The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 23, 1933, Page 6

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eMac LATERALLY PALS | ‘SHORT AS DEMONS | MSESEND GME) == Capital City Quint, Particularly | Forward Wall, Ineffective At Start 1 LONG GOAL DECIDES ISSUE! Behind 9 to 16 as Last Quarter Opened, Bismarck Made Great Finish | With another Demon rally falling short the finish, Bismarck high school's basketball team lost a heart- breaking game by a one-point mar- gin to 1, Mandan, at the state training the Morton county night. The score ¥ Hl Just as in the game at Jamestown | n Bismarck lost , Coach put themselves in a hole by ineffective performance at} ‘Mandan for the first three periods. Going into the last quarter with! the score 16 to 9 them, the! Capital lads put on a tremen-| dous burst of speed which brought | them 13 points and knotted the count! at 21-all with Jess than a minute to play. ‘Then—with only 30 seconds of play | remaining—Bob Saunders, veteran guard of the Braves, sank a beautiful! field goal from just about the center of the large playing court to put Mandan ahead 23 to 22. ed final free throw before the barked merely reduced the margin of | victory. Counted 13 Points In that last quarter, Bismarck out- Scored Mandan 13 to 7 and counted | more points than it had in the first | three cantos. Failure of Bismarck’s forward wall to function effectively for most of the game is reflected in the outcome. ‘The Demons’ defensive play should| not be criticized too severely—for it} was commendable for the most part. Mandan was restricted to few enough shots, but the Braves shot brilliantly, | cashing in on a high percentage. The} Demon guards, aided by the heroic) under-basket play of Forward Frank Lee, kept Mandan at bay as well as/ could be expected. But Bismarck failed to get in for! close shots until the final period. The advent of Captain Wade Green in the game in the last quarter mark- ed the turning point of the contest, | and the guard's field goal and two free throws went a long way in sus- taining Bismarck’s final drive. | Restricted to seven field goals by the tight defensive play of the Braves, the Demons scored eight out of 14 at- tempts from the free toss line, with Forward Bob Finnegan getting five of them. | Mandan’s scoring was divided al-; Senin most evenly between Ernie Percy, | Barney Toman, Rene Charbonneau! and Bob Saunders. Charbonneau, big center, controlled the tipoff; throughout. | First Quarter Even The first quarter was even, with! Bismarck leading 6 to 5. But its own| Jethargy and a Mandan spurt in the } second and third periods was disas- | trous to Bismarck, The Demons failed to score in the second canto! and were behind at the half 6 to 9.} Mandan built its lead up to 16 to 9; as the final chapter opened. The two teams will clash in their Second game at the World War Me- morial building in Bismarck March 3,! with the Demons still seeking revenge for the upset they received at the} hands of the Braves in the regional | championship game last season. Man- dan will ieavor to sustain its be-; nament drive. Up un-! lacements through grad- and ineligibility. Now, | ard C. Me Mahon will be able to keep his lineup intact until the state tour- nament here March 17 and 18, with the Braves for the first time looming as an ominous threat in the Class A crazy quilt. ‘The sum Bismarck 7G FL PF Finnegan, f .. 2 58 2 Tee, f .... 1 1-3 1 Olgeirson, ¢ 2 “Ot ® ‘Woodmansee, 9 0-0 0 Owens, g . 2. Dent 2 Green, & - 1 22 69 6chlickenmayer, ¢ 9 00 0 MoGIA...-.s.ocpsese 7 Seid 8 | Mandan (23) ®. Percy, £ 3 1-264 n, f 0. 2 1-2 0} ‘Charbonneau, c 3 0-2 1 Saunders, g .. yeas os Dae | Partridge, ¢ 09 00 0 Friesz, f 0 00 2 10 3-8 «10 6 6 9 22 5 916 23 Ames). Um- pire: Ellsworth ‘(Jamestown College). if Fights Last Night | ————_____—_—__—__+ Calif., Fields, world a eliseweigh champion, 0), non title. Philadelphia— Benny Bass, Phila- delphia, outpointed Phil Zwick, Cleve- land, (8); Tootsie Bashara, Norfolk, (Va.. and Jackie Willis, Philadelphia, Grew, (8), ym, New St. Louis—Maxie Rosenbloot outpointed Al Stillman, St. (5); Joe Huff, St. Louis, out- Billy Hogan, East Liverpool, O.—Pee Wee Jarrell, {ship contest. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1933 Mandan High Cagers Defeat Bismarck 23 to 22 in n Thrilling Contest NORTH DAKOTA BISON DEFEAT AT NODAK BASKETEERS 32 TO 23 . |_OUR I BOARDIN G HOUSE WELL~THERES OUR TECHNOCRAT I~ WORK FOUR HOURS A DAY AN’ FOUR DAYS A WEEK $820,000 A YEAR, 72. AN RETIRE AT TH’ AGE OF FORTY-FIVE — LESS LABOR, AN MORE 4 { TIME FOR LEISURE / €: ey MAKE KA Ws BEA NOW,THERES TH’ WORKING MODEL. OF LEISURE ie AUTHORITY ON LEISURE = Young Corbett Wins Welter Title ‘KILLDEER AND HEBRON WIN IN INDEPENDENT TOURNEY Dickinson Nosed Out 27 to 25 While Taylor Cagers Are Swamped 14-55 Dickinson, N. D., Feb, 23—(P)— Killdeer nosed out Dickinson 27 to 25, |and Hebron swamped Taylor 55 to 14 \in the first round of the district in- |ependent basketball tournament her Wednesday night. The Killdeer-Dickinson contest was hard fought, with the lead see-sawing from the start to the finish. Hebron won the right to enter the final Friday night. Killdeer will meet Glen Ullin Friday morning to decide which one of these two teams will be jPaired with Hebron in the champion- ‘The summaries: Dickinson (25) Brown, f a of 3 Longbakken, c. tele ooe a | Macbride, ge Totals....... Killdeer (27) G, Scieflo, f . (Jensen, f . J. Schieflo, ¢ 'Ross, g . Grande, g . Johnson, g .. i] loananoto!l wunouew ' Fl omnwne Totals....+0-s-crseeee Hebron (55) Metzger, f Beyer, f Dittus, f Roffler, ¢ Kovarik, § Tiedman, & auucesese ni #Sneeuedh las nneceed &) oneecedal ew oun loses keaseluccuccucs a ovoneucae Basketball i lee es ie seandee High 23; Bismarck High 12; | North Dakota State 32; North Da- a) | Sinks Long Putt | OO HORTON SMITH Miami, Fla., Feb. 23.—(?)—A 22-foot putt on the 35th green Wednesday crowned two youngsters as the new integnational four-ball golf cham- Pions. Horton Smith sank the putt and he and Paul Runyan took the title and $500 cash each. They won from two veterans, Tommy Armour and Olin Dutra, who received $300 each as runner-up prizes. Sixteen teams played in the matches which started last Sunday and drew most of the outstanding professionals of the country. Boy Ski Champion|~ iMakes New Record Casper Oimoen of Minot Is In- jured in Long Leap At Ishpeming, Mich. Ishpeming, Mich. Feb. 23.—(7)— Paul Bietila, 14, of Ishpeming, world’s champion boy ski rider, beat his age record of 187 feet Wednesday in the Ishpeming 8ki club's annual Wash- ington birthday tournament, when he leaped 196 feet for the longest Wandin jump of the day. Casper Oimoen, Minot, N. D., 5 tional ion, leaped 206 feet in shoulder and was forced to retire. kota University 23. St. Thomas College 38; Moorhead | State Teachers 48. | Augsburg 30; St. Mary's 34. ‘Winona Teachers 31; Rochester {Junior 27, Stout Institute 47; Eau Claire 32. Eastern Normal (Madison) 14; Hu- jron College 37. North Dakota State Freshmen 31; About 70 riders were entered, in- cluding stars from Ishpeming, Ne- gaunee, Ironwood, Racine, Wis., and Milwaukee, CARL HOLSTROM, JR., WINS AT LAKE PLACID Lake N, ¥., Feb. 23.—()— Carl Holstrom, Jr., shot down the leaps of 55 and 60 meters (180 and North Dakota University Freshmen 33. Idaho Southern Branch 21; Mon- tana Mines 28. Hockey St. Paul 3; Minneapolis 8. Chicago — Barney Ross, Chicago, outpointed Tommy Grogan, Omaha, Neb., (10). Ralph Metcalfe and Glenn Cun- ningham Hope to Estab- lish New Marks New York, Feb, 23—(7)—At least '»| two of the 275 athletes entered in the ‘Wayne, Ind., outpointed wards, Chester, W. Va., (8); Young Chester, ' outpointed | Walter Midland, Pa, (3), Marquette versity, and Glenn Cunningham, Uni- versity of Kansans middle distance lace. Both were members of the U. 8 {Olympic team last year. 4 Metcalfe, national champion at 100" 197 feet) in the Lake Placid club's annual tourney. Holstrom, a member of the 1932 U. 8. Olymple ski team and a mem- ber of the Bear Mountain Sports as- sociation, took first place in the com- petition for the Dunn trophy. He competed in a fleld of 38 jump- Hi at was given a point rating of TWO RUNNERS WILL AIM AT usc n RECORDS SATURDAY NIGHT) coz.°? and 200 meters, will try to win a title and crack a record at 60 meters, a potassium and sodium, thiree “ghtest ‘metals, will float’ on ‘Tokyo has 5,000,000 inhabitants, FOUR HOURS A DAY, UNDER TECHNOCRACY, WOULD “AN ASSISTANT FIRE WARDEN % IN ASTONE QUARRY / fh: champ! his first attempt, but fell, injured his fave sy Abe TGA WIN UNDPUTED ener womens) {LEAGUE GROWN WITH VICTORY ON MARCH 4||_ Nodaks Are Outplayed From Start; Captain Dablow Plays Great Game JOB AS WEIR AND M’KAY BRILLIANT Beating Was First of Season For Sioux and: First in Last 21 Starts Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 23—(7)}— The North Dakota Bison, 1932 north central conference basketball cham- pions, clinched at least a tie for the 1933 title by defeating the University of North Dakota here Wednesday night, 32 to 23. ‘The Bison can win undisputed claim to the pennant by defeating the Sioux at Fargo March 4. The defeat was the first of the sca- son for the Nodaks, who had run up a string of 20 victories. Paced by Bob Weir, center, and Vivian McKay, guard, the Bison out- played the Nodaks in every depart- ment of the game and after taking @ 2 to 1 lead when four minutes had passed, never were headed. Weir shot five field goals, while McKay was outstanding on the floor. The Sioux put up a losing fight from the start. They were off in shooting and handled the ball poorly. Captain Gordon Dablow was the only member of the quint near top form. The summary: Fresno Southpaw Outpoints Jackie Fields Far Second Time in 10-Rounder U.N. D, (23)— -— ae o a ote a San Francisco, Feb. 23.—()—Young ‘ 3 i Corbett, the third, looked out over * o 6 the welterweight ranks Thursday as 2 0 0 the champion of the division in which ae” he has been the most persistent chal- 9 5 5 Jenger the last three years. Climaxing a long uphill pull, the 3 0 8 Fresno, Cal., left-hander became the ae ae & ruler of the 147-pound class by de- & Oo 8 cisively defeating Jackie Fields in a e A 10-round bout here Wednesday. 2 0 0 ‘With a dazzling early attack that 0 1 2 won him five rounds before his op- — — = ponent got started, Corbett piled up 15 2 10 an advantage that left no doubt in the minds of 15,000 fans as to his superiority. There were no dissent- ing voices when Referee Jack Ken- nedy raised Corbett'’s arm. Tiring somewhat in the eighth and ninth rounds, Corbett finished with @ rally that left Fields dazed and leg-weary. Fifteen seconds before the end of the 10th session, he drove into Fields with rights and lefts that forced the latter to give ground. While the crowd cheered, Corbett Cincinnati — Willard Brown, Indi- anapolis, outpointed Pete Petrosky, Charleroix, Mich. (10); Pete Leno, Cincinnati, outpointed Frank Gerke, Indianapolis, (6). Although the feathers of silkies may be either white or black, their skin is always black. They are the Negroes of the fowl race. \Sir Malcolm Campbell Hurls Bluebird to Three New Marks Malcolm Campbell and His Bluebird . to the body without Fields making a AMERICA’S return. In winning the title Corbett achiev- ed the distinction of having beaten champions on three different occa- sions. Three years ago in @ non- title fight he scored a decision over Fields, who has won and lost the championship twice. - few months after trimming Fields, the Fresno boy took on Young Jack Thompson, who the, rangy ‘Negro terrific’ beating Tangy Negro a Hic beating. ns before, the championship was not Bison Yearlings Rally To Defeat Nodak Five 33-31 Bernard Leads N. D. State Freshmen Cagers to Vic- tory At Grand Forks Grand Forks, N. D, Feb. 23—(9)}— This year, more than ever, the Roney Plaza is maintaining the esteem of its dis-. criminating clientele. . Bier dee car = seg ‘apo ainge that tled the score at 26-26. because in adjusting its q, Bernard collected lx Held goats, but rates in proportion to low-: - OR BS : er overhead costs, it has not Wietory. He had five gift shots and whittled an iota of guest lux- eight and the Sioux counted only five out of 16, Weaver scored 15 points to lead the FG FT PF A , Ss 4 N. B. 2, Roney oo 1 6 3 32 o o 3 5 0 8 0 o 0 2 0 2 as eeeeeee, secooeee 13 5 12 'N. D. State (33) FG iy " o 1 1 0 ao. o 2 o 4 Sloan, g . o 0 Maynard Cf o 0 Pg 7 10 MLAMI ury from its policy. Rather the Roney Plaza today is more beau- tiful, gay and. comfortable than ever before. .. in truth, America’s finest ocean-front hotel. Moreover, its dining room... praised wherever - epicures compare notes . . . offers its FINEST ew OCEAN ‘wand. CABANA SUN CLUB BEACH ay FRONT Racing Car Blasts Over Mile in 13.3 Seconds At 272.108 Miles Per only one hand. Afterwards, he describ. ed his experience as “the worst ride I ever had in my life.” Returning to his hotel immediately after establishing the new marks, Campbell was compelled to summon a physician to treat his arm and band- age it. In making his thunderous runs over the hard-packed sands Wednes- day, Campbell gathered in new rece ords of 272.463 miles an hour over one kilometer; 272.108 over a mile and 257.295 over five kilometers to bring to five the number of world land speed records he possesses. He al- ready holds the record of 242.751 over five miles and 238.669 over 10 kilome- ters. A kilometer is approximately five-eighths of @ mile. Previous Record 253.968 Campbell’s previous records for the carried the tokens in all his races. a> 5 z ith Australia. It is the size of a mouse and has pale blue-gray HOTEL PLORIDA same cuisine, tamed for its tasty and orig- inal recipes, at prices averaging 50%. lower than last yeer’s . . . from the complete 60-cent breakfast (served in your room without extra charge) ...torare, dishes at lunch- eon and dinner which are ex- traordinarily delicious ...-. grati- fyingly’ inexpensive!, member} too; the, privileges of ers, outdoor swimming pool and And re- + surfebathing are offered without cost to Roney Pleza meee FAR j

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