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T. HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1985 _ " SOUTHPAW WELTER FRACTURES HAND IN | OUR BOARDING HoUSE BRUISING HEADLINER} Duluthian Opens Old Cut Over Dick’s Right Eye to Take Closing Rounds LAMBERT KAYOES RITCHIE; Ernie Potter Wins Fort Lincoln| Heavyweight Title; Cody Outpoints Engle DECISIONS Dick Demaray of Bismarck drew with Jock Moore of Duluth, 8 rounds. Wes Lambert of Duluth knock- ed out “Tuffy” Ritchie of Steele, 2 round: Billy Cody of Duluth outpoint- ed Mel Engle of Bismarck, 4 rounds. Ernie Potter of Fort Lincoln knocked out Otto Pictrowski of Fort Lincoln, 2 rounds. Pete Castanke of Wilton scored technical knockout over Bat Carls of Linton, 2 rounds. Joo Masseth cf Bismarck knocked out Kid Goetz of Hazen, 2 rounds. Jack Zahorodny of Wilton out- pointed John Heclodnick of wil- ton, 4 rounds. Fight followers were treated to one} ‘of the greatest Roman holidays in lo- cal ring history Taursday night with four of the seven bouts on the third promotional venture of the Bismarck | Boxing club ending in knockouis. Winning by knockouts were Wes Lambert of Duluth, Ernie Potter of | Fort Lincoln. Pete Castanke of Wil-| ton and Joe Masseth of Bismarck. All) four of the bouts ended in the sec-| ond round. | The estimated 900 persons that) witnessed the fights went away with! plenty of respect for Jack O'Bricn| and his stable of Duluth fighters. Showing the results of splendid con-/ ditioning and expert tutelage, the! three Minnesota boys emerged from the ring with a knockout, a decision and a draw to their credit ' Jock Moore. O'Brien's clever wel-; terweight, and the local southpaw) dynamiter, Dick Demaray, battled/ through eight fast rounds to a draw in the headline bout. For the first time this winter, Sir Richard met his! equal in the squared circle here and the tide of battle that swung from one to the other produced more ac- tual fighting than has been secn here for some time. Moore Outboxes Demaray Moore, with his superior ring gen-) eralship, took the second round by a shade after the first had been called even but in the third Demaray open- ed up with a devastating body attack that gave him an edge in that stanza.) Moore continued to stave Dick off} with a punishing left hand in the} third round but the local scrapper scored with hard lefts to the body during the infighting and the round was called even. ! In the fifth Moore slipped and dropped his guard just a fraction but} it gave Demaray just time to crash| over his left hand to the head. Moore | was dazed and Dick carried that) round by a good margin, The Bismarck sctapper continued| the same tactics in the sixth but late in the round connected with a hard right to Moore's body and fractured his hand. Demaray put up a game fight in the last two rounds but Moore opened up an old cut over! Dick's right eve and carried the seventh. The Duluthian also had a narrow margin in the eighth and the two judges, John Degg of Bismarck and Joe Wicks of Solen, called the} bout a draw. Dr. R. W. Henderson, local physi- cian who set Demaray’s hand, said that the welterweicht would be out of boxing for at least the next six weeks. Lambert weded in from the open- ing gong in the semi-windup and smashed “Tuffy” Ritchie, Steele serapper, with hard lefts and rights that brought a knockdown late in the second round from which the Steele boy never got up. Lambert appeared in great physical condition and pack- ed devastating punches in both hands. Cody Decisions Engle Billy Cody matched Mel Engle’s sharpshooting tactics, blow for blow, and added some hard left and right hand punches to win by a wide mar- gin from the local featherweight. Engle took the first round by a shade but the Duluthian won all of the re- maining three rounds in handy fash- fon and had Engle bleeding from the nose before the fight ended. Ernie Potter, veteran Fort Lincoln heavyweight, upheld his right to the championship of Fort Lincoln with a second round knockout over Otto Pietrowski. Potter cornered Pietrow- ski at the ropes midway in the sec- ond round and unleashed a right and @ left that did the business Mm short order. The first round had been even. Bat Carls of Linton dished out plenty of heavy punishment in the first round of his bout with Pete Cas- tanke of Wilton but Castanke took everything Carls had and came back in the second to win on a technical | declared a draw. Goetz had himself to blame as he walked right into the that Masseth started from his 5 Jack Zahorodny outpointed John Molodnick in the curtain raiser with both boys slugging freely from the Zahorodny took two E 3 Demaray Gets Draw in Punishing Eight Round Battle With Moore CHAMPION CARDS, TIGERS ESCAPE USUAL HOLDOUT TROUBLES T SPENT ALL LOOKING FOR MINE — MY T AND WHISTLIN GET FOR MY Vow Y Oo ass BY NEA SERVIC nC. FUFF-UMP-SPUT-T-.SPUT-T— DOG !-—NO FEET IN THE RETREAT FROM MOSCOW WERE SORER THAN FOR LARYNGITIS, FROM CALLING "REWARD (S HKSACKED FROM ME, DAY YESTERDAY THAT LOST POLICE HWROAT IS READY IO--AND_WHAT DO 1 PAINS P=HALF THE BY YOU !-YES,THAT BROOM |!S AS FORMIDABLE By Ahern | ce #40~45~50! TM ENTITLED TO HALFI-IT WAS MY COOKING THAT GAVE YOU THE STRENGTH AND ENDURANCE 10 SAINTS SEEK Knights of Columbus, Highway Quints Play Preliminary at Memorial Building St. Mary's high school basketeers Will seek their third consecutive vic- tory tonight when they encounter the Mobridge, S. D., high school cagers in a game here. After suffering four straight sot- backs, the Saints set out on the come- back trail two weeks ago. avenged one of the defeats by conquering St. Leo's of Minot and then turned in their second triumph over the Jamestown Bluejays. Promises of a tough battle emanate | from Mobridge where the high school five are being hailed as the coming dis- ! trict. and regional champions by vir tue of an undefeated record in Cen- tral South Dakota League play. Coach Ten Meinhover will have his; starting lineup intact for the game with Tommy Lee and Bob Murphy at guards, Bii] Croake at center and Frank Geiermann and Urban Hagen at forwards. A preliminary game between the Knights of Columbus and the High-| way quints of the city basketball league is schedvled to get under way | at 7p. m., at the World War Memor- | ial building. The main event is called for 8 p. m. Saturday night the Demons engage the defending high school Class A champions fron: Minot. Football Rules Group Opens Annual Session; New York. Feb. 15.—(?)—The a nual overhauling of the football ruies begins Friday at the Seaview Country club in Absecon, N. J. For the next} three days, the national football rules committee will study the playing code and changes cuggesied in it. On/ Monday the committee though its! veteran secretary, W. S. Langford, ; will make public what changes, if any, | have been decided on. A + Nit, ° Fights Last Night | al ee rae (By the Associated Press) Cleveland — Paul Pirrone, 159, Cleveland, knocked out Eddie Shapiro, 157, New York, (2). Dallas — Dwight Dodge. 190, Minneapolis, outpointed Jack Van Noy, 195, Ponca City, (10). | ¢ H grace of free throws. Summary: Wing Independent; (35) = «FG FT PF! Jacobson, f....-see 0 0 Ol Leonard Kremenetsky,f. 5 1 2 Hall, c .. yy ioe | Kremenetsky, 0 0 Mueller, g . i550 Olson. g . S 4. 3 Kusler, £ | WOUIB: sn cecseseses els) ny | Hurdsfield Independen: FG Fr PF Doer, f La 1 2) Mariner. 5 2 9} Livingstone, 1 She Miller, g .. 1 0 al Hornbacher. g Di Al 0 Lester, ¢ ... 0 0 3! eth 4 10 Umpire: Lein. {Manager Roger Hornsby of the St. | which the veteran Connie Mack calls | threat,” said the Rajah as he took up ING THIRD STRAIGHT Goalies Have Big _ WIN IN MOBRIDGE TILT TO ONIGHT Wing Cagers Score 35 to 26 Triumph (Special to The Tribune) Wing. N. D., Fob. 15.—Wing Inde- Pendents defeated the fast Hurds- field quint, 35 to 26, in a torrid bas- Uncorking a speedy offensive in the closing minutes of the game, the Wing team, with Hall and Leonard Kremenetsky setting the pace, piled up a safe margin for the win. Hall was high-point man with five field goals and three gift shots. Mariner was the outstanding per- former for the Hurdsfield five with five baskets from the floor and a Hornsby Thinks A’s May Be ‘Dark Horse’ Hot Springs, Ark. Feb. 15.—(%— Louis Browns believes the young squad of hustling baseball players his Athletics may be the “dark horse" of the American League pennant race. “If Connie Mack gets the pitching and if Jimmy Fox comes through as a catcher, the Athletics will be a real his duties as chief instructor of the Doan Baseball School opening Fri- day. The ukulele was reproduced by the Hawaiians from the guitar introduced by Portuguese traders. | OUT OUR WAY Heague triumphs, each by a sivuteut. Night in League} Rangers, Blackhawks and Can.| adiens Win Shutout Vic- tories Over Rivals New York, Feb. 15.—(4)—Every oal-tender may have his day, but it’s an unusual coincidence when three of these well-padded heroes of ice hockey pick the same night for their most sensational exploits. That happened Thursday night. The New York Rangers, Chicago Blackhawks and Monireal Canadiens rolled cn to now national hockey Young Wilf Cude of the Canadiens, Dave Kerr of the Rangers and Lorne Chabot of the Blackhawks were the goalies who repelled all rival thrusis. The Rangers whipped the Toronto! Maple Leafs, 3-0. to remain in a tie with Chicago for first. place in the American section. Chicago, mean- ie, trounced Detroit by the same Score while the Canadiens, third in} the international section, turned back | |their Montreal rivals, the Maroons,|Sauter 2-0, Colora lo Wrestler Pins Lou Plummer Minneapolis, Feb. 15.—()—Everett Marshall, the blonde wrestler from Lajuanta, Col.. won from Lou Plum- mer of Baltimore, Md.. here Thursday night when Referee Stanley Myslajek disqualified the mauling Plummer. Buckets Goldenberg. the burly Milwau- kee heavyweight, was given quite a tussle by Andy Moen for ten minutes, but the Fergus Falls Norwegian be- came another victim of Goldenberg’s famous flying tackle and was pinned 34 seconds later. Campbell, Bluebird Set for Second Trial Daytona Beach, Fla., Feb. 15.—(?)— Both Sir Malcolm Campbell and his mighty Bluebird were ready for an- other test run up and down the sands Friday, and it was just a qpestion of whether the beach would work into shape. The British sportsman — holder of the present world record for land speed at 272.108 miles an hour— gave his powerful car its initial tryout Thursday. It made two false starts nd then sped down the beach at something under 200 miles an hour. By Williams COULDN'T YOU TELL THERE MUST BE SOME REASON FOR THE DOOR BEING BARRICADED WITH “TABLES AND CHAIRS? COULDNT You TELL THAT WAS FRESH VARNISH, WITHOUT WALKING A MILE THRU IT? ie MEDWICK, MALONE ONLY DISSATISFIED ST. LOUIS PLAYERS | Dizzy Dean, Breadon’s Major Head-Ache, Safely in Fold; Paul to Follow ROWE ASKS PAY BOOST lron-Man Lou Wants Salary Ante of Around $7,000 Be- fore He Will Sign New York, Feb. 15.—(®)—The 8t. Louis Cardinals and Detroit Tigers are making a shambles of the baseball legend that says pennant-winning clubs automatically contract salary troubles the following year. The Cardinals, it is true, may have some little difticulty getting either Joe (Ducky-Wucky) Medwick or Pat Malone to sign but their major head- ache, Jerome H. (Dizzy) Dean is safe- ly in the fold. Paul Dean hasn't signed, officiaily, but if he has any differences with the Cardinal front- office they don’t scem to be of major calibre. As for the Tigers, beaten by the Cards in the world series, they seem to have not even one full-fledged roldout. Rowe to Talk it Over Schoolboy Rowe has indicated his contract is not precisely what he ex- pected but hastened to add that he expected to adjust his differences without much trouble. If the Cardinals and Tigers have escaped fairly well {rom contract \trouble, some of the other major league outfits nave not becn so lucky. Lou Gehrig, no longer overshadowed by the bulky figure of the inimitable Babe Ruth, has indicated he will not sign at the figures the Yankees have offered. Baseball sharps guess the Yanks will have to lif', the ante from $23,000 to around $30.00) before Iron-Man Lou will affix his signature to a con- tract. Denhoff Girls Defeat Harvey Cagers, 49-29 (Special to the Tribune) Denhoff, N. D.. Feb. 15.—Scoring their second win this season over the Harvey girls, the Denhoff high school cagers rang up 49 points to their op- ponents’ 29 ‘na basketball game played here. It was the second de- feat for the Harvey five this season. In a preliminary game the Denhoff grade team defeated the Martin five, Summary: (29) 19 to 15. Harvey 4 er Gutschmids, Reimer Farstad Olson Wells Q bc] | wooncood! wnco Cenhoff (49) Kahler Rittenbach Nelson eocoune Kahler Rittenbach eccceurd|! coonco Referce—L. C. Oeder, Goodrich. Killdeer Girls’ Team Adds Two More Wins (Special to the Tribune) Killdeer, N. D., Feb. 15.—Killdeer high school girl's basketball team chalked up two more wins last week defeating the State Training School quint at Mandan, 18 to 9, and downing the Indian school cagers, 19 to 16 at Bismarck. David was the outstanding performer for the Killdeer quint in both games. The triumphs were the sixth and seventh for the Killdeer girls basketball team this season and nly one setback has been marked up against them in the last three years. GOALIE STARS St. Paul, Feb. 15.—(?)—The goal minding of Ceryance featured a cen- tral league hockey game here Thurs- day night in which St. Paul defeated Eveleth, 4 to 2. The Ranger goalie had 39 stops, nearly half of which were made on shots from only a few feet NOTICE TO CREDITORS, ‘HE ESTATE OF Victorii 1 known as Mrs, Sam Kk. Porter, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- , George E. Klein, as the administrator of the estate of Vic- toria Porter, also known as Mrs, Sam K. Porter, late of the township of Menoken, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased, tu the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six nthe first publication of IN THE M months a/ | this notice, to said administrator at his residence in St. Anthony, Morton County, North Dakota, or to _ the Judge of the County Court of Bur- iclgh County, North Dakota, at his in the’ Burleigh county, North Court House in the city of in Burleigh County, North ou are hereby further notified that Hon, 1. C, Davies, Judge of the County Court within and for the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, has fixed the 27th day of August, A. D. 1935. at the hour of two o'clock in the Court, in the said Burleigh County, North Dakota C« House in the ci of Bismarck in North Dakota, at for hearing and adjusting all claims the estate of the said de- which have been duly and rly presented as hereinbefore regu vided. abated ‘this 30th day of January, A. George E. Klein, as the administrator of the en- f Victoria Porter, Sam office tate of also known as Mrs, Porter, decei Geo. M. Ri ir, Att'y. said administrator, Bismarck, N. + First publication on the first day of Fi 93. A. D, WOOLWORTH, 0. DEADLOCKED n CTE FLEA CLIFTON WAS TIGER ALL OF 1934— BUT HE STILL Is A ROOKIE! By NEA Service Herman “The Flea” Clifton is a regular on the staff of the Detroit Ti- gers—yct he's a rookie. This paradox arises from the fact that the kid in- fielder was carried along by Mickey Cochrane all last year as a utility Player, and didn’t get into action enough to have his name listed in H. WILL TEAMS IN CITY LEAGUE Frank Hummel Holds Fir Place Among Bowlers With Average of 178 Pins The Woolworth and O. H. Will ‘Seedstore trundlers in the City bowl- ing league were deadlocked in first place at the end of the first round games Wednesday, according to aver- ages released by Abe Abrahamson, manager of the local alleys. Frank Hummel, Seedstore: bowler, with @ 24-game average of 178 was high individual performer in the league closely followed by Huss of the Highway team with 177 and Nord- lund of. the Five and Dime aggrega- tion with 177, Team Standings the official averages. Therefore, he is a rookie in experience. Clifton came up from Beaumont in 1934 with the reputation of having one of the greatest throwing arms in the minors. But his hitting was a bit weak and Cochrane, finding himself with a winning infield combination of Greenberg at first, Gehringer at second, Rogell at short, and Owen at third played the quartet right through the year without substitution. ‘The Flea originally was a shortstop, but before coming to Detroit played second and third for Beaumont. His throw from third was what caught the eve of Detroit scouts. Twenty-two years old. the young- ster is 5 feet 10 inches tall, and weighs 160. He comes from Cincinnati, and went to the University of Cincinnati for a year before he quit to tdke up pro baseball. World diplomats pricked up their ears when Viacheslay Mol- otov, Soviet premier, opening the seventh all-union congress of tHe Soviet republics in Mos- cow, bluntly charged Germany Russia’s rela tions with Germany are “ab- vormalls bad,” the premier de: clared. A lunation is the term applied to| it complete revclution of the moon, “Soviet Scents German ‘Grab’ “Speaking of rackets, O'Malley, that cough is one of the worst. Why don't you LUDENIZE* your throat?” K"LUDENIZE”—the complete threat medisating process which cours the moment you place a Luden's Menthol Cough Drop in your mouth «+ -@loven medicinal ingredients melting inte « seothing lotion which quickly moistens the threat, stops imitation and relieves coughing. _ LUDEN'’S MENTHOL COUGH DROPS 5¢ ul COYOTES WIN Brookings, 8. D., Feb. 15.—(?)— South Dakota university defeated South Dakota State Jackrabbits, 39 to 36, Thursday night and moved in- to third place in the north central basketball conference. ————__ SIOUX FALLS ANNEXES Sioux Falls, 8. D., Feb. 15.—(?)— a Regulatory Five, 1-100 Taxi Team Win League Tilts | Sewing Machine Trundlers Lose Two Out of Three Regulatory Department trundlers defeated the Old Style Lager team and the 1-100 Taxi bowlers downed the Singer Sewing Machine five, two out of three, in Commercial league games bowled Thursday night. Anderson coilected a total of 478 pins in three games to lead the Regu- latory bowlers to wins in the second and third games after the Brewers had taken the first game, 718 to 677. Owens with a 485 total was high for the losers. With Martin, Douglas and Koehler Team a [a Fk | blasted the mayles for counts of 445, 0. H. Will Co. ‘625 | 434 and 424 as the Taximen annexed ‘Town Talk Caf 1583 the first two games in easy fashion Highway 1. ‘500 | but lost the final to the Sewing Ma- Schlitz .... ‘458 | Chine aggregation. Moser slammed Capitol Cafe 1417 | Out @ 466 three-game total to set the Highway 2 .... 10 14 .417/| Pace for the losers. N. W. Construction seated Company ........ 15.375 | 1-100 Taxi earn . - 121 188 136 445 Records Koehler e+e 147 140 137 426 High Three Games—Team, O, H. Douglas 156 151 127 434 Will Co. 2817 | Rosson . - 145 135 133 413 High Sing! Shaw - 164 176 —- 340 | Will Co. .......65005 sees 995 | Cracker High Three Games—One Man, Handicap ames Geo. Smith ........... sesseee 622 —_—__ High Single Game—One Man, Totals......... 733 «790 655 217! Geo. Smith ........ +. 235 # ag Sewing Machine Co, i . B. Litt. + 155 108 155 418 Player Stoelting . + 126 108 142 376 F. Hummel . Joe Litt. ~ 110 93 130 333 Huss .... Amory . +121 107 97 325 Nordlund ... Moser .. + 160 149 151 460 Davis ....... Handicap - & 8 — 16 M. Hummel .. 24 (15 — —— —_ Patera .... 18 172 Totals. . 5 5 Patera . sees 18 (172 te i aca D. Schneider . 24 172 Regulatory Dey iment T. Schneider, Sr. . 24 = 170) Anderson . 10 17 161 473 Abrahamson .. 22 | Peterson . 138 108 130 376 T. Schneider, Jr. 24 Jenkins 129 152 98 379 Schubert. 24 95 106 123 324 Klein 16 | 96 135 113 344 Frolund Py 72 «79 «79 «237 Brown . 24 eee 677 757 704 2138 Cervinski 4 Old Style Lager G. Smith 24 Owens 194 151 140 485 Schlauch 6 Mills 95 127 114 336 Baldwin 4 —-- = Person . 21 149 189 4338 Goetz, 24 102 123 326 Roehrick 24 134 130 457 Boehi 6 Wika eee ea Zohn 24 . 118 663 696 2077 ing at SEE aera 8. Smith 15 College Subsidies Are Incurable, Says Iowan Washington, Feb. 15.—(4)—Sub- sidies for college athletes are an in- curable evil in the opinion of Rep. Hubert Utterbach of Iowa, former commissioner of athletics for the Iowa Intercollegiate Athletics Association. “I abhor it,” he says, “but no meth- od has been devised to banish sub- sidizing.” “We have a statute against larceny, but we haven't stopped it. So, with subsidization,” asserts this former law professor at Drake University, who served on his school’s faculty ath- letic commitice. SMOOTH SHAVING BLADE NOW! PROBAK JUNIOR DON’T LET WINTER INTERFERE WITH YOUR Exercise -or- Recreation FOR HEALTH’S SAKE : at Bismarck Recreational Alleys Under American Billiards on