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| se IN WISCONSIN AFFAIR F W estern waucasaer Renseneaases t dolley THE BISMARCK _ TRIBUNE, _ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1929 P 7 WIND UP HIS CAREER Youn ‘Tennis | . Rus Bergherm and Johnny Haas, \ of Fargo Will End Careers | 1c at Northwestern a 18: WILLIS GLASSGOW THROUGH | sh Tae | % Illinois ts Greatest Loser, With, a an Even Dozen Stars Re- o ceiving Sheepskins Ry WILLIAM WEEKES | Chicago, Nov. When the | Western conference football scason | becomes history late Saturday alter: ( noon a host of stars whose playing | thrilled hundreds of thousands of} spectators this fall will have ended! their Big Ten gridiron careers Coach Jimmy Phelan of Purdue's first championship tcam will part, | with real regret. with six trl son, will wear for the last st. Indiana, asj{ Purdue's golden liv lime Saturday aga will Bi) Woerner, the end who caught ; the passes that ated Towa last: week and gave Purdue the title. With ¢ them will go Eb Caraway and Bill y Mackle, ends, and Red Sleight. one ¢ of the outstanding tackles of the con- | ~ ference. The reserves are Lange. cen-! 4 ter; Stewart and Myers, tackles; Kau | s Meicx, guard; and Huntcinger, end. Cal. and Jonn Van Ryn of East 0 courts, has been announced. Mini Greatest Loser STARS ENGAGED | CHAMPIONS OF MANY ORNEDICAL SERVICE | po and Schmeling Have | Sought His Aid \TREATED BILL MEHLHORN | { Run Great Race Despite Strained Tendon By DONN SUTTON New York, Nov. 21.—Iren-fisted ac- ltors in the punch-and-bloody show feall him “the mitt mender.” | To others he is the Remaker of 'Champions. {But certain it is that the husky | parade that winds through the ante- room of Dr. Wilfred G. Fralick’s o! jfice here constitutes a “Who's Whi ‘of the boxing game—and of the sport- ting world in general. | For Dr. Fralick operates a repair : {shop to which men with names made famous by blazing headlines on the ‘sports pages bring mighty fists that {have crumbled, strong arms that have jbeen twisted by an awkward heave of Asso tated Presa Photo Engagement of Marjorie “Midge” Gladman of Santa Monica, Orange, N. J., stars of the tennis Mlinois will suffer the greatest nu- merical | as well as the loss of regulars. Captain Crane and Witz. muards; Burdick and Gordon, tackles Tarwain and Wolgast, ends. ! ‘will make their final stand for ane against Ohio State Saturday, whi 4 five fine backs—"Frosty” Pet |} Timm, Humbert, and wa | 4 play their last game as membe: 4 an Mini eleven : ; Ohio State, which will battle Mlinois for the runner-up honor in the 1929 races, loses 11 men. Barrett. | Bieter, 4 aon 2 Ht goa Bier eu, ¥ mera of Police Judge Oliver Young's court 2 OShaughnessey, end, will leave holes in the Buckeye lin man and Fouch, quarterbacks: Coffee, | Probation vesterd: Huston and McClure, halfbacks, will /Presstire of his studies finish their Big Ten competition. with the strain of the coming game | California Star Is 21-1 weil | . Berkeley. C It Nov. of | Ralston “Rust: i sity game {mee his mind occupied with other | In Towa’s game with Michigan at! Would the i things besides headlights. oS Sceeed <i thase Bhan retire Jug pleace overlook the violation—? time in intercollegiate competition, e judge would but. Ordered to Score sophomore star of the University of California var- football team, doesn’t score a, touchdown or otherwise distinguish with he had better steer clear Arrested for driving an automobile .| With illegal lights, Gill pleaded for | io apg ese » explaining the | combined he warned thee star fullback, he would stand no a xe ia baseball or a football, tissues and Englishman. Now the Norwegian, Von ;tendons torn by the ill-timed swing Porat, who won the Olympic cham- log a golf club or a hockey stick. Pionship in 1924 at Paris, blocks; Phil's advance. It was a Dane, Knute Repair of Athletes Hansen, who abruptly checked Scott; Dr. Fralick is, by profession, an in first visit to these shores, so/abdominal surgeon, with a dis- that Phil is anxious for revenge | tinguished Practice, but in the last against the Scandinavian tribe as well! fifteen years he has built up a new cager to justify a chance to meet fame as a repairer of athictes. Sharkey. | Noted champions have beaten a Western Pennsylvania, where the!Sharkey, Firpo and even the new/ Grebs, the Zivics and other scrappers | outstanding contender for ring hon- have held the fort. mourns the defeat ors, Max Schmeling, have taken their of Wee Willie Davies of Charleroi in physical and sometimes their mental the flyweight tournament, begun at/troubles to this friend of the fight Madison Square Garden. Davies wasigame. Once an amateur boxer him- expected to be a finalist. at least. His | self, Dr. Fralick probably is more fa- ; backers confidently looked for him to|miliar than any other surgeon in win the championship, but he was de- | America with the peculiar physical feated in the first round by Black | requirements of the leatler pushers. Bill, the Cuban stablemate of Kid | Dr. Fralick isn’t just a “bonesetter.” Chocolate. Wee Willic is still the fly-; He is an expert surgeon who recon- weight champion of Pennsylvania, | structs hands, arms and shoulders SPORTS CALL ON HIM | i Tunney, Dempsey, gens, ering, Fir- | Fralick Enabled Murchison to; !path to his door. Tunney, Dempsey, | Nodaks Superior To Notre Dame if Demon Statistician Calculates i | North Dakota Champions 89 Points Better University, N. D. Nov. 21.—Just ten minutes a day and you can figure | North Dakota as national football lchampion. Sounds reasonable—so | just listen to thi Detroit Universi! j ginia, 0. | West Virginia, 0; Gcorgetown 0. | Georgetown, 0; Navy, 0. Of course all of this reduced to Proportions resembling a bug's ear means that Detroit 36 points su- | Perior to the Navy. And then let me See, only a monti ago Notre Da won from Navy by seven points. Getting out our pencil. we find aft- er a moment that Detroit is therefore |29 points hotter than Notre Dame. ) (This story should be sent to Knute | Rockne.) Now a few more figgers: } Marquette, 6; Detroit, 6. Creighton, 13; Marquetic, 6. North Dakota, 54; Creighton, 0. Some more addition, subtraction, ; and manipulation to make findings, to wit: Creighton six points better than the team which tied the ttam , 36; West Vir- Dame. Hope you undersiand. Boiling this further we add 6 and 29. Your 35 is then mixed with that devastating | 54 to give North Dakota 89 points on | Notre Dame. This may or may not make your grandmother a Chinaman. But to get down to brass tacks that 54 to 0 win at Omaha was about the largest | thing athletically we have seen at j North Dakota since Mac Johnson, the 280 pound center, graduated. RETURN BASKETBALL VISIT | Michigan, Indiana and Ohio State | of the Western conference and Notre | Dame will play the University of ‘Pennsylvania basketball quintet in; Philadelphia this winter, returning year. Figures Don’t Lie "| Baby Bison Squad which is 29 points superior to Notre | pottage down still | Gabby Undergoes Chicago, Nov. 21.—(4)—Gabby Hartnett again is waiting to learn if ; @ surgical operation has cured the from catching baseball games for the Cubs last season. , Hartnett, whose condition has caused mourning among Cub fans, tonsils, to be certain nothing that might cause infection remains. He had the tonsils clipped last summer, as well as all kinds of treatments for his arm, but failed to regain the abil- ity to throw in the style that made him one of the best catchers in cith- er major league. Three Centers on Gus Schwartz, Former Demon, McKay and Weir Bat- tling for Position Fargo, N. D., Nov. 20.—Three crack centers, luminaries on North ayes: high school basketball teams last are staging a torrid batt!> for thelr favorite job on the Nor’: Dakota Agricultural college fre-iman cage team, with L. T. Saalwaechter, Bison coach, in somewhat of @ quandry | picking the right man. | ‘The controversy for the pivot post centers around Viv. McKay, Valley City, Bob Weir, Fargo, and Gus Schwartz, Bismarck, all elongated netmen with considerable ability. , McKay was all-state center on the championship Hiliner five last year, | and was closely pressed for honors | by Weir and Schwartz. | ‘Determined bids for the Baby Bison | quint also are being made by Kenneth | Edlund, Fergus Falls; Leonard Fer- | guson, Valley City; Clarence Elling- son, Mohall; William McDonald, | Mandan; Clarence Daley, Deer Riv {Minn.; Jimmie Berdahl, Hillsboro; iEdward Jessen, Fargo; Donald Ar- | Mandan. Tonsil | Operation ‘arm ailment which prevented him / has had a “repeat” operation on his ! further intercollegiate competition ‘Santa Clara Grid | Stars Ineligible Stanford Banished Forever From College Games University of Santa Clara, Calif., Noy. 21.—(4)—Declared ineligible for because they had contracted option- ally to play with the Seattle club of the Pacific coast seball league, University of Santa Clara today were endeavoring to effect reinstatement. still think that we can clear our- selves,” Marvin Owen, captain of the varsity baseball team said. The oth- er two are Guido Simoni, fullback on the football team and pitcher on the baseball team, and John Casanova, halfback on the football team, who also plays on the nine. Justin Fitzgerald, baseball coach, denied any part in the proceedings other than recommending the three Players to the Seattle club. Indicat- ing he was cognizant of the action Trio of Team That Conquered | Conference e Loses Army « of Football Stars by Graduation BRONKONAGURSKIT DIR. WILFRED FRALICK EARNS ‘MITT MENDER’ NAME BY WORK Fights Last Night ' Colgate to Stop three outstanding athletes of the | by The lights originally were erected about one of the practice girdirons so Ke ore td ¥ Could continue foot- into darkness. This season {he declared they were not needed. of the players, Fitzgerald said “at the | tne time the boys agreed to sign with Seattle, I did not know that such an agreement would affect or I certain- ly would have prevented it.” Glick vs. Grogan Bout Called Off San Francisco, Nov. 21.—(7)—Aft- |er signing to meet Tommy Grogan, Omaha, in a 10-round bout here Nov. 29, Joe Glick, Brooklyn lightweight, was forced to call off the fight today because of an injured hand suffered in a bout with Eddie Murdick in Hollywood last Friday. YOUNG GRID MENTOR Joe McKenney, 24-year-old football ‘coach at Boston college, is said to be the youngest head football coach in |major gridiron circles. More than half of the Latin Amer- ican republics signified their inten- tion of participating in the second the visits made by the Quakers last | thur, Mandan; and Lloyd McDonald, Latin-American Olympic games in pogress carly next year. but the contest may mark the final | , appearance of the whole Iowa squad, unless the Big Ten decides to let the school back into its good athletic) graces. Captain Willis Glassgow, ranked with the best halfbacks in the west; Hagerty, fullback; Myers, Rob: ‘ erts and Fuhrman, a great trio of trifling. “You are sentenced to make as many points against Stanford as you can next Saturday,” quoth Judge Youngs, a California booster, and a football fan. “I will be there and if ‘ou don’t distinguish yourself there will be another session in this court | but that’s about all. It seems safe to assume that the big, contracts they held, rather than any lack of confidence in their ability, kept Bob Meusel and Harry Heilmann from being claimed by any American | league outfit before they were sold on | ywith intricate and delicate operations ‘and ingenious splinting, and who ‘delves into the sensitive nerves, mus- cles, blood vessels, tissues and tendons (of hands and arms. Rebuilding for Permanence “The vocational surgeon must do guards; Westra, regular tackle; Car! son, an end; and Pignatelli, first- string quarterback, are the Hawks ‘ho will bother collegiate opponents after the game.” waivers to the Cincinnati Reds. Both | more for an athlete than just set a were understood to be on the payroll | bone back in place or temporarily at around $17,000 or $18,000 a season, | cure shattered hand or broken and few clubs want to add to thei arm," points out Dr. Fralick. “The no longer. it t Minnesota's numerical loss will not | be so great, but the departing players | will leave Spears with plenty of work | when he tries to fill their places next | Season. Bronko Nagurski, probably the 4 greatest all-around football player in the . who has performed equally | ‘well at fullback and at tackle, will be the chief loss, but Art Pharmer and | Barnhart, halfbacks, will not be easily > replaced. Gopher linemen who will meet Wisconsin in their finales are | Langenberg, tackle, and Kakela and | Pulkrabewk, star guards. | Nine Wildcats Go Nine Northwestern seniors will wind | up their careers against big compe- tition when the Wildcats tackle Notre Dame at ahipa Comal Henry Anderson, gu: Micky Erickson, center, are oe ee regular linemen | to go, although Vandeberger, tackle, and Singleton, reserve end, will wear Northwestern suits for the last time. Rus Bergherm, whose play at fullback almost has made Northwestern forget the loss of Hank Bruder, will gradu- ate, along with Bill Calderwood and Johnny Haas, Fargo, N. D., regular ‘backs. Reserve backs who are seniors are Johnson and Klaar. Michigan's losses will include Cap- tain Joe Truskowski, who plays at end or halfoack; Dahlem and Wilson, helfbacks; and Dynamite Joe Gembis, fullback, whose toe has given Michi- gan several field-goal and point-after- | touchdown i F ¢ § | E He fH 7 fi Faunce seniors. os eat £. f. Giaes' thirty-eighth EF Sport Slants j digs racecars aan. Boxing, after a somewhat protracted | Slump from the viewpoint of gate re- ceipts as well as competition, see about due for a comeback this winter Several factors have helped the resuscitating process. The punch | !needed in the heavyweight division, | after a long lapse, has been supplied | unexpectedly by Jack Sharkey. The | decisive victory of Mickey Walker | over Ace Hudkins at Los Angeles for | the middleweight title served to quict | miceninee Tumors of a “business deal.” The return of popular Jimmy | McLarnin as a welterweight, with the lightweight card a year ago, has’ eae interest. The flyweights have ' &@ new sensation in the little French jWalloper, Huat, and light heavy feights have a chance to do some- thing for the division Tommy Laug! ran forsook. Two of the best early winter offer- ings at Madison Square Gardens are the Scott-Von Porat heavyweight bout and the Goldstein-McLarnin | welterweight scrap. Both should lead to championship tests, for the heavy- weight survivor is due to mingle with Jack Sharkey among the palms at Miami in January or February, while either Ruby Goldstein or Jimmy Mc- | Larnin figures to make it interesting for the new welterweight titleholder, . | Jackie Fields. Goldstein has sprung back into the arena, to be reckoned with again, fter wasting a good share of his Prospects under the bright lights. ; When he is in condition and in the mood to fight Ruby of the East Side has the speed and punch to dazzle even a McLarnin. In natural ability Goldstein impressed critics as another Benny Leonard, but so far he has not {Shown much consistency. Life for Phil Scott. the shuffling Briton, has been just one internation- jal complication after another. Phil a Compolo, seeing Schmeling depart for ae) rather 2; than fulfill @ contract to meet the The people closest to you are usually the hardest to touch i HH g Fak i i ; aH E ze if overhead to that extent. On the other hand, the new owner of the Reds. Sidney Weil, not only was willing but anxious to do so, on the advice of his new manager. Dan Howley. As a mat- ter of fact, Heilmann is reported to! i have been offered a bigger salary by {Weil for 1930 than he received with | (or Tigers. Sammy Mandell Milwaukee, Nov. 21.—(@}—A_ top- {show of stuff that made him a great | heavy favorite, and with nothing to lose, Sammy Mandell, world light- weight champion, tonight will meet | Joe Azzarella of Milwaukee in a non- title bout. Doped to win easily, Man- dell nevertheless let it be known to- day that he had not relaxed his train- ing in expectation of any set-up and aimed to be on guard against the | right crosses which constitute the | Milwaukee boy's chief claim to box- ing fame. The fight is to go eight rounds. The weight has been set at 138. three pounds above the lightweight cham- | pion figure. |Hockey Finalists New York, Nov. 21.—(#)—The sec- end meeting of the season between the teams which battled in the final Playoff for the Stanley cup in 1928 provides the leading attraction of a short National Hockey league sched- ule tonight. The New York Rangers, v in one of the most thrilling struggles for the historic trophy of chy world's hockey championship, are the home team with Montreal's Maroons as the visitors. The Canadiens have drawn a sough assignment for their fourth game in the Toronto Maple Leafs. Chicago's rejuvenated Blackhawks go to Ot- tawa for the third of tonight's games. FOOTBALL NICKNAMES pepvlar names for football teams. ‘alc, Sart) Cie Ao Hampden-Bldney sourl, Clemson ai use Tiger; Northwestern and Da’ use Wildcat. ’GATOR CAPTAIN Phil O'Connell, fea’ LEADER STILL STUDIES Ed Leader, Yale crew coach, who! ebtained an LL. B. degree at. Wash- | Battalino, new ington university and a B. A at Yale, Fears Azzarella Bulldogs, Tigers and Wildcats are : Butler, Drake and Georgia use ulldog: Princeton cham. |laney, Harry Ebbets, Ec of the Southern conferenes Iasi | Zivic, \affected part must be rebuilt as firm {as ever—sometimes better than ever. “For instance, if a fighter's shoulder becomes dislocated, it is a simple matter to reset it and relieve his pain | So that he may take a job as a house ‘painter or carpenter or bookkeeper without fear of further injury. But if he fights again and throws his arms in the seme position that it was at the time of its previous injury—out jit will go again.” Jack Delaney, in the midst of his short and brilliant career, suddenly went bad and lost two fights in a row. His dynamite right lost its blasting force and sports writers were consign- to | ing him to the fistic graveyard. Then friend called Dr. Fralick and De- jlaney became his patient. Dr. Fralick discovered that a liga- ment in Delaney’s right arm was {torn, the cartilage injured, and a bone \splintered in his right knuckle. He imended the torn ligament and in- jured cartilage of the center knuckle jand operated on the hand. Two months later Delaney came back with considerable gusto, a fast and danger- ous fighter. Tunney His Patient Gene Tunney, @ young man who Will lash Today j= of water. betting ring, it is pretty penny for the the condition of the gladiators that ve Wild Bul ibibo boca to golf rotting an inju: “Be is now studying for an M. A. degree. patlout. Even though the temperature outside is temperature of your engine is around the boil cngins 4 call Roan ts hadi ao aoetitos Gah pastes _ tion for pistons and cylinder walls, Your battery and your engine demand the starting ease the New. Mobiloil TODAY! the Save your engine from deadly wear caused by too-thin winter oils ... 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