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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SAT JRDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1936 Demons s Tumble \ Wops Fro From Ranks of Unbeaten ‘A’ Quints BRILLIANT BISIARCK (St. Mary’s Quint Staves Off St. Leo’s Rally to Triumph, 21 to 19 RALLY TURNS BACK 'u. §. TW PACED BY HELBLING HOT CORNER IS BIGGEST WEAK . |), MEET 10 TALK U.S. TWO-MILE CHAMPION WILL | INVADERS, 23 T0 a Bricesicsh 2 ahiercoomt RACE LOCALS GAIN 148° SPOTINMAJOR aA CLUBS} (ANE CONSERVATION P inbniaieats dient coe ! LE AD AT HALRTIME wling Prominent National Figures in OREN Sta ndings Wildlife: Work Will Address Meinhover’s Quint Held Score- Delegates Metal one hag LEAGUR ‘Week Ending Feb. 1, 1998 ings Bison Annex 6th Conference Win ! F | Herd Scores,31-23 Victory Over lowa State Teachers Col- lege Quint Norman Bright Flys to New York to Pit Stamina Against Classy Field Tavis Stars in Belated Scoring Barrage That Wipes Out 10-Point Deficit RIFE BEST FOR VISITORS} Few Changes in Prospect De- spite Dissatisfaction With Third Sackers f Washington, Feb. 1.—(4)—The five- New York, Feb. 1.—(4)—For Norman Fargo, N. D., Feb. 1—(?)—The North Bright, American two mile champion, Dakota Agricultural college quintet New York, Feb. 1—(#)—There are no “ten-goal” men among the current —_ = tonight will be a night of “firsts.” turned back the Panthers of Iowa| less During Final Period of | iioior teague third-base tives,| Jr. Association » 6 3 .667|4ay program of the North American Marty Engh's Quint Will Seek to On this first night in February he|gtate Teachers college, 31-23, Priday Minot Tilt \eielcnt set prospective,” Nurerttielees Regulatory Dept, § 3 {sei wilalife conference starting Monday, " will be the first Calfornian ever to! night to gain their sixth consecu- : few changes are in view for the 1936 & 4 :f56 | be featured by discussions of every Recover Prestige at Man- run in the Wanamaker mile at the/ tive North Central intercollegiate vic- ee. pennant drives. 4 8 1444|Phase of wildlife work-on the conti- dan Tonight Millrose A. A. games. It will be his) tory and remain in a te for the lead.| Minot, N. D., Feb. 1.—()—St.| ‘The hot spot of the infield also has/ 2? Bagh { § -444/nent, was announced Saturday by Ira . - 4 first attempt at running on boards| Mashing thelr best form of the sea- | Mary's of Bismarck piled up an early|peen a weak spot, even among top-| service Mlectric” 3 § c333|N- Gabrielson, chief of the biological and the race will come after his first airplane ride, he flew in from the} coast Friday after a last minute de- cision to compete. The odds are against his breezing home first in @ field that includes such human hares as Glenn Cunning- son the Bison ran up a 13-8 lead at, lead and withstood a hard-driving' survey pi = lise the intermission, but stumbled in the | St. Leo's rally in the final quarter to program committee chair- third canto and the Panthers went|Win 21-19 here Friday night. The ahead 14-13 after two minutes of play| Bismarck quintet, was held scoreless in the second half. jin the fourth can’ A counter rally put the Bison in the! St, Mary’ A fg ft vt lead again six minutes before the end, ranking clubs. Detroit, for instance, isn't satisfied with Marvin Owen and will try three or four youngsters, in- cluding “Flea” Clifton, a substitute world series hero, at third. The St. Louis Cardinals plan to shift Pepper Mar- Season's Records High team, three games—Regu- latory Dept. eee ot ep sin arck Bakery Coach Glenn Hanna's Maroon and White cagers were stamped definitely Saturday in the ranks of North Da- kota’s Class A title contenders. Rallying for nine points in the fourth quarter after trailing for uF ike Bilcox, chief ‘of the forest service and chairman of the confer- ence, will open the meetings Monday afternoon, when messages will be read from President Roosevelt, the n ae 10 625 2 f 0 three periods, the Demons tumbled ham, Donald Lash, Joe Mangan, Gene | 29.15, ‘and the margin. Was" never i 4 Cook, 9 | ae tin, the National Leben ha et ad and the prime Beenpeton's ‘ilehty quint from. ie Venzke and Archie San Romant. but) threatened, Individual scoring hon-| {uring ¢2 1 i McGee's 0 2 : league's ranking Individea! Averages aay Dania cr ed Sibinsea a ranks of the unbeaten here Friday the Sunnyvale, Calif., English teacher | or; went to Wendell Kielty, Bison for- | Rau: 0 0 0 Mechler, gO 2 third sacker a year| Sparks - 177 Ellison .. ti jay. pics ae lend , Towa, night in one of the finest basketball has no qualms about matching his! ward, with six field goals, while his Entrer, £2 0 1 Rowan, f 1 0 ago, to the outfield. |scru” eon So eranine. te ee trade ee exhibitions witnessed on the local flectness of foot with any of them. | teammate, Russ Anderson, center,) °° ° + wotais 7 6 Charley Gelbert,| Schlosser .., ry, while Kavala Zinser of hex hardwoods for some time. The score Should he conquer such a field, 1 4 Totals 9 313 who made a ¢| Devlin. 1 | country, while Kavala Zinser of Mex- was 23 to 20. however, and score his first victory |2ernered 10 points, ‘The summary: | costae. ast hs ar, | Gone! and Hoyes Lioyd of Canada will It was the first defeat in 13 games over Cunningham, there will be plen-| NDAC te tert iaen Tea. tg tert st a 814 2121 will take Pepper's ap rs 4 aad the situations in their coun- for the Wops, ranked with Valley ty of eye-brow lifting in the track! Reiners, f 2 0 1 Tolan, f H 8 14—19 Jol. auch les. ‘City’s Hi-Liners as the tops in Class f ining f Klelty, f 0 0 Miner, f 0 3 Eee Austin Petes and Wil- J nner The afternoon session will be open- “s World, Out of training for several) ander’n, c 4 2.1 Brwer, f-c 3 9 1iard Geist, Pie Traynor, one-/ Olson ed by Secretary of Agriculture Wal- A circles, and it was lanky Bob Tavis, weeks, the coast speedster stepped on-| Bet’hen, g 0 1 1 Peter’n, f 1 0 Dh asi }t) Dime Kt vy’ Oth, | Bere. Ss Ghee WHIEN. rs SOKO BEAL playing his second full game at the to a track last Wednesday and reeled| Rorvig, ¢ 1 0 © Curtis, c 5 0 EN aera ee Oe ETS ie king of | Hektner Samuelson . 33 | Tr . John C. ips pivot position, who paced the De- off a mile in 4:22 Saun'rs, g 1 0 1 gittuly, ay \') ot third sackers, Mayer Hennessy . a rane banat ey of the mons’ brilliant scoring splurge that Cunningham, leaving his ‘hotel Fri-} Totals 14 3 4 Black, g 0 1 4 Gropped out of ac-| parry 0 gona Wildlife ‘Protection, iit cosas ‘wiped out a 10-point advantage the day night to view motion pictures” of McCabe, £0 0 \V) In tion with a lame| Kuehn vt le Aye) Sep visitors held at one juncture in the his much-discussed race with Man- emi tsa Popper Martin shoulder last year| Moeller .. spor of a general federal as third quarter. gan in Boston last week, discounted A and fell off to 279 at bat in 57 games, | O¢tum of wildlife interests will occupy the ‘Trailing 19-9 at one point and with defeat looming larger as the minutes Bright’s chances because of his long The Pirate manager will try a come- back but young Harry Lavagetto like-/ Warner delegates Wednesday. Thursday will 1g|be given to discussions of solution of journey from the coast. “Travelling long distances doesn’t help a runner a bit,” he said, “I've done it before a mect and I know. Bright is a fine runner but that long journey by air will hamper him, I think.” Cunningham refused to admit that he would watch any particular run- ner in the race, “They are all good. I'll go out there and run my ‘race and while I’m doing it I will have to wat 9 them all.” CUNNINGHAM ASSERTS HUMAN TIMING FASTER _| Towa City, Feb. 1—(#)—Glenn Cun- ningham, once clocked in 4:6:7 for the the wildlife problem from the educa- *|tional and management standpoints, |Speakers at this time include Dr. John Studebaker, U. 8. commission- er of education; John H. Baker, New York, of the Audubon society; Pro- fessor Aldo Leopold, University of Wisconsin, and L, J. Taber, Columbus, president of the National ticked off, the Demons never once stopped fighting and gradually whit- tled down the margin until they tied ithe score at 19-all early in the fourth quarter. Tavis Bags Winning Baskets With but four minutes left to play, vis leaped high to grab a rebound nd>tipped it in to give the locals a jwo-point edge and duplicated that jperformance a minute later to widen breach to four. From there until he finish, the Demons kept control the ball and only Harvey Rife's throw kept the invaders from be- g completely shut out during the t stanza. Tonight the Wops will be out to re- ly will keep the regular job. This will be Jimmy Dykes’ 18th campaign but he figures to combine regular third basing with his task of; restoring the Chicago White Sox as a Purdue Resumes Cage Title Chase Gophers, Victors in Last Two Starts, Play Ohio Tonight, Indiana Monday ITY LEAGUE Week ing Feb. 1, 1936 = Capitol Cate miei ‘8 jose ‘Will Co, Yrooiworth . Gamble-Robi: Robertsons Town Talk © Score Bank .ef North Dakota bowlers! pennant factor. jswept all three games in their match !*rravis Jackson, another veteran, with the Easy Washers and the Bank’s|stij1 is the best third baseman avail- Collection Department annexed two]abie for the New York Giants. out of three from Quanrud, Brink} The Red Sox and Senators both and Riebold in Commercial league) have shifts in mind for their 1935 reg- matches rolled Friday night. Joe|ulars, Bill Werber and Cecil Travis. Zahn scattered the maples for counts McNair to Get Trial of 219-191-198—608 to capture high} Werber may get an outfield trial, scoring honors for the evening. The| with Eric McNair taking over the hot ‘scores: corner. Travis is slated to do Wash- ington’s shortstopping but this de- tecrmaraei© ” Sewanee ‘Capt.’ Bill Haarlow (above) of Chicago’s basketball quint appears headed for the same honor he won fast year—that of winning Big Ten individual scoring honors. He is leading the scoring race at the Present time. (Associated Press ‘Thursday afternoon the manage- ment problem™ will be discussed by Lt. Col. William H. Hobson, Fort Snelling, Minn. Gabrielson will present the pro- posed national program for wildlife restoration. If adopted it will be pre- sented to President Roosevelt. Elec- Chicago, Feb. 1.—()—The Purdue half of Hoosierdom’s twin Big Ten basketball title threat returns to ac- tion tonight seeking—and likely to; win—its fourth straight victory at the Cc High individual, three gam lummel . High individ Schnelder and M. frummel Easy Washer b i Carroll .. . 165-169-176— 510|pends on the ability of a rookie, Buddy aetna hie tion of officers will conclude the con- lost prestige at the expense of P B Be world’s fastest mile, declared in @lexpense of Chicago's luckless Ma- ie vi Averages fandan Braves in a game calied| A @ erg ete: thesis Saturday that stop watch tim-|roons, Aree re ire oe eed pelle #i sore wankeee tnira | B°'Humme Relea + 4 |ference Friday afternoon. ing even with trained timers averages one-enth of a second faster than that done with mechanical timing devices. Cunningham's study of mechanical or 8 p. m., (CST), at the state train- school "gymnasium, Bix minutes of the first quarter lapsed Friday night before “Peck” The other member of the Hoosier pair, Indiana, resumed warfare Fri- day night, trouncing the University of Louisville, 48 to 26 The Hoosiers, 142-168-150— 460 + 138-138-138— 414 baseman again unless a deal for| 2, Schnelder Frank Higgins of the Athletics is re-| 4 vived. In that case Rolfe might be = Kollman Dummy Mrs. Crews, 2 Up \Red Wing National 1105-726-689—21 17 ee e Totals ........ shifted to second base. ° Guiness finally broke the ice with | a, a versus human timing for a master of| victorious in their five conference Da Ski T nice pitch from within the foul|Minneapolis Girl Rallies After) <cjence degree in the University 4°|starts, will go after number six Bank of Nerth Dakota Pes eareret dels keratin eytey p Hoe aE 3 ourney ns Fircle. Both teams were missing} Slow Start to Annex Florida |!owa department of physical educa-|against Minneseta at Bloomington | Magnuson . 157-220-183— 560| quite, ase Brown ...... 0 nany of their shots, but it was the tion, showed that men who hold stop! Monday night. Sette ..... 123-144-126— 393] On the National league’side of the Cervinsk: 19 Rid C te Ovi 42. Demons and not the Wops who got Tourney Title watches usually anticipate the run-| While Purdue is working on Chi-‘Binigmeier 127-136-143— 405 rence, Stanley Hack of the Chica; — : ers Compe' er = he bad breaks in shooting, blowing ner to the tape. cago at Lafayétte, Minnesota and|smith .. 171-163-155— 489! Cubs, Joe Stripp of the ponies |S Winistorfer Mile Course for U. S. Cross- ‘great many chances after driving in Punta, Gorda. Fla. Feb. 1.—( Ohio State, which had no opportunity |pummy 125-125-125— 373 | pod; vers, Johnny Ve of the ral Goets x or virtual setups. micke aa Bey Wie a to settle their football difference last | Handicap + 05- 05- 05— 151); Be a Lew Riggs et tasolennea dl ene Slontker at Country Title | Rife knotted the score before the |Stocky Patty Berg, 17-year-old Min- Cl 8S A Results fall, will meet in the only other game eek gee Rous all rise i 9 jeune cinnetl| Roenrick Dettman ..... fame was much older and Joe La-|"eaPolis school girl, proved her cham- a: of the championship schedule. Total: 108-793-737 2233 ave eee on the} Erickson °: Bailey : pionship caliber here Friday when : = S080 3) third basing assignment. Red Wing, Minn, Feb. 1—@)— ournaise put the Wops out in front ixhere they remained until the closing The records indicate that Purdue should have little trouble with Chi- ae ae ae at from behi , . as tumes, sus) came trom henlndb in aoa aas HI-LINERS BEAT JAYS Quanrud, Brink and Riebold res le ines te nad oR Maureen Orcutt Crews of Miami two- Weed Ending Feb. 1, 1936 Angels Score 33-10 eee ented «pair from the Valley City, N. D., Feb, 1.—()—Ac- | 280. Netbauer 163-166-167— 496 ‘Team Standings Moor, Jim Schwarzrock counted once|UP in the championship of champions ee na hearin Minnesota's two-game _ winning 37-186-122— ° Bank of No. Dak. 6 0 1.000] Wing Saturday to be on hand for pre~ nd Norman Smith made a good try|80lf tournament finals. curacy from the free throw line gave | streak will he in danger at Ohio State. | paicrs bars creer Win Over Menoken| guarrus, Brink & Reiboid 3.500 | iminary events in the winter carnival nt the free throw line to give the| Courageous Patty, runner up last are Bee. ee serclpay dela nd pee The Gophers defeated Northwestern) goech 141-180-141 462 Collection ‘Dep! 3s 88 auth nee with the pes visitors an 11-7 edge at the half. summer in the women’s national ama-| °° Ao tn Dakota Class A basketball (22 Michigan in their last two starts, Paced by ‘Tony Schneider and|#asy Washer . 1 & .166} championship jumping Zahn + 219-191-198—. 608 teur championship tourney, was five ‘Wops Take Lead “at <a down at the end of the morning ‘Tavis matched LaFournaise’s bucket ment. after dropping their first four con- The starting gun sent 19 riders ference games. contest Friday night. Trailing 13-6 Johnny Entringer, the St. Mary's Season's Records it the opening of the second half, but |Tound, but played sub-par golf in the|at the intermission, the locals rallied nas played rire eUeeEYy eeneag ae i boaaanodineas! pd Re Partner petra High, Brink & Relbol eens way over @ 12-mile course in the nas Robert Callen, | LaFournaise and |afternoon to overcome her opponent's|i" the final quarter for the victory.| won three and lost two, and appears | Bank of N. D., Collection Dept.’ |Menoken Friday night, High team. single ‘game—Quan- | tonal championship cross country ski 3c rock each bagged one from|advantage and take the victory on the |COunting 15 gift shots to five for the) to have a better all-around setup. _| Birdzell 158-120-124— 409|" ‘The Angeis masa tia isaduabithe Ge to sl 864 race, initial event of the two-day pro- floor to put the Wops 10 points|next to the last hole. Aavaners The race will speed up next week | Dale 46-149-169— 42 gram Saturday morning. outset and were never headed. The score at the half was 17-5. \ Schneider bagged six field goals + 201-151-188— 540/and a brace of. free throws for 14: 16-.16- 76— 228} points and peor sine Entringer | M9 rae ——|had five and one for 11 points. King 856-775-812—2443 | was the best performer for Menoken registering one basket from the floor and making good three chances at the free throw line. The summary: ut in front. Facing almost insurmountable odds, ine Demons fought gamely on and ly the gap. McGuiness ‘ d first from the free throw and Tavis followed with the sec- d of five field goals scored during closing two periods. Buddy Beall trimmed the margin Mother two points; McGuiness Continuing the brilliant play which ‘ousted Marion Miley of Lexington, Ky. in the semi-finals Thursday, Patty outdrove her veteran opponent consistently for a two-up lead on the first nine holes of the morning only to run into a case of jitters on the second nine. From Barnes Bluff, picturesque ;spot on the banks of the Mississippi river, spectators followed the progress of ski riders over the entire course. Announcers stationed along the route kept competitors and spectators in- formed of each individual's position via short wave radio broadcasts. In the afternoon the carnival will be in full swing. On the program are with five games. In addition to Min- nesota’s invasion of Indiana Monday, Ohio State plays at Purdue. On Sat- urday Indiana plays its return en- gagement with Chicago at Chicago, Purdue goes to Iowa and Ohio State plays at Minnesota. Thornhill Says West Kinzer . Vadnie Kenney Handicap 123-149-134— 406 DICKINSON LOSES 154-130-121— 405 Dickinson, N. D., Feb. 1.—(?)—Miles City, Mont., cagers defeated the Dick- inson high quint, 20-17 Friday night Magnuson . Individual Averages 188 Price Kinzer wako Billigmier 63 Ashmo! Bosch Albert: Birdzell Sette MAGICIANS VICTORS Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 1.—(?)— Minot’s superior height at every po- sition proved too great an obstacle for Totals .. 65 Survivors Launch Catalina Title Quest WIN ELIMINATIONS Seawecacore Bee ll ol 1 : d off three more: Tavis brought} Minneapolis, Feb. 1—(#)—Frank|Grand Forks high school cagers, and Angels te ttm Menoken 'fg ft pf] p; Vadnie . a dog sled derby, senior and Class “C” fount to i9-ell and then put the| Joyce of St. Paul, Paul Adis of Min-|the Magicians won 23-17 Friday night. Stands Pat on Rules Foret’ i 0 0 Rosson, £0 4 axl: juinping scoping See se) anes on ice with © pair of follow-in|neapolis and Henry Jones of Fort|Minot led 7-5 after a slow first half! pittsburgh, Feb, 1.—(#—Claudel i eons Calif., Feb. 1.—(#)—Sixty- 29 2 King, ie Ane and Beekey contests, Dodge, Iowa—the latter two the class|Both teams speeded up in the second,|cqinyy “Themnnill the feos > Bern | ve eorrers set out Saturday in quest § 2 1 Koch g Basketball Scores Tomorrow championship ski jumping The Demons’ impregnable zone de- of the meet—emerged victorious in|the locals taking @ 13-11 lead mid-| wizard the ‘assembling football of the last pot of gold in California’s| j7 0 0 © Robi’on, ¢ pe 0 hich ee yea tals will Tepeatedly forced the Wops to|their respective classes in the third|Way in the session. The Magicians, Parke eis ne Ratinded Rich werd | ee ese Sane an A go 0 8 —_— ute pirees Lx moots from outside the free|of a series of heavyweight elimination | however, opened up and steadily drew|that the Pacific coast is averse to Nas Pry renee aero pa 15 S pegs ghee (By the Associated Press) Ret ie is thes cceseioneaee Fe ee thor seers and third [tournaments here Friday night. [Away to gain. six-point victory, much rule tampering. Ao 08 N. D, 8. 31; Towa Teachers'23. —{ isssic include Arne Braathan, Lake amateurs into Saturday's 36-hole finals was Ralph Beach, Baltimore, 33-year-old Middle Atlantic cham- pion. He made a 36-hole score of 63- 61-124, eight strokes under par. One stroke behind were Ted Long- worth, Portland, Ore.; Herman, Bar- The Stanford university mentor gathered with two dozen other mem- bers of the rules committee of the American Football Coaches’ associa- tion to decide what changes, if any, they will recommend for the 1936 gridiron game. In general the gathering to make recommendations to the national football rules committee was expected to be ruled by @ conservative attitude. There were no major changes last Northern: Teachers college conference} year and the “hands off” policy still game here Friday night, 45 to 41. holds favor, Platteville Teachers 42; water 29. St. Cloud Teachers 45; Moorhead “41, cl ‘White- Totals 15 3 6& Technical foul—Simonitsch. Steele Prep Cagers Trim Driscoll, 22-14 Steele, N. D., Feb, 1.—Steele’s strong prep quint ran up a 22-14 victory over the” Driscoll high school team in a game played at Driscoll Thursday. Guldeman scored 12. points for the winners on six taskets from the floor. ‘The Hasire Region Winter Sports club, Devils Lake, N..D., Eric Judeen, and Peter Fosseida, both of the Duluth Ski club, Duluth, Minn.; Carl Sundquist, Min- neapolis; Reuben Silvala, Virginia, Minn. One hundred fifty of the nation’s premier ski riders—headed by the en brothers, Alf and Sverre, of bane Lake City, the Bietila brothers of , Mich. and John Elvrum or Los Angeles—are entered in the Jumping. Distances over 250 feet, tournament officials believe, will be possible under and LaFournaise kept ‘well out in front but they cooled tf $p the final period and couldn't to connect with any degree of cy. FARGO TRIUMPHS Moorhead, Minn., Feb. 1.—(?)—Far- go high school defeated Moorhead in the opening game of their series Fri- day night, 22-21, in an overtime con- test. VIKINGS TRIUMPH Mayville, N. D., Feb. 1.—()—Valley City Teachers college overcame May- ville’s 16-13 halftime lead to win its first North Dakota intercollegiate basketball game Friday night, 36-26. The defeat was Mayville’s third. ten Valley ‘City 36; Mayville Teach- Cops Scoring Honors atu Tavis’ five field goals gave him ligh-scoring honors, followed by Mc- with nine points, Rife with sven and LaFournaise with six. Hanna left his starting lineup in til the final whistle and the De-| s nons weathered the terrific pace in jreat shape. Beall in addition to ering four points turned in a bang- MOORHEAD PEDS LOSE St. Cloud, Minn., Feb. 1—(7)—St. Ss 3.211}Cloud Teachers college defeated the Asselstine 1,|Moorhead teachers in a free-scoring Burekhardt 1, grum, Pittsburgh. Ranging .within six strokes of the leader were such luminaries as Willie Hunter, Henry Picard, Horton Smith, Fred Morrison, Wiffy Cox, and Johnny Dawson. Score by period: imps. 1, Kraft 1,'Johnson 1, Referee: Brown. Dakotan Wesle ane FRapla city Mines 24. FAW I OF ALL THE ball team turned back the Dickinson Teacher's college, 38-21, in a North Dakota intercollegiate conference game Friday night, in the first of a two-contest series. The second game will be played Saturday. The Wild- cats trailed 21-19 at the half, but pulled ‘away easily in the final quar- passing ' Steele pf Driscoll, te ft pt good ski ditions. The present * ery sarap ee e| OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | Wildcats Turn Back a Seem'm, <9 3 0 Normal ii, American record—251 feet, 1s held by e all-around performance fo aug: pom ; | Dickinson Peds, 38-21|stevo°s ¢ $ ¢ eee si 3 : peer, ; GB eeting proves of Tavis om Set Set You tt Z - 6 3 Wright, & 0 24 Local Bowlers Will eo < Fights Last Night 3 Weer tam Wh Gl a ey LOLLIPORS- J | tanmion RD. me ion lass: ff SOLAS] "Roll at Jamestown|+— oe oe e+ ‘again showed the type of play TH KIDS WILL TAKE IN WEALTH, Wahpeton’s Science school’s basket- & a, the Associated Press) merited him a berth on last all-state team. He was ex- dangerous from any point on ne floor and contributed much to! ye Wops’ passing game. Schwarz- and LaFournaise at guards and mith at the other forward were | outstanding performers, the preliminary game, the Imps veezed through to a victory over » .85-11. Burckhardt was Totals 8 6 12 ~ Score by quarters: Steele Driscolt Great Lakes Skating Championships Start Oconomowoc, Wis. Feb. 1.—(?)— Near zero weather produced almost Jamestown, ND, D. Feb. 1.—()— Boliers.ot first Dates nthe eet TO IT LIKE POLITICIANS J FOR A NEW TAX!~— ~—TH LOLLIPOPS ARE MADE WITH A WHISTLE-HOLE IN TH CANDY !-—~1T CAN GET THE AGENCY FOR TEN SAKE! THATS TH KIND OF IDEA TH MASOR SHOULD TRY TO HATCH IN TH Ot SHELL!” WWF ‘The Montanans led 12 to 7 at the G -Beorer with five field goals fol- by Asselstine and Kelley with Vanes each. The eumiparics; Yabpeton fe fi pf er'n, ¢ 0 fn, 6 0 10 Totals +t 9 | wechntead touls—Rite. ‘ peore Or perivae: Ri Mi Beall 5, Elofson 3. ‘Referee: Leonard McMahan, Man- umpire, Fay Brown, Bismarck. Imps tg ttpt [ STATES | Dickinson cut the lead to 14-13 in the first two minutes of the second half, pushed ahead to a 15 to 14 lead but was unable to hold the eee advantage. SAINTS BEATEN 8t. Paul, Feb. 1—(#)—St. Paul's string of seven. consecutive victories in the American Hockey association was broken by the Tulsa Oilers here Friday night, as the Oklahoma crew, paced by Vic Des Jardins, won 7 to 3. The defeat was St. Paul's first on home ice since the season aan opener COYOTES AVENGE 3B DEFEAT Vermillion, 8. D., Feb. 1—(P)}— {deal conditions for the start of the | marck. second annual two-day Great Lakes per speed skating championships en Fow- ler ‘Lake here Saturday. A field of 146 skaters from seven states and Canada was primed for competition in eight classes — senior men’s and women’s, Class B ga intermediate boys, junior girls’ and boys’ and juvenile girls’ and boys’ Three former champions were en- Outstanding smong the 50 entered for competition wae Marvin. Swanson, Minneapolis, Dorothy \Franey, St. Paul, the North American 2 Assel'ne, £3 0 2 South Dakota university revenged it- 1100. eit eran at se oes | PAT Oe OE Stenday ||net 5 oO 1 of. Oms vere! ing a heeig thrilling North, Central conference vic- ol City unday ond goo aes 30-29, Friday foen Sa ws a a) New ‘arr 0 Houg! oo) iS en cl tetas neh ains of goals here Friday night to wir sizes to suit ‘the purposes of jeweler! The injured pedestrian nurses 3 +0. dentist, or sclentist. ' grudge against careless motore _ Sata ¥