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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, 9 ET a ent sae dodo tn HATE ne Ze wes 4 : e a te k r for? obal t : of Play Week-End ; IMPS RALLY TO NIP TUTTLE| Saints Will Play Devils Lake Here in Only Game This Determined to redeem themselves for their poor showing egainst Linton @ week earlier, Bismarck high school’s basketball players Saturday night ‘went on @ scoring rampage to swamp Dawson county high school of Glen- dive, Mont., 60 to 11 at the high school gymnasium here. ‘The Demons scored 28 field goals in the 32 minutes of play, with Billy Owens, Larry Schneider, Neil Croon- quist, Bud Kanz and Oliver Sorsdah! leading the parade. OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern s ZZ DP WHAT'RE WE GONNA D0 Bout A Y THEM CHRISTMAS TREES WE Z AINT_SOLD, ON THAT VACANT {7% LOTS -ATHERES ABOUT A 47 | HUNNERT AN’ FORTY OF EM. \ LAVIN” AROUND—~ AN’ IE TH OWNER OF TH LOT COMES ALONG AN SEES ‘EM, HELL GO UP IN A CURL OF. SMOKE? OH FAW, MARTY —WHY DID YOU REMIND ME ABOUT YZ THOSE DRATTED TREES © | EGAD—~I HAD COMPLETELY \ FORGOTTEN ABOUT THEM! fo ANYHOW, THEY BEAUTIFY THE LOT~ COVERING UP THE TIN /} CANS AND OTHER DEBRIS! ZY o y wito & j MRO-HOSE GATHER IN CHICAGO FOR ANNUAL PARLEY OF COACHES GROUP Passing From Any Point Behind Line of Scrimmage Is Suggestion MIGHT MOVE GOAL POSTS UP Elimination of Dead Ball Rule and End Zone Changes Suggested Chicago, Dec. 26.—()—Collegiate football coaches by the hundreds were in town Tuesday prepared to air their pet peeves, or to defend the game as it is now played, depending upon in- dividual viewpoints. It was the 13th annual meeting of |the American Football Coaches’ asso- jciation and all the arguments were saved until Tuesday afternoon after os University of Michigan team, gives his report on proposed changes. However, final action in such mat- iers is left with the national rules committee, but recommendations of the coaches usually are followed. Some of the proposed changes ‘ould move the goal posts up to the goal lines from 10 yards behind; would permit forward passing any- where behind the line of scrimmage instead of five yards or more back of the line as at present; would eliminate the “dead ball” rule; would make bad passes into the end zone on the first three downs incomplete instead of touchbacks, and would give teams the nmght to surrender the ball 25 yards upfield instead of attempting a punt in the face of a stiff wind. Teams Taper Off | for Pasadena Tilt Stanford Squad Will Have Not Rest Until After New Year's Day Pasadena, Calif., Dec. 26. There will be no rest for the Stanford University football squad until after their Rose Bowl game with Columbia University New Year's Day. Coach Claude Thornhill said Tuesday he will send the squad through two practice sessions daily right up to the day of Harry G. Kipke, coach of the victori- } Nodaks Have High-Sco ring Quint This Season CENTER North Dakota has a veteran squad led'| Witasek, the left forward is big, fast| holding their opponents to an avers by bre terran cents tues, and aggressive and can shoot accur-|age score of 15 points. The Nodaks pene ere inches tall, ‘Ted Mein. |2t€Y from any position on the court. | should be favorites to win the North hover, who was called the Empire | Mullen and Tait, the other forwards, | Central Conference championship this State Building of University football ee both veterans and are fair scorers. | year but will have their ability tested hy the Associated Press, is the tallest | Rooth, the other guard, is another six- | by strong opposition in their pre-con- player and stands six feet seven andj foot-two-inch player and is an effec- |ference schedule as they meet cne-half inches, He is fairly active |t-ve scorer from the court. The No- |teachers at Superior, Wis. Dec. 21; for so large a man and is a very hard |daks have played only four games to| Nebraska University at Grand Forl man to cover around the basket. He|date and have scored on the average | Dec. 29 and Creighton University at usually controls the tip at center.|of 45 points in each contest cos maa Neb., on Jan. 6, =t:|Frankie Klick of California Kayoes Kid Chocolate with Terrific Smash Flashy Cuban Bon Bi ing’ y jon Getting ere a heavy favorite to win both| Carolina title last month; Halbert J, the game. | “The boys haven't got their minds on the game,” complained Thornhill. “They've been grinding away at their classes and examinations and the only attention they've paid to the game is to read the cuff in the newspapers about Columbia being a pushover. |COLUMBIA PRACTICE |IN TWILIGHT PLANNED ; cson, Ariz., Dec. 26.—(#)—To avoid the blazing afternoon sun which beat down on the players in their first two workouts Coach Lou Little of the Col- umbia football squad ordered twilight Practice Tuesday. tional title in Cincinnati last eel ead record of 65 in winning the Along All Right Until ‘the qualifying round and the eet ese former Carolina champion’ Seventh bana: ; Pionship. As Thompson, Canadian star, The chief rivals of the national!/and D. N. Tallman, of Minneapolis, champion are Dick Wilson, Southern) member of the United States senior Pines, who tied Dunlap’s amateur) team. Philadelphia, Dec. 26—(AP)—Kid Chocolate’s synthetic title of world Junior lightweight champion was in new and apparently capable hands Tuesday—those of young Frankie Klick of San Francisco. The flashy Cuban “bon bon” was tound of a scheduled 15-round Christ- mas Day bout by a whistling right smash to the chin and all he got in exchange was the second knockout of “There are a lot of things we need to work on yet,” said Little as he pre- pared to send his Lions through what Probably will be their last strenuous session in preparation for the Rose Bowl game with Stanford New Year's Day. Friction between two pieces of Jeather, usually the insole and the outsole, usually is the cause of squeaking shoe: ‘There are 8,000 islands in the group known as the Philippines, and they are strung out over a distance as great as that between New York and Chicago. E Coach Roy D. McLeod used eight r men in the fray, with seven of them t 2 counting fild goals and substitutions < making no difference in the scoring t tempo, i The Demons started off in high | t gear and had @ 13-4 lead at the end ¢ of the first quarter. The margin t had swelled to 26-8 at the half and t: in the third quarter the Demons in- ti creased their total to 47, refusing to B grant the Montanans a single point a in the peried. In a preliminary game the Imps, g Bismarck seconds, cane from be- ’ * a hind to defeat Tuttle high school 20; wg! «is "Stuur inp ener ei W@W York Rangers’ Christmas Present of th a scoring with four field goals and a { gift toss Cameron and Beall each I 3 0 Vi t 0 M t | 4 t t el | ae ctory Over Montreal Sexte a The Imps were behind 3-6 at the SE meee = first quarter and 9-10 at the half but . Chi T bi N J La eM fr were out in front 14-11 as the final, Gain Two Points Needed to Go cago iribune Names Joe Laws iahesc SS oes caine isicatinneisbertal One Point Ahead of Bos- M Val bl Pla ° Bi T neve this weet. St Mary's High school ton Bruins | ost Valuable Flayer in big len i to : quint will matt Esa pause the | ey World War Memorial bu: Fri- See eae | ae ri: = day night. New York, Dec. 26.—(P)—’ it-| _ Chicago, Dec. 26—(P—Joe Laws, , | By winning the award, Laws x Summaries for Saturday night's eq almost until it was ile ae tite | University of Iowa football quar- | became the second Iowa player to h th games: New York Rangers finally got around! tetback last fall, who was made be so honored since the custom 0’ Bismarck (60) FG FT PF to handing Lester Patrick a neat| honorary fire chief of Iowa City, was begun in 1924, William Glas- A Owens, f . 6 1-2 Christmas present. had another honor to his credit gow of Iowa receiving it in 1928. 4 Croonquist, 5 1-3 2 A 3-0 shutout over the Montreal! Tuesday—the annual Big Ten | The voting was as follows: Laws Schneider, ¢ 6 1-1 © Maroons, their second victory in as, ee valuable player” award of a pee pect cae on 5 Engen, & - 0 0-0 1 many nights, gave the Rangers the} ‘he Chicago Tribune. fede le sto c Kanz, g - 4 0-0 2 Laws was announced as the win-| Purdue and Herman Everhardus de two points they needed to clamber up! Monday in 1 with { Michigan, 4 each. 0 So.sdahl, ¢ 40 11 a notch in the standings, a point! Mer Monday in a close race be SS rome Beylund, ¢ . +2 0-0 Francis (Pug) Lund of Minnesota. Michigan, with Benny Fried- pe ie ahead of the Bruins. The Blueshirts| Twenty-three sports writers, of. | man receiving it in 1926 and x Elotson, § + 1 0-0 © had whipped their Metropolitan riv- aed vik Hea ar — -— = als, the Americans, on Sunday night. ficials and coaches served as Harry Newman last year, is the Pe Totals ....secevee 2 47 10, ‘In the only other game of the night, _tudges. only other school winning it twice. q 50 eee ae [the Ottawa Senators, paced Earl | Christello from the cage to shove the ] ni L. Berg, f .. 2 13 Roche, outpointed the Detroit Red MINNEAP [| | |rubber into the citadel. sn herland, £ + 0 0-1 © Wings, 6-3, in a wide open battle and | Ted Breckheimer got the final 5 © 0-0 1 strengthened their hold on third place} ‘iter tally early in the last stanza, 4 ese Ost 1 in the Canadian section. Roche, the awarded over a protest by Duluth. para eb + 1 12 3 jeague's leading scorer, counted two He Fi m . : an 1 goals and assisted in another in a e t we : es game which the Senators really P: k F ¥ le Senge) g . 4 a © clinched in the second period when} i ar’ er avorite 4 acger, f .. wm they gained a two-goal edge. “Mi H i e Hab a ‘Scores by perlods: Detroit thus lost an excettent | Millers Take Lead Midway in In Junior Tourney | as: Bismarck ++ 13 26 47 © 60 chance to return to the American Second Period After i . we Glendive 4 8 8 — 11 section lead, remaining a point be- Se by Pa Referee: Strutz Z (Jamestown Col- hind the Chicago Blackhawks and on- Ragged Start | ; 3 fel lege); umpire—Ernest Benser (U. N./ly two points in front of the Rangers. Former Milwaukee Youngster } 01 DD) Tuesday night both _ pace-setters, N ¥ “8 —_— |Chicago and Toronto, Canadian sec-| Minneapolis, Dec. 267A deter-| Now a Student in New ke Imps (20) FG FT PF tion leader, will swing into action on! | a Clausnitzer, f ....4. 1 0-0 0 foreign fee, Chicago meeting the ™uned offensive drive in the last half York School \. ig Cameron, f 2 1-1 1/Americans at New York while Toron- of the second period brought the Min- | peels a fai Yeasley, ¢ + 4 1-4 0'to clashes with Boston for the first neapolis hockey team two goals and! New york, Dec. 26.—()—The first a 28, Beall, g «.. + 2 O-L 1 time since the recent battle in which carried it a 3-0 win over the Duluth fixture of a busy indoor tennis season Rai : Hedstrom, § ss... 0 0-0 o re ayn Leaf star, was critically’ Hormets in a central league game here Tuesday found Frankie! Earbes a heavy b sey ee i favorite to romp nu e ' 1 Totals scores 9 26 2, ee, in the nations! funigr snamploaaip. . To Tuttle (15) | Fi h La t Ni ht | Ragged hockey was offered the hol-| The former Milwaukee youngster, F a4 Lyback, £ 2 ey | | Fights Last Nig! [ay Nig lgrite Hed oi Pipi now @ student at Lawrenceville, N. Hursh, f . Sarto jand the of the le ses- = Hutchinson, ¢ 1 te 4 (By The Associated Press) |sion, but at that stage the Millers oo)" pe tent for the title He has | ae Guldeman, g + 1 0-0 0| | Philadelphia—Frankle Killick, |started clicking and banged in tWo whipped some of the game's top-rank- Miller, ¢ + 3 O-1 1; 129, stopped Kid Chocolate, 130, scores within @ period of five minutes ing stars and has been recommended u Leno, f + 0 0-0 3} Cuba, (7); Lou Amber, 145, New {to take a commanding lead. for the No. 8 position in the national 0 00 | York, outpointed Young Firpo, The Millers first goal followed when ranking list by the United States Lawn Gr — --— —| 140 Pennsgrove, N. Y.; Johnny {four Duluth players were bottled uP Tennis association's ranking commit. . 7 18 2| Craven, 135, Conshocken, Pa., jinside the Minneapolis blue line. Mc- tee, knocked out Georgie Riley, 136, (Glone, flanked by Oddson and Breck-| Parker was slated for two matches 9 14 20] New York, (4); Mit Jacobs, 126, heimer, took the puck down the ice, Tuesday, the first taklng him against BI 10 11 18| Philadelphia, outpointed Tony (and after feinting a single defense Stephen H. Ogilvy of Northwood Ar Schneider (N.D.A.C.)| Valentin, 129, Philadelphia; ‘man, passed to Oddson who easily school, New Rochelle, and the second, REOTESESEEE ne ERRARGEE, _[ sessazgagpey: nti. New Year's Most Quints Are Having Vacation Court Activity Will Be Resumed on Large Scale Following Charley Badami, 132, New York, (beat goalie Christello. shaded Dick Welsh, 129, Philadel- { Five minutes later, with Bergl phia. iserving a penalty, the Millers again Sarasota, Fla.—Jackie Cruz. 137, ‘tallied. Shea got a break, passed to El Paso, Tex., outpointed Harry (Johnson, who returned the puck to Adams High School, W: Kersey, 140, Jacksonville, (10). ithe big defenseman and he drew,C. OUT OUR WAY th? su Grace, St. Paul's School, Concord, N. Dis AM DE FUNNIEST BUSINESS AH EBER IS TRY TER LEARN! YO' CAINT STAY ON, TILL YO LEARN IT, AN’ ¥ CAIN'T LEARN IT, TILL YO KIN STAY ON. OWOO ~ IckKf You'LL NEVER LEARN TO RIDE A BUCKIN’: HOSS — TH' FU ST RAI Holt’ On THO ROEN. | Tuesday, the first taking him against ‘or of a match between D. R. H, and Nathan Ritzberg, of James D. By Williams | _INSWERS | (a) XX Ebenezer Scrooge is a cha acter in Charles Dicke: CHRISTMAS CAROL. T next presidential term begins JAN. 20, 1937. ALL PORTS ON THE GREAT LAKES be- come icebound at times in wine ter. No U. 8. seaports become ficebound. s ‘Wholesale Centers. . MINNEAPOLIS A strictly fireproof, modem Hotel within a short walk of Shopping, Amusement, Financial and friendly hospitality, the reasonable room rates and the moderately priced Restaurants. W. & CLARK, MANAGER ; hie career, although the latest was of the technical variety. ee few aaa ago, ee scabsee Club Breakfasts yagi gece a 25c and 35c Monday's hostilities did not mate- nally sien Chocolates official status — ore realm, feather luban, ai nds, entered a ss 5 ihe tine with a se pen beat Chef’s Special Evening Dinner vantage. Flashing his usual style, 50c stood off Klick’s first-round rush, the lead in the second and al- slowing a trifle in the third and fourth stanzas, he was going strong from then on until Klick landed that POWERS COFFEE SHOP THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Readers can terrific right near site me always get their paper at the News Stand in the POWERS HOTEL, FARGO. Dunlap Is Seeking His Eighth Victory of 44 in Annual Mid-Win- ter Tourney bereft of the title in the seventh Pinehurst, N. C, Dec. 26—(P}— Forty-four golfers Tuesday were Delsod ier ie rate in the Sist an- nual mid-win ampionship with George T. Dunlap, Jr., national amateur champion, seeking his eighth mid-winter crown, Dunlap is making his first com- {petitive start since winning the na- AMID THE COLORFUL GAYETY OF MINNEAPOLIS Come to the Curtis Hote! ... be part of the happy Holiday throng in the hospitable warmth of this great hotel... All the comforts of home with the added pleasure of béing on the scene, the crowded streets... the brilliant myriads of glittering, varie colored lights ... the theatres with special Holiday programs ... all the happy activity of the early ‘Winter Season, And... at the Curtis... Humming lobbies, glowing dining rooms. Music, dancing, delicious foods, delightful querters. Give others care for your wants and sit back and enjoy youteslf to the lest full measure of contentment, . » You'll appreciate the NO INCREASE IN RATES CURTIS HOTEL MINNEAP Bismarck High Cagers Swamp Glendive 60-11 Here Saturday Night — REDEEM SELVES FRCOLLEGIATE GRID MENTORS CONSIDER PROPOSED CHANGES POOR SHOWING MADE| AGAINST UNTON FIVE Capital City Youths Count 28, Field Goals in 32 Minutes STR a Se ee iii dha ui —