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All across North Dakota in 1937, boys and girls age 14 or younger were
preparing to go head to head in a great marble tournament.
Depending on size of the community, schools held tournaments first; then
cities held their own tournaments, waiting for the best player to shoot
his or her way to the top. Next, county tournaments separated, and then,
tri-county tournaments; for example, Emmons, Logan and McIntosh counties
were to face off against each other. Finally, the top shooters were sent
to Grand Forks on May 15 to compete for district and state championship.
Marble Champs were "out for blood" in Bismarck. There were reports
of expected "kibitzing" from the grade-schoolers. "If the
excitement of the school tournaments last Saturday is any indication,
police squads will have to be called out
to quell the inter-school
riots as fans root for their champs," the Bismarck Capital reported.
It was a big deal in Ashley, too. After the paper printed a listing of
rules, and a listing of awards to come, in the results of a long tourney,
one boy and one girl were to travel on to the tourney for McIntosh County.
It was on this day that Ashley hosted a vicious, county play-off against
Wishek. Wishek won; then the problems began.
Some of those involved in the tournament found that it was unfair: "Members
of the committee, consisting of four boys
protested on the grounds
that the county marble tournament was not satisfactory, and because of
the cold weather, should never have been played."
Indeed, the weather was particularly bad that week, and papers across
the state reported roaring gales that carried sleet, snow and dust with
them to different parts of the state. Whether or not that affected the
outcome of the tournament was debatablebut it was debatable enough
that they decided to leave all decisions about the tournament's outcome
up to the county supervisor.
It didn't matter in the end, though. The big game in Grand Forksand,
in fact, every game he played therewas won by 11-year-old William
Stroh, from Mandan. He beat Howard Moen, a 13-year-old from Mayville,
by 3-1 in the final match. Third place went to Cornet Haroldson of Aneta,
fourth to Dale Butterfield of Stanley, and fifth to the "southpaw"
Bob Odney of Grand Forks.
In this case, one tournament caused the whole state to lose its marbles.
By Sarah Walker
Sources:
Ashley Tribune, Thursday, April 8, 1937
The Bismarck Capital, Thursday, May 6, 1937
Ashley Tribune, Thursday, April 22, 1937, p.1
Ashley Tribune, Thursday, April 15, 1937, p.1
Ashley Tribune, Thursday, April 29, 1937, p.1
The Wishek News, Thursday, April 29, 1937, p.1
Grand Forks Herald, Saturday, May 15, 1937, evening ed.
Grand Forks Herald, Sunday, May 16, 1937
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