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

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1987 THE BUCKET By Jehan Bijele MINNESOTA IN DOGHOUSE Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatche- ‘wan are going to get a lot of Bismarck money next summer, talkfests among cesmeirnsniy { Capital City fishermen indicate. 4 South Dakota and Montana probably \ will slice off a few chunks of the long green also. Minnesota, once the favorite angling grounds for the disciples of Izaak ‘Walton, has gone too far in its taking of all the silver it could dig from the pocketbooks of tourists who have thronged the Gopher state. As one Bismarcker said, “I've been Saint and jOlson, Bowers Look Good ir | Bismarck Lineup; Downey Impresses Kelly | Just basketball team will size up this year may be pretty well determined Friday night when the Demons take on St. Mary's in their season’s inaugural in the World War Memorial building here, fishing in Minnesota every year since|Coach Glenn Hanna opined Tuesday. 1912, This fall I went down there for three days’ fishing. I registered at a Thus far the Demon mentor has not had a chance to see his squad in resort and then asked for a fishing li-|action during a regular game and with cense, And they soaked me $4. Boy, 4 was I mad? I paid the $¢ this year,) ; but it’s the last dollar those Minne- | sota chiselers are going to get out of! me, I'd rather spend $5.50 in Ontario, t because fishing’s better and the re-| f sorts don’t hold you up.” Up spoke another Bismarcker,| “Jack, you should’ve gone with us. ‘We went up north of Regina two hun- dred miles and got so many fish our hooks wore out. I was wised up to the Minnesota racket when they boosted the ante from $2 to $3. I'll fish in Canada hereafter. Those Min- nesota lakes are fished out or frozen) out anyway. And the resort keepers} only two letter winners from last year's quintet back is more or less uncertain how his boys will stand up under fire. The Saints opened their schedule last week with a convincing 33 to 14 tri- umph over Linton, and showed plenty o: class in running up the lop-sided score, Hanna expressed himself as well satisfied with the improvement his orly two veterans, Captain Jack Bow- ers and Gilbert Olson, tall center, have displayed in opening practice sessions. Bowers, Olson Improved “Olson has come far since last sea- son,” Hanna declared, “and will be one ot the strongest scoring threats in the state this year, Bowers has straight- _ Cage Teams Drill For Game Friday how Bismarck high school’s; Demon Pittsburgh Tops Other Elevens in First Place; California Second, Fordham Third ~ the fellows who look at football and write about it, Pitt's Panthers are the best collection of players in the United States this year and there’s not much room for argument. In the seventh and final weekly ranking poll of writers, made by the Associated Press, 29 of 33 experts throughout the country picked Pitt for |first place. Two others split their bal- ‘lot between Pitt and Fordham while single votes were cast for Fordham and Alabama for top rank. California earned second place in the balloting without getting one first place vote. Counting ten points for a first place vote, nine for second, etc., the Panthers polled 327 points to Califor- nia’s 277. Alabama, undefeated and Poll of Writers | All But Four Pick Panthers for | New York, Nov. 30.—(?)—If you heed i ‘Whooping It Up for Dixie qk Tere SS ® pete Reject Proposal for Post Season Game by Secret Ballot, Says Newspaper Pittsburgh, Nov. 30.—()—Pitt’s un- defeated Panthers took themselves out ey cece vo reported to be 16-15 a . 5 the gridders rejected a proposal for any post-season Milwaukee, Nov. 30. flew about Tuesday like wey Take Selves Out . Of Bowl Picture Strength Given To Rumor Giants Seek Van Mungo Arrival of Bill Terry at Milwau- kee Minor League Meet- ing Boosts Talk PR fungoes ‘These peppy young cheer leaders won't hold anything when the Florida scholastic All-Stars play a ‘team selected from 350 Ohio high schools at St. Petersburg, Christmas week, in the first north-south intersectional football game of its kind ever staged. Off the ground in their pleas for more hoopla a! think they're operating a night club.”| * * x A FAN SPEAKS UP ened out some of the kinks in his play and should be one of the smoothest ball handlers and floor men who will untied, could take no better than fourth, and Santa Clara, also with a ciean slate, tied for ninth with Notre A Bismarck football fan who signs himself “An Old University of Minne- sota Graduate” writes in to say a few things about all-state football teams : and candidates. Says he: ‘ “The article in your paper showing candidates for all-state football team noted. “Notice over 20 candidates from Class “B” teams, such as Kenmare, Cando, and so forth, and above all things four or five candidates from Grand Forks—and that team won only one game, “I am an old player, though not so old in years, and have followed Bis- marck's team since I have been in North Dakota. And I want to ask: ‘Why were Bowers and Murray left off the candidate list? “Show me a harder tackle or a bet- ter blocker than Bowers, or a better passer or open field runner than Mur- ray. Without those two this year and last Bismarck would have been sunk. “I am submitting an all-state team appear on our floor this season.” With Olson at center, Hanna has Bowers and either Harold Smith or Charles Shafer to pair at the forward posts and Warren Kraft and Harry Rishworth outstanding candidates for guards. Bob Yeasley and Ed Lee, a pair of six-foot centers, are showing up well and are certain to see duty. All members of the Bismarck first- string squad are likely to see action against the Saints, Hanna said, voic- ing @ belief that St. Mary's should enter the game on at least even terms with the Demons on the basis of last year’s record, lettermen returned and their performance against Linton. Floor play and basket shooting oc- cupied most of the time of Coach (Clement Kelley and his assistant, Bob Finnegan, as they put their St, Mary's charges through paces in preparation charges through their paces in prep- aration for the battle with their city rivals, ‘Plenty To Do’ ‘Dame. A year ago Minnesota beat out Luoisiana State in the final poll, but for. 1937 the Gophers wound up fifth and LS.U. eighth. Here is the final tabulation with points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis and the 1936 rankings of the teams: 1936 Rank- First Ten Points ing 1 Pittsburgh (29 first, 2 ties for frist) 327. «3 2. California . 277 x 3. Fordham (1 for first) 25300=«x 4, Alabama (1 2460«( 4 5, Minnesota ... 104 1 6 Villanova .. 1038 x 1. Dartmouth 1020 x 8 Louisiana Stat 97 2 9. (Tied) Notre Dame 90 8 Santa Clara .......- 90 6 (x—Unranked). Second ten: 11, Nebraska 35; 12, Yale 18; 13, Ohio State 14; 14, Holy Strasburg, Linton Teams Bowl Here Divide Honors in Four Games With Four Bismarck Quin- tets in Match Play Bowling teams from Strasburg and Linton divided honors with four Bis- marck league quintets in match games left to right, Helen Childs, Bebe Dabbs, Margaret Parsley, and Al Only Two Schools Report Drop in Gate Receipts From Last Year's Mark (By the Associated Press) Football attendance and gate re- ceipts—most poignant critics of both ‘coach and team—Tuesday clearly demonstrated a mounting interest in ‘North Dakota high school athletics. Only two of the state schools which responded to an Associated Press sur- vey reported the total season “gate” less than 1936 and only one reported Dallas, Nov. 30.—(7)—Colorado uni- Slayton, all of St. Petersburg. MORE N.D. FANS PAY MORE TO _ Colorado to Play SEE GRID GAMES THIS FALL/ Cotton Bowl Foe)°ss mcs versity will meet the champion of the southwest conference in the New Medd day Cotton Bowl football game re. The Coloradoans, undefeated and untied in seven Rocky Mountain con- picks is all right with him. With withdrawal of University of ference games, accepted the Cotton Bowl association’s bid Monday night. The Rice Institute-Southern Meth- odist game here Saturday will decide} year’s day game at Pasadenda. the Buffalo's opponent. If Rice wins it will take Always secretive, Priestley said only e title. If it loses, Texas 2 Oneistion wil Fed » . “no comment woe told of Pitts- “We've plenty to do to get reads |Cross and Arkansas, tied 9 each; 16, [ere (hls week. the Tinton team win for Bismarck,” said Kelley, “and every | Texas Christian 8; 17, Colorado 7; 18, ” department of our play has to have a|Rice 6; 19, North Carolina 5; 20, Duke |Dce® 8nd Strasburg, losing to Kelly's going over. Not forgetting defensive |4. Joe Zahn, with single game scores work. Most of all, however, we need! Also ran: Vanderbilt and Auburn lof 217, 192, and 206 for a three game Shooting practice. Sometimes against |each 3; Cornell, Harvard and Wash-|total of 6i5, copped high individual Linton the boys looked as if they were {ington each 1. | * honors, pacing the Kelly's Lunch team Wahpeton, ends; Walter Dobler, Lin-[Plnd!) fet tne! Line as it scored 2,732 points in three fon, or Jack Bowers, Bismarck, quar- Pleasing. sepen’. Of. the straight victories over Strasburg. ‘5 ton game as far as Kelley is concerned terback; Chuck Murray, Bismarck, % Strasburg Ias sie Derlormanice of Donald) Dow: Wickenhelser ...... 174-164-115— 453 Wagner .... + 105-124-123— 352 Emerson Logee Earns Wooster ‘W’ Sweater’ te southern school has the better Wooster, Ohio, Nov. 30.—Emerson Logee, son of Rev. and Mrs. F. E. Logee of Bismarck, was one of 21 College of Wooster football players 4,500 fans to home games, compared |to win a gridiron award at the end t approximately 1,500 in each of the|of the season’s play, the list of let- two previous year, and attendance|termen released by Coach L. C. Boles at Devils Lake’s home games jumped | reveals. ‘ to 2,400, nearly double that of 1935 or! Logee, who was regular left tackle going “in the red.” An estimated 5,000 persons, 20 per cent more than in 1936 and 40 per cent above 1935, paid close to $1,200 to watch Harry Bridgeford’s Midgets in action at Fargo this year. Wahpeton Shows Increase Marty Engh’s Wahpeton eleven drew , for your consideration. Here it is: ' Harry Rishworth, Bismarck, center; | Steve Messmer, Valley City, and Les- { ter Clayton, Minot, guards; Harry { Treglawny, Valley City, and Hubert Weise, Jamestown, tackles; Arnold Klimple, Minot, and Roy Hausauer, Injury to Feser Hits Glen Ullin Cage Hopes . |Rey, newcomer to the first string who Green Rough Wool Coats for hel; ace the Saint attack. Dow- and Red Rifenberg, Fargo, or Free- ee reserve on the second-string|, Glen Ullin, N, D., Nov. 30.—News|Bauman, &S ...... 160-153-158— 4711936, é ou this year’s Wooster eleven, will be Flapper Fanny and Little Sister’ of Angels last season but did all-around | that Alois Feser, one of six lettermen | Baumann, J » 160-140-157— 457 Other schools showing good attend-|given a “W” sweater, Wooster's first- ‘You will notice I have named only|¢ooq work in his first starting game |!fom last year's team back for this|Moser-............. 171-186-166— 623|ance gains over last year were Man-|year football award. He was gradu- two Class “B” men. Why? dan, Williston, Turtle Lake, “Beulah, Bismarck’s schedule, . year’s quintet at Glen Ullin high against the Lions. Fessenden, Enderlin, Rugby, Crosby, Hankinson ‘ ated from Bismarck high school in One Class st sie SE ee |school, might be out of the game until Total . 710-161-119 —2256 1934, d i : 3 z against Almont Monday night. team was all they played; the rest the start of the second semester jarred Kelly's Lunch and Bottineau. At Coop-| The Scots won six of eight games were tough ones, Aud who did Ken-| Reeder Cagers Play aay otherwise optinuette emesietd Zahn .. 7, a11-192-206-— 415 lerstown. where floodlights were l-|inursanc thee tok ee ee ae mare, Mohall, Oakes, etc, run us! Marmarth in Opener} __ Other returning lettermen are Tony Hummel +++ 195-169-185— 549/stalled for night games, the attend-| strongest gridiron machines Boles has against? ‘Tavis, Joachim Schantz, Fridolin Mug- |Schneider, D ...... 169-188-185— 512 /arce tripled in one year with approxi-| coached at Wooster. “Hope you print this.” Reeder} N D_MTOW! 90-—-Goaterence |gil, Oharley Bohnelder ‘and Jos Moe- | Baldwin .. + 176-191-167— 534| mately 1540 peying admission to senate US “* * and district tournaments late in Feb-|brucker. New men bidding for start- Schneider, T + 143-175-174— 492 PORE aR oa eape tact a Bob Fitzgerald Lost BOOST FOR DICKINSON ruary will wind up the Reeder high |ing positions include Clarence Miller, 1 15-01 officials see id, bal Altes th Another fan, but this time one from | school basketball season, which gets|Henry Gannon, Walter Hermes, Wil-| Total .- 900-915-917 —2783 Iie eee Decree be on to Maroon Cage Team eg ee 1 ay ae under way when Marmarth plays here |bert Hermes, Ernest Filibeck and Don- Linton to purchase equipment or to support Out on somewhat less than even terms| De® 7 Fifteen games have already jald Schultz, The Rattlers opened |p1,r43, v. 180-145-156— 4a1 other athletic programs not so well| Chicago, Nov. 30—(%—The Uni- with the fighting Midgets. been lined up for the Reeder quintet. The schedule: + 139-125-146— 410 the survey showed. versity of Chicago basketball squad ‘The schedule: Dec. 7—Marmarth at Reeder. Dec. 10—Gascoyne at Gascoyne. Dec. 14—Buffalo Springs at Reeder. Dec. 17—St. Mary's (New England) there, has picked up where the Maroon foot- ball team left off—in the loss col- umn. ‘The Maroons haven't lost a game because they won't open their court schedule until Saturday night, against De Paul, but they've lost the services 0: Fitzgerald, guard for two years. Fitzgerald, star end on the grid squad, suffered a side in- jury this fall and has been advised to forego basketball competition. Despite this setback, Maroon court: prospects are unusually bright, with veterans from the 1936 squad for every Bison Cagers Lose To Cobbers, 38-36 Moorhead, Minn., Nov. 30.—(?)— Concordia’s Cobbers went overtime Monday night to beat the North Da- keta Agricultural college basketbail team, 38 to 36. The Cobbers, pre-game favorite, were hard pressed in the final min- + 151-140-152— 443 » 157-178-184— 519 + 163-167-155— 485 "190-755-793—2338 Electric +++ 128-149-182— 459 + 147-129-157— 433 + 156-148-127— 431 e+ 161-166-142— 469 » 225-132-178— 535. ee + 817-724-786—2327 “I had heard that Bismarck had a good end and center. Well, the end out to be good and the center what he had. But Dickinson showed the Demons something. * one occasion with two min- to play Bismarck had the ball Dickinson's five-yard line with downs to go. Bowers, the Bis- marck quarterback, tried three suc- cessive quarterback sneaks, But our center, Robert George, stopped every ‘one of them. “See where @ Dickinson fan has| * Nov. 30—Almont, there. Dec, 3—Beulah, there. Dec, 10—Taylor, here. ‘ Dec, 14—New Salem, there. » Jan. 7—Beulah, here. Jan. 14—New Salem, here. Jan. 21—Taylor, there. Jan, 28—Richardton, here. Feb. 4—Hebron, there. Feb, 10—Richardton, there. Feb, 18—Hebron, here. *Jan. 1—Scranton at Scranton. Jan. 4—Buffalo Springs at Buffalo iprings. Jan, 7—Hettinger at Reeder. *Jan. 14—Haynes at Haynes. Jan. 18—St. Mary’s, here. Jan, 25—Lemmon at Lemmon. in. 26—Haynes at Reeder. touted the prowess of Agnew and » but I want to mention a boy by the name of O’Brien, who called signals for the Dickinson team. He, too, has what it takes to go places in ‘the moleskins, “I’ve had my fling at football and &0 I think I know what I’m talking Sten on te Sif Dian ieee pas” OE AE | en ceo a nn aeie~ 9! FOUR LOCAL TEAMS TO BOWL GIRLS MAKE COME-BACK A) ae css ee aaa ee + 196-138-105— 429 n cass tum iis stuen forth ll Duke, One of Richest Schools in Country, “ecto IN MINOT TOURNEY SUND AY “Goach, Coaching the feminine quntet|ff Doesh’t Own Tarpualin to Cover Grid Field fj) 7°" 7 "7°01 svg Lunch, city Club, Serv- [At the Movie] Clara Stenbakken, a graduate Mayville normal school. Pros- ® successful season for the good, Slater opines, what but one member of last year’s ny ate es ge Feb. 1—New England, here. Feb. 4—Hettinger at Hettinger. Feb. 8—New England, there. “Feb. 11—Gascoyne at Reeder. Feb, 18-19—Conference Tournament. at Scranton. Feb, 25-26—District Tournament at Hettinger. New ork, Nov. 30.—()—No. 1 Pitt/ fan is Dr. W. W. Leskey, Pittsburgh OO | Fights Last Night | (By the Associated Press) Chicago—Harold Brown, 149, Chicago, outpointed Johnny Bar- vee 14744, South Bend, Ind., 0). Toronto—Baby Yack, 118!2, Tor- onto, Canadian bantamweight = —Says Eddie Brietz. Mike Jacobs is urging the Anti- Nazi league to reconsider its boycott of the Max Schmeling-Harry Thomas Linton » 156-154-187— 497 + 176-162-171— 509 » 159-146-164— 469 eee 178-170-170— 518 187-190-147— 524 856-822-838—2517 Si VWickenheiser ‘Wagner Baumann, Baumann, J. . » 127-154-146— 427 131-147-115— 393 153-173-151— 477 + 146-156-138— 410 150-169-150— 469 ute after holding a 23-18 lead at the half. Parked in a busy street in the City of London, a private automobile oc- cupies space worth $100,000. - ice Electric, Coman Court Quints Entered position. ‘The most important mineral sub- stances required in food are the salts of iron, iodine, phosphorous, calkium (lime), manganese, | Aviators in Terrific _ Air Battle for Film potash, and soda. | SIDEGLANCES - it back for another year’s duty. |alumnus ... He has traveled more Four Bismarck bowling teams will * bout . . . League says nothing doing Se eeeeenenneiaeemeed THE LEARN Fast * than 55,000 miles with the Panthers! and continues picketing Mike's hippo-| ‘Total ........... 707-799-700290¢|40in the trek to the state bowling Fei Metdgare ha eteote Bomsra ‘Apparently Killdeer high school|* °° The Doc has made every trip to|drome . . . Al Lezouski, Pitt guard, ler Loaf ~ tournament at Minot this week in 1s,” coming to the Capitol boys are good scolars, at least when it|the Pacific Coast with the boys. . celebrated ud first appearance below | Schneider, D. + 190-166-181— 537/quest of three state championships,| theatre, is done in a lavish manner. comes to learning the manly game of|Branch Rickey, who ought to know,|{e Mason-Dixon line and his 23rd|Oison .. football. Most of the boys that made ‘up the team that lost only one game in Class B competition this fall—and that one to Hettinger’s strong eleven —never saw a football contest before sport was adopted at Killdeer in 1936. Four of this year’s regulars were in there for the first time. Knocked ‘over by the Cowboys as they galloped their way through the season were Belfield, Watford City, Parshall and Assumption Appey, Bigs Richardton, * SHORT SHOTS “Red” Rifenberg, Fargo's power- Gans er potential cat for all-team honors, according to a5 of our journalistic friends. And we agree. Anybody with a name like that can't help but attract attention. Tt sings strength to you, reeks of » » » . The defeat the University “@f North Dakota football team suf- at of Gus Dorais’ De- weeks ago was the ven, ‘The score was h was in West's 10 years at suring which 92 games hi says Arichie Templeton, the kid ne found in an orphanage down at Winston-Salem, N. C., has the fa: Philadelphia they tell you Chubby Dean, the crace Pinch hitter of the Athletics, is court ing Connie Mack's daughter... If the Yanks and fe Giants get into MBE cciccs the World Series Templeton again, the 1938 Duke-Colgate game will be played in Philadelphia. Duke, one of the richest schools in the country, doesn’t own a tarpauli> for its football field When a big game is scheduled in Durham, Duke | Grimes rents North Carolina’s covers at $500 @ throw .. . Popper Sol Goldberg wouldn't take $5.000,000 for his five sons... (And Pitt wouldn’t take that much for just one of them). . «The folks down at Reisville, N. C., may not know it, but the cigarette factory town is the smallest in or birthday the same day . .. Believe it or not, but Marshall Goldberg, Pitt’s star halfback, was so fidgety over the Duke game he predicted defeat for his team the evening before .. , Casey Stengel is going to the Mil- waukee and Chicago baseball meet- iugs with a pocket full of dongh. Ought to be quite a passing duel Ed Danowski when the Giants meet the Washington Redskins here Sun- day ... The boy who pitches the most strikes not only will be rated the best passer among the pros this season but he likely will toss his team right into the Eastern championship and the playoff against the Chicago Bears ... Baugh has completed more passes and gained more ground so far but Danowski’s average in com- Pleting them 1s better... If Bolly trades Van Mungo during the baseball meetings (and he says he will if he can get a good enough cffer). It won't be to the Giants... Those Flatbush fans would insist on getting a whole pennant-winning club before they'd stand for giving Van to the guys across the river and even then they wouldn't like it... Most popular team when it comes to post- season bids is Chicago's Austin High between Slingin’ Sammy Baugh and, eee 151-142-161— 454 + 167-222-184— 573 Hummel, F. + 193-181-182— 55¢ Total .........+. 850-888-823—2561 Washburn Basketball Team Bills 12 Games this year, with the first scheduled at McClusky Friday. Washburn will! Play at Mandan, Dec. 11. The schedule: ° Dec. 3—McClusky at Washburn. Dec, 11—Washburn at Mandan. Dec. 17—Washburn at Garrison, Jan. .28—Washburn at Underwood Feb. 4—Washburn at Turtle Lake. Feb. 11—Underwood at Washburn. Feb. 18—Garrison at Washburn. GLEN ULLIN TOURNEY PLANNED Glen Ullin, N. D., Nov. 30.—Winners in a city table tournament in Glen Uilin early in December will be elig- date, Baumstark said. marck bowling association, said Tues- day. The teams will leave Bismarck at 10 a. m, Sunday and are scheduled bow! in doubles and singles Pp. land in team events at 7 p. m. tournament started Nov. 26 and Sabens Eaves i bees score turned rolled |Minot. ae . Coman \Court—Clarence Froland, W. Shields, F. Spinarski, Heinie Genze] and Lee \Coman. Workers’ Income Up Last Five Months for the cameras is + 149-177-115— 441 Igteve Walery, secretary of the Bis-| The picpates oat Teresi multi- r destroyed and air- planes are crashed with no regard for expense. As for the authenticity of the s*- quences, word from fliers has it that everything “is aoe level although in the air.” LeMans, ® blind “Listen, Doctor, we're afraid he has that tells whet to do if he should swallowed the p y

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