The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 10, 1926, Page 6

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PAGE SIX CITY LEAGUE ‘AMONG ‘CAGERS’ : Phantoms Will Again Be on Floor —Six or Eight | | it Teams Wanted } t vi o Anyone who is interested in ba ketball or would like to play basket! ball this winter will have the op tunity, for i yinna sium will be avail on Tuesda and Wednesday evenings of each week and plans are be six or cight t Anyone who is not a student of the schools is cligible to play and is urged to report for practice next week. The Bismarck P toms will) again be in the running for the in-| dependent tile which was won by | last. year, Stanle ntoms at Minot last y a single point for the title Vhantoms are out for revenge. They | have Jost but two games in thre years and are in hopes of winning the title this s Two men ha squad of last y is leaving the city satile guard, is attending university. Capt. G daugh, Kludt, Slate Collins and Doyle are r and Geo, Holt high seh on the t Glen Ullin y is work-| ing in the nd will give some-! body a run for a regular berth, The above mentioned players offer a wedith of on al and Manager Churchill will have a stronger team | i on. been out for! practice next Tuesday night and aj meeting will be held the time to make definite : organization of city He Quit N. Y. Giants Scranton, P Dec. 10—)—Ex- | plaining why he withd of the New York Giants, Hughey Jennings says he was shunned while ill by Ju rancis X. McQuade and Charles Stoneham, owners of the, e day that I went into a nerv- | ous breakdown, caused principally because 1 over-exerted myself in a effort tc New York Nation League team every ounce of encriy Thad in my system in 1924 and 1925 4 ager John J. MeGraw was rs of the Giants, erted me, cut me off d from that day to ked me by wire mouth how I absolutely di the pay roll this never dire or letter or word o! felt.” Famous Golfers in California Tourney 10.-@) -A] » numberin. Monte, Calif., Dec nt field of golf some of the gr pro’ and tours in the country, to their clubs today in quest of h ws the onterey peninsula open’ championship play got under way. Led by George Von Eim, national title holder, the amateurs ntered with such professional performers as | Cyril r, of New York, former! open champio Leo Die; of Wash-! ¢ lian open title! Al Watrous, of Grand Rapids, runner up to Bobby Jones in ritish open championship, and winner of the $10,000 open tournament last | Wills and Lengien : °. . Meet in California Oakland, Calif., Dee. 10—(P) Helen Wills made an informal call yesterday on Suzanne Lenglen, It} was the first time th had met) Kince the French tennis star arrived | «in America. They exchanged courte- | Sies “and cach reiterated that she| Awould be “delighted” to meet the! other in a tennis mat¢h, \ ‘Delaney’s Title | 5 at Stake Tonight; = Waterbury, Conn., Dec. 10—()- > idack Delaney of Bridgeport tonight Will-take part in his first bout since he won the light heavyweight cham- spionship from Paul Benlenbach, last ‘July. He will meet Jamaica Kid of New York in a 15-round bout, and Sis title will be take. *New York, Dec. 10—()—Plans to Fprect’ @ sports arena, costing’ be- ween $6,000,000 and $7,000,000 ‘and Grivaling Madison Square Garden as a Beene of all-around athletic activity, _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE =—S—S——— SSS SPORTS “Four Horsemen!” imply “Flew” on Grid These Lads MAY BE FORMED | The same was true at Chicago and Northwestern for important games, | |the exception of Towa, has built a m since the war, although | several are not yet fully completed. building era in 1922 by building \a j larger than the Yale Bowl, and with | a seating capacity of 78,0007 It was | sold out for the Michigan- | November 13, and thousands of ap- | plications had to be turned down. the 1923 season. It has a capacity of 70,000, and has been sold out four times in the four years it in use. HUG AND “CHES' t's greatest scoring back: port (Lenn) hign’sen_ol, X opponents. All four of the bac ss and punt, m: and out a bit above the othe rt started the 1921 It’s the “Pony Ex- as a record of 540 points $ the} aygue. iy Jennings Tells Why |. are fleet-footed and elusive. They can also’ this fall—at Indiana, | Purdue. All were the horses nesota's plant seats 55,000, and the two Hoosier stadiums 25,000 each. 0. at scored the game talking figures for weeks after, 2«- | cording to seme of his close: Kingsport has Le raged 90 point A per game, or a point and a half 2 Looks like you gotta hai was coach} | 1 it to ’em, fellows. _| tion * twelve months to increase it to 80,- 1000. \Northwestern was able to get ‘ 50,000" seats ready for this season’: gridiron spectacles, and plans an uw! mate capa Demons to Play Carson on Local Floor Tomorrow Preparation for The purple scored 114 points jto 13 for the opposition. rang up #4 to 22 for the foe, western scored the highest to’ ame with Chie eee wriine ec ed work on a new plant to be ready for next fall, with a seating capacity of 70,000. The Wolverine stadium will be erected in a “crater” dug into the ground, with the top row of seats being on the ground level. est effort was Judge MeQuade |° ; » blanked Minnesot eroup before the tion to its stand each year. The Badger plant now holts 45,000 and will be incre: sufficient. low. 30,000, but has several new sections of steel and concrete grandstand. likewise to Indian& (twice) and Pur- Ohio State counted 16 points into the game in der to get a line Demon quint, ected to give a good and the Demons are ng the Grant coun-} Northwestern and Towa six. n had two narrow squeaks hot underestima verines whipped Ohio Sta’ hesota (second tilt) by Northwestern's toughest bat- tle was with Iowa which it defeated "yby seven points, ° wi No common opponent was encoun. | Maryland was the only team that didn’t score on Chicago. e will not be iff the one of the worst football season this fall in the wily mentor’s long regime at the midway school. The Maroons en him. With his al the game the Demons will tniss 01 Michigan and Northwestern * merits of the joint cannot be determined by tive score method. Comparing Records of Blue and Purple list, trimmed id Minnesota (twice). field goal d!around and tripped Penn State and Columbia in like manner. Paul Scull accounted for Penn's two victorious field goals. igan and Northwestern sharing football honors campaign, a resume ictories against the AN ALITAMERICA “ \S ASORT OF martyr, HES WRITING UP ALLIZAMERICA, AND TLL Ct RAN THis Gut SEEN A. CONFERENCE Bow- LEGGED a ¥ Will Build ie Huse Sports Arena, nnounced today by Humbert J. ‘metropolitan promoter. bi in business section of ‘lyn, will be ready for operation ding, to be} Indiana (twiee), These three teams (didn't win a conference game all seasons’ in feet, scored but compara- ly few pdints, SPORT PLANTS — “IN BIG TEN T0.: -— SBAT 663,000 Stadiums of Western’ Copfer- ence Have Increased Seating Capacity in Past 5 Years diums now under construction or planned for the immediate future,! are completed, the ten universities ating capacity of 553,000, an to take care of the horde of gridiron fa It was impossible to squeeze ¢ University of Michigan sta- opene nd also at Ohio State, Room Still Insufficient _ The Soldiers Field Stadium tre, | vene of the Army and Navy spectacle, was expanded to care for 110,000 per- sons, but if it could have | creased to hold 500,000 it would not jhave been large enough. jcharge of the ticket sales turned | down 500,000 applications before the | | middle of October, and thousands of jletters still poured in. Every school in the Big Ten, with Ohio State started the stadium ‘antic double decked horseshoe, hio game Illinois finished its stadium during chas been Three New Ones This Fall Three n@w stadiums oe type of constru Two partly completed stadiums ‘e been in use at Chicago and Northwestern. The capacity of the Midway pl has been increased from » to 000, and further addi- vill be made within the next ity of close to 65,000. Coach Yost of Michigan has start- Wisconsin has added one new sec- d if the demand is 's plant seats around ONE SHUTOUT VICTORY Stagg’s Chicago Marons experienced but two of their eight games, ing to win a single Big Ten clash. THREE IN ROW played three games in h the final result was losing to Ilinois by a argin, the Quakers swung OPEN SEASON FOR ALL-AMERICAN EXPERTS: pate —_—_ I KNoOw A LOT OF FANS WILL THINK UM NUTS, BUT THEN You CaAN’T PLEASE EVERYBODY, Pirates Will Fight wo, Dec, 10.—( AP)—When sta- | ing the Western Conference | © athletic plants, with acom-| soca: Muskingum $9; Keayon 34: ¢ of 300,000 sin the last five | Ooi Tinos most cf thet this expansion has not begun | jthat enabled them to eke out 4 point triumph in the last few min- utes of play. in in- | Those in|, been held to a tie in another. The 19-7 vietory over Sewance stands as Tulane’s best performance. | At that B. U. had all-it could do, win- es ning 16 to 7. Yale and Army scored] 8S elected captain of 1927 North |a combined total of 92 points on Boston Un will make America first in the air. of poultry, oranges and honey re- vealed by arrest in Atlanta: have netted promoter @ million dol- lars. Baltimore to be planning anti proceedings against 39 of country’s principal fertilizer compantes. halts proposed merger of Rand Kar- dex Bureau, Inc., and Globe Wernicke company. Sing prison for murder of aged wom- an who. detected them in robbery of a Brooklyn store. Dakota is conducting successful ex- to Last For Bush There will be no joy parties on the Pittsburgh elub with Donie Bush us manager, He tgkes his- baseball seriously, and any player who fails to see it in the same light isd’t in very good standing with the diminu- tive manager. Bush was a player of the old school He is the sume type manager. The will be no singing by the hasnony quartet in the Pirate's dressing room after the club has lost a tough game with Bush in charge. Song and de- feat don’t jibe. Bush wants fighting players who {hate to lose, rather than those who laccept the outcome merely as a part of the day’s worke EVERYBODY SCORED HERE One of the oddest scoring games of the football season was that play- d between Muskingum and Kenyon, two Ohio colleges. The final result Obviously, the ball is behind the VALUE OF FIGHT Cornell's sensational uphill fight in the Dartmouth game’ was one of dium at Ann Arbor, for instance, be- | the ony Meneatloaal ever staked ON | cause every ticket was sold early in| September, even before the season | |; a college football field. Sixteen ints behind starting the final pe- od, Dobie’s charges put on a spurt one- DISASTROUS SEASON This has been a disastrous cam- {paign for Tulance, one of the out- j standing elevens in the country a year ago, Out of cight frays the outhern school has dropped four and a THEY'VE MISSED EDDIE Colgate has certainly missed Eddie yon, its stellar back of last season. ithout the famous ball-toter to lead the offense, Colgate has fallen be- |fore Pittsburgh and Navy and has een held to a tie by Syracuse. Last ear Colgate didn’t lose a game. THREE SCORELESS TIES Wisconsin and Chicago have play- ed three scoreless ties during the many seasons they’ve clashed on the} of that fuel at all state institutions. {coming protective for crops formerly.|the people generally as detrimental football field. These deadlocks cropped out in 1914, 1922 and 1924. Another tie was played in 1909, each | banker and businessman, died after alus into a position in which the tariff|form a new’ministry. to take the team counting .six points, FINAKLY BREAK JINX Boston University, after losing five rid games in a row finally broke} here. the jinx by taking Tufts into camp. Italian senate votes confidence in President Coolidge expressed be- ief that American aviation program Nation wide swindle in fake sale said to Department of justice reported in Federal court order in New York Three men electrocuted in Sing Minneapolis—Representatives from Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Towa and Wisconsin will meet with the Minnesota Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers to consider for: mation of a Northwest Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers, Grand Forks—University of North |, Teformatory, where he was serving | Temperature and Road Conditions || Autos Not Subject |'~*’ -trust | fair. not subject to the automobile license tion against the secretary of state Wrigley Tee ere ieee, gs; roads| #04 Tenlstrar of motor vehicles fol- _ Building fair. gates lowing his refusal to issue plates to ’ ? agencies, he belicved, could, best. ef- : ‘FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1926 Bergeson’s - Open Evenings: Bergeson’s ; Continuing Our December - Overcoat Sale Including HART SCHAFFNER & MARX Finest $75 Overcoats now.............$54,75 $65 Overcoats now.............$46.75 . $50 Overcoats now. .............$84.75 $45 Overcoats now. ............$31.75 Weatherfield and Gordon Coats : $35 Overcoats now............ $26.75 : $30 Overcoats now. .«..........$22.75 Our entire stock of cloth Overcoats, fur collared Over- coats, sheep and. leather lined Overcoats are all included. BERGESON’S « Tailoring Clothing periments in pulverization of lignite] per capita, and with increasing ef- coal which may lead to exclusive use| ficiéney of farming, the tariff is be-| pact which has. been considered by _— influenced mainly by the world mar-|to the interests of Jugo Slavia. St. Paul—James H. Skinner, 68;|ket. Powerful forces are carrying| It appeared certain that he would ‘month's illness. He was vice presi-| will have its intended effect in the! place of that or Premier Ouzouno- dens of St. Paul Fire and Marine In-| near future on a steadily lengthen-|vitch, which resigned several days surance company and former presi-| ing list of important farm commodi-| ago in consequence of the Italo- dent of the Merchants Trust company, ties. Under our high-tariff regime,| Albanian treaty. such tariff rates should be placed on farm products, artielé by article, SHORT TALKS BY THOUGHTFUL as will insure the producer the home MOTHERS : : = prise . akota Aggies football team. Tri have GGTCC e at tas |, AUC ANEIREL, slcawa enlll tua owe system of basing tariff rates on dif-| find nothing to compare with Foley's ferences in production costs is in-| Honey and Tar Compound for coughs applicable to agricultare products,| and colds. My little lad had trouble The only method is to do what‘used| with his bronchial tubes from his to be done decades ago for manufac-| third year, but since we started giv- turing industries, namely, to fix| ing him Foley’s Honey and Tar we Fargo—Cyril Peschel of Wahpetor Minneapolis—Frank Nolan of St. Paul, who escaped’ from the St. Cloud time for grand larceny, was recap- tured in a rooming house here by two state parole agents who had i ble t trol it. W | finance minister Volpi and his plans} been “planted” on “tip” that Nolan| ‘ates at such a height us effectively | have been able to control i e for loans. ‘ive the h ‘ket to domestic | know there is nothing to compare pie eee with Foley’s Honey and Tar Com- pound.” The very name tells a story. 9, Good also for croup (spasmodic) and Express. Company’s | fouticome night courte. Ask for was coming. (Mercury readings at 7 a.m.) | to Minnesota Tax PWwaNT ADS Pay ] Bismarck — Partly cloudy, 28:/ st: Paul, Dec. 10—(#)—Motor ve- roads fair. ~ hiclef owned by the American Rail- } St. Cloud—Cloudy, 35; roads. good.| way Express company and used in Minot—Cloudy, 26; roads poor, to| the operation of their business. are Why Is 2 Wedge Gift like the stuff that built the Crook: A law, the state supreme court held Fargo—C sarin oa yg aire today in reversing the Ramsey coun- Jamestown—Cloudy, roads fair.| t¥ district court. 7 Mandan—Partly cloudy, 28; coun-| The express.company brought ac- aan i first Hibbing—Cloudy, 28; roads fair. | the plaintiff company without Winona—Clear, 26; roads fair, | °btaining the tax fee. 3 The company contended that be- sseamaalie nibh deeitind deem cause df its payment of a gross earn- pe "i ings tax, it is exempt from the provi- henggtester — Cloudy, 29; rowds} sions of the motor vehicle tax-law, Duluth—Clod % roads good. in view of the fact that taxes already al} | Good. | | are paid. ‘Thé supreme court ruled tages Lake—Cloudy, 24; roads) sot “motor vehicles owned and used siieonidiiinitadaaisaaioe: Hd couperablens, paying & gross rere ti a jon oo! eir Farmers Themselves businane Pa net stbiet Ma the a , t statutes of}. Putting Agriculture | (2 hictgraphs ‘102720 (automo: on Upward Grade bile registration law).” (Continued from page one) _ | Former Premier of fect an ‘orderly flow of products tol , Jugo Slavia Dies’ eel " petlow ab rade, Jugo Slavia, Dec. 10— i ging ie pe onl iy £ @)—Nikola P. Pachitch, former pre. ed to crpate . ‘ola P. Pachitch, c agencies apa pod! sot tneie of.| tlowand’ minister of fereign aftairs, forts,” sald Secretary. Jardine. died todpy. .,., general formyla will cover all. coi M, Pachitch” ind beep ill for modities and, all’ regions. _ W: months. He would have been 81 needed is conc rated and years old December 19. nated effort backer y He continued active, however, dur- sources. To do ; pe the latest political crisis in Jugo legisla ‘ad * layin, growing out of the signing John V. Broxmeyer Declaring thet 7m ¢ ity OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE prices, especially . in sreag distant from markets, gre seriously de- pressed by high freight rates, Mr. Jardine said. it was his conviction there must be substantial rate read- justments. ‘ 4 in farm taxes expense of states and local units close to their present level. He said it was a mistake to suppose that the tariff system benefits industry greatly and agriculture little. “It would be in the highest degree unwise for farmers at this time to launch an attack on the tariff,” he said, “without carefully considering. the possibility that in the near fu- tore they may need it more than any rr omic sree. in the cou ia Tariff duties on farm products prior to the war were latgely hypothetical. Now, with increasing population, ‘with relatively declining farm pepw- lation, with declining f cies Game Starty 7:45 P.M. aVinee 4 GUdRAASH POUQR SMOIRAANY SHevet tin ree Ko! dead |

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