The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 4, 1935, Page 10

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)

\ i St. Mary’s Rallies in Fourth ‘Quarter to Defeat. Coyotes, 26-20 _ OVOTES TE SCORE FRED PERRY, HELEN JACOBS CONSIDER PRO TENNIS OFFERS | ARTER TRAILING 11-7)| ovR BoaRDiNc House by Aver || MATEUR TITUSTS (BISMARCK MAY STILL ENTER Schlitz, 0. H. Will ‘AT HALP-WAY MARK AT AVE APLATE OF £2 Zw TerES A Gg | BRUIEVED READY 10 PROPOSED CLASS D LEAGUE| Bowling Fives Win TAKE TH a Z —| 7 4 Beene Utnur can | GLARE OFF {4 rar SPOOR WHO Baseball Star Plays | City League Tilts Legion Baseball Committee Will PARTY TM GIVING TONIGHT, { ME. MRS HAS ‘BEEN HAUNTING | Urban Hagen Fills Breach by Furth ‘urtner ft ESERES (io SEL ERE Sinking Two Baskets in Quick Succession f b ns ) TANG, DITTSWORTH STAR | Visitors to Play Mandan Braves at State Training School Tonight | — Not to be outdone by the Demons, @t. Mary's high school basketball * quint conquered a bad case of over- lence Thursday night and ral- Med ip the fourth quarter to defeat the iston Coyotes, 26 to 20, in a {j Tough game here. After watching a four-point lead | Vanish in the third quarter, the | Saints woke up with a start and with Urban Hagen leading the attack, pil- ed _up a safe margin for victory. Curtis Tang, Coyote guard, gave the invaders an carly lead with a field goal in the opening minutes of _| Play but after Hagen had evened the *) Count, the Saints went out in front ‘and were never behind although the | Score was knotted once. At the end of the first quarter the local quint held a 7 to 5 lead and increased the advantage to 15 to 11 at the half. Coyotes Wipe Out Lead Two baskets by Newman Ditts- } worth, one a high-arching, one-hand- ed shot from the side. brought the 4 Visitors even shortly after the inter- mission but a free throw by Tomm: Lee put the Saints one point ahead fs the third quarter ended. | _ Hagen came into the breach at this point and caged three short shots, two of them on quick passes from Lee, and the Saints held tenaciously to the six point lead until the game ended. Frank Geiermann contributed two field goals and Lee added a gift shot in this period to bolster the Saints’ total. Curtis Tang in the first half and Dittsworth after the intermission led the visitors’ offense. The whole ‘Coyote team was improved from the Might previous when they lost to the Demons but ragged passing still proved a big handicap. Hagen Is High Scorer Hagen was high-point man with @ix field goals and a free throw for a total of 13 points. Bob Murphy and Pred Shultz turned in nice games at © | guard for the Saints. a Tonight the Coyotes journey across the Missouri to face the Mandan Braves at the state training school gymnasium. o alroononund Geiermann, c Murphy, ¢ Schultz, g . loooconuag® al eooororny al besrorenn , mann 1; Murphy 2; Fisher 1. Referee—Bill Morlan. Umpire—Fay Brown. Valley City Gets Class B Tourney _ Site for Class A Contests Not Selected; Basketball Of- ficials Named ., Jan. 4.—(F)—Valley announced at the final two-day ses- sion of the board of control of the state school league here Thursday. The class B event will be held | Jamestown and Mandan had issued invitations, in addition to Valley City. A site for the class A tournament yk has issued an invitation for the Class A tourney and there is @ standing bid from Mandan. Officials for. both Class A and B its were named by the board “Terry Has No Trouble Signing Ace Southpaw bizeseehwan —— Lim — me MAD, IF LT KN ‘DOWN UNTIL North Dakota Champion Ready for; Major Competition, Says Golfing Father ee Announcement that Miss Nadine O'Leary, North Dakota's star woman golfer, probably will enter the wom-/| en's national amateur championship tournament next summer was made here Fhiday by her father, Tom O'Leary, professional at the Bismarck Country: club. After winning the North Dakota state cHampionship in three of the last four years and sweeping the wo- men’s Elirchmont tournament at Be- midji last summer, O'Leary express- ed belief that Nadine, who will be 21 years old in May, is ready for major competition. Her drives, he said, average about 200 yards and she has broken wom- en’s par on every course which she has played. With improvement in her short irons, he said, she should be able to give the best women play- ers in the country a run for their money. Her practice next spring, he said, will be devoted to improving this’department of her play. Meanwhile, O'Leary is acting as in- structor at the indoor golf layout which has been set up in the World War Memorial building, where any golfer may practice daily for $1 a month, The cost of lessons is extra. The equipment consists of two driv- ing nets and a sand green with five cups, The green, he said, is as good as any sand green in the country. Golfers who have trouble keeping their heads down after a shot should try it, O'Leary commented, since there is no danger of losing a ball and no temptation to try to watch where the ball goes. Spears Must Accept Property Settlement St. Paul, Jan. 4.—(#)—The Min sota supreme court Friday upheld Hennepin county (Minneapolis) di trict court decision stipulating Dr. Clarence W. Spears, University of Wisconsin football coach, must ac- cept $2,000 as final settlement in a $9,836 suit brought by the grid tutor alleging fraud in the sale to him of @ house in Minneapolis. Loss of the property also was sus- ained by Dr. Spears and his wife, OUT OUR WAY Twniues + FY ICE BOX GOPHER WHO DID iT, TD WHACK HIM AND TD LIKE TO KNOW F WHO RAN THE STEAM SHOVEL INTO THAT Ne ee HAM /--MAKES ME SO OF MINE EW THE SINCE HED BE GOOD FOR NOTHING NADINE O’LEARY MAY ENTER WOMEN’S NATIONAL AMATEUR Mrs, Cornelia McConnell Spears, through the high court's action. Dr. Spears bought the $7,650 home in 1925, the year he came to Minne- sota as football coach. Five years later, when he was about to go to the University of Oregon, he sought to sell the property and alleged he found fraud and misrepresentation in the sale to him. Perroni to Fight Louis at Detroit Baer Brothers Will Appear in Exhibition Bouts on Friday Night Program Detroit, Jan. 4—(P)—Joe Louis, Detroit's sensational Negro heavy weight, who came up from the ami teur ranks six months ago with a murderous right cross and an ambi- tion to succeed Max Baer, brings big time boxing back to Detroit Friday night in a 10 round bout with Patsy Perroni of Cleveland. Nine knockouts in 12 triumphant ting appearances earned Louis his engagement with the Cleveland bat- tler, and when they meet in mid-ring Friday night, they will be carefully eyed by Max Baer, the wise-cracking champion of the heavyweight division, and Col. John 8. Hammond, president. of the Madison Square Garden cor- poration. Baer and his brother, Buddy, are down on the Louis-Perroni card for short bouts of the exhibition variety, Max taking on Babe Hunt of Ponca: City, Okla., for four rounds while buddy brother is scheduled for ‘six rounds with Jack O'Dowd, a Detroit heavyweight. Primo Carnera Wins Two Decision Bouts Montevideo, Uruguay, Jan. 4.—(#) —Primo Carnera, former world’s heavyweight champion, outpointed Cecil Harris, a North American, and Julio Patega, Italian heavyweight, in two exhibition matches Thursday night. Each match went four rounds, HASNT HAD REFRIGERATOR/ OUTSIDE TH ICE FROST ON IT WATERMELON SEASON/ THIS HOUSE FOR YEARS, AN TVE RECOGNIZED HALF OF HIS ANATOMY ‘BOX MANY Mes! GO FEEL IF AS NOSE 1S STILL EQ p> x Feldners Tackle Phantoms Tonight Touring Brothers Gain Confi- dence in Wins Over Neigh- boring Independents | With confidence gained by victories over nearly every small Independent basketball quint in this section of the Missouri Slop2 area, the Feldner |Brothers, a team of touring cage stars, arrived in Bismarck Friday ; and will play the Bismarck Phantoms it 8:15 tonight at the World War {Memorial building. the Drothers downed the | Wilton Black Knights, 27 to 16, and | Wednesday won theiy fourth game in |as many days by turning back the Washburn Independents, 32 to 18. Ben Jacobson predicted Friday that the Phantom quint would have no jeasy time in turning back the invad- jers. | |_ “It is very apparent that the Feld- | her's have not exerted themselevs un- jul it was necessary in their games |€round here,” Jacobeon said in point- jing out that it was a practice of tour- jing cage squads to win by small mar- gins in order to meet the public de- mand, i However, when the touring quint j takes the floor here they will have to turn on all the scoring power in their possession for with Harold Massmann, Big Ted Meinhover, Johnny Spriggs, Don Arthur, Garvin Croonquist and Jacobson on the floor the Phantoms have little to ask for in the way of a basketball quint. Two Chicago Schools Have Coach Problems| Chicago, Jan. 4.—(?)—Both of Chi- cago’s Big Ten members, Northwest- ern university and the University of Chicago, were giving time thought to football coaching prob- lems Friday. Athletic Director K. L. (Tug) Wil- son had a date with Lynn Waldorf of Kansas State college to discuss the Northwestern vacancy created by the resignation of Dick Hanley. Chicago marked time waiting to learn whether Clark Shaughnessy would be offered the double-barreled position of head football coach and assistant athletic director at Harvard —and what he would do if he did get the offer. OH, GOSH= TH' Dupe! HO, FELLERS— WHERE YA GON' 2 1 DARED NOT HAMS MY SHIRT TAIL OUT, NOR BE IN COMFORT OTHER WAYS, LIKE WEARIN’ FATHER'S PANTS,cUT DOWN— I DIDN'T QUITE FIT IN, THOSE DAYS. AND,NOW THAT 1 LOVE BAGGY KNEBS, AND HATE ARAZOR ON MY CHIN, I FIND NO JOY IN MEETIN’ FOLKS, © 1996 BY WEA SERVICE, WNC. T.M. RED, V. ©. PAT. OFF. BECAUSE, SOMEHOW, I DON'T FIT IN. offers, aggregating . For several months, O'Brien, who ACCEPT CONTRACTS Promoter O’Brien Cables Cali- fornian Bid cf $20,000 for Services WHITTINGSTALL SOUGHT World's Men Champion Evinces Fresh Interest in Leaving Amateur Ranks ry i vl 3 i i | | ze i F EF 5 PPLE Hit Zz lew York, Jan. 4—(#)—Profession- al tennis reached out Friday for two of the amateur game's champions, and apparently stands a good chance of landing them both. 8 Promoter Bill Ing to O'’Brein, Helen Hull Jacobs, for the past three years American champion, Fred J. Perry of England, the world’s Singles titlist, as well as Mrs, Eileen Bennett Whittingstall, one of John Bull’s top-ranking performers, are on the verge of renee professional operates a troupe that includes Bill Tilden, Ellsworth Vines, George Lott and Lester Stoefen, has been negoti- ating with Miss Jacobs. O’Brien Cables Offer he responded with a bid of $20,000. While confirmation was lacking from London and her mother, Mrs. Eula H. Jacobs in Berkeley “doubted” her daughter would make a decision before conferring with her, O'Brien said: Yanks Will Be Club To Beat, Says Navin Detroit, Jan. 4.—(P)—New York is the club to beat for the American ‘and | Leas and he expressed that somewhat sur- opinion Friday as he weighed his club's chances of repeating and bringing to the Motor City the second American League flag since 1909. “The Yankees are going to have a powerful, well balanced club,” Navin said, What about his own club? Boston Bruins Beat Montreal ( Canadiens New York, Jan. 4—(#)—The strong “Baby Face” Buffalo, N. ¥., drew (10). _ Give Proposal Consideration Possibility that Bismarck yet may have a team in the proposed Dakota baseball league loomed Friday with announcement by members of the American Legion senior baseball com- mittee that they have reached no de- cision as to the desirability or lack of desirability of entering a club in the proposed circuit. Harry Rosenthal, secretary of the Organization which has sponsored baseball in Bismarck for the last two years, said Friday that the proposal Golf, Talks Football, Los Angeles, Jan. 4.—(#)—When one of the greatest baseball players of all time plays golf he talks football. Tyrus Raymond Cobb, the Georgia beach, came to the first tee of the Los Angeles country club to join two fellow Georgians and a South Carolinian, all now living in the far west, in a friend- ly foursome. “Well, well,” he boomed, in his best third base coaching tones, “we south- erners certainly gave us westerns a fine shellacking, didn’t we?” “If this Dixie Howell is half the yer he is a footballer, By doubling up on the old master of the diamond, baseball won the floor “Mir, Mack is not only a great char- said Cobb with a look of rever: ence in his eyes, “but he is still as U. S. ASSOCIATION HEAD SEES BIGGER ’N BETTER GOLF YEAR Effect of Better Business Con- ditions on Leisure Point- ed Out by Jaques By HERBERT JAQUES (President, United States Golf Association) New York, Jan. 4—(?)—The turn Statement of —— Capitol Cafe Chefs and Highe waymen Are Defeated in Contests Thursday Smashing the king pins with mon- otonous repetition, members of the Schlitz trundling quintet in the city league bowled over the Capitol Cafe chefs in two games in a row Thurs- day night, only to have the chefs flare into action and show the Beer Kings just what a good bowling menu consists of. Their recipe called for & game of 854. Davis again raised havoc with the maples to count 529. Schlitz’s mys- tery man, Lefty Singer, checked in with a 495, the high contribution to the brewery lads’ score. Those hard-hitting, consistent bowl- ers from O. H. Will's Seed Store put everything they had into their match with the Highwaymen in or- der to win two out of three games. A. Schneider with the Nursery team carved out 531 clubs to add to his teammates’ total. John Rochrick smashed through with 522 pins. Huss, with the Draftsmen, laid up enough wood to last all winter, collecting a total of 515. Person contributed a 507 total to the cause. Scores: T. Schneider 130 A. Brown .. 144 A. Schneider 161 Totals 86 The Bank of North Dakota December 31, 1934 RESOURCES Bismarck, North Dakota U.S. Treasury Notes (Par Value) ..........0000. U. S. Treasury Bonds (Par Value) .............. Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation and Home Genern Loan Gregeenion tones (Par Value) . Cash & Due From Banks State of North Dakota Bonds— Real Estate Series (Par Value) .................. State of North Dakota Bonds—Mill & Elevator Series Certificates of Indebtedness, School, County, State and Municipal Bonds ..... Real. Estate ed to Stat Bills Receivable: Loans to Operating Banks Now Closed. . Loans to Collection Department. Loans to State Institutions... Other Collateral Loans .... oe Homebuilders Contracts ............ Furniture and Fixtures. . Bank Building .......... Real Estate Sold on Contract Other Real Estate ...........- $11,884,000.00 1,201,550.00 ++ _ 696,375.00 & Trust Companies 5,698,285.32 $19,480,210.32 4,301,500.00 411,957.47 —4,718,457.47 3,219,745.32 129,053.68 850.11 1,424,092.70 20,000.00 80,000. 10,098.48 id 26,389.31 36,487.74 Be ee i asyecueieceeel LIABILITIES $ 2,000,000.00 567,240.69 9,610.80 Reserves for Governm ificates of Deposit, Public Funds .......... Certificates of Deposit, Private Funds Cashier’s Checks .... 8,894,102.99 State Institutions .... 2,895,F06.49 — 26,527,045.85 R, M. Stangler

Other pages from this issue: