The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 4, 1936, Page 8

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8 \ T. i + WEBSTER COLLECTS -LAPOINTS FOR TOP HONORS IN SCORING F Locals'Knot Count in 4th Per- a jod: After Trailing Four Points at Half i GAME THRILLS SPECTATORS bs Bondy, Lee and Jacobson Carry Brunt of Capital Citians’ Attack Staving off a determined last half! R < rally after gaining a four point lead at the intermission, the fast-breaking Dakota Millers won a 34-32 decision # over the Phantoms here Friday night. ' Making good 90 per cent of their pitches at the hoop, the speedy Mill- 4, ers assumed a 10-8 lead in the first & { quarter; increased the margin to 19- S = 15 at the half, and fought off the big E * bid of the Bismarck state champions ** in the final minutes to emerge with f > the two point victory. } The game was a thriller from start to finish, but the Millers edge in the shooting department eventually pro- vided the triumph over the rangier Capital Citians. ‘At one juncture in the third quar- Dakota Millers Stav Detroit Brown Bomber Settles Down to Stanford University Scoring Winning Touchdown ter, the score was knotted at 25-all 4 4 but the Millers got out in front again )* when “Windy” Burckhardt, former | i Grand Forks Central star, tossed in a ~ long throw from outside the foul cir- ele and Quint Nelson, who teamed with Burckhardt in the fore court, connected from close range. 4 Nip and Tuck Battle Doh Bondy brought the Phantoms within two points of the visitors with + # ¢loseup shot but the Millers got i { back the four points a moment later i When Chuck Webster, guard, sank a toss. A field goal by Frank Lee and a freé throw by Ben Jacobson whittled the margin down to a single point by Connie Kelleher but made good his gift shot in the closing seconds for the ; ‘Marrow margin of victory. Webster, former University and Elks performer. annexed high bo: honors from his guard posi- don. He sent four long tosses swish- fig through the net, added another field goal from close range and made i good one out of two chances at the free throw line. Tee and Kelleher each counted 8 its; Nelson, Meinhover and Bondy 7 apiece; and Jacobson had 6. ' Meinhover Off Form Meinhover was decidedly off shoot- form. He connected with one t from the floor and made good five of 11 trys from the free Ww line. Bondy, Lee and Jacobson i the brunt of the locals’ attack. For the Visitors, the work of Web- » Burckhardt and Kelleher de- él special mention. Webster in AGdition to leading in the scoring de- ‘partment, played a bang-up floor }, Burckhardt was a particular source ff worry to the Phantoms with his ly_interception of passes and floor play. Kelleher repeatedly ¥ wed Meinhover at the tip-off | and kept the Millers out in front dur- ‘ing the first half with his three field O The summary: fillers t pf Phantoms fg ft pt irck’ 1 2 Lee, f 4.0 1 0 Bonay, ep er} 4 ea) 1 i ee tae 4 210 Rotale 14 611 ‘Totals 12 8 8 re by perivds: ilers . AR Goa sagt sh i 7 6 11-33 Hanna; umpire, Bro ‘AL THEATRE BE. ULATORY DEPARTMENT und set the scoring pace as the m ‘Theatre cagers turned back tory Department quint, in a City League preliminary. lund tossed in four buckets from ‘and added one free throw. ) Welch, center, was high point) fh for the losers with two field and three gift shots. The sum- il Theatre fi jannexed the first engagement 15-12. was witnessed by 85,000 persons, Big Ten Cagers | Open Loop Play Illinois-lowa, Misooiisin - Ohio State Games Slated; Gophers Meet Irish Chicago, Jan. 4.—(#)—Big Ten bas- ketball teams, fortified by huge mar- gin of success over non-conference ; foes, start taking picks on each other tonight in the opening of the cham- pionship schedule. Illinois meets Iowa at Iowa City,! and Wisconsin plays Ohio State at Columbus. Minnesota and Northwestern will tie up loose ends of their pre-season schedules, the former meeting Notre Dame at Minneapolis, and North- western playing at Marquette. Conference teams won 45, lost 13, and’ tied one game during the early season. The tie turned up at North- western New Year's eve when the Wildcats and Notre Dame had to set- tle for a 20 to 20 standoff because of ar. error in scoring. Michigan won seven straight, while Illinois’ veterans checked in with six triumphs in as many starts, NEW SALEM AGAIN DEFKATS MANDAN New Salem, N. D., Jan. 4.—(?)—New Salem high school for the second time this season defeated Mandan's Class A club by a score of 20 to 17 here Friday night. New Salem's Holsteins won both games by the same margin, having ! Hein, New Salem forward, led ‘his team’s scoring. Mandan, unable to connect with the basket, defensively | succeeded in stopping close-in shots by New Salem, but the Holsteins scored frequently on long tosses. Former Champ Lugs Beer at $15 a Week Toronto, Jan. ¢.—()—Back in 1927, when the harvest was heavy, they hailed Albert (Frenchy) Berlanger as king of the heavyweights. Now they send him off for a 10-cent beer. The little fellow who once made $7,300, in an evening works for $15 a week in an east end beer parlor, and he’s glad to get it. A few years ago he took the crown from Ernie Jarvis, later losing it to Frankie Geraro. . Berlanger is forgetting the days of heavy spending and trying to build an} income on which to rest his future | security. | 6 | i i LOU AMBERS New York, Jan. 4—()—Lou j Ambers of Herkimer, N. Y., was back again Saturday, dogging the trail of Tony Canzoneri, light- {| weight king. Ambers, whose jaw was broken in a fight with Dritzi Zivic of Pittsburgh six months ago, stepped out of the Madison Square Garden ring Friday night with a unanimous decision over the veteran and ring-wary Frankie | Klick of California, He won eight | of the 10 rounds. | | Basketball Scores| (By the Associated Press) North Dakoia University.46; Omaha University 26 | Washington State 42; Montana University 28. Dakota Millers 34; Bismarck Phan- toms 32. During the 19th century, a pecu-| liar-shaped glass ball, known as a) “witchball,” was placed in windows | |Art Lasky Kayoes i Wallulis in Fourth | ing a comeback as 4 leading contender | crown, scored a sensational four-round { ~ | ton high school. Left Hook to Chin Floors Ex. Football Star in Sensa- | tional Battle Hollywood, Calif, Jan, 4.—()—Art | Lasky, Minneapolis heavyweight, seek- ! for the boxing world’s most prized! knockout Friday night over Frank Wallulis, ex-football player of Wash- | ington State college. Lasky weighed 203 pounds, Wallulis, 192. The bout sent the American Legion | stadium off to a rousing New Year's start. Theeight was action from the minute the first gong clanged, and a. packed house of 4,000 saw the bat-| The end came after one minute 12} seconds of the fourth round, Lasky flooring his game and rugged opponent with a left hook to the chin that spun him completely around and sent the former gridster to the floor on his; face. { In the first round, Wallulis uncorked a terrific left hook to Lasky’s chin ard sent him sprawling through the Topes. Lasky was practically out but} clung to the ropes and saved himself | from a knockdown. Wallulis stung him with right hooks in the second round, occasionally find- ing the mark with a wild haymaking left, but Lasky tore in from then on. It was a slam-hang battle until the end. The bout was scheduled for ten rounds. COYOTES, 15 10 13 Dickinson, N. D., Jan. 4.—()— Dick- inson’s Midgets edged out a 15 to 13) victory here Friday night’ over Willis- The Williston Coyotes fought to tie the score at four, five, eight and thir- teen. In a. preliminary game Dickinson reserves won a 26 to 18 victory over Killdeer. The Midgets scored six from the! field, the Coyotes five. Williston made only three of nine free throws. The loftiest weather station in! the United States is on Mount Rose, Nevada. It is at an elevation of 10,-) 800 feet and its automatic weather instruments can run for two months without attention, tracing their rec- | of homes to ward off disease. le High Cagers Trim ‘Angels, 32-15 e the strong Steele high school 32. ina game played at Friday night. by. Zeck and Guldeman, the pr county team jumped to a 7-0 bin the first quarter and main- @ good advantage throughout. » Zech captured top scoring swith six field goals and a of gift shots. ‘d Entringer, center for the was the leading offensive per- for the parochial five while Simontisch turned in a good » The summary: Pf Steelo fe ft pt 1 Gulden, £4 0 4 ri foo 0 3 20 ‘ it 0 Brown, 'g 1 1 1 0 Wighton 01 1 Tollefson 13 2 Dalenburg 0 1 0 = Ritchie 09 Totals 13 6 9 73 10 4-32 7 2 6-15 ords on a moving sheet of paper. TRICK~ IT’S A HOLDUPS , 203, Min- Wal- iman, Washn., (4). Zz SS Zz ll By Williams YEH, KINDER TH’ PATHETIC, AINT (T? LOOKIN! FORWARD TO IT FER TWO WEEKS, Utes Bb, , BUT THATS TH MONEV OTHER] HE BORROWED MDGETS EDGE OUT | - —___4 HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1936 e Off Phantom Rally to Win, 34-32 LOUIS HAS $871,00 SALTED AWAY ARTER 19 MONTHS FIGHTING Begins Training for Bout With Charley Retslaff Opening '36 Campaign Chicago, Jan. 4.—(P}—Joe Louis set- tled down Saturday to the task of ‘| earning his first million dollars. The Detroit bomber began ti Stanford’s Quarterback Bill Paulman is shown in this Associated Press photo gripping the pigskin at the bottom of the pile after plunging two yards over the goal line in the first quarter with the touchdown that gave his team a 7 to 0 victory over Southern Methodist. The game, played in the Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif., ¢—_--_—_______—_-¢ | _Bowling Standings SERVICE LEAGUE Week Ending Jan. 4, 1936 ar ae 13 ‘eam ank of N. Dak. .... Bank ‘of N. Dak. rt. Quanrud Brink Riebold . Easy Washer. 1 yIDU Smith Haskin Kenney Johnson Niebauer 4 MeNalls Birdzell". Magnusoi Billigmeir Pater: Vadnie . Alberts , Sette . Dale Ashmore Kwak Weekly Records High team, three games—Quan- rud Brink & Reibold 2 High single game, team rud Brink & Relbold Hi individual, three game Niebauer , High single Niebauer . Canadian Ace Takes Lead in Miami Open Miami Springs, Fla., Jan. 4—(@)— Jules Huot, Canadian P. G. A. tital- ist, whose three-under-par 67 Friday was low for the first round, led 104 professional and 39 amateur golfers Saturday into the second 18 holes of he $2,500 Miami Open. Paul Runyan, White Plaines, N. Y., professional, who burned up the back |nine with 32 for second place, was one stroke behind at 68, Tied at par ‘70, were the veterans Willie MacFarlane, of Tuckahoe, N. Y., and George Smith and Denny Shute of Chicago. Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ Now York, Jan. 4.—(#)—When -84- year-old “Judge” Stephen McKeever retires soon as president of the Brook- lyn Dodgers, he's to b2 succeeded by his daughter, Mrs. James Mulvey, wife of one of the vice presidents. + + + She has been active for some time in helping shape the club's pol- icles. . . . Bernie Bierman will not discuss reports that Tulane is dinz- donging at him to come back... . Jimmie Foxx and Bing Miller are im- proving their stamina pedaling bi- cycles around a Philadelphia gym. Arch Ward reports Minnesota and Princeton are trying to get together on a football date for 1937... . Too bad .it couldn't have been 1935, ... Chuck Smalling of the Mississippi coaching staff re- celved the nicest Christmas pres- ent of all—a baby girl.... As long as he can draw $3,132 merely for floping “Man Mountain” Dean, Danno O'Mahoney doesn’t care a | | hang what they say about the | rasslin’ racket... . Neither would we. | Too bad Kit Klein, the Buffalo \skater, didn't come in for more at- |tontion when the boys were voting on |1935 sports achievements... She won | about everything in sight on the ice, established several world records and jsave @ good account of herself in the World championships at Oslo. Glenn Cunningham, the great miler, in town for the K. of C. games tonight, corresponds regu- larly with a group of orphans in the Kansas State Orphans’ Home + + Glen is the boys’ No. 1 guy. » It was front ruge news in Boston the other day when Jimmy Foxx arrived foi o visit... Jimmie predicted: “We'll be tough to | beat”... General Manager Eddie Collins beamed and agreed. .. . Ssuthern Methodist Mustangs got their Christmas money ‘by auto- staphing old footballs and ped- dling them to admiring Texans for anything they would bring... If Riley Smith goes for pro foot- ball, Boston will get him. Jess and Virgil Barnes, former Giant pitchers, are in business at Holton, Kansas... Both are fat and around 40... Left field fence at Crosley Field, Cincinnati, is 40 fect shorter than the right field wall, but southpaw batters have ‘consistently outhit the right handers over a threc year stretch, Southern Italy's door-to-door milk- men, who soll milk fresh from the! cow, have “license plates” for thelr | cows; they are brass tags worn on a chain between the horns. 3 insky to surrender, 196% for raining, for his 15 round bout with Charley Retzlaff at the Chicago stadium, Jan. 17, the first of his 1936 cam- paign, which he expects to culmil ate in a heavy- weight champion- ship battle with James J. Braddock in New York next fall. In less than 19 months, since he fought his _ firs' professional _en- gagement in Chi- cago, Louis, just 21 and yet to have his first shave, has rolled up a bank- roll of $371,000. He aims to roll the other $600,000 by the time the Present year fades into history. Gradually. taking on weight in the absence of summer sunshine to take it off him, the brown bomber figures to scale 203 pounds when he shuffles in- to the ring against Retzlaff. He will be heavier for this battle than for any engagement in his spectacular 6 g/ tise to ranking heavyweight honors. | He believes he will blossom into a scrapping 220 pounder next summer. Scaled 200 Against Uzcudun He scaled 196 pounds when he knocked out Primo Carnera, jumped to 198% wher: he forced King Lev- Baer, and finally 200%: against Paul- ino Uzcudun, Trainer Jack Blackburn says the added weight will make Loujs a more dangerous fighter than.he was in 1935. “He's a finished .puncher now,” Blackburn said, “and with 20 more | pounds on his frame, he will be un- beatable because I believe he will be- come a harder hitter. Cubs’ Stretch Drive ‘Outstanding in 1935 By FORD FRICK (President, the National League) is building up with each month to make that September 21- game winning streak of the Chicago Cubs stand out stronger, taller and brighter against the skyline of the 1935 sports calendar. We are beginning to realize now that we saw unfolded a page of base- ball history in the making. Twenty- one straight victories! From third lace to the pennant! The Cubs’ con- juest of the National League's 1935 championship truly belongs in base- ball’s gallery of immortal exploits. It wasn’t the longest winning streak in baseball history. The New York Giants of 1916 won 26 in a row, the all-time major league record. Theirs out @ pennant as its climax. As the background builds up around the 1935 season, the picture also sug- gests the pennant drive of the Boston Braves in 1914. Those Braves under George Stallings’ command had no streak as long as 26 or 21, but they charged up the pennant hill all the way from last plade. horses nor did they win as many as 26 straight but to my mind they be- long in that very select. group with the Braves of 1914 and the Giants of 1916. I think baseball, together with the country as @ whole, will enjoy 1936 even more than 1935. For his size, strenth, and fat sup-| ply, a bear is the lightest eater of all creation: ‘The last census taken in the Unit- ed States in 1930, showed. males and 60,637,966 females. MY INVENTION GLASSES, [D YRPAAP ey = Its QUITE A i SINGLE MASOR i rolled Friday night. Max} New York, Jan. 4.—(#)—Perspective | was a September drive, too, but with- | The Cubs in 1935. weren't dark) 137,080 OUR BOARDING HOUSE HM-M~TLL CONSERVATIVELY FIGURE ON A MILLION ELECTRIC LIGHTS BURNING OUT DAILY: \N THE NATION SAND THRU _ IN THE SHAPE OF DRINKING ON TWO CENTS ROYALTY PER BULB—A MILLION TIMES TWO CENTS '\S AH-UuM~ EGAD, LUBDOW~ HOW MUCH IS A MILLION TIMES TWO “Ye Task of Earning First Million Bowli Avara Bank of North Dakota Cdilection Department and Easy Washer trund- lers in the Service Bowling League annexed two wins each in matches The Collection department five trimmed the first place margin of the regular state bank team and the Easy Washers won the first and second games from Quanrud, Brink and Reibold. Nei- bauer with games of 176-131-230—537 captured high ‘single and three-game honors. The scores: ‘ Bank of North Dakota 179-143-188— 510 111-129-145— 385 130-135-135— 400 139- 87-164— 390 163-160-188— 511 128-132-172— 432 140-143-126— 400 166-123-156— 445 24- 24- 24— 72 ‘141-692-739—2172 Easy Washers _ 160-166-144— 470 138-125-155— 418 122- 96- 86— 304 159-149-100— 417 156-155-140— 451 21- 21- 21— 68 156-712-655—2123 Reibold 144-127-167— 438 176-131-230— 537 123-176-162— 461 108-131-127— 366 161- 98-150— 409 Totals........ 712-663-836—2211 j i H Nodaks Trounc= Omaha U., 46-26 Birk, Finnegan, Aamoth Pace Sioux in First Conference Victory - Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 4—(@)— University of North ‘Dakota opened defense of its North Central confer- ence basketball championship here Friday night by smothering Omaha University 46-26 in a rugged game. Coach Johnny Baker's Cardinals put up a battle until well into the second half, when the Sioux started hitting the basket and pulled into a safe lead. By the time the period was half over, the burning pace set by the North Dakotens began to tell on the big Nebraskans and they faded rapidly. The Sioux took the lead as the game opened, but Omaha came back to hold @ 13-11 margin midway in the period. Emmett Birk, star of the Sioux quint, put -the champions back in front im- mediately and North Dakota held a 21-16 edge at the intermission. The box: Omaha — fg ft pf N. Dak. fg ft pf Brown, f 0 6 1 Finne'n, t 4 3 0 Baade, f 4 1 1 Birk, ¢ 21 Johnke, c 4 0 1 Robert'n,c2 1 1 Pearey, g 1 1 2 Rorvig, g 0 3 3 Balde'w, £0 1 3 Aamoth,g5 0 3 Nelson, f 1 2 0 Kettle'n,g1 1 1 Bolte,'t 0 0 2 Muus, 0 0 Gardner, g0 1 1 Lemaire,f1 0 1 ‘ond, & 00 Totals 10 6 11 =o> Totals 18 10 10 Referee, Holzer, Moorhead; umpire, Falgren, Concordia. 9$00-METER DUEL STARTED New York, Jan. 4.—(7)—An 800- meter duel between Kansas’ Glenn Cunningham and Indiana's Chuck Hornbostel provides the high spot of the annual Columbus Council, K. of C. games, opening the indoor track and field season tonight. HORIZONTAL _— answer to Previous Puzsio ie Guided. 1,7Man who . Sneaky. : IMI! ILI Ol IDIEIBIOINIOL. 18 He was a—~ | helped take AURIEICIAMMLIEIEMMEILIEICIT] 19To decorate, ; Pain out of = FFIRIEEMESIEIEIMISMMDIOIRIE| 20 Ticks. } 18 ded. D AINMBAIT! 5 13 Bay window. [CMMPILIPIY] EMILIO [TIO[EMME| 28 Noisy Joltity. 147o hang down. /AWARIEMM DE |UIPIDIEIR| 24He was born | 16 Midshipman. WNIAIPIEIRIY] BONO [RIATUINIS] 5, 2 ciation. cabaricrea RID ILE! AL MC reaue = OIRIEMELIATTIETRIAIL 1sStream ob SJ RIDMERIOIV IE IDEM SIOIR Al acactiod: LUNINIETR MRT D RECT! Ele] 21 Alleged power. [GEINIEIRIAIS LURIEINIDI 3115 indebted: 22 Constellation. 33 Mill 'e 25 Prepares for 42 Horse fennel. VERTIOAL 34 To gould publication, 48 Provided with 1 Possessed. 37 Clandestine, 27 Boy. cilia. 2Native metal. | 30Clan symbol. 46 Layer of tiles. 3 To tear 32Short letter. 0 Poem. atitchgs. {33 Slavic jelly. 51 Witch. 4 Toward sea. | '35Intertwined 55 Baseball team. § Patchwork to air. into fabric, 56 By. maps., 47 Wayside hotel (36 Ringlets. 87 Sleigh. 6 Finished. 48 Falsehood. | 's8 one that 88He demon- 7Burrowing 49 Beitig. | wakens. strated the animal. 52 Wing. | 0 Part of the use of ——. Great lake. 53 Males: | foot. 59 Afresh. 9 Cover, 54 Fish. \ OF MAKING THEM MAKE , EACH DAY, ¢ ON. TH CHUNES, \F WERE GONNA | ‘PLAY AT HOFFENBERSS SILVER WEDDIN® CMON, LETS GIVE “THROW HIM OWN, MECLOSKEY" TUESDAY I A TWIRL !

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