—Regent, here; Eckelson @t! business over to his employes when|Jan. 31—Leith, there; Feb. 4—Mott, someone wants to talk baseball or| there; Feb. 7—New Leipzig, here; Feb. 11—Lemmon, 8. D., there; Feb. 14— Carson, there; Feb, 21—New England, Su. | here. Over 100 Entrants in to pen a srranastumn: aa Cannel ae to three, here Monday night. || Diamond Belt Tourney Omaha, but will teach the hug ils Lake ut Devils Lake. | = a ae igs and tig: racket by) means of patton: Fae peel | Fights Last Night ii Minneapolis, Noy. 26—()—Nick ae ee Kahler, Minneapolis amateur boxing promoter, reported that more than 100 entries had been ‘received for the diamond belt boxing tournament next week and that if they continued to come in at the present rate it would be necessary to close the list by the end of this week, The diamond belt tournament, the third annual event of its kind, is scheduled for the Min- neapolis auditorium the nights of Dec. 5 and 6. tournament will be held in Grand a ia Forks February 15 to 23. inclusive. OUT OUR WAY The tournament, held here last ae By Williams winter, was returned to the city at ig SE Sek 7 the annual meeting of the state or- i \ganization following the meet. Sun- day state officers. meeting with the executive board of the city associa- tion, selected the dates and laid plans for entertaining a larger delegation } than rolled here last winte: : { George Tsoumpas, state ‘president, said a bigger field than roiled last March in the most successful tourna- ntont yet staged, was already assured. | nt YOURE mi | Ds TELLING ME EGAD, ROSCOE, ie London, 1s tolled anly upon the Germany is one of the more en- thusiastic tennis uatio: . » More thai 2,690,009 play thers, .” Buck- nell hes a co-ed drum major... . Jonn Stilley, Notre Dame tackle, has never missed a day of schgol. . And there's @ reason... . His father is a truant off: National League umpires will wear tan unl- forms next season. . . . Don Faurot, Missouri coach, shoots 18 holes in the ‘high 70s consistently... . The Glas- gow Rangers soccer team of Scotland are custodians of the Glasgow cup} for the 22nd ti: . . Harold. Smith, ; Wheaton College freshman, was locked | in the locker room during the Loyola | invitational cres*-country meet and; did not start until the other contest- | ‘ants had traversed a half mile... . | Smith managed to overtake the tail- enders, A great bell in 8t. Paul's cathedra: 1.M. REG. U.6. PAT. OFF. 1928 BY /death of a member of the royal family; ” of England, — a / : Sige ae a