Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~fhover, center, and Ollie Sorsdahl, |. tors and the Woodmanee Stationery pices 71 ‘PRE - TOURNAMENT POSSIBILITIES ARE VIEWED FAVORABLY Dickinson, Park River, Devils Lake and Grand Forks Challenged Saturday OATES TENTATIVELY SET Games Would Be Played Here March 5-6, Two Weeks Prior to State Event Possibility of the four challenge games in Class A high school basket- pall being played in Bismarck was visualized here Saturday following the determination of the four major North Dakota schools whose right to enter the state tournament will be contested, Jamestown will play Park River, Mandan will tackle Grand Forks, Fargo will meet Devils Lake and Wil- liston will oppose Dickinson in the challenge round, it was decided by representatives of the four schools that were forced by the draw to chal- Jenge for the right to enter the Class A event. Elimination games have been ten- tatively set for Feb. 5 and 6 at the ‘World War Memorial building here. Final action upon the move to play all of the challenge contests at Bis- marck will rest upon the approval of the challenged schools. Williston Alters Choice ‘When the drawings were made here Saturday, Jamestown won the right to challenge first and chose Park Riv- er. Williston had the second right and named Devils Lake but Fargo al- g0 challenged the Satans and rather than play in a tournament with the two teams, Williston withdrew that challenge and named Dickinson as eir nent. miliston ’s withdrawal of its initial challenge was in accordance with the system hit upon by Superintendents B.C. B. Tighe of Fargo and L. A. White of Minot, president and secre- tary, respectively, of the North Da- kota high school league, to insure the ‘utmost fairness to all teams. After the challenges had been made, plans were discussed as to how the receipts of the four games would be divided and representatives named several officials that would be ac- ceptable to their schools, Final de- cision in each case will be made by the high school league. Four Are Unchallenged Four Class A teams—Minot, Valley City, Bismarck and Wahpeton—will}.on rittle, king of amateur golf until ‘There was little to chose between|So she’s usi disguise. In ad enter the tournament without playing | nis abdication in favor of profession-| Ohio State Favored to Defeat Y Segre fut’ she ‘also # game. ‘The four chel-| ais tast april, put $1,000 and a tours the five starters in Bismarck’s lineup.|dition to the bathing siut she ‘also THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. ‘MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1937 : Decade Takes Toll on Channel Swimmer ROUGH 6 AME FINDS + HAWKEYE Boss | DEMONS AHEAD 8-7 | | ATHALR SATURDAY! Source ae vel doesn’t plan to make it his life kK Beall Takes High-Sooring Hon- igen strapping son of # former Ger- ors; Blue Jay Reserves : ace anes earrnend ae sattasily can Defeat Imps, 20-13 F most kids dog-paddle. He may cap- P' ; : italize on his great eed A the water, but he has no desire to earn Bismarck high school’s basketball ving swimming, team proved they were something be- ee iueven etoce a sides just @ first-half ball club Sat- *E Jove swimming,” Kiefer said. “It urday night by smothering the James- has done « lot for "me. It has taken town Blue Jays, 25 to 8, after being me to Europe twice ‘and I have seen Bel te an 8-7 edge in the first two every pert of the United States ex- quarters, B west coast I wanto earn Rough and tumble from start to Sart fe peers asiness. finish, the game produced some shin- cad eat ‘sooseehing pease ng examples, oe poor Lerten’ and Q for myself.” all-handling and on the other hand S tanley inger some fine defensive performances and E His coach, '6| ee - occasional bursts of superior hard criticism, limiting William Gussner’s were far below par, particularly dur-| sor, was appointed director of ath. ing the first half. , ilps . suscees ome Solem Who es . roeder been won 1ratis Opens Scoring aocted with the univeraty SO yeare, | Oorothy Franey Leads Women’s wis sank a field goal after (Associated Press Photo! . i a little over'two minutes of the first : Competition; Marvin Swan- quarter had elapsed and followed a) son Paces Men guard, sank one from outside the free throw line to bring the count to 4-2 By SCOTTY RESTON at the end of the first quarter. Jack Bowers’ high-arching shot} New York, Feb. 1—(#)—Bob Pastor, found the hoop at the outset of: the} who started out to lose gracefully to ¥ second period but Danuser tallied] Joe Louis and made » success of it,| Honal records Sunday complete the once from the floor for Jamestown! says he wants to be « sports writer,| ‘¥0-day competition. men’s national outdoor titlist, and tied at 6-all, A charity shot each by In a decade the husky, happy girl (left) has been transformed into Beall and Enge for the Demons and the weary, woe-begone cane-carrier (right). The two pictures show Gertrude Ederle, the first woman to swim the English channel, She re by ane £0: a eds a Ss qeoplen te coe: ae Mineola, N. Y., on a cane to press a suit for ther loedls 2h EC meee i ( lamages, e charges that a loose tile caused her to slip down Aft termission 15 steps, sustain injuries that make it impossible for her to work as Gan ewan the intermission swimming counselor, Buddy Beall registered twice from the floor and with both teams passing est competitor being Shirley Jameson strong lead in her attempt to retain the honors. SAN FRANCISCO OPEN EVENT |o*st2 sisitocia't2" Secor CAMeagMeRm "*se'Sen'Se's | sate snag te ie “ara began to click. Bob Peterson started] } bum.... — - r Eleanor Former Amateur King Proves it with a nice looping shot and Beall Holm Jarrett (re- ° T e » Wi ef E B checked in with his third field goal Bob Pastor member?) still has He Is Still Master of Match 1g en Quintets and added a gift shot. With that 17-7/hopes of regaining her amateur| Stack of Sudbury, Ont., second with! Derrig Play Competition ° ey | lead to work on there was never any|standing. .. . She’s out on a vaude-| 40, and Ralph Hachenbach of Chi-| y Pp ain Take Trail doubt as to the outcome and the|ville tour now, and she knows. the 5 Capital City quint continued to pile; Amateur Athletic Union frowns on San Francisco, Feb. 1—(?)—Law- up points. her appearing in a bathing suit.... Each made his mistakes and had his|wears a 10-gallon hat... . That fenging teams were drawn from ®/nament championship into his pocket Chicago; Buckeyes Play é ne ajor share of bad breaks but on the whole| doesn’t get in the way of the A. A. U. group of 12, selected for the major | Monday as convincing proof that he Gophers Saturday came through in great style consid-|or the, spectators, #0 everybody's state group on the basis of enroll- | still is a master of match play com- ment. petition. Unless Courtenay, a Class B school, withdraws its challenge before Feb.|of the 72-hole San Francisco match 5, Devils Lake will be forced to defeat|/play open to do the trick but the basketball championship drive, after| ering the roughness that grew more/happy. . . . Incidentally, down in noticeable as the game progressed.| Washington Monday, the Washington Beall with thfee field goals and a|A. A. U. has sanctioned a backstroke | 1:21, : brace of gift shots was high-point|/swimming race for the “Eleanor Holm| Senior men’s events tonight include man, Jarrett” trophy... . Anybody who tells| the half-mile, one mile, and five-mile. It took 20 holes in the final round|' Chicago, Feb. 1—(#)—The Big Ten @ lull for mid-year examinations, will that team before engaging Fargo. — |husky son of a United States army| resume tonight: with Chicago's cellar-| Danuser at center and Lynch st|you she’s beautiful but dumb is at) In the senior women, the quarter> Representatives of the four chal-| officer fought it out with the courage occupying Maroons traveling to Col-| forward and Butts at guard were|least half wrong. mile and one-mile are scheduled. Yenging schools, here for the drawings, | of a real champion. were Coach William Giussner and| Little edged out Nell Christian, umabue fore battle with the third} outstanding for the Jays. When figuring how much Joe Di- Ernie Gates of Jamestown; | Coach|squatty veteran from Yakima, Wash, Pee eeneE atunaea or ah Imps Defeated Moyplo is wort per annum, remem- | HOppe and Schaefer Leon .| a ; three » ard McMahan and Supt. J. r the latter had staged @ thrilling! 1161 tour title starts this season, will| _Brugman and Kercher led a fourth-|ber there are more Italians in New Resume Cue Match 8 ‘h Henry Rice | comeback to square the match on the oon Maa Ban, Jono ones of|18th green. el be heavy favorites to take the Ma- ‘Williston. quarter rally wheres leoeeneres York than in Rome, ... In actual town reserves & v over/dollars and cents at the Yankee For three rounds of thi ,| Toons, losers of six straight games. > i champion of 1934 and 1935, played| ames are on the week's program.| "1 a0. ahead 8-4 at the intermis-|That Louisville flood is even threat- Phantoms Trounce sub-par, unbeatable golf, eliminating | Saturday night Indiana goes to Iowa] ©) “ana stim leading 11-9 at thelening the baseball business. .. . Most Dunn Center, 64-46 McQuire, Meinhover and Sors- dahl Lead Capital City Quint’s Attack Bismarck’s Phantoms went on & scoring rampage Sunday afternoon to hang up a 64-46 conquest of the Dunn Center independent basketball team in a game played at Center. McGuire, forWard, Ted Mein- guard, paced the offensive as the in- Gependent state champions jumped to @ 25-2 lead in the first quarter and continued to pile in the baskets to gain a 35-16 lead at the halftime, McGuire sank 10 field goals and a gift shot but trailed Wetch of Dunn ‘Center, who counted 12 times from the floor, in the race for high-scoring ‘honors. ‘Meinhover tallied 5 points, Sorsdahl 44, Eddie Spriggs 10 and Johnny @priggs 4 during the affray. Wetch, .a@nd Fosmark, center, were the best performers for Dunn Center. ‘Next Monday night the Capital City elub will play the University of North Dakota Sioux at the World War Me- morial building here. Reserve seat tickets for the game have been placed ‘on sale at the State Recreation par- store. The summary: Phantoms fg ft pf Orville White. 5 and 4; Jimmy Hines,| 82d Ohio State travels to Minneap- A 3 and 2, and Horton Sinith, 5 and 4, "| OUs to meet Minnesota, three-quarter, mank: Uns gumnmaries: | of tie paeior deat e ee from| Fame at the Strand acedemy. He held a 3 up lead at the ninth| Seven other games are on the @ factory in that town and the:clubs e and virtually tucked the title away at| Week's program, all of a non-confer-| Beall, tf | 3 2 3 Midstr’d ft 0 5 the 14th—four up and four to oe ence variety. Indiana opposes Ball! Bowers, f 2 2 ) Tynch, € 9 @ J) yean supply. . . . Ossie Solem, visit- Sust when it appeared Little was| State nd) ‘Teachers tonight and on|P°'"..5 ¢3 § 2 yonnson gO 0 1|18,the scene of his coaching worries ready to claim his second tournament| Wednesday night Purdue goes. to| Inge, ¢ 0 1 2 Amund’ngo 1 2/0 Syracuse's Piety hill, says his team victory since turning pro—he won the| Notre Dame, Loyola plays Chicago,|Rishw'h c 0 0 0 Davy. f° 0 0 3 will beat Colgate if it has “half the canadian oe last September—the earqucie invades Northwestern and! otals 9 7 8 Butts, t 103 ses ee wee. AG eke pnts ottom i aw oe, hang be . Better fell out of his pag of golfing HH scueen State plays Wisconsin at! Totals 24 14| Young, trainer in Joe Lo caaph ts Score by periods: will tell you all this talk about how He t! | 3 7 Fos 1 le three-putted the last four holes,| The stand nen Bismarck ‘ ‘ 4 13-28 much tape tees on his hands is TP OP} Jamestown yard test. meen aaa oe more cantious | strokes under par for 100 holes, in- 5 is par 5 was not good | cluding 36 holes of qualifying. Chris-| 5 lecides ria naunea sues i tian was four under par for 108 holes Imps. a . eS sdiaaa pioloes venient the is! he tournament 16 | played. He won $500. | 4 ee major league clubs. Hank Marino Retains the Brooklyn camp from now on. . . «| ( And a gent over in Philadelphia te 0 te Cy Milwaukee, y - region lade erent cee IN THIS BACK = oat su) er) by 20.36 Points, ROOM? C’MON-YUH Hi g rad Monday to the business of MUST SEE THIS- DON'T TELL ME tending his bowling alleys here. YUH NEVER SET Ng oa ip ger hyde IN THE FINE night, while at the same time he lost Bo fg ft pf M’Guiref10 1 “Genter fg ft pi uire *Bosch, 2 0 ft 0 0 Spriggs, tf 2 0 0 o 0 inh’ (fee fosmarkc4 0 0 Sorsdahlg7 0 1 Qukrop,cz %9 0 1 ESprgsg5 9 2 Ander'n & 0 2 —_--—-— Summers 4 3 Totals 31 2 3 imstad 0 0 0 ] Basketball Scores { z (By the Associated Press) Minot Teachers 53; Mayville 35. * Corcordia Junior 39; Bethany 37. “Bemidji Teachers 51; St. Cloud 49. N, D. 8. 42; Omaha U. 18. ‘Chadron Rapid City School of Utah Aggies 42; Montana State 41. Coe 84; Beloit 21. Luther 37; Macalester 30. Eveleth Junior 47; Duluth 33. Gustavus Adolphus 42; St. Olaf 20. Kau pee Teashers 41; Stevens Drake 36; Iowa State 32. ' HOCKEY pecoiean Tech. 1; Minnesota 0 &, Thomas 4; St. Johns Univ. 2. WRESTLING Minnesota 26%; Iowa Teachers 9%. SEATS IN THIS of the 120-game title series with Joe Bismarck fg ft pf Jamesto’n fe ay are already worrying about next Schaefer won the first match at TE ‘Four Class A Challeage Games May Be Played in Bismarck Bismarck Spurts in Fourth Quarter to Smother James Kiefer Has No Desire to Make Living at Sport He Excels in pipes and loves to exercise them on “hot” songs. Kiefer matriculated last fall at the University of Texas. rt technique. Z é . Sea ereainne, ‘the Demons were above Z Blade Stars Set Demon P uck Team to a single free throw in the/ €. G. “Dad” Schroed bove), final tee periods? but offensively they} veteran University of pea pel 3 U. S. Records Beats Jamestown Jack Smith Tallies Five Times in Convincing 9-3 Vic- tory Saturday short while ee with a pair Aas the § R d ——_————_ free throw line. Butts, Blue Jay, rts U Se Jack Smith, Demon center, showed ‘a po! oun Pp St. Paul, Feb. 1—(7)—The 1937/the way Saturday afternoon as the North American indoor speed skating} Demon hockey squad chalked up its champions will be determined. Mon-jthird consecutive victory of the sea- day night when the fast field of blade/son, a 9-3 win over the Jamestown artists who hung up three new na-/ Blue. Jay sextet. Smith garnered five goals, four of which came in the first period before and Lynch made both shots good on|and the fight critics have decided he| Dorothy Franey of St. Paul, wo-|Coach George Schaumberg substituted Beall’s infraction and the score was defending ian’ in the ee Hee ee lineup. meet being conducted as a part ofjand left St. Paul’s winter carnival, held ajlied twice scoring. Jamestown tallied once in the first ‘Miss Franey, who won the 220 and|period on W. Haselton’s shot and ped | half-mile races Sunday had 60 points counted twice more in the second with at the halfway mark, with her near-|D. Brugman and Ritchie pushing the puck into the net. ‘Two weeks ago Bismarck defeated LAWSON LITTLE WINS $1 000 wildly, fouling frequently and missing ; of Chicag6, who has 20, 9 their numerous shots at, the basket One night he| Alex Hurd of St. Louis, Mo, the|the Jays at Jamestown and later the score remained at 12-7 through- makes their esti-| defender in the men’s senior event, turned back the Mandan city six for Bismarck Jamestown Kositzky ‘Monroe American Hockey while at St. Louis, taking five shots over par. He missed L . one putt of slightly over a foot. Chris- | Illinois . S 1 217 193| ,teferee: | Fay “Brown; umpire, |just part of the bulldup. tian, meanwhile, was a stroke better | Purdue oh ass ep ; ( each time, to even the match. Ohio State... 3 1 124 119 Imps fg ft pf Jamestown He /docen's (ine .any/ mote tA. ay ‘They halved the first extra hole in| Minnesota, 2 1 63 ep xeasley £2 2 2 Reserves fg tt py Laat eh Arr ed aptiae par 4’s. On the 20th Little had the | Michigan 4 2 22 194 Corwin, c 1 1 2 Porter, £ 0 , LO INESS: Cholce of playing his second shot safe | Indiana 3" 2 178 ler Inman’ 1 1 2 Donner, «2 9 g[anybody else's... . Louis is off to AVOIDS SING F; E or shooting over a cluster of trees.| Northwest al 3) ay) sen pantie; 5/8 (0a) Bene eo es cad pales Black’s mace a reee ies He took the latter course. The ball! Towa . 1 4 139 160) See 30 1 Pregl enee " : Makes Safe ith Ace, sailed to the green. He was down in| Wiscoas 1 4 149 168) Totals 4 5 i$ tleeac of the iki tonal Dode:| D&*larer (ees ick in Suit for Sua Siem” ee wo put for a birdie 4 = Bl on the 500- | Chicago RON Sam) 9 © Olswearing as far as he's concerned in e477 | third round could be ruffed and thus' SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM wing, respectively, each to round out the Bismarck support Apparently he could win all the club other fellow to do tricks if Kast held the king, as the|° ™Y money. Let him use wa? Braddock Would - Ditch Schmeling For Louis Bout Gould Announces Attempt to , Scrap Contract to Meet German Challenger New York, Feb. 1.—(7)—Convinced the world’s heavyweight champion- ship is worth a million dollars, and that a title defense should net the champion at least half that much, Jim Braddock plans to scrap his agreement to meet Max Schmeling, so he can take on Joe Louis for 000, titleholder’s manager, Joe Gould, expressing certainty a Louis- Braddock championship bout will draw @ million dollar gate and that Schmeling can attract no more than $200,000, announced Sunday he had accepted a half-million dollar offer for Braddock to tackle the Brown Bomber in Chicago’s huge Soldiers’ Field in June. In so doing, he would toss aside the contract for a June 3 bout be- tween Schmeling and Braddock in Madison Square’ Garden’s Long Is- land bowl, and the Garden insists he “can't get away with it.” While Gould was explaining that the Louis offer came from Sheldon Clark, wealthy Chicago sportsman once associated with Tex Rickard in promoting the fight game's biggest all-time gate—the second Dempsey- ‘Tunney clash—the Garden’s promoter, Jimmy Johnston advised all con- cerned Sunday night to “pay no at- tention to Gould.” Schmeling, too, was incredulous, and decided it was & “publicity stunt,’ ’ The titleholder’s pilot said he would go before the New York state athletic commission this week to ask return of the $5,000 check he posted ag evi- > dence of “good faith” in Braddock’s intentions, at that time, to fight on June 3, Schmeling has been designated as the number one challenger since he knocked out Louis last year. People’s Forum Tribune wel- cts of inter- with contro- bjects, which est. Letters de: versial religious attack individuals unfalrl; Whlch offend géod taste and’ tar eturne i ers. letters MUST be sipaed to use a s ries jeudonym first ind your oe it, We 0 dele; conform to this policy a: quire publication of a writ name where justice and fair play MRE be Timfted fe°not Word tre fo not 600 words. eee How can we prosper with - den of an “invisible tax?” He I me cite the North Dakote Mill and Elevator. I have before me a Newspaper, published in Bismarck, N.-D,, on the 24th day of December, 1996, with the engraving “The Leader,” ‘Jin big black letters on the first page. It reads, “A total loss of for the fiscal year.” Why ee lawmakers permit this? They are. in Session and without any extra ex- Dense to us taxpayers they can enact toll fo sell the state mill and eleva- make an en tae taxes.” Ot eon ote member, Mr, Legislator, plenty of experience with that a ier owned institution and I am sure the majority of our people, yes, I believe 90 per cent of them, would give you now, you and I are not getting any- thing, and you and I horrible, invisible tax. POY money. If he has none, on the WPA, ze ? ‘Miller, Buffalo, N. ¥., who held the UPHOLSTERED | fi il by one pin the 30-game final quarter ! championship in 1934. Today's Contract Problem ; In Sunday night's ten-game block, i Al a saith moon oe: j with possibly more in either the club suit, having in mind Aw shade || dhe ibe vie ind I tract at three no trump. He I with ‘possibly more in elther pay diamonds or hearts. How should he manage the play of 7 suit ‘might give him his ninth VA /, | trick? ; i SEEE TE he mother of 13. wen. lyn Edith Norton (above), wees els in Jail at Los Angeles on a Fharge of attempting to extort Woney from Clark Gable, movie by declaring him to be the fa- er of the child. (Associated Press Phote)