The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1926, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

j BRACE SIX BECOND PLACE TEAMS STILL HAVE A CHANCE: Cleveland Within 2 Games of; Yanks—Cards 24, Games Ahead of Reds Hopes of second phace teams in) the major leagues rose a bit today | in the wake of « spurt that placed Cleveland within two games of the| erratic Yankees, who lead the Ameri-| can league. Taking coura, stand of Tris Sp turns to the struggle jay of leisure that St. Louis swamp! 1h and boost its lend from the last-ditch | Cincinnati re-{ ‘only ‘two more games to insure for the pennant even though Cle Jand should win all four of its r maining games. The standings: Won Lost To play V, “A w York .... 89 Cleveland 7 ‘Ninth Inning Sally: A ninth inning rally after two men were out scored all the runs} Chicago needed to beat the Yanks | yesterday, 2 to 1. A walk, a pass and two doubles proved Shocker’s un- doing. Buckeye, Cleveland's southpaw, had the Boston Red So: ating from his hand while Tris ker fielded sensationally in the 5 to 1 victory. The Cards made short work of the . Bell hit three triples and au in the midst of the 17 base} Bottomley and Theyenow| made homers, One more three games remainin antee the Cards a tie for first, even though innati should win four. ‘The standings: Won Lost To pl St. Louis Cincinnati_. ‘Schedule Char The fight has caus rangenienis of games, and New York play Fi teday. Chicago have a doubleheader Sund: Chicago heat the New York Giants} with the nd Hartnett. ae The 'JACK DEMPSEY NO LONGER A GREAT | ' Pennant — AMERICAN LEAGUB Standings St. 2; New York 1. ‘leveland 5; B shington 6 Philadelphi Games T NATIONAL LEAGUE Standi: » St. Louis Cincinnati .. Pittsburgh Results ‘Wednesday “Chicago 3; New York eduled. Games Today All games postponed on account of Dempsey-Tunney fight. | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION = Standings Louisville . Milwaukee Indianapolis Toledo Kansas City St. Paul . Minneapolis . Columbus .. Results Wednesday Indianapolis St. Paul 1 Louisville 11-9; Minneapolis 10-9. Toledo 11; Kansas City Milwaukec-Columbus, rain. Games Today Milwaukee at Columbus. Kansas City at Toledo. St. Paul at Indianapolis. JMinneapokis at: Loei: Temonstration Bout Between Jack, Gene, 3 Ends _Disastrously example se set by the boxing institution in America was disastrous- sillustrated in-the lobby of the An- Hotel on a recent, evening. pack, the hotel clerk, and Charlie, a essful and thriving young horti- landscape gardener, had ussing the Sylar of med: ‘or not, the | ed up by a zealous [only once did I see him adopt a -| store. a Broek to the comparative oppor- anities for damage of the principal] | rants 4 the boxing hout between ad: Jack on the coming Thurs- thls Bott vo hot became the dis. ode at both mame perties arose and rate. The hotel f teck the part of tack Dempsey EN Dempsey, oer pases were similar @ name”. Seen the cudgels ne, mayhap for lac! of Gene; bey | vest Ja ene on that] fighting career, ane from 1915, he ar blush perma- engaged in Bat}he te won a by knockouts won 11 FIGHTER, BUT GOOD ENOUGH TO WHIP GENE hese JOE WILLIAMS THINKS | Phitudel Ip! can happen Gene Tunney step into the § bow! ring tonight and_ start ths gh-priced punches in to. the hunch and it will be no f the fight goes 1 think th npio sire to se: 8 im through. surprise tom limit of ten rou fighting fury of the his traducers, will At the same t. n convinced Dempsey has run his dis ready to be bowled over ih the first top- noich — fighting n he needs. In some respects T esteem Tunney a top- notch fighting man, and in others I do not. Tunney Is Cautious Tunney fights with a tiousness tha istic of great fighters. s him in all his important fights like, aggressive attitude. This wi in his fight with Tommy Gibbons, 3 r ago, when he won by a knockout in twelve rounds. Tunney tells me he will fight the same kind of fight against Dempsey this week. “I will tear into him from the start and knock him out early Tunney sa Personally, I don't be- lieye he can knock Dempsey out, but if he crowds him from the start he has a fine chance to win. I think the first two rounds will tell the story of this fight. Demps will bounce from his corner and bs rights and fefts at y and head. Some of ‘¢ hound to connect. In the one of these would be But are gone. Dempsey is no kind of hitter. Punches to stop his foemen, now merely stagger them. Tunney doesn’t thrive on ment. Carpentier made him and Gibbons, after dropp: straight rounds, hit him with hook in the eighth round that sent him into frantic reverse. If he be- gins to back up against Dempsey he will be lost, because Dempsey, faded r old days enough to bring Tunney down. eae dan: opponent. Tunney eee to wor would be better if he E percut, at least if he used it oftence. very ing partner in Demp- s camp has cracked him on the button with right uppercuts. to pun open Tunney Di ney to know he told one of his trainers he was going in the first round and that this train- pre} Tunney is strong enough and clever eno he Demp could not knock put a man who was in there to “stay,” Tommy with ed to drop him once in fifteen rounds. I happen in this fight and I think that is so. what had mad. isa mad Outwardly Dempscy looks all right. I suid that last May after baking him over a C, he 1 as rust ing placed $500 at 15 to 1, weeks hard work under his sash. ome extent Dempsey has offset the idleness. ugh to go out and win from a bet- sibly ambitio: an still chase a retreating | Counts on Right Hook beat Dempsey t hook to the head. The ee td knows Dempsey is easy to hit ight hand. Tunney has a good hook. I think 3 chances! a right up- Tommy the Philadelphia light has brought the blood »pion’s mouth with this on other occasions has It’s the one punch cha the ch and spun him around. that is sure-fire against the wide- nd it’s the one punch ast. tells me he-will stop Tun- the sixth round. I happen jem: befo! to try for a knockout betting on just such a conclusion, the iling odds on a one-round finish, ugh to stay the limit if that’s all is interested in doing. Even when he was really great, as the sa Gibbons went in to “sta’ Dempsey and the champion fail- said earlier that anything can Nobody can say definitely just t effect the three-year layoff has ‘on Dempsey. It certainly hasn't je him a greater fighter, and there good pos: ity that may have le hima ‘y ordinary fighter. Hendersonville, N. 1 think jooks even better physically now, he naturally would with, eight ‘0 and wear of his long period of Whether he has offset it than average fighter who has it dition, stamina, and pos- is the big question. rather think he has. fast and furious. Jack was the ag- xressor throughout. With only a few seconds of the round remaining yet to run, he aimed a vicious swing at| Gene, but missed. Gene ducked, but | in ducking overbalanced and meas- ured his length upon the floor. | After that, but one indignity was left to Gene, He overturned the cu: pidor in failing and his head, out-| stretched in falling, became the means of keeping some additional pollution from the floor. Jack retained his crown, it being! the opinion of the referee, who was tepped on and had his glasses broken | early in the melee, that if the floor): hadn't been so wet, Gene would have) staid down for the coun| Following the battle was sug- gested by the lately ubased and hu-| miliated referee that Gene should be| sent at once to a palmist to find out! definitely what the future has inj | Brief History of | Fighters’ Careers ee) Philadelph: Sept. . 23 -- (®) — Thun nail sketches of the careers of Dempsey and Tunney follow: .The Champion Jack Dempsey, born Colorado, June 24, 1895, of Irish- Scotch-American nationality, won the heavyweight ehampionshi neck ing out Jess willsed at Tolelor Oi He has de! ied ie ly five ‘times since then, against Billy Miske, Bill Bren- Ran, Georges Corpontis Tommy Gib- 77 matches, of which in Manassa, mar Geo! in verd test, career in, 1919, won-the light heavy- weight champii Battling Levi¢s! regaining this title in bouts with Harry Greb within a year. pound engaged in 60 bouts, winning | knockouts, 14 on decisions, engaging ines. He began his professional cofaAMierica from |’ yin 1923, losing and He forsook 175- knocking out He has by ranks after rges Carpentier in 1924, 14 no-decision bouts, losing one Jict and figuring in one no-con- FIT. The Van Heusen really fits. The curve of your neck is duplica- ted in the wo- ven-in curve of e fabric. No mo seams —no starch. | 9) A. C. to Enter 1 Team. The North Dakota Agric lege will again enter a judging team in the great judging contest at the International NTRANCE 70 EXPOSITION GROUNDS ~ judging team will be interested in the fuct that the North Dakota sor E. J. Thompson of the depart. ment of unimal husbandry, well known throughout the northwest as in Chicago Contest | ir SS,crc judge of fat, stock. will have charge of the coaching of~the sponsible for the success of all the team. The entire animal hugbandry| great international collegiate judg- staff will assist Profeynor’ Thomp-| ing contests for” Professor J. son in couching and criticizing can-/ Shepperd, chairman of the depart didates for the team: ment of animal husbandry, Prospective students in the sehool| supervised these contests at Chi of agriculture und candidates for the| for more. than 20 years, cultural col- nternational livestock position to be held at 27 to Dec. 4. _Profes- great moment in my life, as it turned out. Why, that very first taste won me. It was , cool, like a, breeze through ‘an open win- dow. palpably are se Ie.tas t smoke-filled Agricultural college is in a way re-| Pll i The. mildness of Prince Albert ap- pealed to me too. Yet there was plenty | of body to it. I knew T'was emokiog.: And I knew I was.enjoying it more than . poi pang we enone we we fl We Notice in hereby. given a virtue “o he said court Raton “bbe he ay oH are ree gunty ° wie, "gi tional bet 3 of Browne £80 First Natl ee attract Farmington, pring en a at Bank Of drecnweld, Minnesota National Bank “of unity Na at ‘Nutiopal Minnesota; ‘New rague, Bank of ring, -Minneso fay American aaa Min- Pataic’ ‘pain Reckwitle, Minnesota; First Nag Ba: Two Harbors, Minn tional Rank’ of, Stat ie nesota; eae Fi ne Na- ‘Waterville, Bin. nal ik oO! Nn section fiftern, townahip to rantebal re ‘Wii Vdetinet daae™ oc iconai: by ge peotenaes, & Miner: wood, rsa Sead ine Nye aie Judgment in ta eo) and against Hackni rate of. seven per eee: Be annum, which Judgment among oth a directed the sale by me of 4 fala entate | hereinafter | described erest thereon and the costs penses of said sale, or as much thereot as the procees ef waid sale will satisfy. Virtue ‘of @ ‘welt of execution. auly issued out of the office of the clerk of gaid court ia and county of Burleigh an ate of North, Qukota .and-under the order court, diroctin property, purgt judgment and decree, I, Albin Hed: trom, the referee appcineea to w sald property, will sell the herei: after described real property at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the front door of the court house, in the city of eas marck, Burleigh county , and of North Dakot of October, . 1926, the forenoon of at Premises described in ay sud ie ment and decree and to. be sold pursuant thereto are described as ‘ollows, t t Southeast quarter of section three a nearnast t 8, two, range seventy-five: morthweet quarter of section fifteen, ship one hundred forty-one, seventy-six; ‘north halt of “section: nine, and northeast quarter of a oe race Vie ne ae tae -. east juarter north half if went \SKPTEMBER 23, 1926 township one seventy ange seventy-seven; west quarter’ ef section twenty- ven and northwest quarter of sec- tion twenty-nine, township one hundred forty-two, range sevent alf of section thi y-seven; sou: Of section thirteen and ind southwest guastor wenty-five,) townanip one hundred forty-four, range seventy-eight, and east half of sec- th i : eon mineteen, | township KS ef section ner ft of jon tiv woc- tion seven, Ey ee ‘ot As ction nine and all of section twenty- three, township one hundred forty two, range seventy-five; northeast quarter of gone a quarter south half of: north: and the south Ai gd section He of and the north tion \ twenty-three, “township. ‘one hundred thirty-seven, range ote ty-six; gout! ater of sec: ter of un- dred to sone, range seventy-six; of section ‘twenty-an toonarte one hundred forty. range seventy uthweat quar. ter ef section thircy-ones township one “hundred thirty-cight, range seventy-seven; all of section three, south half. of section five, north if of section seven, woutheast ine, forth half it of etion geventeen, MY forty, range seventy-seven; north- West quarter and southeast quar- ter of section twenty-seven, east half of section twenty-nine, and south half of section thirty-three, peeaene one jundred for wo, are, seventy-seven; pout Beet ion thirteen, southeast. q of ection fifter: t nine nd south thirty-one, town Tone hundred forty-one, Tange | seventy-eight; northwest quarter of section cleven, township one hundred forty-four, range = seventyreight southwest quarter of section eleven, township one hundred forty, range sov: nine, all of section — thirt; township one hundred forty-one, range stventy-nine; and west half of section one, fore one ect ae, forty fou nee Be nine a in Burlel, i et a ae gh county, Sorta ip The ove described premises he sold on the above date to satiny the suid judgment and interest and caste thereon and the costs of the 4 a this 15th day of September, ALBIN HEDSTROM, ik Referec. Olgeirson, TR. G. Patt and Hyland & ‘aster, Ate torneys for plal ffs, Date of first pubtication Sept. 16. eid 18-24-20-178-15-33 aege tone on ~ he <7 BA te fold ererretere, Fee" personel itene,

Other pages from this issue: