The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 17, 1933, Page 6

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6 _ Bismarck THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1988 Primed for Opening Game With Enderlin Friday Night INTO OVERTIME PERIODS DEMONS WILL FACE | TWO REGIONAL GAMES HERE GO ‘DARK HORSE’ AT 9 "IN FOURTH CONTEST rh Class A State Championship ‘Tournament Gets Under Way Here in Afternoon JAMESTOWN FIVE CRIPPLED Forks - Minot, Mandan - Devils dake and Fargo-Jamestown i Games on Schedule PROBABLE LINEUPS (Bismarck) (Enderlin) Robert Finnegan F Thomas Carter Frank Lee F Junior Nix John Olgeirson C Harold Kraft Billy Owens G Marvin Bodene | ‘Wade Green G Harvey Peterson Bismarck will meet Enderlin at 9 @’clock Friday evening in the fourth and last game of the first round in the Class A state championship bas- ketball tournament, which will end at , the World War Memorial building Saturday evening. The tournament was to open Fri- @ay afternoon with Minot and Gr: Forks clashing in the first and Mandan and Devils Lake m: in the second. In the first game Friday evening, a crippled Jamestown team will meet Fargo, the defending champ The Blue Jays have lost Erik Peterson, , star guard who underwent an opera- ton for appendicitis Thursday after- moon. Besides being a tower of strength on the defense, Peterson was the Jays’ leading scorer sea- son, having counted 137 poi games. Bismarck’s opponent in the first round ranks as the dark horse of the! tourney. Enderlin, a Class B team, won the right to enter the meet by/ defeating Valley City in the third ex-) tra period of a playoff game. } Particularly bi t on the Ender- | lin team is Harold Kraft, lanky cen- | ter. He has been the main offensive ‘threat of the southern team through- ; out the year. Kraft scored six field goals and a free throw as Enderlin! trimmed Valley City 29 to 27 just aj ‘week ago. Coach J. M. Gronningen/ dhas pronounced ail of his athletes in| good shape for their tussle with the Demons. | Coach George L. Hays of the Cap-/| ital City team Friday morning said he would send Capiain Wade Green and Billy Owens to the guard posts, | Southpaw Bob Finnegan and Frank Lee to forwards and John Olgeirson ‘to center against the visitors. Olgeirson has not been feeling well the last few days but the Demon! mentor believes he will be in shape | final game at 10 winners of Friday night's games will clash in the second penultimate at | ila. m. Two consolation games are sched-| wled for 3 and 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon. ‘The championship game will be Played Saturday at 9:15 p. m., pre- ceded by the game between the losers of the semi-final contests for third Place and the championship game of | the consolation round. | ZANE GREY, famous novelist, caught the largest fish ever captured with rod and reel, a | ~{2040-pound Striped Marlin | swordfish. JOHN TYLER had fourteen children by two wives, “The UNITED STATES, BRAZIL | * and MEXICO, in that order, are the most populous nations in ‘the. Western Hemisphere. OUT OUR WAY Hits Apple Hard | |OUR Boa) BOYS! HAR-RR-RUMFE~ YOU KNOW, IT IS THE CUSTOM OF ALL BIG MEN TO BEQUEATH LARGE SUMS OF MONEY, ART COLLECTIONS, OR SOME OBJECT OF GREAT HISTORICAL VALUE, TO COLLEGES AND MUSEUMS~ AHEM—~NOW,I AM GOING TO GIVE MY BELOVED OWLS CLUB SOMETHING OF VERY GREAT IMPORTANCE (THE EVENT CALLS FOR A CEREMONY, TO BE HELD SOME ! <— Outfield and Infield Give Tigers Power On Americans For Track Counters London, March 17.—(?)—Both Oxford and Cambridge are count- ing upon American Athletes for Points when the track teams of the two universities meet Satur- day at Stamford Bridge. Cambridze’s main American re- liance is placed upon Oscar Su- termeister, formerly of Harvard, Hawes, also formerly of Harvard, and R. B. Greenough, formerly of Amherst, in the short put. Oxford has a wide selection of American talent including C. F. Stanwood, former all-around ath- lete at Bowdoin college, and Nor- wood Penrose Hallowell, formerly of Harvard. Julius Byles, Princeton shot- putter who won the university championship, Will Poole, ae, io and K, Pole-vaulted at Yale, also ‘will compete for the Dark Blue. {| Six Nodak Cagers To Play Next Year Ted Meinhover and Harold Tait Are Among Letter-Win- ners At U. N. D. Grand Forks, N. D., March 17.— Bernie Smith, star guard, was elected to lead the University of North Da- kota basketball team for next year at a meeting of his teammates. Smith is a junior in the school of educa- tion. This year Smith was the second highest scorer on the team, regis- tering 55 points in the regulation conference games. He was outscored only by Ted Meinhover, six feet sev- en inches center, who also returns next year. Smith prepped at Central zest for pitching. Frank Reiber, the Reiber batted 316 last year. cent Bucky Harris Jubilant Over Prospects Oxford and Cambridge Depending Kid Battery and Well-Balanced San Antonio, Tex., March 17—(#)— A kid battery, inspired by the man- eegec pty peser last r, is the other half o! peeing Harris will carry Reiber on Pay-roll especially to catch Rowe. ‘Veteran hurlers who are assured of positions are Thomas Bridges, who Pitched an almost perfect game f0r/ +, +e regional games sent delegations Detroit last year and finished with} (° suonorters here for the contests, BKE OUT SLENDER NARGIS IN TTS) Win Right to Participate in Class B State Tournamnt Next Week-End THREE STARS UNCOVERED Ellwein of New Salem and Timm and Shrawder of Medina Exhibit Class Missouri Slope fans were treated to two hotly-contested basketball games at the World War Memorial building Thursday evening when quints from New Salem and Max were forced into overtime periods to win regional championships and the right to parti- cipate in the state Class B tournament at Valley City state teachers college next week-end. New Salem trimmed Dickinson 25 to 22 and Max eked out a 26-to-25 deci- sion over Medina. Two other Class B teams—the Hen- son county aggies of Maddock And Carson—had qualified for the state tournament Wednesday evening and four others will be decided in games Friday and Saturday nights. ‘Thursday night's doubleheader here brought to light three classy perform- ers. They were Ellwein, snappy guard of the New Salem quint, and Elton Timm, forward, and Gordon Shrawd- er, guard, both of Medina. Any Class A team in the state could use these men to advantage. A Off To Poor Start New Salem’s Holsteins got off to a poor start and at one time were trail- ing Dickinson by nine points, the score being 11 to 2. Beginning to click late in the second quarter, the Hol- steins cut the lead down to 15 to 8 at the half. They were four points behind as the teams enicred the final quarter and New Salem tied the count at 22-all. In the extra period the Morton county quint tied the game in the bag when Rohs dropped in a free throw and Geist scored a field goal. Big Te —Ted 999 tral Conference Shot and Discus Champ J&R We eedlege of education, Th marck Youth ts North Cer! yas exert captain of the 1983 Uni- j Were OC Newer Dakota track team, | Meatover is North Central Cone | Sereewe ata arnt discus champion and [Rais We recent for the shotput He jal was a PORE winner in the 1932 Grand Forks, N. D., March 17.) ‘national fatercoliegiate meet at Chi- St. Patrick’s Meinhover of Bismayk, junket Sago or the shes event. Irish Youths At Notre Dame, Day Census Shows South Bend, Ind. March 17.— (®)—The “fighting Irish” of No- tre Dame still are Irish—even though they may cheer from the sidelines while the Sheeketskis, the Schwartzes and the Carideos fight their football battles for them. So said officials of the local university Friday on the basis of @ student survey to determine {Called in Pinch | Four men went out of this game on|to Personal fouls, three Holsteins and one Midget. Ellwein and Rohs played strong games for the victors while Cox and Baggenstoss were heavy scorers for the losers. Ding-Dong Battle ‘The Max-Medina game was a ding- dong battle all the way, with Max out in front most of the time but Medina ahead enough of the time to make it ./apparent that any slip might cause loss of the game. Tied at 24-all at the end of the regular playing period, the Cossacks took the lead when Samson dropped in a field goal. Timm scored one free throw but on another chance missed | when he might have tied up the game im) al le Timm played a brilliant floor game for the losing team and Shrawder kept Medina in the tussle throughout with five long pitches from the field, four of which came in the last half. Samson and Postovit were the big guns for the victors. The New Salem band played throughout the doubleheader and each of the four communities represented (®;—Ben Chapman, stealer of the American League for two years, apparently is going out af- ter a few extra-base batting records this year. The speedy New York | Yankee outfielder collected five hits in the last two games with the Bdston | Braves and only one was a single. An- jother was a double and three were triples. |GRIDDERS TO WORK MARCH 28 | Opening date for spring football prac- | tice at Ohio State University has beer. (set for March 28 by Coach Sam 8, Willaman. WE NEED , IS TAS BEN CHAPMAN St. Petersburg, Fla. March. 17— Premier base- high school in Grand Forks, where + Elon Hogsett, Victor he learned his basketball. wraanineton: i At the same meeting Coach Clem low Wyatt. Letich announced the letter win- Harris will one more pitcher ners of this season. Besides the reg- ee Pi ular team, three substitutes were |ffom among Orlin th awarded their “ND’s.” The letter- men: Capt-elect Bernie Smith, Grand Forks; Ted Meinhover, Bismarck; Capt. Gordon Dabiow, Thief River Falls, Minn.;- Ben J Bis- Grand marck; Kenneth Mullen, Forks; Herman Witasek, Lankin; Harold Tait, Bismarck; and Weston Booth, Grand Forks. Columbus, O., March 17.—(?)—The Henry Greenberg, giant 200-pound Beaumont first-baseman last year, is the infield gamble who day by day is next year that he has ever had. By Williams ANOTHER IT? wHY, PIECE OF =] THEY HAO oy ~ THEst JiG- 1 Webb, J Look For | SAW Puzzies ‘Oo avi Heinle wine, veteran Kant Nigh, Sones A MEece WHEN WE PEOPLE WAS Sutsield Prax other ALL BweE./ WERE YOUNG] candidates. Bill Terry’s Mound THEM. (3 ey ‘Sorrell, George Uhle and John Whit-' ‘Klusmann, we BAP. na eae Fon wire Staff Disappointing [Ervnde: « ‘The summaries: New Salem (25) FG FT PF Backsen, f 0 12 4 Geist, £ 1 0-2 1 i 1-3 4 Krudt, c . ee 2 3-4 0} Squad, 3 1-2 4/the 1 00 1 we 2 Mpegs 9 1-15 16 of the 4 02 2 and 3 00 3 0 23. 1) Moe 0 2-4 2) bvent 0 4-6 4/ other ot Bet 7 B46 13/0208 ‘W. H. Payne, (Mortiing-| “por Sioux c g é 8 Grand Forks, i u i i 5 Pierce, Knauf, Pearson, Mosh- er, Hill, Meinhover and Eckholm At Work if ega i g : : i E ; H z | REE A E i Fe z 5 j ‘f [ | Be i g >——_* 1G i SF Hf i i i F i i iE i ¢ i 8-5 Favorite To Defeat Dundee Results, said the announcement, were most gratifying. that 999 sons of Erin were roam- ing the campus Friday. was St. Patrick's Day, too. While they flaunted their shamrocks and bits of green, their supremacy, however, Was a one- day affair only. Extractions of other nationalities have invaded this campus in increasing num- For instance, the survey showed 567 with German blood in their veins. And, furthermore, 280 who trace their ancestry back to Eng- land, live and eat daily—and in Perfect harmony, too—with their Irish fellow students whose fami- les at sometime or other deserted the old sod. ‘The survey was conducted by a committee under the direction of the Daily Religious Bulletin of the university of which the Rev. John poled Prefect of religion, is the itor. With the exception of about 200 just how many Irishmen were | a Other nationalities at Notre Dame, Father O'Hara said, in- clude 199 Slavs, 145 Italians, 84 . Frenchmen, 56 Scotchmen, 39 Jews (mostly German), 15 Span- and Belgians—there may even be @ few of them, and others too, eo ‘up on next year’s football ‘( SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark | n Swim Records Certain to Fall TED MEINHOVER IS ELECTED NODAK TRACK TEAM CAPTAIN Michigan, Defending Champion, Favored to Cop Honors in Pool Tourney Chicago, March 17—(P)—A come revision of Western conference short pool records appears certain to result in the annual swimming cham- Pionship meet Friday night and Sat- urday night at the University of Chi- of Jamestown in Penulti- mate Engagement Fargo, N. D., March 17.—()—Jt Hegrenes, Fargo bowler, holds a 113- pin advantage over Guy Jamestown in the first half games at Minot and 10 on their home alleys. Hegrenes had a high of 212 low of 171 Thursday, while Ingle @ high of 210 and a low of 154. Hegrenes’ games in order were 174, ad 171, 191, 199, 212, 176, 209, 182 and. Ingles’ games went 210, 156, 164, 185, 204, 176, 177, 159, 189 and 154, ce N. D, March 17— orth Dakota a Hi aifl Hh “Til bet he is the tall, dark man the fortune teller told me to beware of." PLATING. 1S THE HEAMIEST * maneaerua We, = as

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