The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 21, 1936, Page 6

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+ Ht BISMAKCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1936 Wildcats’ Bid for National Honors Tops Short Schedule — ‘Wood, Thomson, Shute, Mehlhorn Battle Way Into PGA Semi-Finals TRADITIONAL GAMES WIN INTEREST WITH MIX AT SOUTH BEND Yale-Harvard Tilt Features; Final Appearance of Color- ful Larry Kelley TOP ELEVENS SEE ACTION! Purdue-Indiana, Minnesota- | Wisconsin Games Are Tops on Big Ten Slate Northwes' ern’s bid for re 1 as natio football champi headed Saturde the shortest but ] one of the hot- test Saturd ball schedules since the early of the One of the few “major” teams in th western faced Not Bend with its prospe heights rather in dot Sharing the spot struggle were a f “traditional” en i the 55th Yale-Harvard game clash between and the cl contest Peatur the colorful Li Harvard g 65,009 at New Haven while the owd of 80,009 was e. a ele | Stanford and Cali le between two com: unb: Such _power: quette, Fordham and Louisiana and the mighty Minnesota, State, Nebrask a burn and against varied opopsition with s ous oppesiticn in sight for a few o! them. Marquette tackled Duquesne in or of the nding intersectio games. Fordham’s Rams were {a Yored over Georgia. Other leading intersectional contests on schedule were Temple-lowa, Arizona, and Contenai gies With the title safe i ern’s hands, Ui Minnesota Ohio State Michigan, and Purdu and Chicago against of traditionally import Nebraska's clach with Ke and the Missouri-Washii Louis) and Oakland-Ok and M. topped the slate for Big S teams. Seck to Steal Thunder Dartmouth and Princei to stcal pO weak Wisco its old rival, ainst Indian gamcs as itate-Bucknell, land, Boston college- and a couple of “bre. prove annoying, A m adliners may | ny Hobart and include | North sissippi- Missssivpt Stale, T lane- Se- | wanee, Auburn: L: Georgia Tech-Florida, aM Louisian | State-Southwestern ‘La.) Southern | Methodist and Baylor and s Christian and Rice prepared to on the southwest conference gle. Among the games of | ance on the west « Mountain district pro gon-Oregon State, I Kota State, Montan Wyoming-Brigham college-Colorado State State-Colorado Mines r import-| Five Cage e Lettermen Return to Napoleon| ft Napoleon, Nov. lettermen enhance p! good basketball team at poleon nigh | school during the 1936-37 scason, ac- cording to Coach Donald Dardis. Letermen back this year are Grenz, George Silbernagel. Fred Greit], Willie Grenz and Franklin Wagner. Other candidates for the squad are | Anton Zeigler, John Silbernagel,| Buddy Simon, Anton Mitzcl, Joseph; Burgad, Stuart Simon and Vance e returning | 82 pects for ai ason's schedule follows: 19—Burnstad, here. y, 25—Lehr, here. . 1—Burnstad, here. ¢, 4—Hazelton, hei 15—Braddock, there. . 6—Burnstad, here. \—Braddock, here. 12—Ashley, there. . 15—Gackle, he . 20—Lehr, her . 22—Wishek, here. |. 29—Hazelton, the: —Ashley, here. . 5—Steele, there. . 10—Wishek, there. . 12—Steele, here. . 26—Gackle, there. Fights Last Night | ¢ a) (By the Associated Press) New York — Jimmy McLarnin, 144'4, Vancouver, B. C., outpoint- ed Lou Ambers, 136!:, Herkimer, N. Y., (10). Rockford, U!.—Leo Lomski, 134, Aberdeen, Wash., knocked out ‘Tommy Gibson, 189, Kansas City, “). New Orleans — Joe Louis, 20%, Detroit, knocked out Paul Will- iams, 215, Chicago (2); and Tom Jones, 190, Chicago, (3). Hollywood — Mike Balloise, 128, New York —recognized feather- weight champion, knocked out Senny Caldez, 130, Tucson, Ariz., yee San Francisce — Phil Brubaker, 191, Dinuba, Calif. Lee Sareldl, 181, St. Paul, (3). Beach, Calif.—Star Fris- le oC veatpetnted Small Mon- ae champion a ' McLARNIN AGAIN LOOMS AS j Lou Beating Itu feed h in [the 195 nos wt nie ¥ ee iueten Ambe | flatiene iG John | soul roge | weathe jLarnin t TITLIST GOES DOWN TO DEFEAT ionat goliers’ tournament at. Harold “Jug” McSpadden (right) when he defeated Johnny Revolta of Chicago, up in 19 holes. Revolla is shown congratu- h fter the winning putt dropped in the d the quarter-finals with a 4 and 3 victory over ed in that round. (Associated WELTER WEIGAT CHALLENGER: Ambers Takes Dc Football Scores from One-Time “Baby Face Kid’ SOUTH Miami (Fla.) 13; Mercer 0. MIDWEST nnell 6, 7; Towa Wes- Upper Towa 7; Simpson 6. A e 33; Dubuque 0. Knox 6; Monmouth 0. Towa State Teachers 7; Omaha University 7, tie. jouth Dakota School of Mines 0; Chadron Teachers 18, SOUTHWEST De Paul Tech. 6. Over- nin | y night. itule; took | 13; Texas Gooding Coltege 6; _ Mines 34. _ Bowling Standings [ Montana a 8 Nov, in ‘bas ry ‘190 | 654 Winer Moeller nderson cant tr y Solace Sykes Booked 1, Against Tough Negro! s )—Johnny Sykes, d until tt 5 1 ed middleweight, who bills him- | by Promoter Nate Druximan for a cof /10-round boxing match here Dec. 1, with Allen Matthews, St. Louis, Mo., y negro. Matthews made a hit with Seattle ut in! fans when he gave Champion Freddie adly {challenge a crippled vandal football jhere, elf out of Bismarck, N. D., was pigned | the seventh but fied to keep the upp. | scaled 1367. to McLa OUT OUR WAY |/ SURE HOPE YOu DON'T EVER HAVE TO COME BACK TO Bison to Oppose Crippled Vandals| Sioux Boxers to Clash With Idaho Team in Dad’s Day Concluding Feature Moscow, Idaho, Nov. 21.—()—Teams from two North Dakota schools came to the University of Idaho Saturday to eleven and a promising Idaho boxing team. The 23-man football squad came} from North Dakota State college; the boxers from North Dakota University. The boxing meet tonight will be the closing feature of the Idaho Dad's Day program. Coach Ted Bank discounted strong- ly his Vandals’ football hopes against North Dakota State. Bank said there was no possibility of more than four regulars in the Idaho starting lineup. Injuries and sickness have riddled the lineup. Bank's two top-ranked fullbacks met each other in the infirmary corridors this week. Ross Sundberg, the regular, went to the institution with flu Wed- nesday, and George Willcott, his al- ternate, was released Thursday. Bank sald Keith Sundberg would be the likely fullback starter. Nodak Grid Team Tackles Detroit U Dorais to Start Untried Sopho- of 28 Arrive Detroit, Nov. 21.—(#)—Robert Fil- Heights, Ohio, will make his first start in a varsity game Saturday when the University of Detroit encounters North Dakota here. Coach Charles E, (Gus) Dorais de- cided to use the 19-year-old quarter- back because of injuries to several of his backfield stars. Dave Ripley, an- other sophomore, is the regular signal caller. Coach Jack West arrived here Fri- day night with a squad of 28. Six- teen of these are six-footers, and the Sioux’ line averages 188 pounds. Game time is 1 p. m. (CST). probable lineups: North Dakota C. Gainor Jacobson Mackenroth West Johnson M. Gainor Bjorklurd Ordway Pollard Halverson Kahl Wieczorek Officials—Referce, Jack Dunn (Michigan); umpire, George F. Du- four (Georgetown); field judge, Jerry Boglarsky (Wayne); head linesman, Howard E. Beatty (Michigan State). Hettinger Schedules 15 Basketball Games Hettinger, Nov. 21.—With one of the most successful gridiron seasons in the school’s history behind them, Hettinger high school athletes turned their attention this week to basketball. A tentative 15-game schedule fol- lows: Dec. The Detroit Rkoska Cieslak Kondraski Cooper Schroeter Crotty Boglarsky Filiatrault Payne Farkas 4—Bison here. Dec. 11—Dickinson, there. Dec. 15—Haynes, there. Jan, 12—Bucyrus, there. Jan. 15—Bowman, there. Jan. 19—Reeder, here. Jan, 22—Lemmon, here, and Haynes Jan, 26—Gascoyne, here. Jan, 29—Reeder, there. Feb. 2—Lemmon, there. Feb. 5—Bucyrus, here. Feb, 8—Bison, there. Feb. 12—Bowman, here. Feb. 16—Gascoyne, there. Georgia Tech's eleven is the only Steele of Tacoma a stiff battle here a fow weeks ago. Steele won the; decision in the non-title tilt. HARVEV'S YOU GOT TH’ RIGHT IDEE ~ YOU'LL NEVER GIT NOWHERE CASH AN’ yOu GOOD MECHANIC yoo ON CARS! HE WON'T HAVE TO COME BACK. |grid team to hold an edge on Ala- jbama’s Crimson Tide in a series of |16 or more games. By Williams BET T WON'T! THIS '5 GOING TO BE A SPOT BUSINESS, AN' ANYBODY WHUT DON'T LIKE IT WILL BE TALKED ROUGH TO — IM STARTIN' WITH YAWPS ~ BRING IN R CARS, STID OF A LOT OF BOLONIE - the Augusta master's winner, but Hor- ton Smith came in late to edge him out. qualified in the national open, when more; West and Squad the was going strong, for playing the 1935 when the impossible happened— atrault, sophomore from Cleycland;Gene Sarazen executed the double- eagle to tie and whip him in another Steve Reid and Les Schreiber of \JERSEY PRO HOPES HARD-LUCK BREAKS WILL FORSAKE HIM jEdged Out of Britsh, National Open and Augusta Event Championships Pinehurst, N. J., Nov, 21.—()—One of golf's hard luck guys, big blond Craig Wood, wished that dame for- tune would turn her frown into a smile, for him Saturday. The Old Lady, whose favors count a lot in sport, has snubbed the Deal, N. J., belter in recent years but Craig held hopes that she'd relent and give him the professional golfers cham- pionship as a belated birthday pres- ent. He was 35 Wednesday. A long socker himself, Wood tack- led pro golf's bigger slugger, Jimmy Thomson, in one of the 36-hole semi- final matches Saturday as slender Denny Shute squared away with bur- ley Wild Bill Mehlhorn. Once before Craig got into the fi- nals of this tournament, only to lose to Paul (Little Poison) Runyun in 38 holes two years ago. He hopes the breaks will switch and go for him this year, Back in 1933 Craig thought he had won the British open crown, but Denny Shute slipped in to tie him and then win in the play off. The next year it looked like he was And that summer he was ais- wrong ball. To top it all, they were congratu- lating him as the Augusta victor in playoff. He was two under par Friday in beating the national open champion, Tony Manero, 5 and 4. Sports Round-Up By SCOTTY RESTON New York, Nov. 21.—()—On and off the gridiron: Some of the nation’s outstanding football players went out there for the last time Saturday: Don Geyer, Northwestern; Ken Sandbach, Steve Cullinan, Capt. Bill Montgomery, George Stoess, and Chick Kaufman of Princeton; co-Captains Julius Al- fonse, Ed Widseth and eet Antil of ED WIDSETH ULIUS ALPHONSE Minnesota Minnesota Minnesota; Fred Stalcup and Johnny Drake of Purdue; Capt. Merle Wendt, Charlie Hamrick, Tippy Dye, and In- wood Smith of Ohio State; Ray Bui- vid, Al and Art Guepe of Marquette; Vannie Albansee of Syracuse; Capt. Chris Del Sasso and Vern Huffman of Indiana, and Yale's most colorful player in years, Larry Kelley. Don't weep at the passing of an- other great Minnesota team, for Ber- nie Bierman has a new generation coming on... . Dallas Ward, Gopher freshman coach, has good news for his chief... . Already he has recom- mended 40 men as varsity prospects. . .. Most talked of is Ed Bonk, a St. Paul boy, who, they say, is in the great tradition of Minnesota full- backs: Herb Joesting, Bronko Nagur- ski, Jack Manders and Stan Kostka. Fred Vanzo, big Northwestern blocking back, has carried the ball just twice this season .. . and once it was a mistake. ... A kickoff came right to him; he had to take it. 5 Hettinger Gridders Named All-Conference Scranton, Nov. 21.—Hettinger, loop champions, placed five men on the All-Southwest conference football team, chosen by the grid coaches at a meeting held here Tuesday. Marmarth landed three berths on the all-conference first tam, Bowman two and Rhame one. The all-conference selections fol- low: Ends, Baker, Bowman and Tracy, Hettinger; tackles, Childers, Marmarth, and Amsden, Hettinger; guards, Edwin, Hettinger, and Hoff, Marmarth; center, McKennett, Bow- man; backs Holman, Marmarth; Brown, Hettinger; Anderson, Rhame (Capt.), and White, Hettinger. Second all-conference choices in- clude: Ends, Morris, Marmarth, and Herm, Hettiyger; tackles, Clement, Hettinger and Stebbins, Bowman; guards, Hutchensen, Rhame, and Shaefer, Rhame; backs, Bingham. Bowman; Kimbro, Marmarth; Leahy, Marmarth, (Capt.), and Smith, Het- tinge:. BOUT CALLED OFF New York, Nov. 21.—()—The ten round middleweight bout between Harry Balsamo, of New York and Frank Bataglia, Dalrymple, Wisconsin contender, scheduled for the New York Hippodrome next Wednesday night, was called off Saturday. Ernie Filegel, Battaglia'’s. manager, wired from Minneapolis his boy injured a hand in training and would not be available or two weeks. There's a Moon and a Starr on the University of Florida freshman foot- bell team. Tas Mess te'e beck, wile John Starr is a guard. {| D. Olson, f Gould’s Decision May Clear Path) Braddock’s Manager Says He Will Guarantee Fight With Schmeling in 1937 New York, Nov. 21. \—If Joe Gould, Champion Jimmy Braddock's manager, feels Saturday as he did Friday night, the heavyweight situa- tion will have stopped traveling around in circles by nightfall. Gould said Friday night he would turn over to the state athletic com- mission Saturday a check for $5,0C0 guaranteeing the champion would go through with an agreement for a title fight with Max Schmeling next June, If this is done, and the articles of ‘agreement for the Braddock-Schmel- ing fight are signed, as Gould said, the negotic for a proposed 12- round no decision fight between the titleholder and Joe Louis in Atlantic City next February should shift into high gear. ‘With the posting of the check, the That’s ‘How’s Business?’ How You Start the New Game _ Replacing Knock-Knock Fad Aw!, Nuts! Just about the time we figured the knock-knock craze had been con- signed to oblivion along comes an- other of those goofy gam “What's Your Business: That's how the newest game begins. “What's your business?” “Undertaking.” “How's Business?” “Dead!” Ouch! Ow! And other grimaces and groans. But if you didn’t like that one, how's this? “What's your business.” “I'm a hangman.” “How's business?” “A pain in the neck.” Along the same lines, the banking business 1s “interesting,” a tailor’s commission’s threat of suspension for Braddock and Louis would be lifted. Two Driscoll Teams Are Beaten by Wing Wing, N. D., Nov. 21.—Wing’s boys and girls basketball teams emerged with victories in the first games of the season played against Driscoll. Each team committed 12 fouls in the boys’ game which was won by Wing, 27-17, with a belated scoring spurt in the fourth quarter. The score at the half was 11-9 in favor of Wing. In the girls’ contest the Wing six led all the way to chalk up a 24-13 tri- umph, Summary of the boys’ game: Wing (27) Fo FT PR W. Kavonius, f 1 ot 0 0 B, e BA 10 0 0 0 Ts : C! Piepkorn .. cuassos Totals ..... Driscoll (17) L. Wright, f V. Peterson, ¢ L Gilchrist, « D_ Koessel, & Schlaback Colton Hosen [sowaaus Totals Score by Wing. Driscol Referee: ft, NAME GUN CLUB HEADS Fessenden, Nov. 21—Arnold Quarve was chosen president, and Atlee Tan- ner was named secretary-treasurer when the Fessenden Gun club organ- ized for the coming year. The University of San Franciscos 90-piece band wears flowing gold silk blouses, black silk trousers and Span- ish sombreros. acobson. Louisiana State plans to send a track team to compete at the Univer- sity of Puerto Rico in December. business is “cutting,” a stenographer’s aed is (fclicking,” a butcher's job is tough,” the dairy business is “cheesy,” and the editor's Job is “all write.” Anyhow, folks, those are some Starters. Now do your stuff. Send your craziest business gags to the Gag Editor. Illinois Recognizes Marshall as Titlist Chicago, Nov. 21.—(/)—Everett Marshall, in the books of the Illinois Athletic commission, is heavyweight wrestling champion of the world Sat- urday. The Lajunta, Col., grappler pinned Ali Baba, mustached challenger, with a double Nelson in 35:44 at the Chi- cago Stadium Friday night. There Were 9,736 spectators. Marshall out- weighed Baba 29 pounds, 223 to 194. The Illinois commission recognized the winner as champion, At the close vi 1935 there were 26,- 221,052 motor vehicles registered in the United States, or one for every 4.86 persons, an increase of 5 per cent over the previous year. THIS IS THE SPECIAL OFFER MADE TO YOU by The Bismarck Tribune ENTITLING YOU TO “A COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES” FOR 98c (Plus 2c Sales Tax) Present or mail this coupon with $1.00 to this paper and receive this beautiful 640-page volume of Clement Wood's Great book. MAIL ORDERS If by mail, include 13c postage OF YOUR HEALTH IKE the tireless scientist laboring in his laboratory, seek- ing some new serum to fight disease, Individual Dixies are also active guardians of your health. These sanitary drinking cups safeguard you from the well- known dangers of common drinking vessels, recognized By public and medical profession alike, as active spreaders of colds, grippe and other more serious contagions. Dixies are used once, then thrown away. You can be sure, when you drink from a Dixie, that your lips are the first and last to touch its dainty rolled brim. No stranger has left upon it a threat to your health. Dixies are being used more and more widely by the better soda fountains, modern offices and in public and semi- public locations. Many careful people also use Dixies in their bathrooms, kitchens and pantries to prevent the : spread of colds and other contagions through the family, This company, wholesalers of Dixies in this district, is firmly convinced of the usefulness and value of sanitary Dixies. It urges you to patronize those fountains that serve your drinks in Dixies and to use Dixies in your own home, both for their sanitary qualities and for their beauty and convenience. ‘The Bismarck Tribune Co. Stationery Dept. Phone 32 Bismarck Widely used at SODA FOUNTAINS OFFICES PUBLIC BUILDINGS PICNICS PARTIES TABLES BATHROOMS KITCHENS SCHOOLS €

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