The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 6, 1933, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

_& NEW SALEM TONIGHT Winner Will Be Entrant of Re- gion in State Tourney At Valley City ARE DISTRICT CHAMPIONS Prowlers Won Pennant in 13th District By Taking Tour- nament At Hazen Bismarck’s Prowlers will meet the Glen Ullin Independents Monday night at New Salem for the cham- pionship of Region G and the right to participate in the state independ- ent basketball tournament at Valley City March 9, 10 and 11. ‘The game will be played in the New Salem gymnasium, beginning at 8:15 o'clock (M.S. T.). Bismarck and Glen Ullin are cham- pions of the 13th and 14th districts, Tespectively, the former having won its title at Hazen Saturday night while Glen Ullin won its right in a tournament at Dickinson. With 16 district champions crown- ed, eight regional games were ar- ranged to cut entrants in the state tournament down to eight teams. Bismarck won the 13th district championship by defeating Stanton 24 to 18 in the final contest of the two-day tournament at Hazen. The Capital City quint defeated Halliday 35 to 15 in the first round Friday and the Hazen Hawks 36 to 12 in the semi-final Saturday forenoon. Stanton came through to the final by trimming the Hazen Irish 46 to 19 and Beulah 42 to 21. The final game was a battle all the ‘way. Neil O. Churchill, manager of the Capital City quint, said he will start Eddie Agre and Myron Benser at for- wards against Glen Ullin, Arnold Schneider at center and Ernest Man- ney and Eddie Martin at guards. Glen Ullin is expected to have its full strength for the fracas. The game is expected to draw fans from| all over the Missouri Slope area be-/ cause of the strength of the two teams and the rivalry which has pre- vailed between these two independent clubs for the last several years, The summary of the 13th district tournament: First Round aot Center forfeited to Hazen Ha Bismarck 35; Halliday 15. Beulah 42; Elbowoods 18. Stanton 46; Hazen Irish 19. Semi-Finals Stanton 42; Beulah 21. ee Watches Hurlers_ | ? | BILL TERRY Los Angeles, March 6—(P)—Bill Terry has taken stock of his New ‘York Giants after a week's training and decided they'll do if the pitching holds up. “Memphis Bill” has got to find help for his two mainstays, Carl Hubbell and Fred Fitzsimmons. Hal Schumacher and Roy Parmalee may be the answer and Terry makes no secret of the fact that he is expect- | OHIO STATE CAGERS TO FACE ismarck to Play Glen Ullin for Regional I TEAMS WLLBATIZ|NODAKS TIE BISON FOR STATE -INORUGAL CAME AT [ou noanomre noose Bates Thavory wy SAY, UNCLE AMOS~YKNOW HOW MUCH I GOT MARKED ON THE- GEOGRAPHY HOMEWORK YOU HELPED, ME WITH LAST NIGHT © SIXTY /~ AN THAT MEANS POOR ~~ YOU SAID A FRIJOLE WAS A BAY,OR HARBOR IN NORWAY, AN’ MY TEACHER SAID ITS A BEAN THAT GROWS IN MEXICO 9 4 s aad JUST A SLIGHT BIT OF CONFUSION , MLAD=YES~ ~UM-M-HAR-RR RUMF- AND, SO THAT YOUR TEACHER DOESNT GET THE WRONG IMPRESSION, YOU TELL HER THAT: I AM AN OXFORD GRADUATE, AND HAVE MANY DEGREES- INDEED 7 i SHE SAID A BAY IN NORWAY IS CALLED A FJORD Baby Bison Cagers Trounce Nodaks State College Yearlings Run Wild to Pile Up 43 to 19 Margin INDIANA IN CLOSING CONTEST Bismarck 36; Hazen Hawks 12, Final Buckeyes Hope to Defeat Hoos- j March 6—Let it i : il Bismarck 24; Stanton 18, jers For Clear Claim to be er gn poh freshman basketbell SE RE Loop Pennant tural college didn’t do its part toward | Basketball Scores | ssacniente sending the University of North Da- aT i i Eo ik 4 | § i 2¢ University of North Dakota, 28; N. D. A. C., 26 (overtime). Indiana, 31; Michigan, 30. St. Louis U., 41; Drake, 37 (over- time). Northwestern, 38; Minnesota, 29, Illinois, 44; Iowa, 16. Purdue, 50; Chicago, 24. Pennsylvania, 34; Columbia, 29, Princeton, 39; Dartmouth, 35. N. D. A. C. Freshmen, Freshmen, 19. Hig | i E § | g I i E g s j 2 & s Ss i 3 ii & ? i i H i g 4 [ g A [ ga q i i i i g F E it ire ie i hi iE ry F Fi i g L i if Fj nt E i i H 5 F | 3 H 5 I 5 Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Yale, 46; Cornell, 22. ‘Texas, 51; Texas A. & M., 20. Syracuse, 44; Penn State, 29. Marquette, 35: U. of Detroit, 21, Missouri, 37; Kansas State, 33. Platteville Teachers, 34; Oshkosh 58 SE i F Hl E i i ra j i Ey gE ale f d F i f : fl ‘ § j FE & 3 k Dilworth, 17; Hawley, 16. Texas Christian, 36; Southern Me- thodist, 24. Brigham Young, 43; Utah, 26. INDEPENDENT TOURNEY Regional at Hettinger Mott, 43; Hettinger, 28. . 13th District Final: Bismarck 24; Stanton 18. Semi-finals: Bismarck 36; Hazen Stanton 42; Beulah 21. Denhoff Girl Cagers Win 10 Straight Tilts (Tribune Special Service) Denhoff, N. D., March 6.—Defeating Harvey 36 to 16, the Denhoff high school girls basketball team won its 10th straight victory to end a cam- Paign in which it was undefeated. During the season the Denhoff girls defeated the following: Chaseley 26 to 0; McClusky 36 to 16, 24 to 17, 28 to 16 and 43 to 21; Hurdsfield 32 to 0 } i eG fi RE ef i: Ee Eg I F é I i ! t P E F [ i i i z j i i | | ; itt i E § 12. ; 5 aj 3 Z F BLE lie I g susd Fe ing much from them as well as from Ray Starr and Glenn Spencer, secur- _ ed in trades during the winter. | OUT OUR WAY HE DID IT ON PuRPosE!! HE SUST WANTED TO GET EVEN WITH ME, BECAUSE 1 BEAT HIM “TO THE PAPER — WHY OID HE BRINGIT I Vnow! RIGHT OVER IN) FRONT ME TO OPEN IT? WHY Bid HE Pow iT my WHEN HE PUSHED Down I KNOW ~— THe CAPT and 32 to 8; Bismarck Indian girls 44 to 10; and Harvey 33 to 18 and 36 to 18. ccccconann ld looconee Snes CRAZY! CO You THINK TO HALF DROWN MYSELF, TIS TO GIT EVEN WITH HER ? THink IM THAT DumMB? rink YOU'RE AS OvomB AS Mov ThwK 7 am! il Hho weeea Sl hoconsandB oF 7 half: N. D. A. C., 26; North Dakota university, 9. Personal fouls: Bernard 4, Noecker, Rieners 2, Sloan, 2, Mc- Donald 2, Spielman, Weaver 2, Char- bonneau, Dahl, Dyke, Reickert Free throws missed: war, ti c ip FLERE ify H lh He THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1953 IN OVERTIME GAME Brilliance of Herman Witasek, Sophomore Forward, Brings Victory BISON WON IN CONFERENCE Harold Tait and Ted Meinhover of Bismarck Play Through- out Tilt Fargo, N. D., March 6—The North Dakota Agricultural college Bison are North Central conference cham- Pions, undefeated in eight starts, but the best they can claim in North Da- kota is co-ownership of the state in- tercollegiate title. ‘The Bison dropped a 28-26 decision to the University of North Dakota Nodaks in the Bison physical educa- tion building Saturday night in an overtime game, the fourth and final in their series, evening it up at two games each. Basketball is primarily a team Game, and as such, the Bison were entitled to the decision. But there was nothing the Herd could do about the uncanny marksmanship of one Herman Witasek, a curly-haired sophomore forward who performed similar feats for Lankin’s frequent state consolidated high school cham- Pions of recent years. The Bison, with five of the seven performers used during the contest sharing in the scoring from the field, Tang up 11 field goals against 10 for the Nodaks. But eight of the Nodak double counters were the result of Witasek’s individual marksmanship, six of them being one-hand shots. Witasek in all accounted for 18 of the Nodak’s 28 points. It is evident that if it had not been his night the Bison might have gone on to win convincingly. for they bottled up the remainder of the Nodak lineup effec- tively, only Ted Meinhover and Wes- ton Booth finding the net for field ‘Witasek took a one-hand pivot shot after two minutes of the extra period, caging the ball for the decisive points. The Bison called out time, but were unable to score during the next three minutes, although they missed numerous opportunities as FG Fr PF|- 2 0 2 0 o 1 2 0 4 3 1 1 2 2 3 2 1 0 ” © 2 4 12 Fr PF 8 2 0 0 0 4 1 3 1 1 1 3 o 2 0 o 0 0 see secceceenees 10 x8 8 x—Technical foul called on crowd. Score at half—N. D. A. C., 16; North Dakota U., 14. Free throws missed — Denenny, sek 2, Meinhover, Booth 2, Smith, cek 2, Meinhover, Booth 2, Smith, Referee—Dick Holzer, Moorhead. a ii ie aidert Cubs Beat Giants ndependent Championship © *|door meet of the Intercollegiate As- i i F z i we i oh L | i : 4 i : irl i i I | | if i | } J FE } i i 5 dred Sixteen nd “1/100 Dole lars ($1616.41), together with costs of foreclosure. wnt this 11th day of February, THE FEDERAL LAND BANE OF BA! P. Mortgagee, 3113: 7 20 St. Paul, Minnesota, —_—_—. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE ‘WHEREAS, Default has been in the terms and conditions of certal; es hei Reds last season, greeting his yy Hartnett, right, catcher, is Herman, whom he lugged into camp to try catcher. YALE TEAM WINS SURPRISE VICTORY IN I. C. 4-A MEET}. THEY CHANGE OFTEN . Coyotes have special places to and sing their weird songs nightfall, but they never use meeting ground two nights cession, Outpoint New York University 32 to 28 in Annual Classic Saturday The Liberty Bell weighs 2080 pounds. NOTICE OF REAL GAGE FORECL! Notice is hereby certain morteag. Burlet eye Ts book such of the Court Hou: marck, County of of North os, o'clock P. M. on t! New York, March 6.—()—While track followers still were blinking their eyes and wondering how it hap- @ place in their trophy.room Monday for the most coveted prize of the in- door track and field season, the team championship of the annual in- ESTATE MORT- SURE SALE in the city of Bin urleigh, tad Btate at the hour of 3 day ven that ti ecu! Paul, a corporation, In Opening Games Avalon, Calif., March 6. ‘Two victories over the New York Chicago Cubs as he ordered them to be ready for a long drill Mon- day. The pair of triumphs over the Giants revealed that the pitching is coming right along, Warneke, Bush, Henshaw, Malone and Hermann having performed satis- factorily. Malone and Bill Jur- ges, however, got lame arms out of the work. —? ——_—_____—__+ iH i prietor, To Fight German acciation of Amateur Athletes of Ame! rica. A surprisingly well balanced team of Eli tracksters scored in seven of the 11 varsity events Saturday night to provide the ultimate surprise of a series of upsetting performances. Yale collected a total of 32 points while New York university, defend- ing champion and odds-on favorite to repeat, gathered in only 28. Paul, County of ney, innesota, mor: e, day of November, 1917, and fil record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota on the 14th day of November, 1917, and recorded in Book 151 of Mortgages at page will be foreclosed by premises in such morts: inafter described at front of the court house in the city of Bi marck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota at the hour of two o'clock P. M. on the 3rd day of April, 1933, to satisfy the amount due spon such mortgage on the day of sale. Pursuant to provision made in such mortgage, the mort as hereto- fore declared and di by declare the whole mortgag: edness due and payable. The premises described in such mortyane and which will be gold to described as follow: satisfy the same are The Southeast Quarter (SE%) of Section Kighteen (18), in Champ Apprentice | btedness. ferlor to the unpaid principal of the eriol paid principal of aforesaid ‘mor tothe Federat Land Ba: int Paul amounting to Twenty-three Hundred ‘Forty-one 100 Dollars ($8342.34). mo! (swe) ty Seven (31) is oe Thirty ent containing One Hundred Sixty (160) acres, more or less, according to the government survey thereof. ill be due on sal at the f sale for instaliments and insu: of Two Hundred Ni 100 Dollars ( cost of forecios ppated this 11th day ef February, 1933, ‘WITH OPEN ARMS Columbus, O.—A thief who gave his name as Peter Tannenbaum was rance the NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- AGE FORECLOS SALE Gi Notice is hereby given that that xecuted and de- ey, certain mortgage, ¢: house County Dakota at 4

Other pages from this issue: