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aad. ’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1934 Bismarck High Teams Matched for Fast Cage Contests JAMESTOWN PLAYS BISMARCK HIGH FIVE IN CONTEST FRIDAY St. Mary’s Travels to Minot to Play St. Leo’s Thursday Night SAINTS WILL MEET RUGBY Jamestown Brings Aggregation of Stars for This Week's Battle Both Capital City high school bas- xetball teams will see action this week on the courts. Coach George L. Hays leaves ‘Thursday with his St. Ma quint on a trip into the northern part of the state. Thursday night the Bismorck parochial squad meets the St. Leo's high school team at Minot. A game is scheduled for Friday with the Rug- vy five. One of the strongest nigh School teams in the state is matched for pla Friday night against the Bismarck five. Jamestown plays at the World War Memorial building, Friday against Bismarck. Coach Ruy D. McLeod probably will | start his recular first string with Oli-| ver Sorsdahi and Neil Croonquist as forwards, Larry Schneider at center. and Bill Owen and Russell Kanz at! the guard posts. This is the first meeting of the | Jamestown and Bismarck squads this season. They play a return engage-| ‘Cincinnati National Baseball Club Gets Dazzy Vance from Cardinals ment with Jamestown on Feb. 16. The next home game for the St. Mary’s squad will be against Wahpe- ton on Feb 16. A preliminary con- test is scheduled between the Hazel- ten five and St. Mary’s junior team This Week ‘OUR BOARDING G HOUSE GOING TO USE IT A. CLAIM ON JI Bismarck Boxers Head Fight Cards Heading boxing cards that will be held in two North Dakota towns soon are two Bismarck men, according to Isham Hall, local promoter. Johnny Schneider, 185, is headlin- ng a program with Rod McMillen, 174 pounds, champion at North Dakota state college for three years, at New Engiand Monday night; and Otis on, 150, fights in the feature bout st Bill Lanz, 148, Alexander, on mn Center card Saturday. her matches on the New England ich will include 30 rounds of are Kid Kingsley, Regent, 130, Louie Kromarek, Scranton, Su Boettcher, New England, ‘us Gunboat Delliser, Dickin- Hank Slaathaug, Amidon, us Gust Brandt, New Salem, Howard Thorgard, New England, varsus Marcus Nasset, New Eng- 135. aer bouts between members of the -formed New England boxing ) Jove been arranged, according to ha und, in charge. Jor the semi-windup fight on the Dunn Center card, Tiger Ell, Dick- jason, mecis Battling Joe Maas, Kill- deer. Other bouts are Kid Sanford, Werner, 115, and Knockout Moore, Dunn Center; Tiger Carns, 150, and George Dander, Werner; Spark Plug Ohm, and Hot Shot Donahoo, both of Dunn Center. Stanley Beaton is pro- moting the fights at Dunn Center. New Leipzig Loses to House of David Quint New Leipzig, N. D.. Feb. 7. — The fast House of David team handed the iweal basketball independents a neat saellacking in a 40-to-27 game here recently. Score at the half stood at 15.16 in favor of the professionals. Summary of the contest: House of David (40) FG 4 3 Wanusek, f 2 0-0 0 Bennett, f ... 6 1-1 2 Hayes, c 6A oe Runyon, 2 0-0 oO Williams, g 2 0-4 2 New Leipzig (27) FG FT PF 4 1-4 0 2 0-0 3 1 0-0 0 0 00 2 0 0-0 1 4 2-2 0 1 0-0 . 0 0-0 0 Referee, Cole, Elgi Notre Dame Beats Minnesota Cagers Chicago, Feb. 7.—(®)—Purdue will determine what effect examinations and the midsemester layoff has had on its Big Ten basketball title favor- tte Wednesday night against Wabash at Lafayette. They will resume their champion- ship drive Saturday night against Towa, on their home floor. Minnesota's high-stepping crew went | out of the conference Tuesday night wgainst Notre Dame. Led by Captain Fd Krause, football star, and basket- ball center who set a Notre Dame scoring record of 22 points, the Irish SO YOU GOT$300, AND YOURE THIS LATE SPRING, | |Y TO DEVELOPE YOUR GOLD MINE, EH WELL, BEFORE THAT MONEY GOES WITH THE WILD GEESE, TM STAKING 50 OF IT ~AND TM STARTING OPERATIONS RIGHT NOW (YOU CAN USE THE PICK AND. SHOVEL ON YOUR MINE, BUT TM PANNING FOR MY $1509 DO I MAKE MYSELF CLEAR, icaioal EYES © Bis? creat caesar) HIGHWAY ROBBERY 7 TLL MAKE YOU AGIFT By Ahern UMF-SPUTT-SPLIT-T- EE-GAD—THAT IS OF #50 —BuUT THE SUM YOU SEEK 4 | | i | | ' STATE GAME DEPARTMENT RECEIPTS SHOW INCREASE the year Nov. 30, 1933, with a cash! Principal Expansion Over Last Fiscal Year From Hunt- ing License Fees . i 1932 to November 30, 1933, totaled ed $72,906.08, according to partment’s annual report. For the year 1931-32 receipts to-j taled $66,579.11, and disbursements | $79,616.06. The department began the fiscal year on Dec. 1, 1932, with a cash bal- ance on hand totaling $46,629.90. With $79,714.92 receipts, and $72,906.08 dis- \bursements, the department finished , Hunting licenses .. Trapping licenses . Fishing licenses Beaver licenses ani |Big game licenses Commercial fishing licenses . Fur dealers’ licenses .. Taxidermist’s licenses . Sales of confiscations . Sale of permits for propagation.. Miscellaneous receipts Disbursements during the last two game warden . Clerk hire .. Salaries of wardens ....... Travel expenses of officers and ward: Office rent (light, water, heat) . State game refuges ........ Rewards Construction Miscellancous . Furnituze and fixtures .. Fish hatcheries maintenance Office expense (postage-printing-supplies’ Propagation and distribution birds and fish. saris of $53,438.73. Chief increases in receipts for the | last fiscal year over the previous year |were in amounts collected for hunt- | Wednesday with only one major play- ing licenses and big game licenses. For propagation and distribution jot birds and fish, the game commis- Receipts of the state game and fish ‘sion in the last year spent $11,568, ‘club owners went into their mid-win- department for the year December 1,| While for the year 1931-32, a total of | ter schedule meeting, turned out to , $26,076 was spent—$22,285 for pur- $79,714.92, while disbursements total- | chase and distribution of game birds, | ‘agers came, saw one another and left the de- ‘and $3,791 for propagation and dis-| without parting with any “varsity” |tribution of fish. Salaries of wardens for the year 1932-33 totaled $11,090 compared to, $8,815 the previous year. Travel ex- benses of officers and wardens total- ed $20,272 the last year, and $13,815 , the year before. A comparison of receipts the two years follows: during Salaries of commissioner, deputy and chief 1931-32 1932-33 «$ 40,815.60 $ 50,671.94 7,745.05 4,901.00 + 9,397.95 7,197.51 + 3,270.00 174.00 + 3,450.00 13,612.40 . 236.00 291.00 . 620.00 1,065.00 . 70.00 94.00 . 408.52 848.87 96.00 565.99 163.20 years were: -$ 7,850.00 $ 7,262.51 + 4,295.12 5,570.62 + 8,815.49 11,080.05 « 13,091.59 20,272.94 + 1,967.76 3,436.93 1,490.97 1,392.99 1,419.36 346.75 26,076.64 11,568.25 1,830.00 1,906.76 3,487.17 6,480.30 3,380.55 3,577.98 159.13 « 5,752.28 Pete Nebo Hopes to Dethrone me Champion Kansas City, Feb. 7.—(?)—Pete, Nebo, the Key West, Fla., Indian will | seek to deprive Barney Ross, Chicago, | of one of his two ring championships over the 12-round distance here Wed- nesday night. Ross holds both the ' OUT OUR WAY WHY = UH— T'LL LOOK AWEUL, GOIN’ INTO TOWN UKE THIS. ‘lightweight and junior welterweight titles, but only the latter will be at Stake against the Florida veteran. | {Both will enter the ring over the |lightweight limit. A school burned near Spencer, Ind., and the pupils marched out carrying jtheir books with their wraps. ‘What a chance those kids missed! NEVER MIND WHAT ‘THEY'LL THINK, IN TOWN! YouR PAW’'S VERY SICK, AND You GET THAT DOCTOR OUT HERE f “to Wonk on reat OLD FOSSIL | lye Other Major Transactions Made When League Club Owners Meet New York, Feb. 7.—!?)—National League magnates slipped out of town er deal to their credit. Reports of impending trades of ‘startling proportions, prevalent as the ‘be rumors and nothing more. Man- | material. The reorganized Cincinnatl Reds jand their representatives, President | Powel Crosley, Jr., and General Man- ager Larry MacPhail, stole what head- mae there were when they announc- the purchase of Arthur (Dazzy)| vance veteran righthander. from the} St. Louis Cardinals for ihe waiver] Price of $7,500. |. The Reds’ representatives did sign |Val Picinich, veteran catcher, as a tcoach, and obtained second baseman Les Mallon from the Toronto Inter-; i nationals. | The only other player transactions were the purchase of outfielder Ethan | Allen by the Phillies from the Card- jinals and the sale of shortstop Jake Flowers by Brooklyn to Buffalo of the | International League. | The league, in its sessions, adopted ithe schedule, cutting 10,000 miles off ‘the season's traveling by all clubs; i |favored rotating the annual all-star jgame between American and Nation- | jal League parks so this year’s con- |test, in New York, would be played in | the Polo Grounds, and left the broad-; i casting question up to each club. i | | i ROBINSON BEATS LEHR | (Special to The Tribune) Robinson, N. D., Feb. 7.—Robinsc's girls high school basketeers team | were victors in a 18-17 game with the \Lehr girls team in a recent match on the local floor. In a preliminary con- test a quint of lean men proved their ..periority over a group of more port- ly gentlemen and handed them a 12-4 | whipping. BISMARCK MAN FIFTH In the single competition at the Jamestown bowling tournament, Frank Hummel, Bismarck, rolling ka score of 584, tied for fifth place. High | i score for the singles was 595. HEAVY WEIGHT FIGHT | First Chance at Champicnship; Crown for Philadelphia | jhe first—and jthe Italian is allowed to get close to; jneither as experienced nor as fast. (MAN MOUNTAIN EASY’ FAVORITE IN MIAMI Phantom CONTENDER MUCH OLDER ;Mammoth Italian Has Taken Beatings From Second- | Rate Boxers es | By BILL BRAUCHER NEA Service Sports Editor New York. Feb. 7.—Offhand it would appear Tommy Loughran faces | Jast—chance at the TOMMY LOUGHRAN WILL MEET PRIMO CARNERA FEBRUARY 22 Fighting Face ;Werld’s heavyweight championship at (Miami, Feb. 22, without much hope of winning. The Philadelphia phantom will be! \outweighed by a matter of 60 or 70 pounds. At his best fighting weight | Loughran will not go much above 185, | which it not very large for a heavy-; ;Weight. Primo Carnera is as big as{ jthey come, his probable weight ben ing from 245 to 255. Tommy will be out-aged, too, not! only by six years but by hundreds of | fights, most of them the kind that; make a man feel very old. Loughran| will be 32 next, Noy. 29. Carnera will) not be 26 until October. ! Loughran comes to his grand) chance after 15 years of battling: Carnera has been at it something like five years. When Loughran entered} the ring for the first time, Carnera | was a 10-year- py Hee in Italy. * Tommy has ee one way to win| from that animated mountain of muscle he will face Feb. 22. That is to poke, jab, stab and get away. If; Loughran he will paralyze Tommy with punches. There is too much weight behind those wild shoves of Primo's for Loughran to cope with. Max Schmeling believes Loughran can win, however, and there are oth- ers with a fine eye to fistic affairs who agree. Schmeling points out that Corbeit was regarded as some-{ thing of a stripling when he faced | John L. Sullivan. “Loughran steps fast. and may outspear Carnera with his left hand.” says the former champion. “Carnera only pushes. I thought Primo had improved until I saw Paulino Uzcu- dun go 15 rounds with him last fall! in Rome.” ee OK i on Carnera to beat Loughran already are being estab- lished at Mian he champion being something like 5 to 1 to retain his title. But, rating Loughran off his last four bouts—with Impellittiere, Hamas, Gastanaga and Sharkey—it seems to me such odds are a trifle |long. After being almost knocked out in the first round, Loughran rallied to win from Impellittiere, who is a bigger man than Carnera, though Terrific od Hamas, Gastanaga and Sharkey were beaten in 1933 by the lightning Loughran left. Layers of those odds must have for- gotten also that only a little more than a year ago Carnera lost to a couple of second raters, Larry Gaines and Stanley Poreda. x oe OF There are a few things to be said about the Carnera-Sharkey fight which do not appear om the record. Sharkey was rather fat than fit. And slow though the sailor was, he was ahead of Primo on points up to the instant when he ran into that swish- ing uppercut. Now Loughran is a much better defensive boxer than Sharkey, who has gone pretty far back in the last. few years. It will not be beyond the {bounds of imagination if he keeps away from Carnera, who is fast for a big man but painfully slow compared. to Loughran. It is not the purpose of this piece ‘to predict that Tommy will win, It jis too hard to forget how irresistibly ~~] strong Carnera was against Sharkey, By Williams HERG'S GET ES though Jack was not the sailor | Jazskoviak po man of a few years previous. But certainly Tommy can win, The lonly other thing I am certain of is Re: he will be trying with everything , he has, ‘Linton Independents Beat Strasburg Five woa, 43 to 34, at South Bend. Tilinois got back into action with a % to 26 victory over Bradley. PRESIDENT WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON was 68 years old when he took office. The DEMPSEY-TUNNEY fight i Saicare, fo 192) 1937, tom took Ja tne recep’ se 000. Students at the U. 8. Navel Academy have the rank idabinman at Linton, N. D., Feb. 7.—Linton’s in- |dependent cagers romped away from |Strasburg’s independents in a 42-21 contest on the Linton floor Monday. This is the third encounter with the Strasburg five for the locals, who have won the last two games. R. Maier, forward for the Legion- sponsored Lintonians, dropped in seven field goals for high point honors. L. Fiegel counted 13 for Strasburg. of Loughran Here's the face that Primo Carnera will try to mangle Feb. It belon: Primo's heavyweight crown. WILL CONTINUE FISH PLANTING _ PROGRAM AGAIN THIS SEASON "ze: led ‘by t the ¢ department at, Bt. John and State Game and Fish Depart-)at I Lisbon produced 12.650,000_wall- | eyed including 9,750,000 | ¢. hatched from Canadian eggs and the ment Will Stock Many North Dakota Rivers A program of transferring adult fish | from three rivers to numerous dams | and reservoirs in North Dakota proved £0 successful during the last year that} it will be resumed in the spring, ac-' cording to plans announced by State| Game and Fish Commissioner Thoralf | Swenson. Adult fish were transferred from the | Missouri, Cannonball and Heart rivers, to different dams and _ reservoirs, | many of which were built during the; year, and to restock other waters of; the state. Satisfied that the results provided a systematic and well-balanced fish; propagation program, the commission- | er plans to continue the work. \ “Many benefits are received from} the planting of adult fish,” he said. | “One of these is that the mortality; rate is much lower, because the eggs are not artifically hatched and are better adapted to the water. With-{ out intensive stocking each year the/ waters of this siate cannot yield good | fishing for the great army of licens- ed fishermen.” A total of 11,200 bullheads, pike, cat- fish, freshwater drum, sheephead, bass and perch were transferred to 30 lakes, reservoirs and dams during the} months of May, June, and July, the) department reported. Beneficiaries of the transferring program were Crystal Springs, Wil-|< iams, Raleigh, Mirror, Rice, Sadek, Smishek, Margaret, Diamond, Hoskins, Horseshoe, Riverview, Brush, and Strawberry Lakes; Sterling, Mott, So-, len, Richardton, Northern Pacific and Green River reservoirs; N. P. Railroad, |Simms, Crosby, Harvey, Gussner, and | Mandan dams, and Sweet Briar Creek, | Forest River, Lone: Lake creek, and) In ‘addition, "fish hatcheries operat-| Tommy Loughran, Philadelphia challenger for Sort of determined. isn't it? pike fry rest local. reservoirs and dams. + Quincy, Ill—Jimmy Brown, 155, Cincinnati, outpointed Mickey O'Shea, 153, Chicago, (10); Einar Hedquist, 153, Chicago, outpoint- ed Lee Cox, 150, Cincinnati (8); Art Mitchell, 132, Chicago, knock- ed out Ray Taylor, 133%2, Cin- cinnati (2); Charley Oldham, 146, Quincy, outpointed Al Driver, 146, Cincinnati, (6). West Palm Beach, Fla.—Leroy Brown, 168, Charleston, drew wit Jackie Gibbs, 163, Houston, Tex., (10); Howard Scott, 128, Ada, Okia., outpointed Louis Trow- bridge, 129, west Palm Beach, (8). Los Angeles—Art Lasky, 192, Minneapolis, stopped Johnny Freeman, 164, Brooklyn, (5); Fritzie Zivic, 141, Pittsburg, out- Pointed Perfecto Lopez, 139, Los Angeles, (6). DENHOFF GIRLS WIN 10 ‘The girls basketball team of the; Local northern pike fry! , hatched totaled 1,400.000. The fish! fry were distributed to many lakes,! 4 ahipid vies cetera Fights Last Night Whicis iotiemeibdeea iSites for Consolidated School Basketball Tournaments N Named New Leipzig Host t to Cage Teams From Six South- western Counties |} Stanton, N. D., Feb. 7.—WPi—Al | nouncement of eight sites for district | basketball tournaments in the con~ | solidated high school league of Nortia | Dakota, was made here Wednesday jby O. K. Cline of Stanton, state secretary of the association. | Cline listed the following sites fot | district tourneys: Berthold, Rugby, ‘Lakota, Cooperstown, Nome, Steele, , Beulah, and New Leipzig. The play is set for March 2 and 3, {one week after the county elimina- |tions. A site for the state tourna- iment, to be conducted March 16 and 17, has not yet been selected. ; The city of Arthur is making 4 | strong bid for the state tournament, {emphasizing the growing belief that | the consolidated state tourney should be held in smaller towns which the |league naturally serves, Cline said. |The larger cities, he added, see so ‘much basketball and have interest in ‘their own teams with the result there is not as large a turn-out for the consolidated state tournaments. The eight district events and the tournament managers follow: | First: Berthold—T. A. Olson, jmanager: Williams. Divide, Burke, | McKenzie, Mountrail and Ward coun- | ties. Second: Ragby--Charles Webster, | Manager—Bottimeau, McHenry, Ro- lette, Pierce, Towner, and Cavalier | counties. i Third: Lakota—W. R._ Reita:, manager; Benson, Ramsey, Pembina, Walsh, Nelson and Grand Forks counties. Fourth: Cooperstown--A. M. Paul- son, Manager; Wells, Eddy, Foster, | Steele, Traill, Griggs, and that part jor Barnes and Cass county north of the Northern Pacific Railroad line. Fifth: Nome—Leo D. Osman, man- ager; Stutsman, La Moure, Dickey, Ransom, Sargent, Richland and that {Part of Cass and Barnes county south (of the Northern Pacific Railroad line. Sixth: Steele—L. Totdahl, man- ager; McLean, Sheridan, Burleigh, Kidder, Emmons, Logan and McIn- tosh counties. Seventh: Beulah—Thomas Plant, j manager; Dunn, Mercer. Oliver, Mor- ton, Stark, Billings. Golden Valley New Leipzig—Superin- tendent Dahl, manager: Slope, Bow- man, Hettinger, Adams, Grant and Sioux counties. "The. 4 -* y in’t Done Right by Nellie | Chicago, Feb. 7.— (?) —She couidn’t get a job teaching physical training and the vaude- ville business hasn't been so good lately, so Nell Donald, 27, and comely, is out to get some of the money she has heard there is ih wrestling. After graduating from the Chi- cago Normai School of Physical Education Nell looked about for a ‘teaching position in some schocl | system, but had no luck. Hearing about all the money Jim Londos, Joe Savoldi and all the rest of the wrestling “cham- ions” were making, Nell set out to see if a woman couldn’t get some of it. She learned all about the airplane spin, flying tackle ana i body slam, and claimed the wo- | men’s wrestling championship of the world, figuring that some one would come along sooner or later to dispute her claim. Sure enough. along came anoth- | er Chicago girl, Ruby Allen, and they planned to wrestle it out. So, the soprano voices of Nel: ‘Bismarck Indian school plays at Den-| and Ruby will be added to wrestl- hoff Saturday night. | and Hurdsfield last week the | Denhoff | feminine cagers scored their tenth) consecutive victory. GIANT ON DEFENSE Thomas Ayres, 225-pound defense man of the Montreal Maroons, is said! biggest player in profes- to be the sional hockey. Sally Rand's earnings of $3000 @ week all go to her lawyers, she says. That's what she gets for being without pockets. The ouned | hopes to break the Denhoff girls’ win- | ning streak. In games against Haxvey | ing’s grunt-and-groan chorus ai the Cicero Stadium, in a 15 min- ute match Friday night. 'G. P. Eat Shop Quint Beats Highway Five . In a 44-21 contest the Grand Pacifio Hotel Restaurant basketball team won from the highway department |five Monday night at the World War ‘Memorial building. Croonquist, Schneider and Spriggs jScored mos‘ consistently for the eat {shop quint and M. and L. Benser and Ouimet and Foxx Get Clubby ‘The summary: Linton (42) FG FT PF Maier, f . y aie aa Martin, f ..... »- 5 0 0 Dogeagle, c . faNt | i} 2 Fogle. ¢ . 3 0 1 Fergus, g . Sa te iid Sautter, f . - 0 2 0 Vetter, & eee Ye) Blore, f ... ie, ay a Strasburg (21) Kramer, f . Be eta, ae | Plegel, oe o o 0 Oo. 0 0 o 0 06 9 3 1 Jacksonville, Fla.—Cliff Green- wood, 145, Sarasota, outpointed — Nebolsky, 146, Cincinnati, 0). A couple of champions met on Fia., the other day. They were the golf course at Miami Beach, Jimmy, Foxx, home run king of 8, and Francis Ouimet, former national amateur king and his pet club. captain of the Walker Cup squad. Oulmet, at right. is displaying Goetz were high for the highway ‘boys. Summary: Highway (21) FG schafer . Benser, M. | Bencer, L. | Laskows | Flagg Goetz . ee 4 3 G » 0 . 3 3 0 0 3 Totals . 9 | _.G. P. Fat shop 4a) | Priske 4 | gpriges : ; Schneider . {Martin . | Griffin i Croonquist . a! mrouvode! wsoore 1 Totals, . ‘Davis Cup Cup May Remain | In U. 8., Cochet Says New York, Feb. 1) -Take it from |Henri Cochet, the United States has |an excellent chance to regain th | Davis cup, world’s international ten- | nis trophy, this year. | Despite the pessimism of American | critics, the famed French cece, now }® Professional, is convinced that the jshift’ of the challenge round from France to England and the grass courts of Wimbledon will elp bring the cup back to these shores, Cochet arrived Tuesday from South America to compete in a: series of in- ternational team matches against Big Bill Tiden and Ellsworth Vines. His partner, Martin Plaa, was to arrive ‘Wednesday. For Vines and Tilden Cochet had only words of praise, ‘