The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 9, 1935, Page 6

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THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1935 ’ SEER | Si’s Chicken Pickers Defeat Phantoms in Two Overtime Periods 2108 TUESDAY Harold Massmann’s Brilliant Performance Evens Score Twice in Last Periods DON BONDY LEADS VISITORS Two Teams Meet in Second Game at State Training School Gym Tonight ee Your hundred local basketball fans shouted and stamped their approval ‘Tuesday night as the Phantoms bat- Si’s Chicken Pickers of Staples, ‘Minn., through two overtime periods & thrilling hard court encounter the visitors finally won, 32 to ‘Ted Meinhover without looking the basket tossed the ball over his for the first counter in the open- seconds of play and added an- basket in the next half minute give the Phantoms a four-point before the invaders got their on the ball. But with Don EH 1 \ | , former University of Minne- | star, leading the attack the Go- j quint rallied to trail 8 to 7 at | of the first quarter. | Driving in hard for close-up shots Te s the visitors went into the lead in the fecond period, the score at the inter- mission being 16 to 13, a three-point dvantage which the Pickers’ held | through the third quarter. } Massmann Ties Score | Harold Massmann and Don Arthur aged field goals in the fourth period to bring the locals ‘within one point of their opponets and ‘with only four min- utes to play Mass- C4 mann connected with @ free throw to tie ‘brilliant Phantom guard added a field with a minute left to play but hooked one in from under the it before the game ended and it went into the first over- D i i arching shot from the middle floor by Dodo Satovich, clever guard, gave the visitors an but Massmann came into the again sinking a high-arching that swished through the basket it touching the hoop just before first five-minute overtime period > zy iz F tit the second overtime period, Sato- Atkinson and Kelleher connect- for field goals and Atkinson added | field goal to give the visitors their seven-point lead at the end of the | game. ogee Locals Off Form The local cagers were sadly off small percentage of their shots at the | Louis Will Be Ready for Baer in March || Hig RISES FROM Be PRELIMINARY PERFORMER TO GRATIFYING T Bramham Reports That 19 ‘Bush’ Circuits Completed Schedules in 1934 BY W. G. BRAMHAM, PRESIDENT (National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues) Durham, N. C., Jan. 9.—()}—Turn- ing into 1935, the minor leagues of baseball find themselves in a more Strategic position for their program of expansion than they have visioned in several years. There are several factors contributing to this gratify- ing situation. Ever since 1932, the crisis year for the minors, when the close of the schedules found only 13 leagues in operation, the National Association has bent its efforts toward rehabil- itation and expansion. There was some encouragement in 1933, when 14 circuits began the sea- Cities YY EXPANSION OF MINOR LEAGUES O GROUP LEADER and Al Sculley. Eddie Stundl, the ;other member of the group, was ex- pected Wednesday. Boston Defeats Maple Leafs, 3-1 ;Sale of Montreal Canadiens Looms to Overshadow Up- sets in Hockey League New York, Jan. 9.—(#)—The prom- ise that Leo Dandurand would have some definite word concerning the jSale of the Montreal Canadiens Wed- ‘nesday overshadowed the walloping handed out by Boston to the mighty Toronto Maple Leafs and the upset jot Chicago’s Blackhawks by the De- jtroit Red Wings. basket and the same fandicap held|S0n and all finished, Last year 19| Toronto, the league’s high scoring them at the free throw line where they missed 10 out of 15 tries. i Massmann’s brilliant performance “} | im twice pulling the game out of the toms’ play. ‘ Massmann, Meinhover and Arthur tied for high-scoring honors on the Phantom team each caging three field goals and a free throw. Kelleher, center, and Bondy, guard, were high-; point men for the visitors, Tonight the two teams will meet 4n a second game at the state training school gymnasium at Mandan. The game has been called for 8:15 p. m, Mandan time. FG FT PF Suecenel wees neenntelemens bd meonvontsl weann 1 Phantoms— Arthur, 3; Spriggs, 3; Meinhover, 2; 1; Massmann, 1. Referee—Brown. Umpire—Morlan. K. C.’s Defeat Highway With Sebastian Goetz leading the the Knights of Columbus } of the city league defeated the | Mighway quint, 30 to 20, in the pre- ; ‘ game. ‘The diminutive K. C. forward drop- dm seven field goals in the first to put the winners safely out it was held to a single free after the intermission. Behlosser was the big offensive i leagues completed their schedules. 1 am happy to say our “key” leagues have their foundations strengthened to such an extent that more time fare was the high spot of the Phan-|may be devoted to organization work, which means expansion and open- ing of new territory. One of the chief factors in the stabilization of our circuits has been legislation in opposition to the so- called “shoestring operator,” a men- ace to the game, whose activities had more to do with disruption in some territories than the economic de- pression. He started out with noth- ing and wound up with a trail of liens and obligations in his path. Speed Skaters Set For Olympic Trials Minneapolis, Jan. 9. — (#) — The country's outstanding speed skaters settled down to serious training here Wednesday preyaratory for the open- ing Saturday of trials to determine the United States entries in the 1936 Olympic skating everts at Berlin, Germany. No less than 30 skaters will compete in the trials set for Jan. 12, 13, 19 and 20. The events will be the 500, 1,500, 5,000 and 10,000 metre distances. Chicago will be represented by seven skaters, six of whom already re in Minneapolis. They include Ed- die Schroeder, Cornelius Ewerts, Wil- bur Marks, Tony Nebers, Al Kucera | OUT OUR WAY jteam, never was in the game against Boston and went down 3-1 as the Bruins started scoring in the second minute of play. The result tied the American divi- sion standing up in a tight knot with Chicago’s Blackhawks only a point jahead of the Bruins after taking a 2-1 setback from Detroit. The Red Wings trailed Boston by just two points. The New York Rangers, who strug- igled to a slow 1-1 deadlock with the Montreal Maroons in a game played on soft ice, dropped seven points be- hind Detroit. mm YOU'RE i TELLING ME Burgess Whitehead, St. Louis Card- jinals’ infielder, is said to have the llargest pair of hands in the majors 1... Charlotte of the Piedmont League will be a Boston Red Sox farm next season . . . Steve Hamas won't sail for that bout with Max Schmeling in Germany until the $25,- {000 guarantee is right on the liné in |some American bank . . . Frenchy |Bordagary, new Dodger outfielder, is the guy who went to sleep on the Sacramento bench last year during a night game. . . Rogers Hornsby says that Johnny Burnett, the infield- er he got in the Bruce Campbell deal swith Cleveland, is due to set the Pittsburgh, Jan. 9.—(?)—Joe Louis, the Detroit Negro who keeps on winning one fight after another, says he'll be ready for Champion Max Baer “about March.” The sensational 20-year-old heavyweight is in Pittsburgh for ® 10-rounder Thursday night against Hans Birkie, the German, and says he believes that one will be “pretty easy.” league on fire next year . . . The Rajah insists the Indians never treat- ed Johnny right . . . Major league officials have frowned on stars barn- storming after the regular season... due to that injury Jimmy Foxx sus- tained in Canada last fall . . . but they ought to do something about Billy Rogell, the Tiger infielder, who's Playing hockey, the most dangerous game in sports, to keep in condition this winter. . . The outstanding sports performance we can imagine for 1935 would be to put Dizzy Dean and Huey Long in the same ring. 'Detroit Negro Beats Billy Norton at Fargo Fargo, N. D., Jan. 9.—(#)—Freddie Atkinson, Detroit Negro, won from Billy Norton of Fargo in the six round feature bout of a boxing card here Tuesday night. Both scaled 145. In the four round semi-windup, Stout Petrie of Park Rapids, Minn., jdefeated Billy Russell of Moorhead. | They are middleweights. Andy Moen of Fergus Falls, Minn. won from Frank Topas of Minneapolis in a one- fall wrestling match in 23 minutes 29 seconds, (By The Associated Press) Duluth—Jock Moore, 147, Proc- tor, Minn., outpointed Max Kal- brenner, 146, Fargo, (6); Wen Lambert, 142, Proctor, and Red Martin, 138, Minneapolis, drew (4); Marty Teller, 140%, Hibbing, outpointed Johnny Gould, 141, | Minneapolis, (6); Jim Hannigan, 147, Proctor, outpointed Joe Preberg, | 145, Eveleth, (3); Bill Cody, 130, Proctor, and Punchy Finelli, 134, | Hibbing, drew, (3); Joe Michaud, 124, Duluth knocked out Joe Walsh, 128, Duluth. Fargo, N. D.—Freddie Atkinson, 145, Detroit, outpointed Billy Nor- ton, 145, Fargo, (6). Vancouver, B. C.—Gordon Wal- lace, 147, Vancouver, knocked ou Ron Headley, 146, Ottawa, (8). By Williams CHILOREN First! ! ighway, Schlitz, Capitol Cafe Win Bowling Contests’ Newly-Organized Commercial League Begins Play Wed- nesday Evening SQ ‘The Capitol Cafe bowling team in TH' NIGHT the city league . defeated F lar by Professionals, Now ond of a series of three general stories and 18 diagrammed bas- ketball plays by Nat Holman, famous coach of the College of the City of New York. I can’t recall the number of times ji have been asked to distinguish be- tween eastern and western basketball. I can remember, though, that my 507 440 555 536 western style of play improved with 513 | each season. Quite a few years ago, when I made my first professional basketball trip through the west, I had the oppor- tunity of witnessing several leading college teams in action. The exhibi- tions were disappointing. Western style of play suffered badly by com- Parison with the eastern game. I have a vivid recollection of those games in Indiana and Illinois. The long shot was the favorite offensive weapon, passes were long and erratic, and one-handed tosses from any part of the court were numerous, Teams depended upon hard, bone-crushing 1! attack to carry them under the bas- peak Deception was not their long sul 830 2551 137 451 469 391 545 401 HOW COME YA DIDNIT INVITE US? WITH EAST GAME SAYS COACH Short-Pass Attack, Made a tennis’ amateur ranks to full Rules in Colleges | Editor's note: This is the sec- | reply varied each year, just as the, nD OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | SO YA GOT FOUR Tickets | EGAD! THE WAY FER THE FIGHT TONIGHT, HUH? AN! YER TAKIN! SOME OFFICERS OF THE OWLS CLUB! WATCH OUT THAT SOME OFFICERS DON'T TAKE YOU, BEFORE sure! you'D HAVE: YOU LADS HAVE / GIVEN ALL OF ‘EM RIDICULED THE } TO US ANDSTAYED) YB PLACES 1 Go! |HOME YOURSELF. (NOW, TF THE TICKETS) YOU LIKE OPERA WERE FoR THE =| JUST AS Muc OPERA THAT A AS WE DOL WOULD BE <: j SOMETHING ELSE AGAIN. \S OVER. Shane ws Keoee SS XO oY national doubles champions make their pro debuts before an expected crowd of 16.500 in Madison Square Garden, The erst-while simon-pures will receive their professional baptism in contests with “Big Bill” Tilden, and Ellsworth Vines, world pro singles champion. fledged professionals will be com- pleted Wednesday night when the i \ t |) LUDENIZE* her throat ! Put a Luden's into her tiny, pink mouth. Let its cool, refreshing smoothness soothe away the irritation. Let it lay a soft, protective coating on those dry, raw spots. And then she'll sleep... with a dream of a new favor- ite candy, and not a sign of a cough. ‘npupmear’— tue complete throat medicating process which covers the mément you place a Luden's Menthol Cough Drop in your mouth ++-¢leven medicinal ingredients melting into @ soothing lotion which In th during this period, quickly moisteas the throat, stops irritation i i FA time was spent i saving and adapt ” ‘di a a ci in ie style em} ret = ftsonl teams articulaiy" that of LUDEN’ Menthol ss soit er \e peal Ss Cough Drops 5 “ As a result, the efficient, See 441 |22me_ was incorporated into eastern college basketball at an earlier date. TS ae a febeny pone eee 790 23601 and firmly grounded in the game's eine one fundamentals, i i i Menoken Basketball iat ad forts mai No Office Can Afford To Be Without This Quint Wins, Loses Sey of the. ball by reason of $. nul Gi teen) eenreauee rata! DOUDIe-Duty Inexpensive Menoken, N. D., Jan, 9—Menoken’s | strides since then. I well could real-|ji. Independent basketball team won and |ize that after seeing the Notre Dame | lost games the past week defeating |team in action in the last two sea- the Bismarck Comets, 24 to 15, and|sons, Its style was as fundamentally |} losing to the Transients from the Cap-|sound as any I have ever seen, and ital City, 16 to 39. completely dispersed any opinions Summaries: that I might have had on the super- Comets (15) FG FT PF liority of the eastern game. | y Here is a stapling McDonald, f .. ++ 5 0 21 George Keogan, coach of the Irish device, made from the Finlayson, f . 2 1 3) squad, on a recent trip east to meet id ; Jones, : 2 : New York U., gave us bs opinion of suet of materials, ma , Ove bore are: Rewes individually,” patos a Fs an a “Out in our section the players are | and documents “tem- a mE ee aie ber handle the ball better, porarily” or “perma. 1 SL eae ee os ee tm ox ggg. er $ 9 1 ee ee wee eee aie i Model RB. 2 Aid desire, without Style Is Secondary mage. te 10 0) 8 ate alee ae eetote Suex | Just the thing for school | AND MARKWELL STAP- Pe, tion of ability and less upon con- til teachers, bookkeepers,| LING MACHINES ARE 2. 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