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ichigan Cagers H | ; yf | TLLNOISIN ANOTHER ~ WASTERNLOOP TIT Wolverines, Half-owners Of the Title Last Season, Favor- ites to Win A Smile Like Her Father’s NORTHWESTERN LEADIN q Champaign Game Regarded As Tossup; All Cenference Teams Play This Week Chicago, Jan. 6.—()—Michigan, half-owner of the 1929 western con- ference basketball championship, will invade Minnesota ea etciis ber of a start toward another title. itis “ounterence season officially was inaugurated at Evanston Satur- day night where Northwestern jolted Wisconsin's hope of again finishing at the top, by trimming the Badgers 23 to 14. By the end of this week, every team in the Big Nine will have been in action, with two games on tonight’s card. Tn addition to the Michigan-Min- nesota contest, Illinois will open its campaign at Champaign with Ohio State as its opposition. Michigan, with three regulars and @ pair of first strinz reserves avail- able from the team that tied Wis- consin for the title last year, is fig- ured to defeat Minnesota, but the Tllinois-Ohio State tussle appear to be a tossup. Michigan has won all its three pre-conference games, while the Gophers have crashed through a schedule of five early opponents, without defeat. Illinois’ early efforts have not re- vealed championship power, while as a contender lies in a victory over Rickard, who is shown at Miami Beach, Fla., with her mother. Notre Dame. et, ‘Wisconsin's midget team stayed with Northwestern for three quarters of MA M Saturday night’s battle, but faded before a closing rush that gave the ‘Wildcats a nine-point beter nti riod were unable to pierce the North- : : western defense. Bison Athletic Director Points RES the opening e oO! e - 1" ship ‘campaign, © ‘The hiclean i Out Nodak Outplayed All feature number of a four-game pro- American Choice gram, while Northwestern will go to Minnesota in search of id a Te triumph. Indiana will tackle Chicago ae and Wisconsin will meet |/ARRETT, SMITH ARE SPEEDY Ohio State at Hea FERRE » which % . é teyan Chicago tomorrow night Casey Claims Rocky Mountain- we ra g iy urda’ 7 95 fieht, but went the way of Purdue ers Were Not at Disadvan end Tlinois, losing 28 to 21. Minne- 2 had little aifticuty | in winning $ fifth straight pre-conference vic- — to’ & a netexpenes of Grinnell, 30} “Glenn Jarrett and Larry Smith to made the big hit with the newspaper- Minnesota Finds of heavyweight fighters? On the train going to New York, the Von Porat- question was ask- men, but in my estimation, Stuart MacMillan was the best performer on the field,” C. C. (Casey) Finnegan, North Dakota Agricultural college was better quali- fied to answer. “I would say Finnegan was speaking of the star A Performers in the 13 to 6 victory the Gophers Complete Practice Sea-|North Central conference all stars } . , Cc Scored over an all star team from son With Fifth Consecu- the Rocky Mountain conference at + i Denver New Year's day. The game tive Victory was promoted by the Denver Elks, and all profits were turned over to| Course, in the list of fighters you the Elk’s charity fund. Present crop of Minneapolis, Jan. 6.—(?)—Finding easier een an had Peen ex-|" “Jarrett and Smith deserved plenty | eloinder. of praise, for they certainly showed basketball team won its fifth consec- utive nonconference game Saturday |the boys how to carry the ball, merely smiling, and what a smile it to 15, Minnesota led 21-10 at the neThis was the first time since 1919, field. “Sharkey is fast for a big man, clever, and while he hasn't the punch Jarrett and MacMillan hail from North Dakota university while Smith + when Dr. L. J. Cooke was coach, that |is a Morningside halfback. of a knocker-out, there is plenty of a@ Gopher cage team has advanced Outplays Jonas sting behind his jabs, swings and up- ‘through its preliminary schedule} “as a matter of fact, there were Ppercuts. I think he knows too much OHIO STATE TOFACE |BISON CAGERS LOSE 4TH STRAIGHT Paulino Uzcudun And Von Porat to Mix Friday Night } | Jackie Fields and Alf Ros, of Spain, Meet in 10-Round Feature Tonight | New York, Jan. 6.—()—Otto Von } Porat’s 10-round encounter with Paulino Uzcurun, basque beavy- weight, at Madison Square Garden Friday night heads the national box- ing schedule for this week. Jackie Fields, welterweight cham- pion meets Alf Ros, of Spain, in a 10-rounder at the Philadelphia arena tonight and encounters Tony Va- carelli of New York at the Chicago stadium Friday. His title will not be at stake in either bout. Other bouts on the national sched- ule include: Tonight—at Philadelphia, Dany Kramer, Philadelphia, vs. Pete Zivic, Pittsburgh, and Harry Kid Brown, Philadelphia, vs. Gaston Lecadre, France, each 10 rounds; at New York, St. Nicholas arena, Eugene Huat, France, vs. Archie Bell, Brooklyn, and Vidal Gregorio, Spain, vs. Sammy Tisch, New York, all bantamweights, each 10 rounds; at Chicago, White City arena, Haakon Hanson, Chicago, vs. Clyde Chastian, Dallas, Tex., middleweights, eight, rounds; at Lou- isville, Jimmy Byrne, Owensboro, Ky., vs. Harry Fay, New York, heavy- weights, 10 rounds. Mobridge Is Host For Pair Of Meets Ohio State's one claim to recognition | The Tex Rickard smile lives again'in his baby daughter, Maxine Texas| Regional Cage Tourney Set For March 7-and 8, District February 28, March 1 Mobridge, S. D.,. Jan. 6.—The re- PERFORMER, FINNEGAN SAYS |pS-5 tetas held in Mobridge March 7 and 8, and the tournament of district No. 6 will be conducted her2 Feb. 28, March 1. These arrangements were completed at the Hickory Stick meeting held here last week.: Referees for both tourn Superintendent Bersagel, Wakonda, | and Frank Wittenbachm, clerk of the | board of education of Aberdeen. The regional tournament will be | conducted in two sections for class A and B teams. Class A teams are dis- | Who is the best of the present crop | trict champions and class B the run- ners-up in ‘each district. winner. will represent the district in where Jack Dempsey was to referee | the tournament at Mitchell in March and A champions will enter the state tage Without Stars . Scott bout, that| meet at Sioux Falls in March. Districts in the region that centers ed the old Man-| in Mobridge are: No. 5, Ipswich; No. assa Mauler, as we| 6, Mobridge; No. 7, McLaughlin; No. felt that no one}8, Faith. Each district will send two in all the world | teams here for the divisions. Drawings for the regional meet pair district No. 7 with No. 6 and No. 8 with No. 5 for the first of the A sec- ° - athletic director said Saturday u that Jack Shar-| tion and “lo. 6 with No. 5 and No. 8 Grinnell Easier his arrival home from “sisad ei J » key should be | with No. 7 for the first B section con- able to whip the | tests. H The committee which made the heavyweights and | arrangements consists of H. S. Free- take over Tun-| man, Mobridge superintendent, chair- ney’s title,” he re- | man; Supt. E. A. le, McLaughlin; Supt. R. “You are excepting yourself, of | F Nelson, High schools eligible to the district figure Sharkey can trim,” was the|meet are: Eureka, Glenham, Her- ried, Java,-Mobridge, Pollock, Selby. Dempsey didn't: reply to that one, | Drawings will be made ih February. Walstth, Leola; Supt. J. ‘aith, | was. It seemed to say that he|Bge aes | night, defeating Grinnell college, 30 | negan said, “but for me, I lked Mac-| fo ont ne still could outelaes the Minot Teachers | Beat Foresters Minot, N. D. Jan. 6—(%)—The without suffering defeat. The Goph-/four great centers in that game.| for the rest of the heavyweight field.” | Minot Teachers college Beaver bas- ers engage Michigan Monday night in| Jonas of Utah was supposed to be| While Dempsey didn't commit |ketball team defeated the Foresters the Big Nine opener here. the best, as several prominent critics| himself, it was apparent that he|of the Bottineau school of Forestry, Earle Loose, Luverne, the Gopher | had classified him with the best in| wasn’t over-enthusiastic about the |57 to 36, in a fast game here Satucc acting captain, was again the bright the nation. He was good enough for heavyweight contenders. day night. It was the third game in light, scoring five field goals and two any football team, but I think that| “Possibly some of the youngsters now | 88 many nights for the Bottineau ag- free throws for 12 points. The sum- | yacmillan outplayed him. After|in the second and third rate classes| gregation and they tired after the mary: 5 Minment. © 1 ?sperone, © £ "4 | Christianson from Colorado Teachers| the heavyweight division, but as it ill be aes ll in| first half, Jonas left the game, » lad named| soon wi ready to put a thr Crandell, Forester forward, was Paet 3 8 32 st high point man with seven baskets £ 060 0a hn, £9 0 2) took his position and Cod Ordaht| stands, most of the contenders are in | hig! ee Fa tituose 3 2 2| cigs cattery earth Shea ee en oat their ability] and two free throws. ‘Thompson, Norgaard, c 3 1 1Wilhelm,c 1 0 3 otey wen ke +. ee Beaver forward, was high for his Nowotny,c 9 1 1Humphr'y,c 0 0 i1jlan and they sure staged a great| Pretty wel own,” he ce ued. team with fiy kets and a free Karsner, ¢ 1 0 2Dougias, € 1 9 1/battle. This Christianson, by the} ‘None appears to have all the at- t im. ee bas! Hutchison, g % 0 1Minier, g 0 2 0 way, played a season for Tubbs at| tributes necessary for a real cham- | throw. Gadier, 5’ {3 tudmon,s'© 0 0 0|Superlor Normal before going. tol Dion. Some have the courage others as edi 4 5 Ruff,g "0 0 0 {Colorado Teachers,” Finnegan re-| have the ability to take punishment, Chicago Maroons Are Third - Western Conference Team to Fall Short petals “Of course, out there they claim| Punch, but on the whole, . there is © 3 something Butler Wins Dutch Clark had not been in San| While Dempsey again simply laugh- from Tunney, it is our belief that he has ° 2 estry 36. Northwestern 23; Wisconsin 14. that the outcome might have been lacking in most of the Francisco ed when someone asked him why he Games ln Week ne trittat tn an att aint crane best and ones acai etn no intention of returning to the ring. Tabala Temple 38; North Dakota A. Syracuse 27: Creighton 25. rest Virginia 39: Carnegie Tech 29. &: 28. 326 sTotals 5 ii | lated. and a fety have the cleverness and different if Powerhouse Pomeroy and| Present day contenders.” the title that he really won | RE GR TW pelea seat | Basketball Scores | “Minot Teachers 57; Bottineau For- innesota 80; Grinnell 15, Kansas 3: a ts 3 8 ¥ 3 Oberlin 23. Michigan State 30; Ohio Wesleyan Pennsylvania 27; Yale 23. Butler 28; Chicago 21. Marquette 26: Lawrence 23. eeess Aggies 35; Colorado col- lowa, Wesleyan 26; Penn college 18, qohanome 4; Southern Methodist ‘Wayne Normal 37; Nebraska Wes- leyan'25, f 14. wo] onmomnee? lomumcen® = by People who buy from ex- perience usually have trouble getting it | | ; could not stick with the pace set by the Rockford five. North Dakota| Proved enough last week to speeded up at the last half and scored | eys will be | Class B. | | engagement but, unfortunately, the | White Sox train next spring in San THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1930. ope for Flying Start in Minnesota Game Tonight INBorspLAy |WILDCAT BESTS BADGER IN ICHOINBDISPLAY |" WESTERN CIRCUIT OPENER| i NetonalLop STRONG FOR WEARY NORTH DAKOTA FIVE Blair Seitz One Of Main Cogs In Attack As State Ath- . letes Are Beaten SCHULTE LEADS WINNERS Jacks, Maroons Seitz Lost On Personal Fouls In Final Period And Aggie Attack Wilts Rockford, Il, Jan. 6—(?)—Tabala Shrine Temple basketball team Sat- urday night gave the North Dakota Agricultural college its fourth defeat The Bison appeared tired and Cap- has tain Pete Gergen did not enter the | the South game against the Rockford independ- | ketball squad, and the Jackrabbit Fred Sinks irae optimistic about Schulte, St. Louis Brown outfielder, | their game Morningside rh wasted a | night. ‘This tilt will oxen the eave time and within 10 minutes had a| ference season. lead of 18 to 4 over the Bison. Both| Even Coach ae ed down and the half end- (ristit ing some beter gre i Peakere vith Tabala fi i ; Prospects - Mi pele oa Aisa) | tain tens its possibilities than ne Fairhe: itz, shots but'| W88 last Monday when practice be- vp Bat Dit oc et SA gan in earnest. Several players im- Fi ent five, which was led by The independent team wasted no to 9. down almost to a walk. easy but had no trouble in outscor- ing the Bison by 16 to 12 in the final | !ng, Salem, | Period. Seitz was lost on personal | Nebr., guards; and Clarence Hamann, .| fouls in the final period, and his de- | New Ulm, Minn,, and Arnold Nichol- |Parture took most of the punch out | 50, Henry, forwards. of the North Dakota attack. He or the for and hea oer snos (Panther Cagers e ° Win 7 Straight Nebraska Cornhuskers Fall in 34 to 27 Match at Pitts- burgh Gymnasium ibaa however, refused to drop for him. Every man_in the Rockford lineup scored, with Gerhardt, guard, collect- | ing 10 points. The summary: N.D.A.C. 21. fg ft ptRockf'd 36 fe ft pt 5 2.3 JHawk, f 222 9 kdwatds, £3 2 2 0 28chulte,c 4 0 0! 5 0 4Gerhardt,g 4 2 4/ ohn: cy 0 2Schmia 30 2! Blakeslee, 2 1 1Larson,g 1 0 2 ‘Totals Si2Hotals 16 612 Referee: Duncall, Dekalb, [ Sport Slants _ o_-¢ Whether or not the stock market Prospects for another heavyweight extravaganza ‘neath the palms of The Madison Square Garden cor- tion hi to all the both ili d Battl oF rape atte oer Billiar le Three-Cornered Option is held on the services of Johnny Layton, Otto Rieselt, and Allan Hall Have Won arena from Miami Beach to Miami. Contracts were signed with the city of Miami on a five-year basis after the successful promotion of the Sharkey-Stribling fight last February. Jack Sharkey, now the chief Amer- ican heavyweight contender, for a fight in Florida this winter. All of which comes under the head of serious business but unless a match of undisputed drawing power is made, the Garden's millionaire directorate | tional three cushion billiards cham- . Championship Wisconsin Cagers western,’ South Dakota State Will Have| Tave, defeated | Wisconsin, Four Remaining Champs to Face Morningside Paster 8. D., Jan. 6—Six days in f hts of uninterrupted practice four nights by a 38 to 21 score. spots Dakota State college bas- Wildcat defense Matthusen, £1 0 2R tld bok ee from their 2 eight points quickly, but again show- | C0ach, wi 8 not often become ed the _tttects of travel and four Sue, Pebioti & man makes a few ex- fe q games in four nights, and slowed ‘ The Probable, starting Jtheup for the game lude: The Rockford team took things . Miller, center: ‘Hert. and Bill Lowe, Lincoln, Pittsburgh, Jan. 6—(?)—The Uni- | versity of Pittsburgh basketball team {kept its record immaculate Saturday night by winning its seventh straight game of the season. The University of Nebraska was the Score was 34 to 27. pre iat rs led the Wisigetntd until the last few minutes of decline affected the sock market, the half when the Panthers caught up to tie the score 14-14 at the midway Miami have become distinctly bearish. | Point. Greater Interest - Seen By Heydler Buried by Northwestern President Believes Senior Cir- Under 23-14 Count cuit Will Be Best Balanced — ! in History BOBO LOCKHART STARS! crn te iaih of series of — stories written for The Associated Press by leaders in the world of Gam Was Closely Contested| sports, based on 1990 prospects.) Until Last 10 Minutes; Fos- ter Losing Star BY JOHN A. HEYDLER (President, National League) New ‘York, ven ps cA too my early in the year to review the teams Evanston, Ill, Jan. 6—()—North- | in ihe league for the 1930 pennant & swift tin! pone race, and it is too early to Lonidd what kind of a season we may expect. Michigan of the 1929 Western | put judging from the growth and " |progress of the game the past three years and the general strong trend of the public to all sports, I am impelled to predict 1930 will prove another start. |Steat year for Lec l teas and 4 ;, | National League in particular, ye Te The ene | Te ta m fect the attendance in our into the scoring while the |Je#sue championship games the past too sturdy | three years totaled 15,000,000. During for the Wisconsin attack. the three years prior to this period western held a 9-7 lead at | 0Ur attendance was about 12,000,000. half. Lockhart, whose fine play | Now. last season for the first time feature of Northwestern’s ; in about a decade our race was over went through the contest | by about Sept. 1. I do not anticipate burdened with sorrow over the death | Such a runaway by any club this year. of his mother at Martinsville, Ind., | Both the Boston and Cincinnati clubs Saturday. will Fuiscon'ant4 fg ft pfwor'w'n 23 te tt pe | at the start of the next race. Both 10) f 60 Il present a much stronger front ‘arber, f teams will have new managers, Then Bergherm,t tel, £ 3/the Philadelphta team only developed Foster, 2 5 3 Walter, Ghmietwakigo > binekacecied 2 }yits real strength toward the end of Paul, = 00 3Mundy, ¢ ~ 2 0 1/last season. This club should provo Totals 4 6 8Totals “79 7|% feature of the 1930 pennant race. Referee, Schommer, Chicago. | bad agi Hither teen eae ne | put up a real battle with the contend- ers from the start. A better balanced league means a Closer race, keener competition, and as a natural result greater interest and attendance all over the circuit. It looks to me now as though we should have the best balanced league for 1930 in major league history, and therefore we have every reason to look forward with confidence to an- other great year, . v2:| Kirkwood, Dutra Deadlocked For Long Beach Sum | Philadelphian Makes Great Rally Near End To Tie quarterback of the | Hforni ; cheng re California Golfer right end and Harold was a sub-| Long Beach, Calif., Jan. CP) stitute left end.) Olin Dutra of Santa Monica and Joe Myron Hanley at | Kirkwood of Philadelphia today held that time was aj jointly the championship honors of the fifth annual Long Beach $3,500 Prep _gridirons, | open golf tournament. The two Pro- . while Leland and | fessionals scored 216 each for the 5§ nl Homer _ tackled | holes of medal play. and lugged footballs in back lots and Many leading contenders quit the on grade school playgrounds. field yesterday afternoon in the face ‘Ten years later we find Dick oc-{of a driving rain which broke a cupying a head coach's position at|drouth here of nine months. As Northwestern University, a post he | dusk was falling Kirkwood turned in | has held since 1927. His record with | a sensational ‘70 to equal Dutra’s first | the Wildcats is familiar. The eastern Money score of 216, thus winning a ies ee ee ge ee ew tog eee Split of the $1,600 first .| Western players in money. Br eee Satie DAC cet | teens Keastn Cass soit eine Dark horse mudders found the is likely to decide upon a diplomatic |Pionship tournament has developed | Dick, in conjunction with Andy Kerr, | puddles and soaked greens to their retreat from Dixic. For obvious reasons the Stribling-| Johnny Layton Sharkey match requires no encore. | Louis, and Otto Reiselt, Philadelphi The elimination match between Phil | veteran. Scott and Otto Von Porat appears to ppe! have resulted in the elimination of | three’ have been able to keep both. Scott has returned to England | records unmarred by defeat. La: and Von Porat is under suspension. |the defending champion, and Reiselt, Max Schmeling, the German clouter,|a former titleholder, each have won is signed to fight for rival promoters |three games. Hall has won the only two starts he has made. Yesterday Layton defeated Charles ‘The solution might be to sign Ar-| Jordan, Los Angeles, 50 to 22 in 3 Relea it bent Harry York, 50 to 36 in 49 and Hall Antonio and the Great One, if he| downed Tiff Denton, Rane City, 50 survives the winter's fisticuffs, will to 2¢ in 38 innings, at Atlantic City Feb. 22. thur (The Great) Shires for a Miami be obliged to exchange left hooks and right crosses for ball bat and glove. He may be quite willing to do s0 by twin football citadels of the State of Indiana next Fall. grounds of Purdue, Big Nine or Ten champions. To add to the intersectional gayet; Colorado university has concluded a} two-year agreement with Missouri for 1930-31. The Southwest and Rocky Moun: tain conferences have been among the few major groups not fi heavily heretofore In the tional strife but they seem take up the march in a big way. Bettencourt of St. Mary's, All-Amer- ica center in 1927 and Ken New York university, All-, fullback in 1928. them rere such stalwarts at ‘Tiny Ropbuek, | into a three-cornered battle among m8: Alls Hall, 4 Mike now—is football coach at Col-| ond prize money with a 69-76-73 for umbia University. He gained fame|a total of 218. Dutra’s card for the ‘Al of the field of eight, th on the gridiron at the University of | 54 holes was 67-76-73—216, and Kirk- their Pheegpgh atte forth campus, recently con- not only blasted the cluded @ successful season regular | of potential leaders of the field, but quarterback of the Wildcats. drove many to give up the battle patina cee AARON, HANSON FIGHTS. Chicago, 6.—(?)—Haakon Han- February. son, Cl a and Clyde Chastain, of The Southwest apparently intends] in the cight-round final bout of to make a concerted raid upon the| mote; HE MAN WHO REALLY OSE KEEPS if Bere nor. Colgate coach. liking, and Clarence Clark, young Myron Hanley—he is known as| Tulsa, Okla, pro, ploughed into sec- Roy is an assistant to| woods 68-78-70—216. Henry. Guidi , while Leland, | of Bridgeport, Conn., was fourth with Tom Hanley, the father, himself a | early. Among these were Wild Bill former athlete, went into the lumber | Mehlhorn, of New Y business in thi Wood, of Bloomfleld, Nr so ore 14, atter Schuler, New] in Canada. Lacrosse and baseball | also met his waterloo in the morn, were his favorite sports then. ing’s rain, when he piled up an 81 “All the money in the world isn’ for 9 card of 232, entirely out of the worth what I've got in 8 the-wool football fi of the achievement His Fourth Consecutive Triumph; Bill Leach, Cyril Walker Close SERas: ie holes yesterday with the field of 155 the $2,500 ina 930 golfing sen~ A stroke behind him was Bill Leach, Overbrook, Pa.; in third : Cyril Waker, Saddle River NYS with 302 SDNNENBERG MEETS DEVITO Chicago, Jan. 6.—(\—Gus Sonnen- berg, world heavyweight ae ya Devito of Bt. he main event at at 118 Second Street PHONE 306