The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 30, 1937, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Coach L, C. Boles of the of Wooster football team men out on the field for ing game of the season John Carroll college in Cleveland Friday night, Emerson Logee, son of Rev. F. E. Logee, Bismarck, will like as not be at one of the flank positions. Emerson, who played on the Woos- ter freshman team last year after transferring to the college as a junior, is now a senior, Coach Boles is using him at what he calls the “No. 2 post,” which calls for defensive end play and. considerable blocking as a tackle on offense. This is the second time a Logee has been a member of a College of Wooster football team. In 1918 Bob Logee, an uncle of Emerson, was star tackle and captain. * * * SIX-MAN FOOTBALL MANUAL No longer is there any reason why high schools without enough man-power for regulation football should do without tie game alto- gether. All they now need is six boys ambitious to learn the game, and they can take to the field for six-man football, rapidly gaining popularity throughout smaller schools of the country. Just off the presses is a new six-man football manual, compiled by A. W. Larson, superintendent of the Sykes- tion, N. D., schools, Information on cost of equipment, officials, scoring, offense and defensive play, forma- tions, shifts, tournaments and honor teams is contained in it. * * * SATE TRACK MEET A resolution asking that the state high school track meet be held in Bismarck rather than in Grand Forks at the University of North Dakota was passed by the Southwestern conference at its annual meeting recently. Reason for the proposed change, which was sent to the state high school executive committee, is that Bis- marck is centrally located and the Red River Valley city is not. Another resoltuion they adopted asked that the state high school Teague place two representatives of Class B high schools on the executive committee. és * * * SHEEHAN SPELLS DEFEAT Apparently the Mandan Braves have more than a little respect for big Pat Sheehan, Williston high school fullback who accounted for both of the touchdowns the Coyotes scored when they beat the Warriors 14 to 0 last Friday. He gets the most credit for the victory, as far as the Braves re concerned. Also in for a share are Sorben, quarterback, and Allen Penman, who booted the extra two aay 3 * UP MINOT WAY Six former members of the Minot, high school football team are now on the university yearling eleven which will play the Magicians Fri- day night ... Among the Sioux fresh- men are three former all-state play- *rs, Norman Leafe, Laverne Paul and Allen Dragge .. . Partridge, former Mandan high and Iowa State college player, is at one of the tackles, with Harmon Heming, Enderlin, dividing fluties at the center post with two others . . . Ray McComb is the new Minot high school golf champion .. . winner of the recent tournament . Now a tourney to decide who the net champion will be is under way ... and a touchball loop is being formed. - + « Quite an intra-mural athletic Program, we'd say... Nagurski ‘Butts’ Way - To Win Over Detton Los Angeles, Sept. 20—(#)—Bronko Nagurski, 234, Minneapolis, retained sis world heavyweight wrestling title ims Wednesday night by butting Dean Detton, 205, Salt Lake City, into complete submission in one fall before an overflow crowd of 10,500 at the Olympic auditorium. Nagurski held an edge over his foe throughout the 40 minutes. ‘The match was billed for two out three falls, but Detton was un- to respond for the second and by default. It was Detton’s first at the new champion since he the crown last June. Stanley Team Grooms For Parshall Contest Stanley, N. D., Sept. 30—()—With & 66-0 victory over Bowbells high in the season’s opener tucked away, the day. Five of Stanley's touchdowns a Bowbells came in the third THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1937 Gibbons to Meet Winner POW Of Farrar- Hasselstrom Bout Here Next Thursday Full 31 Rounds of Boxing on Oct. 7 Card in Memorial Building Announced Jack Gibbons, light heavyweight battler from St. Paul, will fight the winner of the Wild Bill Hasselstrom- Prett Farrarembrolio here next Thurs- day in the headline match of a card here some time this fall, Isham Hall, matchmaker for the Bismarck boxing club, announced Thursday. Assurance that the gladiator who comes out on top in the feature match of the 3l-round card next week will meet the high-ranking son of old Phantom Mike Gibbons was received this week, Hall stated. Almost any date that is acceptable to local promoters and on which Jack is not already engaged will be suitable to the St. Paul boy, Hall said he was assured, Meanwhile the finished lineup for the card which will be staged in the World War Memorial building here next week was completed and an- nounced. Five Bouts Carded Three six round bouts and a three round curtain raiser have been billed in addition to the 10-round main go, with five of the eight principals due to display their wares in a Capital City ring for the first time. Programmed for the semi-windup match are Jimmy Collins, 150-pound St. Paul middleweight, and K. O. Kaufman 147-pound Red Lodge, Mont., boy, who will go six rounds, Billy Mears, Bismarck, 119 pounds, will fight Billy Smith, Minneapolis, 125 pounds, in a six round affair. Jackie Rogers, Pittsburgh, Pa. 124 pounds, will fight Red Grant, St. Paul, 126 pounds, also over the six round route. Sonny Boy Schneider, Bismarck, will meet Honey Boy Evans, Minot, in the curtain raiser. Both tip the scales at 147 pounds. Engel to Referee Mel Engel, Bismarck, who handled the last two cards staged in the Capi- tal City by the Bismarck boxing club, will again be the third man in the ring, Hall said, with D. E, Shipley mak- ing the announcements. Tickets, which are priced at $1.50 for ringside seats, $1.00 for reserved seats and 75 cents for seats in the bal- cony, are on sale at the Grand Pacific hotel, Patterson hotel, State Recrea- tion parlors, Elks club, Eagles club, The Ring, Town Talk and World War Memorial building. Both Farrar and Hasselstrom are going through conditioning workouts almost daily in The Ring, with both fighters in first-class shape, Hall said. Cuts Weight Down Hasselstrom, who entered the equar- ed circle not far from the 200 pound mark when he fought Farrar in their first engagement here last July 2, has knocked his pouridage down to 177 and will be in “perfect” condition, he as- serted Thuraday. Farrar, a rigid trainer, will tip the beams at about 175 pounds. Hasselstrom and Farrar fought to a draw in their first setto, and each will be out to prove that he’s the better man this time. “He just won't be that lucky with me again,” Farrar predicted. “In fact, he'll be lucky to go the route.” Wild Bill was equally confident, predicting at least a decisive victory if not a knockout over his colored foe. Fort Yates Six-Man Team Loses Opener Fort Yates, N. D., Sept. 30.—Five games remain on the schedule of Fort Yates high school’s six-man football team, defeated 32 to 12 by Wakpala, 8. D., team in its opener ‘here last week. ‘The Wakpala setxtet scored in the first quarter when Thomas Greybull ran 80 yards from behind his won goal line for a touchdown but the Fort Yates boys tied the count at 6-all when Theodore Jamerson, cap- tain, intercepted a pass and galloped 45 yards to score, Collins dashed from the 15-yard line for the second Fort Yates tally. Collins, Jamerson and Thompson, starting Fort Yates backfield, showed promise working behind a first-string line made up of Thomas and Peter Jacobson and Alton Bossert. Coach Frank Oamek’s Seat stepping Carson outfit is next on the Fort Yates program. After Carson come Flasher at Fort Yates, Carson at Fort Yates, Flasher at Flasher and Wak- pala at Wakpala. GOPHERS GET BACKING Minneapolis, Sept. 30 — () — Ap- proximately 4,500 University of Min- nesota rooters will be in the stands at Lincoln, Neb., Saturday, when the Golden Gophers play their first major game of the season against Nebraska. SWITCH TO HARVESTER DISTRIBUTED BY MANDAN BEVERAGE COMP Mandan, N, Dak. - Hasselstr Prett Farrar, above, mighty colored om’s Foe man of the ring, will match blows with Bismarck’s Wild Bill Hasselstrom in the main event of a 31- round boxing card in the World War Memorial building here Oct. 7. It will be the second meeting between the two light-heavyweights, with both Farrar and Hasselstrom out to prove that the draw they fought here in their first embroglio last July 3 was = mistake. SHOULDER INJU Demon Football Captain May Be Out of Uniform for Two or Three Weeks Asa Dawson, hard-driving fullback and captain of the Bismarck high school football team, Wednesday be- came the first major injury casualty of the Demons’ training season. Dawson, on the sidelines much of the time last year with a bad knee, dislocated his shoulder in practice Tuesday and it is doubtful whether he will be able to play for at least one or two weeks. Chances are that he will be in uni- form Fridey when the Demons play the Mandan Braves in the id game of the season here but there is little likelihood that he will get onto the field of battle. Also still on the sidelines with a shoulder injury {s Bill Koch, veteran tackle, who was hurt early in the training season. Koch is likely to see little if any service Friday. Replacing Dawson in the fullback position as Coach Glenn Hanna put his charges through their pices Wed- nesday was Al Potter, halfback and line candidate, Potter, a husky youth, worked at one halfback position in the St. Marys game and showed up well. In Mon- day's workout, Hanne had used Put- New York, Sept. 30—(7)—Note to Van Lingle Mungo, Pageland, 8. C.’ Start doing the “big apple,” kid . . . You definitely will be traded this win- ter . . . Giants, Cards and Cubs have bids ready . . . Terry wants Joe Stripp . . . (Mel Ott has been doing fine work at third base, but he isn’t the hottest guy on earth at fielding bonts) Frisch could use Stripp, too . If the Cards will part with ANY Telephone 337 Hegel Pobsb eis i ath i A & RY SHELVES ter at flank in a trial effort to bol- ster the defensive power at right With Potter definitely not. a able for use at right end, Hanna ned to start Jim Donaldson there Fri- day, with Warren Kraft, who answered the opening call against the Saints, in reserve. Harry Swindling was the right beyae? post,. regularly occupied by Light signal drill occupied the De- mons Wednesday and were in store for them again Thursday afternoon after gruelling workouts the first two days of the week. To Bar Public From Colorado Grid-Game Fort Collins, Colo. Sept. 30— } (®)—The public will be barred instead of invited at the Rocky Mountain conference football game between Colorado Mines and Colorado State here Satur- y. Only a “handpicked” ‘audience of students, faculty members and newspaper writers will be ad- mitted, Colorado State officials announced. ~ ae bed Hatlinges is the prevalence o! fantile paral; in Fort Collins. sc) Besides man, only monkeys have learned the art of throwing. Van Lingle Mungo Sure to Be Traded, Probably for Dizzy Dean —Says Eddie Brietz. dept.: Vincent Lopez, the burper, graduated from Idaho, not Iowa . . . Howard Jones out at Southern Cali- fornia would like to-swap some speed for power . . . He’s got the fastest bunch of backs he’s ever had . | at Dempsey's tonight . . three pro tennis scouts hot-footed it as 28% Irish Fear Drake Team May Be Too Bulldogs First on Notre Dame Schedule; Purdue Backs Try Razzle Dazzle Chicago, Sept. 30 —(P}— Coach Elmer Layden can’t very well beef about Notre Dame’s gridiron sched ule because athletic director Elmer Layden made it, but it looks as though the fighting Irish will have to battle their heads off right from the start. ‘The start will be made Saturday against Drake's Bulldogs in the big, aS peas stadium just outside Sou a i Drake mowed down Central col- lege, 47-0 in their opening contest. But when Drake flattened Washing- ton university of St. Louis, 32-2, last Friday night, Layden decided he must have lined up nothing but major league opposition for his boys. Washington university held Notre Dame to a 14-6 decision last year. Purdue's drill indicated the Boil- ermakers would try to out-razzle dazzle Ohio State at Columbus Sat- urday in the Big Ten’s first cham- pionship battle. Cecil Isbell, Jim Nes- bitt and Felix Mackewicz fired aerial shots all over the field as Mal El- ward concentrated on that style of attack. The Buckeyes wrecked Pur- due plays during a defensive scrim- mage. Aerial defense drills were the order of the day at Minnesota, Il- Mnois and Northwestern. Coach Ber- nie Bierman feared what Nebraska might do to the Gophers Saturday unless the pass defense improves. Michigan’s defense showed im- provement, Chicago devoted two ses- sions to defense against Vanderbilt plays. Wisconsin’s offense was so ragged that Harry Stuhlidreher or- dered an extra scrimmage session be- fore the Marquette game. Indiana and Iowa have open dates this week. Ivy League Teams No Longer ‘Easy’ Five Open Season Saturday; Harvard, Cornell, Yale All on Way Back to Top New York, Sept. 30—(?)—It used to be easy to trim the Ivy, but, as they say around the quads, “them days is gone forever.” For the Ivy colleges, once the soft touch of the season, are now tougher than an open-field block and as solid- ly in the national football picture as any group in the country. Yale, Har- vard and Princeton, Penn, Cornell, Dartmouth and Columbia, the Ivy league, are all in front again with a minimum .of ballyhoo and a maxi- mum of results. Maine; Columbia plays Wil- Virginia, and Penn is host to Mary- land. ‘A decade or 80 ago, these games wouldn’t be the double-staved, brass- tories don’t pay for new shells or new gymnasiums and the boys got busy. Columbia was among the first. Lou ‘Little came to New York and a couple of years later he was bringing the light blue back from the coast, victorious at the Rose Bowl. Princeton bounded back into the national picture to chal- lenge Minnesota for No. 1 ranking. Penn introduced Messrs, Warwick, Kurlish, Elverson and Murray to the East. Yale hired Ducky Pond with the astute Greasy Neale as assistant. Last but fer from least Harvard seized the distinguished ornithologist Much for Opener Terrymen in Line to Veterans Steal Clinch Pennant Today Need Only One More Win After Splitting With Phils as Cubs Beat Reds By SID FEDER (Associated Press Sports Writer) This is the day the Giants prob- ably will clinch the Nations! League/ Runs pennant. . ‘There doesn’t seem to be any way out of it. The probability is they'll take at least one game of their dou- ble-header with the -down-trodden Phillies, and thus hang on to the flag. If they don’t there's always the possibility the Cubs will drop one to the collapsible Cincinnati Reds — nd that will do just as well. As matters now stand, any “com- bination of one” will turn the trick, and since the Giants haven't lost a double-header all season, there's no reason for them to start now, when the chips are down and the stakes are high. Lead by 3% Games Heading into what is probably the last day of the pennant races, with the Giants 3% games ahead this is the way things stand: Games to Bay 4 Thus, iants, by some freak of nature, should lose all their rer games, the Cubs still would have to take four in a row to make it nade but a nickel series for lit- tle old New York. WEDNESDAY’S STARS Tex Cubs — Blanked L 55 60 w 92 90 Gi Burgess Whitehead, Bucky Walters, Phillies — White- head drove in~three runs in 6-3 opener win; Walters batted in five runs in 6-5 nightcap victory, hit- ting homer with bases loaded and two singles, George in seven-inning nightcap. Gus Suhr, Pirates— Hit homer in winning rally for 7-5 victory over Cardinals. Joe Vosmik, Browns — Hit two doubles, drove in three runs, to top Tigers, 7-6. Z Lefty Grove and Johnny Mar- cum, Red Sox—Grove fanned six, walked none and beat Senators 3-1 in opener; Marcum pitched one- hitter in 4 1/3 inning relief trick to take nightcap, 7-4. Frankie Pytlak, Indians, and Bill Cox, White Sox—Pytlak’s dou- ble in tenth drove in winning run for 5-4 opener victory; Cox al- lowed three hits in 1-0 4% inning Five of them open Saturday. Yale | (ener DAWSON FOR MANDAN GAME |=: Richard Cresson Harlow and set him | poison, to work at Soldiers Field. Cornell, just two years away from by St. Lawrence, is up against @ good Colgate team with an even chance of defeating the Raiders. Minneapolis Business Men Buy Hockey Team men gether with the players and all other ties from F. W. (Nick) Kahler. | Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) a i i zt F i i gE a BE i ate fee Hy Ge TERES fo T Boston’s Red Sox, hoping for a first- division cut of the World Series pot, socked the Senatars twice, 3-1 be- hind Lefty Grove and 17-4 behind Johnny Marcum’s effective relief el- ‘bowing. The Browns came from be- hind to squeeze out a 7-6 decision over the Detroit Tigers. Cleveland managed Zero Days? You can if you’re wearing a warm, comfortable over- coat or top coat. DAHL CLOTHING STORE ny | MAJOR LEAGUE | | LEADERS | (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE 110; Galen and Herman, Cubs, 104. Hits — Medwick, Cardinals, 233; P.. Waner, Pirates, 217. Home runs — Ott, Giants, and Med- wick, Cardinals, 31. Pitching — Hubbell, 21-8; Root, Cubs, 13-! AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Gehringer, Tigers, Gehrig, Yankees, .351. Runs—DiMaggio, Yankees, 147; Rolfe, Yankees, 140, 2 | Hits—Bell, Browns, 210; DiMaggio, Yankees, 200. Home runs—DiMaggio, Yankees, 45; Greenberg, Tigers, 38. Pitching — Murphy, Yankees, 13-4; Stratton, White 14-5, Baseball Standings (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE L 92 Giants, 374; 2 New York Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis Boston. “aBRSBES Wolverine Show Upturn in Michigan Grid For- tunes Seen as Kipke Predicts Editor's Note—This is another of a series on prospects of major college football teams. Ann Arbor, Mich. Sept. 30 —(7)— Injuries and gome brilliant practics Performances ‘have forced Harry Kipke to revise some of his plans to Uft the American Wolverines from the gridiron doldrums. At the start of the task of building the head coach’s ninth Michigan team, the emphasis was placed on sophomore talent. A couple of “hailf- pint” halfbacks, an outstanding tackle and a fine defensive center were hailed as leading an array that promised an upturn in Wolverine football fortunes. Then came an intra-squad game when veteran performers stole the show. Three tremendous obstacles to a tul_ season lie immediately ahead of the Wolverines, and it is probable that veterans will get the call to action against Michigan State, Northwestern and Minnesota, Graduation Leaves Holes Kipke’s big problem—the filling of spots left open by graduation and ineligibility in the backfield and the line — apparently have been solved satisfactorily. : Kipke isn’t worried over the line Heartly (Hunk) Anderson has pre- pared. The former Notre Dame head coach, hired Iast winter, has im- proved the blocking, tackling and Kipke has predicted an even break in an eight-game schedule. He be- lieves his team has an even chance against Chicago, Illinois, Iowa and Pennsylvania, which ruined Michi- gan’s 10-year intersectional suprem- acy last year. As for Ohio state, he isn’t so sure. The schedule: Oct. 2, Michigan State at Ann Arbor; Oct. 9, North- western at Evanston; Oct. 16, Min- 302! nesota at Ann Arbor; Oct. 23, Iowa 000 (Game called end of 7th, darkness) Smith and Hayes; Andrews and Glenn, Bosox Take Two RHE 001 000 101— 3 8 0 000 000 001— 112 0 DeShong RHE 2++-410 000 101— 711 0) Cleveland at Iowa City; Oct. 30, Urbana; Nov. 6, Chicago at Ann Arbor; Nov. 13, Pennsylvania at Philadelphia; Nov. 20, Ohio State at’ Ann Arbor. Columbus Upsets Newark in Opener Faulty Base Running Contrib- utes to 5-4 Defeat of In- ternational Champs Illinois at Newark, N, J., Sept. 30.—(?)—Base- running, say the oldtimers, isn’t what it used to be when Ty Cobb was ghost- ing around the paths, But it’s still 9 .| fine art that can mean the difference (Game called end Sth, darkness) ‘Wyatt and Pytiak; Cox and Rensa. Browns Beat Bengals » Coffman and York; Mills and Harshany. NATIONAL LEAGUE iphia (Game called end of 8th, darkness) Gumbert, Brennan, Baker and LaMaster, Passeau and Bucs Club Cards RH 310 000 010— 5 11 0U1 100 50x- Warneke, Ryba and Ogrodo Blanton, Weaver, Brown and Tt Reds Carleton and Hartnett; Schott and Moore. Ty IT'S BLACK’S ated won between winning and losing a ball game, Ask the Newark Bears about it and they'll agree both observations are correct. They learned something about it in the first game of the little World Series Wednesday, their lesson contributing heavily to their losing to the Columbus Red Birds of the Amer- ican Association, The professor of how not to do it, it happened, was Charley Keller, the Maryland lad who won the Interna~ tional League batting crown this year. On base three times, he was picked off twice—losing one run for sure and removing himself as a scoring threat the second time. Newark led, 1-0 at one time and it didn’t seem to matter. Newark open lost by a one-run margin, A four-hit, four-run spree in the seventh chased Joe Beggs from the mound and won the game for the As- sociation champions. Nelson Potter already had relieved John Chambers .| for the Red Birds and he saved Colum- bus’ lead to become the winning pitcher. RHE Columbus (AA)..000 010 400-5 9 3 Newark (IL).....001 020 001— 4 8 3 Chambers, Pott and Crouch; Beggs, Niggeling and Hershberger. Banana trees grow 40 feet tall, but have stems, like plants, instead of trunks. MOVE WHO WINS 2: beton, To no question about it—men likea natural. tasting whiskey. If that's what you're looking for—try Kessler’ Private Blend. Julius Kessler has been the king-pin whiskey man in America for over 60 years. He knows how to prodiice a natural whiskey taste. Kessler’s Private Blend feels smooth going down, yet it’s full 90 proof. Ask for it today—at your favorite liquor store or bar. *OUjes OA SwONROS "MANDAN Mandan, N. Dak. DISTRIBUTED BY BEVERAGE COMPANY Telephone 337

Other pages from this issue: