The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 28, 1926, Page 6

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PAGE SIX SPORTS HAGEN HEADS LIST OF FIRST 10 GOLF STARS| “4 Writer Ranks America’s cfcssional Golfers For the Year 1926 i By Jimmy Powers) HERE ‘ 4 Most By Haz Mteh edt t Waren Geng i vat of if there is grav * hess of its conte sri to stop its d°_ RE! ULTS ! inthe ~* ~ ew York—An Seat Eddie Ande Atlantic Shamokin, Pa Battle Creek, foul (5). Trenton, Mexico, Camden, N. j Louisville--Midget Mike O'Dow Columbus, won from Pal Moore, } phis (12). ey Mel Joe daynon, Mil shaded Billy Drake, German Coach at Third Base ‘Has Toughest Job in ‘Game, Says Hendricks “Coaching at third hase,” said Jack! ricks, manager of the Cincinnati| “is ‘the hardest and in baseball that I ever hardest prob! ir leader is to get's who knows what it’s 3 hird rs OF outfielders the smartne: ‘of the catcher behind the plate, the ‘slowness or quickness of the pitcher pee ene and the speed of his runners. I've seen some great games i, fault coaching around third When to send a run- plate, to know his speed, ability when pitted against of the outfielder handling or the infielder taking it for, throw, is something that Ing at third base a very ik. Many a one-run ground third base by, «Good coaching is! winning ball club. “may not see-it frond THE ae TRIBUNE a ‘TEAMS DRILL - FOR NEW YEAR, | GRID BATTLE | Alabama Has Weight Advan. tage, But Stanford Looks | Two of Baskeibaii’s Leading Point Scorers of Yeur MAY HAVE ONE BOXING BODY =: Governor Smith's Retommen- dation Likely to.Get Leg- aon , tor and November totalled $44,127.62 and brought the loss for the if peording erepared by K. ©, | strat commission office +h TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1926 : jr a Ve ul and elevate | November was $1,188,427.94. iy ane oe ton its. eak o: ed: mb er, tos first onths of 1926 to $363,516.91, to the November repert Ne!<on, mill atidi received at the state indu- HVE barre The total deficit at the end of at the mill dropped from barrels, reach-| Oklahoma ‘Clty, Okla, Dec, -28— (@)—The aroma of printer’s ink has {more attraction than the odor of oil is for|to the nostrils af two weekly news- edn’ of the mill's operation as! Ft by the industrial commission, | follow: r, editors of Oklahoma, jade independent by the. discovery of oil on land owned by them, J. W Kayser of Chickasha and W. J. Liv- | ’ : ; a . . $ 824,011.13 |ingston of Seminole have announced \U ' Mere Powerful .in Action islative Approval sg Rae ee ay jthat they will continue to publish " Ld ' Loss in Februar: : their. papers. t me RUSTY i Deore 28.--)—-| Albany, N, Dee. 28—Y)—Con-| Loss in Marth. |, A well Sine, more than 1,000 "am ¢ cm SAUNDERS followers todayy Heya their|trol of boxing in New York state by | April. barrels a day was brought in on Kay- —— - on 4 upon the Ride id the Car-| one man ‘wi foreshadowed today. ay ser's land in Grady county. | Governor Smith's reeommendation June. | Tam oing to get out a better pa- lfor the gbolition of the. present *Suty. por” Kayser said. “I like the game. n clash in the Ro: practice held, | than a e was other te little ignal drill, OF CARDINALS | | hill McKechnie, Deposed Man- f Pittsburgh Pirates, Will Be Coach (#)--With the manager of a ball club, Bob | shouldered | Louis, Dee, ssistance ofa form of 1926.) appoint nd 0} chnie, Pittsburgh | who had spent a we ciding on a man to take the bi | ager signed turns Tam ge roughly. » canne ‘ year contract, was not revealed. American Boxers in | Too Much of.a Hurry,| Says Harry Persson) New’ York, Dee. ec. 28 —UP)—Ameriean ‘ce in too much of a hurry to suit Harry Persson of Sweden, whose: weight » hopes were dimmed, by a de the hands ny Maloney, “You live too fast over here,” he ex our boxers are always on) I could have beaten Maloney | he had given me time. But ys ina hurry, refusing to red he cement ¢ Football "Critics Want Changes Made in Shift, Huddle SEAKER, COBB PLAN DEFENSE ee relax.” : Ae ariand seeatyal woe BN @lark to Fi ht Go into Consulia- , the par Asso- | y Fg ate Football of- evelend of iee'time to, L& Barba January 21) huddle as slowing up —— ift ing it-dif-| | London, Dec, 23—(?)—Had a new to determine legal- dicate here had its way, suggestion will be . British and European ieht champion, would have de- ed his departure for America. The syndicate planned to bring Fidel LaBarba, world’s champion, over here to fight Clark early in 1927 but, as plans did not materialize rap- s went the west-) idly, Clark refused to wait. second better in din New York December 19 and tion, the westerns having| is scheduled to fight LaBarba at a two-second half, Madison Square Garden January 21. committee that on r three seconds before the THE GENTLE PASTIME OF WRESTLING — AND 11) THIS CORNER PFYZNLSK! GRASBOVICH OF SIBERIA, WEIGHING 263 PopNnos. ALL he THRILL HE CRANES BW SITTING AT THE RINGSIDE AND DEDGING Z40-POUND GRAPPLERS. TS worth THe PRICE OF ADMISSION SOST TO HEAR THE NAMES PRONDUNCED AND SEE THE GUYS ST{RIRPED FoR ACTION. “Ss, GUESS WS ONE eri go a RABBLE | 4 LLE Won't te idee PCR. “ANOTHER BiG. ONE ONTHE. MAT. three-man ‘commission proved by the Reoubli n-controjled one of the most powerful bodies in: lism will pass into history. For at least a half dozen years the com- mission now headed by James A. Far- chores and later had beaten Mrs. Hal- terman to death when she ran to the yard after hearing the shot, Garments of Leo Halterman, bear-/ ing bloodstains, were found at the has ‘been ap-| *August....... September Loss from January 1, to Novembe: Interest on Construction bond iT Eleven Monihy—danuary Ky? November 30, 1926 30, 26 a resi enter the contest. d at least half of their lives ithe United States and have received |- They must hi Strife Threatens _ $368,516.81 Kayser was reporter in Kansas Cny twenty years ago, before he Wailace Wade’s. Alabama! legislature reorganization commis-|Loss in October e teame to Oklahoma with $150 and ork yesterday. For! sio: ‘Loss in November 44,127.62 hind sta eters ets ge tee Pe fan hour the Tide-| If the governor’s recommendation| Loss for cleven months (1926). 363,616.81 vingston publishes the! Seminole hrouxh their paces becore| is accepted by the full legislature, -__-_--_———._|County News. The drill is going who then shooed which is considered highly probable, Total. deficit, November. beeeme eee in nen as. $1,198,427.04 | deeper in sea of greater produc- ;tion on his land, but the editor is assured of a producing well. Although the oil boom has increased the popu- lation of ‘Seminole ‘from less than bama's workout, that of| ley of New York, has wielded a heav-;| Interest on’ operating bonds {1,000 to more than 6.000. Living- a long and arduous one.) stick in ring affairs, ottaining such; Depreciation ‘ston says he does not yet contem- scheduled for today for! power ‘that its rulings “have nF rected | Additional operating loss 54,492.50 {plate enlarging the publication to s was even more strén-! the sport in every segtion of ‘the oe a daily. thers like it siaved until’ country. di weds $363,516.81 —_—___— —_— luction no witnessed the practices | Fg Pl | uahels Derrele Loss per |Family Must Beat 24 were of the) Halterman Pleads — round Loss “barrel to Win This Contest nateh-, January 144,098 $ 24755.14 $788 | ntage | Guilty 1 to Murders! Februar 144,681 ‘O14 | _— 3 the line pl pete A ee | Pails sore irs pecaraaate quicker April 134,210 (723 | —-Villages in this part of England aro “oppon- 1g tghington Courthouse, Ohio, Dee. ay 145,047 1.262 |vieing for the largest family. ppeared —Leo Halterman today plead-! Juno 186,059 11664 The first claim was made by the n jook-| ¢4 guilty to a first degree murder| July 199,110 ‘761 j village of Denaby Main,*when Mrs. carbs UisGan ose. si the ill-| August 207,619 1.06 William Manchester, wife of a miner, man, his brother and siste voi ld iat? ety \ hide the mother of her nineteenth at ee aie One nek ee November 323,072 44,127.62 The village of Blacker Hill then | “iaiterman confessed last night’ ini mm aapue «| guei6 Waigubor: Wamces ofiaaTuomeoatte ‘ als 454, 4 04 581 neighbor, omas Hazelwood, both of ~ | that he hind shot his brother as the (NOTE.) The loss’ per barrel includes figures for both the mill and [wham are fathers of 22 children, und ie {two were doing the early morning! otevator. ‘ |pointed to Matthew Dawson, of the ‘same village, who has a family of I seventeen. Bessell organized a foot- {ball team among his sons and chal- lenged all comers. one- | 2 He ar- | 4 home. ' Artists’:Contest Plans Announced i . D., Dec, 28.—Prof. A. J. Stephens, Fargo, chairman state contest committee of the North| Chicago in April. Dakota Federation of Music clubs, has announced that the seventh bien- nial contest for young artists will be in March, with Mr. C. Rowland, arrell us| head of the music department rt i de-| University of North Dakota; FE. eRe, nounced yes-| Forks; Knute Froysua, heud of the ic department of the Valley City ¢ Teachers college and Joseph S. k, head of the music department Jamestown college, Jamestown, | ed from Mr. Stephens at the Dakota Young artist musicians between the rs of 20 and 31-years of age, native the amount of salary| born or naturalized citizens ‘of the | United States’ and who are children | of naturalized parents are eligible to Fargo, N. |held at Valley Ci ing on this Stephens are Hywell committee ford Torens, ‘Wesley colleg America’s’Lead in | World’s omnes New York, Dec, 28. ’ traditional supremacy in internatio ‘al athletics today was threatened by| and two others 11 peach international strife over contro! of Senator Schlosser The record, j all their musical training in the Unit- Mrs. ted States during the 10 years Just preceding the contest., Four‘prixes of + $50 cach will-be given, one for piano, violin, female and male voices, re- spectively, Winners of the state con- test must obligate themselves to enter the district contest and the district winners must enter the na- tional contest which will be held in 3|}four adopted children. the National Olympic Association. Voting unanimously to withdraw from the association, the National Amoteur Athletic Federation yest day struck another blow in a confl with the amateur athletic union whi for the The first biennal national contest for student musicians, ages from 16 to 24, for which prizes of $25 are of- fered, and the first contest of juniors, 16 yeurs and under, open to members of the junior clubs, will be held at the same time as the major contest. Act- ington, D. C. The federation claims | the North Di he obtained. Folders containing full information of the above contests may be obtain- among other organizations. Alle, domination of America’s | participation in the 1928 neler fetes games bya minority group controlled| du by the A. A. U., was the basis for the} side at Bismarck. federation's action, but the feud be- tween the rival factions dates back several years. conservatory, or from any of the above named committee. -Announce- ment of the definite date will be made just as soon as it is decided | upon. where Mr. Schlosser has and farming interests, : Once in a blue moon now some bright, old-fashioned eynie says: “Aw, I never read the advertisements. ot They’re full of bunk.” But when one starts tolook for if, the “bunk” in adver- tising shows a mysterious tendency to be absent. “‘Bpeci- 4 mens of it are hard to locate. : The reason for that is. simple. Bad goods cannot be successfully advertised. To-stand up under the pitiless glare of publicity, merchandise must be honest. It must live upto its-promises. Otherwise you would ‘quickly cease to buy it. ‘So advertisers discovered long ago that for them, too, honesty was the best policy. More!—the only possible policy, if they were to,remain advertisers! : . Read the advertisements. They are not full of bunk. On the contrary, they‘aré full of honest information:and ‘interesting news. ‘:" oy ahow you ways to:be more'com- fortable. They make life easier: “They help you to be happier and healthier. ‘They ‘teath ' you’ prices’ and values. No doubt about. it—advertisements do yon many a service. . Read them ona day! Advestioemesite convey honest information about ‘honest amogiucts i will pay you to read. ther OC ik pe bee (aan Bhane 32 : ‘TRIBUNE ADVERTISING DEPT. : a however, is held by John Austen of Platts Com- mon, near Barnsley, who is mother of 24, and ‘has, in addition, reared One of Mrs. Austen's daughters has 12 children Becomes Benedict Minot, N. D., ‘Dee, 2 28—()—Walter broke out afresh recently in Wash-| Schlosser of Grand Forks, member of akota senate and former within its membership 90 per cent of | well known athlete at the University the nation’s amateur athletic activi-' of North Dakota, was married here The junior contest will be in charge] ties. With it are aff yore the Army, | last night to’Helen Baker, daughter of Mrs. Lloyd .G, Witter, of Valley} Navy, National Collegiate A. A. lof Mr. and “Mrs, ’ Fred Baker of City from whom full information may | United ‘States Lawn Tennis Associa- | Cooperstown. (The wedding took tion and Federation of Boys’ Clubs, er at 6 p. m. at the home of the ride's sister, Mrs. Waldo Sherman. s| Mr. and Mrs, Sehlosser are leaving fora brief trip into Canad, and ig the legislative session will re- Later they will make their home in Grand Forks, business

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