The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 31, 1930, Page 14

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( THE BISMA is ) ; ia RCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1980 930 Proves Another Year of Sp AOLFING CONQUESTS HEAD ANNUAL LIST OF CITY VICTORIES Paul Cook and Nadine O’Leary Prove to Be Sensations of State Contests DEMONS GARNER TITLES McLean Wins Missouri Slope Crown; Kittenball Cam- paign Stressed The year 1930 proved another year of athletic championships for Bis- marck, even though the high school football team failed to retain its state titular honors. Heading the sports achievements of the year, possibily, was the Capital City’s clean sweep in the state golf tournaments, The Demons succeeded in retaining their state track and field champion- ship which they had annexed for the first time in 1929 and added the state hhigh school basketball championship after having been runners-up the year before. In their unsuccessful campeign to win the state football championship for the third successive season, the ‘Bismarck high school eleven, under the tutoring of Roy D. McLeod, won eight of its nine games. The Demons dropped a 7 to 0 decision to Fargo in the game that cost them the title. Paul Cook As ususal, Paul Thomas Cook kept the Capital City, at the helm in state S golf circles. Trail- . ing for more than three - fourths of the final match in the state amateur golf tourney over the course of the Fargo Country club, Cook a whirlwind finish to crush Bill Fow- ler, Fargo, and win for the second straight year the premier honors in <j the state. He also Paul Cook was medalist and champion in several of the less im- portant tourneys around the state. Cook also qualified among the first 15 in the national intercollegiate tour- nament at Oakmont, Pa., and a few days earlier had missed qualifying for the national open tournament by not Paul's 16-year-old cousin, Miss Na- dine O'Leary, who, like Paui, was ght how to play good golf by her father, Tom O'Leary, proved to be Bismarck’s golf sensation of the year, however. Miss O'Leary won medalist and championship honors in the North Dakota women’s tournament over the course of the Fargo Country club. More than this she set up new records for state women's tournaments and ‘also for women playing on the Fargo course. These two victories gave Bismarck ee ealziail of the seenoe golfing honors in ate. Bismarck high school started the year by copping the state basketball championsip, defeating Grand Forks 29 to 21 in the thrilling final game. It was an uphill battle for the De- mons throughout the season, the Mc- several games. Reserves May Decide Texas Grid Tilt seasonal sports and developed strong basketball team. St. Mary’s school started the year by winning eight out of 12 cage tussles. They followed this with a successful track season. In the Cap- ital City meet, Ralph O'Neil, 8t. Mary's entrant, came within an eighth of an inch of breaking the conference high-jump record by reaching 5 feet 6% inches. With only three football games on their record the St. Mary's eleven lost one game, tied one, and won one. The A. O. U. W. trundling team won the Bismarck bowling honors last The league embraced four teams: the A. O. U. W., Bridgeman- Russell, Capital City, Bottling Works and Bismarck Grocery, who ranked in Rockne to Spend \ a "| Final Workouts Scheduled For C’MoN You MUGS, ITS FE MINUTES “TO TWELVE ! GET READY To GIVE OL” (970 “TH” Boot AN” BouNce! ~~ IF THERE'S ONE YEAR IM GLAD “0 Today Before Midwest- Southwest Grid Battle Dallas, Tex., Dec. 31—(7)—Lack of sufficient reserve strength on the line may prove the undoing of Coach Bob Zuppke’s midwestern eleven in its charity bout with the southwest All-Stars at Ownby stadium here to- morrow. Coach Zuppke expressed that fear while directing his team’s last stren- A 3 Big Ten Cage Outfits Beaten Purdue, Wisconsin, and Chicago Defeated In Basketball Tilts Last Night Chieago, Dec. 31.—(?)—Big. Ten basketball suffered from the after- effects of a painful nightmare to- day. Three conference teams, including @ pair destined to fight it out for the title, were beaten in preliminary games last night, Purdue's Boilermakers, champions to] of the conference, were toppled, 24 E : BSE tiag? lertl g4 Shite Fy 2 itt RIGHT wrt You, Boy! At I WANT “To Do IS CLIMB A POLE AN" DROP A “TiS CAN FoR 1930 funn ADD “THAT DATE AN” [T SPELLS ies EEN to 22, by Pittsburgh; Wisconsin was stunned to defeat by its old rival, Marquette, 16 to 14, while Chicago fell before Brigham Young universit of Provo, Utah, 38 to 35. cl The defeats—so close the total ‘Wisconsin’s fall caused a@ lot of gasps. Three more Big Ten teams will at- tempt to say goodby to 1930 with bet- ter success tonight. Northwestern, .| another title favorite, meets Alabama at Evanston; Indiana invades Penn- sylvania, which was treated during its recent invasion of Big Ten » and Michigan tackles Ohio Wesleyan at Ann Arbor. By Ahern ZA (G30 WAS A BLING AN”? A CRUTCH Pf. ALL IT DID FoR MOST OF US WAS MAKE US ONE NEAR OLDER ! GIVE IT-TH” BRONX CHEER ON “TH” WAY OUT fs SSN orts Ch ROSE BOWL WARRIORS ARE ALL SET TO MAKE ROMAN HOLIDAY si SQUADS TRAINED TO HIGHEST PITCH FOR ANNUAL GAME Opposing Grid Teams Hold First Private Drill Since Arrival CROWD OF 65,000 EXPECTED Victory Tomorrow Would Be Second For Either Eleven in Rose Bowl Pasadena, Calif., Dec. 31—()—That final touch of preparation which often makes or breaks a gridiron eleven was in store today for Wash- ington State and Alabama, foes in the Rose tournament's sixteenth an- nual intersectional football game to- morrow. Already trained to a fine point, both squads went through a brief workout yesterday, their first in the ‘Rose bowl, scene of the New Year's day game. It was the first thoroughly private | drill either eleven had experienced, but it is generally understood both coaches, Wallace Wade, making his final appearance as gridiron Both mentors boast strong ‘The offensive ton 20 to 19, and tied Stanford 7 to 7 two years later. The Cougars inaug- urated the intersectional classic with & 14 to 0 victory over Brown. ‘Washington State officials said sons ‘howl will seat 85,000. MacMillan Back ampionships for Bismarck Tilden Leaves Amateur Tennis Ranks BAS KETBAL —. By EVERETT 8S. DEAN Basketball Coach, Indiana U.: During the last few years there has would be stalling and the center Play. has gested that coaches experiment with different With Gopher Five| ==" Wallie Norgaard, Valley City, NN. D., Returns to Minne- sota Squad Minneapolis. Dec. 31.—(4)—Coach Dave MacMillan returned Tiscad to versity of Chicago in its game with Brigham Young last night at Chi- cago. The Gophers are working for their hardest preliminary game of the sea- son, @ contest with Carleton in the fieldhouse Saturday night. Eddie Cadler, Gopher letterman, has reported for practice. Wallie Norgaard, another letterman, from Valley City, N. D., also has returned ‘to drill. Opinion is divided in the Gopher camp on the seriousness of the ankle injury of Earl “Loose, regular forward. ‘The ankle, which he sprained Friday, still’ was swollen Tuesday. Bruins Maintain Hockey Race Lead Canadiens Tie Montreal Ma- roons; Chicago Blackhawks Remain Idle Australian Swimmer Claims New Record Sydney, Australis, Dec. 31—(P)— Ruth, Leulaville (3)3 ¥: Rowsey, Huntington, W. V}.. (5). Japan, first exploited by: ap Ameri- can geologist in 1874, nor more than 48,000,000 ren offcoal year- \y DLAYS*4 DIAYERS get ee é z ale i 3 i E i g F gé ge at ice HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE BOUT MAY BE FOUGHT IN CHICAGO Promoters Boom Schmeling- [Snare Sas highly unsstistactory Stribling Battle; May Ignore | Board Edict New York, Dec. 31—(?}—The New ‘York state athletic commission seems to have paved the way for the staging of a heavyweight championship fight in Chicago. Whether or not that proves to be the case depends upon Max Schmeling, the title-holder, and Taking the bull by the horns, the commission yesterday. ordered Schmeling, through Jacobs, to agree} gymnasi within seven days to defend his title against Jack Sharkey here in June or ‘| State of North Dakot Notice is here! ven that under authority of an ae of sale granted fudge of the Count: rt in and for the County of Br ‘y, Cout rleigh and d the third day of December, 1930, under- si as the Executor of the estate H. Allensworth, decease: ri le to the highes' h, ur following de- o-wit: southeast “Gua SE%) of Section Twi ae ase (25), ‘dowss Hurdred Thirty-seven Boren ‘Gale will be made on or of January, 1981. and may unty, be in the of said Count; the undersign: personally. of December, NSWORTH, Executor. for kota. North Dauote’s office of the Judge Court, or delivered to john A. Allensworth, this 5th di JOHN A. Chas. Coventry, Attorne: utor, Linton, North 12/24-31 r may Decision to Join Movies-Closely j Parallels Bobby Jones’ Case New York, Dec. 31—(#)—Big Bill players before Lacoste broke through in 1926. Groves Polls High Vote for Place on 1930 Mythical Nine Verdict of 228 Members of Writers’ Association Gives Cochrane Second Place Such is the verdict of 228 members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America, 218 of whom named the regan skirting elem: as All-Star catcher { lor the third suc- @ close SUPERIOR T0 QUININE IN FIGHTING MALARIA Scientist Tells of Experiments With Drugs Against Dis- ease In Canaries lary pentyl-8-amino-6- quinoline.’ “One of the great advantages of over quinine is the ability of the former to destroy the crescents of plasmodium,” said Dr. Manwell. These are the crescent-shaped germ malaria. jeu ‘be sold in loose boxes,

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