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CREDIT ry | i ROLLS 2.961 SCORE: | DOUBLES UNCHANGED Pabst Blue Ribbon.of Mandan, Leolos of Grand Forks Third and Fourth EVENT CONTINUES TONIGHT Kelly’s Lunch, Bismarck, Sev- enth in Team Event of An- nual Competition The. North Dakota State Bowling ssociation tournament at Mandan went into the final round Monday fol- lowing a heavy schedule over the ‘week-end when Hamms Beer of Fargo, tcok the lead in the five-man team event with 2861 pins. ‘The Fargo team nosed out Karlsbrau ‘beer of Jamestown, to the tourney lead with a six-pin margin. Grand Forks’ Jead in the doubles held with Muus and Telle counts of 1232 and Muus’ single score of 662 was unchanged. Following the Fargo and Jamestown teams in the five-man event were Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer of Mandar, 2854; Bill Leolos of Grand Forks, 2756; Kate Beer, Mandan, 2713; » Minot, 2708; and Kelly's Lunch, Bismarck, 2689. Among highest team scores rolled over the week-end were North Main ‘Tavern, Minot, 2566; Hamms Beer Mi- not, 2672; Majestic Alleys, Jamestown, 2621; Minot Printing, 2426; Little Ca- sino, Williston, 2670; Pioneer Coffee, ‘Minot, 2673; Kenmare 7-up of Minot, ad and Blue Ribbon Beer of Fargo, 0. Hendricks and Hendricks of Minot stood fifth in the doubles Monday with 1138 and Cook of Minot was fourth in the singles with 644. New Rockford teams which did not bowl over the week end were ex- pected to participate tonight when the tournament closes. Hettinger and Rhame Reach Playoff Finals Scranton, N. D. Feb. 22.—(7)— Hettinger and Rhame were to battle 4t out over the week-end for the championship of the Southwest Bas- Ketball Conference as the result of victories in the opening playoff round Friday. Hettinger, which wound up the sea- gon at the top of the east half of the split league with seven victories ‘and one defeat, defeated Bowman, berth in the conference series, downed Gascoyne, 18-15. Bowman, winners of the west half championship, was to be paired with Gascoyne in the battle for third place. Brown and Johnston were out- standing for Hettinger in the playoff triumph while Bingham and Backer turned in nice games for the losers. | Anderson was the stand-out in the ’ Rhame lineup with Hughes and E. Anderson showing up well for Gas- coyne. Final standings of the Southwest conference follow: East half W L West half W L' Hettinger 7 Bowman ‘7 1 Gascoyne 6 2 Rhame a4 Reeder 3 SBuflo Sprg 4 4 daa 2 6Marmarth 3 5 1 #7 &cranton 2 6 Summaries of the playoff games: Fargo 5-Man T ST | Patty Berg . . . sweetheart of the Grapefruit Golfing Group + +» takes a draught of aqua pura before teeing off at the Miami Biltmore Club ... where she defended the women’s championship. Ira Ir] Tubbs .. . thinking, no doubt, that those tropical clothes won't be so hot at Iowa +.» Where the little Kansan will coach football next fall... after two years at Miami University. cara \ PORT STARS OFF STAGE ee ey Lou Gehrig of the Yankees «.. Iron Man about town now . .. lights up at a New York banquet . . . where he tells the folks that he is as good as his remarkable legs... which never felt better. #: veloped into quite an after din- ner speaker. ... . Here is the world heavyweight champion studying his.script. . .. He ad libs very well once he warms up to his task, Climax of Indoor Track Events Set National A, A. U. Championships to Be Run Saturday Night in New York New York, Feb, 22—()—The in- *dgor track season reaches its cil- max this week as the stars who have been scattering broken records right and left for the past few weeks and the future record smashers came to- gether in @ pair of meets in Madison Square Garden. The National A. A, U. champion- ships Saturday night will bring out nearly all the aces who have been competing in the big invitation meets here and at Boston, including Glenn Cunningham, winner of four one-mile fixtures, Don Lash, two-mile record smasher; Eddie O'Brien, who lowered the indoor 500-yard standard to 57.6 seconds at the New York A. C, meet last Saturday; and George Varoff, new pole vault record holder, and Earle Meadows, who missed equaling the mark by @ quarter of an inch when he cleared 14 feet, 4% inches Saturday. As a curtain raiser, the national high and prep school championships will be held in the afternoon along with trial heats for some events of the big meet. St. John’s of Danvers, Mass,, is slated to defend its prep team title against such strong rivals as the Hill and Mercersburg of Penn- sylvania; Lawrenceville and Peddie, (N. J), Stsattuck of Faribault, Minn., and Tome of Maryland. Gene Venzke, defending the 1,500 A. A. U, meter crown, is expected to face the hardest opposition. In addi- tion to the durable Cunningham, Luigi Beccali of Italy, Miklos Szabo of Hun- gary, and Archie San Romani of Em- poria, Kans, all finalists in the (By the Associated Press) Purdue 34; Minnesota 33. Monmouth 44; Ripon 32. Duluth Teachers 45; Bemidji 37. Iowa Teachers 46; Omaha U. 31. Knox 47; Coe 33. Hibbing Junion 29; Ironwood 25. St, Cloud Teachers 47; Mankato 46. N. D. 8. 26; N. D. U. 23. 8&t. Thomas 42; Concordia 39. N. D. U. Frosh 31; N, D. & Frosh 30. SWIMMING Carleton 46; Grinnell 29, WRESTLING Minnesota 24%; Wisconsin 6%. U.S. Ski Jumping Record in Danger Alf Engen Leaps 237 Feet Dur- ing Driving Snowstorm of National Amateur. { Basketball Scores LB driving snowstorm hindered warmup/place by- {|Miners Turn Back Stanton for Title Beulah Wins 30-12 Victory in Finals of Mercer County Pre Tournament Beulah, N, D., Feb, 22—Coach R, J. Stegmeler’s Beulah Miners captured the Mercer county boys basketball championship Friday night by - feating Stanton, 30-12, in the game of the two-day tournament. It was Beulah’s third prep cage title this year, the girls’ and cub teams having won similar honors in a com- tournament last week. Capt. G, Murray led the Miners to | Paren! victory. in the championship game, Min scoring 13 points on six field goals and a charity shot, followed by Mul- hauser with eight and W. Murray with Sagehorn and Hefhn were the tompetition in the national amateur] 16-9 setback in the consolation finals ski tournament Sunday but could not} with Schwartz, guard, prevent half a dosen jumpers serv- ing notice the American record is in danger. Utah’s Alf Engen select field in the stridtly exhibition jumps on precipitious Ecker hill. National amateur titles will be at stake Monday in four classes. Engen floated out 287 feet on his ‘econd attempt to record the day’s longest spe. Casper joen of Anaconda, Mont., made two attempts to negotiate Ecker hill but fell and was badly shaken up. 5 He recovered quickly, however, and smilingly predicted he'd “show some- thing different” Monday. Sigmund Ruud of Oslo, Norway, claimant of the world’s longest ama- leading the winners’ offensive. ‘Three Beulah players placed on the all-Mercer county first team chosen outdistanced a|at the conclusion of the tournament. Named on the first squad were Wayne Murray and Joe Mulhauser, forwards, both of Beulah; Jewel Hein, center, Fights Last Night if Minot Wins 2421 Overtime Contest Braves Extend High-Powered ie * Magicians to Limit in Nip- and-Tuck Game seo N, D, Feb, -Ap- feeling 26-16. ibbing handed out by, oy night, Period here before beating Mandan, 24 to 21. At the end of the regular of Mandan, at the beginning of the a extra period, sank « free E | 4 het for two field goals in rapid cession to place the 22 to 19. Arnold Ae ie by ‘House of Mandan, bringing the Stanton; Garvin Murray, jah, |to @ close. ; vi Minot took the lead at the out-set and Orville Sasse, Golden Valley,). that a Sof the guards, The second- all county team was composed of Krause, Hazen, and Radke, Golden Valley, forwards; Stoelting, Hazen, center; and Bates, Beulah, and Link, Hazen, guards. Junior Shirley of Beulah and Orville Sasse of Golden Valley tied in the free throw contest, each hitting 18 out of a possible 25. Stanton was awarded the sportsmanship trophy. Hettinger fe ft pt Bowman fe ft vf) Olympic 1,500 last year, are entered.| teur jump—S24 feet, made in Jugo- CHAMPIONSHIP Sangi'a ¢ 1 1 Flesch, f © 4| Likewise Lash, after being clocked in} slavia—showed near-perfect form and ueniek tg Gj pf ay RL uA vf Brown, c 0 2 2 Bingh’me 1 2 1) 8.58 and 9:01.6, the two fastest times) approached Engen's distance when Murray, £40 1 Kiind’h £0 1 0 White si 9 § Mken'h g 1 9 1) ever recorded by an American in| he soared 281 feet on his second st-/G Mur'y cé 1 3 Heihn, c 1 3 2 dwin, ¢ 0 0 1 Iverson, f 0 9 1) Successive two-mile races, has shifted | tempt. Bates 6-0 y : Sageh niet 4 ‘ ie 18 > =| to the shorter event. Einar Fredbo, Anaconda, jumped|Stituc £0 0 2 Thue, f 0 0 3 4 ——_—_——_ only 201 and 216 feet, but his near-| David, f 9 0 1 Hopew'l £0 0 0 FARGOAN IN LEAD perfect form was a point-winner. Schlof'n f 0 0 0 Schwel't £0 0 0 Duluth, Minn., Feb. 22. — (?) — F.| Eugene Wilson, Coleraine, Minn.,| rotais 14 2 14 Totals 4 414 Weed, Fargo, N. D., was on top in the] appeared a serious contender for the] ‘Technical fouls: Heihn 1. * =i singles event with a 660 count for| championship ‘with jumps of 202 and| Referee: Herb Goetz. Seg tg ft pf Gascoyne fg ft pf} three games, as the arrowhead inter-| 233 feet. Consolation Hutentn £0 0 2 Hashes, &% 7 {| national bowling tournament went in- ———____—_—. Hazen _fg ft pf Golden Dahi, c' 0 0 0 Andern ¢ 1 0 0(t0 its second day Monday. In the SAINTS VICTORS —_—| Krause, £1 Og 1 Valley Ander'n g 4 0 2 Andern g 0 0 3|opening matches Sunday, F. Jacquart,| St. Paul, Feb. 22—(P)—St, Paull Gutknet £2? ) 3 einer, so 1 H Mattson gO , H Ironwood, Mich., was second, one pin| was victor over Kansas City, 3-1, in| Link, g 0 0 0 1 i 3 Cady, f 1 0 1 /behind Weed, at 659. an American Association hockpy|Schwa's g.3 1 1 8 211 Totals 6 3 7 Se | game here, while at St, Louis, the Fly-| Reiche'g c} 9 0 1 7 a-ag| The Teal development of ir line} ers clinched first place in the Asso-| Chase, ¢ 0 0 0 2 7 316 |service for passengers in this country] clation, defeating Wichits, 6-1, Bun-| | > | Umpire: veRecder. Sp abo ee: Gadi ioe Referee: “Goetz. A Sioux Yearlings Hand | OUTOUR WAY Bison 31-30 Setback Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 22.—A one- handed shot by Billy Owens in the closing seconds of the game enabled the University of North Dakota frosh to, defeat the NDAC yearlings here Saturday, 31-30. Owens had knotted the count at 29-all after the Sioux . freshmen had trailed most of the way and then won the game after Ted Whalen had put the Bison in front ‘with e free throw. The summary: N, NDAC fg ft pf Whalen {£5 4 1 Teamosoms ° ah in =! KS Bl eoncoowwanjs | esscccmenen’, Es 5 ol coowconnnat i | Totals 4 Referee: Dick Holzer. THAT'S Jus’ T WAS GETTIN’ TH’ BOTTOM HEEL OUTA THERE~ OH- Cuz RIGHT, BUT SEE WHUT 1 CAN SEE YOUR POINT, THERE, ALL WITH TH' BOTTOM HEEL OF TH’ JAM! By Williams 1 CAN'T YOU WANT game. At the end of the first quarter | #! the score was 6 to 3 for Minot and 12-7 at the half. The fourth quarter began: 14 to 12 for Minot. 4 Don Smith, Mandan, center, out of competition for illness for three weeks because of illness went into the game and tied the score shortly thereafter. ‘The last quarter was closely fought, tae score being tied three times. ‘Minot failed to sink one from the | 3: charity line. The summary: fg ft pf Mandan fe ft pf beh t 3 0 1 Riedin’r £ 5 ea) Huntley f 3 0 2 House, f 03 Elde, ¢ 4 : 4 Geleety c : 4 , HERS Roe 2 0 3 Miluck g 3 1 0 Foster, f 1 9 1 Brodek ¢ 0 0 0 Ander’n f 0 0 0 Friess, f 2 0 0 Herig’d ¢ 0 0 0 Knoll, f 0 0 0 Fawbushc0 0 0 Smith, c 1 0 2 ——— Carlson g 0 0 0 Totals 12 0 10 Spiel: fo 0 0 Totals 9 3 7 Officials: Fay Brown, Bismarck; Glenn Hanna, Bismarck. i = Sixto Escobar Keeps Bantamweight Crown Ben Juan, Puerto Rico, Feb, 22— (®j—A fiesta was scheduled in the Uttle town of Barcelonita Monday as ‘| Sixto Escobar celebrated his retain- ing the world’s bantamweight cham- pionship in the first title fight Puerto curr the decision. weighed 117%, Salica 116%. Dudley, Metz to Play Off Open Tourney Tie Be i 3 EF F é fb he H Frida} op wifisila: Dick Holzer and Al Hat Saturday night! Bowling Standings playing ie _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1937 DEFEAT ENDANGERS | STH.STRAIGHT TYTLE CHANCES OF NODAKS Bob Lowe's Cagers Put on Bril- Viant Spurt to Overcome 19-12 Deficit | i iL : i it i B i peered ee Sonera nl z g cEEBEE 6 erry Commons — oo] memoons ye) eooocnce® alo Totals 8 7 it Free throws missed—Rorvig 2, Anderson. 3, Birk 2, Cox, Robertson, tS ni, Officials: Dick Holser and Al Hyatt. COMMERCIAL LmAGoE. Teams Blackstone Club, Rigs's CO oe Nash-Finc’ Bismarck Bakery . Jr, Association of Cot Inéivides! Ay: 12 ines Record 1m, three games—ZJ! High single-game, feea Co... eam Takes Lead in N. D. Bowling Tou HAIMS BEER TEAN|Bison Square Series With Sioux in Thrilling 26-23 Triumph Saturday , ~ CANDID CAMERA SHOTS OF BOILERMAKER-WOLVERINE TILT TOPS BIG TEN SLATE TONIGHT EERE Ei z 3 ternational curling Week-End Sports medal, defeating U, &. 211-176, in 16-game series. Fargo, Grand Forks Ski Jumpers Victors Detrolt-Lakes, Minn., Feb,.22—(®)— Fargo, y| Petersburg and Tampa, Fia., Gophers, Dumped From Con- ference Lead, to Clash With lowa Cagers Chicago, Feb. 22. — (?) — Purdue's powerful Boilermakers or the scrappy Michigan Wolverines will be virtually ‘dropped out of the championship tonight as the furiously con- Big Ten basketball title race stretch. Michigan-Purdue battle, to be Ann itll i at schedule involving all leading Michigan has won six and lost two, as has Minnesota, engages Iowa at 5 tied at seven wins and two with Purdue, takes on Wis- on the Illinois home court. The contest is between Ohio State Northwestern. 5 Purdue gained 2 decision over early in the season on the r court. The Wolverines, plugging doggedly along while Minne- ‘sota, Illinois and Purdue were getting ( BLUE L Tecord with | most of the attention, shot into a tie with the Gophers Saturday pint by to 32, Minneapolis, was bumped out of the undisputed lead by Purdue's 34 to 33 Young, leading conference was held to seven points. little trouble defeating 25. s Iowa trounced Wisconsin, 43 to 35, a which had no bearing on the championship fight. Minnesota, which should get by Towa tonight, has the most favorable ‘schedule in its title bid. The Gophers’ last three games will be against Wis- consin, Northwestern and Chicago, all Jow ranking outfits. Purdue's two fi- nal contests are against Indiana and Wisconsin, while Illinois, after to- night's Badger game, must play Iowa ‘and Northwestern. Michigan meets Ohio State next Saturday and then plays Indiana and Wisconsin. An air passenger line between St. was opened in 1914. Stamp' News By LS. Klein F get his picture on stamps Germany. A long series is being Prepared for release some time in April. Sixteen values, so far, have been decided upon, and more may be added. 28 First day sale of the three-cent: army-navy stamps, with portraits of Generals Sherman, Grant, and Sheridan on the army issue, and ‘of Admirals Farragut and Porter on the navy, will be Thursday, Feb, 18. Send self-addressed en- velopes—not more than 10 for each type of stamp—to the Post- master, Washington, D. C., with postal money order covering cost © P Great Britain finally has stopped Printing the King Edward VIII Tentative plans, it is reported, call for special sets of coronation stamps for the 43 British colonies, each set consisting of three stamps having a total face value of 6-pence. eee -Manchukuo is preparing a new issue of pictorial stamps, in six designs. There will be 15 ordi- y nary postage, and two’ airmail, (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) ——_— _ ——____, “NORTHERN” Pike, Pickerel, Halibut, Salmon at Wholesale Prices In not less than 100 Ib. boxes. Get fish at the “NORTHERN” i Jack Rabbits “NORTHERN” Corner Nini snd Poort Bia Biomaret, NB. “NORTHERN” rney Arbor, tops a four- . °