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oo prveverseieey THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1981 Indiana Is Favored to Win Round Robin Tourney at Chicago HOdsERS SLATED EXPECT RECORD CROWD AT ELKS CHARITY FIGHT CARD HERE 10 MEET CHICAGO IN FINAL CONTEST Maroons to Play lowa in First Match; Indiana to Engage Illinois PURDUE SUFFERS SETBACK Coach Harry Kipke Is Worrying Over Michigan Team's Mental Attitude .—?)—If the hand- icappers have the situation figured correctly, Indiana's Hoosiers are a cinch to win the Big Ten’s charity yound Robin football tournament ‘Thursday at Stage Field. Chicago and Towa will meet in the first two-period match, and on the Chicago, Nov basis of previous accomplishment, the | Chicago has} ‘oons should win. to score at least one touch- games this season, while the Haw- d to cross an opposi- tion goal line in league competition. auled six times by Big ave much chance of beating Indiana, either by scoring or by yardage de- cision. If the dope is correct thus far, In- Giana and Chicago will tangle in the playoff 30-minute game. They met several weeks ago and the Maroons were given their worst beating of the season, 32 to 6, leaving Indiana the handicappers’ favorite. Purdue suffered a setback yesterday when it was learned neither Doxie Moore, substitute halfback, nor Paul Calvert, end, will play against North- western Saturday. Captain Dal Mar- vil, tackle, and Dick Fencil, regular right end, the preparation playing field at ‘will be able to play, the best of shape. Coach Harry Kipke is worrying about the Michigan squad's mental attitude toward its game for charity against Wisconsin. He fears a let- Gown will follow the victory over Minnesota. ‘ Ohio State probably will face Min- nesota without Martin Varner, guard, ‘and Mickey Vuchinich, fullback, in- jured in the Illinois contest, The Gophers will be without Brad Robin- gn, its outstanding end. To Renew Ancient Feuds on Gridiron Towa last week. Both but will not be in Nodaks Will Come to Grips With Strong George Wash- ington Team New York, Nov. 25.—(?)—Thanks- giving Day is a traditional holiday and, appropriately enough, the East's football program for made up largely of renewals of tradi- tional rivalries. ‘There are exceptions, Cornell and Pennsylvania; Colgate ‘and Brown, and Holy Cross and Bos- ton college have been meeting over a Jong span of years. Even the big in- ttersectional clash of the day, involv- fng Nebraska and Pittsburgh, brings together two universities who first clashed on the gridiron more than a decade ago. Pitt perhaps will be a slight fa- Worite over Nebraska. North Dakota comes to grips with possibly the best team George Washington university ever has put on the field. Maryland takes on Johns Hopkins. Catholic tackles Loyola of Maryland. Saturday's program will be topped by the Notre Dame-Army, Stanford- Dartmouth and Detroit-Georgetown Intersectional contests and by the mnnual clash between Yale and Princeton. Hockey Outfits Score Triumphs of course, but Boston Bruins and Montreal Maroon Take One-Sided Victories New York, Nov. 25.—(?)—Two teams of the National Hockey league have come to life with a pair of one sided victories. The Boston Bruins, who started out by losing three of their first four games, Tuesday night stepped out and handed the Montreal champions of the hockey world, a 7 to 1 lacing. Similarly the husky Montreal Maroons, who appeared to have every- thing needed for success in the cam- paign, got off on the wrong foot, then changed their stride with a 6 to 1 triumph over the Detroit Falcons. These one sided triumphs over- shadowed the battle of the current league leaders, the New York Rang- ers and Chicago Blackhawks. The Rangers and Hawks ended their first meeting of the year in’a 1-1 tie. Assumption Abbey Beats Glen Ullin Glen Ullin high school bowed in defeat before Assumption Abbey of Richardton, 21 to 14, in the first game played in the new North Mis- souri Slope basketball conference. Kwako and Muggii were high point men for Glen Ullin, does not appear toj ‘suffered severe burns from | used to mark the/ | Fight in West | Johnston stepped into the breach,| jcleared his throat and announced as | scarlet flash of Minot won on points Canadiens, | .OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | = BUT. CONFOUND I, [ter ZF Vou, THE “TURKEY WAS STOLEN LAST NIGHT! w- EGAD, I EVEN HAD A DREAM —HAT THE BIRD WAS STOLEN -~~[ Woke UP, SLIPPED ON MY DRESSING GOWN, WENT OUT OTHE YARD AND, SURE ENOUGH, MY TURKEY | WAS GONE Loe BY DOVE, A Needed CURSE on HE ROGUE WHO STOLE MY. ALLEGRETTO BACKYARD A THING | | ME fa. MY ROOM Looks aVER “TH” T DIDNIT HEAR BUT MAYBE TH” “URKEY HAD A x HABIT OF WALKING AN IW CTS SLEEP! IT SGUNDS VERY ba () HOOPLE SAYS WERE GOING HAVE KILLARNEY “TURKEY YOR “TOMORROW CORNED BEEF KABOOTCH I AN” ww NEW YORK PROMOTER DENIES RUMOR OF CALIFORNIA BOUT Watson Wins from Minneapolis Negro { Defeats Ace of Spades in Fea- ture Six Round Bout on Fargo Card No one is paying $25 these days to see something he knows about. Cavanaugh Beaten By Minot Fighter Scarlet Flash Leads Bismarck Veteran on Minot Bene- fit Program Carey Says Garden Officials Will Not Stage Title New York, Nov. 25.—(#)—The dis- cussion centered around the possibil- ity of Max Schmeling, heavyweight champion, defending his title in Los Angeles in February against Mickey Walker, the toy bulldog who has been. | biting the ankles of the big fellows. William F. Carey, president of Madison Square Garden and pro- motor of its boxing business from the | time Tex Rickard died until Jimmy Minot, N. D., Nov. 25.—(?)—The follows: | “If I have anything to say about |that—and it's just possible I will- |Madison Square Garden will promote | over Lee Cavanagh of Bismarck in the six-round main event of a boxing program held here Tuesday night for ithis winter.” | Mr. Carey, warmed to his subje I | 3 to his | in the semi-windup, Don (K. 0.) |, “They say California is virgin terri-| Foster of Minot scored a knockout |tory, hasn’t had a heavyweight cham-' over Battling Braunagel of Bismarck |pionship fight in many years, and/in the second round of a scheduled |they think that’s an advantage, don’t | six-round bout. |they? Well, I'm going to tell you| ire vee eee is the worst ter-| jritory he world for the promotion| New York, Nov. 25.—()—Johnn: jof a heavyweight title fight. We Ferrell, national open golf Gananion learned that at Cleveland last sum-'in 1928, and. Miss Catherine Hush of ee when Schmeling fought Strib-|Greenwich, Conn., were married “Heavyweight title fights can be) staged only where there are fight fans, not just people who might be| versity of Oklahoma by the Big Six interested in a spectacle. They must| conference to use freshmen and (pS fought where the principals are| fourth-year players in two post-sea- known, have been seen. son charity football games. Twin Co-Eds Are Life Savers — entire fight. FERRELL MARRIES Permission was granted the Uni- Drowning is a pleasure in the indoor swimming pool at the University of Missouri, where Anne | and Catherine Roach, twin co-eds, preside over the life | saving crew. | The twins are shown here, Anne, left, and Catherine, right. \ Their home is Kansas City. —— | LGVESS hb GO OCUTAND nothing | , the benefit of the Minot Lions club Thursday is/no fight between Schmeling and /children’s shoe fund. The flash ied | | Walker or anyone else in California | the fighting to Cavanagh through the | Fargo, N. D., Nov. 25.—(?)—Al Wat-} son, Dawson middleweight, thumped! mer of York, Sask., to do battle with the Ace of Spades, Minneapolis negro, to win a decision in the feature six-;has an impresive record and has round bout at the Fargo Elks club! looked good in training here. After Tuesday night. ‘Watson, off to a slow start as thejset was reported to have gone into Ace showered him with gloves in the opening round, came back to win the second by a big margin, and thereaft- er it was all Watson. ‘The Dawson gladiator tore into his Minneapolis adversary viciously, rip- {ping hard rights and lefts to the body which had the Ace bewildered from the third round on and hopelessly outclassed. George Horwitz, made a punching bag of Jack Fletcher, Fargo welter- | weight, to win every round of their four-round semi-windup. George Feist, Grand Forks bantam- weight, scored a surprise victory over Willie Asher, Fargo, Northwest Gold- en Gloves flyweight champion. Adolf Haavisto, Fargo’s flying Finn, substituted for Jid Jackson of Dawson and avenged a previous defeat admin- istered by William Russell, Moorhead, and had the better of three rounds in} their four-round setto. Jimmy Lakes and Billy Burns, Far- go 115-pounders, fought three rounds to a draw. Donald Woodruff and Lowell Gam- stad, Fargo, 85-pounders fought to a draw in another three-round bout, while Robert Vassar and Fritz Ko- walski of Fargo, 55-pounders, caught punch after punch to the head, fin- ishing up even in the opening bout over the same route. o— | Woman May Pick | Football Winner Chicago, Nov. 25) —There* may be need for an expert statis- tician to decide the winners of to- morrow’s 30-minute contests in the Big Ten’s round robin charity football bill, and a woman—Mrs. Amos Alonzo Stagg, Sr., has been nominated for the job. Should their be no score in either or both of the “prelim- inary” games, in which Iowa will meet Chicago, and Indiana tack- les Illinois, the victor or victors will be determined on the basis of yardage gained. For almost 40 years, Mrs. Stagg wife of Coach Stagg, has checked gains and losses in Maroon games, and Major John L, Griffith, Big Ten commissioner of athletics, has suggested she keep the sta- tistics tomorrow, to determine, if necessary, which teams shall meet in the playoff. Glen Ullin Ramblers Win from Richardton In a game in which the lead: changed hands several times, the Glen Ullin Ramblers turned back the Richardton Independents, 39 to 25, in the season’s basketball opener at Richardton. Elton, high school principal at Glen Ullin, and Havelock were high point winners for the Ramblers while Hanson and Rudolph annexed the majority of points for the Richard- ton outfit. : Other members of the Glen Ullin team are Captain McManus, Tavis, Classen, McGrath, Wilmes, Lanz, Hermes, and Geck. * The Hillyard high school team of Spokane, Wash. has a freshman football player who stands six feet, four inches and another with an alti- tude of six feet, seven inches. WILL STAGE EVENT IN AUDITORIUM IN | _ INTERESTS OF POOR Proceeds Will Be Used to a Coal For Needy Families in City which once rang out for football at ‘| jiy that it was a handful of picked ‘ders is “Chesty Jules” Ladoumegue of | Jct are DEMERAY IN HEADLINER Cream of North Dakota Fight- ers Scheduled to Appear on Program One of the largest crowds ever to attend a boxing program in Bismarck is expected to turn out for the Elks All-Star fight card to be held at the} city auditorium Thursday night for the benefit of the city’s poor. The program is scheduled to start at 8 p. m. Promoters said Wednesday that the caliber of the fighters slated to ap- pear together with the fact that the card was being put on in the interests of charity was expected to attract hundreds of fans from Bismarck and the surrounding territory. Proceeds from the affair will be ‘used to buy coal for deserving poor families. Dick Demeray, Aberdeen flash, and Sherald Kennard, rugged Fargo bat- tler, are scheduled to appear on the headliner. While not exactly a grudge fight, promoters said, the contest promises plenty of action. Kennard recently was given a decision over De- meray on a Fargo card which proved unpopular with many fans who wit- nessed the fight. As @ result De- meray is said to be in no very aimable frame of mind and is determined to knock the Fargo man out. ‘The semi-windup promises to bring out plenty of action with Ray Cos- sette of Fargo and Bad Boy Knight of Aberdeen as the principals. Both fighters are hard hitters and on num- erous occasions have exhibtied their ability to “take it.” Promoters have imported Kid Kra- he beat 9 minutes for the two miles in his brilliant career. Ladoumegue’s record mile isn’t his only claim to distinction this year. Since July the barrel-chested little Frenchman has turned in record times of 5:23.4 for 2,000 meters and 3:00.6 for three-quarters of a mile. Yellow Peril Recently, Tokio broadcast the world record feats of two native Japanese, Chuhei Nambui, who broad jumped 26 feet 2% inches, and Mikio Oda, who cleared 51 feet 1% inches in the hop, step and jump. | Oda evidently is out to retain the ‘honors he achieved at Amsterdam, in the 1928 Olympics, as the first Japan- ese to carry off one of the Olympic track and field prizes. He won the hop, step and jump there with a mark of 49 feet 11 inches. Nambu was fourth in this event, but did not place in the broad jump. It’s been a long time since the U. 8. A. won the classic marathon and it probably will be longer before Uncle Sam comes through again. In addi- tion to the threat of Paavo Nurmi in the long grind, there are the returns from Czecho-Slovakia, where one Jose Zabala, an Argentine, galloped the long route in 2:33:19, and from Connecticut where a Finnish delegate from Toronto, Dave Komonen, beat Boston's Jimmy Henigan in 2:39:27. Italy also has a distance contender in Valente, who ran 25,000 meters in the record time of 2:03:13 2-5 at Paris this summer. WORLD'S CHAMP? London.—When Lewis Clarke was small, he was so puny and ill that he was unable to attend school. Through a, system of exercise he has built him- self up so that now, at 16, he is con- sidered the strongest youth of his age; in the world. He can break nails with his fingers, drive a six-inch nail through a plank with his hand, and can support a heavy anvil on his chest while someone pounds it with a sledge hammer. MULES CAWD COAD Tuffy Mosset of Bismarck. Kramer watching his opponent in action, Mos- rigorous training. H Other fights on the card will fea- ture Ben Minnish of Aberdeen versus Jimmy Todd of Medina and Sonny Schlosser of Mandan versus Kid Brooker of Mandan. To Continue Ban on Football at Loyola Chicago, Nov. 25. — () — Cheers Loyola university, now spur on an- other spot: Basketball. ‘And Rev. Robert M. Kelly, presi- dent, says it will stay that way. President Kelly instigated the movement which, a year ago, caused football to be dropped from the uni- versity’s list of sports. Now, a year later, he announced he was so pleased with the results he was certain football would never return. Intercollegiate basketball, he said, has been made the big sport of the school. Loyola's team has won & na- tional reputation. F TS Fort Worth, Tex.—A carload of Last iGnT coughing and sniffing mules i (By The Associnted Press) Basis 18 Aa ee a olin Chevalier, | = (0)s mock tort, Chicago (1). Indianapolis — Sammy. Slaughter, ‘Terre knocked out Gary Len Ind... (1)3 Scotty Scott apolis, outpointed Bi NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS STATE HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION 1, Proposals for the construction of a State Highway on State Route No, 14, Wing South will be received by the State Highway Commission in the offices of the Department of State Highways at Bismarck, N. Dak., not later than 10 o'clock A. M., December Loutaville (8). ee SS eS SPORT SLANTS | Mama? aaa ae sae 2 public! i By ALAN GOULD es roposals must, be tnailed 4 eet eese or State, Highways at It the cabled reports from far and| Rismarck, N. Dak., and shail be seal- wise meen. what they say, the some-{ed and endorsed “Proposal for con- wi lespread notion that the 1932] structing ja State | High, ay South (Federal Aid Project No. 381-B) Olympics at Los Angeles will be alf'Sustcign County romp for the good old U. 8, A. is due} 3, A certified check for B%, to- for @ severe jolt, followed by a right| ether with a bidders bond in the fut am e gross 8 i cross to the maxillary. accompany each proposal. ‘We refer, of course, to track and nan Contemplated wok gopelste of the 9.574 miles o! rave! in fet ee pels Sibbon bers ot Stock ‘Pile road Improvement involv- » and \- roximately: usual number of sterling performances OF stk Miles, ‘Subgrade Preparation. of the last few months to which the| .,/%40# C- ¥ds. Load, Unload and Finns, the Japanese, the French, the| 41,364 f Italians and the Argentines have con-| 13:i9¢ : yds. Crushing Oversize. tributed. 000 C. Yds. Stripping Pits. Track fans will recall quite readi- Load. U M. Hauling. 850 C, Screening. 850 C. Yds. Crushing Oversize. Copies of the Proposal blanks may be obtained from the Department of State Highways at Bismarck, N. Dak. Plans and specifications are on file in the Division Office of the De- partment of State Highways at Bis- marck, N. Dak, and the office of the Depart tof Bismarck, N. Dak. office of the County Auditor in County wherein the project or pro- located. Bidders are invited to be present at the opening of the propos- als, 7. The right is reserved to reject any and all proposals, to waive tech- nicalities, or to accept such as may be determined to be for the best inter- ests of the County and State. & Bidders must bid on contained in the proposal blank. bid, or bid men, such as Williams of Canada, Lowe of England, Nurmi, Larva and Ritola of Finland, who made it so uncomfortable for Uncle Sam in the 1928 games at Amsterdam. Much the same situation may de- velop at Los Angeles if the outcrop- ping of foreign specialists continues to upset the massed forces of the United States. The current sensation of the cin- France, who caused consternation in Abo, Finldnd, the home town of Paavo Nurmi, by knocking off the Phantom Finn’s cherished one mile record. ‘The cruel gesture in this is that Nurmi hasn't in all probability suf- ficient speed in his running machin- ery to regain the honors. He set the mile mark at 4:10 2-5 in 1923. La-|the proposal will be considered as ir- Fegulat and rejected as, STATE HIG igned) A. D, McKinnon, doumegue'’s new record is 4:09 1-5. At his peak in 1924-25, Nurmi was DEMPSEY KOs 1,200-POUND MOOSE Maybe this Is further evidence of his comeback attempt—at an; rate here’s Ex-Champion Jack Dempsey after his most recent Keoekour —a 1,200-pound moose. He hit the Wyoming trails in search of big q@ame with a party that included Gov. Fred Balzar of Nevada. not so long ago, for the second time | Kansas City to Wellington, Tex., over , euafeth'amme ae tutte ny the | Convenience and are described as follows:: ‘all, items | received for any number | of items less than those contained in | such, ‘WAY DEPARTMENT. | | New Basketball Loop Is Formed At Conference Ten Schools Included in New North Missouri Slope Bas- ketball League ‘Ten schools in western North Da- kota will be included in the New North Missouri Slope Basketball con- ference as formulated at a conference of high school officials at Dickinson. Almont, former member of the con- ference, has dropped out of league competition while Assumption Abbey of Richardton and Taylor high school have been added to the league. Assumption Abbey is to take over Almont’s schedule while Taylor is to arrange for eight games with member schools. The conference now consists of ter members, New Salem, Glen Ullin, Hebron, Taylor, Assumption Abbey, Model, high school of Dickinson, Cen- tral high school, Dickinson, Belfield, Sentinel Butte and Beach. The tentative schedule follows: Dec. 18—New Salem vs. Assumption Abbey; Glen Ullin vs. Model; Hebron vs. Dickinson; Belfield vs. Beach. Jan. 8—New Salem vs. Belfield; Beach vs. Hebron; Sent. Butte vs. As- sumption; Glen Ullin vs. Dickinson. Jan, 9—New Salem vs. Model High. Jan. 15—Assumption vs. Dickinson; Glen Ullin vs. Belfield; Model High vs. Beach; Sent. Butte vs. Hebron. Jan. 22—New Salem vs. Glen Ullin; Sent. Butte vs. Beach; Model High vs. Belfield; Assumption vs. Hebron. Jan, 29—Sent. Butte vs. Model High; Dickinson vs. Beach; Hebron vs. New Salem; Sent. Butte vs. Glen Ullin. Feb, 5—Glen Ullin vs. New Salem; Dickinson vs. Sent. Butte; Assumption vs. Model High; Belfield vs. Beach. Feb. 12—Sent. Butte vs. Beach; Heb- ron ys. Dickinson; Assumption vs. Belfield. Feb. 19—New Salem vs. Dickinson; Assumption vs. Hebron; Glen Ullin vs. Beach; Model High vs. Belfield. Feb. 26—New Salem vs. Assump- tion; Glen Ullin vs. Model High; Heb- ron vs. Belfield; Dickinson vs. Sent Butte. Richard “Curly” Harris, 1931 cap- tain and coxswain of the University of Washington varsity crew, has been signed as an assistant coach to Alvin Ulbreikson, head mentor of the Husky oarsmen, Associated Press Photo here. The mules were shipped from the Kansas and Texas railroad. F. H. Sweet and J. G. Lutz, owners, charge that the animals caught cold en route and that it was impossible to sell them for that reason. POLICE CONGRESS Paris. — Criminals in this city laid low recently when police from all over the world held a congress here with a view of setting up an inter- national clearing house for tracing criminals. The congress passed a re- solution to unify identification sys- tems and to carry on an interchange of photographs by radio to make the world tougher for crooks. The cost of feeding 40,000 cows in dairy herd improvement associations in the U. S. in 1930 averaged $80 per head; $41 of this went for grain while $39 was spent for roughage. In North | |j Dakota the average cost for feed was considerable less than $80 per head. NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE Notice Is Hereby Given that a cer- tain mortgage made, executed and delivered by Neil Housten Omay and Helen Omay, his wife, both of Bis- marek, Burleigh County, North Da- kota, ‘mortgagors, to Northwestern Mutual Savings and Loan Association, a corporation, mortgagee dated the 2nd day of February, A. D., 1931, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh, and state of North Dakota, on the 9th day of March, A. D., 1931, and duly recorded in book 208 of mortgages, at page 54, will be fore- closed by ‘a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter de- scribed, at the front door of the courthouse, in the city of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m., on Saturday, the 12th day of December, A. D., 1931, to satisfy the amount due upon said mortgage on in said be sold to the day of sale. The premises described mortgage and which will Burleigh and state of North Dakota, Lot numbered nineteen (19), in | [i block numbered ono hundred ‘ten | {I (110), of the Original Plat of the city of Bismarck, according to tho. certified plat thereof, duly filed for record in the office of tho Register of Deeds in and for the County of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, reference there- to being had: That there will be due on said mortgage on the date of sale the sum Of $1,202.99 besides the costs of this foreciosure. | NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL | SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSO., Mortgagee. SHURE &,MURPHY, No. 11-Broadway, Fargo, North Dakota, Attorneys for Mortgagee. (10-28 —11-4-11-18-25—12-2) and Privacy Book Lovers Attention Special Offer The Way, of Smiles Br & W. Foley, Red Leather Flexible Cover Postpaid any place in the U. 8. each 50c, Send money order or stamps with order, « smarck Printers - Stationers - The Bi Tribune BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA ne Chief Highway Commission. Dated November 23rd, 1931. thoroughly capable of doing 4:05. The odds would be much against him get- ting very close to that now, although |71-?5 12 | ‘Elks’ C harity Boxing Car Thanksgiving Evening | Nov. 26, 8 o’Clock City Auditorium Thirty Rounds of Boxing 0c