The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 21, 1935, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935 Rangy Phantoms Tu ~ INDEPENDENTS USE RAM AR manne a om 3 8inon aZ2298 SUPERIOR HEIGHT TO DOWN SAVAGES Big Ted Meinhover Finds Hoop for Ten Field Goals in Wednesday Encounter STUMPF PACES VISITORS Mandan Bears Win Nip-and- | Tuck Preliminary Game From Teachers’ Reserves Bismarck’s rangy Phantoms, head- ed for a state independent basketball title. casily defeated the smaller Dickinson State Teachers college team. 48 to 26. in a game played here Wednesday night. Using their superior height with deadly effectiveness under the basket and alternating with lone-range shots that frequently found the hoop tne local independents ran up a_one- sided score against Coach Harry Weinbergen’s Savages. who despite their big handicap in size showed great fighting spirit and didn't quit trying until the final whistle blew. In a preliminary game the Mand: Bears, Independent quint, turn back the Dickinson reserves, 22 to 21, in a heated encounter. Except for a brief period in the first half when the Savages matched basket for basket with the Phantom’s scoring efforts, the local quint was never in danger. Paced by Big Ted Meinhover, they ran up an 18 to 9 advantage in the first half and in- creased that margin rapidly after the iutermission. Meinhover Sets Pace Meinhover, who has been having difficulty finding the hoop of late. finally located it just in front of the} backboard and registered ten buckets from close range for high scoring honors. Frank Stumpf, fermer Mandan high school star, and Doering. visi- tors’ pivot. man, Ied the Dickinson quint, scoring four field goals and a gift shot each while Larson, a team- mate in the fore court, contributed much to the Savages’ attack and reg- istered twice from the floor. Osmund Bagzenstc graduate of Dickinson higa last year, showed promise of developing into one of the best guards in the state college con- ference within the next two years. Playing his first game before local fans in a Phantom uniform, Harold Tait, University of North Dakota ath- lete. turned in 2 nice performance while Don Bondy, recently acquired from Si's Chieken Pickers, came into his own for the first time since join- ing the locals and caged five field goals in the last half. Summary: Phantoms (43) Fro fr Pr Arthur, f . 3 0 Tait, f 4 9 Meinhover. ¢ . bce <a Massmann. & DS Or a Jacobson. ¢ 0 0 Bondy, f 9 1] Spriees. f * © Olgeirson, f . 9 1 Totals. . 0 6 Savages (26) Fr PF Stumpf. f .. 1 : Larson, f . 0 6) Doering. ¢ 1 0 Baggenstoss, th Aichle, & oO Ross, & ...... 0 1 Schmickrath . 0 0 Shjeflo De 30) Totals....... a2 Free throws imissed: Larson 1, Schmickrath 1, T: Referee—Fay Bre: BEARS COP Pl The Mandan Bes trouble befere they with a scan’ Savage reser With the tied at 12-all at the half, the Bears pulled inio an 18 to 14 Jead at the end of tie third quarter and safely weathered a rally by the Dickinson quint although the score was knotted twice more at 18 and 20-all. Brunelle, Bear pivot, was high scorer for the winners with five buck- ets while Aindaii, guard and Gunder- son and Peterson, forwards, were the} for the Savages. Mandan Bear Perey, f . Brunelle, c . Latta, Dahiguist, 5 . - Dietrich, ¢ . arr i -....-. ae ec Totals. . 5 Dickinson Reserves -- Peterson. f . : Shjeflo, ft . Gunderson, ¢ . Amdahl, ¢ Partridge, ¢ Richardson, g . i] wlorscsst a st Ce eeeeeelcecencod wlovscend a! Totals. . Lee Ramage to Fight Joe Louis in Chicago Los Angeles, Feb. 21.—(@)—Lee Ramage, tall California heavyweight will put his fistic future on the mart Thursday night «at Wrigley Field when he goes up against the latest black menace, Joe Louis of Detroit. ? (By the Associated Press) ‘Sioux Falls, 8. D.—Babe Dan- fels, 140, Minneapolis, knocked out Sten Christy, 144, St. Paul, (3); Art Van Sickel, 128, Sioux Falls, outpointed Harold Stegel, 130, Minneapolis, (4); Babe Schroeter, 142, Minneapolis, out- pointed George May, 139, Sioux Falls, (3). meat is considered food fit for feasts by African natives, but ‘white men find it hard to chew and rn Back Dickins * OUR BOARDING HOUSE ( ! CAVALCADE SEEN AS WINNER By Ahern © HAW-AVERY WELL-=HAVE YOUR LAUGH—~BUT I KNOW A CHAP WHO ATTENDED A WAREHOUSE SALE,LIKE T DID, AND BOUGHT A BOX FOR THE STORAGE CHARGES OF $44+-——— WHEN HE GOT IT HOME.HE OPENED IT UP, BOOKS OF GOLD. LEAF INTHE KIND USED BY SIGN ARTISTS—<30 POUNDS OF IT! | HE SOLD IT FOR# 750 IH STILL CAN SNAG EM SULTAN OF SWAT BACK HOME; AND WHAT DO YOU) SUPPOSE IT CONTAINEDS HM-M-~GET READY TO FALL—“~UM—KAFF. STILL AFTER Babe Ruth Insists He Will Not! Wind Up Career as Part- | Time Performer i New York, Feb. /P)—Baseball's jbiggest question Mark George Her- |man Ruth, is home again, but he is lunabie to tell whether he will find an jacceptable job in the game he hes old New Yorker, in one of the two semi-finals. She probably will find the New Yorker just as formidable in view of Miss Firsch’s stunning upset vic- tory over Norma Taubele, defending champion. The other semifinal match brings together Mrs. Dorothy Andrus, seeded No. 1 and ranked fourth in the nation, and Jane Sharp of Pasadena, Cal., sixth ranking woman co {personified for more than a decade. | player. | Returning from a world tour that! ne combined business and pleasure and| [Pye ° e re-demonstrated his tremendous pull| DICKINSON i ets at the box office, the Babe readily a said he had no idea what he would do this summer although he scarcely | Triumph, 45 to 17 could conceive the possibility that no baseball job would be open to him. ——— Ruth gave few definite answers toi Watford City Cagers Turned the rattle-fire of questions hurled at A ' i Back in Last Game on jhim when his boat docked but out of; the conversation these points develop- | Regular Schedule ed: 1—He will not wind up his carser as a part-time performer or is | Dickinson, N. D., Feb. 21. — — H Hor i;/Playing the last game of the season Hine aat the peices Haars Ais on its regular schedule the Dickinson z a 3 | Midgets defeated Watford City Wed- | 2—His big ambition still is to be-jnesday night. 45-17. Tanberg, Dick- come a major league manager. |inson forward, was high man with 22 3—If he signs a contract with the | iNew York Yankees, points. The Midgets took an early lead and 2 | Fights Last Night | WELL~THEY USED To say,\F Ip Put A WICK IN MY FAT HEAD, TD MAKE A SWELL CANDLE ! TLL GIVE YOU $2 FOR A THIRD INTEREST IN TH BOX | GO WAVE TH* WAND ON MACK TURF WRITER PICKS EKKY, LADYSMAN T0 RUN SECOND, THIRD Class Will Tell in $100,000 Race of Thoroughbreds at Los Angeles SPELLBINDER ‘Old Style Lager, Regulatory Dept. Bowlers Triumph 1-100 Taxi and Singer Sewing Machine Teams Beaten in Commercial League Regulatory Department trundlers won all three games from the 1-100 taxi team while the Old Style Lager bowlers had plenty of trouble winning two out of three from the Singer Sewing Machine five in Commerciei league games rolled Wednesday night. Anderson set the high three-game score for the evening by slamming the maples for counts of 162, 178 and 185 to lead the Regulatory aggrega- tion in their wins. Wilhelm was high pingetter for the Taximen with a 494 total. Winning their first game with only one pin to spare, the Old Style Lager team faltered in the second game and then came back to annex the rubber match with five pins to the good. Owens was high man for the winners with 514 pins in three games ‘while H. B. Litt with a 473 total was HEAD PLAY GOOD IN MUD Equipoise Merits Much Consid- eration Because of Bet- ter Conditioning By MAX RIDDLE Los Angeles, Feb. 21.—(NEA)—Cav- alcade, Equipoise, and Ladysman! Assuming that these three horses go to the post in the $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap, to be run at the pic- turesque plant at Arcadia, near here, Saturday, and further assuming that all three horses are in top shape, the | above is the writer's selections in or- der for the richest race to be run in America since the $105,700 Belmont Futurity of 1929. The distance is a mile and a quar- swer to the guffaws which no doubt will arise from backers of Top Row, Riskulus, Ted Clark, Gusto, Mate Sir Thomas, Spicson, Head Play, Jabot, High Glec, and various long shots, let them reflect on the quotation, “Class will tell.” Given two horses, one a plater and the other a thoroughbred of estab- {lished class, the plater hasn't the chance of a watermelon surviving a OF RICH SANTA ANITA HANDICAP on State Teachers Five, 48-26 iPrimo Carnera Stands As Collossal | Monument to Managers’ Stupidity i Outsider Wins Rich Purse | Bout With Impellittiere Not to | — Quoted at better than 16 to 1 as the horses paraded to the post for the $20,000 Santa Anita Derby at Arcadia, Calif., the Greentree stable’s Gillie surprised the talent by winning the rich race with ease. Here is the horse as he popped home first ahead of Wiskolo. Jockey 8. Coucct, brought from Florida to ride the Mrs. Payne Whitney horse, Kingfish Is Afraid Supply of Set-Ups Will Run Out Soon ‘| Got Personality,’ Boasts Lev- insky Preparing for Bout at Daytona Beach Negro family reunion of beating the} Daytona Beach, Fla. Feb. 21.—() class of the latter, all things being|—There are poor old athletes work- equal. ing their haphazard ways around th's The $100,000 purse of the Santa/part of the country whose ears never Anita classic has attracted the class}stop ringing. If Max Baer isn’t pop- ‘of the country’s handicap performers. |ping ‘em over, it's Tony Shucto, and It has drawn former platers, too, two|if it isn't Shucco, it's Kingfish Lev- of which have given creditable per-jinsky. formances on the track. These] The Kingfish (hotcha, I got per- horses, Ted Clark and Top Row, are|sonality) is in town to drill one Jim far from being in the same class as| (Killer) Garfield in Armstrong's Cavaleade, Ekky, ond Ladysman. warehouse on the other side of the Favorites Get Play railroad tracks Thursday night. The ‘The real cream of the numerous Feeders the proper aspect on the best for the Sewing Machine team. Scores: Regulatery Dept. | Anderson + 162-178-185—525 | Peterson 161 -128-139—428 Jenkins 113-139-157—409 {Knutson .. 104-121-147—372 Thorson 126-124-142—392 Handicap 112- 91-168—371 Totals ... 778-781-938-2497 | Taxi 1-100 'Festerling ++ 133-143-213— 489 | 103-171-174— 448 169-133-150— 461 | 159-171-164— 494 i 153-148-145— 446) Totals 717-766- 855—2338 te Lager Owens 177-153-184— 514 Mills . 159-128-105-- 392 Erickso 153-144-121— 418 L, Peters 115-112-133— 360 J. Peters 97-144— 241 Dummy 135 135 Totals . =. 739-634-687—2060 Singer Sewing Machine H. B. Litt 164-173-136— 473 Stoelting 140-136-146— 422 Joe Litt . 117-124-126— 367 Amory 122-133- 97— 352 {Dummy 135-135-135— 405 ‘Handicap 60 Totals ... it will be as a f {regular outfielder. fever srelnaulahed iit he score at “I'm co thrilled to get back home | half wa : 3H that T dont know what T will do.”|,,Dickinson— rah peer said the Babe. “It will take me a few RANDCTB. T - a ae days to recover my bearings. ome a. 3 3 i C. Agnew, & . 2 pos iY N t Sta | Robertson, & ae 8 ‘Young Net Star iscrsficcoot oa | Fulfill P tepi Totals. seta ie al i Ss romise| Watlord City— FG Pr PF | Thompson, f 1 2 0 { ‘Bruins, f Lb 2 !Connecticut Girl Sweeps to Olson.c ....... Bee ee La “ , . Grotte, & wes... Ube ah oe Brilliant Victory in Indoor {Hagen, g ........ ee ales Quarter-Finals | Palle. cos.s soa Sieas BL Cal Preah RRNA ASR mne no New York, Feb. 21—P—A year! College Results _ ‘ago Helen Antoinette Pedersen of | —— ° |Stamford, Conn. was labelled a| (By the Associated Press) |“promising young tennis player.” She BASKETBALL {still is young and has fulfilled the} Concordia 22; Gustavus Adolphus promise. 35. She has swept through the current; Huron College 31; Sioux Falls ;women's national indoor champicn-/| College 32. |ship to brilliant heights with a quar-| South Dakota State 21; Dakota |tertfinal round of Mme. Sylvia Jung] — Wesleyan 45. jHenrotin of France, a heavy fayorite.| —— So Thursday Miss Pedersen en-| HOCKEY ‘gages Millicent Hirsch, an 18-year] Carleton 4; St. Olaf 1. | |; OUT OUR WAY candidates includes the wrter's selec- tions, Mate, Gusto, Faireno, Time Supply, High Glee, Azucar, and Head Play. But remember that Mate and Gusto are mere shadows of their former glorious selves. Head Play is a great mud runner. This department doesn't intend to get into arguments about the rela- tive merits of the two top horses. Ekky seems to be in a little better shape than Mrs. Isabel Sloane's horse, but if reports that Pony McAtee is to ride Cavalcade are truc, the won- der horse of 1934, .which won the Kentucky, American, and Detroit Derbies, and the Chesapeake and Classic Stakes, has the better chance to win. Ekky is conceding Cavalcade only one pound in weight. Both horses “I knocked out five guys since I left Chicago,” he says, “a guy named Red Tonn in Sarasota, another mug with a beard named Savage in Tam- pa, a fancy guy named Teddy De- marino, in one of them Palm Beach- es, Jack ‘Townsend in Jacksonville and this guy tonight.” The fact that the supply is fast rinning out bothers the Kingfish. They want his in St. Petersburg. Or- lando, Tampa again, Charlotte, Charleston, New Orleans, Dallas, Houston and Fort Worth and if Tonn, Savage, Garfield and Townsend can hold out, those places will see him. Remembering that night in Chi- cago when Max Baer knocked him out the southern fans have a lot of fun shouting to him “take a num- M’Lean Cage Meet Will Open Friday . Effect Determination of Logical Challenger New York, Fei, 21.—(NEA)—What- ever else may be said about Primo Carnera, he forever will stand as a colossal monument to the cupidity and stupidity of fight managers. They did a 100 per cent bad job on Carnera from the outset, and have maintained the standard since Maxie Baer treated the Venetian Leviathan like a big bowling pin last June. The result is that Carnera today is back in the circus where he started. His affair with the equally large Ray Impellittiere at Madison Square Ger- den on Friday puts him there. Instead of clamoring for a return match with Baer to which most any ex-champion is entitled, and attempt- ing to corner Steve Hamas, the next man in line, in a rebuilding program, Louis Soresi hid Carnera in South America. There Carnera added noth- ing to his prestige by permitting an over-stuffed Victorio Campolo to stick around for 10 rounds. Carnera ironed out the same Campolo in two rounds three years before. The Carnera-Impellittiere bout is attractive only because they are the two biggest men who ever met with padded mittens on their hands. It affords Carnera no opportunity to Garrison Will Be Host to Coun-| Prove that he is something more than ty Tournament; Coleharbor to Defend Title (Special to The Tribune) Garrison, N. D., Feb. 21.—Play in the annual McLean county high School basketball tournament will open here Friday with Coleharbor, defending champions, pre-tournament favorites to retain the trophy they won last year. Rated as strong contenders for the title are the Underwood Comets who the mere hulk that many have sus- pected all along. Carnera Sidetracked Meanwhile, the winner of the Ha- mas-Max Schmeling meeting in Ham- burg on March 10 will be in a much better position to heckle Baer. Carnera has only a six-figure note to show for five years of effort under Leon See, the little Fernchman to established 85! whom he was directed by Paul Jour- nee, who discovered Big Boy. The avaricious See twice sent Car- nera against the late Young Stribling abroad before the Italian knew how to have split even in two games with the | hold up his hands. ‘The foul endii i ings Coleharbor cagers this season. Other | of these two brushes were viewed ob- strong teams given a chance to upset the pre-tournament favorites are those from Wilton, Garrison and ‘Washburn. quely, See made unfortunate Broadway connections and Carnera became in- ed in several unsavory perform- vol’ Wilton will oppose Garrison in the | ances which left him discredited, first round which opens at 2 p. m., Friday. Mercer will battle Turtle Lake at 3 p. m.; Underwood takes on Washburn at 7 p. m., and Coleharbor meets Max at 8 p. m. Semi-finals will be played at 10 a. m., Saturday; the consolation games at 2 p. m. and the championship struggle Saturday evening. ment. A trophy will also be given to the team showing the best sports- manship. Arnold Van Wyk and W. H. Payne will act os referees. Wilton and Garrison Beaten by Underwood (Special to the Tribune) Carnera must have had something to have lived all this down, and was far from disgraced in his battle with Baer. Against Baer, he exhibited courage worthy of a finer setting than the prize ring. Every possible break went against him. He trained virtually alone, with Bill Duffy, the only man in whom he had confidence, detained by the gov- ernment because of income tax trouble. Never Stopped Trying Carnera appeared to be the lone- somest man in the world and fright- ened when he ascended the platform. ‘Primo was on the floor badly hurt be- fore he could get a grip on himself. He twisted an ankle in a knockdown some time before the finish. Yet he continued carrying the fight to the ber from one to ten, Kingfish.” “See,” he says, “I got personality. They're all the Kingfish’s friends.” Thain Cagers Annex Grant County Title are listed at the top by the handi- capper, the former at 130, and the latter at 129, The Whitney horse is a proved weight packer. He has toted as high as 136 pounds and beaten the ears off the pack in a mile. Cavalcade, on the other hand, must prove his es ability to carry poundage. A big, (Special to the Tribune) strong animal, he should do this in] Thain, N. D., Feb. 21—(#)—Win- no uncertain manner in the coming|ners of the Grant county champion- classic, ship, the Thain high Consider Ladysman school basketball team will be en- Ladysman already has demonstrat-|tered in the state consolidated tour- ed his fitness for the battle with|ney in March, class. A standpoint 2-year-old in| Thain defeated Raleigh, 29 to 23, 1932, and winterbook favorite to an-Jin the finals of the Grant county nex the 1933 Kentucsy Derby, the/tournament Tuesday. horse has come back a long way since|third year the local team has taken Underwood, N. D., Feb. 21.—(#)—| hard-hitting Baer until Referee Ar- ‘Underwood's high school Comets won |thur Donovan intervened. two more basketball games during| Just how much the beating by Baer the past week to bring their season’s| took out of Carnera is a question. total to 14 victories. Their record 1s| Certainly, it did Primo no good, but marred by only one defeat. it will take someone more formidable Tuesday the Underwood cagers de-|than Impellittiere to prove just what feated the Wilton five, 36 to 15, and| the Ambling Alp has left. Friday turned back the Garrison| Impellittiere is a young giant of quint, 25 to 9. Cold Springs, N. ¥., whom Harry Len- In the Wilton game the Cometsjny threatened to make champion started slowly and at half time were| Without his going to the trouble of in the lead 11-8. During the second | fighting. half however, they played fast bask-| Finally, Lenny matched Impellit- etball and scored 25 points to Wil-|tiere witii Tommy Loughran, who de- ton’s 7. Gogstetter at forward for|cisively outpointed him after being the Comets was outstanding, scoring| badly cut above an eye. Then Walter the | {ive field goals and three free throws.|Neusel, the blond German chemist, 8. Polonsky played best for Wilton. | chased Impellittiere several country In the Garrison game the Comets} miles. 1} le \¢ BORN THIRTY = YEARS TOO SOON. Tewuams | ‘TM. REO. U. 8, PAT. OFF. 1096 BY mA SERVOS, 2-2) he finished fourth in the Blue Grass event, He showed his class in de- feating Equipoise in the Suburban Handicap last year, and is reported to be in good shape. Ladysman has plenty of speed and heart. It is possible he doesn't like so long a distance as the mile and a quarter, but it was at that distance that he beat Ekky. Head Play is a horse to be given considerable consideration. He is an excellent mud runner, and it was in the goo that he won the Preakness in such startling fashion. His trainer, Tommy Taylor, is smart conditioner for a given race, and he won the predecessor to this Vace, the Agua Caliente Handicap,|Christiansen, f ... |Staynor, with Victorian. Jabot and High Glee, the crack|Berg, ¢ fillies, are capable of brilliant per-|Westrum, & formances on occasion, and if Jabet is in the mood to run, she well might score. The Santa Anita race is not only rich in the matter of the purse, but also rich in the manner of the money- winning total of the horses entered. Selecting nine of the top ranking horses—Equipoise, Cavalcade, Mate, Twenty Grand, Gusto, Ladysman, Faireno, Time Supply, and High Glee—gives a total of more than $1,- 450,000 in purses won. Of this amount, Cavalcade, Equi- poise, and Ladysman have won a to- tal of nearly $700,000—and that’s clats galore! Women’s Golf Meet Reaches Semi-Finals Palm Beach, Fla. 21.—(?)—Shot- making by the finest of feminine golfers was on tap Thursday in the semi-finals of the annual Florida women’s championship tournament. Marian Miley, Kentucky state champion from Lexington, met Grace Amory, Long Island society player. Mrs. Philip Hill of London, England, opposed Mrs. Leon Solomon, a lead; ing Memphis player. ‘Wednesday Miss Miley eliminated the 16-year old medalist, Patty Berg of Minneapolis. the title. Rossum, Hubber and Mavis were high-point men and outstand- ing performers for the winners while Peterson and Westrum were the strongest players in the Raleigh line- a up. Summary: Thain (29) FG FI PF Mavis, { ... 5 2 0 Rossum, f ... 3.0 (1 Huber, c . 3 0 Horton, ¢ 0 0 Massey, € . 2 1 Hanson .... - 0 0 Totals . seoee 13003 Raleigh (23) FG -” 2 . sees 0 2 o 0 2 2 Peterson, ¢ 5.0 Gopp ...... 0 0 Klemsmith 0 o ‘Swedsrud o 0 Totals ......0..-...5 9 § Referee: Hagen, Flasher. Havelock Independents Defeat New England Special to The Tribune) Havelock, N. D., Feb. 21—Havelock Independents defeated the New Eng- land Lions, 33 to 29, in a fast besket- ball game here Monday night. The locals established an early lead but lost it just before the end of the first half when the visitors crept into 2) 15 to 14 lead. Havelock tied the score late in the third period and in the closing minutes of the game over- came another lead held by visitors. Summary: Havelock (31) FG Fr PF E, Rossing, f ae ee) ‘The honor of serving & ‘ “i you at 8 fae upen expert an efficient 43 1 service is so badly 14 2 needed obligates us to o 2 38 do everything 28 near- —-—— = ly perfect as possible. 120°7 You can rely upon us. Ai ti WEBB BROS. 0 0 0 Funeral Directors | ee Gare | Phone 0 2 0 2 Night Phone 50 or 887 o 2 2 i 4. 1 L. Gardner, g-c »-3 o 1 Potals....eseveee 12 8 10] - again started slowly, leading at half time 11-7. In the second half the ‘Comets outscored their opponents 14-2, Engler at center for the Comets nd Temanson at forward also played bang-up games. Johnson and Spiel- man at guards also turned in good performances. ‘The summary: ! alcounoun~od wl cooncood pleseccuuce Sl -suscsut wl ensenel el osucouwen Total ..... Carnera starts all over again in the Impellittiere joust, but he may be getting a break at that. It’s just-as well for any cf the current heavy- weights to keep just as far away from Baer as possible. ‘The National Fire Protection As- sociation estimates that in one single year 10,000 people in the United States lose their lives directly or in- directly because of fires. Much of the fire hazard can be eliminated by careful planning of the home and the installation of fire protective devices. ‘The Mussolini test farms in Italy report high yields of grain such as 131 bushels of wheat per acre. But the United States can lay claim to just as phenomenal test yields, It’s More Fun FOR HEALTH’S SAKE at the Bismarck

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