The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 19, 1934, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1934 Minot Wins State Crown; Coaches Name All-Tourney Five BEAT JAMESTOWN [GRANDIN BEATS NOME FOR CONSOLIDATED TITLE|wmsnin SAD 2-19 IN THRILLING | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | Lester Stoefen Displaces Mangin | PLACES TWO MEN ON FINAL ROUND PLAY GRANDIN WINS 22-15 A CI iso 310s soaver oe ZZZFFZ CONTEST IN STATE As U. S. Indoor Tennis Champion! my THICAI, QUINTET Basket by Muus in Last Minutes New York, March 19—(P)—The Decides Champion of HERE G-1S HE JUS GONNA! TOURNEY AT Tournament Here TAKE ON COAL, AN’ THEN STEAM ALONG “oR Hannah Defeats Tokio 31-29 to Place Third; Medina DOES HE INTEND TO <o Stands Fifth YOUR FRIEND 16 Z A SLATE OF TH OLD SCHOOLY HES ONE OF THOSE TINTYPES WHO SHAVE ‘By THY WINDOW. WITH A SACKKNIFE— HOLDING TH 5 MIRROR, tess = and defense to thwart Mangin's notoriously dangerous net game. Only occasionally did Mangin suc- ceed in executing any of his angled volleys that dropped just over the cord. Stoefen, ranked third in the country and a candidate for the 1931 Davis cup team, won eight of his 20 games on Mangin’s serv= ice, taking two of them at love. Billy Owens, Bismarck, Named Guard on Second All- uUmM-m — Tournament Squad 1 WAS THE See House GUEST # OF MR BOOTHBY, day by Lester R. Stoefen, of Los’ Angeles, who smothered the de- fending champion, 6-1, 8-6, 6-4, before 2,000 spectators. INTO DRYBOCK Pais HE A BRASS RAIL ACQUAINTANCE YOU MET IN LONDON~oR \S HE AN OLD CELLMATE FARGO TAKES THIRD PLACE PLAN INTER-STATE GAME Ns Grand Forks Stand Fifth After Winning 25 to 11 From Bismarck High Yor the first time since 1916 Minot ‘won the championship of North Da- kota Class A teams when it defeated Jamestown 21 to 19 in the final game of the state basketball tournament Saturday night. The meet was held in the World War Memorial auditorium here. Minot literally rained the ball at} the hoop the last two minutes of Play in a frantic effort to break a 19- 19 deadlock, Muus finally getting op. en for a close-in shot to put Coach Harley Robertson's team in the lead. ‘Westby, Blue Jay forward missed a Jong one as the gun sounded. Fargo found stubborn opposition in Mandan, but was able to turn the ‘Braves back 37 to 28 to place third. Bismarck took a 25-11 defeat in the contest with Grand Forks to cede fifth position to Ed Bohnoff's cagers. Governor Throws In Ball ‘The championship tilt opened with Gov. William Langer throwing in the basketball. Jamestown won the right to play 4m the final contest by winning 27 to 32 from Mandan in semi-final play Gaturday morning; and by beating Grand Forks 27 to 24 in the opening round of play Friday. Minot defeat- ed Bismarck, last year’s champions, 21 to 13 Friday night and eliminated Fargo in a 17-15 contest Saturday morning. Other games Friday saw Mandan ‘win from Devils Lake 23 to 21, and Fargo wallop Valley City 35 to 16. In competition Saturday afternoon, Grand Forks downed Devils Lake 23 to 9, and Bismarck won 22 to 15 from alley City. Ingstad Starts Scoring Big Bob Ingstad, Jamestown cen- ter, started scoring in the champion- ship battle with a beautiful one- handed hook shot. After a free toss by Harold Ankarberg, Minot took a 3-2 lead when Muus connected. Donn Pepke, guard, put the Magicians score at 5 with a shot from near the free throw line. Free throws by Ver- non Kittleson and Ingstad and a field goal by Harold Westby tied the count as the quarter ended. The Jays forged ahead on Ralph Richmond's field goal to start the second period. Donn Robertson counted a gift shot for Minot. On the rebound of Ingstad’s try, Westby counted two more for his squad. Muus Pitched a long one in for the Magi- cians and Monnes another to make it Minot 10, Jamestown 9 at the half. Richmond counted again to start! scoring in the third when he nettedj two on the rebound of his own free shot. Robertson counted a field goal and twice from the free throw to boost Minot to lead. Ingstad, who; had tough luck all evening in tries at the net, missed an over hand pitch. Jamestown subbed Herbert Nelson for Richmond. Westby, after dribbling from deep in the Blue Jay territory, lifted a pretty one-handed shot into the basket, Minot lead 14 to 13 as the quarter ended, Tom Mackenroth, hefty Minot man} who replaced Ankerberg during the] second quarter, caged two free throws at the start of the last period. Robin- gon connected with one of two tries. Nelson and Ingstad tied play at 17 by two from the court. After Minot missed five consecutive attempts, Augepurger gave Jamestown a lead by a shot from under the cords. Mackenroth tied it up again and Muus connected for the winning tally. The summary: FG ba] ol mmowwn wl one ol mounue 7E~ OF YOURSS IN LONDON- ES AND HE 1S Now My GUEST, HERE, EGAD 0 1S THAT A GRAVY SPOT ON YOUR scoring thrusts by both teams. to score 21 points to Fargo's 26. The summary: Fargo (37) Kreutz, f .. Nelson, £ 4 c O. Fisher, f Clements, g .. Rl owowanaed Si eeaee oS. Semecces Totals ....000.06 Mandan (28) Ferderer, f Percy, f . Stumpf, c . Shinners, ¢ Reynolds. ¢ Toman, g, f Helbling, Ordway, g . olosxsousy eensouse Totals Score by quarters: Fargo .... «+ 13 22 Mandan a) 10 Bismarck Defeated 0-22 26 19 ing to it as the game 25 to 11, in the final of the title event, at the end of the first made it 15-7 at half time was held scoreless after the period which ended, 21 to 11 and consistently from his own backboard. for Grand Fo The summar: Grand Forks (25) Rindy, f Burkhar FG FT White, g G. Ruud, g Dragge, c . L. Ruud, g SSoanNHa a) oot otee Totals sseroeeses a Bismarck (11) Sorsdahl, f 2-3 OUT OUR WAY Mandan rallied in the second half PF | Beylund, f . Running up an early lead and add-! Burkhardt, f . progressed, | Nelson, c Grand Forks wen fifth place in the| White, g . tournament by defeating Bismarck, Ruud, g . round of the| Dragge, ¢ consolation tournament waged among!L. Ruud, f ... Friday's losers in first-round games! Thompson, g¢ . The Forkers held a 9-3 advantage | quarter and Bismarck | Devils Lake (9) ies Billy Owens directed the offensive |Reslock, ¢ play for Bismarck. Larry Schneider.) Dennis, ¢ center, was valuable for his jumping. | Burckhard, retrieved the ball) Gilliland, f John Cam-' Evans, f, § eron, the smallest player entered in| the meet, played a sensational game Dendien Burkhardt was outstanding counting 9 points. | Grand Forks .... 9 | Schneider, ¢ | Owens, & Kanz, g .. ;Cameron, f 1|McGuiness, f .. wlosonore wl oornwme 0) 4; ‘Totals 4| Score by quarters: 3/Grand Forks .... 9 13 2 Bismarck ...... 3 7 0 Demons Beat Hi-Liners 1!_ In listless consolation tilts, Grand -- Forks defeated Devils Lake, 23 to 9, 15 and Bismarck outplayed Valley City, |22 to 15, Saturday afternoon. Valley City displayed a smooth Passing machine to keep within a few points of the Demons until the last quarter when Bismarck chalked up six points while holding Valley City to two. White was proficient in breaking up Devils Lake scoring threats and teamed with Rindy and Nelson, Grand Forks forward and center, re- i Spectively, in offensive work. The 37 summaries: 28 Grand Forks (23) | Rindy, f . oe al 2 L 2 t 0 0, 1 q 4 Fra 3 Sonmauwssd eeryoroe Totals .... il | z Melhouse, f Wood, f . 2 0 6 23 wloswoome | Totals .. ane Score by quarters: | Devils Lake .... 1 2PF| 2; Bismarck (22) | Sorsdahl, f 3; Cameron, f 3 Schneider, c 2 Owens, g .. Kanz,g .. Engen, f PF 2 0 12 ol ounmund Totals .. | Valley City (15) 1, Codding, f . Fargo, which defeated Mandan, 37 to 28, for third place, and Grand Forks, which vanquished Bismarck, 25 to 11, for fifth place, in games the championship encounter between Mi- not and Jamestown here Saturday night. Fargo’s quick passing attack caught Mandan guardsmen napping as the Midgets established = 13-5 lead in the first quarter, widened it to 23- i [ Ey isi a 3e g i E gt 3 i [ rT] i E i z8 i z g 3 | rr t DON'T STRAIN YouR EYES. THEY'RE BOTH aS pe EXACTLY! \ THEM BOTH, AND IT COUNTED ae NUTS L PUT ON THEM-, THEY'RE EXACTLY ALIKE, SO RELAX AND ENJOY IT. TIED Glenn Cunningham Sets Record for | Indoor Mile in Meet at New York yeoman service to stop numerous | Engen, f . |Knights of Columbus Track Meet Sees Vault, Broad dump Standards Topple Glenn Cunningham dashed to his \new world indoor mile mark of 4:08.4 jon the boards of Madison Square |Garden Saturday night, he became a ; two-time record breaker and the sixth American athicte to put a new uni- versal standard on the books in the two month season which closed (so, far as record breaking goes) then. A few meets remain to be contest- jed, but the big board saucer has been !taken out of the Garden for the last jtime this year and it was there that the seven new world marks this sea- son and nearly all the universal in- door marks have been made. In addition to his great mile which clipped 1.6 seconds from the irecord Gene Venzke set on the same track two years ago, Cunningham also) ‘shares a new world mark of 3:52.2 for , 1500 meters with Bill Bonthron. | Keith Brown of Yale, with a new record of 14 feet 4 inches in the pole vault, replaced his own former mark |of 14 feet 2% inches. Jesse Owens, Ohio State's sensa- tional freshman, broad jumped 25 \feet 3% inches to erase a mark of 26 {feet 11 1-3 inches, made by another jgteat Negro athlete, Dehart Hub- ‘bard, in 1926. | Owens also tied the world record of 0 '62 seconds for the 60 yard dash Sat- urday night. | Knowle, one of the famous man- sions in Kent, Eng., has a room for vevery day in the year, a staircase for every week in year, and a court ifor every day of the week. | Mistletoe may be seen on {telegraph wires in Ceylon. Birds) |wipe the seeds from their bills on the | wires, where the plants actually grow 1) for & tim | |Gibson, f . |MeCosh, ec BSE wl owene PICK ALL-TOURNEY SQUAD Choose Two Grandin Players) -and One Each From Nome, Hannah, Tokio New York, March 19.—()—When | Present Runyan 11 Under Par To Win Open Tourney Charleston, 8. C., March 19.—(P)— Paul Runyan, the young White Plains, N. Y., star, gave his fellow profes- open tournament with a four-round total of 278, 11 strokes under par and nine shots ahead of his nearest rival. ‘The 25-year-old New Yorker pushed in front in the third round with a 68 and blew his opponents out of the running with a brilliant 65, 6 under par, and a new competitive course Four strokes behind him was Hor- ton Smith of New York, who also Played consistently fine rounds of 73- Picard, young pro at this Wappoo course, were fourth with 278s. Harry Cooper, Chicago pro who fin- ished with a 69, and Johnny Revolta, young Milwaukee pro, who fired a 70 as his last effort, were bracketed at 288, while Willie MacFarlane, Tucka- hoe, N. ¥., and Bill Mehlhorn of Brooklyn had 289s. A pair of local youths, Thad Street, at 297. Runyan, the big money winner of the winter season who won 11 tourna- only ments in 1933 and has captured three wloccownse al ouanny Slwonse-u ol wenued his 5 E i = TH ie a d ER i i 3 | i u 5. & el ef i lis e & & E A i fe F g i i i & £ z g ip | i H E ? E L i i é ir a HH He 5 e | E E i [ i 4 ? fe baal ; } i Ei ut iI this year, profited $700 from his latest victory. Will Decide Eighth Regional Champion Fargo, N. D., March 19.—()—Pair- mount and Larimore are matched in & game here Monday night which will complete regional winners in the Class B high school group. Fairmount plays to defend its state crown. The winner of the Fairmount-Lari- more tilt will join Grafton, Hettinger, Linton, Minot Model, Portal, Sentinel Butte and Svea as contenders for the class championship in the state tournament at Valley City Friday and Saturday. the third quarter ended, 14 to 13, but. Paired with George M. Lott, Jr., Chicago Davis cup doubles vet- eran, Stoefen won his second na- tional title, overhauling Berkeley Bell and Frank J. Bowden, New Yorkers, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, in the doubles final. BOB’S A DRIVER Tke Cincinnati Reds will have to toe the mark this year. Their new boss, Bob O'Farrell is a mean driver. He's shown getting off a long one during a round of golf at Hot Springs, Ark, + oo | Begin Grid Practice | At N. D. University Grand Forks, N. D., March 19.— It's a bit too cold and ground con- ditions are not suitable as yet for spring football at the University of North Dakota, but Coach Jack ‘West can’t dissuade his grid poten- tialities with these arguments. Some 20 of the more energetic players, led by Capt. Len Sauer, don sweat suits every afternoon and gallop around the gymnasi- um, lopping off the fat accumu, lated during the wintry months. According to Coach West, the Nodaks will commence their spring drill around April 1. ‘Gallant Sir First To Win Race Twice Agua Caliente, Mexico, March 19.—(#)—Gallant Sir has the honor of being the first, two-time winner of the Agua Caliente han- dicap, but the plaudits went Mone day to the temperamental stal- lion’s young stablemate, Riskulus. The big black son of Sir Gal- lahad III staged a strong stretch Tun in the west’s leading money ‘classic Monday to come home in front of Riskulus by a head in 2 minutes, 2 4-5 seconds. Victory gave Gallant Sir $23,- 000, boosting his total earnings to $114,890. About 6,750,000 persons annually use London’s swimming-baths. Training Camp Fronts BR ? i iH 5 F | : g i i f i il Z i | | F Ee ili ell [ i | § ! j i 4 v2 & | ft i "1 fi i ‘ ie & H E i 2 E 5 g i Z | 8 i F i r lt el I HARRIS IS SATISFIED Sarasota, Fla—Bucky Harris ambles about the Red Sox train- ing camp with a mighty satisfied grin. His boys licked Detroit in their initial contest without even one scrub game. They tried hard all the way, hit at few bad balls, showed a lot of life on the bases and hung up a dozen hits against three of Mickey Cochrane's pitch- ers, RED SOX, YANKS TOUGHEST Biloxi, Miss—The Washington Sen- ators board of strategy is figuring privately that the New York Yan- Announcement That Minot May Play S. D. Champs Made at Banquet Here Jamestown, runnerup for the state high school Class A championship, was the only team to place more than ‘one player on the all-tournament first team. The all-tournament team, se- lected by coaches, was named at the annual banquet held Saturday night at the Grand Pacific hotel restaurant here for coaches, tournament officials, members of the state high school league board of control, and the play- ers. The first all-tournament team in cludes Harold Westby, Jamestown; Elvers Rind, Grand Forks, as fore wards; Robert Ingstad, Jamestown, center; Donn Pepke, Minot, and Charles Nelson, Fargo, guards. One Capital City cager, Billy Owens, was among those included in the sec+ ond all-tourney selection. Owens’ out- standing work on the defense and his valuable offensive play, earned him the berth. The second quint com- prises, forwards, Frank Stumpf, Man+ dan, and Magner Muus, Minot; cen- ter, Donn Robertson, Minot; guards, Owens, Bismarck, and Bere nard White, Grand Forks. May Play 8. D. Champs A game to determine the high school basketball championship of the two Dakotas may be arranged, ac- cording to B. C. B. Tighe, Fargo, chairman of the state board of athle- tic control. The contest would pit Minot, who ee the championship by defeating jamestown 21 to 19 Sat it, with Washington high aeeh acas Falls, South Dakota titlist, Tighe expressed himself as being favorable to the inter-state cham- pionship contest. The no comment from Harley Robertson, coach of the Minot quintette, but since L. A. White, Minot, is a mem- ber of the board of control, Tighe’s mention of the possibility of such a game was taken as an indication that the proposal would be favored at Minot. A challenge by either Minot or the South Dakota champions will be nec- essary. The World War Memorial auditorium at Bismarck, or the Corn Palace at Aberdeen,.8. D., were cone sidered as sites for the proposed tilt. At the banquet trophies were re- ceived by Minot, as winner of the state championship; Jamestown, as runnerups; and by Fargo and Man- dan, who placed third and fourth, respectively, Medals were received by each player who took part in the: tournament. Presentations were made by C. L. Robertson; Jamestown. Among the speakers at the banquet were Governor William Langer; H. P. Goddard, secretary of the Bismarck Association of Commerce; William Gussner, ferees; Coach Robertson, Minot; and C. L. Robertson, Jamestown, member of the board of control, as chairman. 8. 8. Boise and George A. Dueme- land led group singing. Further mu- sical entertainment was furnished by the Lions club quartette, A. P. Simon, W. H. Payne and-H. O. Saxvik, Bismarck, were introduced as tourna ment managers. Hockey League Teams ed Stanley Cup, but it took up to the last minute of | eaGsy at ll notches, dropping the Montreal oons and New York Rangers to third. Tilden, Vines Plan Games With British F aT fies hil [ &

Other pages from this issue: