The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 23, 1937, Page 14

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)

THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1937 THE BUCKET By John Hiele GOLDEN GLOVES CHANGES General satisfaction marked the Fordham in Third Position, Min- ‘work of judges and referees at the Golden Gloves tournament here last week. There were many compliments and few kicks. Yet, since this is an amateur sport, the criticisms which were voiced are worthy of attention. The tournament Tmanagers have come far since this attraction first was organized and presumably are interested in improv- ing it for the future. With that mind, The Dope Bucket presents the following suggestions from a number which have been made in an off-hand way by local Persons: 1. Both referees and judges should be given authority to stop a bout to save any contestant from unnecessary. punishment. Under this year's rules enly the tournament manager and the secretary of the State Athletic com- mission had such authority. 2. Leave the scoring to judges only. Under this year's rules the scoring ‘was done by two judges and the re- feree. ee x 40 AND 8 STARTED IT To get an understanding of the first suggestion it is necessary to go back to the first amateur boxing bouts held in Bismarck in recent years. ‘They were presented under the aus: pices of the 40 and 8, honor society cf the American Legion, which had some 60 boys in boxing classes five years ago. That was the forerunner of the present system, sponsored by the WPA. It was not new here. Far- go and some other cities already: of- fered boxing for athletic youths, but these efforts were largely in connec- tion with private gymnasiums or spon- sored by promoters who were looking’ for suitable professional material. The 40 and 8 classes were sport for sport’s sake, pure and simple. A show was put on in the spring merely to show how the boys had progressed. Boxing under the WPA recreation department probably would have come anyway, but the simon-pure back- ground is interesting. The 40 and 8 Cropped it because it was difficult to induce skilled men to give their time te it and no funds were available to Ppey an instructor. * * * NOBODY GOT HURT One of the rules for the 40 and 8 venture was that no boy should be overmatched and if a contestant ap- in danger of injury the bout be stopped at once. is a rule which, admittedly, r judgment. A punch in the sometimes is required to bring out the best in a contestant. The fact that a boy sheds blood is, in itself, no reason for stopping « fight. Many @ competitor has bled more than his opponent and still come off with a victory. Lads with fair, tender skin bleed more easily than those with darker skins. The efefcts of blows are more obvious on such competitors. Hence it does. the sport no good to give inex- persons the right to stop a bout. It is no place for a Nervous Nellie and this column knows it. keeps & boy fg, even though he is hopelessly Outclassed. The trouble, with young- asters in an amateur sport, is that the: are likely to have that even if they have little else. Pride keeps many lad arom ean even after he is beaten. A case in point was the bout be- Joe Miltenberger, and Norman ‘The latter was 2 good, game and he packed a punch which Mil- Tespected but the contest fwas definitely decided when Milten- ferger closed Kolstad’s eye. it damage could have re- ted from that injury and when it apparent that only Kolstad’s heart was keeping him in the 80 in view of the fa:t efter his eye was closed, Kolstad oon one chance in a million winning nesota Fifth; Notre Dame Displaces Yale New York, Nov. 23.—(?)—Pitts- burgh’s Panthers have been cast du- biously “in the middle” of the hottest Rose Bow! debate in years but there's ru doubt where they stand Tuesday in the national ranking of collegiate football teams. Pitt rates the No. 1 spot by a deci- sive margin for the third straight week in the Associated Press poll. based upon the combined opinions of sports experts. The Rose Bowl champions were picked to head this. week's list on 37 of 48 ballots and bracketed at the top with Fordham on another slate. The voting otherwise was marked by in- creased support for the pride of the west coast, California, ranking gains by Minnesota, Dartmouth and Vil- lanova, and Notre Dame's displace- rent of Yale in the first ten. Here's the tabulation of the sixth weekly poll, with points tallied on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: First Ten 1, Pittsburgh (37 firsts, 1 tie for first) ... California (10 firsts) . 5 . Fordham (one tle for first) .. . Alabama 3 . Minnesota Points Dartmouth . Villanova Santa Clara Notre Dame . 0. Louisiana State . Second ten: 11, Nebraska 70; 12, Vanderbilt 27; 13, Univ. of Washington 20; 14, Yale and Texas Christian tied, 16 each; 16, Colorado university 14; 1%, Holy Cross 12; 18, Duke and North Carolina, tied, 11 éach; 20, Tulsa 8. Also ran: Ohio State, Harvard and Baylor, 7 each; Stanford and Rice. 3 each; Auburn 2; Detroit 1. The northeast, by placing four of its unbeaten teams among the first 3. 4, 5. é z 8. 9, pt or young man who has gone “slug nutty” because he had too much cour- age and those in charge of the pru- giam didn’t have eppurh discretion. * * NO REAL SOLUTION The question of scoring is one which can never be settled to everyone's satisfaction. Every boxing enthusiast has seen decisions which he thought were “sour.” And those decisions were returned in the best of faith. The proposal to bar the referee from the scoring is based on the theory that a referee has enough to do to enforce the rules without at- tempting to score the contestants. Particularly is this true in amateur bexing, where enforcement of the Tules is a full-time chore. Referees of the type available in this community are likely to get excited, at least a little, whereas judges outside the ring are likely to be more detached. In the bout between Bill Weymouth and Hubert Reed, both judges scored the contestants exactly even: for all rounds. The referee gave Weymouth @ six-to-four edge in the first round and scored the others even. Many at the ringside thought the referee got two men confused. In their judgment Reed landed more and cieaner blows than his opponent. His style, which involved an occasional “covering up” technique in the first round, was not so impressive as his work, counted on the basis of effec- tive blows landed. This was the only bout in the championship round in which the fighter -who landed the most blows and came closest to having his oppon- ent in distress lost the decision. It was ® regrettable incident, eek ‘THE OBVIOUS REMEDY The remedy is hard to find, but until the tournament can be assured referees of more experience it would be worth while trying out a system whereby the referee is relieved of the Job of making decisions. * * ONE RULE WAS SILLY One of the rules governing the bouts was silliness supreme in view of the fact that this is an a amateur sport. That was the rule which prohibited the handler of a boy from throwing ia the towel to save his entry from pun- ishment. In effect, it barred ama- teurs from exercising a privilege which aiways is accorded in the hardes’- boiled professional circles. It sounds altogether too blood- INR) thirsty to reflect credit upon this ‘The greatest handicap amateur box- eg can have is the sight of = boy| hood, amateur attraction and there can be no valid argument for it. If any rule-maker wants a Romau holiday, let him get it somewhere else, not at the expense of American boy- ‘Panthers Hold First Place In National Standings for Third Week; California Next a Stars With Tommies DICK LaRUE * * * xe BISMARCK BOYS ARE NAMED TO MINNESOTA HONOR T ten, still holds the strongest sectional hand in the ranking list. On the basis. of their relative posi- tions in the poll, Pittsburgh has nothing much to fear in its final game with Duke, to be played at Dur- m, N. C., this Saturday. But the juency of form reversals lately suggests that nothing can be taken for granted. Alabama rules the favorite over Vonderbilt in their Thanksgiving dey “natural” at Nashville but there may be some significance attached to this week's ranking shifts. Alabama drop- ped a notch, to fourth place, while Vanderbilt advanced six notches to 12th position. Minnesota, the No. 1 team last year, muade a strong finish to land in fifth place. The Gophers dropped close ecisions to Nebraska and Notre Dame in salt from the national title spot- te Four Lettermen on Watford City Squad Watford City, N. D., Nov. 23.—(?)}— Coach J. H. Huey is looking to the de- velopment of last year's reserves for the answer to his current basketball problems at Watford City high. Four lettermen are members of the squad which Huey says will. be small but fairly fast. 4 The schedule: Dec. 3—Epping at Epping; Dec, 7—Ray at Watford City; Dec. 10—Stanley at Watford City; Dec. 17—Grenora at Watford City Dec, 21—Parshall at Parsahll; Ji 10—Arnegard at Arnegard; Jal Tioga at Watford City; Jan. liston at Williston; Jan. 21—Alexander at Alexander; Watford City; Jan. 29—Sanish at San- ish; Feb. 2—Williston Alexander at Watford City; Feb 18— Tioga at Tioga. Hockey Players Call Organization Meeting City hockey league members will hold their first organization meeting of the 1997-38 season in the WPA recreational department offices at the World War Memorial building al 7p. m., Tuesday. League President George Schaum- berg declared hockey enthusiasm should reach @ new high this year and the league hopes to organize at least four teams in Bismarck. Anyone interested in playing is in- vited to attend, HAMM’S ian A holiday meal, or any meal, deserves a fully aged beer... .- Mandan Parity Dairy CT ‘aun ‘aid Dick LaRue of St. Thomas, Larry Schneider of Con- cordia Win Berths Two Bismarck youths, Larry Schnei- Cer of Concordia college and Dick La- Rue of St. Thomas college, have been named to the Minnesota conference all-star eleven selected by the Asso- ciated Press in a poll of coaches, Dick LaRue, a 180-pound guard, is a son of Mr. and Mrs, L. A. LaRue, 1021 Eighth St. Bismarck. A junior, he played his second year as a mem- ber of the Tommies’ first string eleven this fall. St. Thomas finished third in the conference standings. Larry Schneider was a mainstay at end on the Concordia eleven that placed second in the conference stand- ings. A strong defensive player, he Was especially adept as a pass receiver. He is a senior. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Schneider, 914 Sev- ee ee try and Dick are former Bismarck high school athletes. Heavy Schedule Faces Langdon’s Cage Team Langdon, N. D., Nov. 23.—(P}— Langdon’s high school basketball team. will play a 16-game schedule opening with the Nekoma game Nov. 30, Coach Joseph W. Kilpatrick said Tuesday. Lettermen back are Tom Clifford and Bob Murle. The schedule: Nov. 30, Nekoma at Nekoma; Dec. 3, Ed- more at Langdon; Dec. 7, Osnabrock | at Osnabrock; Dec. 10, Cando at Can- do; Dec. 17, Grafton at Langdon; Dec, 21, Park River at Park River; Dec. 30, Hannah at Hannah; Jan. 7, Park River at Langdon; Jan. 14, Cando at Lang- don; Jan. 18, Oalvin at Langdon; Jan. 21, Grafton at Grafton; Jan. 28, La- kota at Langdon; Feb. 4, Osnabrock at Langdon; Feb. 8, Munich at Munich; Feb. 11, Hannah at Langdon; Feb. 15, Nekama at Langdon. - SPONSOR CAGE LEAGUE Bowman, N. D., Nov. 23.—Carl Johnson, Dick McCorkle and W. R. Lokken are a committee named to direct sponsorship of a town basket- ball league and representative inde- pendent quint. To Organize City | Basketball League Interested Players to Meet in World War Memorial Build- ing at 7:30 Tonight Organization of a city basketball league will be planned at a meeting in the World War Memorial buliding at 7:30 tonight, P. R, Volk, Burleigh county recreational director, an- nounced Tuesday morning. All persons interested in basketball who would like to join one of the teams which will participate in league play are urged to attend the meeting, Volk said. Plans for the organization of teams as well as the league will be made at the meeting, he said. -Recreational workers will be in di- rect charge of the league this year, according to Volk. Present plans call for play to start about Dec. 7, with the time remaining up to then to be devoted to organiaztion of teams, he said. Players were urged to bring their basketball shoes along with them as they will have a chance to work out for the firt time tonight. Kelly’s Lunch and Wonder Loaf Lose Toman’s Cleaners, Will Entries Turn in Upset Triumphs in City League Kelly's Lunch and Wonder Loal, fevored entries in the City bowling league, were deefated by Toman’s Cleaners and Oscar H. Will and com- pony in league play Monday night. Schmidt rolled a single game score of 225 and three game high of 581 to pair with Schubert, who had a three game total of 558, in leading the Will team to its win over Wonder Loaf. Ohio State, Minnesota, North- western Top Others in Attendance Marks Chicago, Nov. 23.—(#)—Return to general circulation of what the boys call “folding money” is reflected in football attendance and receipts for 1937 in the Western conference. Receipts probably will exceed the $2,000,000 mark for the season just closed—the highest figure since the peak year of 1927, Maj. John L, Grif- fith, commissioner of the athletics for the “Big Ten” said Tuesda; The all-time high was $2,770,600 in 1927. Last year the receipts were $1,750,000. The bottom was reached in 1932 when the cash amounted to $972,389, Buckeyes Draw Most The “Big Three” from the stand- point of attendance were Ohio State, Minnesota and Northwestern with the Buckeyes leading for the second con- secutive year with eight games at home and abroad drawing an esti- mated 394,000. Although the final ‘checkup will not be completed for sev- eral days, the Buckeyes no doubt will eclipse their all-time high of 392,000 hung up a year ago. Northwestern, although failing to retain its Big Ten championship, set an all-time new high for the Wildcats with a total of 339,800 fans at eight games. Northwestern's attendance this year was boosted by capacity ‘crowds for the Ohio State and Min- nesota games. About 67,000 came out for the Buckeye tilt and the Minne- sota-Northwestern game drew 62,000. Chicago Trails Wisconsin and Illinois ran far ahead of last year’s attendance fig- ures, although a final checkup will A handicap of 119 points per game helped Toman’s trip Kelly's. CITY LEAGUE Wonder Loaf +» 190 148 199— 537 . 172 162 171— 505 +. 158 182 173— 513 eeee 190 159 152— 501 163 184 186— 533 873 835 881—2589 Will & Co. +225 185 171— 58i 119 108 156—. 383 148 141 199— 488 eee 138 172 164— 469 eos 201 191 166— 558 54 54 57— 165 Hektner . Faubel Patera .. Kupper ....- Verduin .. 145 189 179— 513 139 122 117— 378 114 133 162— 409 155 190 187— 532 + 119 119 119— 357 Dummy .. Neibauer Toman .. 186 159 191— 536 159 168 182— 509 202 178 190— 570 166 142 149— 457 ++ 170 175 160— 505 Totals .........883 822 872—2577 Oakes Cagers to Play 16 Games This Season Oakes, N. D., Nov. 23.—(#)—Oakes high school cagers will play 16 games ia advance of the annual Oakes in- vitational tournament Feb. 25, Coach Nate Cummings said Tuesday. Four basketball lettermen — Wil- tems , Roney, Bunker and Nelson—ere The schedule: Dec. 3, Kulm Oakes; Dec. 14, Cogswell at Oakes; Dec. 17, Oakes at Enderlin; Jan. 7, Enderlin at Oakes; Jan. #1, Edgeley at Oakes; Jan. 14, LaMoure at Oakes; Jan. 18, Ellendale at Oakes; Jan. 21, Oakes at Lisbon; Jan. 25, Valley City Model high at Oakes; Jan. 28, Milnor at Oakes; Feb. 1, Oakes at LaMoure, Feb. 4, Oakes at Valley City Model ig) Feb. 11, Oakes at Edgeley; Feb. 16, Lisbon jakes; Feb. 18, Oakes at Ellen- Feb. 25, Oakes invitational T. Schneider .. MOTT GIRLS TO PLAY Mott, N. D., Nov. 23.—Supt. Donald G. Stubbins reports that Mott high school will resume girls basketball af- ter a lapse of a few years. Hot Competition From Sugar Bow] Helps Force Choice of Pitt as Rose Bowl Team New York, Nov. 23.—(?)—Straight from the coast: California has just about made up its mind to ask Pitt to the Rose Bowl if Pitt gets past Duke Saturday .. . Because if some oth- er team is picked it will clear the Meee veg Gecks for the Sugar Bow! (rap- idly becoming & major rival) to come up with Pitt vs. Alabama or some other such attraction . . .. When good old Gabby Hartnett, was introduced at a Chicago fight the other night, 21,000 fans gave ute ovation, He fe ute ovation. . . Gomes, still is the No. 1 Chicago candidate for manager of the Cubs. . Ralph Vona, classy As- bury Park, N. J., welterweight, once was the favorite caddy of Edward G. Robinson, the film star. Within a week two Broadway gos- sip columns have reported Lefty Gomez of the Yanks and the good- looking June O'Dea are arranging @ friendly divorce. . . Harry Etchells, a shoe shop attendant in Manchester, Eng., won $100,000 in a football pool and flags were hoisted all over town in celebration . . . You embryo fight matchmakers can earn $5,000 of Mike Jacobs’ dough if you can get Lou Ambers to defend his lightweight title against Henry Armstrong Mike can’t ... Louis was an even better '—Says Eddie Brietz: or Gene Tunney, but wound up flat broke . . . Both Dempsey and Tun- ney rate a million in any book. That quib about Marchy Schwarts being on the out at ‘Creighton seems to have a bit off-key ... Marchy has just been signed to a new two-year contract, so probably it was who were doing all the yowling . . . Why is everybody overlooking that Tulsa university football team? .. . Been going great. Eddie Mead, manager of Henry Armstrong, is sporting a watch bear- ing the pictures of himself and Joe Lynch, former bantamweight champ, who was Mead Pred Ware, Jr., son of the sports eal Francisco Charlie Bachman has ordered Thanks: not be available for a couple of weeks. Chicago, which failed to win. ® conference game, trailed the field. The “Big Ten” schools split gate re- ceipts right down the middle when they play each other. Only the cost of officials is deducted. The visiting team pays its own traveling expenses and the home team other incidentals of staging the game. When a confer- ence team plays a non-conference school the visiting team gets a guar- antee, which varies in accordance with the size of the school and the im- portance of the game. Six Lettermen Back For Fessenden Quint Coach H. C. (Charlie) Solberg opened basketball practice at Fessen- den high school with six lettermen. Returning to form the nucleus of the team are Capt. Harry Hermann, Charles Vancura, Wilfred Neuensch- wander, Ed Vancura, Alan Adams and Vernon Pepple. Pushing them for positions are Donald Larson, Art Pep- ple, Donald Thornton, Orvin Ong- stad, Bill Hope, Tom Nelson, Bryce Streibel and Leslie Rappuhn. Only two of these 14 men, Hermann and Ed Vancura are seniors. The Orioles schedule is as follows: Nov. 29—Hurdsfield and Ca here. Dec. 7—Rugby there. Dec, 10—McClusky there. Dec, 13—Maddock Aggies here. Dec, 17—Linton here. Dec. 21—Minnewaukan there. Jan, 4—Minnewaukan here. Jan. 1—Maddock Aggies there. Jan. 11—Anamoose there. Jan, 14—Carrington here. Jan..21—Harvey there. Jan, 25—Anamoose here. Jan. 28—Drake here. Feb. 3, 4, 5—Conference tournament. Feb, 8—New Rockford here. Feb. 11—Carrington there. Feb. 15—Harvey here. Feb. 18—New Rockford there. \ Cando Quintet to Play Valley City on Dec. 3 Cando, N. D., Nov. 23.—(?)—Ironing out rough spots revealed in the sea- son’s opener occupied Coach A. L. Greenlee Tuesday as he groomed the Cando Cage squad for the Dec. 3 game with the Hi-Liners at Valley City. - Lett Mets, Martin, Whalen and Underdaht are back for another Jee sald. The schedule: Dec. 3, Valley City at Valley Cit Dec. 7, Rolette at Rokette; Dec. 10, Langdon at Cando; Dec. 17, Bottineau at Bottineau; Dec. 21, Bisbee at Bisbee; Jan. 4, Bottineau at Cando; Jan. 7, Rugby at Rugby Starkweather 21, Leeds at Leeds; Jan. 25, Devils at Cando; Feb. 8, Rolette at Cando; Feb. 11, Devils Lake at Devils Lake: Feb. 18, Minnewaukan at Cando; Feb. 25, Rugby at Cando. Bismarck Youths Bid For Bottineau Quint Bottineau, N. D., Nov. 23.—Twa Bis- marck youths were listed among out- tanding yearling candidates for the State School of Forestry’s basketball team following the first squad cut of the season last week. Helmuth Clausnitzer and Leon Doerner were the Bismarck boys who survived the pearing of the squad to 20 candidates. Karl Thurnburg, Man- dan, is another Big 10 Gate Receipts May Be Largest Since 1927, Indications Are Oldest Southern Rivalry Still Lives | Chapel Hill, N. C., Nov. 23—(#) —Southern football’s oldest con- tinuous rivalry and one of its most harmonious will be renewed here Saturday when Virginia and North Carolina meet. It will be the 42nd contest be- tween the two institutions. The Cavaliers, despite nine defeats in the last 10 games, hold the ad- vantage. They have won 21 games to the Tar Heels’ 17 with three ties. Fort Yates Quintet Beats Selfridge, 59-16 Fort Yates, Nov. 23.—Scoring six points in the first 30 seconds of play, Fort Yates high school’s basketball team rung up the curtain on its sea- son here with a 59 to 16 victory over Selfridge. Looking Back, Jametson, Collins and Hatch paced the Fort Yates quin- tet with Ferder and Dressler looking best in the Selfridge lineup. ‘The linups: Fort Yates (59) T, Jamerson, f. J. Taken Alive, f. R. jack, 4 3 Totals... Selfridge (16) ‘T. Ferder, lesosouudel Houcoownsesa looumovetmlioococecco=e ol covonwatel conmoowowon Five Lettermen Back At Assumption Abbey Richardton, N. D., Nov. 23.—Return ot five lettermen bolsters hopes that Assumption Abbey will have an out- standing basketball team this winter. Playing are Harold Schmidt, Frank Hammerschmidt, Kuhn, Arnold Haspert, Teddy Zech, Victor Klein, Nick Ziegler, John Sand, John and Wendy Kuntz, John White and Johnny Meyers. Hazen Clashing With New Salem Holsteins Hazen, N. D., Nov. 23—Hazen’s in- experienced cagers get their first taste of the hardwood Tuesday whea they clash with the New Salem Hol- steins at New Salem. Herbert Gut- knecht and Edwin Reichenberg are the only lettermen. Other games be- fore Christmas are Dunn Center there Dec. 3; Golden Valley there Dec. 10, and Killdeer there Dec. 17. GET NEW UNIFORMS McClusky, N. D.> Nov. 23.—Twelve local business firms have purchased new uniforms for the McClusky In- dependents. The cagers will don iade togs with white stripes and letters. be Se Pe ee | Fights Last Night | (By the Associated Press) Pitteburgh—Al Gainer, 170%, New Haven, Conn, outpointed Tiger Jack Fox, 173, Spokane, Wash., (1). $ To gracious good living—this To. We present... and suggest Forks Cagers Play Satans in Opener Squad Will Be ‘Good’ by End of Season, Is Coach Bohn- hoff’s Prediction Grand Forks, N. D. Nov. 23.—(?)}— With a squad that Coach Ed Bohnhoff asserts will be “good” by the end of the regular season, Grand Forks high school Cagers are preparing for the opening game Dec. 3 at Devils Lake. Co-captains Gene Bogan and Ray Millette and Henry Gotsian, letter- men, are the nucleus around which Bohnhoff is building his 1937-38 club. ‘The schedule: Dec, 3—Deviis Lake at Devils Lake. Dec, 10—Valley City at Valley City. Dec. 11—Jamestown at Jamestown. Dec. 14—Grafton at Grafton. Jan. 7—Devils Lake at Grand Forks, Jan. 14—Park River at Grand Forks. 21—Wahpeton at Grand Forks, Jan. 28—East Grand Forks at East Grand Forks. Feb. 4—Grafton at Grand Forks. Feb, 11—East Grand Forks at Grand Forks. \ Feb. 18—Minot at Grand Forks. Feb. 20—East Grand Forks at East Grand Forks. March 4—Fargo at Grand Forks. New Salem Begins Cage Year Strong Five Lettermen Form Core of District Champions of Last Winter New Salem, N. D., Nov. 23. — Five lettermen have given the New Salem Holsteins a flying start towards a suc- cessful cage season. They are Vern Stayton, Herman Vollrath, Henry Arndt, Freddie Schneider and Calvin Tempel. The Holsteins return to the hard- wood wars tonight when they face Hazen’s inexperienced quint, the club which last year gave New Salem a battle in the finals of the district tournament. First year men out for the squad this year are Berton Fromm, Milton Gaebe, Art Lieb, Marvin Wilkens, Harold Ostereng, Edmund Bauer, Marvin Gunder, Russell Kruger, Pal- mer Johnson, Edwward Nagel, Harvey ites } Dallas Henke and Avold ‘The shcedule: Nov. 23—Hazen at New Salem. Dec. 2—Mandan there. Dec. 7—Beulah here. Dec, 10—Hebron there. Dec, 14—Glen Ullin here. Dec. 17—Dickinson here. Dec, 21—Taylor there. Dec, 30—Dickinson there, Jan, 4—Beulah there. Jan 7—Hazen there, Jan. 13—Glen Ullin there. Jan, 21—Richardton here. Jan. 28—Taylor here. Feb, 3—Richardton there. Feb. 8—Mandan here. Feb, 11—Hebron her Cage Outlook Bright At Enderlin This Fall Enderlin, N. D., Noy, 23.—(/ ‘The basketball’ outlook ‘at, Enderlin high school is “fairly bright” with three lettermen back, declared Coach P. J. Henkel and Harold Johnson. ‘The schedule: Dec. 10, Enderlin at, Sacred Heart Academy, Fargo; Dec. Oakes at Enderlin; Jan. 7, Ender- lin at Oakes; Jan. 11, Enderlin at Mil- Nor; Jan. 14, Edgeley at Enderlin; Jan. 18, Lisbon at Enderlin; Jan, 19, En- derlin at Valley City; Jan. 21, Ender- lin at Ellendale; Jan. 25, Enderlin at Sheldon; Jan. 28, Valley City model high at Enderlin; Feb. 1, Enderlin at Edgeley; Feb. 8, Sacred Heart at En- derlin; Feb. 11, Enderlin at Lisbon; Feb. 18, Milnor at Enderlin; Feb. 22, Sheldon at Enderlin; Feb. 25, Enderlin at Valley City Model high. May the best of the goed... are giving... faues to Pet Distributed by *

Other pages from this issue: