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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1926 ‘OF CAMP’S 34 ALL-AMERICAN-TEAMS, 9 itateuesiauocutriPhanthms.toPlay « (gesisenge te ote or ; iy. 1 ; aa “Pincha oa { ‘Training School — ] || ONLY 14 PLAYERS-NOW:TRACH GAME |, 2st ze" seter's: ae wu! Team This Evening SJ ° ; om ty Pe pioemey Ab 4 int’ id ue ‘pata ‘The Phanibe gil ob :Micecatinsl ea | ’ pear gus Conn Dee, 22. MBE” Many “Coaching. Quurterhacka ®. fy ie, eete mene 8 kel that the| a speedy team from the atate training | in d by Coaching-quarcerbacks of all-Amer-| secents will consider bui ig th school on the school floor this eve- PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Pp ‘ ding football players | ican teams boxin with T, A. D, Jones, : ined hrough more than a third of a een-| Yale, in 190% and also inelude Walver | gyre, depth, of the bi eget thatibee, Ct alaainad pebeoass ury of football history hb remain, teffen, Chicago, named in 1998. Al- | wall and, later finishing. the entire | toward the title again this: year. f { a -ubached’ Carvesie. teen.” Fi | The trainingsehool has produced | nn SvnCn et aster er or te the building at a single time would} some good teams’ and should offer | ed in the game sas-teacke | most continuously since then Steffe | house. “Building the erire shell of months of the year Steffens is 4) also effect important econpinics,! more than. pussing: opposition to the} Midget of Major Leagues Delivers After Bad Start In the make-up of Camp's. thirty , fifteen names are: Found 2 included in the’ most | judge of Chicago's superior court. fi rf F “ ? especially in stiuctural steel and.in) Phantoms. H able list of | epllege | Next among the quarterbacks is | saving the cost of & temporary rear| In the Phantom lineup, as tenta- - i . ; FO ase oa | Alvin (’Bo"™ MeMillin, colorful both | wall,” This matter will be decided at! ¢ively arnenged, are Greenfield at} TO JOHN WPGRAW Pessibility Angle in Baseball's Sen- sational Trade De | Looms as Latest | Hornsh Joh y, nelude two j and a center from the line A, agg Ralph Glaze T. Wait heir All- player and as @ coach. He named All-American in 1919 and this guard | year coached Geneva, Another qu four | terback coach with legal leanings is and | Gordon Locke, named in 1922, who * coaches nds, a tackJe, nd halfbacks three an early meeting of the board. The state architect has tecommended that the university do as much as pos- sible at one time in the interest of rather important building economics. The fact that Minnesota's basket- ALLAXMERICAN COACHES * School Yale A. D.. Johes Steffen brand Perey Wendel rvard 4. 3. bitte aul in Na Michigan Dartmouth Dartmouth ‘ale West Point |ball team appeats to be off to a |makes the field house of more than ordinary interest at present, as the house wilb be, above all else, a home for the basketball team. This sport easily ranks next to football in the interest it arouses in the student jbody and the public. It alxo ranks |high in intercollegiate: importance. Coach Taylor will have a floor sur- Position Coaching End Chicago oe Viators ‘ale varnegie Tech, rehiek Oregon Okla. A, & M. Minnesota |flying start on a successful season; center, Gray and Slattery at forwards | and Middaugh and Robidou at guards. | F may possibly get In during | part of the game asa guard. New. England Wins ‘From Regent, 19-10, New England, N, D., December: 22. —(Special)—Playing at Regent | i night, the New England high bas. j eters defeated Regent by a scoi of 19 to 10. The game was closel fought’ and: was featured by som brilliam ‘playing. | i { NN. DAK North Dakota has more people owning their own homes than any other state in the Union; 653 out of every 1,000 in North Dakota own ‘their own homes; the percent- age of home owners for the whole coun- try is 450 per 1,000. rounded by, 17,800 seats when the, a jouse has been finished, as com- Wi pared with about 2,400 seats in ea: | Men’ fll Battle old university armory. The difficulty For Bowling Win; of attending games in the university |, , , Jack Hepreness of Mandan; winner armory became ae great that people stopped going to the games because of ness. of U of the all everith in the state bovtling. tournament at Fargo, and Charles !the likelihood. of disappointment. Jebinek,-one of Bismarck’s best bowl- With the transfer of play to. the Kenwood armory downtown, attend. , tand with coaching Western Re- jance ns again increased,” bat the, ara, will start a 10-game series at the tase ‘ layers suffer a handicap in the lack | jowling Alleys tonight a Harry Stuhldreher, of Notre | Payers suffer a Pin the lack | § otclock to’ determine who fa the best ame's “four horsemen" fame, is now] Construction of a new swimming! man. The. bowling fans. are greatiy| conth SE VAlOOA: |pool in the field house has been de-. interested in ‘this, match as both men; Perey Wendell, Harvard, one of the | ferted for a year or two due to the Tank at the top in the bowling circles uminaries of the Haughton system, |&reatly, added cost that would be of their two cities. : entailed, | th id Pennsylvani the earliest halfback selection on | ¢ rle representat day's coachine lists, being the 1 | ira ec ahem dae | Demons, Alumni to || Temperature and ented. i betsch, i whoses a- > Con tie madd Tangle Tomorrow 4 Road Conditiens | eee the ; ree me be- | Minnesota, couch of Kalamazoo Nor-| ” Evening at, 8:30) cmereury readipen wt: tiesm.) { rte resy -—~ —— | . x tween north and south, mal, (Western State) in” Michigan ‘ , Bismarek—Partly cloudy, 27; roads 8 e sleven teams of the nincteenth cen-| completes the list, Formen. stars. for Bismarck high} @#it H si ‘ 79 cate SE GREATER © coach| Ira E. Rodge West Virginia,} w; % i : vith thin | St: Cloud—Cloudy, 28; roads good. JIM MALONE | ; yey re repre Ei Big eA oconk teeth = tea will match their mettle with this M. & ritory borderland A. A, Stage. named ai Jones the distine-| Year's luminaries wi ; inot—Cloudy, 30; roads fair. end on Camp's first mythical, ch n of being the one All-American | nd the Demons. tangle “tomorry| damestown—-Cloudy, 21; roads fair,| % | 1 choice 1 y ts 1899, being one of the four Yale| coaching at the schools from which] yj fi Winona—Cloudy, 30; roads fai IS FAVORITE lla : die egy oes night at 8:30 on the high wchool! . yyampna Cloudy, 0; roads fa OVER PERSSON i FoR ° With him on| they were named to the mythical high school, with Ernie Benser and Besten) Fighter Will Third Step on Elimi Ladder Tonight Geneva W. Virginia Quarter Western Reserve Minnesota Halfback Kalamazoo Nor, Homer Hazel Rutgers End & Fullback Mississippi Harry Stuhldrerer Notre Dame Quarter Villanova 5. F. McGinley, Jr. Tackle St. Josepha Center West Va. lowa Fuliback » one of the practice of law in been name r, how-| combines the also 2s aN) Cley nt Schools ears h, represented | American selec two of its 88 se- ¢ list, eveh coach rep ferent school. \ Funeral. Parlorn 210 Fifth St. come nm Big Ten t ar! Martineau, | {from Used Auto Parts, of a ee and models—, Cloudy, 91; roads ‘ough. ‘Duluth—-Cloudy, 26; roads fair. Grand Forks—Cloudy, 36; roads fair. Mandan—Cloudy, 2: Hibbing—Cloudy, 22: Crookston—Cloudy, 25; roads Fargo-—Cloudy, 24; ronds fair, gee Lake—Cloudy, 24; roads fair, 1. Princeton, De now coach: doanl|ing, include wan, Oo} est! McGettigan at forwa Point, who, _ Several years’) center and H. Brown dima lone coachii the service school, went] and John Lofthouse at guards. ta the University of Oregon this year.|" Among the former Bismarck high {CW Spears, - Dartmouth, is “now! stars from whom the alumni team urs before | ‘h at Minnesota, and E. F.°Me-| will be chosen are Robidou, Livdah| college | Ginley, Jr, is conch wt St. Jos Register, Shephard, Middaugh, Doyle, Philadelphia, Hollenbeck, Hass and others. 3 An annual. affair, the high school- (10). eee ge eee r | Cardinals’ Honors ENLARGEMENT |” wit Be Displayea cun be expected to attend. ‘on 2 Extra Poles Louis, Dee, 22—(NE, t. first pennant wanes he world champion in 38 years will be put on prominent display. Instead of draping the champion- ship emblems won in the National |’ League last season and in the title series with the Yankees on the same |: flag pole that flies the Stars and Stripes, President Sam Breadon of pee Se eae a) geo two extra les in center field at y tne Louis. iahemes t , lory will fly in the cen: with the National League chanpisat ship colors to the right and the world championship emblem to the left. ‘The flag-raising for the pennant will be held on the opening day of' the season and the world series ban- ner will be raised as an extra feature |. during the season. '’ It is.probable the Cincinnati Reds Phone or Write iF Bismarck a Auto Parts Phone 154 513 Bdwy. . A, Thal BISMARCK, N. D. Take voting athletics. A deep-sea diver walked on the} bottom of the Elizabeth river from j Portsmouth to Norfolk, Va, a dis- ° call him the “Midget of the M And he i wutreau is only a mite. He “to a me bove the five-foot margin, but he’s quite « bali player is the “ Gautreau made his big league debut last season. He made ! Connie Mack's Athletics. He made it as a second baseman, t San Antonio —Midget Mike O'Dowd, | a f trial, however, the leam Mr, MeGillicuddy let the tot go. | Columbus, Uhio, beat Kid Leneh of | grabbed him and with the Beantown gang he's been starrin: {san Antonio (0). Kid § n AT-MINNESOTA j ee, Ant knocked out Kid Fields, Lo: just. that. York, Dee (A) Jinn : couple of inches ef Boston takes his third m the heavyweight eliminati at Madison Square he mounts the mbling de Te oh f Capital Funeral Parlors 216 Main St. Phone Day or Night—22W ever since, Florida Cone). ers the Braves have the days of ince the days one of the most popular pl eigeh of the best-liked, in, fact, displ James, Rudolph and’ Gowdy enough punching power to | : i of 191d him a 2 to 1 favorite tonight. He stopped Arthur De Kuh of York in the first match, requiring! y or his triumph. In cisively outpointed | nder, Franz Di } ard’s rival in th Humbert Pugazy that Maloney wou inst’ Jack Delaney, world’s} champion, if he! ting Persson to ii San F . Angeles Gautreau’s general play leads one to believe the old saying, that | \orld are : m- | “good things come in small packages.”s =| pion, bee 9p over Jack Silve! i" co (4 |Helen Wills Plays Exhibition Match [Si of'Gintna foueke a With Bill Tildei |‘) Mors Pewer. ieee S. D. Gridders Jackie {Athletic Director Says Field House Project Is Enough For Present Time tling| Minneapolis, Dec. 22—“The Uni- with |versity of Minnesota has no -inten- tion of enlarging its stadium in the {near future, nor any. plans as yet {for an ultimate enlargement.” This leniul of recent stories that Minne- sota’s stadium would be expanded to have a capacity of 72,000 was issued today by F. W. Luehring, director of at Honolulu For ei » a «lhe are . 9, y i aqHioned Juha Epaoeel suis itional outdoor crown tu: Game |athietics. The stadium has been fill- Peer eneae EL out REE | ane’ yielded: ta. ate Motion MRUCey Saturday’s Game led but twice in its three years of 7 SKE acme (p) The foot. Sxittence for the Michigan and Notre erstwhile queen of the Ame onolulu, Dee. c e foot-}Dame games of the-past autumn. The | wi i We eardan urts took up her racqu eam of South Dakota State Col-|University administration fails to ace Tid be, the, attraction jrnen the Car- bind’ oidtectis st Bill Tilden in-an’ ey Coach Jack West| any “crisis” in the present situation. | “Othe Reds paver ge eto eeip, flag. Ma doubles match on, indoor| and’ Mrs. ved here yester-/ | Principal among the reasons Why | tle as the sere vine nottest bat- pidiente \ gallery of | day for the Minnesota is not planning to add to| they are entitied te hig tei ors th as entirely | of Hawiaii $ its stadium is the fact that plans are! says Breadon. - ® ‘stinetion, cred irom the operation for ap-] Today the entire team, 18 in num-|now in the making for the, construc- ° which foreed her out of per, is to go to Wahiawa to train for|tion of a large and complete field tion last summer, the game. The altitude and tempera-|house. Original plans called for a ture at Wahiawa have been found to| structure costing about $650,000 but ts aan) oor IGHT RESULTS : Se hich it ref entered into — by Georgia Peac seed to bet ed beat Denver Wright, Omaha, New York, Dec, 22—()—Helen : upon the first tennis champion in un attempt to the 10-round » Monte Munn’s I heavy- |‘ semi-final I test contend, w lege, Da Phone 246 Night 246-887 ¢ Orleans i rounder, May Have Caused Resi That the impending s in the ve be ‘more agreeable to visitors fromjathletic finances were found not to the continent than the climate hers.|warrant a start on quite so expensive The. gridders from the University of /a building, with the consequence that Utah trained for their game with|the field house will be held down to! Hawaii at Wahiawa and decisively| a total cost in the neighborhood of | beat the i $500,000. With this retrenchment “**' \ BRIGHT fi ¢ in His‘Heaven of = Two of Baseball's Greatest} pa Players Claim Charges Are Unfounded » handwriting on the t writers also believ-! the De rivets n League teams on ‘ound which © of fixing, involving two of the great-| © st mayers ‘known to the game, have} been mad. | « The long smouldering bon: H the subject of broke y + into eptem- alary ayement of the Friends, who quot saying he was willing Sore in order to protect anothe start a law cle Likewise there was Detroit over the , Sport writ there being Ss early 4 August that Leonard had made such allegations. Leonard went to Detroit | that time with copies of the correspondence with Cobb. He no surprise in| ker, idols of thousand baseball fans and holders of many baseball records, de clared they were innocent of assc tions that they were involved in conspiracy. to “throw” the ball game Sand to benefit by betting on the out-| “a8 seeking reinstatement in major come of the contest, made by Hubert | league baseball the time. He was (Dutch) Leonard, on pitcher | released in 1925, for Detroit and made public by Base- Box Score Studi rei) Some lasianer pares ‘i While the controv ed, Ce les Knowledge of Plan | halt followers scanned the hox = Cobb, who recently — resigned of the game of seven years back. manager of the Tigers, said in Chi- Lewis Deon %¢ at he bad “never het a cont a hitting fest for b eague hus: a .-game” and denied that he knew of es any plan to “throw” the game, while] piace in *\Speuker, who likewise resigned his| thom three-b managerial berth with Cleveland aft- erthe: close. of. the season, asserted ~ in Cleveland that he was i ry} 9 if re INVESTIGATE COMPARE inly wouldn’t be poundii in that m: side to win. Descriptions of the ganie appearing jin Detroit newspapers at the time id that both teams edified the! crowds by “good — sportsmanship, that Cobb was the only. play. offered un opportunity to f, batting average, and was virtually prese: triples.’ Nothing to distinguish the same) from the ordinary run was remember- | ed by players who participated. Sev-| eral of the Indians could reca!! noth-! ing about it, while others pointed to; the box score as evidence that their former manager was innocent. Every one rallied to the defense of “Spok f Basketball Scores, | ULAR SIZES | ; he ball er if he wanted the other any statement he has made that impli- boreal Meonard'a testimony was that Cobb, Speaker, Wood, and himself met un- gider the grandstand of Nav ' it, on ‘September 24, 191 eed ‘that Detroit should i 3 game me fiargiend the ialowiie a ving the Tigers a chance to ni" thied “in the American League int race. In addition, Leonard ‘eaaid, the four planned to benefit on the outcome, with each putting up a s$sum of money, but that only he and are, won $130 apiece when Detroit that ed with won, as Cobb: and Speaker did not ‘ up their share of the mapney. w : 3 Sebb, both containing allusions to betting. Cobb acknowl he gorge nt a bet Parvcppnd te ‘