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Three Games Feature Local Hardwood Court Progran SAINTS AND BRAVES LAUNCH BUSY SLATE | < IN TUESDAY Bi BATTLE, aitinie Swing rit Swing Into Action Here Wednesday Opposing Dickinson Savages DEMONS PLAY BLUEJAYS St. Mary’s Five Will Seek to Re- gain Prestige Lost in Re- cent Encounters Plenty of action is promised C: p= ital City basketball fans this week with three games slated for loca hardwood courts. St. Mary's parochial cag! open the busy week Tuesday i when they tackle the Mandan Braves. ‘The game has been called for 8 p. m, at the World War Memorial build-| ing. The high school quint from across the Missouri have a hardearned vic-/ tory over the Saints to their credit this year and last week established themselves as very definitely not out of the state picture when they hand- ed Minot's defending class A cham- pions a decisive setback. The Saints broke even in two games last weex, trouncing the James- | town Bluejays for the second time this season and later in the week los- | ing to the Mobridge, S. D. quint in a} Tagged exhibition. Tait Dons Phantom Uniform Wednesday night the Phantoms will swing into action here for their first encounter on a local court in three weeks. They will battle the Dickinson Savages at the Memorial building gymnasium. i New members of the Phantom line- | up who will appear before local fans; for the first time this season are Harold Tait, University of North Da- kota athelte, and Bob Olgierson, former Bismarck high school lumin- ary. At the Bismarck high school gym- nasium, Friday, the Jamestown Blue- jays will attempt to regain some of the prestige they have lost during the season. They play the Demons, who last week dropped a game to the Magicians but already have a vic- tory to their credit over the Stutsman county five. Steele High Defeats Training School Five: (Special to the Tribune) Steele, N. D.. Feb, 18.—Steele high! School defeated the Mandan Train-|~ ing school team, 18 to 16, in a bi the inv ade Summary: ies Dornacke! Wigton . oa 200 Totals ....... Mandan (16) bn S&chmidt, f Noung, f - Naviland, ¢ Compos, & ‘Thon, § Burch Brocker Totals ... Bucyrus Quint Beats League Leaders, 9- (Special to the Tribune) Bucyrus, N. b. x the league without a p quarters, the seth turned xames, Haeg and L tes, counted the oniy Bowman five. Summar i Bucyrus PF} Badten, { 0 | Omodt, f 1 3 t) 2 C) 8 0 1 1 0) 2 3 1 8 Totals Referee—Walstad; umpire—Berg Four Quints in Race For High School Title Ky Laffoon Wins — | Phoenix Tourney, Denver Pro 1 Takes First Place Money With Sub-Par 68 t o-point marzin.| yw Four teams are fighting it out for the campus league championship at the Bismarck high school. The Bison Panthers ure deadlocked in the nine wins and two defeats ith eae ‘ee FSwoaumwwrnswt OUR BO. ARDING HOUSE You ASKED WHO IN FoR, DINNER-4MASOR ae WELL, GET THIS, OTIG—<THAT BIG ELK ISNT GRAZING HERE TONIGHT !--LET HIM NOSE INTO A MEAL SOMEPLACE ELSE! STOP SHOOSHING ME DID HE EVER PAY YOU BACK THAT 85 HM-M—TI KNOW A HINT, WHEN 1 HEAR ONE, EGAD! TLL SUST GO GET A SNACK AT CHIL SOES | SH-H—EASY, HILDA I-HES IN THERE, WITH TH ALBUM! Z } ES Z © 1998 ev Nea senvice. we. T.m. nea. uepar.or, 27/8 IPURDUE, INDIANA WILL RENEW Star Field Enters HARD COURT RIVALRY TONIGHT} Indoor Tourney 4 mY ‘Te “and four} iChampionship Hopes of Both) Cunningham Favored to Repeat’ Teams at Stake; Gophers Victory in 1,500 Meter to Meet Wisconsin Race This Saturday New York, Feb. 18—(#)—The board THE STANDINGS track season reaches its climax this W LTP OP ‘ Saturday in the National A. A. U. on Final 36 Holes Purdue .6 1 282 210 | indoor “championships in Madison Wisconsin . 2 230 189 | Square Garden. Phoenix, Ariz., Feb. 18—“P)—Ky| Indiana 5 2 246 212 All told, seventeen Olympians from jLaffoon, bronzed Denver ace, h2d| Ohio State 6 3 306 275 | three countries, ten world’s record- $500 in his pocket Monday because of| Minnesota “5 3 260 249 |holders, eighteen national senior his vietory in the $2,500 Phoenix open| Mltincis .. * 4 3 242 226 | champions, six national junior cham- golf tournament. Towa “4 5 299 299 | Pions, seven I. C. 4-A titleholders, and In rounding off the achicvement| Michigan’... 2 5 170 199 |flve N.C. A. A. champions will com- shot a sub- par 68 for the last 18| Northwestern .... 1 6 170 207 |Pete—the most comprehensive galaxy i him a card of} Chicago © 9 259 246 |0f stars the campaign has seen. After his smashing victory in the Baxter mile of the New York A. C. games. Saturday, Glenn Cunningham's bid for his second successive 1500 meter crown seems to come under the head of a “sure thing” although his rivals, as usual, will include Bill Bon- thron, Gene Venzke and Erik Ny. Cunningham conclusively demon- strated his right to the mile throne when he defeated Venzke by 25 yards and Bonthron by 30 in the Baxter, setting up a new record of 4:09.8 for the event at the same time. It mark- Feb, 18—(P}—The Big ¢ vasketball rivalry, heigh- a question of championship 1 be renewed Monday night drag them back iking distance of | hd oe oe ana, which suf i et ed the fourth time the Great Kansan Ou iXte Wn at in seven games| Pad shaded 4:19 for the eight furlongs AT | an ao than a long-|in his career, a feat not even ap- ct Lu N ! es “ie I Sean proached by his closest rivals. An Indiana vietory would be a fine hip. te hol : ros | thing for Hoosier title hopes, but tt Fourth Place Team ;a ight shove Wisconsin into the ea Should | Indiana upset the Out of Hockey Race Wisconsin could jump — defeating Min-| New York, Feb, 18—(#)—The two fourth-place teams are virtually out of the race for the coveted half-dozen places in the National Hockey League ion to the Hoosier classic ‘Wisconsin battle Michigan meets at Evanston and Ohio es Illinois at Champaign. ys at Ohio State Saturday . While Wisconsin visits Mich- n, Northwestern meets Indiana at Bloomington, and Iowa and Chicago Chicaro. regained first place Satur- tt by beating Ilinois, 35-27. it two straight scoring five field; month in which to re-assert their claims, The Detroit Red Wings are 13 points behind Chicago and Boston, which are tied for second in the American. division and 15 behind the New York Rangers, who climbed to the undisputed lead. The New York Americans lost their jonly game of the week to their keen- est rivals, the Montreal Canadiens, 3 to 1 Sunday night. The Red Wings lost to the Rangers by a 5-3 count in overtime. Boston, suffering an unexpected 3-0] ors, shutout from St. Louis Saturday, re- gained an unexpected second-place ig {tle with Chicago by beating the Blackhawks 2-1 Sunday night. By Williams of to27 v Towa absorbed its a straight con- i to Michigan, 29 “dropped into the second Marquette, 34 to BLUSHY / IF A GIRL. WANTS A Gly, = SUST GCES ASTER iM AN’ G2AgS HIM MUM U8. PAT. OFF, LT ADMIT SHE AINT LIKE THIS— LIKE You, I MEAN— LIKE GIRLS IN YOUR DAY— KINDA GCOLY-EYED AND LISTEN, YOUNG MAN—£ NEVER WAS GOOLy-ByEDI AND IN Oo Aas oR PERIOD, WOULD I EVER GRAB ‘'EM—smMART ALEcK f siren NOWACTCSAYS, /4, Playoffs although they still have a} 5. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1935 ACE CAGES FIRST 10 POINTS FOR VISITORS; | Locals ‘Out-Pass Ma Pass Magic City Quint But Have Tough Luck With Shooting SCORE STOOD 8-4 AT HALF Imps Turn Back Dawson, 24- 20, After Trailing 10-8 at Intermission Tom Mackenroth, Minot high school’s all-around athlete, put on a one man show for the first 15 min- utes of the game here Saturday, sank six of his seven tosses from under the basket and paved the way for the Magicians’ 27 to 18 win over the ‘Demons. The veteran Magic City pivot mace the first eight points for the defend- ing state champions as the Magicians jumped into an 8 to 5 lead in the first quarter. Mackenroth added two field goals and a free throw in the sec- ond quarter before he was taken out ‘by Coach Harley Robertson because of the Cen personals chalked up im. Rallying in the third quarter after trailing 17 to 9 at the half the De- mons drew within five points of the visitors on one occasion but lost ground again in the final stanza when Peterson, substitute forward, made good two free throws and Pepke, all-state guard last year, looped in a basket. Neil Croonquist started the scoring with a field goal in the opening min- utes of the game and kept the De- mons two points out in front for a time with his second bucket after Mackenroth had registered his first to even the count. But from that point it was all Mackenroth until he ‘was taken from the fray. Passing with speed and accuracy the Demons had control of the ball during a big portion of the game mainly because Ollie Sorsdah! con- trolled the tip-off despite Macken- roth’s greater height. Pepke and Monnes, Magician guards, saw to it that the Demons did most of their shooting from outside the free throw line and the locals had extremely tough luck with their shots. Croonquist was high scorer for the Demons with three field goals and two free throws. Sorsdahl was next with three baskets from the floor and one gift shot. Captain Billy Owens, “Peck” Mc- Guiness, Bud Kanz and Buddy Beall, who replaced Kanz in the sec- jond half, were vital factors in the locals’ pass offense but all had diffi- culty hitting the loop. Sorsdahl and Mackenroth were ejected in the last quarter on person- als. The summary: Bismarck (18) ‘Croonquist, f McGuiness, f . a 4 “sl Eercecs al ocoonowoe alwoounony alococonmn : Bismarck— McGuiness 2, Sorsdahl 3. Minot— [Davy 1, Monnes 2, Pepke 1. Referee—Al Strutz, Umpire—Ernest Benser, Bismarck. Clausnitzer and Senses Harold Mellum, Grand Abbott, led a second-half scoring rally that 9 wloornarnd aloocommny am This Week IMACKENROTH LEADS MAGICIANS TO WIN OVER DEMONS, 27-18 By Aver [MINOT ALL ARON) Rain Squalls, Wind Force Further Delay of Campbell’s Speed Trials | Eastern Woman Wins Miami Cup cw | Miss Jean Bauer (right) of Providence, R. 1., Is shown at Miami, Fla. as si OIMOEN SETS NEW” SKI JUMP Ri RECORD Minot Man Soars 194 Feet to Defeat Select Field of 12 Class A Riders received the loving cup symbolic of the Miami Biltmore Women’s golf championship from Miss Maureen Orcutt, J., last year’s champion. Miss Bauer deft to win the title. (Associated Press Photo College Results , (By The Hien Press) Carleton ue 2s. Coe 28. Sheesh pootbbr iene 29; Hamline 28. Crosse Teachers 38; Stout 29. Beni Teachers 25; Duluth Teach- ers 42, Valley City Teachers 26; Dekota State 47, Winona Teachers 36; Moorhead| Bosch, f .. Teachers 33. Augsburg 32; Concordia 44. Sioux Falls College 31; Devils Lake, N. D., Feb. 18.—(?)—/28. Casper Oimoen, former national champion, with two record-smashing leaps off the huge slide of the Lake Region Winter Sports club, captured top honors in the club’s third annual ski tournament staged before 4,000 persons here Sunday. In conquering a select field of 12 Class A riders, Oimoen, who rep- resented the Anaconda, Mont., Ski club, was pushed hard by Sverre Fredheim, Central Association cham- pion of Minnespolis, Fredheim broke his own competitive hill record of 184 feet on his first jump, soaring 193 feet, but Oimoen followed with a 194 foot ride to rebreak the record. Oimoen had a point total of 153.45, with a second jump of 189, ahead of Fredheim, who floated 184 feet on his second to give him 151.25 points. Jimmy Hendrickson, Canton, 8. D. finished third with 146.30 points with Ronald Nangscth, Coleraine, Minn.; George Kotlarek, Duluth, John Oliver, Minneapolis, Ingvar Arenson, Wis- consin Rapids, Peder Falstad, Devils Lake, Rolf Mas:gseth, Coleraine, Clar- ence Knutson, Grand Forks, Gunnar Rebne, Wisconsin Rapids, and Reider Byfuglen, Minot, following in that order. Ted Jensen, Duluth star, placed first in Class B outdistancing seven entrants and compiling 139.2 points with jumps of 175 and 171 feet. Be- Jamestown,| hind Jensen in the order in which | Bi they placed were Ingvald Johnson, Grand Forks; Ed. Vadder, Minot; Forks; Hans and Arne Braathen, Devils Lake, gave the Imps a 24 to 20 victory eet (tied); Albert Mellum, and Walter the Dawson high school five in the preliminary game. The score at the| Henry Holt, Jr., Mellum, both of Grand Forks. youthful Grane bai ‘was 10 to 8 in favor of the visit- _ star, topped the boys’ class, ping off a small slide. He fin- atein, Dawson pivot who carried|ished far in front of Phil Gleson, off high-scoring honors with three|Hamar, and Kenneth pew field goals and a pair of gift shots, Minot, who were second and third, ‘kept the invaders in the running dur- ing the last half but after Abbott had with jumps of 84 and 83 feet. Falstad and Oimoen: paired in & placed the Imps out in front with a! perfect twin Jump, another of the brace of field goals Yeasley and|meet’s high spots. Henry Holt, Sr., Clausnitzer added a like pair and|and Oscar Johnson, Grand Forks, Elofson contributed a basket that| were tournament judges. Paved the way for the win. Clausnitzer with three field goals} NORTH DAKOTA RIDERS and a free throw was high scorer for WIN AT DETROIT LAKES F i 3 | Detroit Lakes, Minn., Feb. 18.—(P)— Yr PF| Before a crowd of nearly 5,000 fans Bluejays Defeat Augustana / Montana State 60; Utah Aggies 56.|!ron Necklace, f his Junior 20; Eveleth Junior pected ae Perverse Nature May Delay Try for New Record Until Sometime in March Daytona Beach, Feb. 18—(7)— Perverse nature had so contrived things Monday that Sir Malcolm Campbell had just about decided it might be March before conditions on Daytona’s sands allow him to shoot for the world’s automobile speed rec- ord with Old Lady Bluebird. Two days of rain squalls, and a wind that persisted in blowing from the land out to sea, messed up the 11% mile stretch by the edge of the water as it hasn’t been messed since the titled Englishman arrived here two weeks ago for the assault on the 272.108 mile mark he set in 1933. “If we don’t get a miracle chance in a few days,” he said, “we'll prob- ably be here until March. I’ve never seen the beach worse.” Strangely enough, though, the knowledge that the beach was 80 ridged and rutty that running the Seven-ton Bluebird was out of the question settled the restlessness that has charged Sir Malcolm during the past few days when he waited anxi- ously for a shift in conditions that would give him a rideable beach. He was as calm as the car itself, slum- bering on the floor of its big garage. “There isn’t anything one can do about it,” he shuddered. “Except sit and wait—and hope.” Linton Lions Trounce Fort Yates, 47 to 20 (Special to the Tribune) Linton, N. D, Feb. 1&8—(P)— Harold Dobler, Lion forward, sank 12 field goals and three gift shots to pace the Linton high school squad to @ 47 to 20 victory over the Fort Yates quint here last Tuesday. T. ‘® | Jamerson, guard, was outstanding for the visitors. Summary: Linton (47) FG FI PF L, Kremer, { 2 0 2 L. Kremer, 2 3 ~=0 E. Blore, c e 2 2 ener & 0 0 1 e. 0 0 0 North Quast, g : o o 1 3 0 «0 Burkhardt, f . o 0 1 21 5 66 o 1 0 2 0 #0 2 2 1 Gates, ¢ . Ltrs Samer, e. oe 1 3 2 3 sie. eee 0 o 0 Total .....06 seccccene 8 4 6 Eagle. esata Umpire—Dog Jamestown Six Emerges With 17 Demon Gridders 3-2 Triumph in Rough Overtime Encounter Receive e Monograms Letter awards wer were presented to 17 members of the Demon football team and two members of the Girls’ In @ rough overtime contest played| Athletic association by Coach R. D. on soft ice Saturday the Demon| McLeod at an assembly program at hockey squad dropped a 3 ee 2 de-| the Bismarck high school Friday aft- cision to the Bluejay six at James-|¢rnoon. town. Dorothy Lighthizer and Marcia Le- Wilson Davis, Demon left wing; Roy were the two girls to receive broke through the Bluejay defense to score twice in the first period and the Demons held that lead until the final period when Vessey and L. Johnson tallied for the Jamestown six and sent the ‘game into the over- time period. by the rough wet ice, Handicapped both squads had difficulty getting their attacks functioning and the ay ‘was exceedingly rough through- out. The lineups: ismarck Norwegian Blade Star Captures World Title Oslo, Norway, Feb. 18.—(?)—The new world’s speed skating champion is 28-year old Michael Steksrud of the awards for last semester. Winners of the football mono- grams were Bud Kanz, Ollie Sors- dahl, George Shafer, Dick Shafer, Jack Harris, Junior Neff, John Cameron, Wilson Davis, Bud Beall, Elfred Elofson, Evan Lips, Bud Wenaas, Vincer.t Wilson, Lawrerce Woodland, Paul Whittey, Arlan Schultz_and Vernon Hedstrom. Complete Line of MEN’S - BOYS’ 2] Oliver Kaldahl, star of the Detroit 1] Lakes Ski club Sunday captured and 205 Se hl os Full po = ALL $1.50) FOR cue coum 14 Qe lecacuene al wounodd wleecnered aleonue Outfield Continues To Worry M’Carthy Coleraine, wr Paul, captured first in The Sumas include: ‘Kasre Rosenberg, Fargo, lyn Andrews, ville, N. D., 111-110—126.2, fourth, Hans Rosenberg, MAN-0-MAN — WHAT A BUY. Get your year’s supply of shaving necessities while this SPECIAL OFFER lasts, Fitch wants every man to know the finest shaving cream that money can make. Fitch’s is made with lubricates, protects and keeps smooth and soft. 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