The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 4, 1936, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1936 Rejuvenated Braves Hope to Square Saint QUINTS T0 SETTLE SCORE AT NEW HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM “Yops Retain Hold on No. 1 Position Among State Teams, Despite Setback DEMONS IMPROVE RATING; Dickinson and Valley City Only Class A Fives Undefeated in State Play Coach McMahan’s Mandan prep cagers wil be watching little Nicky Schneider plenty close when the Braves and Saints clash tonight in | Book Appearance at TICKETS FOR TOURING TENNIS Vines, Bell, Stoefen and Lott Mandan Feb. 28 Farly reservation of tickets was urged here Tuesday as officers of the for the appearance on Feb. 28 of Ellsworth Vines and three members of Big Bill Tilden’s tennis troupe. Sponsors of the event, which will be staged in the gymnasium of the state training school at Mandan, anticipate | ; a crowd of over 1,000 persons for the two singles and one doubles match to be played by the touring profes- sionals, Other players in addition to Vines, who will appear in the net stars’ first | first visit to west- ern North Dakota, Ri ls the second game of the season be- tween the two teams. It was the diminutive parochial school forward, playing his first game with the Saint regulars, that spelled defeat for the Braves in the first game, pacing a St. Mary’s rally in the Jast half and paving the way for Art Helbling’s winning basket in the clos- will be Berkely Bell of Texas, for-| mer amateur star now turned pro- fessional; Lester Stoefen, 1934 in- door singles cham- pion, and George Lott, said to be]en Valley's Hot Shots beat the fast Beach Cagers Defeat ly-improving avenged a previous defeat at the hands of Dickinson Model high by scoring @ 37-12 victory here. The lo- Mandan Tennis association prepared ‘cals jumped into a lead at the outset and were never in danger. Hanevold and Gilman led the scoring with 13 and 11 points respectively. Beach Hanev-d, Carlson each . Model ¥ Golden Valley Whips Dickinson Model High Beach, N. D., Feb. 4.—Beach’s rapid- high school team The sum- 2 M, High fe tt vf dam'i, t able, 1 ‘ogt, ¢ 0 Stranik, ¢ 1 Jose, & Gerbig Peterson ams’ d, erocmma Totals | Totals Score by a] cosenenne Referee, Brown. day. Stanton Five, 27-26 Golden Valley, N. D., Feb, 4.—Gold- Indiana Minnesoia Chicago |Hoosiers Defeat STARS’ MATCHES PUT ON (SALE) Minnesota, 26-23| * Purdue Hangs on as Big Ten Co-Leader With Win Over Ohio, 48-27 The Standings 1 1 228 cunnnumunad sawuununco Chicago, Feb. 4. — (®) — Purdue's spendthrift Boilermakers and Indi- ana’s frugal Hoosiers, exemplifying “|two widely different varieties of bas- ketball, the state's favorite pastime, were still bowling along toward a tie for the Big Ten championship Tues- Each of the neighborhood rivals who do not meet this season added a victory to undefeated conference rec- ords Monday night. Each accom- Rowling Score Gamble-Robinson trundlers swept all three games from the O. H. Will team and the Capital Cafe: won two out of three from Klein’s Toggery in L_ Pct. TP 4 City League matches rolled Monday 000 17 i 59} night. Steve Walery of the Capitol Cafe crew blasted the maples for counts of 223-163-202—588 to annex single and three game honors. The scores: Gamble Robinson 161-147-158— 466 177-170-140— 487 168-154-144— 466 140-140-140— 420 181-199-212— 592 131-131-131— 393 + 958- 941-025—2834 itl’s Dettman |Handicap .. F. Hummel Zahn ...... M. Hummel . D. Schneider . A. Schneider .. 179-188-153— 520 157-162-129— 448 200-155-221— 576 165-175-161— 501 ++ 208-190-157— 555 Totals ......... . 900-870-821—2600 Klein’s ‘Prelims Promise Plenty of Action Rusty Gramling Will Spot Hard- ing.Seven Pounds in Six- Round Semi Preliminaries to the Demaray- Mann main event on the Legion card here Wednesday night promise to fur- nish plenty of action for the follow- ers of the boxing game. Jack Harding of Sioux City, who meets Rusty Gramling in the six- round semi, is a stablemate of Mann's and has fought a big percentage of the Northwest’s better welterweights with fair success. Among others he holds a decision over Lloyd Weaver of Sioux City, the same boy who gave Kalbrener of Moorhead such a close rub at Fargo not long ago. Rusty will spot his Towa opponent about seven pounds in weight. ‘The Hasselstrom-Schafer bout is a return match. Wild Bill won a deci- sion in the first engagement but Schafer is in better condition for this New England Downs Belfield id High, 28-12 New England, N. ND, Feb. 4.—New England’s Tigers downed the unde- feated Belfield high school team, 28- 12, here Friday. New England held @ 18-6 lead at the half. Butnitsky led the Tigers in scoring with two buckets The summary: N England fe tt pe Zemjcle, t 1 Butnit'y, ¢ 2 Schwe'r, ¢ 1 Nassett, ¢ 1 Balee fg ft vf rf 1 0 oem Siistetn ‘Thomas Ingman Jacobson 0 81 oooh fouls: | Coote rses Totals I eoces, Tot: 1 smith ei Redmond at Cae 4 6—28 4 2 4—12 inpire, Bender, S ators by. ce te New Englani Belfield ...... Referee, Rundl Governor Urges Feeding of Birds Welford Says State Stands Ready to Cooperate in Wild from the floor and eight gift pac Defeat Tonight | (Right Garden to Test Comebacks | Moses, Campbell and Klein Have Chances to Cet Bac! in Lineups New York, Feb. 4.—(?}—Among other things, the right field patrol offers an excellent chance for several of the wounded or missing to make comebacks along the major league baseball front this spring. Outstanding in this respect are Wally Moses of the Athletics, Bruce Campbell of the Cleveland Indians and Chuck Kleir of the Chicago Cubs, Moses, freshman sensation among American League outfielders last sea» son, and Campbell, obtained by the tribe from St. Louis, both were hit- ting at @ .325 clip when forced out of action. Moses broke an arm in mid season and Campbell was taken seri- ously ill with meningitis. Full recovery for both men will mean regular jobs again, Klein, one-time batting king who became a-$125,000 bench-warmer last year after falling off to .293 at bat, hopes to pick up where he left off in the world series. An accident to fight and is confident he can reverse the tables, In the three other preliminaries, Bill Chapman of Bismarck wil meet 5 Clyde Icenogle of Bismarck, Pony' Sportsmen’s organizations were Williams of Fargo will battle "Johnny | urged Tuesday Acting Governor Moren of Billings and Billy Cavin of| Welford to save wild life from des- Bismarck in encounter Jimmy Wil-j truction by the continued cold weath- + 925-901-850—2675 | son of Fari er and snow-covered feeding ground. apitol Cafe | The shistatn raiser is slated to start| Pheasants, especially, need assist- ++ 211-160-149— 520! at 8:30 p. m., at the city auditorium.| ance now, he said, stating that lack 223-163-202— 568 of feed is driving the birds from their 5 Nodak Golden Glove 194-194-194— 582 natural feeding grounds and many 182-157-195— 534. are victims to automobiles on high os 172-177-142— 491 vays. pga yet Charkgions 3 in Tourney] ‘1 woud suggest that sportsmen’s 982-851-882—2715 organizations of the state decide on Minneapolis, Feb. 4.—(@)—A motley| the best method of feeding and car- assortment of leather pushers start|ing for our wild life during the re- swinging tonight in the opening 64} mainder of the winter,” Welford said. bouts of the seventh annual North-|“The state stands ready to cooperate west Golden Gloves tournament. |in any way possible as soon as a line A new lure of the championships, | of action is determined upon. of which five will be defended by Uni-| “In the meantime individuals and versity of North Dakota representa-|sportsmen’s units can do much by tives, was the possibility of winning, leaving feed for game birds back from the greatest dou-;Stanton Independent aggregation bles player in the; here Saturday night, 27-26. The game world! was fast and marked by brilliant .| Shooting by both teams. The lead a emminion hee aaa iaadeet ae wie two fore he forsook| field goals in the final two minutes the amateur game, is recognized as|Paving the .way for the locals’ the hardest smasher and the posses-| triumph. Whyte was high point get- sor of more sustained speed than any|ter with 12 points. The summagy: other player in history. Unquestion- | [for Shots fe ft pi Drewers fe ft pf ably he is one of the ranking tennis! Sam" Telnius £46 players of the world. Jacob'n, ¢ Grannis, ¢ 2 0 Last year he won the world’s pro- yin tee fessional singles championship at| pindstin®s Wembley stadium in England with| Dee, s his bullet-like service and smashing returns which rank him above even Big Bill in pro net circles. Bell, Stofen and Lott stand only a notch below the dynamic Vines and each appearance of the pro stars is marked by the same smashing brilliant play that characterizes the Fred Lindstrom gave Chuck his chance to show a@ burst of oldtime power. The subsequent release of Lindstrom indicates the Cubs will start off with Klein at his old stand, in right field, and Frank Demaree shifting to center. Except for standbys such as Paul Waner of the Pirates, John Moore of the Phillies, Mel Ott of the Giants and Pete Fox of the world cham- pion Tigers, there’s a scramble for Tight field jobs. For the Yankees Roy Johnson, shute tled to the big town from Boston by way of Washington, will get the call over George Selkirk. The Red Sox may experiment with the speedy Bill Werber, a third base- man, in right field. Mel Almada and Dusty Cooke also will be available. | Fights Last Night as (By the Associated Press ) plished its triumph in characteristic Fowl Protection fashion. The Hoosiers, who have made a|Dum! practice of not wasting any more scoring power than necessity oh, any |Harnish Big Ten foe, squeezed out a 25-23 vic- |Handicap tory over Minnesota's immensely im- Proved five at Bloomington. Purdue, following its lavish point making pol- icy, overwhelmed Ohio State, 47-27, at Lafayette. Indiana's victory was its sixth straight, with six more league con- tests to go. The Boilermakers ran their conference string to five in a row. Iowa turned in a 35-22 victory over Drake in a non-conference game. Glen Ullin Con quers Indiana's set offense produced a 23-12 margin over Minnesota early in New Salem, 20 to 15 Glen Ullin, N. D., Feb. 4—Glen the second half, but as was the case a iheeataes conference tests, the loosters weakened and had to check| yjiin’s flashy high school team turn- off @ threatening rally. ed in a 20-15 victory over New Salem here in a closely contested game. The locals had a narrow 10-9 lead at the 168-190-156— 514 204-156-170— 530 ++ 140-140-140— 420 3+ -196-180-155— 531 +. 161-179-173— 513 56- 56- 56— 168 ace eae nal: ing seconds of play. Tonight, the inexperienced Braves, who found themselves for the first time Saturday against the classy Wah- peton quint, will be out to square | that defeat and in doing so figure they first must stop Schneider. The ‘game, which will be played in | the Bismarck high school gymnasium, has been called for 8 p. m. ' Coach Ted Meinhover was shifting » his lineup this week to fill in the gap left by the loss of Jim Hurning, who Monday reached the age limit. Hurn- F ing has been playing some bangup |’ basketball this season and his loss F will be sorely missed in the back J. court. Totals . Davis Leinius, ¢ 1 0 Grannis, ¢ 1 Leupp 0 H, Furest, 1 2 Totals | esecr: 1 0 2:8 1 ) 8 Totals Elgin Five Trounces Regent Cagers, 17-6 Elgin, N. D., Feb. 4.—Playing a fine defensive game, Elgin’s prep cagers defeated Regent, 17-6, here recently. It was the fifth straight conference Changes Lineup The parochial school coach is ex- | pected to shift Pete Fischer back into one of the guard berths to team with | Dick Rausch. Arnold Anderson will / remain at center and Schneider and ’ Art Helbling at the forward posts. > McMahan shifts his lineup so often The Gophers roared to trim Indi- ana’s margin to 24-21, but were that it is hard to tell who will start © for the Braves but the probability is f that Toman and Friesz will be in the = forecourt, Smith at center and Uhi- man and Miluck at guards. The Wahpeton game in which the Braves showed remarkable power in | battling the eastern top-notchers on even terms during the regular playing F time uncovered a new Brave star in the person of Ralph Reidinger, sub- stitute forward, and he is liabie to get E the call over either Toman or Friesz. ) A preliminary game between the Angels and the Papooses, reserve teams of the two schools has been . called for 7 p. m. North Dakota high school basket- ball teams resume warfare this week ) with Wahpeton knocked down from its undefeated rank into the group- ing of three other class A teams hav- ‘ing one setback on their record. Demons Dangerous Although beaten twice, Bismarck ‘proved itself a dangerous quint by toppling the smooth-performing Wahpeton club which nevertheless held to a tie with Valley City for the lead in the class A race, each having /13 wins in 14 games. Other teams beaten but once this }season are Minot and Dickinson. Quints representing Valley City and Dickinson are the only ones unde- ‘feated by state teams, Valley City Pdropping its one tilt to a Minneapolis outfit and Dickinson failing in a game }with Miles City, Mont. Seven intra-class A engagements fare slated for this week, starting off with Park River at Wahpeton Thurs- iday. The others are: Friday—Fargo fat Bismarck, Dickinson at Williston, Valley City at Minot, Saturday—val- y City at Devils Lake, Bismarck at : yn, and Fargo at Mandan. Games against non-class A oppon- ents included Minot playing St. Leo's fof Minot Tuesday, Wahpeton defend- itself against a Grafton invasion nd Grand Forks journeying to East Except for Park River whose offi- ‘sials failed to supply information on yan played, the class A standings City L 7 oTP 237 268 219 135 206 148 17 269 201 208 210 253 valley t wt 354 274 227 253 318 290 165 318 175 265 OO ATR Mandan . Williston Steele Quint Turns | Back Dawson, 31-22 | Steele, N. D., Feb. 4.—Rallying after n slow start, the Steele high school hve turned back Dawson here, 31-22. locals led 18-11 at the intermis- Chester Zech tossed in nine i! id goais for high scoring honors. summery: Dawson Kooker, f Markam, f Pumm'l,' c Lewis, & Burkett, g Gregor W Burkett ° Mattly, fy Totals 10 BE el ecesouw Referee, lodaks Schedule Grid Contest With DePaul Feb. t ity’s ’s football card for 1936, an- Monday by Coach Jim ‘Yneluded games with Ilinots ‘North Dakota university, new- fs on the Demons’ schedule. The include: Sept. 26—Illinois a: Nov. 7—North Dakota here. NEW SALEM WINS ». 4.—()—De Paul annual _ tourneys at Wimbledon and Forrest Hills, com- manding world wide attention, In Bismarck tickets will be on sale at Woodman see's, Hall Drug store, the Sak's, Ww R Berkeley Bell | Ri Bismarck high school and may also be purchased from Ruth Wetwore at the Association of Commerce offices, Milton Higgins at the capitol, J. H. Kling at the Bismarck - Mandan Credit bureau and George Hauser. Bowman Quint Takes SW Conference Lead Bowman, N. D., Feb. 4.—Bowman’s Bulldogs grabbed the lead in the west- ern division of the Southwest Basket- ball Conference here by conquering the previously unbeaten Scranton prep quint, 22-10. Bingham and Ly- ford, guards, and Hagg, forward, were the outstanding performers for Bow- man while Nibbs at forward looked best for the visitors. The summary: Bowman fg {t pf Scranton fe ft pt Herzig, f Miller, Hage, ft Nibbs, f i Chiba ‘Timlin Bing'’m, g 2 Schmitz, & Lyford, g 4 Husnik, Griffin, & Wegner, f Totals 8 Totals Referee, G. Clemetson, U. S. Breaks Canadian Puck Star Monopoly New York, Feb. 4.—(?)—Major League ice hockey, once the monopoly of Canadian-born players, slowly but surely is making room for American youth and aggressiveness. There was a time when a star hockey player who claimed American birth was looked upon either as a prevaricator or a wonder. Hobie Baker, Taffy Abel and Billy Burch were among those who first showed that the game could be devoloped to a high degree by players born this side of the border. Today, however, it is possible to name an all-major, all-American born team that shapes up as a power- ful outfit. For the job of goal minding there is Mike Karakas of the Chicago Blackhawks, born in Aurora, Minn. For the defense there could be Art Lesieur of the Montreal Canadiens, born in Fall River, Mass.; Alex Le- vinsky of the Blackhawks, born in Syracuse, N. ¥., and Roger Jenkins of the Boston Bruins, a native of Ap- pleton, Wis. The forward lines could be started with Doc Romnes of the Blackhawks from White Bear, Minn., Carl Voss of the New York Americans, Chelsea, Mass.; Cecil Dillon, New York Rang- ers, Toledo, Ohio; Louis Trudell, Blackhawks, Salem, Mass., and Leroy Goldsworth, Canadiens, Two Harbors, Minn. Boston College Signs Gil Dobie As Mentor Newton, Mass., Feb, 4.—()—Boston college's football pendulum may be ready to swing high again with Gil Dobie generating the force. Since announcement that “Gloomy Gil” had transferred from Cornell to B. C., the Eagles hopes have soared as high as under the late Major Frank Cavanaugh, whose teams were great ones a decade and a half ago, Details of Dobie’s contract were not disclosed, but there were hints from those who should be informed that it was for two years’ duration &t about $10,000 a year. Influential alumni had clamored for a prominent head coach since the time of Nav- anaugh, At B. C. the current attitude is to forget slumps of Dobie's recent teams and remember his grand record of winning elevens over a 31-year career as @ coach at Minnesota, North Da- kota Aggies, University of Washing- eth and the navy as well as at Cor- nel victory for Elgin. Lipelt of Elgin was high scorer with three field goals, The summary: Elgin fg siowed down at the finish by the vic- tors’ clever ball Handling. Lester Stout and Fred Fechtman led Indi- Regent ana with eight points each. Jim 2 half. Fischer collected nine points for scoring honors. Mae summary: G, Ulin fe ft Salem fg tt pf Fischer, t 2 Rina eg 2 8 team. Places on the United States Olympic| the highways in the areas generally frequented by them. From backyard rings, coleges, and |help by placing small amounts of feed CCC camps came 168 amateurs for|daily in the fields. Food and crusts Farmers can Roth, 135, New York, (10). New York — Pedro Montanez, 134%, Puerto Rico, outpointed Al LaMarre, c 2 Roberts, ¢ 2 Lipelt, & A eel Lewis, State and OKay confectionaries, the| {ustarn; * 9 tg ft pt Bach, f x are D'Laney, £0 0 0 Marks, ¢ 06 Ulmer, & Beesley go Burga'r, & 0 Wisem’n, f 0 Tollof'n, ft 0 Totals 3 Tttmer, £0 einke, f 1 = ivini's, er00ss005 ° go eyer, f Totals pA ae C) 8 ele Minneapolis, Baker scored six to top Minnesota. PLUMMER PINS FOE Feb. 4.— (®) —Lou Plummer, 240, Baltimore, threw Cliff Thiede, 207, Long Beach, Calif, after 22 minutes and 35 seconds of rough | 9 wrestling here last night. Dinyer, f Benson’ ft Wilkens, g Kirchmer sl Sl cose ot! Score by quarters: Glen Ulin . New Salem elimination bouts tonight and tomor- row night at the. auditorium, sem!- finals to follow Friday night. North Dakota's title defenders are Carlyle Loverude, bantamweight; Cully Eckstrom, feather; Owen Trick- ey, lightweight; Kenny Brown middle- weight, and Ben Blanchette, heavy- weight. =i THE HAWKINS BOYS, Roy and Jesse, in a cozy corner of the kitchen. They’re cleaning up the rifle for a little shooting. And they’re having some fun right now—because do you know what’s in those pipes? Prince Albert! “I’m here to tell you that there’s only one ‘national joy smoke’—Prince Albert,” says Roy. “The P.A. cut is different— each P.A. pipeful burns slower and tastes cooler. I’d advise any pipe lover to take up that Prince Albert proposi- tion of money back if not satisfied. Me, I’m pleased as can bel” Albert cigarette in 17 sec. Leonard says: “Prince Albert whips into shape in a jifty—tastes mild—soothes @ man’s tongue and soul!” 5 (Left) ROY REMEMBERS WELL how he got that one. Had his pipe and Prince Albert along too, because he has smoked Prince Albert for at least ten years. “I found a pleasant sur- prise,” he remembers, “the first time I opened one of those big red tins. What mellow aroma!” YES,SIR, FIFTY PIPEFULS! (Right) “You'll be surprised how much more tobacco you get in those big economy tins,” says Roy. “They hold around fifty pipeft ”’ Men, read the you- must-be-pleased offer. Try America’s favorite tobacco entirely at our risk. LONG BURNING PIPE AND CIGARETTE TOBACCO pipefuls of fragrant tobacco...in }, every 2-ouncetin of Prince Albert of bread should be left on clearings or small platforms every day for the smaller birds that paasize towns and cities,” he said. He stated the game and fish de- partment is also attempting to aid deer in need of food, especially in the northern area of the state where snow is deepest. langer, 18314, Winnipeg, outpoint- ed Johnny Nelson, 175, Buffalo, DOWN BY THE POST OF- FICE. Jesse got some mail! Roy’s smiling because he has just stocked up on Prince Albert. “It is easy to tell from thetaste,” hesays, “that Prince Albert comes from extra-qual- ity tobaccos. And the fine flavor of mild, mellow tobaccos is pro- tected by a special ‘bite remov- ing’ process that P. A. uses.” You'll Think Just As Highly of Prince Albert As Mr. Hawkins Does If You Try it. Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don't find it the mellowest, smoked, return the pocket tin. with the rest of the to- bacco in it to us at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund full’ purchase price, plus neon. (tigen R. dr Remmeieg Toetees Comenet PRIP Our Proposition | tastiest pipe tobacco you ever R. J. Reynolds T. “Money Back If Not Satisfied” If you roll your own: Roll yourself 30 swell cigarettes from Prince Albert. If you don’t find them the finest, tastiest roll-your-own cigarettes you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund full purchase price, plus postage. (Signed) ‘obacco Company, Winston-Salem, N.C. \LBERT THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE

Other pages from this issue: