The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 31, 1935, Page 8

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sismarck Captures Four M: CUB, 0" O'LEARY, TOMS, DEMARAY|c HOME CROWNS, and A.C. Boast Three: ampionships; James- town Annexes Three BXING LEGALIZED IN N. D.’ easper Oimoen, Maurice Peters, Capital City team Win U. S. Honors (By the Associated Press) Bismarck, Jamestown and Fargo) ‘were prominently represented in) North Dakota's parade of athletic champions in 1935. | Fargo boasted three cliampionship machines in football, track and basc- ball; Bismarck brought home trophies | in baseball, golf and basketball and | wobably one in boxing, and James- | town golf, football and a divided sari ketball title. Pargo’s claims included the state | agricultural college eleven that cap- tured the North Central Conference gridiron crown, a high school track | team that swept major meets in the} tate and won the state track and id meet. and a baseball club that! artied off state honors in the junior | perican Legion ranks. | re national semi-pro_b: nt was one of Bismarc! pg acquisitions while Nadine retained her state women’s; and the Bismarck Phantoms pff the state independent | championship. Dick De-! ssibly gave the Capital dge by scoring a technical yer Shareld Kennard o! ant to the northwest! boxing title. ! hl Dethrones Cook th! of Jamestown captur- ; state golf trophy and lege added the footbali | co-championsifip with pf in the basketball race of Dakota intercollege con- Dakota came to the front in| fi sporting circles through the} of a Brantford, N. D., farm] McK, Maurice Peters, who rode 221 inning horses for the championship of American jockeys. A fornfer national champion, and present captain of the U. S. Olympic team. Casper Oimoen of Minot com pleted two record-smashing leaps on| the lake region winter sports club | slide at Devils Lake to win top skiing; honorp in the club's third annual tour- | ney, ‘He rode 194 feet and 184 feet. Bexing reached an official stage in u during the year with the state | the sport for] amateurs by; letic comm! ith power to bs, James n- nt, | Firls | Par! dent | also hinge ndin | as aE Gould Predicts Tigers, Cubs ‘As ‘36 Repeaters, Sees Louis As Champion Teams Battied in 1931, New Orlea Christian and Louisiana State, pre- enting two fro ‘football machi ttraction je | Sugar estab] relations if a tou 1) them < | Yea | The teams played each other in ; 1931 and 1932 single te! points were Since both are fortified with strong defenses for thi site of the Etienne de Bore |i original | Figure Skating Champs Retain Titles New York. Dee, 31.— ‘4)}—Maribel Y. Vinson of Boston and young Robin Lee of St. Paul held places on the Am un Olympic skating team Thesday by retaining the national women’s and men tigure skating championships. day night in Madison Square 7 arden. dazzled 3,000 spectators Mon- Miss Vinson teamed with George E. B. Hill of Boston to win the Paris championship for the third straight year, their performance havit the Olympic team. Erle Rittcr of Minneapolis, 19 champion, took second place to Lee and Hill beat 34 _— of Boston for third. Sugar Bow! Rivals : ‘Hepe to Sad * Jinx 1932 Without Producing Single Touchdown » Dec, 31.—(4)—Texas of Bowl a prec sports fes ient in their g ndown is in Tulane’s stadium here Day. New | without All producing a the nine oals. touchdown. neeting in Audubon that was the " of the deep south in their bowl battle may pon field goal Boswell Boots "E jon Texas Christ choo! | goal. Class | In 1932, Texas Christian took the B club| lead carly with a Boswell field goal, ;but the advantage ¥. minutes later when t = crased a few Horned Frogs in broke | from Texas fumbled near their goal. running | The Bayou Tigers Kenneth | Jack Torrence, ered and huge tackle, the; H the 100/three points that resulted in a 3-3) ‘tie score. i golf crown. ie state C.C.C. in runnerup. | unofficial Southwest Conference, ed the majority of the points-after-| The Christians from Fort Worth st captured | now have Walter Roach and Taidon; ‘Manton ready in case another field jgoal is needed. They rate with the; Mangrum, P: kickers and punters in the; Roach boot- state | touchdown in the 1935 campaign, and Ul title, and added | it was Manton’s field goal that gave s with the toss of a}___— OUR BOARDING HOUSE 1 SAID 1 WOULD DIS eame ended in a tie. ideé in football was sug- | Jack West of the University Dakota who offered 12 man jl teams, the extra player to, fon-playing quarterback. ther novelty during the year was oduction of donkey baseball | pen mounted on donkeys playing | ca’s national pastime with | iy-altered rules. t ‘Urges ( Closed ‘Waterfowl Season | . Louis. Dec. 31.—(P)—A com-} ‘closed hunting season on water- { ‘was advocated Tuesday by Irving | mt, treasurer of the emergency ervation committee of New York, n address at a convention of the n Ornithological club. Brant, a St. Louis editorial writer, | d that conservatior societies were to hunting but asserted they measures “to curtail hunting en pit detrory the breding sock of Pr hau a cloed eeson, Brant pro- extension of tl ted them No, 1 on year-old junior year-old Roger ltne Tee iivete intersectional icant over Santa Clara. However, Coach Leo (Dutch) Meyer duce enough power so department may He has the strongest Christian team ever developed at Fort in a tough conference race, only one of 12 stout g Lost Only to 5. M. The Chri only tered on he Rose Bowl-boundi Sovthern Methodict, and if the game: had lasted a bit longer, the Frogs ight have won with the terrific} ing of Slinging Sammy Baugh, tthe qui eaten in its ‘opener by Rice Insti-! tute, Louisiana romped through the! losing y |rest of its campaign undefeated. Some of the southland’s greatest rers will perform in the Sugar ,Head man for the Christians Trell Lester, 218-pound al: America center of 1934 and 1935. Next og Jimmy La’ one of he toughest, roughest | ckers in the ng Louisiana State, there are! Ti 188- pound all- J, and Abe Mickal, a great | ist, and said by some to asscr than _ Bout 63 Golfers Go Into 1 Finals | at Pasadena, Gaynell America o leld ari be a better Pasadena, calif, 31a) — ixty-three golfers ed into the nals of the $4,000 Pasadena open} tournament ‘Tuesday with Harry! (Lightho! Cooper leading the shot- ! makers two strokes. The Chicago veteran shot a 71 Mon-! day for a 137. Bunched with 139's Horton Smith, Chicago; Wilford | y) Cox, Bethesda, Md., Ray | urgh, and Harold Mc-; Spaden, winner of the 1934 Pasadena j open A | Hers! dena, pr Dee. roke behind were Henry Picard,! ey, Pa. Fred Morrison, and Ky Laffoon, Chicago. Pasa-| Little Should Retain Golf Title; England to Keep Davis Cup By ALAN GOULD | New York, Dec, 31.—(4)—Now that | the athletic orators, in a thundering {stretch drive, have closed the speech making for 1935, it's time to take istock of the competitive prospects | for the new year, | Easing our aching arches and light- jing a fresh cigar, here's the way {things look from this corner: | Baseball—in the major leagues, a thot pair of pennant putsches, with Mickel Cochrane's Detroit Tigers, re- inforced by Al Simmons, keeping a {stride or so ahead of the high-pow- jered Red Sox in the American League, tand the Chicago Cubs repeating in ithe national despite the challenges of the St. Louis Cardinals, New York ;Giants and Pittsburgh Pirates in a four-cornered fight. Boxing—two “million-dollar gates; mt where only one bloomed in 1935, and ‘Joe Louis a knockout winner in both. | |Max Schmeling to be the victim in; iJune and James J, Braddock losing his heavyweight title to the brown; | bomber in September after giving the sensational Negro his toughest match. | Picks Little to Repeat | Golf—W, Lawson Little to continue {his reign as amateur king, Sam/ | Parks, Jr., to yield his title as national | open ‘champion at Balturrol, N, J. | Football—Stanford to start the new jyear by spilling Southern Methodist jin the Rose Bowl Wednesday and | Texas Christian to beat Louisiana ‘state in the Sugar Bowl. Princeton |to bowl them all over again in the | east and northwestern to challenge Minnesota or Ohio State for Big Ten honors next fall. Olympics—Germany to put on the ee spectacular international sports | show of all time. | Tennis—England | Davis cup. | Track and ficld—America to put |its best foot forward in the Olympics {since the 1912 Hed ‘Rightmire Rated to retain the No. 1 Challenger: 1 Worth, an eleven that finished second! Sioux Citian Decisively Defeats | Mullins in 12- Round Bout ‘Moon’ 3 Chicago, Dec, 3: Rightmire, Sioux City, Towa, ranked | Tuesday as the Illinois state athletic {commission's No. 1 challenger for the world’s featherweight championship. ;He won the honor Monday night by idecisively defeating the ever charg- {ing Winfred (Moon) Mullins, Vin- cennes, Ind., in a 12-round bout. | Rightmire was presented with belt, symbolic of the honor, by Barney Ross, world’s welterweight champion. Rightmire will fight the winner of ‘a bout between Claud Varner of Los ~ | Angeles and Mike Belloise of New York, billed in New York for Jan. 8. The victor will be matched with Alberto (Baby) Arimendi, fierly Mex- ‘ico City featherweight, with the win- ‘ner to be recognized in New York and {in Illinois as the featherweight cham- { pion. Both states have withdrawn recog- nition from Freddy Miller of Cincin- nati, the National Boxing association's titleholder, for failure to defend his (title in New York or Illinois in the last six months. \ Possessing superior boxing skill and | speed, Rightmire outclassed Mullins in every round with the exception of two. \ SAINTS SWEEP SERIES St. Paul, Dec. 31.—(P)—St. Paul ; Swept its two game series with Wich- ieta by downing the Hawks, 4 to 3, in mm American Hockey Association ;game Monday night. The Hawks | deadlocked the count at 3-3 only to have Emory Hanson, star winger, count the winning goal on a solo dash about five minutes before the end of the game. By Ahern SUBJECT OF CLOSE THE MY LATEST INVENTION TO YOU LADS TODAY,SO HERE IT \S -+- NOW » THEN -~HARR-R-RUME IN MY HAND |S AN ELECTRIC LIGHT BULB——~ WHEN THE BULB BURNS OUT, IT IS USELESS J. My IDEA 1S TO MAKE ELECTRIC LIGHT BULBS IN THE SHAPE OF A DRINKING GLASS I~ WHEN ONE “BURNS OUT, UNSCREW THE FILAMENT, AND ¢ SOMETHING S USEFUL J teed iMostaNe’s‘oRcUS EAS | MAY FIND TROUBLE | PERFORMING IN MUD! | i i Thornhill’s Eleven Has Psycho-! logical Edge With Unfor- tunate Record / | Pasadena, Calif., Dec. 31.—()—The | weather may decide who will get the | garlands and wear the thorns after jthe Rose Bowl game here Wednesday between Stanford and Southern Meth- odist. A soggy turf, the result of two rains in three days, greeted the western rep- resentatives and the wild charging Mustangs from Texas Tuesday as they turned to the scene of the classic for final workouts before the intersec- tional clash. In spite of the possibility of addi- tional moisture and uncertain footing, odds remained 10 to 8 in favor of Coach Matty Bell’s Texans. Thousands of fans, only 84,600 of whom will see the contest, were reluct- ant to tab Coach Claude (Tiny) Thornhill’s team as a good mudder bet although the weight advantage will be theirs by a wide margin. Mud May Slow Mustangs Stanford’s powerful. ground attack, built around Bobby Grayson, all-Am- erican fullback, certainly would be less \handicaped in the mud than would the lightning thrusts of the visitors featuring Bobby Wilson, the elusive little all-American. Most observers were inclined to rate the game as a tossup. There appeared to be some psycho- logical advantage in behalf of the! western representative. This was based on the unfortunate Rose Bow! record of Stanford in which the Indians have won only one game in jfive starts. Eight members’ of the| team that will start against the Mus- tangs were members of the elevens that lost to Columbia and: Alabama and they are determined to atone for these losses in the last grid clash of their intercollegiate careers. In physical condition the teams will jbe even. Stanford has James (Monk) |Moscrip hobbling around with a game |knee. Southern Methodist’s Harry Shuford also is limping. Probable starting lineups: Wt. Methodist Pos. Stanford wt. 170 Tipton le Moscrip 189 i Spain Reynolds 225 Wetzel Adams 197 is Johnson Muller 215 180 Stamps Rouble 186 {210 Orr Beedle 290 185 Stewart Topping 186 Sprague qb Paulman 188 Wilson Ih Coffis 172 Burt th Hamilton 187 Shufford, c fb Gayson 190 Officials-referee; Bob Morris (Seat- tle); umpire, Harry Viner, (Missouri); headlinesman, Tom _ Fitzpatrick. (Utah); field judge, Abe Curtis (Texas). \South’s Track Marks Broken in Sugar Bowl New Orleans, Dec. 31.—(?)—New southern track marks were written in the record books Tuesday as the cli- max of the Sugar Bowl athletic car- nival neared. The high point of the celebration is the New Year’s Day football game between Louisiana State University and Texas Christian University. The T. C. U. team arrived Monday and went through a@ practice session. The L. 8. U. squad, remaining in Baton Rouge, held only light timber- ing up sessions. Glenn Gunningham, former Kansas University miler, took eight seconds off the southern record by running the distance in 4 minutes and 16 seconds. Forest Towns of the. University of Georgia lowered the old record of 15 seconds for tle 120-yard hurdles to 14.8 seconds. In the half mile, Charles Hornbos- tel of Harvard set a new record of 1 minute 54.6 secon: The record was 1 minute 55.6 seconds. Wildcat Quint Plays Host to Notre Dame Chicago, Dec. 31.—(4)—Northwest- ern’s Wildcats were the hosts to Notre Dame in their annual New Year's eve game tonight. The Wildcats hoped for revenge for the 40-29 setback at the hands of the Irish two weeks Ig c be rt re ago. Big Ten teams which were idle Monday night will go into action Wednesday, Thursday and Friday be- fore the opening guns are fired Sat- urday in what promises to be a nip and tuck Western conference season. Purdue took a bad beating from the Temple Owls last night, 54 to 39, at Philadelphia, and California bowed to Illinois, 42 to 17, at Champaign, De Paul of Chicago turned: in its third win in five games against Big Ten opponents with a 48 to 17 win over a sophomore Minnesota team. Towa put on a winning rally against Marquette at Milwaukee to leave the floor with a 31-27 victory. Smooth De Paul Five Whip: Gophers, 48-17 Chicago, Dec. BL —(P)—De Paul's smooth passing and accurate shoot- ing Blue Demons smothered a ae Minnesota sophomores tight 48 to 17, for its third victory in starts against basketball opposition this season. jthe picked western football Crowd of 60,000 Expected to Watch New Year's Day Classic in ‘Frisco San Francisco, Dec. 31.—(?)—Sters of the east rated 2 to 1 favorites over players they meet Wednesday for charity and sectional gridiron prestige. A crowd of possibly 60,000 is expect- ed to fill Kezar stadium for the an- nual New Year's day classic. between outstanding players who finished their college careers in 1935. The 22 easterners, listing nine team captains and several all-America | f choice, put the finishing touches on their 10-day practice with a zip and power clinching popular belief that Coaches Andy Kerr and Dick Han- ley have assembled one of the most formidable squads since the game was established a decade ago. Three of the eight western ball car- riers, Bill Wallace of Rice institute, Bill Lam of Colerado and Theron ‘Ward of Idaho, run the 100 yard dash under ten seconds. Rain threatened to furnish a slip-! pery, soggy field for the game. Probable starting lineups: Fast Antonini, Ind. D, Smith, Minn. Oech, Minn. Jones, Ohio 8. Fortmann, Col. Lewis, Ohlo U. Loebs, Purdue R. Smith, Ala. Heekin, Ohio S. Towa Minn, 8 le Scherer, Neb. It Lutz, ‘Calif. re Carter, Ore. e Saunders, Loyola Sklar, Kansas Wheeler, Okla. Sylvester, Rice Ward, ‘Idaho Lam, Colorado Wallace, Rice Crayne, fh Justice, Gonzaga Beise, Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, Dec. 31.—(#)—Deluged with requests for passes to the Sugar Eri Bowl game, Bill Keefe is telling all comers: “Sammy Baugh and Abe Mickal will handle the passes”... AS soon as Casey Stengel can find some- body to take him, the Dodgers will aise Joe Stripp the old heave-ho... ‘Wedding bells ring Wednesday for Benny Leonard, former lightweight champion ... and his first New Year’s resolution will be not to resume fight- ing. . . Bob Zuppke has turned down a coaching offer from the coast. * # e How the big town is going for basketball. .. Two crowds of 18,000 in as many weeks... some of the best fives in the country are being ht in... Young Ned Irish, the promoter, is going around beg- ging his friends not te wake him up. Iso, he is looking at yachts ++. a few more sellouts and he'll shift his weekly luncheons frem the Turf and Gridiron club to the Waldorf. * * OK Minnesota fans will get a look at pictures of the Princeton team this week-end. . . Fritz Crisler will be on hand to identify the hundred backs ... Johnny Revolta picks his all Am- etican golf team as follows: Henry Picard, Sam Parks, Jr., Paul Runyan, Gene Sarazen, Craig Wood, Harry Cooper, Walter Hagen, Tommy Ar- mour, Horton Smith and Victor Ghez- ai... anybody else’s would have Johnny on there somewhere .. . Jack Dempsey always insists on running the elevator when he shoots up to his Central Park apartment. x * * Jimmy Johnston needs a pair.of faun colored spats for his brewn shoes... says he can’t find on Fifth Avenue... haw!... reason Bill Terry came out tirement is that the Reds laug! off his offer of $20,000 for Josh Cody, who goes into that, very uncertain Florida coaching job March 1, is making his farewell tour with the Vanderbilt cagers ... Harry Smith, San Francisco sports -editor, Picks the east to beat the west in the all star game ... maybe because there are three Smiths on the eastern team «+. On @ recent week’s hunting and fishing expedition, Frank Thomas, Alabama coach, fired one shot and did not cast @ line into the water... was he hunting footballers, mebbe? Sy Rowling P’Scores Coman’s Tourist Court trundlers swept to three straight victories over the Town Talk Cafe and the Capital Cafe team won two out of three from Robertsons in City League matches Bag Monday night. Ole Nordlund lor Robertsons bowled a consistent 194-108-1906 for high «honors. Kenneth Sloniker has a 206 in the second game for the top single game total.. The scores: Capitol Cafe see 158-171-204— 533. « 203-186-172— 561 + 175-205-159— 539 + 140-140-140— 420 + 143-176-182— 501 a+. 81D- 878-857—2554 140- — 140 . 131-151— 262 + 104-171-114— 389 see 171-153-161— 485 + 150-157-159— 466 +» 194-193-180— 567 « Th 18- 63— 155 Totals ........... 833-823-828 —2484 + 143-223-166— 532 154-164-148— 466 170-179-131— 480 ‘174-166-164— 504 + 190-127-171— 488 Totals ........... 831-859-780—2470 Comans Tourist Court 178-179-161— 517 178-180-161— 519 169-160-167— 496 179-166-155— 500 115-206-122— 443 ‘13- 13- 73— 219 891-' 964-839—2604 Sloniker ......+. Total . Nodaks Smother Superior, 44-27 ‘Bob Finnegan Bags Six Field Goals, Three Free Throws for Top Honors Superior, Wis., Dec. 31.—(4)—Dis- playing a attack that com- pletely bewildered their opponents, the North Dakota University cagers drubbed the Superior State Teachers college quint, 44-27, here Monday night. The Nodaks completely dominatea the play throughout the game, taking main defensive player for the visit- ors. For Superior, Red McGrath the leading offensive Srooeto! Kittal'n, Rorvig," Totals | monwooow' Totals" Dimarco, Duluth; Sam Kaufman, Park Falls. HI-LINERS vee Valley City, N. D., Valley City Hi-Liners Pareioa an an alumni quint 21-19 in an overtime game here Monday night. » o =} ° Weather May Decide Winner of Stat Stanford: oe M. U. Rose “Boul Clash mount, 49-13; K. C.’s De- feat Co. A, 30-26 Or be 00 20 he et eg Klein's Toggery ay Place lead in the City C: Monday night by scoring a victory over the Te Sr mount Theatre quint, 49-13 The Knights of Columbus tered their fifth Lago Crago ing out a narrow 30-: Engen led the Klein's team in the high-scoring outburst. Martin with six field goals and three gift shote was high-point man. Eddie Spriggs was outstanding for tle Paramount five, collecting two baskets from the floor and a brace of free throws. Failure to bottle up Sebastian Goetz, who rolled in seven field goals and added a gift shot, accounted for Company A upset. Becker paced the losers with four from the floor and three free throws. The summaries: CoA ty tt pe K. Cia fe tt pf Becker lagen = 2 Meininger cker Doerner Meyers H. Brown Goets H. Potter Priske Bobzein Totals Klein's Yeasley Martin Fite Engen La Rue Totals - | ssnors con! Totals Paramo't Croonquis' Allen Ww 3 sua © a RS! oreo leomor Spri Schlosser Brown Blecumaz Slenwon el wcowet a] monmnes pe 3 wl enone ee} onsree al mowowotal onnwoo Totals { Fights Last Night pens O— 6 &! wrrsoe: (By the Associated Press) Chicago—Everette (Young) Rightmire, 124%, Sioux City Iowa, outpointed Winfred (Moon) Mullins, 126, Vincennes, Ind. (12). p Neticcmnedeemek lato aire otic NE | College Results (By the Associated Press) De Paul 48; Minnesota 17. North kota University 44; Su- perior Teachers 27. HOCKEY Minnesota 3; Princeton 1. “The Star-Spangled Banner” was legally made the national anthem of the United States in March, 1931. SMOKE 20 PIPEFULS AT OUR _ RISK Here is a remarkable new money- back tobacco offer: HERE IS OUR OFFER to pipe smok- ere: Smoke 20 fragrant pipefule of Prince Albert. If you don’t find it the mellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the tin with the vest of the tobacco in it te us at asy time within a month from this date, ‘Thisoffer can be made, because Prince Albert is sure to please! For we use only mild, choice tobacco—‘‘crimp cut” for slow, cool smoking. All ite’’ is removed. And there are about 50 pipefuls in the big 2-ounce tin. Prince Albert makes. a fine- | tasting roll-your-own too. 18, somone Cee Prince ALBERT THE INGE 40Y SMOKE OUT OUR WAY Western Conference | By Williams

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