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Th use to it also here! ter b 5,837 & EATPRLEELL MCEPTERE.E Tot | of on PAGE SIX Major League Baseball Breaks In RED SOX BEAT Five Knockouts Feat WASHINGTON IN PROLOGUE, 7-5 Opening Finds Ambitious Youngsters in Every Club Locking For Chance VETERANS HAVE PASSED! Half a Dozen Stars Will Be Seen Battling Against Old Teammates Baseballs wi hopes and fears to game home to more th league players and a q' million fans. Opening of t son in eight cities will produce ma- serial for the co: n ¢ scores and a standir on which the ch: ultimately be awarded. hi A shivering Washir saw the Senators and Sox offer a prologue American League fans see the curtain rung up at Phi -| phia, Boston, Detroit and ( while the National Lea ing another baseball ye York, Brooklyn, St. Louis cinnati. Heavy artillery has been on every front fur the o tle. Each man off in at le may decide a cha September, Many Changes in Lineups The opening finds the usual var iety of changes. Ambitiou sters will be found on every knocking at the door of opportunity while @ quota of veterans ha: n under the handicap of bad legs arm: and passed out of the pi More than the normal number former major league players who have served sentences in the minors| have disproved the truth of the saying that they do not come back of for here they are again. Phin ty sae. MANDAN HIGH TRACK TEAM HOPES TO COP CAPITAL CITY TOURNEY. WATZL BEATS MOULDEN answer the rallying call of the Washington fans’ “Hey Barney when the Senators and Red Sox lined up yesterday. Buck W sunburned face will be missing to-' day and the swarthy Jacques } our- nier will not hear a major league fan cry “hit it cut of the lot, Jack. ihe sun will not be dimmed by the} brilliant red undershirt of shawkey when the Yankees eme: trom their dugout. | Minors Step Up | To pick up the .bat and glove) iwopped by the pla: passed on| .o we minors, these same minors | iaye sent up young arms and legs} vy carry on. kddie «ig out ina crop of prom .vung outfielders, will bid for tavor of Cleveland tans while «ouis has Brannon at ‘midabi burden. Chaimer Cissell will be found ai! sho. for the White Sox and a will- ing, hustling Sohen is in charge of the Bill Kelley has his chance at first base for the Phillies an | Arthur Whitney has won the third} base bid on the ib. Doug Taitt played his first major league game for the Red*Sox yesterday. that all is not lost when a Frank O’Doul plays for the Harry Riconda and Howard Fr go to bat for Brooklyn and G Robertson makes himself gener useful for the Yankees. Friends Now Enemies A number of players may toward the wrong bench at the end| of an inning. Half a ! were for clubs lust ve: against now. be trying to beat the Giant Frank Hogan and Jimmy W work for New York interest: Bancroft’s hits and throws shortstop will help Brooklyn noé&t Boston. In the American League, Lu Blue will do all his f basing for St. Louis while Ha Manush, ‘another former Detroit Tiger, is in the Brown outfield. Earl MeNeely has taken off a Washing- ton uniform to put on that of St. Louis. Harry Rice will be hitting for the Tigers against the Browns and there is no white elephant on Chick Galloway’s shirt 2s he sits on the Detroit bench. George Sisler is in Washington colors instead of St. is and Tris Speaker is wearing the blue of Philadelphia instead of the red, white and blue of the Sen- ators. Bing Miller’s stockings have changed from brown to bluc. Every prospect pleases except fickle weather as the big parade starts. It will require nearly six months to pass a given point, rep- resented by two championship marches and a world series at the Four Billiard Stars in Running For Title from a { and | scka will work on’ the 440. nd Valder will also try the 220, McDonald, Arthur, Seitz, McKen- dry and Fleck have signified their intentions of trying both the low and| high hurdles. | THER, BISM 4 ROK TRIBUNE Sst he YE OLDE STUFFE : av i ipeissed fos aiternoon: the Gntoatt ny ofan By Knick Well-halanced Squad of Candi-! : dates Will Repsrt in Few Days to Cozch Leonard Me- Mahan—Heidt and Helbling Fa Pany Mandan has had only three years of traclt and ficld Brave institution this spring already senses victory in the Capital City! “track and field mect on May 4 and expensive | for the first time. The feeling that a track title is jcoming to Mandan high for the first |time has been engendered by the} reporting of a large and likely look-| ing squad of cinder men, the ma-| Jority of the candidates having been} members of th While | started, many of the Brace track as- The living examples of the tact| pirants have been working out daily. major | This has. league player drops back to the| boys minors wil! see action today when di: If Mandan produces some classy | and field timber, Coach Leon- jzrd McMahan stated Tuesday that jhe would enter a team in the state turn| Meet at Grand Forks on May 18 and! and probably send a squad to the trac! 19 N.D.A. furlong Heidt forte. shot. ho intend to throw, the shot, and javelin, is, Fried and Seitz will confine their workouts to the century and | greatest athletes to wear the Brave colors, are singing their swansong {in high school athletics by reporting {for track. jin the field section. The discus, jave- lin, shot and broad jump are their Dietrich, Belinsky and Borreson have already started hoisting them- selves over the horizontal pol. Bor- reson will add the half mile run to his calendar. Gordon Morris, the big basketball captain of the past winter, will close his. high school days throwing the! discus and javelin and putting the _ Beanpole Williams is the big hope in the high jump. The elongated lad has been stepping over the sticks Payne anu Gavuzzi Lead Pyle Runners ar Faces in Fast Com- work yet the squad last year. official practice has not yet been especii lly true of the May Go to Forks mon, festival at Fargo on May rvis, Nichols, Voseka, and Valder are the in the sprinting division. = while Fleck, Valder and Vo- Fried Two Vets Report and Helbling, two of the Both veterans will work money, Morris Tries Field pect fighters, ated Speedy Moulden of St. a 10-round bout here Tuesda: ight. Watzl weighed 159, two mor Tunney Is Cinch to Win Most crities are of the opinion that Gene Tunney is a cinch to de- fend hi- title successfully against place with a total of 236:10:20. Tom Heeney, the New Zealander, Eighty-two runners and walkers re- summer, _ “From a dime to a million,” Firpo and Thomas Heeney, n It isn’t a matter of o dime when they arrived in this country. Internal Revenue Burcau, however, when he left the United States. Perhaps Heeney will have as much when he returns to the blacksmith shop in New Zealand. Fortune, in the contribution was kind to him and Heeney golden smile from the fates. Firpo failed to win the heavyweight championship he slugged Jack Dempsey clear out of the ring in is coming into his big chance to win the heavyweight championship and the decision await his battle with Gene Tunney. Fate played in Dempsey’s favor when he fell out of the to the press table in himself back into the played against Dempsey to the floor. Perhaps, in the workings of those fates, a break against Tunne: | is now due and Heeney a vagabond was a rubber the dock. He had no great reputation as a fighter. His strength, his resemblance to a wild bull, and his k sorb punishment were his onl: about it. He couldn't speak ‘English, Rather panic-stricken in a big city, under a second-hand store in Newark, negro who was wiling to had been for from Sayre f Gavuzzi arathon, theze lead nad a 35-mile j to further test their en: 0 hails from Claremore, covering the from Los Angeles. Gavuzzi, South: main in the race to New York. ! 2 —————— The Story of Tom Heeney CHAPTER II The Anzac, Like Firpo, Came Here With Less Than a Dime, and—May Leave With a Million +e inisecesineaneeanamisineaniniabbia aia SPORTS FANS: This is the second of six articles by Henry L. Farrell, telling the interesting story of Tom Heeney, who fights Gene Tunncy for the heavyweight championship in July, and his manager, Charley Harvey, rho finally received a “break.” BY HENRY L. FARRELL of opportunities to Firpo, certainl; may be blessed with even more of By the minute fraction of an_ incl of the world whe of the fates will have t may get the benefit. A Vagabond Lands Firpo. crawled out of the hold of a South American liner on the Jersey side of the New York port. He hadn’t had his clothes off in days and the only.article of apparel he had to distinguish him from collar that he washed in a water trough on assets. But he sharing quarters with a bi . Firpo first attracted attention when some one carried the news to Jimmy De Forest that there was a great-looking heav; in a cellar in an old-timer, Newark, a guy who wanted to fi int De Fores! the best trainer in the country and a skilled handler of f years in the quest of that unknown heavy- wets that every old-timer is seeking. Forest was in a run of bad Tuck life when he hooked no more superb! status of Andrew in “the nt to d his leadership by| played last night. 0 S$ yesterday in a jdead heat with Gavuzzi in 8:21:40. i This gave the Oklahoman an elapsed! gloves been used. But padded with| occasions with hard blows but the time of 234:54:37 for the 1,386 miles ampton, England, entry, held second n,” as it might be written by Luis’ Angel is a tale that has many high spots in com- fficial record that either had as much as a There is a record in the U. S. that shows Firpo was a millionaire New York. Heeney millions that go with the size and_ physical nown ability to ab- couldn’t tell anyone Firpo took refuge in a cellar accept his unsociable society for coffee weight pros- - He thought he was set for up with Jack Dempsey in 1919. He trained Demp- sey for his fight with Jess Willard in’ Toledo and Leads Badgers ve I PACKED HOUSE | HOWLS DELIGHT | QVER BATTLES Parks, Vadnais, Fortino, Nich- olson and Smith Score | Thrilling Kayos 1 BOUT GOES OVERTIME | First Heavyweight Scrap End- in Slumber—Fort Officials Are Commended SO Victors and Losers |; ee Wallay Laurent beat Charley | Gear (3). | Carl Toler beat Mom Hicks (3). Cecil Parks knocked out John Lucky (1). John Ambrovitch beat Peter Rombach (4). Arthur Vadnais knocked out Rufus Haynes (1). Steve O Donnell beat William Wisconsin wasn’t on the Hudson at! Poughkeepsie last year in the inter- collegiate rowing championship but big Frank Irth, veteran stroke of three years, will lead a crew in the big classic this year. There wiil be Palm (3.) five sheds id in oa boat Sane Sob i very promising sophomores. ay- Kane pe. eck kt! be we'll get that trip to Amster- Bcb Nicholson stopped George |4am,” Coach “Dad” Vail and Orth Spare (2). say. cea Pitre! beat Walter Abbott himself for another round. In the aa ay ( ith stopped Leo | second round, Nicholson again dumped his good-looking opponent on the canvas and the fight was over. Albert Woods came through with flying colors in one of the fastest fights of the evening when he! slapped Wallie Abbott through three speedy rounds. Abbott could dance and jab but didn’t carry any dyna-; mite while Woods continually bored in with snappy wallops that had Abbott slightly Froggy at the end. Smith Whips lley In the first heavyweight match scen at Fort Lincoln on either of the two cards so far offered, Frank Smith, bulking large with a squat: stature and heavily muscled limbs, | beat down Leo Bradley’s trim fi y Bradley was aggressive but couldn't find the button while Smith coolly let loose with a hard right to floor Bradley for the toll of nine and rocked Leo to s'!:ep with hard right. The round lasted a over two minutes. A bouncing bear by name of Andy Graytax ducked and pummeled his way about the arena as Crescendo Garcia gamely strove to solve his Andy Graytax beat Crescendo Garcia (3). BY J. G. MacGREGOR Battling with tigerish ferocity, 22 icughboys of Fort Lincoln last drove 400 fight fans into hys- ‘ics. Five bouts ended with one- nd knockouts, one bout went an extra round before the judges agreed, while the other five feuds nded with the combatants totter- zg. Tt rained blows last night at Fort Lincoln. Blood from fragile nasal organs spattered about the ring. Khaki-clad rooters groaned and howled as their company represent- atives smashed each other around the ring. Women spectators cringed as terrific swings felle’ first one | gladiator and then another. Old timers who have seen some -|of the greatest fights in history as- serted that they had never seen such -|an evening packed with fistic enter- tainment of such deadly animosity »;and clean sportsmanship as was dis- other | little; There would have been slaughter had the regulation four ounce ring|tax back on his heels on numerous eight ounce coverings, the flailing | stocky ex-Butte miner bored in, beat ie ania of the doughboys last night|down Garcia’s guard, and had the stunned but did not render uncon-| dark-skinned boy tottering as the scious. final gong of the rion maa Laurent Surprises Gear ‘ans Well Satisfi Opening the card, Wally Laurent| Today the fight fans of Bismarck earned a clean cut victory over|and Mandan are ing the praises Charley Gear. Laurent knew the|of the bill and its matchmaker, Lt. fundamentals of jabbing and hooking | H. C. Jones. There is no doubt that and used them to good advantage on| Jones and his other aides at Fort the wild-swinging Gear. Only in| Lincoln de: did Gear have any advantage. Injother show that has been offered that 60 seconds he swept out his} here in years. - ‘ corner to batter the surprised Lau-| ©. W. Roberts, Bismarck’s ring rent about the ring. veteran, handled the 11 bouts in Mom Hicks had obviously never| great style while Sergeant Olson, stepped in a ring before but he was|the raucous voiced announcer, also game and slugged it out with Carl|drew the plaudits of the tickled Toler. Toler stuck a snaky left in| crowd. Hicks’ face time and again. Hicks} The garrison gymnasium was ba I think the backfield mater- opponent's offense. Garcia set Gray-'House, Grand Forks, regular back serve heaps of credit for | @ the first minute of the last round|their card. It was far and above any | WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1928 to Nation’s Sportlight Today ure Fort Lincoln’s Second Great Fight Car JACK WEST LEADS NODAK_GRIDDERS IN FIRST DRILL Willis Shepard, Bismarck, Cap- tain of 1928 Flickers, Heads Squad of 20 TAME SEA LION 1S OUTCLASSED BY HUMAN FISH Otto Kemmerich Breaks En- durance Record and Out- swims Denizen of Deep Grand Forks, N. D., April 11.—C. A. (Jack) West, developer of fine athletic talent at South Dakota State college since 1919, and who will will be athletic director and head football coach at North Dakota uni- versity beginninz next fall, took over a squad of 20 Flickertail ath- letes Monday for the first training romp of the spring. In_ typical West style, business was in order from the start, and the moment the lads in moleskin trotted on the field they were put to work. It was a fine turnout of athletes, 20 in number, considering that classes do not open after the Eastcr vaca- tion until todey. West declared after the workout that he was favorably impressed vi the squad and spirit of the ys. “There were twice as many out there as I expected,” he declared, “and right now I’ve no zeason to be- lieve that all available talent in the school will not be out in another day or two.” To Meke Work Harder “I plan to let them take it easy for a few days, and then the pro- gram will be stiffer. I want to see all the men in action, real action, I mean, and as I can only remain here for 10 days or two weeks, the work will have to be speeded up consider- an “Right now, from what I can Hamburg, Germany, April 11.— (AP)—A man today was acclaimed for a victory over a sea lion who fell asleep in trying to outswim his hu- man competitor.: Otto Kemmerich, German profes- sional swimmer, made the longest recorded continuous swim in human annals, plodding through the water for 46 hours. His pet California sea lion, Leo, who was to act as peace- maker, however, had been lifted drooping from the water four hours before sound asleep. When Kemmerich started with Leo it was freely predicted that the sea lion would outlast the human. After ten hours, Leo fell asleep in the wa- ter. A luscious meal of fresh her- rings roused Leo to fresh activity. Every time Leo dozed attendants threw him a fish. After disposing of 35 pounds of herring, the sea lion became increasingly languid and at the end of 42 hours was lifted from the water and plunged into sleep. Inthe meantime, Kemmerich plodded along on a diet of fried eggs, coffee, cocoa and fruit. At the 32nd hour he passed the record recently set by Mrs. Lottie Moore Schoemmell of New York. At the 46th hour, un- aided, he climbed from the tank. is a little light, but the line ma- terial looks good, and if all the boys turn out, it will give me an oppor- tunity to know exactly what I'll have to expect next fall,” he added. The squad was made up of Buck Thoreson, Fargo, big member of the freshman team, who played tackle last fall, but who was used by West as a back Monday; Dunnell, Minot, regular half last year; Kotchain, Lidgerwood, two ‘year regular dood Doan, Oakes, member of the ickfield squad two years ago; Han. son, Grand Forks, freshman _line- man; Wood, Grand Forks, freshman linema: Battcher, Donnybrook, Stuhldreher to Wed; Remaining Horsemen Usher Philadelphia, April 11—En- fi ent of Miss Mary A; ickinery, Germantown, to Har- ry A. Stuhldreher, 1924 all- American quarterback and_one of Notre Dame’s famous “Four Horsemen,” has been announced by het parents, Mr. and Mrs. back of last fall, who did not get a|| Michael J. McEnery. hance to play bec: injuri At the wedding, planned in Ton Valles City, tee peat ann: || dene, Stuabereies * trekticta tackle; Vern Smith, Dickinson, last year tackle; Larson, Grand Forks, freshman back; Ludvig, Grand running mates wi!l be ushers. They are Elmer Layden, Pitts- burgh; Don Miller, Cleveland, a deny end; Love; ee Los rd Jack Crowley, Green Bay, iter; i is. nee Williston, reserve * pee Knute Rockne, Notre Dame- at the welding topether, with last year; Baird, East Grand Forks,|| ®! wedding tcgether wit! freshman back; Willis Shepard, Bis-|| other sporting world notables. marck, captain and e Austin Smith. Dickinson, reserve lineman; McMillan, Grand Forks, regular center; Gerald Shepard, Great Falls, | >. —, —.--—* reserve end. | Yesterday’s Games | ee a —<—$_$—_|____+ MILBURN INJURED 4 This is a little story about an (By The Associated Press) internationally famous an who fell AMERICAN oe - See cgaaheeo sonar | eee 2, OE Washington . a» 5 8 0 MacFayden and Hofmann; Gzs- Price. an great-| ton, Braxton and Tate. grimaced, backed away and then| jammed last night and it appears as would wade ia with wide lefts and | though the next card will have to rights that landed futilely on the|held in the oj air to accommodate unexposed portions of Toler’s anat-|the huge mo! gle aoe on pasiilly; fata out. john Lucky had a promisi name but failed to call upon it in| usually su ful evening last night his slashing match with Cecil Parks. | and today they top the . To Parks went the distinction of|/company in points in the boxing| suffered a sprained ankle when his Y| scoring the first real knockout at/ tournament. 8/Fort Lincoln, Short left and right h| hooks to the jaw after two minutes M)of uneven milling found Lucky on the mat completely befuddled. His dizzy brain did not fathom the end ©} of the battle when Referee O. W. Roberts waved Parks to his corner, Y|and pounded away at his muscled f opponent. For three rounds, Am-| Annapolis, Md., April eripii brovitch threw his pistons into Rom-| The matter of supervised and wer bach’s face and body in volleys of | quate training by contenders for clean punches. At the end of the| American Olympic boxit seam gute three rounds, the judges called the|to the very heart of Unel Log bout a draw. In the fourth round| chances to clinch world honors * Rombach tired and the Pole jabbed| Amsterdam this mer; << it rela out a decision. be team strength will ultimat Rufus Haynes per up,a ex-| ly carry off the laurels, not alone hibition against Arthur Vadnais but | individuals. ; ran up against some deadly swings.| It should be made plain righ bess, After 70 seconds of hectic mauling,|that every youngster in erica ig eet Bl ie slerke when a Ey pa: Kg Lo a he ee of fists’ and mite right lan square on al chin. Haynes took a count of nine| little opportun- to will have and then rose to be beaten down| ity ited to in the next few in under a tornado of punches. . 3 to re tt the United it, wy Sieve, O'Donnel, eripaled seeeean Bisies in the Ciympic boxing tourn- 25 years’ ring ex; nce and for. | ament. 5 mer welterweight pede of the} And, like everything else that’s Orient, showed that punch knowl-| worthwhile fi ting for, the making one Bid. Sing SARS gs on ee a Curae a ig corals sores it im’s wild rushes, troul inconvenience awit a spurt of claret from| which comes in tedious training pe- be| that is sure to turn|§ Company I's battlers had an un-| man fell at the same place the pre- OLYMPIC FIGHTS AND FIGHTERS == || By “Spike” Webb est polo player of not scheduled. futt wejurat Pate] AMERICAN ASSOCIATION the horse he was R H E riding in a hunt Milwaukee .. 11 19 3 fell at Aiken, 8. C.| Columbus ... - 10 9 ri) He sustained in- (10 innings) ternal injuries that|_ Ballou, Wingard, Sanders and may result seri-| Young, Lyons, Zumbro, Harris, ously. Strange to|Fishbaugh and Bird, say, another equal-| . E ‘ ~| St. Paul ... ie ee che gaan ee | Loaiaville “igieig?y ©? a Innings Headquarters | rated with Milburn ae’ the grostest| _ (Forfeited to.St- Paul, 9 to 0, when fans refused to allow game to m ji proceed.) Heimach and Gaston; mount went down under him. Cullop, imer. “aati (12 innings) Sheehan, Nelson and Peters; Pal- mero and O'Neil. r ring on/a winner. tates * Boxing’ Coac inneapoli 1 @ & New York in such a position that he could pull] Qne Match Takes Extra Round eben Olymple iid wid mi polis 5 it 2 ring. jn tiene J aaa, FPS, Spt. fate! John Ambrovitch and Peter Rom- Tndinnanots chy 21 2 zi in Chicago last September when Tunney|bach furnished some of the heftiest pics Every Youngster With Good Pair H was permitted to doze for fourteen seconds after having been smashed| slugging of the evening. For three|Way to Olym om to leart Moon, __ Hubbell pe Resor: rely ‘ombach took the offensive 4 of ts and Fighter’s H 13 Schur. Burwell and 4 roungsters; Benny Levine of New Yorks Jack Metz of Pittsburgh, and George Blake of the Los ae Athletic Club—who turned over two. world’s champions to me in Tee Fe ceeeee oF Field Lae Barbe and J: Fields. I mention these athletic agencies because they are the ones—num- bered among countless other small (By The Associated Press) Toledo, ©.— Panama Al who usually affiliate with} (2), A, jartin, New Bed- fhe danger organisations who turn f , me was over Soldier the a game of fisticuffs into] Dombrowski, Cleveland, foul, Oe eee RE: tothe adage] Gh Bees Nam Cleats Beet that “good fighters are born,” but ). aR ee: sail give. me @ youngster with a desire to fight—and I mean by that what Des Moines, Ia.—Mike Man- call a “tighter’s heart,”| dell, St. Paul, knocked out ° some. little physical prowess and a| neth Hunt, Des Moines, (4). little time to train—and under nor- Johnny Martin, Sioux Falls, mal conditi the product will be cs out Bobby Lyons, potential Olympic material. St. Paul, (2). To the unnumbered legions of i 2 " -| trained and physically conditioned athlete ever ste} into a ring than} Palm’s nose in the second round, and | riods and right living. youths who find it impossible to Great Falls, Monts—Dick — aay Bee, Sot ane Me the Dempsey wonder who smashed the facial er the hugee Wil-|snapping Palm drunk in the third.| With the Tnteveafiegiate Boxing| place themselves in proper hands| Watzel, St. Paul, def ve Chicago, fo 11—-(AP)—Only | rot add another foot, lard and won the world’s championship. Palm's only chance came in the Associ working in conjunction | for a well-rounded training grill, I Mi St. Louis (10). four play Kap illie Hanne. .ot New| "The Nichols brothers Guy and ee i ps De Forest round when he dashed from his cor-}.with the Amateur Athletic Union mould be more than happy to offer| . Alex Knauv, Butte, out oat ns ton of St. Louis, Gus| yerncn, will carry the bulwark of Luck didn’t stay with De Forest, however. Jack Kearns thought|ner at the bell to smother O’Donnell| of the United States, and army and| what advice I believe necessary if} Norman Wi Moosejaw, Copulos tng and Otto peel work in the mile and half-mile runs.| ‘hat Dempsey and De Forest were too friendly. He charged De Forest| momentarily under a wild flurry of | navy athletic authorities, American| thev care to make inquiry from me| Sask. (10)., of Philadelphi See aetepding Tiuing | Other candidates, not veterans, will) With attempting to steal Dempsey away from him and fired him bodily|swings. After that the veteran| Olympic hopefuls have unequaled/at the Naval Academy. It is suf- crete aoa, were considered in the running |) 01st oy this department, " out of the camp. He not only forbade him the liberty of Dempsey’s| stood back and beat Palm unmerci-| facilities for showing their stuff. lent now. to say, that Indianapolis—Jack Kane, Chi- foe the, national three-cushion bil- MSEDREPBenE company but did everything he eouly to discredit the part De Forest | fully. cia ea dee mn: manoring, circles in| lots of sleep, weil balanced diet| cago, outpotnted “Tony | Ross, liards today. 1B. e! making Dempsey. el ‘al Count past a inish Babe fy Willie Hoppe and Layton were tiea| Maroons Grab Second De Forest, accepting the tip on’Firpo, dug the huge South Amer-| Smiling, Bot Fortinoc e" jamping| sreelaf La” Commander 0. 0. Kest:| in the af2%, B88 absolutely neces:| beat Kid Lencho, Mexico City, Place with only onc defeat Contest From Rangers| {27.0 of the cellar, staked him, fed him and put him up in his home.| jack that skipped and leered a ing, of the Naval Academy, presi- ' ‘are general rules and| (10). in \. ulos was proving | A t4 He was making a fighter out of Firpo when some Brazilian waiters|the ropes, shi class in whipping| dent of the college association, and/ anything further would have to be — tartar of the race. After # poor ,_ | from a coffee house in New York told Firpo that De Forest would|John Kelly. Kelly lacked the exper-|such coaches as the veteran Leo ted from the individual fight- 8t. Fla. — Alex he has shown s remarkable re-| Montreal, April 11.—(AP)—Vis-| double-cross him, but not the cou and re-| Houck of Penn State, George Deck-| er's viewpoint. Hart, Philadel; won over makiar difficult |ions of Stanley cup, the prize They told him that De Forest was heart and soul a Dem, man, sailed into the -punch-| er of the University of Pennsylva-| E once in awhile a genius is} Alex Simms, Cantcn, O., (10). opponents dif: | denoting world’s professional hockey| that he, would school him wrong and betray him and Firpo left De Italian. Near the close of the| nis, and.John Larowe of the Uni-| born, fort for the rest — y, he was in third | supremacy, were nearer reality for| Forest, It isn’t too much to believe that if Firpe hed. ttack wet | foot cond Peete stepped inside fash A Sig Lapel adage Olym-| of us—not often. master who ooh eAngtlets Armand Eman- victories two|the Montreal Maroons today as they| De Forest he would have won the championship. [n° hic fight with|two wild swings and petty clipes pic boxing have been in-|can play a spare without effort, rancisco, beat Matt of St. eee on, Pe oats ot te0 ps ae, oe on Pas A a was beaten considerably in Nis own corner by ama- Kelly on his china piece. Kelly was “t inereased fesgod of od first “must psd himself to + Adgie, Philadelphia (10). . Louis - | th ngers | teu . eri dials phism fies Michtar they turning some practice sacrifice much —<—$<—<—<—$——— the title chase. contest competition. When He arrived in this country, he, “hooked up with an Hob Nicholson, a serious Scot with| from year to . ‘become better. So it should be, ’ Helffrich Won't Go Over bis portal last night to Pushing Sos Hees Nast night, old Hager, Charley rvey, But he stack Gite hime nestor all's a ley pune, ked Geo. 8 Them standing ‘out in the vet-| usually with the fighter Who can| Because of business Alan 50'to 45, in soe cing: Fogg ade, maar off with tations to throw him over and therein may be the difference. : Ei oo mae wick ce . | ieee taco nee ee — 5 Jon by atriving°ao| Neceity arho once, defeated vo ., Hoppe, game ——— lows. ended in a in figures Lacy comes a champion striving @ half-mile race who os at rrtatly fa ton | RaeeTE AY 2 count of & goals to 0, maakt creat aATICY, Harvey, who for | twenty yeaa bed sie Fenn Eoare top Aho] pas Roem selected ae boxing trainer} reach excellence by training dill fears amember of the 1924 Olympic normal; fourth enco take place| _ sought @ “break,” believ. im Heeney became hig man- stopping a hard right. He Obmpies without necessarily burning] team, says he won ‘0 com- ‘@ handicap to overcome. here tomorrow night, ager ‘when: others in the'fight racket ignored the New Zealander. | tine, rose and covered to save| turns oct cf promising | Rimeait cot . e Pete for the team this season. .