The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 12, 1936, Page 6

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6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1986 Swiss SCANDINAVIAN STARS TAKE MAJOR SPEED SKATING, SKI TITLES Teritish Win Third, Americans; Fourth and Sixth in Thrill- ing Finals BALLANGRUD COPS CROWN | Swedish Skier Captures 18. / Kilometer Cross-Country Title Wednesday Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Ger., Feb. ; 12.—(#)—Cracking the course record, | Switzerland's daring bob - sledding} } pilots, Pierre Musy and Reto Capa- drutt, finished one-two in the four- man championship of the fourth win- ‘ter Olympic games Wednesday. Musy and Capadrutt held their own; in the final two runs Wednesday to) beat a crack international field that) (included two American teams, headed ' ‘by J. Hubert Stevens and Francis! ‘Tyler of Lake Placid, N. Y. Musy put together successive heats! “Of 1:22.45, 1:18.78, 1:19.60 and 1:19.02 for the 1600 meter course to win the championship with total elapsed time or five minutes, 19.85 seconds. Although nosed out for the title, Capadrutt shattered the Olympic chute record in his final whirl down the course. Capadrutt was clocked in 1:18.61 for this heat. eclipsing the rec- ord of 1:18.70 held by Hans Kilian of Germany, and finished second with total time of 5:22.73. Britishers Cop Third Third place in -13 went to a Sensational British team led by Fred- erik McEvoy while Stevens had to be content with fourth place and Tyler; with sixth despite their consistent racing in both of Wednesday's heats. Stevens’ total time was 5:24.13 and Tyler's 5:29.00. A Belgium quartet piloted by Max Houbent split the American entries to snare fifth place with elapsed time of 5:28.92, Although the two American teams made a much better showing Wed- mesday than they did in the opening two heats, they were outspeeded by the Swiss all the Second to Mus: total time of Fs i fi ,. | der revised rules wi 2:38.62 for the final two runs, Stev eliminated after each fie and | for Wednesday's heats, 2:39.35, to pull|€4ch basket from the floor counting | up from fifth place to fourth. Tyler's | three instead of two points, the Lin-{ consistent performance enabled the | to Independents siayed off a detor- second American sled to slide into} Mined rally by ens turned in the fastest aggregate sixth position a{ter winding up tenth | Wednesday. Tyler's showing came as a surprise | SC! for he was a last-minute stbstitute | free throw: for Donna Fox, New York pilot who Was injured in a smash during prac- tice last week. Swedish Skiier Triumphs Arthur Larsson of Sweden captured the 18-kilometer cross-country ski face Wednesday, covering the taxing curse in one hour, 14 minutes, 38 “seconds. Scandinavians swept the first six | Places with Obbjorn Hagen of Nor- ‘way second in 1:15.33 and Pekka ‘Niemi of Finland third in 1:16.59. \. Matin Matsbo of Sweden fourth in 1:17.0: [ee Se K Co H In 2; Olaf Hoffsbakken fifth in 1:17.37; and Arne Rustad-| jstuen of Norway sixth in 1:18.13. } In the first 11 finishers were three | (Swedes, five Norwegians, two Finns} jand one Czech. America’s entrants | Minished far back. Magnus Satre of! Salisbury, Conn., leader of the Amer-| ican delegation, was clocked in 1:25.56. +Norse Skater Wins Again | Ivar Ballangrud of Norway Wed-} ov fesday won his second Olympic speed | Periods, the Togger: in front and were never threatened. Ed Fite, Toggery center, dropped in four field goals for high scoring to- tal. skating title in as many days, defeat- ‘ing the world’s best over the 5,000 ‘meter distance in new record time. | Ballangrud, undisputed king of the! jworld’s speed skaters, was clocked in! minutes, 19.6 seconds to smash the| ell ~— {here Friday. the City Cage | drive in the se formers Baseball Ranking of Major Sport| &me From Title Gets Title Shot _ Freddy Miller's featherweight title goes on the block in Seat- tle, Feb. 18, when Johnny Pena, above, Portuguese boxer, climbs in the ring with the Cincinnati belter. Pena won a 10-round non-title decision from the champion in Oakland, Calif., in January. Linton Independents | Beat Prep Five, 33-26: Linton, N. D., Feb. 12.—Playing un: orer W The summar, lk, go chier'r, 0 remer 1 don igh § depe Rete Toggery Quint Trims | Shamrocks, 22 to 14 Klein's Toggery quint, put on a bi: md half ti ver the Mandan Shamro; ight. The score was tied at six-all at thi intermission but in the closing two quint stepped out le, center, were the out for the Shamrocks. Th: pic record Thunberg of Finland | summary: K jset at 8:39.24 in 1924. | | Birger Vasenius of Finland was sec- and Antero Ojala, also of Fin- , third. Delbert Lamb of Mil-| jukee withdrew because of a bad Bob Peterson of Milwaukee | d in 8:46 | Champions to Enter Indoor Skating Meet | j | Bt. Paul, Feb. 12 of Sudbury, Oni M and Madaline Horn, mowoc, Wis., defending champ- fons, Wednesday added their names to the record entry for the North Am- erican indoor skating championships here Saturday and Sunday. The event has not been held since 1933, and as the outdoor championship ‘Faces are not expected to be held this year, officials look forward to more than 150 competitors, including the ‘Canadian Olympic team which did ‘not go to Berlin because of lack of funds. | Twin Cities skaters, who made al-/| it a clean sweep of championships it Petoskey, Mich., last week, are listed ‘as the most dangerous contenders for the titles. Dorothy Franey of St. aul bested Miss Horn last week, and Marvin Swanson, Minneapolis, took eer honors in the senior men’s divis- { | Canadiens Play 1-1 Deadlock With N.Y. New York, Feb. 12.—()—-The Mon- _treal Canadiens. bogged down in the “Canadian division cellar of the Na- tonal Hockey League, are trying desperate measures to improve their standing but little progress showed “for it Wednesday. The Flying [Frenchmen had, three new players in Mnitorm Tuesday nicht as thev strug- ‘only to a 1-1 tie with the New ork Rangers. Boston ran over the i. o Blackhawks 7-1. Detroit in- its American group lead by e the world champion Mon- club, 7-3. WIN TOURNEY MONEY Jamestown, N. D., Feb. 12.—Prize in the annual Jamestawn tournament included: doubles n-Ripple, Mandan, 1,147, $23.50; itgens, Mandan, 1,107, $4; and; ¥. Schultz, Mandasi, 590, $10, Mandan, 568, $2. Yeasley, P)—Alex Hurd, | engines. are frequently rusting, due to the humidity. lein's f t? tin Totals In many tropical countries, aircraft 1894 that Johnny Ward, manager and ven to the cylinder kore-— second baseman of the Mutuals, subject to excessive threatened to take Hanlon before the ms | ae ‘ith the center jump Id goal and| ‘ne Lions high school quint to hang up a 33-26 triumph! Walter Dobler was his n three field goals and five leaders of triumph 22-14, in a game played at Mandan Tuesday ! nit | H. House, forward, and A. Brun- | standing p2r- National Granted 31 Franchises Before League Became Stabilized This is the second of a series cf articles on Sixty Years of Na- ticnal League Baseball.) \ New York, Feb. 12.—()—Chicago ;and Boston are the only two cities jthat have been members of the Na- | tional League throughout the 60 years {of its existence. _ During the nineteenth century, jfranchises jumped hither and yon ‘according to the vicissitudes of base- {ball tides and ebbs. In the 25 years jup to and including 1900, there were 31 different franchises held, a few {of them for only one season. | William A. Hulbert's guiding force ‘set the game on a solid basis in Chi- |eago from the beginning. “The Father of the League” built the background {on which many of the sport's greatest’ jfigures have moved, from Cap Anson down through the Tinker-to-Evers-| to-Chance era into the Wrigley cham- {pionships of 1929, '32, and °35 | Boston's first administration, headed jby N. T. Appolonio, lasted only one; \campaign, but in 1877 began the 30-) year reign of Arthur Soden, whos¢) [entrance meant important money {spent to purchase stars. The business \first big-money deals were transac- |tions in which Soden coin drew Chi- cago luminaries across country to play |with the “Bean-eaters.” i No Change Since 1900 The turn of the century marked a| | Yeal milestone in National League his- tory, instead of merely a change in the circuit's stationery. The league lineup, ‘as it started the grind of 1901—Chi- cago, Boston, Brooklyn, Cincinnati, |New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Pittsburz has remained intact. A roll-call of cities that have had their names in National League jchampionship standings will bring moments of astonishment to today’s generation of fans. Providence. for instance, was a pow- erful baseball metropolis in the first |dozen years of the loop’s life. The Frovidence Grays, managed by George Wright, won the pennant in 1879 and again in 1884, with Old Hoss Rad-| bourne the hero. Wright vas the most famous short- stop in the early days of the dodge. He is the only surviving member of the illustrious Cincinnati Reds of 1869 and the oldest living ball player. Radbourne pitched in 75 contests} for the Grays if 1884, winning 63 andj losing 10. From July 23 until Sept. 26, Old Hoss pitched every game, bagging 18 in succession. Each morning his iron} arm was so sore that he couldn't lit it to his shoulder. He started to warm !up by rolling to the catcher. After an hour or more of this he could Oa Tall Hoosier Pivot may | A chief reason for Indiana uni- versity’s game-winning drive to- ward the Big Ten basketball cham. pionship is Fred “Reach” Fecht- man, 6 foot, 7 inch center, who has scored many of his team’s points, (Associated Press Photo) Ace of Spades’ Rally Bests Jim Slattery Fargo, N. D., Feb. 12—()—Ace of Spades, 160, Minneapolis, Negro, ral- lied in late rounds to outpoint Jim Slattery, 180, Fargo, in a six round windup bout of the weekly Elks card Tuesday night. Otto Kuss, 225, Pine City, Minn., threw Sandy Carter, 230, Evansville, Ind., in 19 minutes with a body scis- sors and body press in the wrestling bout sharing the main event place. Results of other fights: Mike Kan- ski, 160, Fargo, stopped Hank Thor- sen, 167, Milnor (2) technical; Sonny ;|toss the ball lightly. By game time! he was ready to go. His regular as- signments were not enough. Rad- bourne won five exhibition games during the schedule. That fall he} trimmed the New York Metropolitans | in three consecutive engagements in} the Temple Cup series, which corres- ponded to the world series of today. Orioles Revolutionize Baseball Detroit bagged the flag in 1887, and the Baltimore Orioles of song and story held sway in 1894, '95, and ‘98. Ned Hanlon managed that immortal aggregation and on the player list were such men as John McGraw, |Hughie Jennings, Wilbert Robinson, © |Willie Keeler, Kid Gleason, Jack ;Doyle and others who lived to be patriarchs of «the pastime in the jtwentieth century. The Orioles were the first outfit to |go south for training. Hanlon took |them to Macon in the spring of 1894 ~ |Baseball writers said that he was go- ing goofy, but the Baltimore array |Was so successful that in 1895 every 'g ft Pf pig league team went to Dixie to get) 3 in shape. fy 5 The Orioles perfected the hit-and- | 2 Tun. Bunting had been done before! 0 by other teams, but perfect bunts and *|putting the ball into whichever field 5|the batter desired’ had never been seen before. The Orioles revolution- 4 ized the game in other respects. So one-sided did their opening series |with the New York club prove in league heads. Ward declared that the Wood, 140, Fargo, outpointed Elroy Bushaw, 134, Grand Forks, four rounds, A | Fights Last Night | ieee" (By the Associated Press) San Jose, Calif.—Freddie Miller, 128, Cincinnati, NBA feather- weight champion, stopped Bobby Gray, 134, San Jose, (1) (non- title). Los Angeles—Moon Mullins, 126, Terre Haute, Ind., outpointed Frankie Castillo, 12412, Los An- geles (10). Saginaw, Mich.—Frankie Wolf- ram, 126, Detroit, outpointed Ar- manda Sicilia, 126, Springfield Ti. (10), Fargo, N. D.—Ace of Spades, 160, Minneapolis, outpointed Jim- my Slattery, Fargo, 180 (6). Orioles were not playing baseball, but & new game. Hartford, Louisville, Buffalo, Syracuse, Worcester, Milwaukee, Troy. jKansas City, and Indianapolis were National League cities for shorter or longer periods during the formative quarter-century of the wheel. Original charter members, besides Chicago and Boston, were the Mu- tuals of New York, the Athletics ot Philadelphia, Hartford, St. Louts, Cincinnati, and Louisville. Of these \cities, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Cincinnati are members of the twentieth century lineup, but there were gaps in the continuity of their membership. OUR BOARDING H OUSE =. AND, MY BOY= FOR $250 You LOLLIPOP CORPORATION |! THINK OF IT, #250! By Ahern YOU Guys, TH CLIFF TO$35, BuT I FELL FOR A TWO-PANTS suit J BOTH PAIRS ARE AS FRANK AS AN XRAY TOGETHER To START Ves A NICKEL HERE,. COULDNT POOL ju: mm ——| Victory at Jamestown Friday y Will Clinch State Inter- collegiate Crown Season's Standings Wwte TP. 644 412 308: 238 399 202 187 Jamestown .. (Minot ..... Dickinson . Valley City Wahpeton Ellendale .. Mayville (By the Associated Press) Jamestown college _ figuratively cleared a space in its trophy case Wednesday, fully confident of win- ‘Jning the North Dakota Intercollegiate Conference basketball championship. The Jimmes chalked up their sixth consecutive loop win by edging out! the second-place Minot Normal school for the second time this season, and are not the least apprehensive over three additional conference games re- maining for the next two weeks. Friday Jamestown meets Dickinson Normal, a team twice beaten by Minot | and then tackles the defending cham- pions of the state independent league. the Bismarck Phantoms, in a non- conference tilt at Bismarck Saturday. Last week's play boosted total games won by Jamestown to 15 out of 16 the lone defeat being at the hands oi the University of North Dakota quint which managed a one-point victory. A three-game road trip by Wahpe- ton features this week's college sched- ule. The scientists play Mayville ‘Thursday, Minot Friday and Bottineau Saturday. The only other intercolleg- fate battle will be fought between Valley City and Ellendale Friday. Minot with six wins and two losses ranks second to Jamestown in the college conference, Dickinson thirc, jtwo and three, and the others in or- der: Valley City one and two, Wah- ipeton two ard four, Ellendale one and jfour, and Mayville none and two. | Rowling PScores Two out of three games was the best any team could win in the City Bowling League matches Monday and Tuesday nights. The Town Talk won on that margin from the O. H. Will trundlers, Klein’s Toggery turned back the F. W. Woolworth five, Gam- ble-Robinson beat the Coman’s Tour- ist Court bowlers and the Capitol Cafe were victors over Robertson's. Dan Schneider of the Nursery crew toppled the maples for counts of 193- 207-202—602 for the high three-game total Monday night while John Roeh- rick for Coman’s chalked up games of 191-222-195—608 for top honors Tuesday. The scores: Town Talk 152-218-170— 540 152-184-224— 560 186-195-182— 563 187-176-200— 563 201-130-155— 486 32- 32- 32— 96 1 x Try Cervinski .. Goetz . Baldwin . Smith . Larsen . Handicap . Totals........ 910-935-963—2808 O. H. Will F. Hummel.... 200-170-181— 551 Zahn ...... 196-190-180— 566 168-172-187— 527 193-207-202— 602 191-181-203— 575 948-920-953—2821 | Klein’s 181-156-187— 524 151-162-169— 482 121-210-169— 500 169-160-194— 523 171-173-214— 558 '793-861-933—2587 Beaudoin Harnish . i 467| 474 438 151-169-147— 180-153-141— 167-143-128— 140-140-140— 420 180-208-177— 565 46- 46- 46— 138 864-859-779—2502 Handicap ..... Totals... Coman’s Tourist ++ 124-178-117— 419 191-222-195— 608 138-139-157— 434 156-176-136— 468 140-140-140— 420 149-855-745—2349 -Robinson 158-127-164— 469 159-148-155— 462 | 138-185-140— 463 140-140-140— 420 140-140-140— 420 26- 26- 26— 78 Nelson .. Roehrick Coman ! Sioniker Dummy . Totals.... Gambl Handicap Totals........ 761-786-765—2312 "8 172-138-165— 475 170-123-178— 471 137-110-131— 378 203-146-166— 575 198-190-157— 545 36- 36- 36— 108 tals........ 916-743-833—2492 Capitol Cafe 159-186-186— 531 140-140-140— 420 147-179-182— 508 158-157-194— 509 173-205-153— 531 Patera .. Stolz Anstrom . Winistorfer O, Nordiund.. Handicap .... Brown . Totals........ 777-867-855—2499 Abe Kashey Throws Undlin at Rochester Rochester, Minn., Feb. 12.—()—Abe Kashey, 209, Paterson, N. J., grappler, threw Glenn Undlin, 220, of Madison, Wis., in 24 minutes of a half-hour limit wrestling match here Tuesday night. In the semi-windup, Farmer Tobin the bearded 264-pound wrestler from Presque Isle, Maine, went 30 minutes to a draw with Carl Davis, 245, of Columbus, O. Stan Myslajek, 205, St. Paul, drew with Jack Sampson, 210 Wahpeton, N. D, in 15 minutes. 0 Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, veteran athletic director and basketball conch of the Univers sity of Kansas, who will direct. the American hoop team in the Olympic Games, | Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, Feb. 12.—()—Southern experts are telling everybody Patty Berg will be the next women’s golf champion, ... Jack Dempsey trotted out three colored lads in his “white hope” tourney the other night. ... Jimmy Walker's entry won a first, at the dog show. . ... California is send- ing a bumper batch of native sons — eight this time—to the majors for tryouts. .. . Connie Mack and Tom Yawkey have notified their athletes autos will be taboo at the training camps this year, ... The Athletic’s ban includes wives, too. Notes of the perfession: George Edmond, Demen sports ed of the St. Paul Dispatch, has felt the sting of the razzberry. ... He helped judge a fight in the enemy city of Minneapolis, ... A St. Paul scrapper got the nod... . Ouch! No, Dan Parker of the Daily Mirror, didn’t get that broken arm writing a column about James J. Johnston. ... He skidded on the ice.... The father of Bob Sensenderfer, sports ed of the Philadelphia Bulletin, played right field for the Athletics 70 years ago. Ty Cobb has lined up with the Joe di Maggio rooters. .. . Says the kid may flop in his first year, but ulti- mately will be a sensation with the Yanks. . . . Everybody says Joe will be the best throwing outfielder in the majors. ... Babe Risko got only $868 for crown the other night... . Pickings are so poor he will offer Barney Ross a shot at the title... . English sports- fighters how to box. Roy Stockton tells this one on Terry Moore, Cardinal speed mer- chant. in an exhibition game with th 2d Sox last spring, he was on first base when Virgil Da- vis hit a double ta right field... . Moore crossed the plat> in time to turn and watch Davis going into second, ... The Amorican League umpire cn the bases could searcely believe his eyes... . “What was that object that flashed past me? he asked. “That,” replied a National League ump, “was the fastest thing I ever saw on two feet.” SAINTS TRIUMPH Oklahoma City, Feb, 12.—()—St. an goals, defending his middle - weight men are offering Tommy Loughran all kinds of dough to stay in London, open a gym and show the British; Paul repulsed Oxlahoma City, 4-3 in overtime American Association hockey game Tuesday night after tie- ing the score with two third-period LYMPIC BASKETBALL RULES WILL HANDICAP U. S. CAGERS| Win Over Coyotes Coach ‘Phog’ Allen Believes Quality of Talent Will Off- set Odds Lawrence, Kan., Feb. 12.—()—The| 1, United States Olympic Games basket- ball squad will stack up against con- ditions entirely foreign to those un- der which it plays in this country Regardless of that, Dr. Forrest (Phog) Allen, director of athletics and cage coach of the University of Kansas, who will handle the Yankee} 1, squad, is optimistic. Reason for the optimism of this sage of the court game, who has tu- tored teams for 25 years at Kansas and Warrensburg Teachers, is evi- dent. The United States will have the pick of the largest number of players indulging in the sport in any country in the world. The tournament to select the squad will be played in New York in April. Five college teams will be selected through elimination in 10 regions, and pairing of regional winners; the win- ner and runnerup in the national A. A. U, tournament; and the winner of the Y. M. C. A. meet. From the winner of the final round between these eight squads, the run- selected 14 men. Gravel Hinders Dribble “Competition is to be ugder Euro- pean rules, which differ somewhat from those in use in this country,” points out Dr. Allen. “Play will be out of doors, in August, on gravel or bituminow; courts. It is difficult to dribble on these types of surfaces, and it will take some time to acquaint our boys with conditions. “According to a letter that I re- i of athletics at the American School in Paris, European officials call pivot plays strictly, ruling as traveling what is perfectly legal in this country. Stalling or ‘freezing’ are legal in Euro- pean play.” Dr. Allen, however, isn’t worried much over differences in regulations. His 19 conference championships in 25 years of coaching has made him an authority unequaled in this coun- try. , Phog broke in under Dr. James Naismith, inventor of the game, when he was playing with the Kansas City Athletic club in 1905. The father of basketball, then Jayhawk coach, in- duced Allen to enter Kansas Univer- sity. In 1908 Naismith’s pupil took straight championships. all sports at Missouri State Teachers, Warrensburg. In 1919 he returned to {his alma mater as director of athletics, and has been there ever since. Prize Pupils Now Coaching Dr. Allen originated the zone elas- tic band, ‘five-man defense system. This advocates playing the ball in- stead of the man, and players are not worn down as in the man-to-man defense. It also tends to hold down opponent's scores. Some idea of the game the Yankees will play against teams of 22 other nations in Berlin, the first time bas- |ketball will be a competitive Olympic |sport (it was played as an exhibition contest during the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis) can be had from the type of game Allen’s teams play. His offensive game consists of short passes, pivots, dribbles and short shots. He stresses accurate shooting of fou jgoals, and uses both the fast break and the set screening plays. | As @ builder of star players, Dr. | Allen probably is not outdone by any 'coach in the country. A few of his ‘former pupils are Louis Menze, Iowa | State mentor, whose team won the |Big Six title last year; John Bunn, | Stanford coach; Adolph Rupp, Ken- |tucky; Dutch Lonborg, Northwestern, Hl 1 jand Forrest Cox, University of Colo-|. |rado. | Olympic Results | HOCKEY England 2; Canada 1. Unived States 2; Czechoslovakia 0.) Sweden 1; Austria 0, Germany 2; Hungary 1. SPEED SKATING 500 meters, won by Ivar Ballangrud, Norway, time 43.4 seconds (equals Olympic record). Leading American, Leo Freisinger, Chicago, third. ner-up and other top teams will " over the coaching reins, and won two| @ y ‘Then he entered medical school and, | in the fall of 1912, became coach of! jJunior High 4-Man Bobsled Teams Finish One-Two in Olympics Immortal Baltimore Orioles Gave _| Jimmies Only One Sioux Score 34-24 | Bob Finnegan's 10 Points Help Nodaks Stay Unbeaten in Conference Vermillion, 8. D., Feb. 12.—()—The Iniversity of North Dakota continued unbeaten in the North Central Con- ference by trouncing the University of South Dakota here Tuesday night. 34-24. Tonight the Sioux play their oft-postponed game with State College at Brookings. The first half ended 16-10 for North kota. Bobby Buck, Coyote guard, stayed in the forefront of the conference Scorers with nine points, only one behind Bob Finnegan, high-pointer forward from the north with 10. Little Clark Swisher, who played nearly the entire tilt, turned in a scintillating flour game for the losers. Aamoth and Rorvig, North Dakota guards, were plainly off form but Le- maire and the tall Robertson per- formed creditably. Summary: S. Dak. fe ft pf N. Dak. of ec wo monersaS M'Dow'l, Finne'n, Swisher, Birk, t M’Ginty, Burich, f G Rober'n, Aamoth, Kittle'n, ¢ Rorvig, 'g Lemaire, g 3 eras, Howoommnoel 4 3 0 3 1 1 Shreves, c Buck, c¢ Home'r, ¢ David'n, & ry oootHoons Totals 15 4 34 Totals 7 10 2 Score at half—North Dakota 16; South Dakota 10, Personal fouls—McGinty 4, Shreves 3, Buck, Hoymeyer 4, Davidson 3, Finnegan 2, k 4, Robertson, loonenonmss | oworteesarne Aamoth 8, Kittleson, Rorvig 2, Le: maire 3. Referee—Livingston, South Dakota. POSTPONED A. C.-IOWA GAME SLATED TONIGHT Cedar Falls, Iowa, Feb. 12—(®)— ceived from V. Bouryschkine, dna a tad ti ete iliac Teachers basketball game, postponed from Tuesday night when drifted roads prevented the visitors from reaching here in time, is on schedule for tonight. St. Mary’s 8th Grade Beats Jr. High Cagers Paced by Volk, forward, the St. Mary’s Eighth grade basketball team won from the Junior High school quint, 15-12, here Tuesday night. Volk tossed in four field goals and three free throws to account for 11 of the winners’ points. The summary: St. Mary's fg ft pf Jr. High fe 1 0 2 Shuitz, f 1 Scott, £1 Shultz, c 0 Minin’r, g Gephart, & Olson, f Dohn, ¢ ft pe toa Free, f Totals Totals 4 Technical Shultz 1, Scot St. Mary's .. 2-15 5-13 Referee, U. Hebron Quint Downs Almont Cagers, 19-14 Hebron, N. D., Feb. 12.—Making good five trys at the free throw line, the Hebron prep cagers defeated Al- mont here Saturday, 19-14. Each team scored seven field goals with the gift shots providing the margin of difference. The score at the half was six-all. Atkinson and Anderson for Almont and Mann for Hebron tied for top scoring honors with three bas- kets from the floor apiece. The sum- Almont 1 Atkin’n, Falgren, ‘Ander’ Mann, ¢ Fehr, & Ding’ Totals Blind Trundlers Lose Unique Match in N.Y. New York, Feb. 12—()—Five blind bowlers competed with their seeing brothers Tuesday night and lost. ‘The unique match was held in the basement of the community center | ecccce al newconS jof the New York guild for the Jewish blind, the blind youths using an iron rail to get their bearings before fir- ing the big ball. With a handicap of 100 pins, they lost 670 to 654 but if enthusiasm was the measure of success they would have won in a rout, It was the world series and the Rose Bow! game rolled into one for these unfortunates who have never seen a two-base hit or a halfback lug the ball. OUT OUR WAY | i | | i YOU EYPECTED TO GO SERE! TH’ OTHER SIDE, HAH? NELY GLIDIN’ UP By Williams

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