Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1981 ‘DEMONS HOLD LEAD ; THROUGHOUT GAME WITH MAGICIAN FIVE Capital City Quint Plays Best Game of Season Before Capacity Crowd AGRE HIGH SCORER OF TILT Imps Hand Hazelton High School Team 34-10 Beat- ing in Preliminary A landslide of goals and almost complete control of the ball gave Bismarck’s Demon cagers an easy 31-14 victory over Minot Saturday i i | | Be a Loser; Lives on Per- petual Diet New York, Feb. 16.—()—Babe Ruth gave away the 60th home run ball he hit in 1927, You can have the 500th |homer, the only ball he has saved, 4s soon as he has marked his major league total up to 600. He'll grab the dinner check no matter what size, But just try to concede yourself a six inch putt against him and he'll bellow like a broken-legged calf. “Waddeya think they put those holes there for?” “To hold up the flags?” He moans over every bad shot, exults at the good ones, demands that . night, before a capacity crowd at the | YOU sympathize with him, but he’s Bismarck high school gymnasium. An unerring eye for the basket, combined with accuracy from the free throw line gave Bismarck an 8-4 lead at the end of the first quarter, an 18-8 lead at half-time and a 24-12 Jead at the end of the third quar- ter. The Demons annexed seven! a fine audience too. He's a great alibi artist. His favorite bet is $5 nassau.” He has a pair of light brown knickers, “good luck” pants, he wears in all important matches— winter and summer. Loves Golf Next to ball he loves golf. Shoots points in the last quarter to two|in the low eighties. He chews a half Points for the Magicians. is Play Best Game Playing the best game of the sea- son, the Demon cagers demonstrated their efficiency in every department of the game. The Capital City quint fouled Minot less often than Minot ; fouled Bismarck. The Demons made five charity tosses out of 12, while the | Magicians missed every one of their nine attempis. Kalbileisch, midget Magician for-| opened the scoring for the Ma- gicians after the first minute of play, with his only basket during the en- tire game. In quick succession, Spriggs, Tait, McDonnell and Dohn sank short shots to end the first quar- ter, 8-4 in Bismarck’s favor. ‘The Magicians seemed to be a de- cozen plugs of tobacco going 18 holes. He forgot his tobacco at Wingfoot one day and lost every hole. Almost went goofy. Sometimes he chews a plug an inning in an important ser- jes, Can't smoke playing golf but likes cigars at other times. The Babe was never meant to be a loser. He must win at every game he plays. He'd rather be the clouting ampion of the majors at $10,000 a year than second at $100,000. Fights bitterly over every point at handball. feels deeply about Hack Wilson cop- ping his home run title last season. “Why I can spit farther than he can hit ’em,” the Babe insists. He plays ping pong with Mrs. Ruth. He was out with the boys until 2:30 the other morning for the first time in moralized team in the final half of ; years and he phoned Mrs. Ruth every the game. Their shots were hurried and inaccurate. The Minot quint made only three field goals in the entire second half, although they committed four personal fouls and one technical one in the last half. Use Ten Men Coach George “Baldy” Hays used 10 men in the contest Saturday. He sent in his alternates early in the fourth quarter. They held Minot to four points. Eddie “Speed” Acre was high scor- er for the Demons with five field goals. Lester “Dynamo” Dohn, Bis- | _ Yharck guard, in addition to playing ius best defensive game so far this feason, managed to annex eight points. Harold Tait, although making only seven points, was exceptionally pro- ficient in leading the floor attack. Tait, Demon center, got the tip-off the majority of the game ,although fast little Kalbfleisch and De- time after time, stole tip-off mon men only to lose it be- they could shoot. Smps Trim Hazelton played in the first half, the Bis- Imps rallied during the sec- oi half to defeat a hard-fighting | Hazleton high school team, 34-10, in the preliminary game. The Hazleton quint held a 2-0 lead at, the conclusion of the first quar- ter and trailed the Imps, 7-6, at half- time. Coming back strong in the last half, the Imps raised their score to lead 20-8 at the end of the third period. The Bismarck squad annexed 14 more points in the last quarter to their opponents’ two. Zirbes, Hazleton forward, led the Hazelton attack with six points. Bob- by Stackhouse, Imp forward, held high scoring honors with 13 points. Stackhouse made all but three of his Points in the last half. Schlikenmeyer, Imp guard, was! outstanding for the Imps on their ; defensiye formations. The summaries: Bismarck (31 the FG ry half hour. Invests In Insurance His money is invested in insurance and trust funds. If he dies between $800,000. At 45 his income will be $2,500 a month. He made $245,000 a year in 1926 and 1927. His poorest Sear in the past five netted $175,000 from writings, baseball and barn- storming tours. to keep his weight down. Eats noth- Loves sweets but can’t have them. In 1926 the stomach ache whose rumbles were heard around the world, a typi- ca! breakfast consisted of three or- ders of hash, six fried eggs, a stack of toast, six cups of coffee at the vate of a swallow per cup. Now he has cereal, dried toast, fruit. He used to average a dozen hot dogs a day during the baseball season. Stil) | Mo loves them, defends them, but doesn’t | eat them. was the skins I couldn't digest.” Is Good Bridge Player bid, play one trick, lay down the cards and call all the rest. He never Full S The Babe Was Never Meant to! names. ing but lean meats, fish, vegetables. | his heyday, before he contracted in| “It wasn’t the dogs,” he insists. “It i c . M He's a great bridge player. He can Bergeson’S Broadcloth Ruth Is a Golf Bug and Bridge Shark JARRETT, SCHAVE, | misses. But he can't remember Everyone is “Kid” to him. | The Babe has known Alan Gould for years and still calls him “Pahker.” Can't walk two blocks without draw- |ing a crowd, so he takes taxis. Eats |a'l meals on the road in his hotel | | room, but he walks his daughters to | school every morning. | He wears only brown and blue | suits, buys four at a time. His peak- |ed brown caps and polo coats come jin half dozen lots. He likes to sleep jraw. | After he gets a homerun with a |particular bat no one ‘else can touch jthat stick. He carries at least four | good luck pieces at all times. He |smashed a half dozen cars before he learned to drive slowly. | The Babe is very soft hearted, he jcried when an Hawaiian orchestra jand the entire cast of a picture in {which he had worked gathered in | Hollywood station to see him off. He | put his arms around the director and | wept. Kissed the members of the ‘cast. Took in one of the bystanders, |@ woman with two children at his jside. The photographers took the | picture, |. The next day the papers carried | the caption: “Babe weeps as he leaves wife and kiddies.” Wife and kiddies were In New York. He's still trying to explain that. (Nodak Frosh Trim Baby Bison 35-22 Youthful University Cagers Out- play Rivals During | First Half { Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 16.—Badly outplayed in the first half but coming | back to hold their university foes on even terms during the second period, |the North Dakota Agricultural col- now and 45 he will leave an estate of | lege freshmen basketball squad were submerged this afternoon, 35 to 22. Held to only three field goals in the | initial stanza, the Baby Bison allowed the Nodak freshman to pile up a 20 , to 7 lead in the first period and al- | though affairs were evenly balanced The Babe lives on a perpetual diet | after the beginning of the second half, they were unable to overcome the Nodak advantage. | ‘The summary: Nodaks-— FG FT PF Dablow, f pene} | Mullen, f ... 4 2 n | tie ee un | , 1 a ry Stablein, g 3 Ly 1 Thomas, f 0 0 a Smith, g . 1 1 0 Totals......0+6 i8< Bie 4 ° 1 | M. Botemir, To hrun Shepard, 5 Totals Minot (14 Dunnell, f . Kalbfleisch, f'¢ De Mots, c A. Dahl, MeDonnell, H. Dahl, t’. Dokken, f < Wood, & - Totals. Referee, Strutz, Jamestown; umpire, Kratz, Hamline. Bismarck Imps (34)— FG FT PF Ahlen, f ... 3 0-0 Stackhouse, 5 3-3 Shepard, ¢ M. Benser, Loyd Murphy, & Olgierson, f .!.... Schlickenmeyer, & Woodmansee, ¢ . Totals... 14 loocosene Bee | Golf’s Money Brigade | Will Invade Florida, | | Pensacola, Fla., Feb. 16—4)—Golf’s } professional money brigade completes | its transcontinental tour and swings into Florida next Friday for a month’s treasure hunt, starting with the $3,000 } Pensacola open. , i Upward of $30,000 awaits the army | 4) of cash players in a series of tourna- | ments at Florida’s leading winter re- gorts. The end of the Florida golden wainbow comes at Miami Beach where the second richest event in the sea- eatalogue—the La Gorce open set for March 19-21. Awards to- $15,000 go to the low scorers @ ete ‘WOMAN MUSHER WINS Calif, Feb, 15.—()—Mrs. of McCall, Idaho, only ‘entered in the third dog derby. Sat~ first 20-mile lap of the Shirts $4 75 3 for $5 Until this season $2.15 Better Quality Lower Price Full cut, perfect in fit and style STAY-RITE attached col- lars, full sized pocket WHITE, BLUE, TAN, GREY, GREEN Every shirt is unconditionally guaranteed and will be replaced if not entirely ~~ Bergeson’S <= -satisfactory. Nadine O'Leary | D\/CHENELEADERS Saalwaechter’s Starting Squad Sunday served a mid-winter warning Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 16.—The University of North Dakota basket- ball team won the second game of the annual four game series with the North Dakota Agricultural college, her records for both nine &hd 18 holes over the course of the Bismarck Country club. Nadine shot 40-39. Women's par for nine holes is 42. for 18 holes 84. Clem Letich, Nodak coach, started Ray Gillson at center and Lowe at the forwards, Bob Wehr at center, ‘and Viv McKay and ‘Thomasson ‘at guards. Thomasson is the only Cracks Record | Mine erga! aioe ion, sne-| ‘Run Monday Night In Sunday Play! IN NODAK VICTOR bat, ened tas ante saa aoe Moet Is First of Two Before A. State Champion Shoots 40-39] Shows Up Well on Defens- | $°e* margin held by either tenm anit A. U. Games Here; Paul Cook Gets Four ive Formations minutes. The Nodaks held 8 13 to; © Straight Birdies aa va aed ‘Sa theveran aba Me renin A f MANDAN YOUTHS ARE STARS) ne nodats, ose they got in tron | Soo" tack ond ae, soheauled ie Miss Nadine O'Leary, ‘wom- —_ safe margin, went to a watt and| ‘Urn out again Monday Sed en's golf champion of North Dakots, | Four Sophomores and One Jun- break defense’ which succeeded in| the New York Athletic club meet in to all those women ‘golfers who may ior Carry Aggie Colors | the Bison had pulled the count to 22|'# the first of two this week which ft A " ..| Complete the preparations of the Bice Ing avaricious eyes toward her in First Half ¢ to 21 sag five minutes of play re: hoard Sepik epehtatore fer the nation- The Bismarck lass Sunday broke — Red Jarrett, the stellar performer | §! A. A. U. championships Feb. 25. scoring a 28-22 vic with’ Jarrett, Du- Paul Cook, Nadine's cousin and/ night, ‘ The Nodake ater on stra Chee He made Soctewer in this | ® successful job of repulsing the for- state men's champion for the last two| opening game Friday, 27-26. combination until Gillon was ejected | ign attacks again are slated to pro- seasons, shot four birdies in a row] Saturday night’s game lacked the| with four personal fouls after 11% | Vide the highlights of Monday night's Sunday, getting 4, 2, 3, and 4 on the! thrin of Friday's setto when Bill| minutes of play. Later, DuChene was | Competition. Seraphin Martin is en- fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth holes | Lowe, the rubber-ball captain of the | forced out with four personals and | ‘ered in the Brefney half mile against on his second nine. He shot 40-34. | Nodaks, went under the net to sink a| was replaced by Manuel Wexler. Russell Chapman of Bates college, Tom O'Leary, club professional, | field goal just four seconds before the} The summary: who beat the French ace in his first said more than 50 shot-makers were| close of the encounter and give his|_ University— FG FT pr|race. Phil Edwards of Canada and on the course Sunday. “The pro i8]team the lead for, the first time in |Schve , » 2 © 2 | Dr. Paul Martin of Switzerland also father of Nadine and tutor of the two] the game. Sno ee # 4 | | will face the French Martin. state champiohs. Neither team Saturday had any de- |DuChene, & ; ae corey. | With George Bullwinkle of City —_——__— cided advantage, the contest being | Lowe, & ----- : AGE College of New York, who stepped out, NAMED WELTER CHAMP much closer than the score might |Wesise's.” + 0 6 | Saturday to repulse the second French San Francisco, Feb. 16.—(®)—| indicate. . if — — — |ace, Paul Keller, in a 1,000 yard race Young Corbett, southpaw boxer of ‘Starts New Combination | ., Totals. ....e. «11 6 12 |in Boston, as pace setter, the Baxter Fresno, Saturday was named “welter-| Leonard Saalwaechter, Bison coach, | mclonaid, f.- 2 9g | mile 4s expected to produce unusual- weight champion of California” by| started a new- combination against |A 2 3 9 2 |1y good time. The advance “dope” is the state athletic commission, the ac-| the Nodaks, partly because he Was 1 6 6 |that Bullwinkle, a remarkable judge tion automatically listing two former'| forced to, owing to an injury to Walt! ; & § § |of pace, will take care of the early world champions as “contenders.”| Olson, regular guard. He statted off 1 1 6 |Tunning and that Ray Conger, who The Fresno fighter’s chief rivals are| the contest with four sophomores and | M@¥. © «- 1 4 1 {has ‘brought the nation’s topmost Jackie Fields and Young Jack] a junior in his lineup desiring to give | Xorastrom, ¢ : 9 1-4 |infle honors to the Illinois A._C., will Thompson, both former world cham-| them expericnce under fire. Buren, f .’.. 6 09 0'|come through with his famous. last title bouts he Dick : 212, hel wuts here ye Don Arthur and Lloyd McDonald mt Referee, Dick Holzer, Moorhead. | jointly by Paavi Nurmi and Joie Ray. Bismarck High School Cagers Trounce Minot Basketeers Track Stars Will Madison Square Garden. The meet Ony Thursday the clan gathers in Newark for the New Jersey A. A. U. ip meet. The troupe of foreign invaders, led by Seraphin Martin of France, and the Americans who have done such Victory Over fowa Saturday Would Clinch Big Ten Title for Northwestern — Chicago, Feb. 16.—()—Riding high at the head of the Big ‘Ten basketball chal race, Northwestern's undefeated five will seek its eighth straight conference victory and its twelfth of the season, Monday night against Illinois at Evanston. If the Wildcats can whip the Illini, ‘a victory over Iowa’s last place team Saturday night, would just about as- sure them of their second major title of the school year. While Northwestern is “entertain- ing” Illinois, Chicago will go to Ohio State, Purdue will battle the second place Gophers of Minnesota at Min- neapolis, and Wisconsin will attempt to repair its battered fortunes at Iowa. ‘The whole league will be in action Saturday night. Along with the Northwestern-Iowa encounter at Towa City, Chicago will play. at Illi- nois, Michigan will return to compe- tition against Indiana at Ann Arbor, Minneapolis will meet Ohio State at Columbus, and Wisconsin will tackle Purdue on the Boilermakers’ court. Northwestern made Chicago its seventh victim Saturday night. Tlli- neis shoved Iowa into the cellar, by winning, 26 to 23, at Iowa City. Bison Pucksters Beat Nodaks, 5-0 Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 16.—Six superior puckmen from North Dako- to Agricultural college outskated and outshot a half dozen University of North Dakota rivals on Steffansson tink here Saturday afternoon and came off the ice at the end of the game victors by # 5 to 0 score. Play- ing on extremely slow ice which was covered in places by nearly an inch of slush created by the melting heat of the sun, neither team was able to exert itself to its full power. Says uo ‘ INT CLOUGH ? FUT OULsaE sTacet wtney VT june 2b, 1980+ wou Coes ican Clee? et Farth Aremues Hen York Citye # Gentienent ang public health t© 1: erested in 8° 1 am int interested 3D wnity. You er 344 of my o itizens K ently s to all America. ne ©: there i¢ selling o+6*" ests heres I noticed Yr ever, when aco eion to the onils ioh pointed artent apa a @ public nealth standpoints “ia ron oigar® done by you to prevent spit tapped 04: ‘een 40! 3 ee a wion of Anti zea that there was aa ei are to be congratulated for fi_nt! ou ao, not pecause at 3° goins y * . pat rather that 5% de coins, care how wary pore puviic neslthe no joining of inter Anterestiné navertisenents wh of spit f Tou er spitting evil 08 more oigerss atisense to anterested 12 roy eee 1 do not make healthier © you 40 sell. cigere want to for you can use this detter af yoo oLicatione ETA, very sincerely ; orc /a> | DR. O. FLINT CLOUGH Health Officer, Poultney, Vermont approving husband smokes Clough’s letter. SO STRONGLY clean, sunny “You Are To Be Congratulated ' For Fighting the Spitting Evil" -o oneof 56 health officials from 56 different points Cremo’scrusade against spit or spit-tipping. Every emoker, every wife whose cigars, should read Dr. “Who are the friends of ‘Spit’?” YOU MAY WELL ASK THIS QUESTION WHEN 56 IMPORTANT HEALTH OFFICIALS HAVE WRITTEN AGAINST THE EVILS OF SPIT OR SPIT-TIPPING. Dr. Clough writes: “... fighting the spitting evil...is going healthier citizens.” to make’ decency. Joinit...smokeCertified Cremo-a really wonderful smoke= mild = mellow =nut- ‘sweet! Every leaf entering the Cremo factories is ]/ scientifically treated by methods recommended by the United States Department of Agriculture. Certified " 31-14 ~ UNIVERSITY CAGERS DEFEAT BISON 28-22 IN SECOND BATTLE IWildcats to Seek Win from Illinols