The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1934, Page 8

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, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1934 Bismarck High Cagers Will Play Valley City Here Saturday Night “HI-UNERS HAVE BUT TWOVETERANS; HAVE GOOD RBCORD $0 FAR Pressed Strong Jamestown Quint Into Last-Minute Rally in Struggle BEAT CLASS B CHAMPIONS Scott and Codding Are Letter- men on Coach Claude Miller’s Squad Bismarck high school’s basketball team will meet its first Class A com- petition this season when it clashes with Valley City’s Hi-Liners here Sat- urday evening. The game will be staged at the Bue) ditorium of the World War Memorial building, beginning at 8:30 o'clock, @ half hour later than the usual | MEDINA FACES SAINTS Medina’s basketball team will | play the strong St. Mary's five of Bismarck at St. Mary's gymnasium here Friday night at 8 o'clock. starting time to give business persons! an opportunity to see the fracas. In @ preliminary game beginning at 7:15 o'clock, the Imps, Bismarck reserve team, will play Wilton. Coach Claude Miller of Valley City. former athletic ster at North Dakota| State, will bring here a team which has only two veterans from last year but which has made an impressive record in games so far this season. Besides forcing the great James-) town team to a last-minute rally to) eke out a victory, the Hi-Liners have conquered Fairmount, Class B state champions last season, by a 21-13) count. Coach Miller's two veterans are} Scott, a forward, and Codding, a! guard. One of the most effective Valley Citians, however, !s Jimmy Sletten, the other forward. Sathe at center and McCosh at guard complete the starting lineup of the Hi-Liners.' Diemert is another classy | eal who may see some action. Coach Roy D. McLeod expects Bis-| marck to have full strength on the floor Saturday night. The Demon; mentor plans to start Larry Schneid- er at center, Billy Owens and Neil Croonquist at forwards and Bud Kanz| and Gordon Engen at guards. For reserve duty he will have Ni Beylund, center; John Cameron, for- ward; and Ollie Sorsdehl, guard. Winnipeg Boxer Wins From Negro; Laurie Peppin Rallies to Cop Last Two Rounds With Ace of Spades | Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 19.—(?\—} Laurie Peppin, Winnipeg even the! count with Ace of Spades, Omaha, |! Neb, Negro, by rallying in the last two rounds to gain the decision in a sensational 10-round battle here ‘Thursday right. \s It was « savage fight which was! all even at the end of eight rounds, | ‘ut Peppin rocked the Omaha fighter with a two-fisted attack to the head! ‘mn the ninth and went on to win the 10th and the veraict. Peppin weighed 156 and Ace of Spades 15713. "The bout was a re-match of a fight here two weeks ago in which Ace of Spades won on a foul in the fourth round. A seilout crowd witnessed the battle. In the semi-windup, George Feist, | Grand Forks featherweight, shaded Johnny Buker, East Grand Forks, in six rounds. Ade Hofer, Lisbon, won @ great four-rounder from Bud Jen- son of Devils Lake and Elroy Bushaw | ef Grand Forks easily outpoinied | Vduggsy Sullivan of Fargo in another | four-rounde:. Northwestern | Five Will Battle Mlini| Chicago, Jan. 19.—(7)—Gaining momentum in their fight to retain their share of the Big Ten basketball ip, Northwestern's Wild- have a chance to take sec- in the race Saturday when the Illini in the feature ing. ll invade Chicago and in the other games Sat- night, but none is expected to hhave any bearing on the ultimate out- come of the championship race. Benefit Doubleheader Is Planned at Beulah (Tribune Special Service) 'JIMMIES NIP HIGHLY-TOUTED VIKINGS | IN 26-24 THRILLER WHAT 'S THIS — A GAG? WHY" RE You PUTTIN’ TH’ HEAT ea ME Ge 3. PAT. OF 1934 BY_NEA SeRviCe. tne. OUR BOARDING HOUSE UP WITH EM, BURT, AND NO FAST PLAY, OR TLL. PUT YOU ON A SLABS HERE, MASOR, TAKE THE WELUBALTIMORE BURT, WE FINALLY CAUGHT UP WITH YOU —~AND GOT YOU WITH By Ahern | UMP-=FUMEF— EGAD, RIENDEAU, HADN'T WE -AH- ~HADNT YOU BETTER TIE, OR MANACLE HIM “SuumE- SPUT-T-t YOUR FINGERS DRIPPING HONEYs YOURE DUE FoR bhi \ YEAR STRETC 150 Championship Class Ski-Riders Have Entered National Tournament MAPLE LEAFS AND RANGERS ARE CLASS OF HOCKEY LOOP | Toronto Swamps Boston Bruins While New York Blanks Blackhawks New York, Jan. early to start mi about the erd of the League season w of the campai; jbut at the py Maple Leafs jare the “class” of th |to be headed dire: place playoff series. | Toro: !points Thursday ni the Boston Bru | Rangers co: a 5-0 | Chicago Biackhawks. Detroit played a 1-1 draw in a hard- sought game with the Montreal Ma-; Toons. A large part of the Ranger scoring was due to Conacher’s penaltie: After Butch Keeling had bowled him} over and split the Blackhawk defense! to score the first goal, the * big train” began to lose his temper and the Blackhawks lost most of their defense wt the same time. First Conny got into a brief battle with Ching John- son and drew a major penalty. While he was off Cecil Dillon scored the sec. ond Ranger goal. Later he cross checked Keeling. was banished again and Frank Boucher made it 3-0. Field Complete for | Skating Tournament | Oconomowoc, Wis., Jan. 19.—(F}— | With the arrival of entry blanks tor | Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan skat-/ ers qualified to match strides with | Canadian ice arists, the field was | completed Friday for the North American speed skating championship | tournameni here Jan. 27 and 28. Entries have been received from | Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, Missouri, New York, Ilinols, Minnesota and Canada, mph over the A goose serves as “watchdog” the vicar of Kewstoke, England. for Queen Gets King A 6-foot 3-inch tarpon, landed by Miss Kyle Browder, 17-year-old Port Isabel, Texas, girl, set a new all-time record for early silver king captures on the Gulf Coast of Texas. ‘The earliest-previous catch war. reported in February. Miss Rrowder, shown with her prize, Hooked this one the first week of January. Casper Oimoen of Minot Will Be Among Entrants at Chi- cago Sunday Chicago, Jan. 19.—(7)—A total of 150 entries, 103 of them from jump- ers of championship calibre, have been received for the national ski- championships to be held Sunday at the giant Norse slide at Fox River; Grove, north of Chicago. President Fred Brunn of the Norge | Ski club said that competition in all four classes—A, B. Senior and Junior j—is expected to be the keenest in jmany years. Ray Mikkelsen, representing Au- joven, Cal. is the defending title- ‘holder and favorite, but must defeat’ jsuch jumpers as Casper Oimoen of Minot, N. D., several times American jchampion; LaMoine Batson, Chicago; i Sverre Fredheim of Minneapolis and | Ted Peterson of St. Paul. | Erik Solid of the University of | Wisconsin, third-place winner in the {famous meet at Holemkollen, Nor- j Way, in 1927, is favored to win the title in Class B. Reider Byfuglin of | Minot, N. D., is among the entrants \in that class.” Johanna Kolstad, Norwegian wo- man star, will compete in Class A. Seven carloads of snow will be | Spread over the 340 foot surface of the on scaffold and landing hill. ——-¢ ‘| * March Schwartz Aids Shaughnessy | Chicago, Jan. 19.—()—March- mont Schwartz is coming back to help his old teacher, Clark Shaughnessy, in the task of pro- ducing winning football teams at the Univerersity of Chicago. Through at Notre Dame, where he won All-American honors as halfback and then assisted Hunk Anderson for two seasons, Schwarts has been to assist in the coaching of the Maroon backfield. He will begin his new duties during spring training in March. Coach Shaughnessy taught Schwartz football when March was on the freshman team at Loyola, New Orleans, After his freshman year he entered Notre Dame. ° OUT OUR WAY Beulah, N. D., Jan. 19.—Two Boy} Scout teams and two quints represent- ing the Beulah Lions club will clash in 9 benefit basketball doubleheader next itmaster, is arrangements. for the doubleheader. Foresters Primed for | Vietory Over Veterans Mike Jundt and his Cath- of Foresters hockey NO MORE . INVENTING ! TAMAS, 1-14 By Williams \VAUEY GIT’ cny's GYM | FILLED 10 CAPACITY | AS RIVALS ALS BATTLED {crouse, Hal Hall and Thun and Thunem Play | Brilliantly in Important | Tussle a BIG CENTER IS SCORELESS Eddie Spriggs, Eddie Agre, Ernie Manney, All of Bis- { marck, Play { Valley City, N. D., Jan. 19.—(h}— {Jamestown college triumphed over the {Valley City Teachers, most serious | threat to their conference cage cham- {pionship, 26-24 in a thrilling battle {here Thursday night. } | So jammed was the large Viking | gymnasium that the overflow crowd received the account of the game by broadcast in a neighboring building. Overtaking the Vikings late in the ‘first half in @ brilliant burst of speed, the Jimmie held a 13-12 lead at the intermission. The visitors sprang impressively to the front in the third quarter and at one time led by as many as nine points, 21-12. In the final 10 minutes the Vikings crept up within one point but were unable to knot the score. | In the remaining minutes before the frenzied crowd, both teams bat- \tled desperately, with Jamestown jgaining an edge in free tosses. Crouse kept the Jimmies in step with the ‘Vikings in the first half with his long shots, but it was Hall and Thunem who kept Jamestown in the lead in the final stanza. Hill, Viking forward, played a bril- Mant offensive game, counting 14 Points or more than half of Valley City’s total. Caskey, stellar forward, and Humbracht, giant center, usually! good for several points, were held scoreless from the floor. After Jamestown started scoring with a free throw, Valley City tied it up and went into a 7-1 lead in the first seven minutes. Jamestown over- took the Vikings midway in the sec- ond quarter and the lead exchanged | twice in the last five minutes of the first half. Valley City trailed by one or two points in the last seven min-: utes of the second half. j ‘The summary: Valley City cei FG Hill, f ... y Caskey, f .. Morsch, f Gronlie, f Humbracht, ¢ Butters, g Stensland, g - a Bil www won Totals Jamestown (26) Peterson, f . E. Agere, f . Crouse, f oeowcos a! conscosH my Schauer, g } wlornonwon of HsconHon | fisowuces Retereo--iitek Melzer, Holzer, Moorhead. | |Nodak Boxing Team. i To Invade Bemidji Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 19.—The} University of North Dakota boxing team will leave here Saturday morn- ing for Bemidji, Minn., where it meets a selected team of amateurs that evening. This will be Lit first cual meet for the Sioux Coach H. H. Russell will take we University fighters, Heavyweight Ben Blanchette of Grand Forks; Lightheavyweight Bill Morrow of Grand Forks; Middleweight Kenny Brown of Minneapolis; Welterweight Newell Fait of Fingal; weight Ed Dehne of Mismarck; and| at the request of Bemidji officials, : Ray Baker, East Grand Forks feather- weight, will make the trip with the) De ioux squad. Two of the University boxers, Blan- chats and Brown, are holders of Min- Diamond Belt champion- aie Brown retained his middle- weight title in this year’s tourna- ment, while Blanchette won the heavyweight crown for the first time. With these two battlers for a nucleus, Coach Russell expects to build the strongest boxing team in the history of the Dniversiy of North Dakota. *| Elly Vines Squares Things W: With Tilden. Cleveland, Jan. 19. — (#) — Young Ellsworth Vines has evened the road tour termis series with Big Bill Tilden at three matches-all in a short power show which included a spray of baf- fling drives and a breath-taking serv-! ive good for 17 aces. Tilden utilized his contract privi- |, lege to shorten the match to three| sets Thursday night when he saw the crowd of 2,300 at the Coliseum virtu- ally spilling over the edges of the court. Vines’ victory was on scores of 6-3, 3-6, and Light- Kahl, King Levinsky May Get Title Chance In Madison Square Garden This Year When Victory Is Sweet Lucky fellows, the money winners in the ninth annual’Los An- geles Open. Victoria Vinton, above, was selected to hand out the $5000 and cups to the victors. All voted the selection was nerfect. Ohio State Basketball Coach Gets Few Tips From 13-Year-Old Youngster Columbus, O., Jan. 19. —- (®) — running your team wrong and suggest-——” The writer was Billy Jones, 13, a junior high school basketball vlayer, and the recipient was Har- old G. Olsen, director of basket- ball at Ohio State University. The rotund and jolly Olsen, al- ways ready to accept advice, called up Billy and said, “come up to my office and we'll talk this thing over.” Half an hour after Billy ap- peared he left the office in high “I believe we'll win from . “I gave Mr. Olsen quite a few pointers.” Olsen chuckled. “He sure did. He's a great lad.” Minot Teachers Nose Out Dusties’‘. Beavers Take Games From Ellendale by 39-38 Count Wahpeton, N. D., Thursday night, 39 to 38. It was the opening tilt of a two-| game invasion for the Beavers and) they were forced to pull up from be- hind in the last five minutes to gain First of Two, Jan, 19.—(@)— The Minot State Teachers College Beavers nosed out the ‘Wahpeton | jState Science School Wildcats here, if Basketball Scores COLLEGES Jamestown (N. D.) College 26; Val- jley City Teachers 24. | Minot Teachers 39; Selence 38. ‘Robinson Girls Win (Tribune Special Service) Robinson, son's high-scoring girls’ basketball team extended its victories this season to seven without a defeat by walloping ‘the Canfield girls 22 to 9. Robinson second team played moet of the game. In seven games the Robinson girls hove scored 220 points to 70 for their the advantage after the Wildcats had} opponents. led by 10 points most of the way. ed In the second game of a double- Wildcats had a 24-13 advantage at If. the half. The summary: Wahpeton (38) Rife, £ &|l coco ouMna Senechal. f Iverson, ¢ .. M. Johnson, & Anderson, g Clute, g ... i. Sonnu0n, c. salossnouew a! cocHoomnE sl o-usaene Totals . Referee—Jackson, Th Falls. Fo oFTOPF| ;neader, the Robinson boys defeated ee Canfield boys 23 to 8. | teams are announced as follows by 91 Coach Harvey Be Senane: Jan. 19—-Robinson at Steele. Jan. 36—Driscoll at Robinosn, Feb. 3—Lehr at Robinson. Boys Jan, 19—Robinson at Steele. Feb. —teppen at Robinson. 1 GOPHERS BEAT MICHIGAN 1° Bt. Paul, Jan. 19.—()—Minnesote | 1) disposed summarily of its first job of 4: protecting its Big Ten hockey cham- HI plionship by whipping Michigan Be2| ; 3| here ‘Thureday night 0; Alexander Graham Bell, by in- —| venting the telephone, made it pos- 11| sible to hear the conversation of peo- ple whom you cannot sec, while his father, Alexander Melville Bell, in- Cottentail rabbits communicate|vented the lip-reading system by with each other by rubbing whiskers/ which deaf-mutes can see and read and stamping their feet. tS Darned Clever, the conversation they cannot hear. Glos «SPORTS Japanese—and ‘Rabbit’ Has Cause to Believe By NEA Service ‘When Rabbit Maranville was playing with the U. 8. All-Star nine on its tour of Japan a couple of years back, he pulled a trick which kicked hoosegow. back and landed him in the Japanese troops staged a the Rabbit wanted some fun. He tion the in Tokio, and ribed & sub-otficer te lend hie @ unis Wahpeton | 1 Seven Straight Tilts; N. D,, Jan. 19.—Robin-j| Schedules of the two Robinson! Kilpatrick and Johnston Have Dropped Negotiations With Baer New York. Jan. 19—(P)—If Madi- son Square Garden promotes a heavy- weight championship bout in June, the chances are just about 10 to one the challenger won't be Max Baer. But it might be King Levinsky. Finding it impossible to tie Baer up to @ contract to fight for the garden in the event he won the championship, Col. John R. Kilpatrick, president of the big arena, and his Tatohmaxer, Jimmy Johnston, have dropped all negotiations with Baer, his manager, Ancil Hoffman, and Promoter Jack Dempsey, and turned to Levinsky instead. In their first move to build the talk- ative ex-fish peddler into the status ot a title contender, the Garden's directors have booked him for two matches, one against Charley Mas- sera, young Pittsburgher, the other egainst Walter Neusel, blonde puncher from Germany, on Feb. 9 and March 2, respectively. If the Kingfish can get by those two hurdles, he may be asked to agree to one more tune-up before get- ting a shot @ Primo Carnera in June, always assuming the mammoth Ital- jan succeeds in beating Tommy Loughran in their 15-round bout in Miami, Feb. 22. Nodak Quint To Battle Rabbits Friday Evening North Dakotans Hope to Win Fourth Straight in Con- ference Race LINEUPS North Dakota South Dak. State Witask it Gripent itrog Mallen Bankert Dehnert Arndt Diehl Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 19.—Those fast-stepping. high-scoring Sioux from the University of North Dakota will attempt to annex their fourth straight North Central conference victory Friday night when they meet South Dakota State, here. The Nodaks, who are averaging more than a point a minute this sea- son, are the favorites to win the con- {ference title, leading the league at |the present with three victories and no defeats. South Dakota University, {South Dakota State, and Morningside have fallen before the rampaging Sioux. In their first meeting of the sea- son, the Nodaks trounced South De-~ kota State, 42-28. In this game Mul- fien, Witasek, and Meinhover, the three leading scorers, accounted for 130 of the points. To date, Witasek nas averaged 14 points per game, while Meinhover is a his heels with 11 tallies per conte: Coach Clem etic will send his regular “point a minute” team into tie, fray, consisting of Mullen and Witasek at forwards, Meinhover at center, and Capt. Bernie Smith and Westy Booth at guards. 8o closely have the two defenseive men guarded jtre Sioux opponents that only 61 j Pomme have been registered against the University by the three conference opponents, while the Nodaks have been scoring 131 points for an average \eloge to 44 per game. In the entire 10 games played, the North Dakotans ‘have counted for 433 points, or more than 43 per game. | ‘The Unlversity will set its defense to stop the two Jackrabbit forwards, | Gripentrog and Bankert, who scored 110 and eight points, respectively, | against the Sioux in their first meet- ire. ae aa RR Te | Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) , New Haven, Conn.—Jackie Da- vis, 142, Cleveland, outpointed Louis “Kid” Cocoa, 140, New Ha- ven, (8). Grand Forks, N. D.—Laurie Peppin, 156, Winnipeg, outpointed Ace of Spades, 157;, Omaha, Ne- gro, (10); Georgie Feist, Grand Forks, outpointed Johnny Baker, East Grand Forks, Minn., (6). ,, Quincy, Ill.—Joe Reed, 146, st. Louis, outpointed Jackie Purvis, 149, Indianapolis, (10); Henry Hoo, 118, Indianapolis, outpointed ‘Tony Wiviano, 118, St. Louis, (10); Indianapolis, Knocked out Babe Davis, 182, St. Louis, (3). Dallas, Tex. — Bobby Calmes, 12212, Wichita, Kans., outpointed Bae Cates, 12; a Paso, (10). elphia — Tony Morgano, 132‘, outpointed Bobby Dean, 1; lor, 218° (2); Billy Cross, knocked out Sounns Santo, 146, (2); (All but King from Philade!-

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