The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 27, 1933, Page 6

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8 : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1938 - Expect Fans to Pack Memorial Building for Bismarck-Fargo Game TWO GREAT QUINTS SET FOR BRILLIANT SKIRMISH TONIGHT Game Scheduled to Begin At) 8:30 O'Clock, Preliminary | Set For 7:30 | VISITORS ARE CONFIDENT, ' Coach George L Hays Still Un-| decided About Who Will | Start At Guard PROBABLE LINEUPS i Bismarck Fargo | Finnegan t Doherty | Lee f Nelson Olgeirson © Fortune | Schlickenmayer or Green g Tuor | Owens or i Woodmansee g ‘May Two of North Dako! School basketball teams will be pitted against each other when Bismarck faces Fargo, 1932 state champion, at the World War Memorial buildi here tonight. One of the largest crowds of the ‘Season is expected to witness the spec- tacle, Which will get under way at 8:30 o'clock, | In a preliminary game beginning at | 7:30 o'clock, Hazelton will play the | Imps, Bismarck reserve team. | Though Fargo’s championship team Tost all its regulars from last year) with the exception of Captain Marvin | Doherty, the Midgets will be far from @ set-up and the visitors probably will enter the game expecting victory Coach Henry Rice has an abund- nce of reserve material, as demon-,; strated in the Midgets’ 40 to 20 walk- away in their game with Moorhead | recentiy. | Fargo fans are j lant over the | chance for this ye team to win! the third successive state title for the | Gate City. | Bismarck fans tonight will be} cheered by the fact that Fargo's two) great guards of last year—Gordon | Aamoth and Jack Charbonneau—will! not be playing. at the state unive Coach George L. Hi of Bismarck | Friday morning had not announced! whom he would guards—his pony pair or his huskies—but it w: a foregone conclusion that Bob Finn gan and Frank Lee will be at for-) wards, with lanky John Olgeirson at) center. This trio hit a scoring stride | in the y Ci ame last week | which indicates Fargo’s two defense! men tonight will have a busy session. s Will have four good! ble for duty tonight in} y Schlickenmayer, | Wade Green and Joe Woodmansee, 's leading high | Devils Lake Will Be Host Feb. 12to | Central Ski Meet, Casper Oimoen and Peder Fal- | stad, Olympic Stars, Will | Be Among Entrants Devils Lake, N. D. an. 27. —rhe | Lake Region Winter nearly completed arrangements for its first annual Central United States Ski association tournament, to be theld at the new ski slide, a short dis- tance off the Burtness highway, near this city Sunday, Feb. 12. ' At this tournament, the Devils Lake club will be host to ski stars of the Central Association, who will ap-! pear here in exhibition jumps. The new gigantic slide, erected on the towering hill, and whose inaugural | skiers were two United States Olym- pic stars, Casper Oimoen, national champion, and Peder Falstad, a fel- low member oi the United States! ‘team, offers the visiting skiiers plenty | of thrills in the towering slide. i Spectators, it is stated, may feel) assured that they will be entertained | ‘by some of the finest ski jumping exhibitions ever seen on the Ameri-, can continent. ‘The scaffold of the new jump rears 118 feet above the top of the hill,! which in itself {s 196 feet high. It is, Delieved that for the first time in} tthe history of northwest skiing, a! jump of 200 feet or better will be Becorded. { Casper Oimoen, present Central} Ski champion and his teammate,| Peder Falstatd, have already reached! 190 feet in exhibition jumps, earlier! ‘this season on the new slide. With| these two stellar performers and| other stars of the association com- peting, a new record for the United States Central Ski association, com- prising more than 30 clubs in five states, will undoubtedly be establish- ed here at the meet. As an added attraction, the local «lub is arranging for a clown team of skiiers to appear and efforts are likewi:> being expended to bring the famous Norwegian girl skiier, Johan-| na C. Kolstad, here. | Shots Miss Judge; || Man Kills Himself | ee South St. Paul, Jan. ae” ‘The body of Frank Yedelsky who ‘Wednesday night attacked Judge ‘W. A. Schultz and escaped in an automobile, was found Thursday, mangled by a train in the railroad * yards here. { Facing deportation as an unde- sirable alien, \Yedelsky attacked Judge Schultz with an iron bar and then fired four shots at him. Yedelsky apparently believed * goal, WAIT A MINUTE SINCE ‘YOU MUGS ARE GOING TO WALTZ, LET'S HAVE SOME music f TH’ FLAG THAT FOR. TEN MINUTES YOUVE BEEN PUSHING EACH OTHER AROUND LIKE BALES OF COTTON ON_A) WHARF / EQ OUR BOARDING HOUSE To GIVE BUSTER HIM AN’ HOISTM HIM ON HIS SHINGLE! TM JUST STALLING, § CHANCE TO WAVE HE'S HAD ENOUGH, BEFORE I PUT MY DERRICK HOLD ON WELL, GOON {1 A)? AN Dorr! TW WAY YOU'RE j ‘PUFFING, YOULL BE BLOWING OUT A CYLINDER HEAD IN-A MINUTES TLL JusT ToY AROUND wiTH You) — | THEN WRAP YOu UP IN A COUPLE oF PACKAGES 7 Max High Cagers Upset Coleharbor Redbirds Suffer First Defeat inl THREE-CUSHION LEADERSHIP IS SAFE FOR CALIFORNIANS, M'Lean County Basket- ball Race (Tribune Special Service) Garrison, N. D., Jan. 27.—Colehar- tor high school’s basketball team suf- fered its first defeat in the McLean county conference when they ran up Both are freshmen against the Max Cossacks and came ;Schmoll, f .. jout second best in a 25 to 21 contest | Barrows. f here. ‘What Max lacked in other depart- ments of the game, the Cossacks | made up for in the height and weight advantage they had over Coleharbor. The Redbirds were speedier and play-! ed a better floor game. The score was tied at 8-all at the; end of the first period. Coleharbor | lead 13 to 1 at half-time and 18 to 17) at the end of the third stanza. In{ the final period, however, birds failed to score a single field | The Wilton Miners advanced in, the league race by defeating Wash-! burn 17 to 8 in a rough game. After getting off to a ragged star: in the race for county honors, the Garrison Troopers opened up and registered their third league win inj five starts by upsetting the dope! bucket to defeat the Underwood Com- ets 16 to 8. i The summaries: Max (25) Boettcher, f . Bokovoy, f . Haverluck, c Postovit, ¢ Freitag, & .+.+- FG 2 4 0 3 1 PF| Coleharbor (21) T. Saldin, f . Carlson, f . Lockrem, ¢ . B. Saldin, g Jensen, g . a Mieeecedclisne oa elecuawd 5 Referee: Akan and Ireland, Garrison. | ‘Wilton (17) Christ, f .... Polonsky, f . Skoropot, ¢ Gray. & .-- McFadden, g FT PF; 2) eles Washburn (8) Starbuck,.f . Fisher, f Kronick, c Mittleider, ¢ Robinson, g ... OUT OUR WAY Pe eGl cout See ee PF Fil 0 0 1 4 | ‘ Dalbotten, & .sse..00... 0 1 0 3 2 4 Garrison (16) FG FT PF 2 0 1 | 4 0 % Benshoff, c 2 0 1 Behles, g ..... 0 0 2 Rupp, ¢ o- oor 8 0 5 Underwood (8) FG FT PP Tauer, f .. 2 0 1 Sayler, f 0 0 0 Snyder, f Soe et eee) Landgren, c ED Ae: Legg. & - - 0 2 3 Johnson. g - 0 0 0 Busch, ¢ - oO 0 0 3 2 256 Skaters Will Battle For Titles | National Speed Skating Cham- pionships Will Be Con- ducted Saturday Oconomowoc, Wis., Jan. 27.—(P)— A glistening oval of firm ice was be- ing polished by sprinklers and sweep- ers at Fowler lake near here Friday in preparation for the national speed skating championships in which a new queen and possibly a new king | will be chosen Saturday and Sun- day. A field of 256 blade stars, many of them already champions in the small- er title realms of their respective States, Saturday will begin an as- sault on the record books which may | place Helen Bina, Chicago, in the ranks of the former national womens’ champions and possibly end the reign of Jimmy Webster, St. Paul, as men’s champion. Although Kit Klein, Buffalo, N. Y., is generally ranked as the favorite in the women’s division, trial spins have shown Dorothy Franey, St. Paul, as a dangerous contender. An airplane of 100 horsepower costs between $2500 and $4000. 4, Wednesday, but Cochran pulled up J. N. Bozeman, Jr., and Welker | Cochran, Both of Sunny | State, Tied { Chicago, Jan. 27.—(?)—Regardless ;Of the results in Friday's matches in ‘the world three-cushion billiards {championship tournament, the lea- | dership was safe for sunny California. | Tied for the lead were Welker | Cochran, San Francisco, and J. N. | Bozeman, Jr., Vallejo, with four vic- |tories and one defeat each. = {man was not to play Friday, but in | Friday's match Cochran had a) ;chance of sneaking ahead of his neighbor by defeating Tiff Denton of | Kansas City. ;. Bozeman jumped into the lead jeven Thursday night by polishing off | Clarence Jackson of Detroit 50 to 26 {in 40 innings. |_ Johnny Layton, of Sedalia, Mo., | Friday was in second place, a 50 to 36 to triumph in 37 innings over, Otto Reiselt of Philadelphia having! | boosted his standing Thursday. Arthur Thurnblad, Chicago, pro- | duced the most sensational finish of | ;the tournament to score his thi | victory in three starts, at the ex. | pense of Hall, 50 to 49 in 43 innings. | | Says Hurley Won’t | Become Matchmaker Chicago, Jan. 27.—(AP)—Sidney Strotz, president of the Chicago Sta- dium Corporation, said Wednesday there was no truth to the report from Duluth that Jack Hurley, boxing manager, was under consideration as. Successor to Nate Lewis as stadium ; matchmaker. j “Nothing to it at all,” Strotz said. | The Chicago stadium was thrown jinto a friendly receivership last week and for the time being, all officers | 1 Of the huge West Side arena are on, | the inactive list. i ° ———___—_______» | Basketball Scores | (By The Associated Press) Gustavus Adolphus 23; Hamline Univ. 30, Spearfish Normal 34; Yankton Col- e 29. Eastern Normal 24; Dakota Wes- leyan 39. Billings Poly 29; Carroll 35. ‘© | Ryan. Nodaks Might Meet Texas Christian, Loyola and Okla- homa Aggies on Jaunt BE HOST 10 ElG REGIONAL CHAMPS Plan Meets At Hettinger, Mott, Garrison or Washburn, and Un-Named Place Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 27.—()— Announcement that the University of North Dakota will meet Texas Chris- tian University at Fort Worth Nov. 11 gives the Sioux two intersectional games in the south, if a date can be arranged for another meeting with Loyola at New Orleans. The Nodaks and Loyola have agreed on financial terms, but con- tracts have not been signed yet. C. A. West, university coach and direc- tor, expects the game will be played "ltt wen ‘Wednesday he also was holding a date for the Oklahoma Ag- Py Gs Announcement that the annual|Nov. 25 and every Tadication points tournament of the North Dakota In-| to an agreement on terms, which will becionhenae at vite: big © will be| give North Dakota the toughest three conduc! at Valley ‘y Thursday, |8ame program on fore! Friday and Saturday, March 9, 10 ‘and have ever attempted. ies rd 11, was made in Bismarck Friday by| Texas Christian was undefeated Neil O. Churchill, vice president of | last fall, winning the southwest con- the loop. ference championship, while the Churchill made the announcement | Oklahoma Aggies won the Missouri following receipt of a communication | Conference title. , from R. W. Johnston, Hillsboro, presi-| Other games on the Sioux schedule dent. include University of South Dakota Simultaneously, Churchill an-/8¢ Grand Forks Oct. 13; South Da- nounced preliminary arrangements |kota Aggies at Brookings Oct 21; for district and regional tournaments | North Dakota Aggies at Grand Forks in the Missouri Slope area. Oct. 28 and Morningside at Sioux District tournaments will be held| City Nov. 4. the last week in February, he said, a Teed while regional games are set for the| Warner Assistants May Be Named Soon first week in March. The state has been divided into 18 ririetabert and eight regions. The dis- trict champions will play for the| Philadelphia, Jan. 27.—(#)—Selec- eight regional championships and the| tion of Glenn 8. (Pop) Warsers ne right to participate in the state tour-|sistants may be announced when the famous football mentor comes here next Tuesday for his first visit to Philadelphia since he was named head nament. District tournaments will be held football coach of Temple university, He has submitted the names of at Hettinger, Mott, either Garrison ot Washburn, and at another site yet to be selected, Churchill said. In charge of the tournament at|Chuck Winterburn, his freshman Hettinger will be Harold Thomas|Coach at Stanford, and Fred Swan, now freshman mentor at Wisconsin, as likely coaching timber. Temple authorities said, however, that con- while S. D. Riley will manage the Mott tourney. A site for the district tracts have not been offered to either. FINN RUNNERS TO VISIT tournament which last year was held at Dunn Center has not yet been se- lected. Two tournaments in the ex- It has been reported that Lauri Virtanen and Iso Hollo, the two Fin- nish Olympic long distance runners, treme southwest corner of the state are necessitated by the great. number are to visit the United States soon to take part in indoor track meets. of teams in that area, the vice presi- SIDE GLANCES - - dent said, CHURCHILL REVEALS DATES Site For Tournament Held Last Year At Dunn Center Is Not Yet Selected Churchill said communities willing to entertain the tournament which was held at Dunn Center last year should communicate with him. Teams eligible for this tourney are those along the Northern Pacific branch line from: Mandan to Killdeer. ‘The local officer said interest in in- dependent basketball is growing by leaps and bounds. Last year, he said, 146 teams participated in the inde- pendent tourneys. Arrangements for other tourna. ments throughout the state will be announced in the near future by E M. Yocum, Minot, secretary of the loop. Other directors of the organ- ization are Dan Haffey. Eckelson, and George Stutsman, Cando. Giants Need Only Catcher For Nine Ott, Davis, Moore, Luque, Hub- bell, Critz, Verges and Ryan Signed New York, Jan. 27.—(?)}—The New York Giants already have 12 players signed for the 1933 season but they lack a catcher to round out a com- plete nine. Contracts, signed, so far have been returned by outfielders Ott, George Davis and Joe Moore; pitchers Luque, Hubbell, Glenn Spencer and Reggie Mapp; First Basemen Terry and Joe Malay; Second Baseman Critz; Third Baseman Vergez; and Shortstop John The veteran Luque and the rookies, Mapp and Malay, came to terms Thursday. Del Bissonette, one of the unluck- jest men in major league baseball, will have to demonstrate in training camp that he is recovered from his various ailments before the Brooklyn Dodgers offer him a contract. Bis- HAVE ONWY BROKEN LOOSE | FROM A AITCHINI Post, MAW. By Williams sonette was on the shelf because of illness all through last season and now is on the voluntary retireg list. He said a few ddys ago that he was feeling fine and ready to resume his place at first base. That would solve one of Manager Max Carey's principal worries, Shaughnessy May Coach At Chicago Loyola Mentor Said Among Leading Candidates to Suceed A. A. Stagg Chicago, Jan. 27.—(*)—Clark Shaughnessy, for several years foot- ball coach at Loyola university, New Orleans, Friday was reported to be mong the leading candidates as suc- Chicago. Reports said that Thomas N. Met- succeed CaS sa a a SES suffers so from corns.” HIS CURIOUS WORLD ‘STATE INDEPENDENT CAGE TOURNEY SET FOR MARCH 9-10-11 By bern VALLEY CITY WILL |U Eleven Plans Bold Southern Trip CLAIM SUFFICIENT BACKING ____ TO BUY KANSAS CITY BLUES a ° To Fight LaBarba | Des Moines Man, Film Come- H dian and.Tris Speaker Make Up Triumvirate Kansas City, Jan. 27.—(?)—Acqui- sition of sufficient backing to warrant & completion of negotiations for pur- chase of the Kansas City baseball club of the American Association was claimed Friday by E. Lee Keyser, Des Moines, chief figure in the triumvirate seeking to buy the Blues. Keyser, who indicated final details might be arranged Friday, said local businessmen had pledged sufficient additional security to take over the franchise and players from George E. Muehlebach. The proposed transac- tion also includes a lease on Muehle- bach Field at a minimum yearly ren- tal of $4,500. Part owner of the Des Moines Western League club, Keyser is asso- ciated in the deal wtih Tris Speaker, former major league player, and Joe E. Brown, film comedian. Keyser would become president of the club, Brown vice president, and Speaker the manager. CAGE TOURNEY SET ‘The senior basketball championship tournament of the Midwestern A. A. ‘U. will be held at Council Bluffs, Ia., sometime in February. MIGHTY NICE RECORD * Belve Bean, recalled by the Cleve- land Indians from the Toledo Ameri- can Association Club, finished 1932 with 20 victories and 14 defeats af- ter losing his first eight games. She Wins— SEAMAN THOMAS WATSON New York, Jan. 27.—(?)—They're launching Seaman Watson on an un- familiar ocean Friday night with no charts to guide him. Britain's nauti- cal fisticuffer, champion of the Little Isle’s featherweights, faces Fidel La- Barba, staunch Los Angeles battler, in a 12-round match in Madison Square Garden. The odds were as high as 2 to 1 that LaBarba would win and gain the right to meet Kid Chocolate, recognized in this state as featherweight champion of the world, in @ title bout here in February. METCALFE MAY TOUR Ralph Metcalfe, colored sprint star of Marquette University, may accom- Bany a group of crack track athletes on @ visit to Sweden and other Euro- Pean countries next August. KERR TO TEACH COACHING son, will conduct the fourth annual Lafayette University summer coach- ing school at Easton, Pa., this year. ‘The United States has a trade com- missioner in India stationed in Cal- jcutta. - By George Clark give competition to Virginia Learned of Sandusky, O. Here she demon- strates how to take a dip without get- ti her feet wet. Citation Report and fe Accounting, Petition for Dintribation- STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County IN COUNTY COURT, Ret ©..Davies, Judge. et re Hom % In the Matter of the Estate of Car- rle D, Taylor, also known as Caroline Donnelly Taylor, Deceased. John McCrory, Petitioner, vs. John McCrory, Sarah Preavey, Busie Day, Kaile Gardner, Flor: ence Cochran, Emma_ Salzer, Edith ‘Harms, Will, McCrory, Sarah Butler, ‘Anna Butler, Eli: za Terhune, Frank Chesrown, Will Chesrown, Joseph Chen- town, Guy Chesrown, Clitton D, Hollister, the administrator of state of Susie Day, de- Alice E, Miller and Sara E. Gardner, the executrices of the last will and testament and estate of Katie Gardner, de- ceased, Florence Clark, former- ly Florence Corchran, and. all other persons interested in the cetate of Carrie D, Taylor, also own as Caroline Donne! Taylor, deceased, aa Respondents, ‘The State of North Dak shove Respondents: pie ‘ou and each one of you are hereb; elted and required to yor before the County Court of Burleigh count: in said Burleigh county, on the day of February, A. D. 1933 at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of that day, to show cause, if any you have, why the final report and ‘ac- counting, petition for distribution of li, ‘ag the administrator of the ‘ator, | co tained in said final report and ace counting, petition for distribution, praying that said final report and ac- counting be allowed, the residue of sald estate be distributed to the per- sons entitled thereto, the administr tion of said estate closed and said ad- ministrator be discharged, or that Such other or further orders be maae 88 is meet in the premises, should not be alloy and granted. ‘The late residence of said Carrie D. Taylor, al- #0 known as Caroline Donnelly Tay- ased, the owner of sal was the city of Bismarck, in igh county, North Dakota, Let service be made of this clita. tion as required by law. Dated this £0th day of January, A. D.,, 1933, By (SEAL) iy the Court, 4 LC. Davies, Judi Pr eeeneF said County Court, oe se ly) Administrator, Pigmarck, orth Dakota.

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