The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 3, 1935, Page 8

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‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1935 - Meehan Says Demand Is Growing to Move ve Goal Posts Up | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ; RULES GROUP WILL CONSIDER CHANGING | "BACK IN FEBRUARY Field Goal and Drop Kicking Are Lost Arts in Col- 13 legiate Game INJURY DANGER IS SMALL: Pro Game More ‘Spectacular Because of Booting, Says Manhattan Coach New York, Dec. 3.—(#)—Growing SORRY TO AWAKEN You, ROSCOE |~ HAS AGREED To PAY $500, IF YOU WILL WRESTLE THE PILE DRIVER SOME NIGHT THIS WEEK~ DO YOU THINK YOU CAN GO THRU WITH \T ON SUCH SHORT NOTICE ‘2 SON'S MANAGER LIKE AN ANVIL I. AN’ FoR #500, 1D GET UP_OFF AN OPERATING TABLE AN RASSLE A GREASED CROCODILE! THIS WILL BE OLSONS LAST POSE AS A RASSLER J-~ TM GONNA LEAVE THAI GUY SO TWISTED THEYLL HAVE TO CALL IN,A TREE SURGEON! Sentiment for restoring goal posts to the goal line may develop into an or- ganized demand by football coaches} at the rules committee meeting in February, Chick Meehan, Manhattan mentor, said Tuesday. “With a few exceptions the art ot field goal kicking and drop-kicking has been lost ever since the goal posts were moved back to the rear bound- ary of the end zone,” said Meehan. “Professional football leaders kept! the posts on the goal line—where they belong—with the result that the ee | play a more spectacular game. “The colleges moved the uprights back so as to remove the danger of players colliding with them head-on or suffering other forms of injury. I don't think there has been a goal post casualty—major or minor—in pro foot- ball.” Declaring that the pro game ts growing in such proportions that it may surpass the intercollegiate sport in public interest, Meehan also sug gested colleges adopt another detail of commercial football When a play is carried over a side- line the ball, in pfo football, is brought in 15 yards,” he said. “In college foot- ball it's brought in only 10 yards. That extra five yards is virtually tanta mount to bringing the ball into the center of the field “T am in a position to know that many coaches throughout the country are going to propose legislation for these two changes.” | Sports Round. Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, Dec Bernie Bierman spent a day in town, but got away before reporters could ask him if U. C. L. A. and Southern Cal- ifornia are trying to lure him away from Minnesota Al McCoy isn't throwing any alibis, but it's the truth he worked in the gym two hours ou} the day of his fight with Jock Mc- Avoy to lose two pounds and protect a $1,000 weight forfeit. . Cheer up, Spearfish . . . There'll be another Rose Bow! game in 1937... Pop Warn- er will try to make a football player next season out of Eulace Peacock, Negro track star. Yep, it hits ’em hard... Dr. Isay Balinkin of Cincinnati is a physicist given to obtuse studies of wave motions and such. . . Last season the baseball bug hit him... . Now he has figured out a graph that pictures club stand ings at any time, comparative Performances and a team’s chanc es of overtaking the leaders, . . - In other words, everything except what the next pitch is going to be, The reason Freddie Miller isn't do-| ing any business around new York ts bacause he demands guarantee to defend his N. B. A. featherweight title here . Says he can get the dough in France. gossip columns say Paulino Uzeudun is wanting to be married before Joe Louis completely ruins his face. Frank Sommers, who used to block for Jim Thorpe at Carlisle, now caddies at a Green Bay, Wis., golf club, Dizziest show on earth is the six- day bike race... . You drop in for half an hour and darned if you don’t stay all night... . Jimmy Johnston ts a regular... Al Le- tourner and his partner, Gerard Debaets, hardly speak off the track but they're the crack riding team of the lost... . After inhal- ing his fifth bottle of beer aboard the New Haven special, Mike Mesko broke down and told the Yale entertainment committee it was some other guy who charged out of the Princeton stands and lined up with Dart- mouth. Fight men say Jock McAvoy is the best fighter John Bull has sent across since the days of Ted (Kid) Lewis, Owen Moran and Jem Driscoll... . He'll get a bout with John Henry Lewis if he can knock off another trial horse first... . Tony Canzoneri is vacationing until January 1. C. A. West Attaches Scranton, Pa. Dec. 3.—(P)}—-The Davis-Elkins college football team of Elkins, W. Va., will not get its share of the gate receipts of the Thanksgiv- St. Thomas col- ing day game wit! a flat $10,000! | . The} Davis-Elkins Receipts ] | # TE20LL OvER. “cory ROSCOE ! 5 1995 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. > UNCERTAINTY PREDOMINATES | PREP GRID OUTLOOK FOR 36 =" “ gan, crushing blow next fall when Gaity | Eight Semester Rule Increases four of 19 letter winners report. ° | Beulah will build around five let- Worries of State High termen while Valley City lost nine School Coaches jYeterans and Bowbells has but half lof its 1935 club. Graduation takes| ,16 of Jamestown's 21 lettermen and ;Williston’s team disintegrates—Right | Tackle Fred Sheidigger will be the lone monogram man in uniform next fall. Uncertainty prevails in Park River,! where things “don’t Icok so good” be- cause of the loss of key men, but) {Coach L. Fahlgren says he'll know! ibetter after spring training. Mott will retain nine lettermen, Max 10, Stanley nine, Kenmare Mohall eight, and Parshall three. Fargo expects to have (By the Associated Press) Unceriainty was a predominating note in the comments of high school football coaches who examined the graduation lists io determine the 1936 outlook in North Dakota. The new regulation limiting prep school athletes to competition during jeight semesters of school also became involved in the problem, many men- tors definitely losing players and oth- lers reporting they were “not certain” jhow many men would continue play until 4 further check is made. Prominent among sauads which no indication of from next rear {prospects were available was the un tie against Rapid City, S. D., after j winning nine straight state games. Another club unbeaten on the grid- iron will take a cevere lacing by grad-} uation, eleven lettermen falling in the | diploma barrage at Lidgerwood. Coach L, G. May says prospective new ma-! terial is “unpromising.” | Prospecis for other updefeated ag- teregations were: Leeds, “very slim"; ‘Bowman, good; Wahpeton, fair; Man- idan, Kenmare, Beulah, Washburn and | | Aneta. uncertain | Leeds will have a strong defensive ; leleven, next year. but prospects are} |*slim” with only three lettermen back, | {Coach Leland Vinz reported. Tev monogram men graduate and two oth- ‘ers will be ineligible. | Bewman Coach Hopeful | Coach D. C, Evans who established | ja new system at Bowman this year. jexpects his seven returning lettermen |to be well coached in the play for next fall while reserves coming up {will have weight and experience to fill vacancies. He will have another ‘strong line and a faster team. A host of fair newcomers will aug-| ment six returning lettermen to give ‘Wahpeton fair prospects. Fourte2n {monogram men graduated. New Rockford anticjpates a “more | potent team than it has had the last few years.” Reserve strength will de- velop into a powerful team next fall after one year of play this season, said) Mentor O. W. Berg. Drayton will have another tough ‘class B team next year with several strong reserves to fill four vacant po- ;sitions. There are nine lettermen re- (© 1035, B. J. Reynolds Tob. Co, | turning. | Other prospective strong clubs are |Garrison, Fairmount, Elgin, Hazen, | - 'Sherwood, Crosby, Hillsboro, and Rugby. Fairmount will have 11 veterans} back while Elgin, which this year ex- perienced its worst season in a! decade, looks to better things next) | fall with nine lettermen back, ‘ Emil Goetz is the only senior regu- | lar at Hazen and the coach described prospects as “exceptionally good, con- | sidering progress made the last of this season.” Sherwood Strong Only four of Sherwood’s 13 letter-| men graduate. B, M. Boyd of Crosby must replace only five regulars. Fast- er and better offensively, Crosby's 1935 eleven will be much stronger and should pack a scoring punch ieoking | this fall, he declared. Hillsboro, which started this sea-| son with a record-breaking number of candidates, will have a great num- ber of reserves coming up to strengthen the nine-veteran skeleton expected to report next fall. Fairly strong reserve material will | be the margin making Rugby, re- team in years. Captain-Elec! a guard, will head a group of! seven lettermen continuing gridiron bares Rvarentinans cebe arfare while eight seniors will be! Wétterback. and Steve buque, Miller, 148';, Milwaukee, (8f. Each (By the Associated Press) New Yerk—Eric Seelig, 16314, hs Walk- Chicago — Mil’ Aron, 144, Du- Ycwa, cptpointed | Billy Pittsfield, Mass. — Day Shade, 168, Pittsficld. Mass., outpoinied Eddie Saxon, 162, Jersey City, N. J, (10). Just a moment——read this sensational No-Risk Offer that has taken the whole state by storm! If you area pipe smoker who would enjoy a better smoke, this remarkable no-risk offer is right down your alley! Get a tin of Prince Albert, Smoke 20 pipefuls of P.A. If you don’t say you’ve had the best smokin’ ever, return the tin with the rest of the tobacco in it, and we will refund your full purchase price, plus postage. You Be the Judge ‘The risk is all on us. Prince Albert has to satisfy you. And we believe it will. For we use only choice, ripe, mild tobacco. Then it is “crimp cut” for slow burning and cool smoking. All “bite” is removed to make it absolutely | Ed Mor- lege until the court decides to whom | taining the money belongs, St. Thomas of- ficials said Tuesday. Rebuilding operations will be the task of coaches at Grafton, Mandan, A writ of attachment was served on Doris take Grand, Pous, Cakete, them before the game. The writ was issued at the instance of the Univers- ity of North Dakota because of an al- Jegéd breach of contract by the Davis- | derlin. lars, a strong outfit. Parshall, Beulah, Valley City, bells, Jamestown, Williston, and En- only four of this year's regu- Bow- Eikins team last year. uae d Cage Star Is Lost fe for Season diving, N. t B. Dee, 3. — Rohert | well, stellar performer on the team, was taken to Enderlin loses its entire line except the center. Graduation takes four backs, leaving but one ball carrier for Grafton where nine of 14 mono- gramers leave. Some me Mandan’s key men are among the 10 lettermen graduating. As a@ result the outlook is uncertain despite return of 11 men, Coach L. C. McMahan “Poor” is the eutlook for Devils Lake, Doug Smith reporting 10 let- termen on his arg aay Ist. Grand Forks Loses 15 Rebuilt only this spring, the Grand Forks machine will receive another legionnaire of the French |t Foreign Legion in North Africa is}s allowed, and even expected to get! Train, and, drunk once every fortnight, because quarterback; White, Princeton, half-| City League, was high scorer for three lliving in the lonely desert develops a halfback; eee with a tally of 607 as seven five, and Lockbeam and Knoll of the lightest | dangerously low mental state. certain that Prince Albert is mild and delicate in taste. There’s no skimping on quantity, either. We pack enough tobacco for 50 ordinary pipefuls in the big 2-ounce economy tin. So it’s little wonder that men are flocking to Prince’ Albert, “The National Joy Smoke,” that is backed up by such a fair and square offer as we have made. Having read the offer, act now. For your own aake, @ you should know what the difference is! PRINGE ALBEf -By Ahern |Colts’ Franchise TM ALWAYS IN SHAPE DOC, 4 Bowling Scores Klein’s Toggery and Gamble-Rob- inson trundlers won two out of three igames from the Capitol Cafe and Co- Change ge Uncertain: Transfer Must Be Approved by! Organization, President White Rules i | | { Try { | mau Claire, Wis, Dec. 3—(@7)—A {Northern League policy interpreta-! tion by President Herman White; {Tuesday left proposed franchise | ively. noi Lane cutee sai jtransfers to the final approval of the j Monday night. oe eae before they can be ef-' py) Fox paced the Klein’s five ifecte iw | Transfer of the Grand Forks ett; noes le ra arrgt er I) operated by Johnny Anderson, t0/ came fur top single game honors. The |Jamestown, White said, could not{consistent bowling of Steve Walery, itake place without League sanction.!non Huss and Louis Klein, with |White revealed that differences over'scores of 551, 550 and 849, was the players sold on conditional contract |outstanding feature on the Capital tare holding .up purchase of the/ Cafe five. Brainerd club by Wausau, Wis. in-| Beaten by one pin in the first game, terests. ithe Gamble-Robinson team rallied to Wausau, he said, objects to paying | win the second and then eked out a Hetherington And Gramling Win Decisions fight card here Monday night. a wide margin and had Jimmie Ker- knockout on several occasions in the eight-round headliner. Gramling outpointed Cowboy Ray of Glendive in the six-round semi event, Gramling headed for Fargo where tonight he meets Wen Lambert of Duluth in a headline bout of the Elks card while Hetherington took a plane for Sioux City, Iowa, where he will join Dick Demaray, another stable- mate, on a benefit card Wednesday Glendive, Mont., Dee. 3.—(#)—Ernie Hetherington and Rusty Gramling, both of Bismarck, won clear cut de- cisions over their opponents in the main and semi-windup events of a Hetherington took every round by win of Miles City on the verge of a ICCC, Piggly- Viegly Cage Quints W Commercial College Hands Paramount Theatre Firs> Defeat of Season Capital Commercial college cagers handed the Paramount Theatre team its first defeat of the City League sea- son, 39 to 32, Monday night while the Piggly-Wiggly quint was turning back the Regulatory Department, 26 to 18 Tryalson rang up five field goals and a brace of gift shots to pace the Commercial college attack while Spriggs led the Theatre aggregation with eight baskets from the floor. Seven converted free throws provided the winners’ margin. Heiser and Morlan with nine and eight points, respectively, kept the Piggly-Wiggly out in front from the Brainerd for three men sold on that contract basis while Brainerd asks the price agreed on for the players} be a part of the club price. Monday Anderson said that lack of support and cooperation was th: factor in moving his Grand one-pin margin in the third. Sedevic; set the pace with a 408 while Roeh- tick was best for Coman’s with 537. The scores: i Klein's Toggery | 191-190-158— 539 109-216-224— 549 k3 Northern League franchise to Jamestown, which had __ previously | een announced by A. J. Breithach of} i Jamestown, | the day the Grand Forks: | Herald aid it had learned no vote! ‘was taken on the proposed transfer. | Princeton Gets Three | Berths on All-Eastern| New York, Dec. \ 3.—(?)}—Princeton | won three places and Army two on the first team of the Associated Press} ll-Eastern football selections. ! John Weller, guard; Ken Sandbach, | | ter, were chosen from the powerful | Tiger team that mowed down all op-j ition, Bill Shuler, Army captain! ,and end, and the slend Cadet halfback ipery Monk Mcyer, jals re picked. es First Team — Shuler, Army, end; | 'Wasicek, Cols t Weller, | ; Princeton, gual Cul . Prince- | |ton, center; Flanagan, Holy Cross, jguard; Michaels, Villanova, tackle; | Wivika, Ruigers, end: Sandbach, Princeton, quarterback; Mi . Army, fhack; Schmidt, | hat fhack; | Albanese, Syracuse, | Second Team—Lea, Pr! Tol, Princeton, tarkio: Pranco, Ford- | guard; Roberishaw, Navy, cen- McCrary, Darimouth, guard; | lahat, West Virginia, tackle; | Yale, end; Murray, Penn,} back; Larue, Pittsburgh, Whitehead, Yale, fullbac | Beatie soso ee 165-131-129— 425 178-134-225— 537 172-172-138— 482 see Ble Sle 51— 153 Harnish Handicap 866-894-925—2685 Capitol Cafe Davis «+ 165-154-167— 486 Klein 173-166-210— 549; Waler 167-184-200— 551) Bro’ 192-143-143— 478! ‘Huss 200-188-162— 550 Totals.... Coman’s Tourist Court +. 149-159-123— 431 166-167-204— 537 163-105-165— 435} Nelson . Roehrick Weisenburger + 159-135-117— 411 +» 102-126-125— 353 ‘sport loses its independent and demo- {cratic character and becomes a po- start. Thoreson and Carr were best performers for the Regulatory depart- ment. The scores: Reg. Dept. (18) Thoreson Thiegs Welch Fisher Kolus night. Opposition to Olympic Entry Gains Strength New York, Dec, 3.—(#)—Forces op- posing American participation in the 1936 Olympic games if they are held in Germany gained new allies Tues- day with 14 college coaches and » United States senator voicing oppo- sition. In a statement addressed to the Amateur Athletic Union and the American Olympic committee, the coaches said: . “True sportsmanship becomes im-! possible and sport is prostituted when a 4 oot eune Totals 3. Cummins litical institution devoted to political; Par. Theatre (32) ends rather than the interests of|Flarg sport.” Allen Senator Wagner (Dem.-N. Y.) a na-/Winslow . tive of Germany, made public in| Asselstine Washington a telegram to the com-|Spriggs mittee on fair play in sports. i “Americans should not participate in the Olympic games,” he said. Cc. C. C. 139) sloosootielessoet es hocencou S Lime et wl erm Sliconowe sb eoetbeel curtis Totals ...........6.. | Totals...... . Tale §92-734—2167 | i !Dettman 2-106— 404 | Sedevic 140— 408 * Dummy . .140-140-140— 420 Erickson . 113-113-137-— 363 | Bates .....0 151-116-136— 403 Handicap .. 80- 76— 211 Totals........ T40-734-T35—2209 |F. HUMMEL IS HIGH 7S Q Bl oem The statement also carried thei gwenson names of Nathan Putchat, student/Framm / wrestling coach at the University ofjpajley ..... North Dakota; Charles H. Agnew, ath-|Trgaison .. letic director at Whitewater, Wis..)jswindling . state teachers college, and Carl H. Doehling, athletic director at Ripon college. stossacss salourno Totals ..... BEAR PLAYERS SOLD Eau Claire, Wis., Dec, 3.—(#)—Her- man White, club and ledgue president, New Rockford and Mandan rolled here Sunday. SCORER AT MANDAN Frank Hummel, a bowler in the{ [lee ewling teams from Minot, Bismarck, | In three-game matches Minot won!announced sale of Frank Rendler, one and lost one from Mandan teams,}Eau Claire outfielder, to Portsmouth. Bismarck defeated another Mandan | Ohio, of the Middle Atlantic league and Danny Collins, first baseman, to j Albany of the International league. Mandan beat the New Rockford club. | purchase price, OUR OFFER TO PIPE SMOKERS: Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert, If you don’t find it the mellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, re- turn the tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any time within a month from. this date, and we will refund full plus postage. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company <<< MONEY-BACK PLAN APPLAUDED BY SMOKERS OF BISMARCK fragrant tobacco in every — 2-ounce tin of Prince Albert _ IF YOU ROLL YOUR OWN: Roll yourself 30 swell cigarettes from Prince Albert, If not completely pleased, return the tin with the rest of the tobacco in it, as stated above, and we will make good. Winston-Salem, North Carolina JESSE BUSH ~rolling 0 P.A, cigarette in 16 seconds. What's your rolling time? THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE “Let me tell you something about ‘makin’s’ cigarettes” SAYS JESSE BUSH “I feel so pleased with Prince Albert for all the enjoyment it has given me that I want others to know that Prince Albert rolls easy, rolls right, and smokes better,” Bush says. “Prince Albert stays put. It’s mild, yet has real two-fisted flavor too. I'm ‘sold’ on the big red tin,” Try rolling P.A. You'l be delighted! nee f fk | |

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