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EIGHT | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE s Chicago White Sox Expect to Be More Than Doormat This Season ‘BLACKBURNE’S CREW Helen Wills Will Marr y San Francisco Family, le y Scion of Wealth STRENGTHEN | ~~ Who Will Be Named to Replace Tex Rickard? _ I'HUSBAND OF TENNIS’ (Fastest Woman once SLOW STARTERSIN. litle FRST WOMAN TOBE | zs | HOCKEY LOPS ARE 14) FG FT PF 5 MIZELL TURNS DOWN | 5:4 ex ww a=? PF Neither Manager Nor Qwner Is FREDERICK §, MOODY ENJOYING SUCCESS Predicting Pennant but fe @ They See Success | f sidan Engagement’ of Two Young| Boston: Bruins ‘and Montreal ROOKIE MATERIAL STRONG People Announced Yester- Canadiens, Original Losers, ” "Hoffman, Watwood, Weiland ee ve poh “py . , lle New York, Jan. 16.—(#)—The slow banal | ut Sots lee FIANCE IS STOCK BROKER starters are having thelr innings in ing Among Newcomers Chicago, Jan. 16—(7)—For the Bar : Engagement Has Been Ru- - time since the “Black Sox” scan ! ‘ of a decade ago shattered a mighty : \ pier. 3 mored for Two Years; baseball team. it appears as though ia ae Wedding Date Not Set bie Chicago White Sox band be ee i more than just a doormat for — far teats cr ttvy ainssioan league & : Berkeley, Calif, Jan. 16.—(7)—Miss 5 Helen Wills, queen. of the tennis in the 1929 pennant race. Strengthened by several minor courts, is to marry Frederick 8, ‘Yeague “Big Berthas” and led by a Moody, Jr, son of a San Francisco * manager of the old school, Russell 7 capitalist. i “Lena” Blackburne, the White Sox # ; ‘The engagement, announced here will put a younc but fast and danger- a yesterday by her parents, Dr. and : ous outfit in the field. / ij Mrs Clarence A. Wills, has been ‘4 ’ Neither Blackburne nor the “Old a j Tumored since 1926. Roman,” Charles A Comiskey, is pre- Moody, who is empl by 8 stock dicting a pennant, but both expect a . y ‘ § brokerage company in Francisco, « first division berth—a position unoc- {attended a private school near\here, = ' ne cupied by the Sox since Comiskey meee: after which he took to the sea. ‘He : & — . e broke up his great club of 1919. E ; ‘Served an apprenticeship aboard the ‘ Rookie Material Strong . Bo sailing ship Falls of Clyde, winning | Here's Leila Brooks Potter of Toronto, Canada, who happens to be With an array of rookie material 3 - officers papers, and finally serving | amateur champion woman speed skater and the fastest woman on and veterans from last year's fifth 4 e H 8s first officer on some of the Mat- | is entered for competition in all the coming international meets to place: club, Blackburne’s problem is * : son navigation company’s vessels. His | 8t Lake Placid, New York, Cleveland, Chicago and Detroit in t! ‘who to discard. Only William Kamm, 3 family has been prominent in San few weeks. t Teading defensive third baseman of Francisco for several years and his the junior circuit, finds his position IACK father is a member of the state highs ; < oe ee ne uel 7 - DEMPSEY q ec lire eal ; ; ] y - ee lor the outfield, four for secon iss Wills’ tennis career began ia + base, thre for catcher, and two each JOHN M. CHAPMAN when she was 14. As a pupil of her BLA G The « for shortstop and first base, in addi- | Carey, Chapman, Dempsey, Hammond! One of the four probably will succeed the late Tex Rickard. The Madi- | father, she won notice on the local p r ‘i tion. to a small army of prospective son Garden Corporation joins sports followers in the guessing. courts. In 1921 she won the nation: . : p pitchers. | junior tennis championship in Forest : © _ Of the score of rookie hopefuls, four Hills. When 17 she defeated Molla ’ ¢ stand out—"Dutch” Hoffman, an out- Mallory for the women’s American bee en % F: i fielder ob:ained from Sacramento for i 4 singles championship. Mille. Suzanne D> . $25,000 and Earl Sheely; J. C. Atwood, “| Lenglen defeated Miss’ Wills ‘in if OU! in the playoff for the National Open & hard hitting outfielder from Shreve- - France in February, 1926. Mille.| Sport is far from being a modern|at Inwood the Georgian shook the Fi id Johnny Kerr, 28-year-old se¢- i Lenglen turned professional before a jinvention. They played tag and|Jinx that had beset his youthful trail c base setleli of the Coast j Teturn match could be nd j tossed rocks jn the neolithic ages but|and began the par-beating parade Sheppard 1 Teague who is up for his second trial : the big concentration and the high-/that hes carried him to victories here | the americans, brought the goals that 2 e majors and Bob Welland, a ; her rivals in singles championship | powered stuff is of more recent origin. |and abroad. punctuated 70 minutes of close check-' “ Southpaw obtained from Moline of | By FORREST C. (PHOG.) ALLEN | by the rules committee. As pointed Play. She was for a time a student at | Nineteen. twenty-three, for an ex-| The samie year witnessed the as-| ing, oF the Mississippi Valley league. Wel- (President National Basketball {out in one of the rules, “the mere : \the University of. California, but left jamplé that is fresh in memory, had |Cndancy-of Helen Wills, just.out of: i He : season forthe White Sor lat fall and | Ghail we make more chmeyes in the | teiptnt (2° deel, Blaver 8 at; MOTE PET ring, and draving. °° Peninr] 6, Silt ovary. sage of it eoeuetl-|Eetnee ay the. omit tine the rore| aed Pl, fe make more t! es in the | tempt Play the ball does not writing, and dr: ; ing at same e B ck Phan’ ete shut out the Athletics 1 to 0. present rules? justity im tn placing one or both | c@ge Game Has Ruled Supreme | "iting. and drawing boom that sports have ever newt’ | reign of Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, ismar tom: Several other likely looking young-| Basketball standpatter says: “Cer-|arms over his opponent's shoulder,— for Years; Other Winter t “Little Miss Poker Face” they sters will be back. The most promis- tainly not. Why should we change| if, by so doing, he causes personal Five: years may not mean so: much ing is Art Shires, a Dallas product. | them?” contact.” This infraction is “getting Sports Demanded when you're talking about the careers | complished _, Who played a whale of a game around | Basketball progressive says: “Yes, | by” repeatedly without being called. s of Ty Cobb or Cy Young, Walter| the age of 17 and started a career first base and led the club in hitting. | because we need a more improved Stalling Kansas City, Jan. 16.—UP)—-Hockey ' Hagen or Harry Vardon, but the last|that has carried her to world’s cham- Meet Here T ; He is regarded as a fixture at first | game.” Undoubtedly, it is the thought of | nas invaded the capital of basketball {five have been the most significant in / pionshipcheights. 8 : : _ | although Bud Clancy, whom Shires) And so it has always been. But | the rules committee that public opin- | Kansas City, where the Coot sport : #\J |athletic history. Look over @ few of the other brigh ; ousted etd ‘gfvaing two extremes often develop a happy |ion will curb stalling,—that specta-| has ruled like an autocrat for many The passing show of 1923 featured; pages of that significant campaign Bis ‘our Second Basemen mean. Often when @ team pulls|tors will not pay to see actionless | years, reaching the pinnacle of its Paul Miller, Grand Fork the flashing episodes of Dempsey,|of 1923. Teams Are in Quest of Cham- ~ , Second base has four applicants in |some questionable play, which is the | games. glory with the annual A. A. U. tourna. | Paul Miller, Grand Forks, Is In-|and Firpo, Zev and Papyrus, Tilden On one/there’s the story of ° Bill ee ie Serr, dearl Swanson, a rookie and Bill | product of the brain of its foxy coach, This committee has done much to| ments for the national championship, dividual Leader in All’ and Johnston, Wills and Mallory,| Johnston's first Davis Cup detent; at| Pionship of Two Cities; Hunnefield and George Redfern, who|the referee, as well as the rival Prevent stallin;. Both the one-yard | now knows that basketball is not the Ruth and'McGraw. It quickened the|the hands of Kengaroo Jim Ander-| ~ ited at the position last season. | coaches, shout, “Illegal. Tule and the b. :*bgging or freezing | only winter sport. Events “Tpace, started professional valués|son of Australia. On- another Zev's| ‘ Mandan Five Strong . ll Clsselt will be at shortstop] “Well, show me a rule against it!”! the ball rule ke: been contributed When W. F. (‘Bill’) Grant. left a “ shooting sky-high and overthrew a|triumph over Papyrus, the English . rapes ‘again unless Irvine Jeffries, who | retorts the wily coach. The rule book | as an aid to curb «" «ling. paying hockey club in Duluth last flock of old-fashioned stalwarts and|Derby winner, in the $100,000 turf| Mandén vs. Bismarck! Comes from Dallas, beats him out. seems not to contain one. And so it| The one-yard rv. declares that “as| winter to pioneer with the ice game |, Jamestown, Jan. 16.—(P)--Nygaards ' eas, % classic at Belmont, ‘A third reveals For tie outfield Blackburne has |goes. Usually, such plays are found | scon as an opponeti: takes a position | in a new fleld he attracted spectators [Internationals of Jamestown today Many, if not most, of the sensa-|the Yankees, not yet the super-team, | Barret ae anny yuiostil, Bll |to be just outside the precincts of |close to (say within a yard of) the | because they were curious. "But the |led the five men teams with: 7709 |,,werVyif not most, of sport, the| but world's champions for the firse | Barrett, Bib Falk, all veterans. and {ethical basketball and just within the | pleyer with the ball, the latter must'| spectators became fans, discovering {Pins at the seventh annual bowling changing times and the new order of|time, at any rate, after their third: oe iB etek 4 ren yules. Consequently, s change in the /get the bell into pla To date. I) that the flash of Uttle puck chasers | tournament being ‘Amenicon Bouliey {things mpy be traced directly back|straight clash with the Giants. fman 5 tules is supp ie only means | have seen some of the nation’s best | across ice, the battle before the nets les can Be . i Being farmed cut inet seaseres, ‘1 [Of Blocking these illegal “pet” plays. jofticias a work in the game, but I|and the ‘frequent. physical clashes Congress ot the Blacksione alleys, |*0,the mpetus of 1923 || Red Grange was a sophomore nen-| Sanuen, xadepeidents, said to be a: being farmed out last season. he evolution of the game of bas-}have not seen one of them call a| compared favorably withthe clever|, L. M. Poseley, a member of the In- |, 7cr Riceard put boxing on a spec- ling: light heaveyeighe, aehne | teams of the two cities, meet tonight: > goitost Of Blackburne’s troubles seem | ketball seems to necessitate new of- | single play of this kind. But the in- | dribbling and swift passing of baskets | ternational five," heads the ‘singles staged the Dem, Pekipartlreed beter} ei wyweight. Bériny | forthe championship \of the two | to hinge about the backstop position. |fensive and new defensive measures. | fraction has occurred a score of times. | bail. with 607 while Jackson and Miller | eee ee entury oe Gils. tat Leonard "wes the ring master” snd] cities tat He has but one man of dependability, | The offense, usually, outspeeds the de- | The rules committee hes further Hockey Is Failure of Grand Forks are leading in the | 10,2 es a Digger fObe Toe Coe re ee cot ightweights. Jess Willsrd |" ‘rhe Mandan crowd is particularly... 4 Moe Berg. Buck Crouse has been re- | fense. decreed that there shall be no “bull-| Hockey proved a failure financially | doubles with 1093. Miller with 1707 is fit io, Heer har fo the ring, | wis faving: drasnatic oomst-ba Wak strong this year, according to Neil O. /: j tained but Harry McCurdy has been | The joint basketball rules commit- | dogging or freezing the ball.” By this| in the first season. But Grant was|high man in all the events. brought to w smashing climax by the) scarred Gene Griqui scaled the) Churchill, Phantom Four’ 4 edo. tee has made come excellent changes |is meant that on a jump ball, the | undaunted and returned this winter} Other scores include: five man | “battle of ages” between Dempsey and | featherweight title heights. of the best men are George Heidt and: : tit? pitching staff will consist of |in the rules and these changes should | player may tap and catch the ball,! with virtually the same club, which | teams: Recreation Grand Forks 2596; |Firpo at the Polo Grounds. Furthermore Yale ruled the foot~ | Helping, former Mandan high school ve veterans—"Red’ ., Ted }aid the game. But they will not give | but if he then holds it until another | ended well up in the 1928 race. Park Grant Morris, Jamestown 2522; |, Nineteen twenty-three was the year | ball roost in the East and California's) stars, and Mike Geston and “murt Us the help that they should unless held ball ts declared, he may not tap) In their early games the 1928 Pla- | Clinic Drug Company 2449; Farmers |that saw Bobby Jones scale national] Golden Bears “ won’ their fourth | Gronvold, former University of North 4, the officials can solve the difficulty |and catch it on the ensuing jump | Mors have demonstrated the dopesters|and Merchants National . bank,|chempionship golf heights for the straight Pacific, Const title | Dakota athletes. The Mandan center: Falah weg nsing rookles—young Ed jencountered in their interpretations | ball. This rule, if enforced, will ald | were not wild in predicting an Ameri- | Jamestown 1080; Goldberg and Cady, |first time, after many @ disappoint-|in one of the greatest unbeaten is six feet six inches off the. floor,’ La and George Cox, who were{and in their enforcements of the | in preventing stalling. can Hockey association title for the |Grand Forks, 1078; Augspurger and|ment, and launch @ triumphant |marches.of gridiron Church says, They are 7 the club last season, Weiland | rules. ‘A New Mental Track Kansas City team before spring. Nierling, Miles City. 1013; Berg and march that is now without parallel in) What = parade! And what a dif-| victory tonight and it will and Leslie Cox. Dribbling In most situations of life, ‘the old/ The five-club circuit of last season | Keller, Miles City, 988, . the royal and ancient domain. ference five short years have made, | team with a great spirit ——————____. The dribble rule has caused more | order changeth, giving place to new.” | was increased to six, Winnipeg drop-| Singles: Poseley 607; Berg, Miles} When Jones, then just become of | but, like the song, the memory lingers} Churchill] ig planning = agitation than all of the others com- | I am wondering as I write, if before | ping out and Tulsa and St. Louis| City, ; Goldberg. Grand Forks. | voting age, beat ‘Bobby Cruickshank |on. re at center on the Phan aggrega: bined. This year the responsibility | the basketball season is too old, these | coming in for the first season of. ice |584; Keller, Miles City, 575; Paul nr Hank %srown and is put on the dribbler. He must go| changes in the rules will be made| hockey. St. Paul, Minneapolis and Miller, Grand Forks, 571. = : n : and -Doc Burdick and clearly around his guard and avoid |efective. Officials have been calling | Duluth are the other members. All events: Miller, Grand Forks, : guards. Van and Personal contact. But in the doven | the plays a long time under the old | |The sport has fascinated St Louls | 101; Goldberg. Grand Forks, 1616; || ASKETB ALL ier seca or so early collegiate games that I | rules, and they sem a bit calloused to| Walter R. Whiteside, millionaire oil | Jackson, Grand Forks, 1606, : 4 the Phantom sec- - ; have witnessed this year, the officials | the progressive changes.’ Evidently, | man, who is backing the Tulsa club, \ : ° A said to be as strong as \° 18 ee are working the dribble rule exactly | they have developed a habit—a reflex, | will spend almost $900,000 on his club + BURNSTAD ?, NAPOLEON ? ” to 21 at Mandan last é Wilton Boy Scouts last night won| #5 they worked it last year. They | which will take time to replace. For | and palatial rink. im Burnstad, N. D., Jan. 16—Who won. . jag i © and 38 to 14 basketball victory over | Fé still allowing the dribbler to plow | instance, the play in this one-yard Bert McLeod Stars , the: basketball” game between the : journey to $2) Bismarck Troop No. 4 at Wilton. through, end also to bodyblock while |rule is such.a rapid one that the| Among the stars populsrizing the Independents and Napo- Se the indes.. ‘ Wilton took an early lead, holding | @ribbling. oe Teteree's. Gocieiom. mill roauite the der | Ree ere Ate Nett ileaercl apse Olam leon? i Loses to Herman Weiner; Says county: > a 1 advantage at the er but e advance of the sea- lopment @ new men rack. | boro, itario, in jense teams played : ‘They ey £% Binnarck came a petlteadey the son will find the average official of | Old grooves are worn deeply; and the | man, who turned professional last — amet pit still tied ieee. peor ed Fighter. Begins and Ends Be lh 2 £ seco quarter and the half ended | ‘the game changing his last year's | men in charge of the game are not |year after several seasons of bril-| Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 16—(#)—The periods. : as a ‘Bum’ Lake here 7 £7 with the score knotted at 12, The | habits materially. But this rew anti-| apt to develop new eyes and new|liant amsteur competition; Garnet | ast pot of gold in the golf tourna- ¢ ‘Wilton boys made one point in the ; Dlock rule is a splendid one, if en- | tracks for a little while. (“Wasp”) Campbell, center and mem- | ments of the west this winter was in the a '® third period outscored their op- 4 Psychologically, in times of stress| ber of Soo Greyhounds when they | sight today. period. Hagerstown, Md., Jan. ©? ponents 5 to 2 in the last canto. Guarding from the Rear and excitement, we revert to habits| won the Allen cup, highest amateur] A final 36 hole drive remained be: yo : «tN. Agre, Bismarck, scored five fiela |, The change in the rules on “guard- | and actions of the .past. Thus, do fore the treasure hunters of the links ‘goalé four free throws ing from the rear” is another good | our splendid and well-meaning offi- also of Fin : & “Green, example of <'¢ failure of many offi- | cials overlook many, of the new in- i i ‘The : clals to carry out the idea formulated | terpretations. (& 4 0 3 0 i vg round. . Bil Soy = eone ae . : “A fighter > 3} PHOTO OPPORTUNITY) ssezerstine teers |S he sed gaa org |Ump Saye Leggett, sr na : 4 8 football game, was offered » Hol- : Good Ball: Players oT thipk FU go 1 a a Pr| Atlanta, Ga. Jan 16—Not many! 4. 8 ; ‘ Sed eae pa ash proaots | 2 ~0° 2] Young men turn down‘an offer to'go| rote. , ee 0 ) 4 in the movies, especially when a nice 3 : 3 ; fat contract is offered, but Warner| players 0 2. 0 | Mizell, Georgia Tech ‘halfvack, may} things 0 0 _9{ de one of them. called them fornia game. 0. 0 o| Mizu $50,000 out, = “Z| Made out in Hollywood on the recent; his banker 8 2 8\ trip there And the ‘ against to him. . ¥ H i i Sets to Decision : E : nse : ; — il et