The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 5, 1929, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT? 3 cP outfit which three weeks ago was de- feated 32 to 17 by the capital city clan. Played First Game Hudiler and Lillibridge played their first game against Valley City, just having become eligible at the begin- ning of the second semester. Their advent forced Lloyd McDonald, who this year is playing his fourth year as a Brave, to the bench. ‘Tough the Braves defeated Valley City only 20 to 16, they were content with a small lead, confident that they ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Demons and Braves Both Stronger for Friday Night Cage | After he had knocked out Bob Fitzsimmons and | dim Corbett for the second time in 1902, the great Jeffries was matched with Jack Munro and they met in San Francisco on Aug. 26. The two fighters, with Jeffries on the right, are shown in the above picture before the fight started. The referee was Eddie Graney, who officiated in prac- tically all of the big bouts of that day. Jeffries appears to be unconcerned and he seems left arm hangs Jack Sharkey i Jeffrics knock to be counting the house. The position in which his for a natural hook and a devastating one. Munro's trunks are so high they are mindful of had his pants so high the referee had to pull them down several times. series, dropping tears from the pain that shot down his arm every time he threw the ball. It was magnificent courage that kept Adam Walsh playing for Notre Dame against the Army football team with two broken hands and for Red Dunn to battle through a whole game for Marquette with an arm broken in two places. It was the impulse from a superb heart that kept little Jimmy Wilde coming up off the floor in front of is worth observation. It was an arm in the Dempsey fight, when Sharkey Young Jack Merriam ought to be in a good spot on the University of Pennsylvania swimming team. He is a good swimmer and his father, Jack Sr., is the coach of the team. But young Merriam had to go out and win his place on the team on his own skill. The two Merriams, father and son, are shown in the above picture. ed out Munro in the second round. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1929 Game Sharkey has been invited to go through an exhibition with his spar= ring partners in Tampa Friday night; ° and Dempsey may accompany him to’ the west coast city. The managers’ battle over the Teferces began yesterday. Dempscy has advised “Pa” Stribling and John« ny Buckley, managers of the princt-' Pals that if no -selection has been made a week before the fight, he wil! choose the referee himself. Among those already mentioncd \ | ] ] i nb S ‘ ) ' _ TWOFORMERHURON (Physical Handicaps Are Absent in Face of Courage, Farrell Says. ‘ os! ~ i = eEeEEEEe—e — STARS HAVE JOINED | <a Court Writ Will STARS i Soft Spot for Jack urt Writ ; i) r 4 D eo : “4 \ \ , : : ° - fe Using His Plane __ They Are Hudler and Lillibridge; ASIDE IN CONTESTS H Hudler Played Well | Jack Dempsey Doesn't: Like 4 " | Stribling’s Air Rides ¢ 4 Against Valley | Hundreds of Examples Can Be; for Training ’ Cited Where Injuries Are T \ilamt Beso Flay” Feb, 5—()—' ; MEINHOVER MAKES DEBUT) : Young Stribling does. not expect to, i | Overcome fly today, nor tomorrow, nor any’ i | other day until he has kept his Feb.” McLeod Has Squad of Ten Men! | Sa ee with Jack’ i Who Are All Developing | TONY LAZERRI IS EXAMPLE Promoter Jack Dempsey is deters: 4 E ingl H | — mined that flying shall have no place 5 ncouragingly | on the conditioning program of the’ “ ‘ One-Armed Bowlers, Basketball Ba Haak a ce ue is a cee ‘ Bismarck high school cagers will! Players and Gridsters Are the Georgian to slay an tee grain f hat is expected to be one of | and has filed injunction proceed! ‘ Riis’ Bigiinas rahines of the easel | Almost Common to keep Stribling out of the air. ee rene © Fevamibed text 36 | By HENRY 1. FARRELL pice acveral: years © ager eae eR the state training school gymnasium | Handicaps? . . . There are no such hopped about the country in it for‘ in Mandan Friday night. ' things as physical handicaps when his various matches. ° With the addition of Hudler and there is a great fighting heart to in- Stribling today was prepared for Lillibridge, two former Huron, S. D., spire the cripple or the physically de- his usual two and one-half miles of stars, to his lineup, Coach Leonard ficient to go on with his game. road work, while his opponent ex- McMahan promises to present a Man- It took a great fighting heart for pected to put in a hard round of pos-’ dan team much stronger than the Tony Lazzeri to play through a world ing for camera men. «geenk fh: i i i i iy Pittsburgh, (10). Bucky Lawless, Syracuse, N. Y., and Jack Horner, Mansfield, O.—Eddie Kid Wag- ner, Philadelphia, outpointed Ray Newton, Mansfield, (10). Sunday Baseball New York, Feb. 5.—(P)—For the Emanuel Meet had in the championship round-robin tour- nament. Shannon Moves to Annapolis, Md. Feb. 5.—Every point that Plebe Hudson McGuire ‘ SHOWN EXCLUSIVELY aT r BERGESON’S | » ON BROADWAY OPPOSITE FOSTOR:=w. ’ « . © z a ’ e i a bl ‘ sisbiceaboriaehts abs siexiaai tec eee , Pancho Villa with his tongue hang- are Dave Miller and Walter Ecker- could run a few points whenever de- Sharke Shows ing by a thread and with his eyes sall, Chicago; Fd Dickerson, Grand , sired. y pounded shut. He couldn't see, hear Rapids, Mich.; Tom Reilly, Philadels The Demons, on the other hand, e ’ Jor talk. But he kept going. phia; Lou Magnolia and Jack O'Sul= +e «Will be stronger also. McLeod will use Good Taste In Hundreds of other examples might livan, New York; Max Hinkle, Cleves 4 Meinhover at center part of the game. be related of great bravery in action land; Slim McClelland, Detroit and 0 His tremendous height is an advan- 4 oy ye on countless fields of battle. * two unnamed Massachusetts referees, tage which the local mentor will in: “4 © make use of this year. General de- . g ome sue fj section meine ain ‘ + velopment of all players on the squad| By FORRE 7 it wi SST) 2 ee he torture that a man = p has made the team strong, one which ide Se ee Meee. eld ils ha an Heeycedy ra ee ee of hea : = . is expected to defeat Mandan again | (President, National Association of| Along with the changes in our/Tunney Was Socially Promi-) The things that a brave man does : BASKETBALL gy etter, enother ‘hard struggle. Basketball Coaches) methods and standards of living, ll Siinrkeyion a ie eben fe cana bebe tg amon AtaN, Aol? : [2,bame where it was only a question | Has 10 Men Why do so many senior-year ath- have come the new attitudes of pres- ’ i zest of competition and the thrill of ‘Associat Press | « stroi ol ? L ural rominen action work up ordinary courage in- ed <. : et MeLeod now has a strong squad of |letic captains fail to measure up? |ent day youth. ‘The preliminary turally P t When you start talking about |through to the top. It just happened McCLUSKY 37; WILTON 14 . e rt that he chose Inwood for the n McCh 10 men: Captain Ben Jacobson, Eddie] 1 have seen athletes perform bril-|‘Taining, both at home and at school, to a mad frenzy of devil-may-care | CPOchS in sport and that sort of thing, oe | agtcClusky, N. Dak., Feb. 5.—Coacht tt Spriggs, Gordie Landers, Loehrke,|liantly in their sophomore and junior /@S not entailed much in the way of bravado. how about the epoch that a young|ing act of the drama and Cruick-|“Snooty” Robertson’s McClusky high @t and Johnny Spriggs, forwards; Ted | years, only to fail as pl: jhardships. Men in our college groups| Brookline, .Mass., Feb. 5.—(?)— : man named Jones started on the |shank was his unfortunate victim. {school cagers defeated Wilton here a ; . Players, in their 4 ; But there is another kind of cour- | j;, 37 to 1 , © Meinhover and Gus Schwartz, cen-|senior years, with the burden of an|‘0day are out in search of freedom, | While Gene Tunney was carrying for-|age, And perhaps more noble inks of the Inwood Country club in] The little Scotsman had made a/37 to 14.in a one-sided contest. * ters; and Fay Brown, John O'Hare, | athleti f in search of a modern care-free|,,, es ‘ 4 1923 as he beat Bobby Cruickshank | game fight, a sensational finish to tie| Robertson used three McClusky athletic captaincy placed on them. ward the banner of boxing into the| It is the kind of courage that @ and Earl Hoffman, guards. {Garden of Eden where they can work ; for the American Open Golf cham-|Jones with 296 at the end of the reg-|teams in the game and Wilton was Hudler and Lillibridge are both for-| ,, Aphletics. as conducted today, area little and play a lot. Too much realm of the socially correct, Soar pears Tapia isan etek: pionship? ulation 72 holes. It was ironic fate | outclassed from the start. 2 wards on the Mandan outfit. Besides | Mooded groups, throng our athletic [Hacking makes them rebellious. And |Sharkey was doing his best, too. tempt the almost hopeless. And the| I saw Bobby Jones—you may have|as well as fact that the same sort of| |The Dragons played their best. ball » them there will be Bill Russell and] jonas to analyze and to criticize |e, average athletic captain, in his} In the exclusive Chestnut Hill dis-/ kind of courage that has to be worked |heard his name before—beat Cruick-|shot that had given Cruickshank his/in the third quarter when they _ 4 Lloyd McDonald, forwards; Don Ar- every play and every mis-pla; ‘ot he senior year, is unable and unwilling |trict of this aristocratic Boston. sub- up cold. shank with one of the greatest iron|tie on Saturday turned out to be his| scored almost at will and ran up + thur, center; and Jack Stephens and |tvPiy, Pay one every play Ne }to enter into an ultra-serious pact |urb finishing touches are being made|' tom McAuliffe lost both arms at |Shots of any championship affair and |undoing on Sunday on the same hole,|their big lead. After gathering in a fu Captain Phil Helbling, guards. R. t ee i i with any coach, for another season’s|on the splendid estate and palatialline shoulder in an accident but he|thereby gain his first national title|the 18th. lead they were content to keep the e Soc eigen etne and ae pare: Paheretatees Toney, ee baled oe toil. residence of this heavyweight title|qian't attempt to capitalize on his|five years ago on the flat, watery ‘Gute a story of foi pierce be from the poe ead marksmen. ry Bineg hh bre opis Oly gene, Iawhiol Aha ccogeniea teas iatione Hold seni AR GEeiooling babe contender. . misfortune. He went into newspaper | “ong Island links. I saw the great et were : es le a = br a la forstiaiea ’s best perform~ bs ‘Arrangements are being made to|their positions on their record of|tains now is in its trial stages. ot andnheones aa will be pehanslt 2 Aaah ereomaeatt diel inulin teicher say pgp eneoniemget os fie, From the iéth tee, Cruickshank, strong games. ire egies Sa of take care of one of the largest crowds| Wins. As a result, the athletes be-|may avert some of the tragedies of |Iawn, is a long, iow gabled structure | a's, Of ihe handicap. He used & Reys| Burn last September in a crushing|who had just caught his rival to a 7 qi t© ever witness a Mandan-Bismarck|come the coach's meal ticket. They|the past. Minnesota, Indiana and of early English and Norman design.|on a typewriter. march to his fourth American ama- |square the match at the 17th, ‘half- SOLEN 14; FLASHER 11 re. c28e contest. Ba eee him and they must oor are experimenting now with /1t; walls are of hand-made brick.) He took up golf and became a fair|teur crown in five years. topped tie drive, landing in the trageihay reere= 5.—The oeen ee ere J the plan. broken hi id the by bil i cl y ink there's rough behind a-clump of trees. Jones , Sages court game here ~ Butl Bulld Bere ner oa es siureneiye| Under this plan, the coach ap- Sar ‘unio Hee Cine. dae aint “pai gi presi som aiakine: pp taraled ee was 100 yards longa but in the edge |from Flasher Statics in a game fea- Bl er logs tkned co Hesution of every play |points a captain for each game. Af-|yoof is of thateh-style of weathered | John Magor, a young Pennsyl-|these five years, look the record over. |of the rough. Cruickshank’s second {tured by its defensive play. : a A eet cenee oui Lean ld ter the competitive season 1s over.!preen, grey and blue and it descends | vania boy, lost his left arm in a rail-|Four national amateur champion-|shot was barely ahead of Jones’ drive Flasher opened the scoring with : S, : Entrance and living room with its|not keep hii it of athletics when | brace of British open crowns repre- 3 ap | canis SACLE EAT for the season just completed. _ 9 Toush-nlastered walls and hewn oak Hel niatiiilated sre. (heenple (Univers: gent the conguest, of Atlanta's fair| | Aided by s good le, the Georgian times, Bolen leading up to within i ‘vies {beams are suggestive of Old England. made - boy. ere’s no one else even | used m! igs gong, Adding Thi Their Victi They have become altogether too ser-|honor without the responsibility, | “ curved AES with wiguehte a Hoa a . genie ime ac close joss ‘this period, no one player jest shots of the tournament, a 200- | Statics dropped in a pair of baskets to ing Them as Their Victim to|ious for the average senior who|which has seemed in many instances icanibalisteaties lead wowand 16 ifi ketball squad. except Walter Hagen’ who has cap-|yard swipe that never wavered from jland the long end of a 10 to 7 count Purdue, Missouri, Pitt, knows the additional responsibility |to interfere with his technique and Rep Rce peg abet relia tanien bead Handicaps Overlooked tured any national title, British or | direct line to the flag and stopped|at the half. J . i and the grind that a major-sport|prijliancy as a player. eat thes Harland Eastwood, a San Francisco vd b fe it. Cruickshank| The Sages in the finished in colored tiles. Everywhere American, more than once in that |about four feet from it. an opened up second : North Carolina captaincy implies. This type of post-election should|tio ‘house lends itself to Mrs. Shar. 0% ‘8 typical of number of cases| tive year span, hooked his third to the trap at the/half with a strong offense which Every normal athlete wants to win. represent ne ane rahe} meen key's hobby for antique furniture. poles bors. Repiesnoed ue pet i left of the green and then walked |netted a pair of baskets which gave a choice; and should not interfere wi : | them the lead. Play - : the machine, : inces where one-arm ave the putt back. able to during the entire half : another leap toward the mythical key may install a gymnasium to suit te . |Jones in their 1923 playoff over the put ing 2 national basketball championship for the taste of anyone athletically in-|Patl teams, es Pro OM" | wind-swept Inwood links had ELE Bed otitine ine dite mR ce ee fa! 7P. udogs added another scain| Mandell Defeats ia Cudahy, Wis, boasts of ,six-man| Pron” 2°°Sctuing” if the fireworks |retgn than since has failed to sce the| and pea oo Fed to their collection last night by i . such @ rarity to see a man on|B0bby was the boy wonder, acknowl-|year where he hasn't held at least drubbing Illinois, 33 to 28, in a fur- . 4 "By the Associated Press) ourney ates et crutches speeding a ball down the |*dsed at 21 as a master shotmaker in |one or more national titles. 4 ‘ jously fought game at Champaign. Chicago Ig ter) ee et eta alle i al y Tuffy . y8. 0. They already have conquered such Sioux City, Iowa, stopped Billy i -Defective eyesight, many times an major league training during the ee Powerful teams as Purdue, ‘Pitts- LESSEE Freas, Grand Rapids, Mich, (7). |KAING@Y VAVIS 1 CAM |aimost hopeless handicap in athletics, next two weeks. eee + j burgh, ape on ahs Garallon, But Wrenches His Left Shoulder| . King Tut, Minneapolis, stopped has not prevented any number of H “Big Ed” Walsh, coach of the | Wetton, TB lec He . gp Cealcneo. e cellar team of e in the Ninth Round Tony Sanders, Chicago, (2). performers from indulging in games : White Sox, and his son, Ed, Jr., young | Banning Ig .. 00 2 ig. Ten, upset the Bulldogs early in Danny Delmont, Chicago. out- . 'where personal contact or a flying White Sox pitcher, will train the Dea Whe season for their only defeat. Last Night pointed Jimmy ‘Harris, Cincin- | Fennis Tournament Must Bejcyicct ‘made it hazardous to wear ramblers until they join the White Poe win Northwester: na nati, (6). Young Battling Levin- let b . glasses. Sox traini camp. “! Ed” will S ot out for possession of sixth place in : sky, Chicago, knocked out Billy Completed: by, .May,, 81 George Torporcer, Lee Meadows train the infielders while his ton will lwetsch, rf ” oP re the” only Big Ten game tonight.} Peoria, Ill., Feb. 5—(P)—The injury] O'Brien, Rockford, Ill, (3). Thought Too Early and Carmen Hill were three baseball scape do preliminary work with the pitch-|wetch, if "3 13 OO the onlipegie ill be | teasienned gins has. ieee ‘ Sammy Mandell, oe, Thana heel players who wore glasses on the ma-; Minneapolis, Feb. 5.—()—Dick | ers, Btockert, c [3 00 0 7; becat F |- | world’s lightwe! champion, again. ockford, IIL, outpoi n ; jor league diamonds. Daniels, Minneapolis, will meet Del ‘ * : ter, its star center, who has been out| Mandell wrenched his left should-| Davis, Chicago, (10). Johnny Paris, Feb. 5.—(P)—Date set for|"" wisconsin has two hockey players, tiie, eee tonight in the STUDENT PICKS TEAM jZabn, rg... + 0 0-0 2 for two weeks because of an injured jer in the ninth round of his non-| Nelton, Indianapolis, knocked out {completion of the second round Mieklejohn and Krueger, who risk ” - 0 1-1 t knee, “Feusell Bergherm will take his championship match with Don Davis} Taylor Van Necht, South Bend, | stands as the only serious threat to |the hasard of wearing glasses in one beanie ae of lg eard bout|, able Nechenewee: Sinvend 60 ie. 6 25 9 place. game wi played at | last ni and appeai adiy hurt| Ind., (6). of the most dangerous games of all.| @t the au jum. ie men are irginia team 5 ‘otals..... - Bloomington. although his manager, Eddie Kane,| _ Philadelphia—Johnny Dundce, | ‘Ne United States in its path to the | 1° Tan’ CoistaS over thelr eyes| light heavyweights and the fight is | coach of the boxing team at his in-) Referee: Pierce. : 3 said it would not keep him out of the| Baltimore, outpointed ‘Tony As- panes ae ig the pagan Iie but @ flying puck will go through the|over the 10-round route. stitution now. He is still in school. Timekeeper: Moorehead. af ring for long. Mandell won the de-| cencio, Spain, (10). Henri De- | competition. was deci yester- | strongest guards. os Less than three weeks ago the e Mar oons and Leafs cision in 10 rounds. . wanker, Erenee, wieaped Garten day the round must be concluded be-| Many basketball teams have used| French-Canadian knocked out Dan- a) gaure, France, (8). irc- {fore May 8, when the tennis season jels when the first round was only ao ae ee 9 gorio, Spain, outpointed Milton | has barely opened in Canada, the Play Off Deadlock Gus Sonnenberg $ | Cohen, New York, (10). Tiger | first opponent of the United States. 4 pees ty a ein It. seems almost impossible for the y team. - K ry Carlo, » (6). authorities to arrange a schedule for Little Rock, Ark—Eddie Kid | 2 match between the United States Dee Mint : Montreal Flame-Clad Ice Stars|- Hold to Be Tested Wolfe, Mem ° phis, Tenn. knocked | and the dominion and one between Faced With Necessity of out Johnny Harris, Kansas City, |the winner and Japan at so early a oremans , Minneapolis, oil Chicago, Feb. 5.—(?)—Gus Sonnen-} (7). {date. The other second round tie Short, St. Paul, Vanquishing Champs berg, the newly crowned heavyweight Memphis, Tenn.—Billy Brown, | presents few difficulties as Cuba and rown Ue | Mucter, i wrestling champion, will attempt to| Helena, Ark., won on foul over | Mexico are the contestants. Jack 5 : York, Feb convince the Illinois athletic com-| Tod Smith, Canton, O., (5). In the European zone, a somewhat — E New 5 bok Be. eerie tie mission that his “flying tackle” hold a a Be colacee Rage: stiffer schedule for the favorities has | New York, Feb. 5.—(#}—The world’s | ¢uure on) this penasions @ legitimate grip Friday night. lose ville, fe pol a en, | been arranged. Twenty-four. nations | 18.2 balkline billiards crown rested a il B ets Montreal The commission has questioned cago, (10). chose this zone. trifle insecurely on Eduard Hore- his use of the hold, which defeated boi ; » Okla.—Babe Hunt, Tulsa, pica aS mans’ head today. Strangler Lewis for the title. brig Inted Jimmy Byrne, Louis- ° ie °. ‘The slim Belgian made an inau- ‘ot prings one’ —_——— ¥ eet CP) iaaie ets Rich spicious start in defense of the game’s % e Par 5 oe ‘Till, Bat most coveted title night when he —_— , : ston. et cinnati, (8); Jack Manley, Wilkes Shoo 4 Baskets Donne Se pone Mawea ee Mie | he mean: ihe eee (oat 3 Barre, outpointed Tony Ross, ting 4 , ui 2 the first match in ae

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