The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 6, 1928, Page 6

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= ee feervewerwrerrer Tr ett ee eee £obc0eeenneessenen PAGE SIX Huddle System STATES PAIRED WITH MEXICO IN, DAVIS CUP PLAY Paavo Nurmi May Pass Up Short Runs and Try Mara- thon at Olympics Brothers, Hockey Stars, Play With Rival Teams TO SETTLE) = | HAS SCOR! France Has Won Majority of; Major Tennis Titles of World man gene since Bill Roper started to mal popular on-castern gridirons a few| years go. | It seems to be necessary, for in-! stance. for Doctor Otto I er to go into a huddle with amateur ath- letic union officials every time the German schoolmaster displ E a de-| 14% a : : sire to get off the mark t took |, a eas | at least six separate and distinct T) e a ‘oud one because | the best player: » doctor finally|he | in his first race am the k i Millrose meet championship Mice be zey will not make,George (eft) p ith Ottawa, nk’ (center) plays with the > more than three racing starts while| York Rangers and Dilly (righty plays with the New York Americans. | in the United States but he will get, The girls probably will give the medal to Billy because of the swell uni-| plenty of exercise sprinting from) form and the face above it. one conference to another. Gene and Tex Huddle te ditalty wii tee woes Bat Krause Demands is done on the football field c d' ‘ Place on Local Car Gene Tunney and Te ick ida links for some time without yet y might make but they pla Tge part of a fferent team: have been huddling together on F So eee | disclosing the signals for the next [will be disappointed to know that | aelfoment disry aa ect ts par Hazen Battler Eliminates Self| Billy, Petrolle, Russie LeRoy, Billy ve s s been to oe i 2 ight or ‘anRyan will h Jack petspsey on the ees | by Refusing Anything But)the card here before the Grain Deal-| erhaps Rickard has borrowed | ae fe . jers and one of the quartet is prac- the Rockne system and decided to) Windup Pasition — Mysteri-|¢i-any booked to fight the wind-up of" thie sear heavyweight eh ous Promoter Will Announce) Pte tne Mysterious Promoter pionship, game, meanwhile _ using cadiiners N e has almost given up hopes of show-! aeaTny eharkey, Risko and Heeney ay Not Later Than ing Billy Petrolle for lack of a suit- as shock troops. | Sunday able opponent, he is still scouring Kinseys Have Problem | ° i the country in a last minute attempt The Pan-American conference Ser. to locate some boy wl.o will figure and Lindbergh may not have had) gat Krause, the veteran Hazenjthat a showing against Petrolle will anything to do with it, but the/ battler, who is said to have taken| put him in the fistic.limelight. United | States and Mexico are| more punishment in northwest rings! “If I have not located a gogd boy paired in the first round of the)in the past ten year's than all of the | by Wednesday, I will concentrate on Davis Cup tournament, anyw uliflower clan put together, ap-| matching two of the other three con- This will cevelop a curious situa-| neared in Bismarck over the week-| siderations and will make my an- tion if Robert Kinsey, # former 0-| end and announced that he “deserved |nouncement of the headliners not enki etre sates a place on the Grainmen’s cardj|later than next Sunday,” the Mys- : es er /here Feb, 28.” of Mexico’s Davis Cup team. | For the edification of a large| LeRoy Ignores Light Kinsey told the tennis authorities coterie of fight fans gathered in} Johnny Salvatore of St. Paul, who| last year that for competitive pur-|the training com at the U. S.|guides Billy Light and My Sullivan, | poses he was a Mexican. He mar-| Weather bureau, Bat went on to ex-|is anxious to throw his men into the | ried a Mexican girl, established | plan how he had given Bismarck its{same ring against Russie LeRoy. | residence in Mexico City and played | best fights, reviewed his ring his-|So far Russie’s ambitions in that in the Davis Cup matches against) tory, and then emphatically declared direction have not been ascertained, Japan at St, Louis last summer. | that’ he “was in the best condition,the Fargo blonde refusing to an- Brother Howard Kinsey, who of his career.” iswer the Mysterious Promoter's let- helped brother Robert lift the n But Bat automatically eliminated ters. | : tional doubles t:: in 1924 at Long- himself from consideration for the’ Al Van Ryan and My Sullivan wood, is now a professional, which] Feb, 28 bill when he declared that have been matched to fight in St. is the same thing as being a Mexi- |he would fight in no place but the, Paul in the near future while Le- can so far. as helping the United) wind-up position. Roy, according to a Fargo paper, is States in this year’s Davis Cup) i EA -@ |considering a trip to Rio de Janeiro, play is concerned. : | Krause Is Eliminated Brazil, as one of-a party of boxers Finland May Surprise {| Informed of Bat’s ultimatum, the | who will invade the South American el latest He on Anan Mysterious Promoter said, “Krause {countries this summer. lympic preparations is_ tha’ e famous phantom, Paavo Nurmi, may | | pass up the shorter distances and LARS HAUGEN TA | run the marathon at Amsterdam, This will be Paavo’s _ third ; Olympic and possibly his last. He is represented as being anxious to } cap his career by leading the pack i i over the long grind, adding his name | to those of his countrymen, Koleh- pes ' mainen and Stenroos, previous win- ners of the classic. On the other hand Paavo scems a bit young to take up the mara- thon. He is only about 32 and most Finns don’t go in for the longer apate eg they roa around 40, The | older they are the longer they run. m4 a Moreover Nurmi has a score or| Red Wing, Minn., Feb. 6. i i two to settle with Peltzer and Wide, |For the fifth time in 10 years, Lars |%® it was with football in the south, who beat him in Belgium last sum-|Taugen, St.Paul veteran, is the peo it will be given full recogni- mer. To do so he wil ibliged to] . ‘ A ati i tion. meet them at 1.500 at 5,000 meters, iets a champion of the National ‘There is no doubt that football at both of which distances the Finn) Ski association. ‘ has made great progress in the holds the Olympic championship.} He outclassed a large field at the | south within the past few years, but He won them in a single afternoon | national tournament here yesterday | recognition has beert the major fac- at Paris four years ago because| and successfully retained his honors | = ——7 tor in this prog- neither one, alone, offered him suf-j|.,- Z ‘4 ress. ficient exercise for a day. wich he Won ABain OBL MANED A) Southern fuotball was never as far France Takes ’Em All year aep: Sulees ae bi a tal If there are any important ten-|0f 18.388 points for first place wi jing as has nis’ title France's agile Davis | Pedar Falstad of Canton, 8. D., sec- |, fees ne bas been Cup players haven't won within the |Ond, with 18.288. ii Gen T went to last year it's probably because they| Falstad made a jump of 148 feet |! West Point from Recent heard of them, on his first try as compared with |! Alabama ten years| Jumping Jean Borotra has just|143 for the champion, but spurred |; ago, I traveled half way around the world| 0 by the cheers of the 25,000 spec- ised to find so to win the Australian champion-|tators, Haugen came back to leap |! + little difference in ship. He also holds the American|151 feet, or seven better then Fal- | the brand of foot- indoor title. Rene LaCoste defeat-|stad’s second effort. i (ball of the south terious Promoter stated today. | Leap of 151 Feet Wins For St. Paul Vet—Trogstad Heads | Class B W. T. VANDEGRAAF SAYS: I do-not believe that there is bet- ter football anywhere than that played in the far southwest, and I —p)— | feel that it is only a matter of time, } quint Ts) that THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BS Has Become Popul Demons Defeat Dickinson, 21-12, in Uninteresting GREAT QUINT THAT PLAYED BRAVES, LAGS a Flickers’ Football .Men- AS BATTLE ARBITER Elmer Benser Leads Mates| ‘ten Offers — Calls Nodak OF FARGO FIGHTERS With Four Field Goals to Athletic Policy ‘Vague and Be Lone Star \ Regulars Face Banishment inj ‘°%ch at the University of North Coming Drills as Result of Loafing : BY yJ. G. MacGREGOR Elmer Benser led his a score of 21 to 12. Flushed with its allowed ter. court, Dickinson Fought local followers of the fight. . Bismarck’s the locals gave slight aid. Dickinson nearly registered quarter. als Lead at Half the locals midway. scoring for the foul circle. Midgets’ only tally. a vain effort to find a bination but the boys forward, ones sistent the minutes waned. cupying the bench during the comi Heidt, Lon mueller were outstanding drills. Starke, Huncovsky and Lo Q oy a Heidt, f ...cceoereves 2 1-2 Hunter, f .. 2 0-1 Lonbacken, ¢ 1 1-2 Windmueller, 0 0-0 Starke, g QO 0-1 Honcovsky, 0 0-1 Totals 5 29 Referee: mes. Gopher Field House ed Tilden for the French and Amer-| Halvor Winstac of Racine, Wis.,! jean crowns while Henri Gochet | equaled Haugen’s 151-foot mark, but || a geen of lifted the British honors at Wimble-|the judges awarded the champion distance is the don, the jump trophy because of his bet- chief factor that ter form. Walstad won third place has operated >——_—_—_—_—_____——¢ | in the ratings with 18.279 points. against teams of i Basketball Results | Trogstad Wins Class B the South. ad gemrurest, {rpm re ——— |, The Class B litle went to, Steve | Seiving, recognition. In, the Rocky Bismarck 21; Dickinson 12. Trogstad of Superior, Wis., who had | Mountain Conference, I have found, Morningside 31, N. D. A. 24. _ | graceful leaps of 149 and’ 137 fect, |#8 coach at Colorado College the Moorhead high 35, Detroit Lakes 1:4 His point total was 18. amne bindieat tine the altitude. Valley City Teachers 28, Moor-| Tarl Aaker of Minneapolis leaped |,,2Ong trips with violent changes head 24, 3 150, feet and won the trophy for the in altitude work considerable hard- Devils Lake high 21, Jamestown |iongest Class B jump, but he failed (iP of teams of this section play- 16. : to place among the first 10 in the | in other settions. That and Ohio State 42, Minnesota 40| point ratings. He made 156 feet, | smaller gate receipts prevent teams (overtime). the longest of the day, on his second | "0m other ions coming here for _ Lawrence 27, Monmouth 24 (over-|attempt, but it went for naught | S4mes- : ‘ time) os Maryland 26 when he fell. The senoatsueegilk section are not Navy 35, Maryland 26. With uniform hops of 138 as large as Jy other sections, Pittsburgh 42, Army 36. foet, Clarence Berling of Iramwood, [28d their football teams are corre- Yankton high 25. Sioux City 20. |Mich., sco-ed 17.642 points, good for | SPondingly not as powerful, but the Huron high 46, Redfield 23. —" |second place in Class B, with third | “Hference ix not great, Columbus college 40. Augustana}going to Iver Engebrethsen of T believe that in a few. years, : : Westby, Wis:, who had 133 md 134 ficulties of distance Aberdeen high 29. Madison 23, feet and 17.331 points. St. ‘Thomas 22, St. John’s 29, The first,10 winners in eac’. event | eng Wesleyan 35, Madison baa evaned peiees worth anes ees 4 veral the riders were slightl; as Chicago 19. injured a oy. due. monty to ; . | 27. treacherous current ani pe peas 44, Washington | underfooting at the en.’ of the lide, Aggies, Nebraska pal ‘Okishoma sity 40, Mis- DICKINSON SHOWS FIGHT laggin; i i Demon cage mates to an uninpres-| Kane today, Rockwell says in part:/ Part the ropes in ! sive victory over the green Dickin- son quint here Saturday night by} ed to me that the future athletic) victory over! Dakota is too vague, too uncertain, it ing, j= Mandan 'a week: apo, the Wameree Dee ate: gue, as the third man in the ring, Kos. overconfidence to} resigna: wreck the smooth-working machine! | am giving you ample time to h presented against the an-| chocse a successor. cient rivals and in its place showed] believe that it is needless for mej that were just as tough as the Le- a floundering type of team play|to add, that until that resulted in the poorest exhibi- ii i I will > Honl of, busbetBall wo fae this: Win'| Gotan we are moss for’ thmendea | setae d HS ik ble Glarus esha | work that won the ) idget game for! in 1916 after a successful year as the locals.. Had Dickinson boasted} athletic director at Salem college,! sh | 2 veteran quint there might have) Salem, W. Va. Previous to that ficial he.could obtain who would be been a massacre on the-Capital City| he was an all-western The spectators’ admiration was for Frank Richard’s boys alone. The jn 1926 and 1927 won state cham- were over, but I guess they have, w Clan McLeod| pionships, and made strong show. groaned dismally as they watched) ings in the North Central confer- ae play logey ol . jickinson added what spice, there * was to the contest by its unceasing oh Le ‘one of the year’s football of St. Paul, as the referee. Elmer Benser's four field goals. his offensive drive, his passing and} prove, tis North Dakota’s outstand- defensive Oe ee eae ing all-time gridiron victory. fog tin atic ae rticipated for) tion, Rockwell announced his con-| that he had been in bed for a week shut-out sad oe Leen iy first jeidt an nl en con- “ rae tributed three points for the west- ; | nothing serious,” explained the Far- erners while Elmer Benser ‘dropped| Maize and Blue Beats | ‘ iS A *., | lasted-a couple of days. a pretty field goal through the hoop-|Chicago, 28 to 19, im | ““Gosh,” said little Billy, “can't a In the second quarter, the Me- i 4 ictory | fighter have a slight cold: withost Leod men showed a little sign of Third Big Ten Vi ry bod life and managed to tally four field —_—— Pere ke Oe peo pegent ran its string of consectitive confer-| Zabuil, ose bl new heavyweight| Cubs of Winnipeg, led the teams Devils Lake Cagers t» a tie with Indiana for fourth oppone! the Trim Jimmi 21-16 Thornberg and Benser did | the! piace in the Big Ten basketball race| but it ia thought that some good | a quarter both shots being from near|DY defeating Chicago, 28.to 19, Sat-| fighter from the Twin Cities will Hunter slapped aj UTday. set-up through the strings for the oi In ee final eight minutes Coach play, oy D. McLeod subsituted Sapa 8B Oesterbenn of the Maize and Blue, pushed their team into the the tend, R San Antonio, Texas, Feb. 6.—(?) ey sta came kal radia Michigan started strong, rolling; —With mud proving’ an effective ickinson’s R up a 7 to 1 advantage in the first peice pe pote rapratg piss} | five minutes of play with Captain|of the Texas was threatening per- a left guard, on the side-|the 100-odd entries today had the Faces Some of the regulars may be oc- during the Jamestown game this week-end un- less they show rejuvenated form en and Wind-! for the Badlands boys Saturday night while Hunter’ showed that they will be dangerous players when another season rolls around. és The lineup and, summary :— Bismarck Dedication Is Spoiled | by Ohio State Team Tod Rockwell Resigns at State University Michigan Football LEO ‘KOSSICK BALKS tor, Considers Several Big \ Barton, Hoke and Shave of Twin Cities. Are Considered by Hurley Uncertain’ Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 6.—F.! A. (Tod) Rockwell, head football! Dakota for the past two years, inj Fargo, N. D., Feb. 6.—With the a letter to President Thomas F, | biggest ee aid in ae brelit e i +. | 0 nol west xing, ‘romotor Kane Saturday resigned his posi-| Jaoy Hurley is confronted with a tion, the resignation to take effect! problem today that is certain to June 30. ! cause him plenty of trouble before In his letter, sent to President| Russie LeRoy and Billy Petrolle Fargo Friday round grudge! u After both of the principals had} policy of the university of North) agreed on Leo Kossick of Moorhead) “For some time past it has appear- Bb ded their 10 In submitting my| sick threw a monkey wrench in the at this time I trust that) machinery by announcing that he would not accept the assignment. “I have refereed seyeral * bouts! - . . And I the time my) Roy-Petrolle fracus,” said the Moor- “but knowing Russie tinue to do my utmost for the good! and Billy as I do, I would sooner of the university.” * .._| Watch the bout from a ringside Rockwell: came to the university) seat.” Jack Hurley, promotor of the y, said he had no idea what of- warterback | satisfactory to LeRoy. ichigan in Referec Question Worries “I thought all of my worries! at the university of 1924. His two teams at North Dakota just started,” the promotor moaned. “However, I think I can get LeRoy; to accept George Barton or Billy Hoke of Minneapolis or Ed ike ‘ure ence. 1926, Rockwell’s men con-} : “ ley stafed that he would try to upsets in defeating, Marquette at 4 i ilwaukee. This, the records peu, agreement with LeRoy by Pond Syghee meh tad ies ieee ty r * yy and announced that he was Simultaneous with his resig@™-| in good condition. Petrolle denied sideration of three coaching offers, o “ alone in the Western conference for| bag ce papa re Be bed next fall. on me a couple of times, but it was go Express, ‘and besides, it only red ly. getting exeited about | I: ‘was announced today Szymka. Chicago, Feb. 6.—(?)—MicHigan ence vi appear on the card. to three and went in-| protege, ‘woul ‘His mt has not been named, be imported. seemed destined for vic-| Regardless of the fact that the tory until the last five minutes of| referee question is still unsettled, when its powerful defense! the ticket sale continues to move in| crumbled and Captain Harrigan and} at a merry clip. DUDLEY LEADS GOLFERS bar to par -ards in the first round open golf tournament, » Simultaneous with Harri-' prospect of another 18-holes over a n’s entry into the, contest, the mary course. Ed Tudley of Holly- arses found the basket and tied| wood, Calif.. led the field yesterday the score. sith a minute. with a 72, one over par, while Tom n higan fe lead and at the halt into o 14 to 11. | was second wita 73. alocounoy al coccocooumnt ar in All Athleti — > = Winnipeg, town bowlers fi; He rolled a total of 664, cash prize of $100. George Peterson of Farg: second, with. 645, and F. MUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1928 Unbreakable Chicago Basketball Star Wears Strong Glasses in Games =. DURING WEEK ing his unbreakable glasses. merman wears them in all the games he plays in, and claims snugly on his eyes, and so far have wate to ng a vee often do -in actual = POY: | nesota at iowa. Purdue will ha' WINNIPEG PIN _| MEET CLOSES size. sere Feb. 6.—(?)—Out-of-|ers I ire prominently in| conference alae occu; the final standings of Winnipeg's | Madison. 13th annual bowling tournament which came to a close Saturday|Iowa at Bloomii geregate total Winnipeg trundlers captured the| 42 to 40. five-man and doubles events. The leading players doubles are local men, Fenwick and | Thomas and Davis and Smith be- | ing tied with scores of 1,227 each.| Lake high school Other leaders in the doubles in-| measure of the Jackson and” Sibbell, Grand Forks, N. D., seventh with 1,186; and Miller and Peterson, Grand Forks, 10th, with 1, In the singles, first with 668, and took the grand| At a ate with 1,849. dwindled to three th Ee. Kelsven of Fargo, N. D., gee iffer won captured the special “classic” event.| the lead in the third , and won a count stood 17 to 15. . mighty coe pipeemal And great Gideon! How that flavor : of Granger Rough Cat! eee TED ZIMMERMAN Here’s a photograph of Ted Zim-|feat merman, Chicago cage star, wie scramble the race. im- glasses|volve second divsion teams. The c Maneuvers Game MICHIGAN IS PURDUE FEAR Boilermakers’ Defeat Will Scramble Race—Badgers Play Notre Dame Chicago, Feb. 6.—(?)—Michigan’s fast pis team held both the hopes and fears of conference ‘ead- ers today as the Big Ten basketball bi entered pron tad or eis y hoped the ize an lue machine, which has Niiteady ‘won thrée consecutive victories, would erush Purdue in their game at Ann Arbor Saturday thereby toppling the Boilermakers from first place. Likewise, they feared to meet Bei nie Oosterbaen and his n.ates as fay must do before they can end season. . Michigan, after losing its first two games to Wisconsin und North- western, has so mastered its diffi- cult pivot any that Indiana, Ohio State and Chicago have fallen in the path of the onrushing Maize and jue. Of the six conference he this week, the Michigan-Purdue game will be the-most im rtant. A de- for Purdue likewise would Two Triumphant Frays Two conference games will be fit|Played ‘tonight but neither is con- sidered important because paar io State will play at Chicago and Min- ve @ warming up session for the Michi- gan game by tackling Franklin col- lege at Lafayette. ges eld baw at game of the is the tom of the conference ladder, Snel Paves and. Grand Forks upset of Wisconsin has stam Trundlers in Money—St. Paul Man Cops Singles . m as troublesome, Wisconsin will return to the floor after an nce of three when it meets Notre Dame in a non-conference game at Madison to- morrow night. Saturday the Badg- Minnesota, present ints, also at Indian, will return to conference play Saturday, meeting due to the . prowess of L.| In last Sa y_night’s games, Wolseiffer, of St. Paul, who won the| Michigan defeated Chicago, 28 to 19, ind a ite 1. and Ohio State surprised Minnesota, Jamestown, N. D.. Feb, 6.—Devils cagers took the Jamestown high |, of on team here Saturday, 21 to Jamestown took an early lead frog we them a 9 to 3 margin at cl lose of the o) uarter. the half re had led, 18 to 10. e Satans too! 0, was| for the it Vall ” aan flor season against eile (Cus. and K. McCormack, were tied for| with 12. points, the) Lally, San Antonio, professional| seventh with 600. P. Miller of/ Jamestown guard, was the losers’ Grand Forks was ninth with 598.| best scoring threat with five points. while Franke,

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