The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1937, Page 8

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$0 PAR THIS YEAR Unive ONLY 10 WISCONSIN Co-Leaders of North Central ~ Conference Race Seeking 4th Title in Row PHANTOMS BOOK 2 GAMES Capital City Five Will Play Lin- ton, Dunn Center Prior to Sioux Clash Clem Letich’s University of North Dakota Sioux, co-leaders of the North Central Conference basketball race, will -invade Bismarck ..‘day, Feb. 8, for a clash with the Phantoms, Class A independent state cham- pions, ‘The Nodaks, paced by their two sen- sational forwards, Co-captains Emmet Birk and Bob (Casey) Finnegan, have lost only one game this season, @ 42-25 decision to the University of Wisconsin. Badgers, and apparently are headed for their fourth consecu- tive conference championship. The Phantoms, featuring Big Ted Meinhover, former University center, recently handed the vaunted Dakota Millers a setback after losing their first start of the season to the Har- lem Globe Trotters and winning later from Washburn's strong independent aggregation. ‘Only two games have been definitely scheduled. by the Phantoms between now and the time they clash with the ‘university team, but several others Haye been tentatively booked. Thurs- ! day, Jan, 28, they play the Linton in- dependents and Jan. 31 engage the Dunn Center club on the Dunn Cen- ter-court. . Play Jimmies on Way Clem Letich will bring his club here after a game with the Jamestown college Jimmies at Jamestown, who the Sioux defeated earlier in the sea- son by a 36-24 margin. i; Finnegan, like Meinhover, got his prep training with the Bismarck high school Demons as did Webb Olgierson, six-foot-five-inch reserve center on the Nodak squad. Besides Finnegan and Birk, Letich usually starts Donn Robertson of Minot at center with Harold Lemaire of Grand Forks and Vern Kittleson of Jamestown or Donn Pepke of Minot at the defensive po- sitions. Since their defeat at the hands of Wisconsin, the Sioux have defeated DePaul university at Chicago, James- town college et Grand Forks, Superior Teachers at Superior, Wis, Iowa Teachers at Cedar Falls, Omaha uni- versity at Omaha, South Dakota State at Brookings and Grand Forks and South Dakota university at Grard: Forks. Beulah Miners Beat Dunn Center, 29-17 Beulah, N. D. Jan. 26.—(P)— Holding the Dunn Center cagers to five points in the first half, the Beulah Miners staved off a deter- mined fourth quarter rally to win, 29-17, in a basketball game Friday. It was Beulah’s ‘first victory over Dunn Center in two years afd their fourth triumph since’ Christmas. Coach Stegmeier’s two raugy for- wards again led the offense, collect- ing 12 and 11 points, respectively. Paced by E. Erbele and Vincent, the Beulah Coeds gained their ninth vic- tory out of 10 games by defeating Dunn Center, 35-10, in a preliminary game. The first half was close but the Coeds began clicking in the third period and won handily. Summary of the boys’ game: Beulah fg ft pf D. Center fg ft pf Murray,.f 6 0' 0 Ebeltoftf4¢ 1 1 Mulhau'rf£5 1 1 Gilber'n f 1 0 0 G Mur'yc 1 2 1 Ebeltoftc2 1 2 Bates, g 1 0 2 Remsi'g g0 1 2 Shirley, g 0 0 1 Odren, g 0 0 1 Schlaf'n f 0 0 0 Dinkins g 0 0 0 David, f 0 0-0 Olson 00 0 Siebert 5 0 0 0 / rsity Quinte NODAKSHAVELOST [Playing Fullback for N. Y. Minneapolis, Jan. 26.—()—Apart from her golfing genius, Patty Berg might well pose as the model for the “average American girl.” Surprise this 18-year-old headed, freckle-faced girl home and the odds are you'd find her § sprawled on the floor teaching her three-year-old toy fox pup, “Tuxedo,” tricks. red- in her to pick up a few melodies, or over the cook stove making fudge. Although it’s her golf that brought her title of Minneap- lis’ No. 1 goodwill Patty Berg emissary, Patty is a natural athlete. She's no minor quantity on the base- ball lot either. She used to be pitcher Patty, Mill City Ace, Might Well Model as Average American Girl for her school room team and appos- ing batsmen say she had plenty, of stuff on the ball. Volley ball and basketball also were on her sport schedule in high school, Like most athletes, she likes to dance, She says she plays golf “for the fun that’s in it,” but adds, a frifle naively, that she’d “like to win at least one championship a year.” She's superstitious. In one national women’s championship, Patty flatly declined to change her old green wool skirt and loosely-fitting pink sweater, even though both were drenched by rain, because she figured it might be bad luck. Patty says she found the English such “good sports” when she played abroad with the Curtis Cup team last year that she wants to go back agai and play in the British championship. Her ambitions? “My only ambition,” she says, “is to play good golf—the right style.” Grain Belt Beer, Bank of N. D. Win Kelly’s Lunch, Coman’s Lose Opening Second Round City League Tilts Two out of three games was the best either team in the City League could do Monday night at the open- ing of the second round games with the Grain Belt Beer bowlers winning by that margin from Kelly's Lunch and the Bank of North Dakota five triumphing over Coman’s Court. Matt Hummel of Kelly’s Lunch rolled the evening’s high single and three-game scores getting a 221 in the third game for a 564 total. Degen of the Grain Belt five was only one pin behind with games of 206-200-158. for a 563 total. The scores: Kelly’s Lunch H, Hummel ....... 132-186-180— 498 J, Zahn ... « 166-169-148— 483 M, Hummel ...... 151-192-221— 564 Dan Schneider ... 170-144-176— 490 Tony Schneider .. 200-176-192— 668 Totals ......... 818-867-917—2603 Grain Belt Beer Cleveland . 128-134-180— 442 Dummy . 140-140-140— 420 Ganzel 150-137-191— 478 « 140-140-140— 420 206-200-158— 563 103-113-72— 398 867-973-881 —2621 Bank of North Dakota Kinney .. . 121-201-133— 465 Dale .... . 138-153-118— 499 Kinzer . +. 129-142-224 495 | Dummy . + 140-140-140— 420 G. Smith . 161-178-148— 487 Handicap . 9- 9- 9— 27 . 3-772 —2293 's Court Coman » 168-211-169— 548 Welsenberger . 129-128-139— 396! Masseth . « 164-172-153— 489 Shields .. . 17%+149-163— 489 Slonicker .. + 142-138-127— 407 Totals ......... 780-288-751—2329 Sixth District Tourney Awarded to Underwood Underwood, N. D., teams will be entered in the ‘annual sixth district basketball tournament Feb. 26-27, which was ewarded to Underwood at the annual meeting of the district committee recently. + Teams entered include Elbowoods, Max, Garrison, Coleharbor, Under- wood, Turtle Lake, Mercer, Wash- burn, Wilton and McClusky. Draw- ings will be made during the annual Totals 7 3 6 Totals 133 6 Technical fouls: “Referee, Webber; umpire, Thomp- son. Bowman Wins Third Conference Victory Bowman, Jan. 26.—(?)—Bowman Bates 1, Remsing | T McLean county tournament at Gar- mn, Feb. 19-20 in which all teams except McClusky will be entered. Glen Jarrett, Minot.high school football coach, and Clem Seneschal, also of Minot, have been chosen as referees. Christoferson of Garrison, Westley of McClusky and Danielson of Underwood have been named to Jan. 26.—Ten | Sports Round-Up By SCOTTY RESTON New York, Jan. 26.—(#)—Ambitious Jack Dempsey is plotting his future with one eye on the remarkable ca- reer of Jim Farley. ... He’s not in- terested in Big Jim's spring-board, 'FORMER GRID STAR CONFIDENT: UNAFRAD AS GO APPROACHES Louis May Have Answer to Ed- ucational Handicap in . Sparing Partner New York, Jan. 26.—(7)—A college education, usually rated as a total loss for a fighter, has taught Bob Pastor one lesson that may come in handy when he fights Joe Louls at Madison Square Garden Friday—how to take a@ pounding. The former New York University football star looks at it in an even brighter light. “I got over getting scared when I played fullback on NYU's football team,” he says. “In football a runner has 11 men to beat with no defense. In fighting it’s eas- ier: You have only one man to beat and you can frame a defense for him.” That is one, reason why Pastor, despite his comparatively unimportant. record; is being considered seriously as an opponent for Detroit's Brown bomber. He's confident, unworried and doesn’t give the impression he’s whistling in the dark. Louis, however, may have found the answer to the educational handicap. In his sparring drills he’s been pound- ing Tom Ponte, an ex-football player from Western Maryland. the New York state athletic commission chair- manship. .. . He's after bigger things... . Right now Jack shies from - political conversation, but in a modest way he’s campaigning for Farley to suc- ceed F.D. R. In . Mean- ne Tun- uey burrows deep- er in seclusion... . Tunney He hobnobs with Christopher Morley, the author, passes up Dempsey’s res- taurant in favor of Christ Cella’s George Bernard Shaw, and reads the nights away in his modest shore home in Stamford, Conn. . . ; Indidentally, Gene's love of seclusion tricked him once... . Grant Rice called Tunney one morning at the request of an ac- quaintance who asked an introduction to Tunney. .. . Gene was not in and did not call Rice when ‘he gotin... . The acquaintance who asked the \in- troduction was a young man named Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Story by Lou Gehrig: At Joe Mc- Carthy’s dinner to the New York scribes, Gehrig told about the time McCarthy called his Chicago Cubs team into a room for a talk about the bad effects of liquor. Joe was very calm and brief... . When the players arrived, angry about being dragged out early in the morning, Joe displayed two glasses, one half-filled with gin, the other with water... . He then displayed a long, live angleworm. . . . First he dropped the worm in the glass of wa- ter. . . It wriggled. + Then Joe dropped it in the gin... . The worm curled up and died... . “Do you know the moral of that?” piped McCarthy. “Sure,” yelled Hack Wilson in the back of the room, “it proves that if ‘you diink gin, you won't have worms.” Tip: Zeke Bonura may be yelling for $12,000 but he'll sign for less and like it... Fred Perry has been invited to play an exhibition match in London in the spring during the coronation cere- monies. . now are halloing over “D. X.” Bible’: stroke in getting $15,000 a year and 10-year contract to coach football at Texas. ... Ordinarily a 10-year con- tract shouldn’t come up for disous- sion again for 10 years, but this one will be unearthed and waved before the coaches at every charge of over- emphasis. . president gets $7,500, the argument. Serve on the tournament committee. will be hard to beat. East Side Dungeon, corresponds with | ¥. ..And it won't be long... .| . . Football coaches right! . . And since the Texas; Glen Ullin Rattlers Trim Hebron, 25-14 Hebron, N. D., Jan. 26.—()—Led by F, Yungheim and F. Mormann, the Glen Ullin Rattlers scored a 25-14 victory over the Hebron Brickmakers in a high school basketball game. Yungheim was high-point man for Glen Ullin with seven points while Meidinger with a field goal and six charity shots led the Hebron attack. In a preliminary game, the Glen Ullin girls downed the Hebron girls’ team, 18-15. The summary: Glen Ullin fg ft pf Hebron fg ft pf Schantz f1 2 4 Meidinr f1 6 3 Yung'm f 3 1 1 Werth, tf 0 1 2 Morm'’n g 3 0 3 Mann, ¢ 1 0 2 Mosbr'r g 2 0 4 Schwe't ge 1 1 2 M’Mon'e g 0 2 4 Ding, & oo ¢ Tavis, f 1 0 O Feil, & ba des, eS Schnei’r £0 0 © Ander’n f 0 0 1 Maggle, g 0 0 O Ulrich, f 0 00 Totals 10 5 16 Totals 3 8 15 Score by quarters: Glen Ullin 7 15 20 25—25 Hebron . 56 7 14—14 Referee, F. umpire, Dubbs. Beach Cagers Hand Belfield First Loss Beach, N. D., Jan. 26.—(?)—Beach handed the Belfield high school bas- ketball team its first defeat of the North Missouri Slope conference schedule here Friday night, winning by a score of. 40-15. Taking the lead shortly after the first quarter openea, the Beach team piled up an 11-2 mar- gin at the end ofthe period and were ahead 21-9 at the half. The sum- mary- Beach fg ft pf Belfield fg ft pf Niece, f 6 3.0 Richter, £4 0 1 Sites, f 2 2 1 Thomas f0 1 2 Jones, c 2 0 1 Smith, ec 2 0 3 Beckley ¢ 5 0 2 Olson, g 1 0 3 Douglas g1 1 9% Milster, g 9 0 1 Carlson 1 0 2 Barrow 0 0 0 Marman 0 0 1 Metzger 0 0 0 Wandke 0 0 1 D Thomas 0 0{ 1 Mayer oe 0 a == Totals 7) 4 12 Totals 17 6 8 Referee: Boisen, «Sentinel Butte). % 7), Joe M’Carthy’s Job ‘ .. > 2, ‘A Cinch’ This Year aoe 1 New York, Jan. 26.—()—All Marse Joe McCarthy has to do to earn his $35,000 as manager of the New York Yankees next season is win the Ameri- ‘can League pennant by 20 games and take the World Series in four straight. hat's what Col. Jake Ruppert jest- gly told him before Joe left Thurs- cay for Philadelphia on his last tour of the banquet circuit. RUGBY WINS Harvey, N. D., Jan. 23.—()—Rugby high school scored a 20-11 victory over Harvey in a basketball game played here Friday night. Rugby led at the half, 11-8. It was their eighth win of the season, chalked up its third Southwest Con- ference victory as against one defeat in conquering the Rhame high school five, 26-13, here last Tuesday. Thiel- and Bingham looked the best for Bowman, Thielges taking top scor- + ing honors with nine points. Ander- | * goh, guard, turned in a fine defen- +. downed the Bowman seconds, 19-16, sive game for Rhame with D. Hutch- ison and Erickson upholding the _georing end. Jumping to a 13-9 lead in the first half, the Rhame reserves The sum- preliminary game. 3 Bowman fg Thielges f 4 Iverson, f M’Ken‘h & Baker, ¢ | ocean! ol moony 2 3 0 1 Totals 1 Chunky Patty Berg Loses Medal Honors Punta Gorda, Fis., Jen. 26—(P)— ty Patty Burg held her favorite’s in thé championship of cham- golf. tournament Monday de- her failure to take the medal in qualifying. he Minneapolis schoolgirl was poked in the preliminary test by fies Kathryn Hemphill of Greenville, who toured the OUT OUR WAY VISITS HOME~ 1 SHOULD THINK, AFTER A SISTER HAS LEFT HOME, HER BROTHER WOULD BE GLAD WO SEE HER WHEN SHE EVER THAT STUNT IS, - NOW, WHAT- OH, DON'T SPOIL IT! I JIS WANT TO GIVE HER A LITTLE 01G ABOUT. MINDIN'. HER OWN KIDS + SHE'LL GIT MAD AN' DO IT FER AWHILE ~ I WON'T SAY By Williams _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1937 reese: SEES EE AIA SME t Will Oppose Phantoms Here February 8 MAGICIANS FORTIFY CLASS A LEADERSHIP WITH 10TH WIN Fargo Tumbled From Top Ranks; Park River Ags, De- mons in Hot Pursuit Hurt Beulah Gridder | Is Aided by Friends Beulah, N. D., Jan. 26.—Freddie Yonker, Beulah high school ath- (By the ) lete, has learned the A atring of 10 consecutive victories real friendship. gave the. Minot Magicians, North Da- kota’s only undefeated Class A cage soeeridden for four months fol- Jciub, key position in the state high lowing @& it fell, Freddie was taken to Man- [000 malor: league basketball’ race dan hospital last week to have the cast removed from his hips and get fitted out with a set of braces that will enable him to be up and around again. | A popular subscription to. which the welfare board, the American Legion post, the Beulah Lions club and the Beulah athletic club donated produced a fund suffi-. cient to take care of the entire hospital and doctors’ bills. Joe DiMaggio Is Glad Training Starts Soon San Francisco, Jan. 26.—(?)—Joe DiMaggio already is getting itchy feet. The New York Yankees outfielding ‘The Fargo Midgets, who shared top honors last week with the Magicians, were in seventh place as a result of thelr two defeats at Bismarck and Mandan over the week-end. With only a one-game margin over the Park River Aggies and the Bis- marck Demons, the Minoters face a severe test. Friday when they meet Coach Glenn Hanna’s Demons on the Magician court. Coach Lioyd Falgren’s Aggies clung tightly to second posit in the race. The Aggies have dropped only one con- test in 13) starts, while Bismarck was at third with a lone defeat in 10 games. Of the 12 teams in the Class A race, Valley City, Mandan, Wahpeton, Far- go and Jamestown each had two de- feats for the season while Dickinson, Grand Forks and Williston had three star’of 1936 is straining at-the leash.|and Devils Lake remained in the Springtime can’t come too soon for {cellar with five loses in nine games. the long-legged. Italian youth who] ° H U. Taught Bob Pastor How to ‘Take It’ NO TRUMP IS WEAK REPLY. Player, With Nine Solid Tricks, Avoids Going Partner Fails to Respond With Suit Bid By WM. E. McKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) While for the most part has become standardized in keeping with the principles of the’ one-over- one, 8. Gartou Churchill, of Brooklyn, who has been the favorite partner of many of the nation’s ranking experts, very much of an individualist in his carved his name in bold letters in his Won’ Lost Pet. major league debut’ last’ year. 10 0 1,000 The spring training grind may be a 12 1 923 pain in the neck to the oldsters but 9 1 800 it’s a lark for Joe. 8 2 -800 “I sure have missed the feel of that 7 2 178 old apple,” said DiMaggio. “That 7 2 178. blistered foot. at training camp last 5 2 14 spring cost me a lot of time and I ™ 3 -700 missed the first 17 games of the sea- 6 3 667 son, This year I want to play in every 4 2 667 game.” 5 3 625 Since he helped the Yankees ring » 4 5 “4 down uraleriacn Lond sa vee + Fights Last Night _ championship, Joe has taken a8 i easily as is pose Ne tee. a rT ¢ Fights Last Night { youngster who ks and talks (By the Associated Press) esis of rence cticase—Hiarola Brown, 142%, ee hicago, outpointed Frank Sag- Basketball Clinic Is lio, 44%, Chicago, (10); Billy Marquardt, 128, Winnipeg, Man., | knocked out Walter Pasick, 131%, Detroit (1); Ray Baker, 139, Grand Forks, N, D., outpointed Scheduled at Bowman Bowman, N. D., Jan, 26—(?)—Harry Wienbergen, coach of the Dickinson Bengel, State Teachers college Savages, will eared Pradaicariepaly be in charge of a basketball clinic to] ast Moline, Ill, knockea out be held Wednesday ‘afternoon and} ‘Tony Mandell, Rockford, Ill. (3); evening at the Bowman high school) fenry Rothier, East Moline, gymnasium, knocked out Kid Rudy, Rockford, Purpose of the clinic is to explain} (g), and interpret the rules for coaches Dulut lenry Schaft, and game officials in order to secure Pheoeateny outpeinted bara more uniform officiating and create| Lambert, 145, Proctor, (8); Jimmy & better understanding between the Minneapelis knocked Collins, 152, out Steve Cooke, 160, St, Paul, (2)3 eying 131, Procter, knock- “ (8); Jock Moore, Rym Procter, cutpointed Joe Elliett, 148, Su- coaches and referees. The sessions will start at 3 p. m. Ditner will be served in the evening to superintendents, coaches and offi- cials and a basketball game between | coaches will be played in order tO) perior, Wis.. (6). put the proper interpretations into Butte, Mont.—Charlie SOFTBALL HEADS NAMED effect, according to Melvin Ingebrit-} Butte, defeated Hubert Dennis, Chicago, Jan 26.—(®)—The Ama- sen, secretary of the Southwest Con-| Beseman, Mont. en a foul, (10), | tur Softball Association of America ference. jriaaiiatsiddiie bensisetits Monday- night its . 1937 ae mu SCHAFT TRIUMPHS state and roped com- * he luth,-Jan. 26.—()—Henry Schaft, | missioners, beaten hoy Michigan Hangs Onto |,)""itineapolis, decisions’. Wer | those of 600,000 or more ; First Division Berth |tambert, 145, Proctor, in an eight-|The commissioners included: North Chicago, Jan. 26.—(7)—Big Ten basketball players turned from courts te examination classrooms Monday, with the championship race temporar- ily halted until the first week in Feb- Tuary. Michigan was clinkingly doggedly to @ first division perch as the result of its 32-19 victory Monday night over Chicago. It was a fourth win in six title starts for the Wolverines and the sixth straight defeat for the hap- less Maroons. + Indiana plays Loyola and DePaul meets Chicago next Saturday in non- conference tilts. Underwood Defeats Mercer.and Wilton Underwood, N, D., Jan. 26.—Under- wood's high school basketball team added two more cage teams to its growing string of victims last week de- feating Mercer in a game at Under- wood Thurscay, 25-12, and conquer- ing Wilton at Wilton, 24-7. Tonight the locals play Garrison here and Fri- day night go to Turtle Lake for their second encounter this week. Under- ‘wood has won all but two of its games this season. COBBER LEADS SCORERS 8&t. Paul, Jan. 26.—(4)—Art Ernst, star guard on the Concordia college basketball team of Moorhead, holds down the individual scoring lead in the Minnesota College Conference. The Cobber player in five games has con- nected for 16 field goals and 14 free throws for 46 points. He is followed by George Peters, bulky McAlester center, with 41. Research experimentalists at Ohio State university, searching for the ideal motor fuel, used gasoline pre- parations costing from $128 to $3,200 a . More than 125 various com- binations of hydrocarbons were ana- lyzed at a cost of $1 to $25 an ounce. ee Just Received {Tonks are plumb tickled Fis Silver Dollar tastes so an’ costs so little! es fine Bourbon was distilled: Brogabiuaice renin by. experts—jest like ex- ive whiskies. Then it was aged in charred oak kegs er 18 months. Only reason it costs so little is Royal Tailors’ Spring Line of woolens for men’s fine tailored clothes. Royal Tailors’ Suits are correctly styled to your individual measure. | Dahl Clothing Store 410 Main Ave. round main event bout Monday night. Dakota—P. E. Mickelson, because we knew it was goin’ alin — fa- vorite whi an’ figgered our profit by the carload instead o’ by two counts—| an’ low cost. day, folks, wherever good liquor is sold!” tuncoun wm cesta co.. inc. (Seagram's) vawmencesune, mus SILVER DOLLAR °: 18 MONTHS OLD STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY ‘Slam: When. aio trump seepuabe:t0 tle disasind trump, if North can produce a heart So far as this is concerned, both roads lead to game, ‘but with South’s hand it would be quite easy for the holder Ud cea ering Ao vision a cards in his partner's hand Si he bidding. ; For myself, I must admit that I prefer the more generally followed N. eto tS Tame oeepniade, Eat as ee same time admire precision of the “eke ‘Churchill bidding, which at once dis- missed the possibility of greater ties at Match Point Play,” the first |things than game, with South's strong book on bidding at duplicate bridge | Holdings. to be published. So far es the play is concerned, the Today’s hand is an_ illustration. | opening lead gave North.an addition Other experts would prefer.the heart jal trick, but no-play could have pre- an immediate to an open- | vented him from taking at. least nine, ing diamond bid. But Churchill, who|as South held that number in top reserves such bids to disclose more cards, Forx Winter Sports stadia need recom getia’ ri al D te Set] Ue ees eC wien avite. ye Carniv: al 8 imagine you are. dancing with a little Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 25.—(?)}— Members of the Grand Forks Caval- younger the drink. “Silver Dollar wins on for it to- LIQUORS DISTRIB! REVERAGE 60,

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