The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1928, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1928 geen as ee cea LOCALS FACE aS RE EP EAS urday Night FIRST STIFF COURT GAME Mandan High Will Clash With Barnes County Quint Sat- -\ LITTLE DOPE ON OUTCOME ern Cagers a : : Mandan High on Saturday alee et stands early. of the quint that the former 3 yi to the Capital City. been a hotbed of basketball. Little is known about the st: Dakota Aggie athletic star will b The Barn county aggregation graduated stars as Norgaard, Spicer, McK and others last June but there are always others to take their piaces. Valley City for many years has{ Demons and Braves Appear to Be Stronger Than East- Two basketball games of a super- lative order are on tap for Bismarck and Mandan basketball fans when | Claudie Miller sends his Valley City Hi-Liners into action Friday night against Bismarck high and a: Both clashes will start promptly at 8 p. m. and mentors of the respec- tive teams have warned the fans who want good seats to be in the They will tell you there that boys and girls are born with the spheroids in their hands. It is a well recognized during twelve months.of fact that from an early age the youngsters are never without a ball | the year, The little city lying under the high bri liant has furnished more bril- formers for University of North Dakota and North Dakota tural college quints than any of city or town in the state, a tremendous recommendation of the brand of ball played there. Demons Lost Two Last year Bismarck dropped two games to the blue and white. How-| successor, but Jack Hurley, Billy Petrolle’s manager, has picked Wal- ever, Valley is reported to be weak- er this year while the Demons are doped to be a stronger than any time in the past five years. It _will be the first real test for the Clan McLeod school basketball race. in the state high Six weeks of strenuous work and four basket- _ ball games lie behind them. In the last two encounters against the sand) the Alumni, the maroon atid gray flashed brilliant > basketball at times. Valley City will have a well-bal- anced outfit. They have a nucleus cf opel Playing their second atid thi years. Captain Ralph Sten- shoel and Big Bub Schrunm are the outstanding stars. Bismarck’s lineup will probably have Ha ink Brown at center, Carl and Fay Brown at guards and Ben lacobson and either Gordon or O’Hare at forwards. Earl Hoffma: ward, wil guard, also see action. 7:30 p. m. Company K Loses ind Slattery, for- Two quints from the junior high school will play a curtain raiscr at New Ow * * * 8 Sammy Mandel Billy Petrolle, the Minneapolis arena. famous heart punch? rgo Express, for ‘an the Roc! Tex Rickard picked Billy Wallace of loping Willle to win. (PETROLLE- MANDELL ADVERTISING | CONTROVERSY IS DISMISSED AS TECHNICALITY BY COMISH CHAIRMAN Both the Fargo Express and Company I Whips Champion Have Ended Their Heavy Training — Petrolle Will Take Light Drill Today, While Mandell Will Rest Minneapolis, Jan. 12.—(AP)— Dismissing the controversy aver al- leged misleading advertising of the fight here Friday night between Bil- ly Petrolle and Sammy Mandell, lightweight champion, as a “tech- WILL SAMMY Northwest Fight Fans Believe Billy Petrolle Will Become Unofficial Champion ey SAMMY MANDELL the lightweight champion of the world, will face ford That is the question which when answered will| James C, solve Petrolle’s chances of winning the unofficial lightwei over the Staff in a hard-fought bas- ketaball game hero last night. cially good form game, should be commended upon their good showing. and much is expected from Co. L’s! team as they are in excellent shape condition. and are real goal-getters. The line-j; 4 up and summary: Claudie Miller Invades Bismarck With VaHey City Hi-Liners ners and Billy Evans Back Cleveland to Top League TOPPLE? INDIANS HAVE | "crapri is COMISH BIG TEN OF GOLFDOM HORNSBY DEAL NEW RECR oety eact Goes Yea twa ue) SLU PUZZLE AND OLD VET _ TERETE) ie ne 10 EVERYONE Jack, Pounding Arm Sports Writers State’ Stone- Chair ham’s ‘Explanation’ Doesn’t eee ‘Zi BY 'EDWARD J. NEIL ‘Explain (Associated Press Sport Writer) —— New York, Jan. 12.—(7)—Unsa‘ New York, Jan. 12—(7)—An air isfied with the official statement patient silence hung heavy today romulgated by New York Giants about Jack Sharkey, whose New ine Pe emaite dae Ete ony Year resolution of “no more blood Roge sb: t jand thunder” outbursts excluded for we t eoiparativaly. aun even a predictior as to w t dire yout rs. = happenings would be visited upon Officially, the trade which brings ee Heeney in the Madison Square Frank Hogan, promising catcher, Hot Stove League Trades| Brought Only Peckinpaugh and Rookies HAS BUNCH OF PITCHERS’ ,¢ With Infield Intact, Real Bat- tle For Places Will Be in Outfield ‘38 Garden tomorrow night. and Jimmy Welsh, outfielder, to the Accustomed as the public is to Giants in exchange for a fine sec- Sharkey’s loud speaking, his audi- ond baseman and one of the greatest ence was totally unprepared for the hitters the game has ev cr known, almost demure edition of the Boston was “made for the best interests” heavyweight who trekked into New of the-Giants and “to avoid any fu- ork to report for examination by ture conflict in management” of the New York state athletic com- the club. mission. Questioned as to the out- That was the substance of two come of his 12-round melee with the statements issued by the Giants’ brawny New Zealander, Jack only powers that be. The first was over eran Baad said ina Head voice: the signatures of ‘both President eral promising recruits (ast ny Salta win.’ le felt quite Bist a hag agar ager Failure marked all efforts during’ “put through the veil of zeticence e, the winter to add any major league that das fallen so suddenly over the stars to the Cleve- massive form, there came occasional Jad camp and flashes of the Sharkey—the ed Evans, the cocky youth—who “gave the eye” to tribe’s new general ancient Mike McTigue and Jimmy ' picingde! faces ae Maloney, and even tried to stare out pri start with o¢ countenance Jack Dempsey, the almost the same oiq Manassa Mauler himself before Bat da ck Menke 1 falling ae former cham- A cs pion’s sledge-like ly ramming in ter finished with the Yankee Stadium last summer. “ast October. Evans took Sharkey Laughs charge of the team! “Why should I spend thousands in December after of dollars training for a little guy it had been pur- like Heeney if I intended to run out i ree from se 2 dosh nae peeled on alah Shar- unn by a group of key demanded, pounding 01 t' e edge old core big | Cleveland business men headed by of a chair the left hand fractured bi a in training for the orivinal match Alva Bradley, a banker. The new owners said their chief concern was with Heeney, postponed from late a winning team and told Evans to jn 1926. go out and round up the players He, “I should give up 60 grand for needed. They promised what money fighting him? Oh, no! no! no!” he needed. Then Jack offered to hit anybody Added Peckinpaugh But Evans found the going hard. He had no good men to trade with- out wrecking his team and no other major Jeague man-, ager would sell] ‘any good man out-| right for the sam: reason. So wher the stove leagc season ended Evans had mostl. some recruits and part of last year's team to build on. He did, however add Roge: Peckin- paugh, as field}. manager. Knowing that it takes pitching to win ball: games, i Cleveland, Jan. 12.—(?)—Backed by a group of new owners commit- ted to “a,winning team for Cleve- land,” but with virtually the same old group of players that finished sixth last year, the Cleveland In- dians will enter the 1928 season with their hopes pinned principally on a better showing of the last year's veterans and the coming out of scv- by Stoneham alone, was intended as a further “explanation” of the deal. The sports writers contended that the only fault with Mr. Stoneham’s xplanation” was that it didn’t xplain.” If some managerial con- flict was to be feared, they ask, why did McGraw, when he was ill,appoint Hornsby as acting manager during the hottest part of the National League pennant chase last summer? Few, if any, of the experts ac- cepted the “official” explanation at its face value. Hornsby, oimself, in St. Louis denied he had any trouble with McGraw or had atiempted to “undermine” the “little Napoleon.” Jockey’s Dogs Fail in Greyhound Derby London, Jan. 12,—(AP)—Steve Donoghue, the famous jockey, has gone in for a greyhound racing. During the horse racing season Donoghue had no time for any other sport as he was riding nearly every day, but the day after the running races closed for the winter Donog- hue bought a greyhound. <A few days later he bought another and before the week was out he had a string of them. One of Donoght dog: was en- tered in a “ but didn’t win. Others were entered in various events, but for weeks none ever saw first place. wghue says he could remedy all this losing business if only he could ride his dog in each race. gt tl annotate What'll They Do? Tris Speaker and Ty Cobb, two high-salaried players of last year, are finding that their services, be- minutes of wrestling. Olson was! cause of the large salaries, are not injured and unable to continue. | wanted so badly this yea’ the first time Friday night in a Rajah run away from Billy’s| Billy Kvane Cleveland as Mandell's Jones and George Von Elm, two of the outstanding players of Prog A season, rank first and second on the 1927 list selected by the United States Golf Association as the “Big Ten” of the amateurs. Rat- ing them on their season’s work, the association selected Jones first. Von im second, Jess W. Sweetser third, Francis Quimet fourth, Watts pire a Bon ig erred rer ined Lt heer gh J&se P. Guildford jarrison ins ni and Rola: MacKenzie tenth. | They appear in this order in our layout. _ been with the Saints so long that Gq they were given the privilege of “ates ~~ oe a in the place with the left just to show that it was in perfect working order. Aftcr a deep silence all pres- ent agreed that Sharkey’s hand was faultless and there was no demon- stration. Sharkey has no agreement with Rickard for any fight to follow the Heeney h, Manager Buckley de- clared, and there will be no talk of a fight with Tunney until the ob- stacle just ahead has been cleared. Player-owner System | _ Failure in St. Paul St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 12.—(AP) The player-owner plan has been dis- carded by the St. Paul club of the American Hockey association after a Staff, 25 to 15, at Fort Lincoln Co. I showed their superiority purchasing stock. An outside man- ager was signed. When the team failed to come up to expectations, reports of dissension developed. The plan was criticized and soon all stock owned by the players was called in by the club. A clash growing out of the dis- agreements resulted in departure of one of the erstwhie player-own- i: i ye | dismal early season showing. the ince the first days | Evans donne tae nee in| Three members of the team had|of league hockey. Both men were consist- —— — — ent winners in 1926, but both had a mer heavy- weight champion of the world, won from Buck Olson’ of Crookston in a wrestling match held here last night. Munn became angered aft- er being thrown to the floor by means of a headlock and caught the local man in his famous slam hold and hurled him to the mat after 23 Cotter and Mulvihill showed espe- throughout the although ‘the entire team Thursday night Co. L plays Co. K nicality,” Dr. Andrew Sivertson, ;1,) {lame arms last season. Hudlin and to Co Lb chataman of the Minnesota Boxing aire Dy auarars 32 Final ' Walter Miller, who came through mpany Y | commission, indicated today that the Se aa arene 7 6 9-25 last year with good records, despite commission would take no action in bis i reo coat Id tak ‘i FT P Pts the rather medio- — Eich a esa: eeinel te. Rocio Va fing. themy wil be DEAt ‘otests n. voi at ad- 2 “et ; The first game of the Fort Lin-|vertising of ight gave the in-| N' en on hand again, and MEN HE GETS on THE TRAIN | — AMD NE CAUSES A MISDEAL | — AND WHEN YouRE TRING To cola basketball tournament. was| ference that if would involve, the | £2 5 a he Peckinpaugh ne GIVES AN IMITATION Of The | BY. GETTING INTO THE WRONG - uc csenana played Monday at the Por tines lightweight ‘tie, when the title ‘et Heacnee ry ier a pereiees | peanning eee es NOTRE DAME FooTBALL TEAM section as {Se QUES Symnasiywmn. The game was a very|ually could not chan; ands _be- ‘ maive out orrosimon ands ‘one, The stars of cruse the articles specified that Pet-| Carter, & * a A A for Stauteau, the arene — Ah wo sear— You Cart You TELL ME ; game were Sergeant Leschinski, | rolle weigh over the class limit. - ss és 8 “ es Co. “I” who made five goals in the| “I have looked into the matter a Total 6 38 7 15 Team a ig pated | Yast quarter of the last half; Pri-|little,” said Dr. Sivertson, “and have Company FG FT P Pts mv mens BRGrs vate Cotter, and Mulvihill, Co. “I’| found‘ that it is common practice Mulvihill, ft 2s, eB OS aa ‘5 . | who gave Company “I” a great lead|among promoters to advertise the a ka ee vaugh and his two ny b> , \ j in the first half; Sergeant Alexan-|appearance of champions in this Pr fos. Te aa a1ew assistants, 6 i; der Private Lietz, Co. “K”,|manner even when the title really| Rog s ..77770 0 lO jatcher Grover || having made the only points for|is not at stake. An informal deci- tits 6 oe Ue : rtley and How- = i. their team. sion from the National Boxing as-| Patterson, G ..0 0-2 4 0| George Uhle ard Shanks, be- ZZ } ‘The lineup and summary: sociation, of which our commission|Young, g’.....0 0-0 1 0 ~~" lieve they can CEZzS f: Company “I” is a member, holds that. there is ME iota make a winner out of him. Buck- VA j Pp KG FTP PTs notning. peeiously. objectionable a Total 1 «3138 8 25 eFb, annie soMinee, =A Grant, | cS me one ' S-\the practice. It is purely a tech-) pope Ny neither of whom marked up many — == if. oe, 2 "4 o 4 nicality and not worth getting ex- pelereera pines mS victories last year are still with the Gg ia * 1 2 | cited about.” bog gor ee team, but the veteran Sherry Smith s— ii Cotter, ¢ 1g Timekeeper— foot” Gibson. has been released unconditionally. ———— ' ae, A 2 3 es No Asien: Threatened yb Scorer—Corn, Page. In addition Evans will take south a e le a ‘at no action would be baa" aie ae i unch itching re- Hi Leschi 0 © 10/}taken unless the other two commis- Flasher Ekes Out ber Mae a ieee t Youpg, ¢ ... 1 0 @/}sioners want to outvote him. It ap- . Has Many Vets 4 i — — -—|peared improbable that any action 13 to 12 Victory George Burns, the American a lotats- 3.6... 4 4 26)would be taken, for the commission 0 Cc Fi league's most valuable player in Com: “Ke as a whole will not meet until the ver Carson rive 1926, will continue to hold down first j CAR pany oe Fr arrival of Sandy MacDonald, the - sack with Joe Sewell at short- TAN Sue sn "Te $ TP PYS.|Datuth member, a few hours before| Flasher, N. D., Jan. 12,—Scoring| Johnny. Hobsph will replace Lutzke Wy dow We PLAY We Saves 1 1 1. 3|the, fight, the winning counter on a free throw | at third base, while the club owners 4 ; Or asen Both Petrolle and Mandell have| after the gun ending an overtime|have tossed lines toward the Nov 1AD Game In Oe Gear ‘ ended their heavy training for the} period, the Flasher high school | minor league ranks for a second THAT HAND IF You'D i 0 0 1. 9|20-Found go tomorrow night, A short| team defeated the Carson five by| baseman, since Spurgeon, e sensation FINESSED ME : fi spin on the road this morning and] a score of 13-12 here. Play was|in 1926, still suffers from injuries QUBEN OF SPADES © © la light drill this afternoon will com-| fast throughout and the crowd was {in an auto accident. Fonseca, with | : 2 6 g|Blete Petrolle’s preparations. Man-| wild as the regular period ended|a record of 96 games at second last ? dell 1s announ that he is in| with the score deadlocked e] as tilit: : unc I loc! 12-12. | season, is fi more.as a utility See T Sokaiten: first class condition, and will do but] Moorhead and Conlee were _ the | infielder. ra_ infielders are ; 3 little work. : F scoring luminaries for Flasher,| Jesse, sxortstop from Salt Lake Vi Elm ha’ Petrolle declared that he intended | while F. Wagner and J. Wagner put | City, and Carl Lind, farmed out to on Emp! tically to make a rushing fight from the] up a strong defense against the op- | Denver last . Do Off orening and will attempt to smc: posing attack. Jamieson counted on for left Turns wn Pro €F | Mandell with a volley of punches inj “ The New ' Leipzig high school battle for other field) ~ po - —_— the hope of landing one in a vital] team plays at Flasher Friday, Jan. be waged between ee | " - ‘ <Los Angel Jan. 12,—()— | spot. . 13, - in of New Orleans, Frank Wil- 1 George Von E! Mandell, a clever boxer, voiced his} ‘The lineup and summary: son of Milwaukee, Elton Langford t ion, “would | confidence in the outcome, but add-| Home team 1 4:10 12 13 13\of Omaha, and comer Summa, who Bobby Jones for the |¢d that Petrolle is “good,” and that | Visitors 4 7 9 12 12 12/has been with the Indians for sev- receive: m he expected a hard fight. Flasher eral years. George Gerkin, drafted tonal. i FG FT P PTS. | from also will be on L. Westrum,f....0 0-2 8 O}hand for an outfield job. 1 5-8 2 1%] Luke Sewell will be depended up-|: Oot OL eee Nae Guise “Mate” Dick yo jenn 5 00 4 0 Stakiman and Grover Hartley e ee 81 Mixes Barre club of the New York pA cache. rs lew Yor! 5 18 13] and Pennsylvania league, where he ’ Frankie rr p'prs,| see Sueeticnsy_ . : evalua TS 0 3] New York om 12--UP)Jack y, 4 lew jan, i , Het Springs, 14 2 5] suatey tots § condition and Better Ci rete . , from Joe Scully, (10), 04 2 0 Sighs See toes, Narery ad sree é ‘ nb Merced, Calif—Delos (Kid) | Totals .......4 4 6 12 ing of the] a Le ad Uny : or 8: yin a

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