The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 8, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX LIONS TAKE PIN HONORS Beat Nationals by Rolling up A Good Score The Lions took the honors at the i Joeq) bowling alley Monday — night honors here last February. when they knocked the secre | Young Falor is after the national a total of 2 d_ too! Bs | title this winter and“hopes to wrest x = straigut from the Nationals, ee \the championship crown now ‘being ‘ Wild Cats took two out of ties worn by Frank Lundin of New Lon from the Capitals with MeGowan of Yan, te The’ Mey te, working /eHb the W See erat tal daily at Orlando, Fla, where his De eat arr ona eas High father has opened a training camp ee wih Sti, dhe | for the knickerbockered athlete. for a single game wit 1! In a_ recent exhibition match, Heliedule for Friday night te ss toe Falor trounced Davis, the former * iiants — vs. ht awks, iH y Re Chnitaik: champion, 50 to 42, both men total- Lhas " : ing 9 Sringers in the nip-and-tuck SCORES exhibtion. LIONS Falor has a lazy revolving shoe J. Christensen ..178 that opens perfectly at the iron up- Schnecker 181 right, sliding on a ringer. He wears Noggle ....20L a canvas glove on his pitching hand M. Schneider ....140 and this cuts the turn of his horse- Dummy 1150 shoe down to a one-and-quarter Mitdteap TEX RICKARD revolution. Metals)... ..0 2874 B14 “When it comes to promoting prize) to decide the heavyweight title. Of Billy K. livto tip : ‘ fights—or boxing watches, if you) this amount, Jess drew down a gold) BBY e ree xattoNats tee Ne ede eet eis ae att ot el ee A BIGPART OF THE COST OF LIVING TODAY MAY Frank Patera ...158 137 hand it to Tex Rickard. the wgrl’s purse. e Saddle Horse L, Henzler “46 144 leading impresar When Dempsey and Carpenotier a Adam 19 For Tex believes in doing big] met at Boyle's Thirty Acres in 1921, Billy Kelly, famous sprinter, BE CHARGED TO LOST MOTION, TO SLOW, Geos Shubert 148 things and doing them, rigyt. He| Jack carted away exactly $300,000. known the length and preadth of B. Dns 115 delights in hanging up tempting of-] which he ive, win, lose} turfdom, is to become a_ saddle SLIPSHOD DIS UTION OF GOoDs, AND Hi 45 45 135. fers for champion pugilists to battie hile the Frenchman got| horse. * TRIB Total 84 708 707 2199) gor, Pugs who swap punches in a The purse of $500,000-—-| Commander J. K. L. Ross, owner euitaid bout promoted by the Texan don't million berries, therefore,| of Billy Kelly, has presented the} APITALS aq have to fight just for glory—the| was four times as much as had| noted horse to his wife, ~ -STYLE, W. j _ P. Donahue 1g0e ASE US: aes mazuna is always there. ever been offefed for a ring en-| As a yearling Billy Kelly gave ne| TO OLD-S E, ASTEFUL SELLING . Ms ae peeaae au ie TH 460 The three largest purses that have| counter in the history of pugilism.} great promise, yet it is doubtful if . Joe Patera ......169 166 131 200 ever been put up in the annals of| Perhaps the “battle of the cen-| ever a more popular horse came C. White ........188 99 U1 48% the ring have been offered by the| tury” or whatever they want to eni!| down the home stretch, unless it is METHODS. tae a te) toy , crafty Rickard, Other so-called “big | it wasn’t worth that sum, but. at] Exterminator. oe a ggag | Pots” have been made to look like| any rate five hundred thousand is] + Kelly, during his glorious career] 829 751 769 2349 coing platers by Rickard in his| quite a bit of money to the average| on the turf, has won over a hundred 149 442) 193 468 | 129 397 180 531 150. 450 | 816 2333 | N D. BASEBALL LEAGUE TALKED Bismarck Would Be seca In Proposed Circuit Fry hlenker . MeGowan go, Feb. 8—Plans for the or-| Cobb, who has played a prominent] Came the ninth with Philadelphia| would be possible, yet it actually! ion of a North peat re el part in many a thriller, hesitate] stitl showing the way, 8 to 6. But] happened in a game “hat f umpired | : * . eugue, whieh aout dene [enue rfly and then replied the Tigers were’t through, for with| in Chicago several years ago. Buck | Contrast this with the handling of oranges. $1,000,- , Ja ee Bismarck and “Guess it would be pretty hard tn] Sam Crawford on first base, Ty| Weaver, now out of professional | f ; Wahpeton- reckenridge — in | peat that 17-inning affair we played| Cobb tied the score, and made it a| ball, played the leading role. ie ie & ij 7 southern portion of the state, and | ith ‘the Athletics back in "1907. new ball game by deiving the leather Senate 000 a year is spent for advertising by the co-operative Minot. Devils Lake, Grand Forks phat was a wild and wooly after-] over the right field wall for a home| Detroit was playing in Chicago. N and Crookston, Minn, for the north-\| ern ‘half of the circuit, are being di ed although no definite or- ganizers have come to the front as The plan appears to have origi nated at Jamestown. Jamestown was a member of the Dakota League last year and lost about $4,000 on | the venture. The businessmen of Seannineningn: satan lemnaneeetnimmetnn | ticipated in. | Cobb’s opinion, ‘Tex Rickard Stands Out as Greatest Promoter In History of Pugilistic Sport merry race to'establish record stakes. | lay In 1910 Rickard startled the en- tire sporting world and incidentally made Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries feel like “kings” when he offered the unheard of sum of $101,000 for a bout between Big Jeff and the nan, and it is extremely doubtful if a larger purse than that will ever be put up to get two ring experts together again. But if it is, it will no doubt be Tex Rickard Who will turn the trick, for the cnre-free and easy-going Tex | colored champion. The whole world]is the king 9f fight promoters the gasped at the size of the “kitty.” | world over. He just dotes on doing Nine years late Rickard even out-|big things in a big way—bigger did this:effort at Toledo when Wil-| than anyone else would ‘think of lard and Dempsey received $127,590 | doing them. is Cobb, Hero of Many a- Thriller, Picks Wildest Game of Long Career - Recently Ty Cobb was asked what | the he regarded as the most exciting major league game he had ever par- Macks were leadingy7 to 1. But then Waddell weakened and Detroit put on a rally which finally sent the great “Rube” to the showers. noon, with everything possible ‘pack- ed into that ball game.” A perufal of the box score and summary of that game bears out With the two teams battling for the lead in the Amer- ican League, the game had an ideal setting and it is doubtful if ever a more hectic struggte was ever staged run. Thus they went into overtime. In the eleventh, Detroit succeeded in scoring what appeared to be the winning tally, but the Athletics came back ard evened the count when Davy Jones, playing ieft field for the jungle clan, dropped an easy fly, allowing a Mackite to cross the fina, paying station, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE teams deadlocked at nine runs each, And thus terminated one of the. most hectic and bitterly fought games in the history of the diamond. Barnyard Golf Has Boy Wonder Who Seeks Title! By NEA Service. : St. Peterburg, Fla., Feb. 7.—Amer- ica’s youngest horseshoe pitcher. Harold Falor, the 15-year-old boy. wizard of Akron, 0., is the most fre- cent entry in the fifth annual mid- winter national “barnyard golf™ tournament to be held here during the week of Feb. 19. The boy marvel finished high in the midsummer met, held in Des Moines last August, topping ‘several stars of national prominence, includ- ing C. C. Davis, who won leading TTT thousand dollars. His name ‘will live long in the memory of every racing fan, for Kelly always gave his ad- mirers a run for their money. Courageous, fast and one of the sweetest tempered’ thoroughbreds that ever graced turfdom, Billy Kel- ly was almost a fiction race horse, one of those kind you read about but seldom see. ————— | Billy Evans Says | Do you think it would be’ possible for a majority of the spectators at a ‘major league ball game ‘td’ file out of the grounds, feeling sure the’ home team had won, only to later} learn the game had been lost? Doesn’t seem as if such a ‘thing/ At the end of the ninth inning the score was a tie, and with both pitch- ers going good, it looked like a long,| extra-inning struggle. In either the 13th 14th inning Detroit broke the! ice by scoring a run. That looked big enough to settle the outcome, of the game, een and supply : are not brought together. Advertised Goods association of the California Fruit Growers. sum; yet it is only about one-fifth of a‘cent per dozen— one-sixtieth of a’‘cént for each orange sold. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1928 100 AE A CN For example, every year tons of fruits and vegetables rot on the ground, because it doesn’t pay to pick them. Discouraged growers plant less the next season, and the supply of food is reduced. Meanwhile, consumers. inthe cities near by grumble over high prices. Demand A large And this advertising has kept down the cost of i e y F »| On and on they struggled wits. Detroit was playing in Chicago. | that city apparently feel, that tae |in the history of the Americar C t te | oe onaeee inert, i ae 7 vell spent for advertis- | League. neither team being able to break the e end of the ninth inning the | A money was well spent for adverts | "Detroit hadn't won a pennant|ice. Roseman, Detroit first baseman, | 80F€ was a tie, and with both pitch- 4 oranges. To quote an official of the Exchange: enter in the new venture, provided | since " back in 1887, and obvi-| was ejected from the proceedings for | 8 soing good, it looked like aj the other cities can be interested | in the plan. The Dakota league of 1922 is prac- | tically a thing of tae past, according | -lan unscheduled encounter with one of Mack's players—a general free- for-all being narrowly averted. Along about the fifteenth, a near y, with a golden opportunity |fore them, the Tigers were at | |going down fighting if nothing else. Detroit had managed to annex the long, extra-inning struggle. In either | the 13th or 14th inning Detroit broke the ice by scoring a run, That looked big enough to settle the.out- come of the game. : “The cost.of selling oranges and lemons+through the Califorhia Fruit Growers’ Exchange is lower today than’ J to reports. The distance between | opening tilt of a three-ganw seri¢s.| riot resulted when a Philadelphia 4 the North and South Dakota cities|5 to 4, which went 10 innings. Ani r wes called out after the crowd = made traveling expenses so\ high | consequently Connie Mack, with his tled Outfielder Sam Crawfori, | , Chicago, however, refused te. go! it' was ten years ago. , x eo a ‘ that it was practically impossible | team’s back to the proverbial wail,| causing him to drop the ball. The | gown wien 5 Sent Paine i \ to run such a circuit wita the pa- | was out to even up the count. »So nc| fans were to mob the umpire. | ¢p, * 3 s fe | 4 ie White Sox = a * tronage afforded by the majority of |rent in “Rube” Waddell to turn the] And so it Erouble’-con- | eee ta aecgnt cen re eee | “In the twelve years since the first. campaign was the towns. The old South Dakota | (yjoK, stantly brewing, though no casua!-| meant at least a tie and probably a ; league will be reorganized, or four! For the first few frames the| ties resulted. y towns in Nebraska and Iowa will | b 4 1 “Rube” went great, standing the Final at the ad of the seven- \ e taken in to complete a new cit- | Tigers on their collective heads. | teenth ng, the. game was called] Qscar Stanage i A . : ‘ guit, according to word from Sioux |gtence, along: whout the fifth inning] on account of darkness with the] eatching: for eh ee eines he doubled: The American consumer has been taught by alls, No effort has been made to put | the plan over in Fargo as yet, as the | organizers of the league, if there are any, have not come to the front. As | soon as definite plans are arranged, the plan probably will be put before the Fargo Commercial clup for in- vestigation. Jamestown appears willing to take another whirl at the diamond | game while the Grand Forks Com- | mercial club is investigating the advisability of-. putting organized baseball in that town in that town again. WRESTLERS HERE ‘FOR BATTLE Otto Nelson, who will meet Stan- ley Radgers in a wrestling match at the Rialto theater at 8:30 to- night, arrived in Bismarek last night. Nelson weighs in at about | 200-and appears to be in fine shape. He is confident of victory. Joe Moug and Joe Fettis will box a six- round semi-final and other prelimj- -narivs, are on the card. UNDERWOOD DEFEATS COLE- : HARBOR 8. in the fastest game~of the season “the Coleharbors heretofore undefeat- ed H. 8. team was defeated here 17 83, by the reorganized local team. celebrated five man de- @ proved to be no obstacle for ‘the local boys to overcome at any oughness was: an outstand- | and Indiana at Bloomington on Jan. Williams Certain to Break Record As Wisconsin All-Round AanENe When the final whistle blew in the 3 basketball game between Wisconsin 8, Rollie Williams, star athlete of Wisconsin, had tied the record of all time for Wisconsin’s greatest all- round athlete, The record has just been made public. The Indiana game gave Williams his eighth varsity letter, a feat un- equaled since Guy Sundt in 1922 broke the record of Eber Simpson. Simpson made his record with seven varsity: letters, in 1918. ~ In addition, Wi ms won his let- | ters when athletic competition was at its height in Wisconsin. {t is no detraction from Sundt to point out that he broke .the Simpson record] | during) the period which was marked-by S. A.'‘T. C. year when athletics. were at their low ebb in 1 colleges over the country. But Williams’ honor is expec; to be the greater before the end’ of the: school year. He is slated for a left-field perth on the va ball team, ‘which would give him his] ninth letter. This would break, all Wisconsin records and- make Rollie the greatest allsround.. athlete, officially, thé Cardinal has’ ever produced. ‘Williams ‘is the ideal type of col- lege athlete, There has never been any. hope as to his scholarship,| ‘always ptood high in at studious popular outside whieh comes as the varsity athlete, pelted in taking a big lead. Sudden- {that the White 8 win for the home team. on third base for Chicago and per. ly Stanage snapped a throw to third thyt caught Weaver flatfooted. In the run-up, the Detvoit play- ers had all kinds of difficulty try- ing to retire “Weaver, and several times it looked as if he might avoié being toiched, Beginning fo tire and seeing that his chances to get | by were getting slimmer all the time, Weaver evidently decided ‘o try to pull a little’inside stuff. He skilfully threw his arm ‘n front of the ball fflst as Stanage, standing near the home plate, was about to receive it and touch him ovanhges as before. planted.” 830! out. The ball was deflected to the grandstand. Weaver, within a few feet of the plate, crossed it with much glee. The other runner, close behind, was also over in an instant. ‘The moment Weaver threw his arm into the ball I- called him out for interference, retiring the -side an. ending the game 'in Detroit's favor. Stanage, not knowing how I was going to rule, puraued the ball and threw it to another player who was covering the palte. $ Then everyone surged off the field, knowing the game was ‘over. Most of the spectators, however, ‘thought the two Chicago runs had scored, deciding the game in favor of ‘the White Sox, when in reality Weayer had béen called ‘out for interfer- ence, which erased the | fro runs, thet lot of It wasn't ‘until the néxt ‘morning |§ ii : the ete sy tating and distributio ‘i ‘the Bismarck Tribune, in c0-o} launched the consumption of California oranges has co-operative advertising to eat nearly twice as many Ae “Had the orange industry refnained on dhe old basis; there would ‘have been no profit in growing oranges. New acreage would not have been planted. Orchards would most surely have been upronted: and other crops - “Advertising, properly done, saves money for the con- sumer and makes money. for the producer by driving out wasteful-methods, increasing v volume and cutting down \ if Published by sop with ‘The ca ped nog Apis of Advertilag Agencies O he -

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