The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 1, 1934, Page 6

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i 6 Bismarck Prowlers W NDPADETAVES BISMARCK WINS DISTRICT INDEPENDENT CAGE HONORS Ree pemen |_ CChSOROING RIO ~ NIGHT AT BISMARCK Winning Team Will Enter State Tournament Play at Minot March 8, 9 and 10 HAVE WON DISTRICT MEETS Dunn Center Quint Champions in District 13 After Beat- Ing Killdeer 26-22 Bismarck Prowlers play Dunn Cen- ter for the regional independent bas- ketball championship, Friday night fm a game starting at 8 o'clock at the World War Memorial auditorium in Bismarck, according to Neil O. Churchill, Bismarck, vice president. of the state league. ‘The winning team in the game Fri- day will go to Minot, March 8, 9 and 10 to compete for state independent honors. Teams from Werner, Halliday, Dunn Center, Elbowoods and Killdeer were entered in the District 13 tournament. Halliday eliminated Werner in the first round of play and Dunn Center, Elbowoods and Killdeer drew byes. Dunn Center counted 42 to_Elbo- ‘woods’ 18, and Killdeer beat Halliday 36 to 30 in semi-final play. In the final set Dunn Center won @ 26-22 game from Killdeer. Bismarck won from Strasburg, Man- dan and Linton in the tournament here Tuesday and Wednesday. Man- dan eliminated Napoleon and Linton eliminated Ft. Yates. Entered for tournament play for the Capital City squad are John Spriggs, Arnold Schneider, Emil Mar- tin, George Hays, Jerry Griffen, The- mar Simle, Myron Benser, 8. Olson and G. Croonquist. Starting lineup for Bismarck in the regional meet will probably include Croonquist, Spriggs, forwards; @chneider, center; and Griffen and Hays at guards. Beulah Teams Split With Stanton Fives (Special to The Tribune) Beulah, N. D., March 1. — Beulah high school cagers had little trouble ‘winning 26 to 11 from Stanton to cop the championship of the Mercer county high school league. Murphy. forward, and David, guard, were high in scoring for the locals. The Stanton girls team made up for the defeat the boy hoopsters suf- fered, when they routed the Beulah feminine players 32-40 in a fast game here. The Stanton girls have the champtonship of Mercer counry. Summaries: Beulah (26) FG Fr PF Mounts, f .. 1 1 2 Murphy, f eo 4 oy Bates, ¢ Bh Oe Peterson, g . 1 9 0 David, ¢ 6 0 0 - O 0 2 Totals. ..... edecceese 12 2 6 Stanton (11) FG FT PF Sailer, f .. 0 8 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 2 2 o 9 2 4 3 4 9 16 20 26—26 14 71-11 FG FT PF 4 o 0 3 2 1 8 @ 0 0 a 2 o o 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 Totals.....-.+seseeee 15 2 3 ‘Stanton Girls (40) FG FI PF , aa ae | 4 2 0 3 0 1 o 0 2 0 0 3 i) 1 o 0 0 2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH LOCALS BEAT LINTON IN FINAL CONTEST AT TOURNEY HELD HERE Capital City Hoopsters Win From Mandan, Strasburg and Linton in Series A ACH, ALFUN=~BRAVO! BRAVO ¢ 9 Ze A CHEENYUS) AFTER DREI SAHREN E YOU HAF AT LAST BLAYED DER VALTZ WAS THAT TH’ WALTZ UF DER BUMBLE BEES.FROM BEGNNING|/Y OF TH BUMBLE} TO ENT, MIDOUT A MISTAKE 9 BRAVO), BEES SUI THOUGHT f —HArAY BUILDING DER BANANAMA - TWAS PLAYIN CANAL VOS NUDDING IN VoRK, MIT TH DEW geal TEACHING YOU DOT VALTZ JeacH~ LULLABY § 1 AM SO OVERCHOYED, AN WHILE T WAS 1 YODEL F PLAYIN’ 17, T WAS MAKIN’ BELIEVE T WAS SAWIN' MY WAY OUT OF A LION'S CAGE 0 Gy LAST WE HAS MASTERED WW Ve. = ~~ Inclement Weather May Cause More Delay in Heavyweight Title Match LINTON TOWN TEAM HIGH IN NAPOLEON CAGE TOURNAMENT Win 28-to-21 Contest With! Herried (S. D.) Quint to Cop Championship (Special to The Tribune) Napoleon, N. D., March 1.—Linton | won the Napoleon Lions independent basketball tournament, defeating Her- reid 28 to 21 in an extra-period con- test Saturday evening before a ca-j; pacity crowd at the Napoleon schoo) gym. Napoleon finished third and Pollock fourth. Ashley, winner of the tourna- | ment a year ago, placed first. in the consolation series by defeating Burn- stad. The sportsmanship trophy was awarded Herreid. Dawson and Zee- land, the other two entries in the tourney, were eliminated the first | round and the teams did not stay to take part in the consolation series. The first all-conference team was composed of A. Renz, Herreid; P. Renz, Herreid; Kempf, Ashley; Maier, Linton; Vogel, Linton. A second all-conference team in- cluded B. Renz, Herreid; Hugo Beck- er, Ashley; Forest, Ashley; Dogeagle, Linton; Alvin Grosz, Napoleon. Tournament high scorers were Jack | Greitl, Napoleon, 3 games, 28; Maier, Linton, 3 games, 27; P. Renz, Herreid. 3 games 26; A. Boschee. Zeeland, one| game, 26; Walter Doerr, Ashley, 2 games, 26; and Martin Linton, 3) games, 25. Summary for the championship game: | Linton (28) FG FT PF 2. deao 7 02 1 2 0:0 2 1 1-1 1} 1 00 3 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 6a 13° 2-6 8B FG FT PF! 1; 28: 0 7 0st. ‘ol 1 Age 4) 2° 0-2 1 B. Renz, ¢ 4 0-0 3) Totals..ccccceceree 9 3-8 5 OUT OUR WAY = Wins State Golf Title in Florida Maureen Orcutt fs bringing this gold chalice trophy to her Ha- worth, N. J., home for keeps. She gained permanent possession of the cup by winning the Florida state golf championship for the third time. Here you see her at Palm Beach after defeating Mar- ian Milley of Lexington, Ky., for the title. Expect to Hold Championship Fight Friday; Continued Rain and Wind Forecast Miami, Fla. March 1.—(?)—With one decision already to his credit over a fisitc affair that not even the ele- ments seem to want, old man weather ‘blustered around again Thursday in a belligerent mood, threatening to force another postponement of the 15-round heavy-weight championship beut between Primo Carnera and Tommy Loughran. Called off Wednesday by a renewed outburst of tropical storms, the fight was re-scheduled tentatively for Thursday night but only the most optimistic expected the weather to clear and the arena to dry out suffi- ciently for the show to go on. Thursday's forecast was for con- tinued winds and rain, with a sim- ilar outlook for Friday. Decision was expected to be reached this morning to set the fight back to Friday night in the hopes that the sun would co-operate in drying out the arena. “The fighters want to go on, despite the delay and we have a substantial investment to protect by producing the show,” said Col. John Reed Kilpatrick, president of Madison Square Garden corporation. “I believe the delay will help rather than hurt the sale of tickets.” ‘The understanding is that the gar- den will break even if the fight draws ‘Jas much as $50,000 in net receipts, owing to the fact the rival gladiators are working strictly on 3 percentage basis. Up to Wednesday, night the actual cash advance sale was less than $30,000 with tentative reserva- tions for perhaps $15,000 more. ee a es . M’Graw Taken to | | Baltimore Home | eS ee if Baltimore, March 1.—(#)—John Joseph McGraw is home. His body lay Thursday in a granite vault at Bonnie Brae, New Ca- thedral cemetery where it awaits burial in the spring. The body was brought to Balti- more late Wednesday after fun- eral services were held in New York. Two hundred admirers met. the casket at the station. They escorted it, with relatives and friends, to the cemetery where Rev. Timothy B. Kenney read the service. By Williams GOOD GAWSH, ICK? WHEN YUH WASH BOY, AH_HAB TER WARSH SIX TEAMS ENTER MEET Strasburg Beats Ft. Yates 38 to 20 for Third Position in Tournament Holding the Linton players to a single point during the entire first half, the Bismarck Prowlers had little trouble in winning a 30-to-15 game and the championship of district 14) independent basketball league. John Spriggs, forward, copped scor- ing honors with 14 points. The local ‘cagers showed the strain of the hard game of the morning, but played steady, though not spectacular ball, in the final game of the tournament. Briefly the meet, in which were entered Mandan, Bismarck, Ft. Yates, Strasburg, Linton and Napoleon, went through with the following results: In the opening play the Capital City squad downed Strasburg 40 to 22; Napoleon only counted 11 points to lose by a large margin to the Man- dan Indians; and Ft. Yates lost 10 to 29 to Linton. ~Linton and Ft. Yates were given byes in the official drawings, so Man- dan and Bismarck played Wednesday morning for the right of meeting Lin- ton for the championship. Bismarck squeezed out a margin to win from Mandan in the semi-final game by a 26-25 count. Mandan did not choose to get in the running for third place, and Strasburg substituted to annex that position by beating Ft. Yates 38 to 20 in a preliminary contest Wednesday night. Dogeagie Is Outstanding In the final competition, Ambrose Dogeagle, Indian youth who played the pivot position for the runnersup, was the whole show for Linton. He was the only one on the losing five able to count a field goal. Dogeagle counted three from the court and garnered three from gift shots in four chances. . The game was rough with 25 infrac- tions being called. The locals were the main offenders, fouling 15 times. The Linton boys had tough luck in converting the donations, counting only 9 in 20 attempts. The Linton boys also had an off night with the field goals. The play- ers several times missed as meny as four tries from under the net. Dog- eagle, the one exception, pushed the leather through the loop with one- handed shots that the locals found hard to stop. Officials for the games Saturday night were Themar Simle and Edward Heer. Summary: Bismarck (39) FG FT PF Croonquist, f . 3 1-2 3 Spriggs, f .. 6 2-3 1 Schneider, ¢ . 2 3-4 3 Griffen, g 0 0-0 4 Hays, & 3 0-2 3 Benser, & 2 0-0 1 Martin, g .. 1 0-1 0 Totals .....sse0e 17 5-12 15 Linton (15) Martin, f .. 0 2-4 1 Maier, f, 8, 0 1-5 1 Dogeagle, c .. 3 3-4 3 Fergus, g .. 0 0-1 1 Fogle, f, & . 0 3-4 3 Blore, f 0 0-2 1 Vetter, g - 0 0-0 0 Totals 3 9-20 10 Ft. Yates Boys Sportemen The Tribune nominates Ft. Yates for sportsmanship honors. The In- dian boys were not able to click in any of the games they played, but. they were in every contest fighting their best. During all the play they contested no decision and grumbled at nothing. There was no from the side lines. The Ft. Yates players did not intentionally resort to unfair tactics as far as could be seen. Strasburg led at the half of the con- solation game 14 to 6. A determined Ft. Yates squad came back in the next stanza to start a short rally to boost, YORE CLO'ES, WHY MAH CLO'ES their count to 14 before the winners G DON'T YUH WRING TH' PANTS AN’ TH’ SHIRT TH’ SAME WAY? \T LOOKS FUNNY Wen'y push i, \N DE DARK. SRwnuAMs, Cd x 3! caught a fresh hold and again began to build up their advantage. Lee Flegal counted 18 points for 1, 1984 ill Play Dunn Center for Regional Honors Bismarck Imps Count Tenth Win in 11 Starts by Beating Wing 27-14 Driver Beats | race with Roy Russing, Call- Death in Race The ale Grins Reaper Tost 7 | fornia auto racer, in a turn | 8round the Ascot track near Los Angeles recently. This pic- ture shows Roy's racer on ‘its | back after it misbehaved and left the track. And there’s Roy sitting safely on the bank, sec- ond from lett. NODAK QUINT TITLE HOLDERS SECOND TIME IN NINE YEARS t Basketball Scores ||Meinhover and Witasek Total P Naeesinersinactaciatets Carleton 29; Minnesota 43. Moorhead State Teachers 35; Concordia 33. River Falls Teachers 44; Eau Claire Teachers 30. Ripon 20; Marquette 40. Lake Forest 30; Beloit 34. Towa State Teachers 42; Penn. NODAK BOXERS Fou FOR AMATEUR HONORS Ed Dehne, Bismarck Boy, Eli- minated in Golden Glove Meet at Minneapolis Minneapolis, Minn., March 1—()— Two University of North Dakota box- ers were eliminated in the first round of the fifth annual northwest golden gioves tournament here Wednesday night as amateur pugilists from all Parts of the northwest sought honors in eight divisions. A third Nodak fighter, Ray Crummy, advanced to the second round on a close decision over Durwood Sanford of Northfield in the lightweight divi- sion. Crummy survived several low blows to gain his victory. Orvis Nelson of North Dakota was put away by Lawrence Kendrick of Minneapolis on a technical knockout in the second round of their light- weight bout. Harry Lane of Minneapolis defeated Weldon Chandler, Nodak flyweight in a furiously contested bout. Lane had a slight edge during the third round to pull out his decision. The results included: Lightweights: Lawrence Kendrick, Pillsbury House, won by @ technical knockout from Orvis Nelson, University of North Dakota, second round. Ray Crummy, University of North Dakota ‘defeated Durwood Sanford, Northfield, Minn. Flyweights: Arry Lane, Minne- apolis, defeated Weldon Chandler, Unjversity of North Dakota. Richard Charbonneau, University of North Dakota, defeated Wyman Wing, Northfield. Middleweights: Kenny Brown, University of North Dakota, knocked out Donald Frarck, Elbow Lake, Minn., first round. ‘Welterweights, second round. Tim Johnston, Big Lake, won by technical knockout from Art Lanz, University of North Dakota, first round. Featherweights, second round. Harry Putt defeated Ed Dehne, Uni- versity of North Dakota, Ray Baker, East Grand Forks, defeated Donald Bryce. Ry Crummy, University of North Dakotas, defeated Ranfll Wuor- now. Flyweights, second round: Howard Gerstner, Wedel club, won Strasburg to easily lead the scoring./by default from Richard Charbon- Summary: neau. Strasburg (38) FG FI PF! Middleweights, second round. Klein, f .. 1 1-2 3 mny Brown, won by default from Kraft, f 3 0-0 =: 2 Emil Staude, Pillsbury House. Mastel, & 0 1-2 0| Lightheavyweights, second round. M. Mastel, 4 2-2 2) Russ Schulte, Potts — — —/knocked out Allan Moque, University Totals .......... 16 6-9 Blot North Dakota, second round. Ft. Yates (20) ig ge gE RRO I Halsey, f .... 2 oo 2] | By Own Statement : ; #3 11| Rookie One of Best 0 4 : ° 1 ob Hot Ark, March 1.—(P)— 2 1-1 1) art % Ferings, talking » had > =, —|better look to his oral eooe 7 6-10 5|George Moyer is headed for the big : leagues. er, a visitor at the baseball | Fights Last Night ||:chod rere, samitted he wes just one + ~—# lot Connie Mack's rookle plichers, but 126, Cleveland, outpolnied Beby plated winning 30 ennes Ne she Al Tiger MioNerh 13, Omens. cir: |. After he stated he thought Dimy , FIELDS 18 REFEREE After dropping $21,000 in a business venture, Jackie Fields, for. mer welterweight champion, is fereeing fights for the Calif Athletic Commission. * Most Scores to Help Sioux in Conference Race Grand Forks, N. D., March 1.— When the University of North Dakota basketball team won the North Cen- tral Conference championship Friday night by token of the defeat of its traditional rival, North Dakota State, it marked the second title won since Clem Letich assumed the coaching reigns, nine years ago. On every other occasion, the Sioux have been runners-up for the championship, The University completed the 1933- 34 conference season with a record of seven won and one lost, with State’s Bison in second place with six victories and two defeats. The Bison held the title for the’past two years. The Sioux stamped themselves as one. of the most powerful teams in con- ference history, averaging a point a minute throughout conference, as well aS pre-season, competition. Two members of the team, Herman Witasek, 6 foot 2 inch forward, weighing 200 pounds, and Ted Mein- hover, 6 foot 7 inch center, weighing 245 pounds, finished one-two in the conference individual scoring race. Witasek tallied an even 100 points in the eight conference games for an average of 12% points per tilt. Mein- hover was close behind with 88 mark- ers, or 11 per contest. Both are slated for all-conference teams. The final standings in the North Central Conference: we North Dakota Universit; North Dakota State .... Lost evsoad mma Morningside ....... FIGHTS? PHOOEY! Three times this year Madison Square Garden, the premier fight palace of the nation, has been sold out. But the three events weren't fights—one was a track meet, another was a hockey game and the third a tennis match, We Have a Complete Line of Township, Village and Petition for Nomination Blanks Special Orders Given Prompt Attention Write or Call The Legal Blank Department Bismarck Tribune Company Local Junior Hoopsters Will Play Hazelton Cagers There Friday Night — ‘The Bismarck Imps won their tenth victory in 11 basketball games played this season when they counted a 27+ to-14 triumph over the Wing cagers Wednesday night in a contest at Wing. John Yeasley and McGuiness with nine and seven points scored are high for Bismarck. Weber, Wing, starred for his mates and collected five field goals and a free throw to total 11 for the play. Coach Arnold Van Wyk announces that he will take his squad to Hazele ton for a game Friday night. The lineup will include J. Yeasely, Mce Guiness, Clausnitcer, Hedstrom, Ellofe son, LaRue, Logee and Roy Yeasely. Golf Tourney Starts At Belleair, Florida Belleair, Fla, March 1-—(P)— Wind-swept sunny Florida's trane sient golfing clan of notables, moved in on Belleair Thursday for a 72-hole parade in the west coast open. Headed by Paul Runyan, squat lite “;tle Westchester, N. Y., professional who yesterday annexed the St. Peters burg open, and Bill Meihorn of Louise ville, who finished second in tha tourney, the caravan of golfers who, in the past several days, negotiated two tournaments, are ready for @ tough, two day grind here. Chicago and New York Pucksters Will Play. New York, March 1—(?)—The New York Rangers, Stanley cup holders, and the Powerful young Chicago Blackhawks clash Thursday night to decide which shall hold second place in the American division standings af the National Hockey league as they rush down the home stretch to the 1934 playoffs. In the other two contests Thurs day night the flying Frenchmen play at Boston against the Bruins. The Maroons go to Detroit to tackle the Red Wings. PLAY IN CANADA Montreal, March 1,.—(?)—Hoping, Perhaps, that cheers in their own lane guage by Montreal’s many French fans might bring improvement in their play, Henry Cochet and Martin Plaa of France will resume their pro« fessional gnnis series against. Bill Tilden and Ellsworth Vines at the Forum Thursday night. —_—__, NOTICE To Stockholders of the Regan-Alta Rural Telephone Co., Regan, No. Dak. Notice: There is delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessments levied on Oct. 15th, 1933 and assessments levied previous thereto, the several amounts set on- site the names of the respective areholders as follows: Oscar Magnuson, certificate No, 67, one share $25.00. ig Robert Pa er, certificate No, PES Ruane $25.00. eas Nels Nel: , certificate No, 63 share, $25.00 See And in accordance with law and 0} order of the board of Directors made Jan. 6th, 1934, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be nee cessary will be sold in front of the Postoffice in the Village of Regan, N. D. on March 3rd, 1934, at 2:06 o'clock p. m., to pay delinquent ase sessments thereon, together wit costs of advertising and expense o} sale, 2-8-15-22 3-1, Teen eecticxr

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