The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE SIX port “DEMONS” WILL MEET VALLEY TEAM FRIDAY | | | | | Locals Accept Inviiation to Play Title Gam in Valley City Bismarck High School's “Demo Hey ¢ will contest V ty in the se finals of the s choo! foot high hall championship Valley Cit bri ternoon 2:30 o'clock, i* | innounced tod by Coach Mo on of the ocal h school, The win " me will mee the winner of the vils Lake-Minot for the championship of state ! h school football The local athletic authorities vited Valley City to play in Bismares | next Saturday, but the Valley Cit anagement countered with an in- | vitution jarantee larger thas the loc r felt able to 5 for The locals are City Valley improved so | is i) re ' n for a real : aw of Jamestown will referee Farlar be umpire. SELECTS KELLY MOST VALUABLE 4.—Manager Reds iders | ¢ BY Yo ince 1 and Ter simultaneou jivision, the f JOE KAPLAN OR KRAMER NEXT CHAMPION One of These Feathers Seems Certain To Win Dundee’ s Gift Crown WILLIAMS Nov, 4.-For the 904, when Young ry MeGovern moved up y to the lightweigit itherweights are with- first Cor- ay York | out # digital dictator the . most le utility} A Jewish boy, one Abraham in the Nati League, if| tell, claimed the vacated tit not both jor of; ations. | as matehed with Hurry For The fine sfowing of Ki n the | ockout in five roun¢ world series, despite the fact that | was recognized as the champion. he struck out twice in a pinch in} Two Jewish boys ne aim the final game, bears out Hendrick’s opinion of him. Kell great a fine target for the infielders. first baseman— He is ‘a hi 1 wonderful arm and is a dangerous hitter. Filling in at second base in the series when Frisch was moved ov to third, Kelly saved the first by a remarkable play on Goslin. the outfield he played equally There are few players in majors who can perf field or outfield Kelly does. me In well. the m in the in capably as ———- > | Billy Evans Says | ———— — It is rather surprising that colleges of the country have ny seriously objected to foothall eli enforced at West the y jority of the colleges e not permitted to play. This makes it possible for an athlete the title r I ny Dundee, portly sp den, The other is c is Lou Conn., One Iphia, har ertown Rickar que may in hi a dearth of him match Kramer with K the next featherweight | he will have champion, Kram Wise exes terfere most impossi to stop the 1 * to form, utly outgrown by John ehetti addict. Kid Kaplan of Meri- emigr om Rus Dann umer of Phil d-boiled product of the treet corners d been crying ¢io- has lo opponents or Harder Hitter and mi ble for the kicking te es it un in his tracks three ye: of varsity poe. 4 . Beeiieiivproyided| be has the ability] ,, 7 rurston bY winning 20\games for to make the team in his sophomore|)) 0) eel Anadetnats suid to — ave earned a substantial bonus. At West Point no such - u a matter of fact many| Young Stribling has gone back to best men are former] School and may play basketball this college sta ho have played their) ™ alloted three i | For football the ete of from re has 22 to 2h is more desirable than the uch the ‘ youth of from 18 to 21, all things be- | ing equal phys | S . * . former star tackle at The well conditioned athlete of | \: s in New York trying more mature years is much better|* professional boxer ‘able to stand up under the gruelling | - that « player must take for 60 min-| Travers, former open and + utes of actual playing time. amateur champiec noted for his In any sport other than footbali|ability to concentra the few added years might serv | a handicap but not on the gridiron, | rn, Missouri profession- a ars | al, has the biggest shoulders in golf. 1924 Army eleven won fame elsewhere on Three of the stars of the the gridiron before iving an| Army appointment. They are gr: beards, veterans, from a football standpoint. Garbisch, center and captain, one| of the best in the country, money out of the open championship teres entered BRIER eee cs Stayer (luce cuniiice Chane any plevee melt ater tag iaeleastae etgeed 2) Ee eretousoming to West Point hejever held. the ttle, aveuta/of tha) cloding) weeks Nobady Bined. cor four. veara.ot W. & J, ea i : had heard much about him, The It is not difficult to figure the hand-| Certain ball manufacturers paid | ¢ie1g was els Thi Saninc odio ieap some chap of say 4g, a sopho-| Walter Hagen $8000 in fees for play-| coved Masten, Charlee a. 80-to-1 more playing his first year of col-|ing with their special products last|wpot ee a lege football, would be up against when facing Garbisch. Hardly seems fair. | In the backfield Tiny Hewitt, a former University of Pittsburg play- er. and Harry Wilson, a sensation with Penn State last year, comprise much of the Army’s offense. It is really surprising that the Army, with this added advantage of using former college stars, does not make a better showing. No institu- tion other than West Point could get away with it without having rival colleges yelling murder. One of the changes of the football rules for 1924 was the banishment of the ortifieiel tee used in kicking off. So far this rule has not worked | out very well from the standpoint | of the team doing the kicking. | | With the use of the tee it was pos-| sible to-regulate the kicks to a cer-| tain extent: “A high or low ball could | be kicked, according to the position of the ball on the tee. In h recent game I saw cuge. with Boston College, three good kickoffs were made in the entire game. Often it’was nec- essary to make a second try. Without 2 tee the kicks are in- at Syra- not over team aeeeizing the ball a decided ad. vanta; it offers a chance for in- Melhorn used to be au hod-carrier. nor has it that if Miller Hug gins retires, Eddie Collins may so to the Yankees as manager. It is said summer, Derrill Pr: Pratt intends coaching when through jors. att, veteran infielder, is pe , is}at White Sulphur Springs at the slated to be turned loose by Detroit. | time watching. Luis Hiei tein in to take up college | hammock for Hurry Wills. in the ma-| «t¢ you newspaper guys want to get rich get a bet down on Master payor Charley,” advised McTigue. of Rutgers, one of 7 ‘' Homer Hazel the greatest the count: that makes Cyril Walker showing the form him look to be in for an- DO POS, is consomme because of | made less assers and kickers in THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE GEORGE DIXON” WAS H PROBABLY GIREATEST OF ALL FEATHI LSENNS =n =2(() ~ | S ~ i T HAS A REGULAR LEAGUE OF NATIONS TINS {Kramer will beat Kaplan, Kramer is a knocker-out and a southpaw. His lett lite in your ‘ 1 dd Wolfe on the whiskers several years ago. Wolfe dropped as if he had been shot, and didn’t move for 10 minutes. A week later Wolfe was rammed by an automobile and knocked un- cons When he came to he wanted to know what Kramer had hit him with, Wolfe himself will tell you this is no joke. | Kaplan is hette H-round work- man than Kramer, He is a stiff) puncher, if not a knocker-out, and better defensive fighter. It is not urd to hit Kramer, George Chaney, Baltimore lightweight, knoeked him quivering not so long ago. one of the boys are dropping in for the count, and he has | other big year. He was an All-Am- lerica selection last season. 'y of Buffalo is com-| a rush in the mid- Two members of the ional League st of umpires, Quigley land Sweeney, are also football offi- ciuls. Both are in demand for the big games. | Knute Rockne, ‘amous: tre {Dame coach, rates the late George Gipp as) the grentest) football! play-| er he ever saw. Real praise. Gehrig, the, Yankees ree slugger who rivals Babe The Bambino has nicknamed | “Buster.” | In Lou leovered a Ruth Gehrig | McTIGUE ON \ LONG SHOT i AT SPRINGS By NEA Service toga Springs, N.Y Mike Me light: champion, forget Master -old, that is buri Nov. 4.— heavyweight | ' | i | ummer White Sulphur Springs. from here. Together with Jack Br ton and Bartley Madden, Mike paid| frequent visits to the Saratoga track, training 4 McTigue had some inside informa- tion. A number of fight writers were A checkup revealed a total of $3.80 | among seven sports writers, or just n | enough to buy another bottle of Tom | Freak Stunts 1 ER WEIGHTS it S | mingled with the lightweights, too. Kaplan showed up Moran worse than Benny Leonard did, and he bounced enough punches off Johnny rue’s noble pan to earn the de- Here’s One Sure Bet You are reasonably safe in making a wager that the name of the next ight champion will begin “K” to hold in some re- Kilbane was the t the title and Killy spects, little champion. This writer ne aw, for one thing, any- | body with a better one-two punch. The featherweight division has heen represented the top by more different nationalities than any other fighting group. George Dixon, probably gr all thers, was a negro. Little | Chocolate they called him, and he held the title on three different oc- | H est of | casions. Billy Plimmer and Ben Jordan, were both English born. ci emphaticaily Irish, Criqui_ French and Dundee I Of course the nag won. And Me- Tigue claimed to be down for $400 worth at opening odds. No wonder he didn't do fighting last sum-! mer! y. Renault Gets i Success With | Britton’s Left; 4.—Jack Ri who for fieht with Jack Dempsey, de-| pends mainly on a left hand. | Renault says he learned the use ot | | Renault, | in line} this hand from Jack Britton, veteran welterweight. Renault uses it in much the same) way Britton used to, shooting it} straight to the head und boc The effect on an opponent is that | of being hit by a stick. | It is not a felling punch but « series of them bring total aeatry tion, Feature Recent -' World Series; By NEA Service i Washington, Nov. 4. series ever produced half the unusual | ituations that cropped out in the 1924 event. For instance: i | iter Johnson struck out 12 men,! yet was beaten 4 to 3 in Catcher Tate, second string catch-| er to Muddy Ruel of Washington, was sent to the bat three times as pinch hitter and drew a walk on ca oceasion. Pitcher Marberry of Washington worked in four of the seven games, three of them on successive days. He! saved the second game by striking out Jackson for the final out of the} contest on three pitched balls. ' Pitcher Jonnard of the New York! Giants, sent in as relief pitcher, was allowed to pitch only five balls be- foresbeing derricked. He walked the Luther's ale. first man to face him on four straight, three one ball to the next batter and then got the gate. In a pinch in the final game, ONLY 1 bes TO. se clined to be low and fast, giving the| English ‘turf followers got their biggest thrill of the season from this sight a3 Aga Khan's ‘Charle; paying 100 to 1, romped home. first. re tha, Caesarew! itch, feature. The the post and finished fourth. j home runs, {ise win every | ing! j started. j mo: Frankie Frisch struck out, Johnson turning the trick, It was his first strikeout in four world series. Lindstrom, third baseman for the Giants, the youngest player in the series, made four hits in one game off Walter Johnson, the oldest 2th- lete, Goose Goslin, by making three tied the record that was held by Babe Ruth and made in 1923, Washington came from behind to one of the four games cessary to decide the baxeball championship. runners on, Walter Johnson geme of the n to take a chance on first passed Jack Kelly, striking sacker of the Giant In one game Fran of three hits b: impossible plays h robbed king, seem- m | fly halls find on grounder. In only one game did the Giants go through with the pitcher who More pitchers were used on | in any other world contest two badly bounding balls sent over the tying| and winning runs for Washington. played three | series, first second base. Ne performed in sensational style at cach spot. In the doubled, game. final game a’ pinch hitter starting the rally that tied In the 12th inning of ne, Ruel, after getting wdy stumbled over his a foul fly, doubled nyisk goin: ahd later Reel of the nings of th le two hi of the series decided the contest. the most extraordin- ary feature of Bo Nick J Altrock was serious for the entire} | series. OHIO STATE HAS DEFENSE FOR GRANGE By NEA Service ch Nov. 4.—- While stop the slogan of every “B football coach, few have bee: ul in turning the tri ny th Wilce of Ohio Si in te has had success building up a de- fense for Gr an any Western Conference mentor. In the mportant game at Ohio | State last year, which Illinois won by the close score of 9 to 0, the ex- ploits of G and far between. No doubt Wilce is bunking on again | ries, twice | on two short | other | we were mightly few] * ROCKNE’S MASCOT Notre Dame Coach _Isn’t Superstitious, But Strong For Terry | Roc SCOT While Coach Knute Rockne works jon the theory that football games | are won through merit, not supersti- |tion, he has a decided fondne for Airedale shown in the pictur | Rockne regards Mascot Terry as [an omen of good luck, and wouldn't | think of starting a game without aving the Airedale on the scene of | battle. ‘upsetting the dope in the clash of | his Ohio State team with Illinois. | He believes that he can bottle up the Mlinois star. | Nebraska is the only team that has | played Illinois in the Itst tw | that has prevented Grange from run- ning wild and scoring one or | touchdowns, The two games with Neb jhave been played on an and no doubt Grange was | to a certain extent. | Another thing, the heav line outcharged Mlinois ieult for G niore Held bac c Nebraska and made it ange to metas started. i| The Nut Cracker iN ste ha teh Ara | Perhaps you | those who did —' noticed that among not attend Walter Johnson’s home-coming celebration was John J. McGraw. Whether he realizes it or not, Mr. Rockne of Notre Dame is: doing whole lot to discourage the practice of intersectional football games. Young Stribling has returned to his books and we suspect the most jimportant one is his checkbook. A Mexican heavyweight has ar- rived in New York. . . You can tell he is a Mexican heavyweight because his reservation calls for a room without bath, Returning to France, Epinard is probably convinced the national slo- gan of this country is, “Excuse my dust.” il Dobie of Cornell has never had any confidence in his teams and it m please him to know the fans a with him for once. Dundee is known the Indian rubber man of the ring. Well, he’s managed to stretch his career out longer than most of ’em. ay no chain is stronger than est link. Mr. O'Goofty jWants to know if the same logic ap- plies to country sausage. After all, the prizefighter man- ager who always boasts “My boy will win sure” has nothing on th gents handling the political destin- ies of Messrs, Coolidge, La Follette and Da Any tell you there are times yellow streak has considerable do with a losing hardened sport observer will when a to cards, “Having fine time. were here.” Wish you But none of them are going to Bucky Harris or Goose Goslin. dered average of champion is closed until the year's announced, MANDAN NEWS FINE CHURCH FAIR All records for receipts at “church fairs in Glen Ullin are believed to have been broken Sunday at the annual fete of the Catholic church there. More than 900 people were served at a splendid chicken dinner in the basement of the church, while the school house was, jammed thru SV eon fly-swatting The ‘statistical season can not be TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1924 | © out the day by merrymakers parti. c.pating in the various money rai: ing events. A large number of peo- ple from Hebron, Almont, New Sa- tem, Mandan and the rural territory north and south of Glen Ullin helped swell the crowd. The Glen Ullin Band under the leadership of Tom Homer helped to liven things with Zenerous concerts. MASONIC MEETING R. E. Wenzel, grand orator. of the North Dakota Masonic grand lodge, and head of the Council, will deliver an address on the “constitution” at the Masonic Service association meeting at the Masonic hall tonight. Mr. Wenzel is an orator of unusual ability and has an interesting mes- sage for the members of the order. There will be a social session after the meeting, refreshments, and the officers of the lodge have arranged to secure an election return service as a special feature, RETURNS FROM HOSPITAL Northern Pacific Agent, H. G. Taylor, who has been quite serious- ly ill in the N. P. hospital at Glen- dive, returned to the city Saturday. Although greatly improved in health, Mr. Taylor plans to return to the hospital in a few days for further treatment. LOCAL GIRL WINS Miss Jeanette, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Wilson, was awarded a second, prize of $5.00 Tn a poster contest conducted by the |Child Life Magazine. The contest was national in scope and children from all over the United States com- pleted. Four second prizes of $5.00 each were offered. ———— | LITTLE JOE. | ——-_—— | IT'S BADLUCKT RAISE AN, | UMBRELLA INDOORS' AND BAD LUCK TO PUT IT DOWN ANYWHERE | | } | ses Distributor. THE RIENEKE CO. Fargo, N. D. fayorite. in, the race, Was kicked at — Ohey're bound to win your favor Men know how .to pick a winner... The New Cinco Invincible carried the country by storm Quality will tell... Try them today... You'll elect them for the rést of your natural life... MAN, THEY'RE FINE! safe H

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