The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 6, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE SIX American Asso WESTERN AND TEXAS LOOPS: ARB AT PEACE Opening Games Given to To- ledo, Louisville, Columbus and Indiana in 1928 SET DATE NEAR APRIL 10 Three New Parks Will Be Built Among Association Cities Dallas, Te: Dec. 6.—(—Aft- er three day: maneuvering fea- tured by spirited arguments in the Western league eamp, harmony pre- veiled today among officers of var- ious minor circuits as they joined for the initial session of the con- vention of the National Association of Professional Baseball clubs. ‘The American Association was the first to solve the pre-season s. In dealing with major league owners of minor clubs the owners p! a clause in its re- vised constitution providing that the board of directors must approve all franchises sales. The club own- ers farther specified that the asso- ciation must be given the opportun- be to ey rie ged in case the : asle ipproved. me Effect Compromise. ‘was a compromise in the ef- vent control of minors by ‘eck red Sunday in the @ resolution Grging exclu- tion clubs purchased by National or American Jesgués for use as farms. The first n resulted in a four to four dead- association then turned to for a sing season, Indianapolis ing a new under construction while with Indianapolis, Louisville r than last Non-Transf ar. jtend to manage many years more, itted to withdraw from _ the league to the Texas La agra the nope! rn league pro} an not be transfe rr without it of other clubs owners. ewners into another’ bedile te 7 after. several hours with the announcement that all difficul- a split season of 168 games, open! April 12 and closing Sep- 23, with a five-game post| Illinois off series. The opening] vised by Dr. Frank 8. Dickinson of split between the nor-|the University of Illinois. The sil- southern clubs. Final ap-|ver statue of victory atop a silver the schedule was left for/column was awarded the “Fighting Mini” at their annual football din- Chicago, Dec. 6.—(7)—The na- tional football championship for 1927 was awardéd to the University of ler the rating stem de- wt TUNNEY SAYS ___ NEVER QUIT Sportsmanship Talk of Cham-| Minnesota third and Notre Dame fourth. The trophy would have gone pion Characterized as to Notre Dame again this year, but ‘Best Ever’ for their defeat by the Army. Dr. — New York, Dec. 6.—)—Gene addres: ner. Scores of 95 football teams were compiled by Dr. Dickinson in seven football conferences, including an eastern group of 23 leading teams re- garded for convenience as a “confer- ence.” The Pittsburgh team was just a jickinson rated the “All-American eleven teams” as follows: 1—Illinois ... 2—Pittsburgh 3—Minnesota . 4—Notre Dame . 5—Yale .... 6—Army . 7—Miehigan Twenty Cagers Report For St. Mary’s Quint With Fulton as Coach Twenty ambitious youngsters re- ported to W. G. Fulton for instruc- 5! tion in basketball at St. Mary’s high school Monday afternoon. Or- ganization of a team will proceed as quickly as possible with a long schedule facing the Catholic quint. Sebastian Goetz, veteran of the St. Mary’s hardwood, was elected captain of the juad while Mike Goetz was selected as manager. Prospects are bright for one of the best quints that has represented St. Mary’s in a number of years as bead barged and quality of the ma- ter is superior to any that has ne recent], : reported recently. though the schedule {s still in- complete ‘it is announced that Fort Yates and Solen have agreed to while’ other neighboring contests. iy team are Sebastian Goetz, Goetz, James McDonald. Hugh For- tune, Leo Boespflug, Chester Fin layson, Mike Balzer, Tony Beer, and the big game hunter the most prolific list of hunt Insti-| ground in the world. oP eines EDDIE COLLINS ly April 10 or] While Connie Mack continues to deny the the reins of the club before next spring a The national arbitration board] Collins is certain to succeed him as le the question of whether| has said when he decides to step out, Collins is the Oklahoma city and Tulsa should be|in. He recently signed with Mack as coach, ready 1 Mack steps out. ILLINOIS PROFESSOR GIVES ILLINI ~ NATIONAL FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP shade behind the Illinois rating, with | Season it is p ler of the At 8—Georgia .... 9—Nebraska ... +. 10—Southern California. . 11—Texas A. & M.... “Pittsburgh’s leading over Nebraska,” said Dr. in explaining h: ting they were tied by W. nois record included victory over Michigan and a tie with Iowa State. Pittsburgh’s tie was a better show: ing than Illinois but their victory over Nebraska would not count heavily as ‘the victory of Illin over Michigan, whose only defeat were by the first and third teams in the national standing, Mlinois and Minnesot: The Dickinson system awards 30 points for a victory over a strong » “and team and 20 for victory 0: e~ a weak | team. Defeats count half as much as victories anc ‘ies a considered as games half won and half Icst. Di- viding this total by the number of games played gives the final rating. Illinois is the fourth national }champion to hold the Rissman trophy awarded under the Dickin- son system, Notre Dame, Dart- mouth and Leland §tanford were the previous holders. Basketball League Will Be Organized at Fort Lincolr. Old Fort Lincoln, the scene of many of the most colorful events in’North Dakota history, will add another note to its scale of life with the organization of the first A. Dietz, post sports officer. The fort was unoccupied except for a brief interim during the World| War until the fourth infantry sta- tioned a battalion there this fall for the first time since 1905, when basketball was just beginning to be played in North Dakota. Lieut. Dietz has announced that within the next 10 days, teams will be formed among the different companies and they will play a regular schedule of games during schools have been also asked for, the winter in the army gymnasium. Organization of a team to repre- prospects for ithe first] sent the post is also likely and con- tl Mike; tests will be booked with the inde- pendent teams along the Big Muddy and other parts of North Dakota. Dempsey-Tunney Can Not Be Identified San Antonio, Texas, Dec. 6—(?) caneity to identify Jack. Demp- sey or Gene Tunney has delayed Prosecution of a local picture thea- tre exhjbitor charges’ of illegal ight films. theatre terdey charged. with ilegsl display cl of the films of the recent Chic: 4 bout, his af lenged ‘the shown. J. The Mli-| basketball teams by Lieut. George! CANN DONS GLOVES WITH Through Four Sizzling Rounds By J. G. prone 4 Looking every inch a fighter and |ready to tackle “any and everyone” to prove his worth to title consider- | ation in the heavyweight class now ruled so privat by Gene |Tunney, Jack McCann, North Da. kota’s foremost heavyweight, donned the padded mitts for a four round |tangle with Jimmie Lugan in the | Weather Bureau | Noon. Jack and Jimmie who beth learned the rudiments of the ring game from | the Capital City’s grand old man of boxing—O. W. Roberts, one of the greatest of featherweights 30 years | ago—faced each other for the first time in the squared aren-. Dugan gave away some 33 pounds |to the mauling McCann in iti }to three or four inches reach and the same number of years of ring experience but it never daunted the slim fellow one io rs. slam-bar~. best fisticuffs Jimmie bobbed Cc. bbing away with a lightning le: t reached first for the jaw and then for the midriff. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE gym Monday after-! about the towering Mc-/ SE BIS A i a « ~ MANY TRADES MARK DALLAS JIMMIE DUGAR) BALL CONFAB Old Proteges of Roberts Step Robins. Braves, Reds and Pain| omen and Towa Will Also lies Are in Market For Players GIANTS BARGAIN VAINLY |Bancroft's Salary Boosted to $43.500 as Compared to $20,000 i | i | is | mal fab, }t | Rext we {=e man saf. to ¢ ¢ | H | lier got_the former Robinson re- 2 left of McCann's is powerful. ked by an arm and shoulder ki ee ee ee ae p through three \boxing that must have had the shades of old Fort Hancock’s gar- rison twitching in their slumbers. ones workout pee aprons that he felt good ea p int the ring at Stedison fqnare Garden against any heavyweight in the a world—and he meant it. Jack Drew Blood “Boy! That man.has a wallop,” jwas Dugan’s only comment as he lrubbed a slightly aching jaw and \flecked a few drops of blood from his nose that had bled slightly when | McCann accidentally elbowed his 156 Tommy Burns, a 16 year old youngster who scales 140 pounds, and hopes to be a champion some jday, was another interested who avidly grabbed the.chance to work out with the oldsters when they told jhim to hop into the tights. Tommy didn’t do any sparring, but ihe did make one of the skipping ropes whistle as he deftly danced for two full minutes without a miss. And he also looked lik2 an oldtimer as he punched viciously at an imag: inary foe who must have been knocked out about once every 15 seconds as the terrible Tommy re- dentlessly attacked. the rope .and tapered} pound opponent during their melee. | 000. infielder an for Cuyler but j ‘hink much of a Cardimals which would Pitcher Flint Rhem and Lester Bell. contenders regarded any chance of Cuyler to the Phillies or the fear he would eventually 2 the Giants’ fold. The 23 would have been able to do “en picking from the Phil- or Boston rosters had they so desired, according to gossip in baseball circles. ‘Giants Wanted Cuyler Cuyler would have been accepta- ble-to New York but McGraw’s bargaining would not measure up to what the Pirates expected. Furthermore, the Buccaneers wei not disposed to let Cuyler go wit the Giants in view of the flag strife. Shortstop Dave Bancroft, who piloted the Braves last year is to receive $43,000 from the Brooklyn club for his services in 1928. Of that amount $13,500 will be salary and the remainder a bonus he was promised. As manager of Boston, Bancroft’s salary was $20,- It is reported that Al Schaacht, 53, mate of Nick Altrock in side- line comedy, will be missing from the Washington Senators roster next season, No announcements were forthcom- ing Monday from the purveyors of fight cards de luxe on either side of the Big Muddy as to future dag tanglements in either of the Twin ; Cities and it mayy be that the pro- | -'-wa will weit wntil Christmas time to see what Old Nick may have Jove suo aagnt bag } i | ec) The Sued fal shicago—| jhlan, fore i knocked Lew Chester, Philadelphia, (3). ers, aoe, defeated Young ston, Dencio, W: @). Pittsburgh—Egmett Rocco, Elmwood City, Pa. won by a technical knockout from George Gemas, gored O'Donnell, Clev ritee Simmons, Pittsburga Johnstown, Welch, MeKees) Pa. and ing, 4 ce ‘technical knockout from Meyers, Detroit, (7). e. Tampa Flan aad Here hid am! bow fg Bothy Creams, Mam little, Heck Ark —Milton janguns, New ‘ont. pointed Peal Stedman, “Bt. Memphis, Tenn, — Frankie ds heyy 4 New Orleans, fornia (10). ses Berane as | ay r his! i} iTetics, and Dr. “Braves the two teams will be rtems dis- director mal League Thistlethwaite, football coach. laid e land Cuy-/the plan before, the recent Western tty, the silver’ schools will ff. Petty was schedule for a interested the! opinion of Maj have bartered once, to tempt the | t. Louis indicated | | i { [MICHIGAN WILL ADOPT SYSTEM OF THO TEAMS Form Second Football Squad Chicago, De team fodthall both in the W in other sections, is to reality in the Big Ten rex! Michigan taking the Towa has also announced definite plans for a Fielding H. —(AP)—The two- long talked of n conference and begome a president of chi inced that tames for the second igan team are being si ht ong the other conference and non- fefence schools. most conference team ed their 1928 sche to follow < Tic id, but developed power. the “two- eorge Little, and Glenn plan, “also, of athletics | Conference annual :neeting and got a ruling from the faculty athletic committee that would permit the ; dual system. ‘ Sooner o- later all the Big Ten have at least a partial second team, in the jor John L. Griffith, {athletic commissioner f the confer- nce, for all the coaches and athletic directors voted favorably on'the sec- ond team plan. HORNSBY IS MUM Fort Worth, Tex., Dec. 6.— \ Rogers Hornsby, captain of the New | York Giants, here on a visit with his sisters, ‘Mrs. Roland Wellown of Ft. Worth, today declined to com- ment on reports that he will succeed John McGraw as manager of the team next spring. The Giant star will go to Tulsa within a few days to attend to business, then will cgn- tinue to New York, whcre he will spend the winter. IOWA ELECTS CAPTAIN Towa Gity, Iowa, Dec. 6—®)— Richard M. Brown of Cedar Rapids, Towa, a junior in the College of Lib-! captain of. the 1928 University of Iowa foot-! ball team at the annual dinner of! eral Arts, was elected the football squad. He has played center through every game' in his two years on the Iowa varsity. CAPTAINS ELECTED St. Cloud, ‘Minn., Dec. 6.— Jack Hanlon, Morris, Minn., was elected captain of the Teachers College basketball team last yight and Vernon Miller, veteran tackle, was named captain of the technical high school’s football team for‘1928. (Pj}— Walter Hagen’s ing of the pro golf tournament in Texas was proof to the experts that he is not through yet. bearing down pains, female weak- ciation Attendance Last Season Set At 1,7 Post Mortems Show KikiCuyler Was Eddie Collins May Manage Athletics Wanted by Man PHAI i | | | | | | { Jimmie Dugan Will _Box For Foresters and | At Private Show| Jimmie Dugan, Bismarck’s rapidly St rising ace in the cauliflower pro- will demonstrate his 1 !gym Wednesday night at a private! {boxing exhibition that is being sponsored by the Catholic Order of Foresters for its members. Johnnie Shafer,- a rough and ready youngster from the south side, will be Dugan's opponent and the Foresters will be furnishéd plenty of entertainment when these two youngsters mix, \for Dugan never \backs up and Wright is willing to take two blows in order to land one with his Mery Ann. Matt Humel and Jackie Snyder, corking ‘litle junior light- weights, will travel over a four round gourse in_ the preliminary. | Both Humel and Snyder have been | handling the best boy in their class some neat pastings during the past year and they are out to decide the jchampionship of the city in their di- | vision. i | two t | Plans are being made to enlarge the seating capacity of the Yankee stadium to 85,000. Women, Weak, Tired, Rundown and Nervous or who suffer ovarian pains, pains in the lower part of the stomach, nesses, headaches, backache, melan- cholia, despondency, nervous de- rangements, flushes or heat, fleet- ing and indefinite pains, whites, painful or irreguler periods, should write to Mrs. Ellen Lovell, % Mass., Kansas City, Mo. She will entirely FREE and with- out charge to the inquirer advise of a convenient home method whereby she and other women say they have jsuccessfully relieved similar troubles. | The most common ¢xpression of | these thankful women is “I feel like |a new women.” And others, “I don’t have any pains whatever any- more.” “I can hardly believe myself | that your Wonderful Method has done so much good for mc in such a jshort time.” Write today. The ad- | vice is entirely free to you. She has nothing to sell—Adv. are changing Crhesterfield _ smokers don't change with the moon... _ . but watch how other smokers to Cheflefield! TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1927 y Clubs New York, Dec. 6—(?/—Leo P, Flynn and Jimmy Johnston have en- tered into an arrangement whereby they will guarantde $20,000 to Tex Rickard if he will allow them to experiment with a vy wei shew at Madison Banecdne. January 20. Flynn and Johnston desire to prove that a card minus was stars will yield handsome profits, Rickard said he was willing to go through with the Proposition, but would take his guarantee in’ ad- vance. That feature has yet to be complied with.’ Rickard’s to; h boxers, Jack Dempsey, Jack rey, Paulino, Tom Heeney, Johnny Ris- = and “ack Delaney, uw cannot be in the competition, it is stipulated. lynn and Johnston put forth a tentative card of three 10-rounders as_ follows: Knute Hanson vs. Jack Renault; Phil Scott vs. Jack Dervil. and Ben- ny Touchstone vs. Joe Sel Dr.'Enge Chiropractor Drugless Physician Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. This agenty of the Hartford Fire Insur- ance company is bat- tling fire every day. To help you prevent fire, to knock out fire on your property is ‘the object of the ad- vice that we give owt ; policyholders. Call, write or phone : MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 218 Broadway Phone 577 BISMARCK, N. D.

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