The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1934, Page 9

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1934 , : | Satchel Paige, Colored Hurler, Expected in Bismarck Next Week | AGHA WLL 'SKI-RIDING SPORT HAS GROWN RAP sess : PETGH FOR CAPITAL longated Star Prove Every Cloud Has Silver Lining 211.0. 0 Mt eo Oe "TROUPE AND HALEY SIGNED q EMasemann, Ringhofer Lost; Morlan to Return; Ober- holzer in Doubt G a Satchel Paige, star colored pitcher for Bismarck tast vear is returning to ithe Capital City next week to prepare for the next baseball season and prove tu Bismarck fans that every cloud has silver lining. Paige has been pitching in Califor- us, during the fall and winter against ajor and coast league stars. He lost pnly two games on the coast. | Quincy Troupe, catcher, and Red faley, shortstop, also will return next season, according to Manager Nell O. Churchill. Churchill visited in Jamestown i Tuesday night with A. M. Saperstein, Imanager of the All-Nations baseball Fteam last year, who is managing the ‘Harlem Globe Trotters, colored bas- wetball team which played Jamestown| college. Saperstein told him that Second- Baseman M: ssmann, who finished the season with Bismarck, had signed for |a tryout with the Boston Braves and fwas going to their Florida training }camp early in February. Ringhofer, first-baseman who fin- ‘ised the season with Bismarck, has signed with Louisville of the Ameri- can Association, Saperstein said. ‘Want O’Connor Here Churchill was interested in securing O'Connor, slow-ball pitcher for the All-Nations last season, but Saper- stein informed him that O'Connor hhad signed with the Minneapolis team of the American Association. Morlan, who played center field for year, will be back, . Oberholzer, who third base, is attending the ‘University of Minnesota and Church- ill has not heard from him to date. Jamestown will have the same team ‘as last year with the addition of an- Pitcher of the calibre of Lefty Brown, who is wintering there, “onurchill said. A new grandstand other repairs are being made to Jamestown ball park and the fans another banner season Dickinson Strong all tts last year's strength where management ex- team than they had they had one of best tate. signed practically the City Stockyards club of will have a team that| Beulah, Jamestown and Bis- nty of competition, accord- urehill, Sioux City will have the Western League next the independent club was to seek a new home. Churchill is looking for another the calibre of Paige. He to secure a good left- i tpi a 3 # i E ry il PEE tite eee He CITY ANOTHER YEAR} Expects to| {neapolis, will bring the Twin City OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAYBE YOU CAN GIVE | US TH’ LOW ON WHY TH* i MASOR HAD THAT CAPTAIN SHANDYGAFF PINCHED 0 HE WAS TELLING Us, BUT HE ISNT STICKING TO TH SCRIPT? HE CUT BACK THIRTY YEARS 10 HIS DAYS WITH SCOTLAND YARD, SO WE_HAILED A PASSING CAB AN LEFT #==HIM BLOWING Gx AY WIS LEGALIZED BREATH ABOUT YEARS? T HEAR HIM ¥ By Ahern WELL , THAT GIVES YOu A SLIGHT IDEA F OF WHAT THESE OLD EARS OF MINE HAVE HAD TO PUT UP WITH FOR 35 NEVER UNTIL WHEN HE STARTS TO HWE STARTS TO Giants At Every Turn Brooklyn Dodgers Resolved to Beat This Season Lyle Fisher of Fargo Following in | Footsteps of Waldo at Northwestern Chicago, Jan. 26.—(P—It has | taken him a long time to get nine free throws to lead the con- ‘ \ started, but Lyle Fisher of Fargo, | erence with 53 points, and man- N. D., seems headed for ranking { alongside of his brother, Waldo, | _ sed to collect his total in spite of fouling himself out of four con- among Northwestern's basketball fence games. heroes. The elder Fisher was a star cen- Only two games remain on the ter on Northwestern's 1925-26-27 Big Ten schedule for this week. teams, and when his six-foot, two- | inch brother came along, Coach | Dutch Lonborg expected big things from him. jheavyweight, who is the 1933 Golden Friday he had 22 field goals and western meets Minnesota at Min- neapolis. Ohio State palys at Michigan Fri- | day night. Saturday night North- | | Burned up When Terry Asks If Dodgers Still Are in Na- tional Loop New York, Jan. 26.—(#)—The |Brooklyn Dodgers will go to the Na- jtional League wars this season with & new battle-cry. “Beat the Giants,” Manager Max Carey and Business Manager Bob Quinn will tell their hired hands. “Beat everybody else if possible, but. ibe sure to beat the Giants.” | The rivalry between these Metro- Politan district teams is old stuff, ‘but it will be intensified this summer, Nodak Boxers Will arr Meet Minneapolitans; — Urges U.S. to Table | Grand Forks, N. D., Jan, 26.—The * | University of North Dakota boxing | Olympics Invitation | team will step into the limelight Fri- | ' day night, Feb. 2, when the Sioux; New York, Jan. 26—()—The Am-, pugilists meet a team of Minneapolis erican Olympic committee will be! Golden Gloves champions in the city urged not to accept Germany's invita- auditorium, here. F. W. Kahler, Min- ‘ticn to compete in the 1936 Olympic Pipe peectaiieeai cists ai team to Grand Forks. . 4, ‘ame known iy. i ‘The Nodaks, with but two exper-| Charles L. Ornstein, a member of | ienced fighters on the squad, have |the committee, will propose that the been training for the past month, and United States elther decline the; in their last meet won three of four invitation outright or else table bouts against the Bemidiji amateur |/¢ for the present. Ornstein says he and all because Bill Terry cracked wise. Somebody asked the Giants’ man- ager the other day what he thought of the Dodgers. “The ” Bill replied, “are they still in the league?” Bill may live to regret that remark. It made the veteran Quinn fighting mad. It may make the Dodgers mad, too, mad enough to regain their old mastery over the Giants, no matter what the relative position of the two clubs in the standings. — ° | Fights Last Night | | Per Oimoen hurled his body 175 feet! {cbambers of commerce, tiny villages ‘CASPER OIMOEN OF MINOT 1S LEADING EXPONENT OF ART North Dakotan Last Week-End/ Captured His Fourth Na- tional Title i TAKES COUNTRY BY STORM Thrills of Norwegian Institution Capture Imagination of Thousands i | { If | | BY BILL BRAUCHER | NEA Service Sports Writer | New York, Jan. 25.—()—When Cas- from a snowclad slide at Cary, Tll., the! other day to win: his fourth national! ski-jumping title a crowd of 25,000) brought a new significance to a! swiftly growing sport. ‘The impetus given to the daring adventure of ski-riding by the 1932 Olympic winter games at Lake Placid has spread it from New Hampshire's mountains to the icy heights of the far west. ! Colleges, prep schools, towns. cities. end far flung winter sports clubs jnow hold jumping tournaments from | which stars for our future Olympic | teams are rapidly oe * * Men who wear the flying ships on| itheir feet are accepting new perlis in itheir efforts toward records on the jsteep slopes. Back in 1923, on the sensational hill at Brattleboro, Ver-/ mont, Bing Anderson leaped 190 feet. Two years later Nels Nelson. ar. American ski-jumper, went gliding on empty air for 240 feet. Two years ago at Davos, Switzer- land, Sigmund Ruud established a world record with a leap of 265.74 feet. Last year Alf Engen, Dakota, j daredevil, took up Ruud’s challenge and soared for a distance of 281 fect; down a slide in Utah's Wasatch moun- | tains. Engen’s speed on the takeoff was estimated at more than 90 miles an hour—and his jump through space approximated the height of a 25-story building! Engen has taken a dozen jumps of more than 200 feet, setting up his. “old” American record at Salt Lake City two years ago with a jump of 247 feet. That same year he went 243 feet at Big Pines, Calif. xe x Norwegian pioneers introduced skis along the northern Atlantic seaboard in 1840. Viking settlers took the light- ning-runners west to Wisconsin and Minnesota, using them in cross coun- try travel. During the gold rush of '49, a mail carrier named Thompson smashed records for travel between the Pacific coast and Idaho and Nevada skiing eeross the Sierras and Rockies. ‘The first actual ski jumps made in this country are credited to two Nor- wegian boys—Michael and Torgas} Heimestvet—the nliving in Red Wing, Minn. Prior to the early 80's skis ‘were used only in cross-country travel. Clubs were formed in Red Wing, I i Demons and Saints ' | R DLY TO NEW SIGNIFICANCE eport Bennie Oosterbaan Will Sign As Yale Football Line Coach Sunday "She ‘Wins Army’s Football Coach Romance that budded in a visit to West Point will culminate in June wedding, when Verona Gruenth bove, of Omaha, becomes the bride of Lieut. Garrison Davidson, head coach of the Army football team. Miss Gruenther holds several amateur swimming titles and is a tennis star. WORM TURNS AS MONTREAL SIX — Fielding H. Yost Definitely An- nounces Kipke to Coach Wolverines Once again reports have strongly linked the name of a Michigan foot- ball coach with the gridiron staff at Yale university, but this time it, is that of Bennie coach at Michigan of the ends and pass-re- pth and not Harry Kipke, head ‘The Detroit Free Press Friday said Oosterbaan’s appointment as line coach at Yale will be announced Sun- day. The Free Press also says that Jack Blott, line coach at Michigan, is ape considered for the Yale, staff. It was reported here on good: au- thority that Oosterbaan and Blott conferred-in Detroit Thursday with Malcom Farmer, athletic director at Yale. Oosterbaan indicated he had reach- ed no definite agreement with Yale authorities, but declined to comment er, Meanwhile Fielding H. Yost, ath- letic director at Michigan, announce definitely that Coach Kipke will-re- main at Michigan, at least through _ Basketball BY EVERETT 8. DEAN (Basketball Coach, Indiana Univ.) Basketball is full of tricks and un- certain turns of fortune. The chance element carries appeal to the fans. noe sites prot recorded in this ar- -have been heart-breaking to the losing team. The Indiana university team was playing the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis during the season of 1929. Indiana won in overtime, 37-36, on the following play: an Indiana man took a medium shot and the ball rebounded high, stopping momentar- ily on top of the upper right corner of the backboard. The backboard is ball hesitated a second and started its DEFEATS TORONTO PUCKSTERS joo: csc: exce cro te top. 100 i| Senators to Take Undis- puted Lead Set for Struggles |, Both of the Capital City high schools’ basketball teams will par- ticipate in hard games Friday night. Bismarck high school’s Demons will battle their traditional and | ancient rivals, the Mandan Braves, at the World War Memorial build- | ing here. The game will begin at 8:30 o'clock (C.8.T.). There will } be no preliminary. Coaches Roy Montreal Maroons. (New York Rangers Beat Ottawa For more than half the Nationai| {perilous trip across the top edge of the same. It rolled very slowly for {three feet to the middle of the board {where it suddenly lost its balance, ‘falling through the basket. | Before the new ten-second rule was New York, Jan. 26.—()—It may be |Passed, Georgetown, Ill, won a 1 to old stuff to say “the bigger they are the harder they fall,” but ask the 0 basketball game from Fairmount in ® sectional tournament. This game depicts one of the sins of stalling. During the 1932 season port, and Lafayette, two of Indiana's fin- est high school teams, played a tie game 9-9, triple overtime. This 1 champions. will be able to present new evi- Minn,, and at Ishpeming, Mich. A is Baoan press among ee most with a good slow ball and aa encasement iaiada dia change of pace as a contrast to Paige's blinding right hand speed. He ex- pects to land the man he wants before the season starts about the middle of Expect Nearly 100 in Golden Gloves Tourney Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 26.—Regis- 6, in the university armory. . The winners of each division will be presented with a galden glove, on the division, year, and name of the winner will be inscribed. Run- -up will be awarded silver gloves with the same inscription. tional ips. Close to 100 amateur boxers in this expected to enter the first Gloves tournament d . The University of will enter a complete The Minneapolis team will have & distinct advantage in experience, but ‘Gence that the Nazi government in Germany still is discriminating against Jewish athletes. national association was formed in (By The Associated Press) 1904 at Ishpeming. This has de- Philadelphia — Frank Petrolle, Coach Howard H. Russell, Sioux men- | tor, expects at least two of his boys to come through with victories. Ben} Blanchette, Diamond belt heavyweight | M'Larnin Is Willing 146, Schenectady, N. ¥., outpoint- ed Bucky Jones, 146, Philadelphia, ®). Dallas, Tex.—Eddie Speaks, 134, champion, and Kenny Brown, Dia-| To Meet Barney Ross mond Belt middleweight titleholder, | —= | are the outstanding Sioux hopes. | Berkeley, Cal, Jan. 26—(%}—| Other members of the squad are Charles “Pop” Foster, manager of: Bill Morrow, light heavyweight; Jimmy McLarnin, will be glad to ne-! Newell Fait, welterweight; Ray Crum- gotiate for a fight in New York be- my, lightweight: and Ed Dehne, tween his welterweight champion and featherweight. This lineup is subject Barney Ross, lightweight titleholder. | to change before Friday night. | But the shrewd manager of the, The Minneapolis personnel includes scrapping welterweight wants to be Owen Trickey, three-time entry in sure he and Jimmy get their share| the Golden Gloves and champion this|of the purse. He indicated a $35,000; year; Johnny Dobbin, lightweight guarantee wouldn't satisfy him. He; finalist in the Diamond Belt tourna-| wants a larger guarantee and a per-| ment; Bill Radke, welterweight, a centage of the gate, which it is esti- newcomer to Minneapolis amateur mated would be $200,000 or better. ranks; Bob Spratt, middleweight, who! is one of the University of Minneso-| Production of capital goods, not products; Russ Schultz, hard-hit- | money inflation, is the key to recov-, ing light heavyweight and a Diamond | ery.—Col. Leonard .P. Ayres, econom-| ‘Belt champion; and Gay Raschke, list. | | OUT OUR WAY I DONT FERGET You, Boy, EVEN WHEN WE DO EAT IN RESTRUNTS! YoU NOTICE and send two representatives | === in.each weight to Grand Forks for the 4 state finals. Branch Rickey Sees Bright Days Ahead WHO'S YouR REAL FRIEND, DON'T YOU? NOTICE WHO AIN'T TOO PROUD TO SAVE TH’ BONES OFFA RESTRUNT | PLATES? NOTICE WHO MAKES A BUM OUTA HISSELF FOR You, DON'T YOu? Nin evel Ma nl astro! Well Aha a eee il hey A\TRECCON eat 7 CA PL 7 iit ae AU yl Py | ili dat rar ree tes Louisville, Ky. outpointed Ike Woolsey, 144, Tucson, Ariz., : Hy Liter, 160, El Paso, Tex., stopped Bat Wimbley, 166, Rich- mond, Va., (3). New York—Bep Van Kiaveren, 1463, Holland, outpointed Phil Rafferty, 143%, New York, (10). Idaho Falls, Ida.—Tiger Jack Fox, Terre Haute, Ind., knocked out Jack Riley, Provo, Utah, <1); Leroy Gibson, Terre Haute, Ne- gro, knocked out Byron Mason, Rirle, Ida., (1). Tacoma, Wash. — Jimmy Me- Tacoma, and Carl Iron” Linn, 134, Butte, 132, Vancouver Negro, outpointed Roy Ockley, 136, Cloudburst, Mont., (6). By Williams JUST AOD, THAT YOU ENJOY MAKING A BUM OF YOURSELF AND US, -TOO- SO ITS SACRIFICE. NO veloped into « nation-wide organ- ization of six geographical divisions, boat Springs, Colo, Red Wing, Den- ver, Chicago, Lake Placid, N. Y., Brat- Beneeo, Vt. and Bear Mountain, N. Other clubs which have been the scene of national championships are located at Ironwood, Mich., Ashland, ‘Wis.; Eau Claire, Wis.; Coleraine, Minn.; Chippewa Falls, Wis.; Virginia, Minn.; Glenwood, Minn.; Ely, Minn.; Superior, Wiss ane Hudson, Wis. ** Last year the first national ski- running championship over a 30-kil- ometer course was held at Salisbury, ‘Conn. Magnus Satre negotiated the 18 miles of mountain running in 1 last year, he attained a rate of 150 ‘kdlome: it 100 miles—an hour.| Kjelland’ '3_meteoric flight was down @ special 300-meter ice slope, and he uae skis weighted with 40 pounds of Trojans Strike Back At Hawkeyes’ Charge ; Los Angeles, Jan. 26.—(%)—It ap- peared Friday that the University of Southern California was far from willing oe the case of Duane Swan- , or to what ex- ’3_ investigation 'ilett, faculty EDWARD EVERETT. was’ supposed to be the principal speaker at Gettysburg, ay 19, 1863, | The U. ILVER St. Mary's high school’s Saints ‘will meet the strong Blue Jays at Scores of Bismarck expect full strength available colorful clash. Jamestown is regarded outstanding favorite to victims being Class A quints. ‘The Saints will play Valley City will start at 8:30 o'clock. Abe Kashey Defeats Bob Jessen at Fargo Fargo, N. D., Jan, 26—(P)—Abe Ka- fessionals Are Cast Against Each Other Kingsrud ._ D. ‘Tiso of Great Neck, L. Fergus Falls,|Charles McAllister of tainutes 30 seconds in s preliminary. In another preliminary, Bobby St Paul, 210, and Mike Nasarian, Berien, 200, drew in a 30-minute limit mateh, al Be é 30 Pro-Amateur Golf Teams Enter Tourney ite sf ey 4, ad i FS a & g a3 oa it | “ Be Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 26.—The basketball from ” i ; tr i 3 s §, il ie z z ; ii A 5 i! : i : i : ° i i fF FF i | ile i & s fe i : | | : 1 zi : ; i cE HH Hae AA R td E F i

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