The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1934, Page 8

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ASS A SKIRMISH WIL START ATSIN Demons Will Clash With Strong; gakers Played Thrilling Game! pinity Saturday night to witness a! tiast game when the Devils Lake high | Yehool team mects Bismarck high in} uslding. snstead of the usual 8:30 to make ac- | sommodations for the concert that is ’ has been arranged between the Haz- Hiton Imps and the Baby Demons. he first meeting of the Devils Lake iggregation and the local five. marck sport enthusiasts had the op-| portunity of observing the smooth- | lvorking Satans in action when they | blayed here on Dec. 29 against the St. he Saints won 23-21, the Lake team | ‘splayed a form that probably would | ve any high school squad in the tate a tough go. orking his local quint especially hard his week in preparation for Satur- iay’s contest. tart the regular first string which includes Bud Kanz, Oliver Sorsdahl, REMaeeni be the second contest of ‘BISON TO ‘MEET MINNESOTA _ a \ediasane one Will See Ar-| Board of Managers, enn ort he week for the Demons, who play | jars around whom to build the Devils huck Wood, Harold Reslock, Bill sirckhardt and Gordon Dennis. ferne Melhouse completes the lineup | that is expected to be matched against | the Demons. Dickinson Savages to Play Twice N ext Week turn from Wahpeton and Ellendale sees the Dickinson Savages ready for resumption of inter-collegiate confer- ence hostilities next week, when they are scheduled to meet Mayville and Minot here. in recent games restored his confi-; dence in the squad's ability. week are Mayville Monday and Minot Thursday. Fredericks, Jost to the Savages for the season, at forwards, Foss at center, and Maule! and McDonald at guards is the ag- gregation on which Coach Wienberg- en is depending, with as few altera- tions as possible. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1934 igh Cagers Will Battle Devils Lake Here Saturday Night Bismarck H : WIFFY CO MEMORIAL BUILDING: Dickinson Quint There Friday Evening ATAN QUINT IS POLISHED: With St. Mary’s Basket- | eers Last Month i | Basketball fans will have an oppor- | contest a‘ the World War Memorial } ‘The main game begins at 8 o'clock ; be given at the auditorium at 9:15.) A preliminary game which starts at} The court battle at 8 o'clock will be | Bis- | ary’s high school quint. Although | Coach Roy D. McLeod has been McLeod probably will wrence Schneider, Net! Croonquist, ickinson there Friday night. Coach Doug Smith had four regu- } } ke team this season. These are Dickinson, N. D., Feb. 2—(P)—A eek’s rest after their triumphal re- Coath Harry J. Wienbergen’s sup- The savage assignments for next all veterans, definitely , Larimer and Bill Fredericks, (By The Associated Press) Galveston, Tex.—Ervin Berlier, 138, New Orleans, outpointed Wil- lard Brown, 140, Indianapolis (10); Johnny Lacille, 140, Omaha, outpointed Charley Roque, 140, Galveston (6). Dallas—Ritchie Mack, 142, Dal- Jas, outpointed Cecilio Loyasada, 139, Tampico, Mex. (10); Roy Calamire, 135, New Orleans, out- pointed Cullen Williams, 138, | Denison, Tex., (10). | Chicago—Solly Dukelsky, 161, Chicago, outpointed Karl Ogren, 162, Chicago (10); Mickey Miske, | | 155%4, Saginaw, Mich., outpointed Tommy Habel, 154. Chicago (4); Frankie Mirabel, 1192, Chicago, knocked out Floyd Embry, 120, Chicago (4); Bobby O'Down 118'2, Sioux City, outpointed Lenny Co- hen, 114%, Chicago (5). Minneapolis — Jackie Sharkey, 1390, Minneapolis, outpointed Wayne Short, 126'2, St. Paul (6); Shareld Kennard, 148, Fargo, out- pointed Ed Jack Libgott, 144, St. Paul (6); Frankie Knauer, 142%, Eagle River, Wis., knocked out Caddy Casey, 138, St. Paul, (3); Lee Savoldi, 175, St. Paul, knock- ed out George Ecks, 175, Minne- apolis (3). Rochester, Minn.—lIowa Joe Rivers, 141, Cedar Rapids, out- pointed Stanley Christie, 144, Far- go, (8); Frankie Freeman, 157, Minneapolis and Kid Ripley, 153, Charles City, Ia. drew (6); Bob Haas, 151, Goodhue, Minn., and Bennie Arnold, 149, Rochester. drew, (6); Lefty Kern. 145, Chis- holm, Minn. stopped Judd John- son, 145, Rochester, (2); Midget Darnell, 102, Rochester, outpoint- ed Harold Clark, 102, Milwaukee (4); Babe Coughlan, 133, Roches- ter, outpointed Speed Ripley, 129%, Charles City, Ia., (4). ‘Tacoms, Wi Richie Most of OUR BOARDING HOUSE f — AND WITH THE REWARD MONEY TLL GET FOR CALISING THE ARREST OF CAPTAIN SHANDYGAFF, TM GOING TO TAKE A RUN OUT TO MY COLORADO GOLD MINE PROPERTY, AFTER THE SNOW MELTS VY! AS J HUME - By Ahern ~L EXPECT TO GET IN PRODUCTION | ON TH’ FLOOR ABOUT SUNE— WORK THE MINE OF TH’ MINE FOUR MONTHS, SUST TAKING OUT ENOUGH GOLD TO KEEP ME IN LUXURY, THE WITH A OTHER EIGHT MONTHS OF D THe YEAR J VACUUM Ny CLEANERZ=S 4898 2G, FOLLOWED CLOSEL | |BY WILLE HUNTER, 1932 PRIZE - WINNER High Man for First Day Play! Trails Brooklyn Golf Pro | by Five Strokes | ‘HALF - WAY MARK PASSED) | Fairway Kings Prepared for Friday's Battle as Con- | test Nears Close | Agua Caliente, Mex., Feb. 2.—(P)— Wiffy Cox, Brooklyn public links pro- fessional, with 139, was leading the Agua Caliente open golf tournament today as the field passed the half- way mark. He added a 70 yesterday to a first round 69. Dodging the footsteps of Cox were Willie Hunter, third high money win- ner of 1933, from Culver City, Cal., and H Paul Runyan, the slight-of-stature pro j defending the title. The slender White ; Plains, N. Y., youth shot a 72 on the second 18 for his 141 score, while Hunter shaved a stroke off par for a 70 to match with his 71 on the opening day. | Craig Wood. Deal, N. J., who led opening day with a course record 67, had putter trouble and dropped to a {77 on the second round. Track Stars Gather at New York To Contend in Millrose Events IN GRID CONTEST SEPT. 29 Gopher’s Powerful Eleven Will Return for 1934 Football Season Fargo, N. D., Feb. 2—When the Agricultural college football team meets the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis next Sept. North Dakota fans will watch the! outcome with interest, eager to learn how the Bison will compare with aj | Big Ten team. Minnesota, according to football’ experts, will have one of the most powerful teams in the history of the School, Roy Oen, center, being the ply of reserve material still is low but Only regular lost through graduation. the showing his regulars have made! Pug Lund, smashing back, and Butch Larsen, All-American end in 1933, will be back in the lineup, striving for a similar recognition in 1934. The Bison team will be minus the! services of Harold Miller, With Deering, Eastgate and Don;Thompson, and Roman Meyers, all of | whom graduate this spring. The loss of Meyers will be keenly felt. ever, Fritz Hanson, speed merchant, | will again be in the backfield and| should cause the Minnesota line con- | siderable trouble with his lightning-/| like sprints. Many fans are wonder- ing if Fritz can scamper around All- | American Larsen’s end. | —___—__~____--—*_ Hanson has been rated by i Night — [coaches as the fastest back in pres-| _Fights Last Night ent day football. e be able to outrun Lund, the latter has! greater ability in the passing and kicking department. Hanson, as well! as Meyers, has received honorable mention in a selection of All-Ameri-| can players. | The meeting of the two schools, next fall will mark the third engage- ment between the Bisons and the) Gophers. 29, many James How- some Although he will North Dakota last played OUT OUR WAY asketba | Minnesota in 1931, losing by the nar- row margin of 13 to 7. | GOES TO AUBURN | Another Notre Dame man oes to fill the shoes vacated at Auburn by Chet Wynne, who recently Jeft that southern school for the head coaching position at Kentucky. He is Jack Meagher, above, who has been tutoring the gridiron gladiators of Rice _ Institute, Mouston, ‘Tex, ~~ Seattle—Jimomy Ketchell, 114, Seattle, outpointed Bud Welling, 119, Fargo, N. D., (6). / AH WISH FOLKS ray of Famous Athletes | | Vie for Honors i | | New York, Feb. 2—(%—With the Millrose games Saturday night as the {mecca, New York City Friday became ithe track and field headquarters of ee country. | The late arrivals were Glenn Cun- ‘ningham, the Kansas miler, Iva Fu- qua and Charles Hornbostel, Indiana University’s track co-captains, Ray i | Metcalfe, Marquette’s great Negro | Sprinter. | Preceding them were Emmett Top- pino, the New Orleans windmill, John- ny Morriss, Abbeyville’s high hurdler, Walter Marty, world outdoor high |Jump record-holder from Fresno, and | distance ace. {Boxers Blamed for responsible. Brown, dean of men at Michigan State Normal College at Ypsilanti, in| an interview Friday, emphatically de- clared that “too many hand picked} opponents and too much shadow box- ing in the gym instead of road work” is keeping the sport from regaining Sears, Butler distance star, and Ralph jit iGlen Dawson, the Oklahoma middle | club officials at the camp has a list. Decline of Sport! Detroit, Feb. 2. — (P) — The fight ‘game, says James M. (Bingo) Brown, h n {former president of the National Box- |store net in recent years is Lonnie ling association, “is on the skids” and ‘tne leather pushers “themselves are ! | } Cards’ fom Plan X LEADS FIELD OF GOLFERS IN AGUA CA LIENTE MEET Uniform Ball Settles Lively Dispute A uniform baseball, a cross between the lively s: i ci b ; spheroid of tho American League and its slower cousin in the National loop, will be used by both major circuits during 1934. Above are three of the men responsible for the new ball. bibs tridge, president of the American League, and John A, Heydler, president of the National. left to right. are: old National League ball: new pelict. and old American League sphere. Left to right. Tom Shibe, president of the Athletics; William Below, | Boasts Efficiency ! Club President Thin Out Prospects St. Louis Feb. 2—(7)—The ap-j Pproaching 1934 baseball season finds the St. Louis Cardinal management watching its farm hands—rookies to you—witn the same careful attention that through the years spells winning teams and financial gain. Branch Rickey, vice president of the St Louis National League club, Fri- day explained the little-known work- s of the famous farm system. ‘Seven or eight managers, several! scouts and club presidents form a ‘terial,” Rickey said. “We have an elaborate card index | and each of our managers, scouts and | “We inspect the players and after a session on the field we hold a meeting, each man with his list in his hand. release one until all scouts, managers and officiais agree that he won't make good.” The outstanding major league play- er to slip through the Cardinal chain- ‘Warneke, the Cubs’ brilliant right- hander. Lonnie never passed the mass inspection, however. Rangers, Maple Leafs Battle to Third Tie New York, Feb. 2—(#}—The Na- its place in the sun. “Max Baer could be the greatest fighter in the heavyweight division if he wanted to be,” said Brown, adding that “Dempsey was right the other day when he said fighters don’t train. There's too much shadow boxing and bag punching in the gym instead of | Rangers. (saad work. A man in any sport is just as good as his legs.” By Williams WOULO PUT DERE SADDLES SOMMERS ELSE, BESIDES ON DOE AH NEBBER DO SADOLE COMING DOWN WitH THE GRIP. BISMARCK vs. | DEVILS LAKE | 8 P. M. I CORRAL FENCE! GRAB DE RIGHT HAWN! TRWiLtiIAMS, ‘FES. U. 8. PAT, tional Hockey League fans who at times have complained loudly about the number of tie games played in the circuit would have few objections if all of this season's 31 drawn bat- tles were like the ones between the Toronto Maple Leafs and New York Their third tie, which ended with 9) 5-5 score Thursday night, might be called the season’s superlative game. {|Xt drew about the biggest and prob- |lably the noisiest crowd of the season, |lsome 16,000 fans who howled them- selves hoarse before it was over. The Chicago Blackhawks and Mon- jtreal Canadiens battled to a 3-3 daw and the Detroit Red Wings and Boston Bruins tied at 2-2. The Mon- treal Maroons trimmed the last-place Ottawa Senators, 3-: \Cann Leaves Post as N. Y. U. Football Head New York, Feb. 2—()—For the sec- ond time in three years but for total- }lv dissimilar reasons, New York U: versity was forced to look about for a new head football coach Friday. Howard G. (Jake) Cann, appointed to the post in January, 1932, as suc- cessor to Dynamic John F. (Chick) Meehan when N. Y. U. decided to de- =mphasize the game, resigned sudden- ly Thursday night after being subject- ‘ed to heavy undergraduate fire for ‘months, He retains his post, however. ‘as basketbal! coach and assistant pro- }fessor and director of physical train- ing. | Indications pointed strongly Friday {to Arthur H. (Archie) Roberts of |Holyoke, Mass. as new head coach, SPORTSMEN TALK TURKEY Washington, Feb. 2.—(P)—A half- dozen of the government's principal figures interested in game conserva- tion will meet Saturday with Presi- dent Roosevelt's committee on wild: ta State's Bison basketball team has yeturned home from a successful for- \age of southern “pastures,” where it maintained its tie for first place in the Central Conference championship by winning three successive games from South Dakota University, Morn- board whici carefully sifts the ma- lingside, and South Dakota State. i a i even the most ardent Bison fan, since system and each player is on @ lst! eariier indications pointed towards a mediocre season. Starting slowly but gaining momentum with each game, the Herd has shown a complete re- versal of its pre-conference form. We go over each player and do not! iat Bob Lowe, assistant Bison foot- ball coach and former University of North Dakota football, basketball, and track star, would assume additional duties as basketeers, there was much raising of eyebrows as North Dakota fans looked askance. However, their worries have been dispelled, for with only one reg- uiar, nucleus of bis team, Coach Lowe has combination by drawing from reserves and the graduates of last year’s fresh- men team. | prepared for the M here Friday night. Although won by a decisive margin at Sioux City, Iowa, Lowe is warning them of dence. North Dakota Teams Prepare for North Central Conference Battles {Bison Return From Successful | Southern Tour; Ready for Morningside Tilt Fargo, N. D,, Feb. 2.—North Dako- ! ‘The results of this tour surprised | When it was announced last fall “headman” of the Bison “Bua” the Marquardt, as seceeded in building up a winning After a one-day rest, the Bison are’ le game his boys that well-known bugbear, over-confi- Should the Herd win from Morn- ingside and the University of South Dakota during the next two weeks, and the possibility of defeat seems re- | mote, they will battle the University | in that annual North Dakota basket- ball classic—Sioux vs. State—for the | conference championship. Tony Canzoneri Will Defend Boxing Crown New York, Feb. 2.— (#) — An 8-to-5 | favorite in the betting, Tony Canzon- eri resumes his fistic feud with Cleto Locatelli of Italy in Madison Square Garden Friday night. champion decisively outpointed Lo- champion decisively outpoitned Lo- extelli in their first meeting several weeks ago over the 10-round route. Friday night’s match, however, is at 1? rounds and the strong and sturdy invader figures to benefit by the long- er distance. | | | Dragon flies, in the larval stage, snare their prey by means of a mouthpiece at the end of an “exten- sion,” which reaches out and grabs the victim. Louis Dembits Brandeis is 2 JUSTICE OF THE UV. S. 8U- PREME COURT. GRAPHITE Saturday, Feb. 3 isthe marking element used in ‘pencils. Lake Titicaca lies across the border of PERU and BOLI- NIA. > World War Memorial Bldg. ee Basketball Scores | *«. o—__—_________¥4 At Billings, Mont. — Montana H Sioux Seek Fifth Loop Victory Saturday When They Meet lowa Team Grand Forks, Feb. 2—The “point- ;2-minute” basketball team from the University of North Dakota will at- jtempt to maintain its high-scoring | Average at the expense of Morning- side college Saturday in the univer- | isty armory here. ; The Sioux will be after their fifth straight North Central Conference | Victory, as well as their 11th win in ‘12 games. | In their first meeting this season which the Sioux won, 52-18, Ted |Meinhover, 6-foot-7-inch center, and | Herman Witasek, 6-foot-2-inch for- j Ward, tallied 16 and 14 points respec- \tively, In the games played to date. | Witasek has averaged more than 14 points per game, while Meinhover is | close behind with 11 per contest. The Sioux starting lineup will in- jclude Mullen, Witask, Meinhover {Smith and Booth. Morningside’ is expected to start Dean, Hedum, Ped- | €tson, Docken and Saunderson, | |Bowlers Will Battle | At Jamestown Meet Because two of the Uni- | versity of Towa’s best freshmen | basketball prospects hopped a He reg fo aae with in- entions of signing up at the |. University of Southern Cali. {HOR toumament here Friday, fornia, Rollie Williams, above, | ,, srundlers from three states, North Towa cage coach, Nias lodged a jand South Dakota and Minnesota protest with Sam Barry, Trojan | ©ntered the tourney. Jamestown, N. D., Feb, 2—(P— | Bowling by teams from Valley City 'Fargo and Jamestown opened the | four-day Jamestown Bowling associa- tutor. Barry has’ dented iat- | With considerable improvement. tempts were made to lure the Work completed, the alleys are in freshmen, from: the Hawkeye {first-class condition for the tourna- ;ment which is to be conducted under Bchool. Tules of the American bowling con- —+ Grand recreation of Fargo and Val- ley City Elks will roll Friday night along with four local teams represent- ing Pabst, Palace, Blackstone and Beck's, Lidgerwood to Hold Amateur Boxing Card Lidgerwood, N. D., Feb. Mines 60; Eastern Montana Nor-' mal 26. FARGO FIGHTER BEATEN Seattle, Feb. 2.—()-—Jimmy Ketchell, 114, Seattle, won a six- round decision over Bud Welling, 119, Fargo, here Thursday night. 2p . 3, The fi Lightheavyweight Title: season vit be rele ae a ee Skirmish Is Postponed °°. 7, with Johnny Baumann, 175, Lidgerwood, meeting Henry Thor- stenson of Milnor in the main bout, Both men are entered in the North Miami, Fla, Feb. 2—()—It was! back to the grind of training Friday | Dakota golden gloves boxing tourna- for Maxie Rosenbloom and the chal-|'ment at Grand Forks next month. lenger, Joe Knight, with their cham- | Besides these two, two other men on plonship scrap for the lightheavy-;the card are entered in the meet. It is planned to hold cards here levery two weeks on Wednesdays, weight title now. scheduled for next) Monday night. FOR RENT One unfurnished apartment. City heat. Electric refrigerator. Electric stove. Fireproof building. Available — at once. Rent reasonable. Inquire at the Bismarck Tribune Office Game Starts Preliminary | yrorere at 7 O'clock | 40c and 25¢ 4

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