The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 18, 1930, Page 10

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4 re, Spriggs and Tait Members of 3 Straight St f | ate Title Teams ‘| - “xDMNATHTS [CADETS MAY GET BIG SURPRISE WHEN THEY BATTLE NODAKS —_——_— SHARED 34 LETTERS ooo pee DOln STANDINGS Bismarok’s Triple Championship j ( AINGT ARMY TEAM Saket run ise cao r Celebration Comes Mon- I tried to show the importance of not day Evening North Dakotans to Get First the club to gain this end. Glimpse of Broadway on | Pethaps your own game can be helped, | TO’ GROUND \ THREE COACHES HONORED) C. J. Hunt, Carleton Athletic Di- rector, Will Give Fea- ture Address nmisHocep November 1 Journey bit of jealousy connected wth my dis- ! rita pean covery. After I had turned profes- | SPRING TRAINING SPIRITED |‘on Smith's spectacular success. Last TEN eee nament after tournament and also a Coach C. A. ‘Last-Minute’ West|/o¢ of money with uncanny regular- z 2 eccumnue dg commune d sncerseepS Hnuneresp New York Philadeiph Chica ‘SO. Pittsburg’ St. Louis Cincinnati Brooklyn ‘Three of the 21 Bismarck high school athletes Will Unleash Stars in I was older than he and way down Boston .. pe] cups Monds BNte ccitig misuarers . deep inside I felt there was something AMERICAN championship celebration are Eastern Game I could correct that kept me from be- @ Pi at all three itis ing as successful as he was. beh Dok & ponleville . + By JACK STEWART Down south that winter I watched Indianapo! . ;Smith carefully. And I found out, I/81-80-81-83—325. Five or six shots|Columbus . ee lives aad. afer The Bis; think, one thing I lacked thst he/every round went off the club just | fansas ci World) Possessed. Tt was in his manner of|lttie bit wrong. ‘That, of course | Minneapolis Grand Forks, N. D., Aj i t meant trouble and usually a trap at ‘estetnsrted hieke on the ‘Yass aebatlene spriiion He sorted of dragged the club-head |Oakmont. Naturally my scores went ry that are Dakota, some 45 boys, none along the ground at the Of | blooey. You've got to be straight at ubs Trim Cards of whom have ever had a glimpse of sight having i ea Sia oat x New York City, are preparing for this | f the wrists starting the action. ‘What I needed was straightness and other opportunities. clubhead remained close to the| with woods and irons. So I copied on H Is Hornsby's failure to touch home plate in the first inning of the Cubs-Cards game at St. Louis almost cost ‘North Dakota's University Flicker- ground until the first quarter of his|that part of Horton Smith’s swing. ' le ur ue ari ay So De tsESe outa Rites hin soca ney ie Ld 8. ime is shown here tails, real “Giants of the North,” are backswing had been completed. I de-| And I've got him to thank for a great St. L ——_—_—__ qi 5 5 scheduled to meet Army at West |ided that was worth a try. It seem-|deal of my success. it. Louis Shut Out 3 to 0; Pi. Point next November 1 in a football /@4 logical that that method would | (Copyright, 1990, NEA'Gervice, Inc)! rates Beat Cincinnati Be- contest scheduled by “Biff” Jones, ex- |Sive one straight shot. ‘ aati, tchers Have Dominated Early Games i> fire om nia! os ise Ta Sl] "MRR, Athace” hind Franch for the Cadets between their jouists national open in 1926, I had scored Brings Staleness. October 25 with Yale, and November St. Louis, April 18.—()—Pat Malone 8 with Illinois. games out of the fire in the waning | he snorts up the field with little Jar- | hurled Chicago Cubs t t= ter crowed Up by Lary|CREW RACING OPENS INEAST |S iti mo 3 se mw. |Sasers Sa ses ee Sa ae SEE way” will mean considerable to these | West is in the midst of spring prac- | oftentimes wish for a lariat rather |cauled after the sixth inning ohne French, Pat Malone and boys from the prairies but they have | tice right now and he is able to goad | than perronal contact with Eckholm. |Chicago 100 101— 3°76 - something else in mind. They have|his men to efforts seldom before| Another strong interference man is | St, Loui 00 000 0 3 2 a hankering to upset the Army. ‘This|equaled in these meaningless April | Bill Mjogdalen, 190 pound guard. |ginithon® "4 Hartnett; H. Bell and is quite a Say tae Cl aoe sete fk simply hitting, “remember} A erie a eae Felber, ber Sincinmare eet HOMER think, particularly si North Da- ip east.” arms -way ground, , .—(}—Holding: ‘ Columbia Is Favorite to Defeat] kota’s eye-teeth in the football worla| Among West’s forces are a handful | grips a football as most players would | iieg°ta icles until the seventh in- a have hardly been cut. And more par- Lester Sweetland USUAL ORDER IS REVERSED French Allows but Two Hits Tech Boats ines. are-termeryoutdie WBStkiaw fie most | Etitburgh s... 964 200 See Fig "5 Malone Give Three "| THRILLING SEASON IS SEEN} Centre proved to Harvard, such | eront ne Coats A itasulty of | Contrary to general opinion in the| p,Fiiisdelphia “at Brooktyn, post: Coach Hunt, (Associated Shell Program for Season Had} winning 15, losing 2, and tieing 1./is quite a handy fellow to have|all but bonafide citizens. This early | Auspicious Opening in Practically all the athletes who made | around. Lond id Seattl fold tins autumn for thelr last season | is chief interferer in the backfleA | shock ‘and plesss Robert Ziupp- Feats Yesterday ,ondon an le fold this autumn for their last season ferer may re . of competition. This, and the fact|is John “Bombastic” Burma, 194}ke'’s Illini who tackle the Cadets No- some eeREE lid 92? a eR that spring training has uncovered | pound fullback, who is fast on his| vember 8; and it may raise = BY TED VOSBURGH a flock of fine new candidates, gives | feet and a powe: in all deparjments | eary conjecture as to whether North (By The Associated Press) may be F r Good W th New York, April 18—(?)—Launched | rise to the conviction that on Novem- | of the game. Two enormous tackles, }Dakota may be another Centre. Larry French, Pirates—Pitche , | \ times cera 0) eather in thrilling fashion at Seattle and|ber 1 Army may find itself in the | fast moving fighters, are the bulwarks two-hit game and beat Reds, 7-1; i i RSH ASRESE ERR London, the college rowing campaign | Somewhat unhappy predicatment of | of the line. Claude Urevig, 232, han-| WOMEN FACE MADEMOISELLES home run by Allen and single by Mattoon, | While five, one Three Games Played Yesterday, | which will be inaugurated in the east | the man who clutched a tiger’s hind | dles one of these jobs, and Einar Eck-) New York, April 18—(#)—A team Meusel only Red hits, He | number . *’ | tomorrow gives promise of bringing] leg thinking it was that of a lamb. | holm, 220, the other. If Eckholm gver | match against France has been added Stephenson, Cubs—Hit home sont in but Kansas City and Indi- | into action a flock of speedy all well- ‘West Brings Nodaks Ahead gets back to Dakota following the|to-the schedule of Glenna .Collett's|Tun and two doubles in three times # matched crews. North Dakota’s head coach, Charles | Army trip this correspondent will be | women’s golf team this year. at bat. anapolis Were Idle (Last Minute) West, has been at the| surprised. Any wrestling promoter —_——_—___—__ Earl Whitehill, Tigers — Beat ae. It the two races already rowed are] University only two seasons and is| looking for a Swedish grappler capa-| WALKER TEAM PRACTICES Browns, 6-1, allowing only three By WILLIAM WEEKES any criterion there will be plenty of| given credit for the Flickertails’ rise) ble of breaking the mat trust would| New York, April 18—UP)—Bobby Chicago, April 18.—(P}—With a nice | Sense luels and garrison finishes| atnietically. He uses “Pop” Warner's | be foolish to ever let Eckholm leave | Jones and his Walker cup golf team-| Alex Metzler, White Sox—Double¢ stack of doubleheaders already piled before the 1930 season ends. wing-back offense, believes in plenty | the city. Here is a strong man (we|mates will get in some serious prac-|in tenth to score Cissell with run that cn American association clubs today | « Only, five feet. separted Washington| of scoring, takes plenty of chances|call him “Atlas") fearing nothing. tice at the national links in South-|best Cleveland, 8-7. were hopeful of getting in at least 204, California in their great race | offensively, and earned his nickname | West uses him to come out of the |hampton next week before leaving for] Pat Malone, Cubs—Held Cardinals one complete set of games during the Bag enitioge tien bacelnegin Y\ by “pulling” more than a few ball-|line for blocking purposes and when | England. to three hits and won by shutout, 3-0, oie oe from behind. Everybody got into action yesterday | ‘Columbia will be favored to defeat except the cham Kansas City Sia etn en | oun a ' ‘ pair two down to the weather. To- 1 d ’ : morrow the scenes will change, with | Annapolis pare ae | the Blues going to Louisville, St. Paul t seed Perper shou Fe = invading Toledo, Minneapolis meeting | ‘aster than year and Yale may ‘ Columbus at Columbus, and Milwau- j going to Indianapolis. SPRING STYLE SHOW tee kee ee i Hl ef if tt 36 i Hi 5 i Bai 4 48 i a 8 i i i i E H itt el bet 22 made use of nine bases on balls by John Buvid to fashion a 6 to 5 vic- lumbus last season. The senators packing enough of hits, 12 to 7 for St. Paul, but took a 6 to 5 beating. Peapiyenepagesagan pions . | Toledo’s Mud Hens out-maneuvered a . ee ) called after the Millers’ sixth. Fred |lie, recruit first baseman, to the To- : ¢ Heimach gave Minneapolis but four be hits, while the Hens @racked John ‘was purchased Brillheart for 11, three of them by 23 Spgs ~~ We" \ “A STRAIGHT. EIGHT PANIC Swe DUST FoR ee feke Te Hiigpal E ai H EF e Hy b Hi 4 ‘the oldest active coach in Minnesota PYRAMIDS in ves ct saves ee A GAG WE HAD : ; p : Se MAM Tie men oss tetcet eae PROFESSOR ZAMO Broehe Fe nt : Lasr CALr to get your Gordon hat vi ae thim, and who are now engaged in the HYPNOTIZE “TH? MASOR | we ANT SWHEN “TH? PROF. FouND ouT HE f 2 5 D RE-BUILT! : : P Ps is a MD I An for Easter. Don’t put it off —come Coach i COULDAYT BRING —TH” isha ied ot eae ae : 7 esi] fh ‘cauda FP MASOR OUT oF MS stints wir 8 a Pi tom metal of EREE I~ ANCE, HE PACKE a ees et ~onene UP AN”. BEAT ST! WAT will sow you things about gallant le latting. i Gordon styles are authentic; $10 covers the cover charge. |

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