The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 23, 1929, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Demons Come From Behind to Whip Fargo 16-15 in Great Contest | FGHINGBSMARCK [Yankees and Athletics Destined to Have Tough Time in American League BASKETBALL QUTHIT (~~ —~“rothers in Same shen] SSE ESCA|pu aDREPHIA AND (SETS Sees Quarter-Finals of RBCARDED PLIST SEE oa TON ERC OTINS | alm, ota Colle Tourney 4 4 3 FE fi Hy FG 3 : D. Clute, f +0 0-0 0| ter snd 1 Earl Averill, Captain Ben Jacobson Supplies E eiute, ¢ ee rl ADVANCE SLIGHTLY 2 Chicago | White : : White, ¢ 1 it 0 Sox, will be # valu- Scoring Punch Which Meagher, g 1 23 2 able man for Man-| . Brings Victory Totals... sees 9 11-15 9|Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, |: White Sox will de- for National Title sees Rutledge s..0'0 23 1] Boston Are Reported young ied wie 1 ut “i FARGO HAD GREAT MACHINE Berry, f . 0 0-0 0} ve P joined the team last py Burnson, f . 0 0-1 3 Much Better utumn to keep : Fuller, f . 0 0-1 1! them in the run- Valley City, Grand Forks and Ryerson, ce. i 4 2} — exception of ee Sherwood Other Tourna- Brown, @ <.ccccccccs.0 1-2 0/JOHNSON LEADS SENATORS thou a capable ment Survivors | rae = Referee: ‘Thompson, Drake, ‘ume | Stanley Harris, New Manager, wel. the (By WILLIAM S. MOELLER) pire: Lawler, Minnesota. Seems Destined to Move Fighting a courageous secord half battle after an apparently hopeless start, five husky Bismarck high school basket tossers last night pulled themselves together. overcame a lead which at one time carly in the sec- ond half was 9 to 2, and defeated Bee Several Boats to — ry Atlanta, Ga., ae peer | "of ave rea Make Record Tries 20173, "¢¢, ce baseball sky, there will be no two- Bx he Re l Fi F fi ! Fargo 16 to 15 in one of the greatest defensive and most ee battles Miami Beach, Fla., March 23—(a? | ed Hard ae peresiry spprowsiian’ 4 u winning two nog took the game, 8 to itnessed it in. . u ae S But the eDeniotas ‘defeated a great Sane po Micah eer bine may be found the Yankees and fae Indiana Bowler Is tholic high school CUBS TAKE ‘ team i » improvement Angeles Reeadcthy « tesri tut toee basket- Ser thas sl BOR a dee he other six chibe tn tian gioutl Bay 8t. Louis, Miss,,|..205 A cov mer team that fought to the Sareea uit a he Dore water ‘ es es satel fees ected 5 vents biggest oe in the/have won ditch. icago, " uphold the honor |games from . Forks Is Threat records over a mile straightaway | purtalo—the Detroit ‘Tigers, under — 2c24-|Cubs defeated the ‘Tigers ae votitinnd a greene a gar = “ jo The field selected from among the cision ite Nee tk erred. Chicago, March 23—(7)—New lead- fourth | vesterday. Kiki Cuyler led the Giiak of the Gand Forks-Valley | When the Oxford and Cambridge crews meet in their annual race on the| fastest boats that competed in the threat to the teams higher up.|/¢8 were enthroned today in the made 2 ith a homer and triple. , City game remained as a great threat | Thames river soon, two brothers will be pulling together for a Cambridge | annual Biscayne Bay regatta ending |°US threat to the teste oe "| doubles and all events divisions of the omrnerae nei itestina found. vietory. ‘The two brothers are shown here: O. V. Bevan at the left,-and|Thursday, included virtually every] 1. ruvy MOY Si Ome 14, | American Bowling congress tourna ma nDUSH JOINS ROOKIES Bismarck met Sherwood and Grand E. V. Bevan at the right. Oe ae i shortstop of the Yankees, has found | ™ent following one of the most spec- He tonio, Texas, March 23—(P) i Wool, who lost a competitive race tacular days of the 1929 ting. Ed Roush, veteran outfielder, has Forks met Valley City in the semi- here Thi lay to the single himself at home, and Mark Koenig The Eddie oC * the . finals this morning. Scored a point from the foul line mid- |easy shots, but crratic shooting and «miss England,” driven by major H. | doubtless will do well cnough at third| on team of sapiine, Mats act tee vec m5 Sistem string Results of the first round in the | way in the period, while Weir batted | handling of the ball deprived the Hi- O. D. Segrave’ of London, had in- base. Tony Lazzerl’s | new doubles mark by knocking over the rest Gian during streney Clty 26: Cando 1g, vO": [one tn under the basket Just as the | liners of many baskets. tended to make his speed tHals yes- arm remains some-|1 315 pins, 65 short of the all-time paign. would riot vlossa Seibel rl Gounty Age | U2, sounded. : Cando was without an offense suf-|terday but found wind and water thing of a question | cord and 13 better than the prev es one Arete ; “oy 3 y Ag The first half ended 7 to 2, Bis- | ficient to cope with the caliber of| conditions unfavorable. mark, but his hit-/ious high mark of the present tourn- string that hed Eaaawcod 29; Hettinger 10. marck’s two points coming through | opposition met in state tournament| Among the outstanding drivers of | fm § ting power has not | ament, rather be will ciate 36, Fargo 15 : free tosses by Spriggs and Jacobson. | circles. The Towner county outfit had less powerful craft who wer> out to- ag been lessened. With | “james Handy, of Hammond, Ind., be in When Captain iferrie Long, dap-| Wei Scored @ field goal for Fargo to | tew opportunities to score. day to establish new records for var- . # Babe Ruth and Lou|took-first in the all events division i ip canta made ie thied sive the Cass county outfit its two Crume Was Outstanding ious types of boats, were Ralph Gehrig able to/ with 1,892 points. His best score “CONTINUES scat foul carly in the second | Ponts during a period of equal play) Crume, forward, was the outstand-|Snoddy, Los Angeles, and Gibson é swing their big}.was 650 in the doubles. In the singles “ - RRP ea ion its Gownward | mtn oe, eon Hens ing performer for the losers. He|Bradfield, Barnesville, Ohio. bats, most of the! he got 617 pins and in the five-man th. Morrie had been a shadow to| groymarck, came back fighting the | showed excellent form on the floor,| In a series of trials yesterday Brad- experts agree that |event, 625. Eddie Spriggs all during the first | std Period scoring three field goals | vine Peterson, big center, was a big| field, piloting his “Miss Buckey 11,” little or nothing|:- Second place in the five-man di- half and reduced the Bismarck for- | two rea ise wigce ct aed Dialed factor in what success his team had. | fell only .02 of a mile an hour short “| can be done about | vision was won by the Garden No. 2 ward's effectiveness. After making | foul line and the count stood 14 to 10| Duvall, diminutive blond forward,|°f equalling the world’s record of Z the pennant chase | quintet of Detroit, with a score of ; 50.68 for 151 inch hydroplanes, estab- without consulting | 3,018. TSENG cence mca lished here last year by Snoddy in his | ddmmy Foxx Miller] None of the leaders was displaced Spriggs was given a free reign. Long made it 9 to 2, th : Kay also played a good game at| MiSs Rioco 1. ugg in the singles although Dr. A. 8. Ad- ‘This fact proved a spur to the De-| Spriggs made it 10 to 5, but Weir| Jarvis, last year all-state guard, . $ gph hes sms mons, and Captain Ben Jacobson, cone hack with a double couater and | was a big help, but id not pertoets H Fights Last Night {| pitcher should be ready. Tolling a 289 score. He got 10 straight with two beautiful | Fargo led 12 to 5. * Jacobson came | up to his usual standard, leaving the Connie Mack has stood pat on the strikes and. then left No. 7 standing, field goals, fur-| through with two from the court and | game on four personals. By Thi ated Press) Personnel of the Athletics, but has | mowing it down with his twelfth. The nished the punch | the count was 12 to 9. Long dropped | Cando opened the scoring when ne sft ear izite MeLarnin, | '¢2!Tanged the infield. Jimmy Foxx, | previous high single game was 284. Which _ left the | in one for the Cass county clu, then | Crume tossed through a shot from| petrcit, cxipelated Ray Milter, .| the hard-hitting catcher, third base-| || game Fargoens| schwartz counted again as the period | the foul line and the Towner county Chicago, (10). Joey La Gray, |™8" and first baseman, will be the sroesy. closed. crew retained the point advantage for| New York stopped ‘Freddie Poly, | Tesular’ first sacker. Jimmy Dykes is Immy Ins DIOW To Jacobson) Spriggs, forward, counted his first | our minutes before DuVall gave Val- Newark, N. ©, (7). Sammy Dort- | the leading third base candidate. a must go the cred- | field goal off Long as the final pe- | iey City a 2 to 1 lead by a goal from| man. New Y ‘ork, outpointed Dom- | ™Menager Mack has only one extra Bout Fr m Miller it for turning the | Tod opened. Then O'Hare's free toss | the field. He duplicated his feat a inic Petrone, New York, (10) outfielder of experience, Homer Sum- 0) i ‘. brought Bismarck one poipt behind | minute late fter a neat der 4 4 . ma, late of Cleveland, and will need tide of battle. His | p, 14 to 13. O'Hare dribbled half nu Tr after pass unt Omaha—Tommy Grogan, Oma- least ‘An alr tr f: —— vapor : rey na’ | the basket from Ferguson. Peterson| ha, knocked out Russie LeRoy, |! least one more. An already strong the, ‘Demons to | te length of the floor and dropped | wrought the count 4 to 3 by giving| Farge, ND. (1), George Manley, | Pitching staff has been made stronger| New -York, March 23—(P)—The their greatest ef- cer dn snat irae ae pera ote sult Cando 2 double counter just before} Denver, knocked out Bud Doran, |>Y shire Sine aw sche vel Pie Asap cre may be forts. Every man 4 the first quarter closed. . Cincinnati, (7). -concealed fy etiam was-giving all he hed. ea aS Pueeey Roehl yeiaiea ght Run Score Up Milwaukee — Herman Perlick, Seman: Harris, see iettee to! amusement any future pugilistic en- | 93. but it remained for the blonde cap-| foul line before the game ended. Valley City ran the score to 26 to 7}. Kalamazoo, Mich. outpointed Sol- | + vemed ri fates ; essere counters between well advertised slug- tain to slip the sphere through the| The su a z g in the third quarter, showing a de-| ly Scamand, New York, (8). am, seems lave @ great chance | gers. mmary: |e move the Tigers up from their! Having understood that Jimmy Mc- his third infraction, the Midget cap- | for Kimball's team as the two outfits tain could take no chances, and@| went into the final period. * hoop when it counted the most. cided change in form from the first} Henry Perlick, Kalamazoo, out- rs Demons Sensed Victory oo *D Fs "2{half, Cando's only addition to the| pointed Irwin Berndt, Milwaukee, | Sixth Place position of last year. Roy | Larnin and Ray Miller could hit with Sensing victory, the Demons took | Jacobson, f iE) 9 9:7 1] scoring column was a free throw by| (8). denned od 5 Lone igen the lethal power of a stick of dyna- the game in their own hands and | schwartz, c TU. 7 0-0 2! Johnson and a field goal by Peterson. Boston — Ernie Schaaf, Boston, || Should help an outfield that was 21,000 of the fistic faithful outplayed the Midgets 6 to 1 in the|OHare g¢ .... [1 1-1 2{DuVall, Jarvis and McKay made six| outpointed Al Friedman, Boston, | before. If George Unle, former star trustfully paid $111,000 to see Mc- last quarter. It was John O’Hare,| Brown’ g ........ RED 6 1-1 0| goals from the floor. (10). Kid Chocolate, Cuba, | Cleveland pitcher, has @ good year | Larnin outpoint the blond Chicagoan who dribbled the length of the floor d — —--—] Cando staged’a rally in the fourth| stopped Johnnie Vacca, Boston, | ‘the clever “Bucky” Harris will “be| last night in 10 rounds at Madison and dropped in a difficult side shot Totals ......+...... 5 6-12 7)/ Quarter and outplayed Valley City) (9). happy. es I. four minutes before the final gun! argo (15) badly, scoring 11 points while the Hi-| _ New Orleans—Jack Britton, for- | The St. Louis Browns have re- who gave the Demons the lead which | witson, f ... .. 0 ‘1-1 2/liners were held without a counter.| mer welterweight champion, out- (tained their fighting spirit. A clever they never relinquished. The last | wisher, ¢ +. © 0-0 0) Hopper, inserted into the game in the| pointed Farmer Joc ‘Cooper, Terre fielder has been added to the infield four minutes were hectic enough, but | weiple, ¢ - ++ 1 1-2 3 |Jast-period, with Crume and Plemel,| Haute, Ind., (10). in the person of Third Baseman Eddie | 1 Fargo had apparently blown up and| weir, ¢ .. 3 0-0 2! accounted for ten points for Cando, Hot Springs, Ark.—Roger Barn- | Grimes, and another recruit infielder, esenpment, ., | Long, & 2 1-3\ 3|while Williams scored one from the| ard, Detroit, knocked out Chicho | Leonard Dondero, may be heard from. Much of the credit for Bismarck’s| Jessen g . © 0-2 0/ foul line. The summary: Cisneros, Mexico, (10). ‘Rip” Collins, a pitcher who “has great play must go to Gus Schwartz, — —-—| Valley City (26)— Des Moines — Jocy Phelan, | ¢Verything,” should win some games. fighting center who, despite the fact} — qotais ............ + 6 3-8 10/ Duvall, f Omaha, stopped Teddy Gartin, | |W 's Senators will be built that he was outreached by three or! Referee: “Lawier, Minnesota; um- | Uugent. f Lincoln, (6), Johnny Mack, Cin- | about the personality of the beloved four inches, controlled the tip-off] pire, Thompson, Drake, cinnati, outpointed Pat Keener, | Walter Johnson, who has his chance : * throughout the game. Schwartz | sii i eee Oklahoma, vith ” Jas ® major league manager’ after a showed a complete reversal of form GRAND FORKS 34, AGGIES 14_| Thorson, c . Hollywood — Joe Roche, San | brief apprenticeship at Newark. “Bar- over that exhibited in the last Man-| Grand Forks had little difficulty in Ferguson, g Francisco, knocked -out Homer | ney” would like to have another] and then caught. the dan game and acquitted himself with | walloping the Walsh County Aggies in | Lockwood, ¢ ene Sheridan, Sioux City, Towa, (2). | pitcher or’ two. “Adolph Léska and|right.to the chin that dazed glory last night. the second game by a 34 to 14 count.| Jarvis, § ¥-..csooolsn —_——_—___—_— Archie Campbell, a former’ Yankee,| After that it was all clear sailing f O'Hare and Brown proved in the] eq by Frank Clinton, one of ithe LANE PLAYS BASEBALL have shown promise, and if they con- | McLarnin. : Magers that they are the two great- | classiest guards and team generals in| Total....... eee Myles Lane, the former Dartmouth | Vince him that they can win now and". There was little, if any, disagree. ] sere ied in the state.| the tournament, the Forkers jumped| Cando (18)— hockey player who has been playing | then Manager Johnson will feel much | megti with the official decision. The N oe eet pl a great games, and. | ofr to an early lead and held an 11 Crume, f ... . professional hockey this winter, was | better. . Assocjated Press score card gave Mc- exception of abe first half | to 2 advantage at the quarter mark.| Plemel,f |. offered a contract by the Newark In- Cleveland Made Over Larnin elght rounds and Miller two, ele. pot _ ges scheme | “The green Forks team, all new to ‘ ternationals recently. Cleveland will offer. an outfit | the first and the fourth. Be enctiaiiad tie ball wa er the bas. | the game with the exception of Clin- - - ket. ‘They didn't score hea’ ily, ton, a veteran of several campaigns, but they were in the game ¢ pal handled the ball like an aggregation ee tae , Very SCC" of veterans, Mullen at center looked Wash Tubbs Wals Tt would be hard to pick an in- | Barticularly neat asa ball handler. F Played a vigorous game but could not Minnesota. OVAL MESSENGER, sIR, | ! Fi il g Es: Hi i Bre ; i 4 i a5 F f if rill ft i BE locate the basket. ipped At half time the Central outfit, me even. mmlshty | crampions for the last. two seasons, held an advantage of 18 to 5. This swelled to 29 to 10 at the end of the third canto. Mullen led the scoring with five field goals and a free toss, with Clin- ton trailing closeiy with five field goals, while Stignnon took a gift shot. Smith scored a field goal and two SHERWOOD 29; HETTINGER 10 Sherwood's elongated bunch: of long shots romped roughshod over Het- tinger in the opening Hettinger never had a chance, scor- ing but two field goals, both in the second half. Sherwood showed coaching, espe- MIT A DECREE ORDERING DER , IMMEDIATE VITHDRAWAL "SA LOTTA MONGY. ; IAA GUESS HLL PUT IT IN HERE'S GOOBER'S ] THIS. BRASS CHEST. SIGNATURE, AN! TH! y si ROVAL SEAL, He | ge er, Hf Hee Paseee ats u rE | i : E f | Clally on the offense, and was good ‘Me free throws. enough to make their shots from a ball en to beat the Montreal nternat distance when unable to get in close. ¥. DD ae Eugene Clute, six foot tive inch Any sumpestion saletive FLO! center was effective in Sherwood’s will be answered through “San en long passing game, while White, big umn if sent to the Sport new card, , Showed to good advantage. The care ) Tribune. ‘Waner, team from the north made 11 out of a . to 15 free shots, eight out of t in tl second half, i 7 ne HIMMELS DOTS NOT WT, GES wi2h THIS 16 Dem -euanoine ue || ( GoARD wt Toop. MeNeY SR GUARDIAN U o 4 DER TREASURY IN ‘DIFFERENT PLACES, ‘ALL AT TH SAME TIME? , aE i if ze ERG be 8 in i i Pid [ ? g betel Ele I a 5 H fir itil

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