The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 7, 1933, Page 6

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’ D D D D THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1933 Bismarck Youngsters SEVEN THREE-ROUND CONTESTS ARRANGED BY FORTY AND EH Principals Will Be From Class Sponsored by Veterans’ Organization WORKING QUT REGULARLY Program Will Have Unusual Ap- peal for Real Fan, Com- mittee Believes ‘m: Wednes- | see 21 rounds of | gsters from the! boxing class cast in| to. have three} e and a half each.! a scene of un- program. Spare | ‘ores receiving m John C. Spare re of the | organization | College. | the ages of| r parents’ the class, jor project of the and Eight this sea-/ | / | have been working out twice furnished by the the boys could 2 own needs. Extreme! precautions have been taken against | injury to the contestants, their mitts being of the large, soft type. Objectives of the program are de- velopment of physique. mental keen-; ness, courage, resourcefulness and; self-confidence in the boys. The youngsters are working out! éaily this week to “taper off” their | ‘raining for the program. They are} meeting at the memorial t g | from 7 p. m. until 9 p. m. Thursday} end Friday nights and . TH until 5 p. m. Saturday i The card, which will o'clock, will be as follows: Will Clash in Boxing Show Next Wednesday COACHING HEADS ALREADY HAVE BEGUN TO DROP. IN BASKET OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern “ZA ACCORDING TO YOU, ALL 4 NOU WANE TO DO IS SUST HAVE AN NOUR GOLD MINE, KICK A i, FEW ROCKS AROUND,THEN /4 x FILL UP YOUR PLUG HAT “| WITH GOLD NUGCETS? LISTEN , KID ~~ GOLD MINING |S WORK~AN* THATS SOMETHING YOU ACQUAINTANCE WITHS BUSTING UPA COUPLE TONS OF ROCK FOR AN OUNCE OF GOLD, FOR A YEAR,MY UNCLE SASPER TRIED TO SELL HIS. GOLD MINE —~ FINALLY, HE TRADED IT To A GLY FOR AcoaT! —~AFTER WORKING! TH MINE FOR A | MONTH TH’ GLY CAME BACK AN’ FED TH DEED TO TH MINE To quon! EGAD, ‘A SAPLING LIRE You, STILL WITH ]¥ NOUR MILK-TEETR, g TELLING AN OLD KLONDIKE - { SOUR -DOUGH \ / ABOUT GOLD 1 MINING J-HEH - S* HER~RER~ MY WORD— HOW AMUSING! WALK INTO) JOBDING. 26 Grid Star s of North Central Loop Are Chosen for Coaches’ Honor Roll Ted Meinhover of Bismarck Named; 1934 Grid Sched- ules Are Drawn Chicago, Dec. 7.—(?}—Twenty-six of the outstanding stars of the 1933 North Central Conference football season were named on the honor roi by coaches at their annual schedule- making meeting Wednesday. In the past it has been customary jto name an all-star conference team,| but this year it was decided to pick an honor roll instead. The honor roll of 1933: Contes a South Dakota | pitching averages of the National State; Hodoway, Thompson, North Dakota State. Guards—Lenon. South Dakota uni- S.; Pauley, Morn- ingside; House, John McDonald, 101 pounds, vs. Leonard Kositzky. 105. Lyle Drennan, 152, vs Henry Wildfang, 127. i Otis Mohler, 153, vs. Harry Weisenberger, 145. Matt Weisgerber, 140, vs. Bob Everts, 137. Will Mohler, Campagna, 135. Lowell Elofson, Couch, 123, N. D. &.: S. D. S.; Meinhover, D. . S. D. S.: Messner, Three N. D. Men Named 140, vs. Albert | Backs—Johnson, S. D. S.; Pierce, \U. N. D.; Kramer, S. D. Hanson, ;N. D. Freiburg. U. S. U. S. D.; Dean, Mornings’ A. Schultze, 145, vs. E. Elof: | Bonneau, U.N. D. 145. Me coe | Schedules for the 1934 season also 123, vs. Ben 3 Char- Arndt. | Clinker, | RECORDS REVEAL BRILLIANT | HURLING OF GIANTS’ STAFF until Thursday night. Coach Hartly “Hunk” Anderson named a different captain for each game during the season just past, but Thursday night the players name their permanent leader for the year at a private din- ner given them by the athietic asso- ciation. Ed Krause, star tackle from Chicago, was regarded as a favorite. Deaths in Football Hubbell, Schumacher, Fitzsim- | mons and Parmelee Were | Among Leaders | New York, Dec. 7—(?—The bril- j ant pitching at carried the New |York Giants’ “hitless” team to the ‘1933 world championship is emphe- ized more than ever in the official | League. | Led by Carl Hubbell, the entire) |Giant staff of mound regulars ap-! ‘peared well up in the list as based on! the earned run averages. New York, Dec. 7—(P—A ‘record }0f progress was marked up Thursday Hubbell allowed an average of only jin the efforts to check the deaths .66 earned runs per nine-inning game |C@used by football as a survey made while hurling 309 innings. the equiv- | by the Associated Press revealed only —Groves, U. S. D.: Olson, N./alent of more than 34 full contests. {26 deaths directly attributable to the G | Behind Hubbell, Hal Schumacher '&@me during the 1933 season. jwas third with a 2.15 average; Fred|_ Last year a similar survey showed Fitzsimmons was 11th at 2.89 and Le-/ 38 football deaths and in 1931 there roy (Bud) Parmelee was 15th at 3.18./ Were 50. | ‘The Chicago Cubs were the leading) Ten more deaths may be partly ithreats to the Giants’ supremacy as|Charged against the game but are jLon ‘Warncke, the 1932 leader, took {Considered doubtful. In these cases |second place with a 2.01 average: Guy | doctors said football injuries may Bush was fourth with 2.59 and Char-|have been contributing factors. {ley Root fifth with 2.60. High schools again showed the On Marked Decrease! I TEXAS A. AND, AND No ‘LEIGH HAVE NAMED: NEW 1934 MENTORS Others Quit at Dartmouth, Tex- as, Kentucky, Boston, S. D. State | HUNK ANDERSON IS ON SPOT | Changes at Indiana, U. C. L. A. | and Wisconsin Are Being | Forecast i | | New York, Dec. 7—(P!—Coaching {heads already have begun to drop in-| jto the basket, in keeping with the| | traditional college custom of demand- ing a reckoning at the close of a dis- astrous campaign or a periodic house- !cleaning on general principles. | The mortality rate for 1933 appar-| ntly will be as high as ever, even though the demands for high-pres- 'sure production are less conspicuous than they were when put under the ‘Carnegie foundation’s microscope a {few years ago. Upwards of a dozen} head coaches so far have become in-/ volved in shake-ups or prospective| |changes at larger colleges or univer- {sities. The list may be doubled be- |fore the head-hunting season closes. |. Head coaches at Texas A. & M. and Lehigh already have been replaced. jOthers have resigned at Dartmouth, | ‘Texas, Kentucky, Boston university |and South Dakota State, more or less junder fire. Speculation meanwhile} {has been rife over possible changes jat North Carolina, Auburn and Rice jin the south, Yale and New York uni- ‘versity in the east, Notre Dame, In- jdiana, Purdue, Missouri and Wiscon- | ‘sin in the middiewest. { |_ Chief interest centered nearly all jseason in the possible shakeup at |Notre Dame. Support for Hunk An-| derson, who succeeded Knute Rockne, | ;has been rallied since Notre Dame's} lexciting last-game victory over the} | Army, but the feeling persists that a |change is likely. The name of Noble: \Kizer, of Purdue, has been most of- | iten linked with the job despite denials. ;. Dartmouth—Jackson Cannell re- {Signed after outbreak of under-grad- | | uate criticism, although contract has) pone more year to run. No action on} possible successor. i Indiana—E. C. (Billy) Hayes may! take over athletic directorship and} seek own successor as head football! South Dakota State—T. C. Kasper, ' CONSIDER FOUR POSSIBILITIES FOR BIG TEN’ Notre. Dame, Nebraska, Michi- gan State and Marquette Are Mentioned Chicago, Dec. 7—U)—The door may | he opened for either Notre Dame, Ne- | braska, Michigan State or Marquette to join the Western Athletic Confer- ence, better known as the Big Ten, | nefore another football season rolls ; around, if Proposed plans to merge the Uni-! versity of Chicago and Northwestern | University, a move that would auto- | matically reduce the conference's snembership to nine and leave a spot open, were reported 60 rapidly Thursday by its proponents that the consolidation may be effect- ed by the time the 1934 fall term! opens. ' Under the merger plan, Northwest- ern would strictly an under- graduate school, and Chicago would revert to a post-graduate university. Graduates aren't allowed to compete in college football in the Big Ten so the football players would all go to! Northwestern, Of the four probable candidgtes for snembership in the Big Ten, Michigan State was regarded as the most prob- able choice of the conference leaders. Nebraska was considered too far re- moved from conference territory as/ well as belonging to the Big Six, an enterprising group; the old feud be- tween Fielding H. Yost of Michigan ‘nd the late Knute K. Rockne prob- ably would block Notre Dame's re- quest for admission, whereas Mar- quette’s football team last season was far below Big Ten standard. Americans, Senators Said in Difficulties ‘New York, Dec. 7.—(P}—Reports of Serious difficulties facing the New York Americans and perhaps the Ot- tawa Senators, the two low ranking clubs of the Canadian division of the National Hockey League, overshadow- ed such lesser affairs as a trio of comparatively unimportant games Thursday. A report said that the Americans and the Senators would be into one team playing at New York, and that Frank Patrick, now manag- ing director of the league, probably would take charge. Denials followed, with Marty} i ‘his legal problems, including a peti- ‘ion in bankruptcy and a breach of | Maule G |McDonald_G ‘The situation surrounding Baer is Eastgate F ... quite different, though he too is im- /D. Fredericks F . mersed in civil law actions that out-!Ross G .. iresigned as head coach and athletic! gchenker, secretary of the Amerks {director: succeeded in latter position|and Frank Ahearn, president of the| by R. H. Threlfall, formerly of Pur-/ Senators, agreeing that no such move | (due. : | was contemplated. University of California at Los An-' | eles—Rumors that Bill Spaulding, e iinay be replaced, ro fer deniea, (Edwards Knocked Out | Wisconsin—Dr. C. W. Spears ap- |parently slated to retain job despite By Frank Battaglia ‘earlier reports of dissatisfaction. | Reno Ney.,. thes 9 eae i iBattaglia, 163, Canadian middie- | MAY NOT CHANGE RULE weight champion, knocked out Billy | New York, Dec. 17—i.P)—Although | Edwards, 162, Louisville, Ky., in the; ithe revised amateur code adopted by! second round of their 10-round match SCHOOLS AS rth Dakota Bison Cagers Wallop Dickinson Savages 46-22 in Opener | Noecker, Marquardt and Ber. nard Score Heavily; Ralph Eastgate Classy Carnera Vs. Baer Looms Bright as Titleholder Sails Italian Already Has Signed; Californian Will Visit Gotham Soon New York, Dec. 7.—(?}—With Primo Carnera, heavyweight champion, ar- viving next week from Italy, and Max Baer, his outstanding challanger, due im New York from Callfornia early next month, the possibility of their peing matched for a title bout next | June loomed bright Thursday. i Carnera, who disposed of the chal- | lenge of Paulino Uzcudun in Rome; tefore his Fascist’ public a few weeks | ago, already has signed with Madison / square Garden for a title defense any | time the bout can be made. The Gar- den had no advance knowledge of his sudden departure on an Italian liner! | Wednesday. His business here is be-|Larimer F ...... . Ueved to have something to do with | promise judgment. number even Carnera’s difficulties. They involve breach of promise and ; rival managerial claims, but do not | touch upon bankruptcy. holding the role of outstanding chai- ienger, Baer's motion picture activ | Hes and his alliance with Jack Demp- vey, rather than the Garden, have so far halted efforts -to sign him for a title match. | Baer, when he comes here in Jan- uary, is expected to appear for a month in a night club show, but re-/ cent advices are he also will be re-| ceptive to a Garden offer to fight Carnera in June. : Another stumbling block however | is the Garden's insistence that Baer must also sign to defend the title for the Garden if he wins it from Car- nera, thus precluding any chance of | Dempsey cornering the heavyweight | championship market the Garden has | held since Tex Rickard captured it; with Dempsey himself. 1 Driscoll Has Two Games This Wee! ‘Will Meet Dawson Friday Night and Bismarck Imps Satur- day Night Driscoll, N. D., Dec. 7. — Already, having played three games so far this season against Tappen, Sterling and Although Boyland G . Dickinson, N. D., Dec. 7—(}—The ‘North Dakota Agricultural college (basketball team, opening a three-game invasion, defeated the Dickinson state ; teachers college Savages here Wed- |mesday night, 46 to 20. | ‘The Bison had a 24-15 advantage ‘at the half. ‘ larson Noecker at center, ® sopho- |more, led ‘the Bison attack, scoring jfive field goals, although Bud Mar- ‘quardt, veteran Bison forward, ac- counted for one more point with the | same.number of field goals and a frec jthrow. Arnold Bernard, sophomore ‘forward, rang up three field goals. } Ralph Eastgate, Savage forwarc. | Was the outstanding performer for his |team, ringing up two field goals and | three free throws. | The Bison continue their journe: with a game against the Jamestown: college Jimmies, defending state in- tercollegiate champions, Thursday night, and wind up the invasion a+ Valley City Friday night against the fast-traveling Vikings of the Valle: City state teachers colleges Summary: Dickinson (20) FG FT Pr 2) W. Fredericks, F. ss C .. Larson G .... Odegaard F . Scully F .. Marquardt F Olson F ... Anderson C . Reiners G . Stinson G Bernard F Ma: Mickelson Bettschen G . Totals leGuscenenot at cacesccut wea eiessesestuundel-aceccsucens rS g earned +33-25 verdict from Robinson. but the Driscoll girls were swamped bv Robinson’s feminine sharp-shoot- ers. 12 to 28. Dorothy Neustel led the Robinson girls’ attack while Janet McCann was outstanding for the home team. In the boys’ game, Seeman and Jor- dan were outstanding for Driscoll anc Shirley and Hagseth played well for ' Robinson. | The remainder | Schedule: ; ‘Dec. 15—Wing (Boys) there. Dec, 19—Stecle (Girls and Boys there. Jan. 12—Bismarck Indian Girls and Tappen Boys here. Jan 23—Steele (Girls and Boys) 1 here. | Jan. Sate aene (Girls and Boys of the Drisco!! here. | Feb. 3—Dawson (Girls and Boys) FO PE A AEE i SOR lc i ae ate F Reee Members of the Forty and Eight al- | Were drawn up and Robert Van Horfe “ ready have launched their ticket sales Of Morningside chosen president of} In the percentages of games won |greatest number of fatalities, 16, and) the ruling body of British gold, thejhere Wednesday night. campaign, prices being low and in-|the conference. Other officers elected | and lost, Hubbell, with 23 victories to|"sandlot” games were next with 13|Royal and Ancient Gold Club of St.» George Ecks, 175, former Minnesota Robinson, the Driscoll high school | there, | Feb 16—Sterling (Girls and ys) tended to ca! incidental ex- Were: M. M. McKusick, South Da-/12 defeats for a .657 mark, was third. |deaths. Not one college varsity play-| Andrews, is even stricter than the / football player, knocked out Kayo Mc- eee 1s Boy boys basketball team will engage in| tWo contests this week-end. Hl LHRH sh nae penses of th € Members of the mittee are K. W. Si Martin and E. M. Spare in man Davis and George Hektn les F. Assisting | he class are Jimmy M'Larnin Plans) Trip Through Europe: titleholder, a European or two” next lush welter- | 1 Thil. middleweight offer the opposition, eave for Eur- m his return to he said, he expected | t ‘© or three bouts in defense of his title before retiring from active ring werfare. | OUT OUR WAY iN kota university, vice president; H. C. tary. McKusick, Severin and G. A. Talbot of North Dakota university were named on the eligibility com- mittee. Schedules for 1934: North Dakota University 6—U. S. D. at Vermili 12—Morningside at Grand Forks. Oct. . 20—S. D. S. at Grand Forks. . 27—N. D. 8. at Fargo. North Dakota State 6—St. Thomas at Farzo. . 12—U, S. D. at Fargo. . 21—U. N. D. at Fargo. y. 10-8. D. S. at Brookings. South Dakota State 6—Morningside at Sioux City. . 13—Wisconsin at Madison 20—U. N. D. et Grand Forks t. 27—U. S. D. at Brookings vy. 10—N. D. S. at Brookings. South Dakota University Oct. 6—U.N. D. at Vermilion Oct. 13—N. D. 8. at Fargo. SEWED UPA HOLE IN YOUR PANTS, HAH 2 WELL , LEMME TELL YOU SUMPIN— ‘AT'S TH' MOST AWFUL PIECE OF _TAILORIN’ TVE EVER jLvle Tinning of Chicago led with a er died as the result of football | one now in effect in America, there |Pharland, 173, Stockton, Cal., in the Severin, South Dakota State, secre- 684 average from 13 victories and six ,injuries and only two college fresh-|is little possibility that the United second round of a six-round prelimin- ‘defeats and Ben Cantwell of Boston |men are listed as having died of {was second with 20 games won and 10|Juries that could be traced to supe Host for .667. ;Vised games or practice. ; Jerome (Dizzy) Dean of St. Louis States Gold association will make any/ary. It was Ecks’ fifth successive changes in its present rulings when knockout victory since coming to the it meets here in January. j Pacific Coast region. shared the season's individual honors! ‘with the New York southpaw. He set | a new “modern” record for strikeouts | | na single game by whiffing 17 Chi | jcago batsmen on July 30. NOTRE DAME TO ELECT South Bend, Ind. Dec. 7.—%)— ‘Notre Dame's surprising football cam- paign of 1933 is over but the name> i : “5 of the team’s captain won't be known! Oct. 27—S. D. S. at Brookings. | Noy. 3—Morningside at Vermilion. Mornit j Oct. 6-5. D. S. at Sioux City i Oct. 13—U. N. D. at Grand Forks. {| Oct. 20—N. D. S. at Sioux City. Nov. 3—U. 8. D. at Vermilion. Nov, 17—Iowa State Teachers at Sioux City. By Williams | YEH, BUT ONE ER TWO MORE AWFUL TAILORIN'S LIKE THAT, AN! THEY'LL FIT Me! You BE refreshing bottle of Hamm’s Pre- ferred Stock, the fully aged beer, as you’ renew acquaintance with the famous beers Try a cool, of pre-war days. After all, there is really only one test - of a beer . Hamm/’s Beer is mild, mellow and fully aged we eye eg, SCL Tee R - «do you like it? * ++. testing a full 4 percent Woon BREW: Friday night Driscoll will face Daw-! son here white Saturday night the| jocal boys will face the Bismarck Imps. at the Capital City. Last week-end Driscoll won a hard- Feb. 23—Wing (Boys) here. a Boys-Reserves) pending, aaa Indian Girls pending, i a ERS OF FINE HAMM’S PREFERRED STOCK *x Wholesale Distributors: BISMARCK BAKING COMPANY, THE JUDGE by volume. It is a fact that Hamm’s Preferred Stock has gained a preferred ranking since April, 1933, in every city where it been introduced, eS oe Try a bottle of Hamm it with other beers. You be THEO. HAMM BREWING CO., ST, - Compare the judge. PAUL, MINN. QUALITY BEER SINCE 1965 1601 Main Avenue—Phone 912 —

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