The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 18, 1929, Page 8

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a “oanamee ‘ ee enh sear Tres eUse iMcCann P BATTERING BULL PUT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1929 AWAY KS HARD LEFT | mall College Team Beats Navy HITS STOMAGH'S PIT, Champion Carried Too Many) Guns for Youthful Oppo- | nent Last Night | GREY-MEEK BOUT CANCELED | Tony Went Down Fighting, His trength No Match for Jack's Experience FIGHT RESULTS Jack McCann, Sanger, knocked out Tony Brown. Bis- marck, 188 (6). (For the heavy- weight championship of North Dakota.) Jack D 181, 137, Bi Bismarck, Bud Morgan, marek, 133 (4). Clyde Rutherford, Fort Lincoln, 140, beat Thomas Finn, Fort Lin- coin, 140 (4). tey A Bismarck, shaded Bis ck (4). Heavyweight Champ VETERAN BOB SHAWKEY SUGGESTED PITCHER | "AS LIKELY PROSPECT Art Fletcher Crosses Up Critics by Refusing Job Offered i to Him | | :BOB COACHED LAST SEASON, I {Five Years Before His Death, Huggins Suggested Fietch- er or Shawkey | New York, Oct. 18. \tionally released by years ago, Bob Sihawkey. ex-sailor. | has been named manager of the New ; York Yankees, leaderless since the {death three weeks ago of Miller J. } Huggins. i A great right-handed pitcher in his day, coach of the Yankees during the |last season, Shawkey never has had ‘any managerial experience. His con- tract is for one y ‘ Shawkey's selection surprised the | experts, who had expected that Arthur Fletcher, Yankee coach, or Bob Con-| nery, president of the St. Paul club of | »—Uncondi- , the Cubs two; i After Kayoing Brown in MILLER HUGGINS AD) | CHANGE TENDS TO DISCOURAGE | KICKING IS MADE DIFFICULT jclare it is unfair, in that while 11) NAMED YANKS’ MANAGER FOR SEASON 7 ling the franchise to such a city @ j Detroit. | oie ONE MAN MAKING EXTRA POINT 2". vis.cs jPart of 1929, there have been nont ————— | i|more conspicuous than those of Jacl contract with the Braves, a job that |Sharkey in the ring. Big Bill Tilder Ball Is Moved to Two-Yard In-! may easily take that long to get the/on the courts and Glenna Collett ot | {Boston club lifted out of its long | the links. Stead of Three-Yard Line | deciine. Miss ‘Collett's performance was nc After Touchdown | Donte Bush departed from Pitts- | comeback in one sense of the word jburgh under circumstances reminis- for she demonstrated her supremacy ent of McKechnie’s leave-taking of [in American golf for the second suc: | {cessive year and fourth time altor ithe Pirates a year after winning the gether, yet it took a series of courage: 1925 pennant. Donie lost little time | ous uphill fights for her to even reack signing a two-year contract with the the final at Oakland Hills agains! Fans Would Rather See Whole| White Sox, replacing Lena Black-| Mrs. Leona Pressler. - a {burne, while Jewel Ens, a coach un-/| Team Take Part in Scor- der Bush, assumed the leadership of | ing Seventh Point the Pirates. i Dan Howley made a first-div'sion club out of the St. Louis Browns but resigned after a season of some dis: content, to be replaced by Bill Kil) fer. A change in the Cincinnati! ownership involved the withdrawal of | Jack Hendricks as manager, with at / least a half dozen candidates in the | | field to succeed him. | By CHESTER L. SMITH There has been more or less agita- tion for years to abolish the extra point after touchdown. We have it with us again this fall, but in a slightly altered form. Opponents of the seventh point de- men are needed to score the six} “We will have a winning club in points which are won with a toueh-| Cincinnati, no matter whether it down, making the extra one generally | takes one year. two or three years to falls upon the shoulders of one player | build it up.” said Sidney Weil. the or, at the most two. They contend | new club president, to me during the that the winning or losing of a game ! world series. | should not depend upon which eleven} “No player on the club is for sale | has the most accurate kicker. and there are at least three. Red That it does help do away with tle Lucas, Hughey Critz and Swanson. eer is testi) claim advanced by | the new outfield star, who could not | § proponents. ' In an effort to discourage the kick Meer wrrikiey: cee Bibi te as a means of adding the point. the | price on Lucas, I just laughed. Lucas | Package of S—S0e. 22 tor $1.00 WADE & BUTCHER e - a rules committee some time ago agreed Sharper et Sretend stare ¥ vilion when the monarch knocked out; = ‘Tony Brown, the battering bull of the Missouri Slope, with a hard left-hand # Jack McCa ¢ Manassa Mauler * of the Nor oday s { puted king of North Dakot Pan thanks to a strong left | he coronation ceremonies 2] | solemnized act night at the Dome x |Nodaks See Hard named to the post. the American association, would be | “I Co not want to manage the Yan-; Tilt With Maroon kees, or any other club.” Fletcher said that the ball should be placed on the three-yard line from whence it could be kicked or rushed. From there, jis the greatest pitcher in the league. | r—Every one the | There is no reason why we can't put baseball back on its feet in Cincin- | el SAME uniform quality. A Preduct of WADE & BUTCHER nati.” tery, | hopelessly oute! sock to the pit of the stomach in the | sixth canto of a scheduled 10-round | Coach Jack West Leaves With bout. Dempsey’s double, after tl 25 i i i the buttle at the | Men to Pit Against manufacturer of dope-upsetting football rounds, began to win the e { 4 | college. Upper right s beginning of the fourth canto, wher | he started poking his left into the jay | and stomach of Tony with shocking Morningside | Warren and Elijah Smith. The gentleman of the pensive mood, to the left, is “Crafiy Cam” Henderson, | pe sutisfied.” ows, left to right, Halfbacks “Curls In_ lower right is Cecil Ervin. | tackle, with Neil Rengle, fullback, in lower left. when the offer was made. “If the club | wishes me to continue as coach I will | teams for little Davis and Elkins | : ‘The offer then was made to and} Close, Claude | accepted by Shawkey tar 220-pound| Colonel Jacob Rupprecht — said | Shawkey had been selected solely on regularity. Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 18—?)}-- —— ae gilating in the fourt round, Tony | Twenty-five University of North Da- | nose bezan spouting blood, and,’ kota football players, with Coach ©! MICHI N AND IOWA BAT TLETO A. We City, Morningside Saturday in their second | conference game of the season. ' ‘The Flickertails were big favorites | to defeat th Ma $s. Wh ¥ ‘i oot eck was 38 to 0 by South | Records of Both Were Soiled by swamped a week ago 38 to 0 by South | Dakota State. West is looking for a | Defeats in Inaugural | Encounters | | t. left here ‘Thursday for Sioux Towa, where they will mect| though the early knockout ‘as n pected by the majority of the Was apparent that the battering bu was about to come out second be: Tony went down fighting, however, ssed in boxing but and sheer physical not in rit strength: Carried Too Many Jack carried too many guns—that | ‘was the whole story—and his left had | heavy artillery proportions. The two hheavies put up one of the nicest fights thet have been staged in Bis- marek i: many months. McCann played a smart game, Iet- ting Tony do most of the leading 10 the first three rounds. He was walt- ing for Tony to tire. A: tough battle, however, and will ‘atl satisfied to win by any margin. The} Nodak coach saw the slaughter at} Brookings and says Morningside is aj much better team than was shown | against the Jackrabbits. | The North Dakota squad is in the | best physical condition it has been in| Purdue, Author of S ti \ | 5 ensationa since the first game of the season. | ‘West was able to take every available Upset, Has Minor Game _| With Depauw result, th? | man except Storeim, a reserve tackle, : et bs apy a) Richmond, half; Schmit, quarterback; ee fea came and th. [Felber. end, and Jacobson. tackle, all t Nant his vietor even in{of Whom have been out of the game | ; jat one time or another, will be ready} Chicago, Oct. 18—i%—Their rec- rounds. \ faerie tomorsaw: 'ords soiled by defeat in their inaug- 7 rapidly because | ‘ural i L i GSS SES | gaines of the Big Ten football | most of the leading, A | letics Cc Il 1 }Season, Michigan and Iowa tomorrow ‘ P eg | ship. e- t it: Before the opening games last. week , 3! ‘1 was content to protect jone defeat was regarded as sufficient | @ big boy had a point adv the n landed few of his shing blows, and none of those he land hit the mark squarely. Mc- was too quick and too cautious. espected that big, brawny arm| + which demanded a made- itt. 2 fourth and fifth rounds wen* their chances for the 1929 champion- \to eliminate a team from considera- | “ fall of the four favorites on last Sat- tion at Banquet Given for —surday’s program, Michigan. Wiscon- | GOPHERS, PURPLE WATCHED “2s One of the Last Links of the last links connecting present {day pugilism with the era of John jnorthwestern Pennsylvania village aaa L. Sullivan and other fighters of the! who foresaw the possibilities in the. | bare-knuckle school has been broken |janky youth. with the ceath here of Frank Slavin. | j more than 20 years, will fight to retain what remains of /SPel of the Yukon during the gold stampede of 1898 and wound up the | 54 years old. i in i tion in t t re, it, me Connie Mack Given Great Ova- tion in the title race, but the down-| Gav after an filness of more than i year. the basis of advice given by Huggins! |five years ago. Rupprecht and Hug- ‘gins had discussed possible successors ,to the “mite manager.” in the event | Shawkey second. | KEEP REMAINING TITLE CHANCE (iss'sssinsenace Fitch trot and’ Frank Slavin, Vet {to the Montreal club of the Inter- nee national league as a pitcher and} P ugilist, Is Dead as coach at the start of the season just closed, | OBSCURE STOREKEEPER DISCOVERED SHAWKEY Connecting Modern Boxing \ Brookville, Pa.. Oct. 18.—?)--Be- menace Tagg {Bob Shawkey, who today steps into if 2 the shoes of Miller Huggins as man- . Oct. 18.--\)—One jager of the Yankees, looms the story lof an obscure.storekeeper in a smali Vancouver. B. j. The pitcher was unconditionally re- jj leased in November, 1927, and went | @: coach. He qame back to the Yankees | 4+ the biggest shakeups in its history | nind the scenes in the baseball life of | they ATEUEd, aA tea evs une | ,The rest of the National League ti {club owners will watch the efforts stead of chancing the hazards of 10° 49, weil to rebuild, with consid- Heck from placement of & drop fier [erable interest. for his club thas been tinued to kick. so the powers last |® weak link, financially and competi- Winter decided to move ‘the ball (tively. for some time: so much so yard closer—to the two-yard line. that there has been talking of shift- Whether or not the move will have | == a tendency to bring about the desired le 2 * Makers of Fine Sheffield Cu | Careers ant Ravore for over 308 years Geo. E. Shunk 416 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. result is problematical—and extreme- ly doubtful. \ ~~ Sport Slants o~ | @ By ALAN J. GOULD Baseball will feel the effects of one | when the major league campaigns of 1930 get under way. Since late this | season and through the excitement of ithe world’s series, more managerial) | ‘changes have developed than in any ; isingle year on record, with no less Harry ‘Truman, minor league and semipro pitcher in his younger. days, stopped one afternoon to watch a gawky youth playing ball on a vacant lot in Sigel, Pa., a tiny oil town. The youth was Shawkey. Sensing possibilities in the youthful hurler, Truman took him in id and for two years coached him in pitch- ing for control. Back of the Truman barn Shawkey practiced throwing nothing but a straight fast ball for Slavin fought 2s a professtonal for | fell under the | pectacular side of his career with mn enlistment in the Canadian arm uring the World war when he was He died in a hospital here yester- | jthan seven of the 16 clubs reorgan- could have held his job as long as Priceless style priced to please you. . . . he wished but internal warfare, | Billy Southworth in the leadership of \the Cardinals, who abruptly sent the | * i | i izing for various reasons . . . | ‘The death of Miller Huggins de- \well as demands for improvement, Youthful and smart... . $5 to $10. contributed to most of the other) {changes in leadership that have been | jeffected or are about to be. | | ‘The big turnover began with the: ‘recall of Bill McKechnie to replace | A HAT fe [former to the minors after the de- | Hit your personality ‘bacle against the Yankees in the 1928 S. E. BERGESON & SON * prived the Yankees of a pilot who i series. | Now McKechnie has a four - year —— e's by big margins after he had opened up. Tony was battered about § the ring unmercifully. Knockout Was Unexpected The knockout came quite unexpect- edly. It appeared that Tony would take much more punishment before going down for the count. But Jack's lightning left caught him square, and Tony went down, completely out. He didn’t stir a muscle as Referee O. W. Rokerts counted him out. It was the ‘son, Towa and Indiana, left them with | Born in Maitland. New | South ‘at least an outside hope of another | Wales. January 5. aed, Slavin met | chanee. \ others, Jem Sealth. British champion; | e as i | Big Jack McAuliffe of Detroit; Peter , Philadelphia, Oct. 18.—(4»—The; Towa’s task will be to upset Illinois! gackson, Jim Hall, Bob Armstrong. Athletics, winners of the world ser- in the latter's campaign for its third re ies, were dined and feted last night | straight Big Ten title. Rae Risin ane ek ora 1 by the city. the Chamber of Com-| Although the 1927-28 champion I-|\ many years, he met. Frank Gotch merce and. the Philadelphia sports jlinois eleven will he making its 1929|the heavyweight wrestling champion. writers association. jbow in conference competition at | Gotch thought he could box and he Connie Mack and Eddie Collins | Towa City, the Minnesota invasion of | agreed not. to. use wrestling tactics. the World Champs were presented with radios. Electric | Northwestern has assumed the place After Slavin had given him a bad two years and at the end of that time he could hit a tiny mark on the side of the barn at the regular pitching distance. When the kid catchers of the vil- lage could no longer hold Shawkcy's fast ball, ‘Truman hired a profession- al catcher to clerk in his store and train with his pitching find on the side. When Shawkey became proficient oniy knockdown of the fight, though | clocks went to a number of players of first importance on the Big Ten we will have to fight all the way.” erday afternoon be-| Mack said the A’s were successful @ouuse Meck was ill | because they were not, a one man Jack Delaney knocked out Bud! team. Morgan just a few seconds before the! “T want bout was to end, The fight was un- impressive. ‘annual threat. The Wildcats’ pros- | | Pect for victory, dimmed early by the loss of Hank Bruder through injury in the Wisconsin triumph, and Coach Dick Hanley’s illness, was improved yesterday when the coach appeared | {to direct practice, and by the an-| to take issue with Mr. said Captain often ask me Eddie Collins. Organized Labor battering however, Gotch, infuriated, ;enough in control to satisfy his teach- aap slipped to the floor together inj and each member of the club re- card for Saturday. Northwestern. |tifted the Australian in his arms and jer, he was taught the intricacies of he second round. f ai ceived a wrist watch. which won a surprising. but earned! tossed him out of the ring. {the curve ball. Curving balls between The x-round semiwindup between | “We hope to win another pennant victory over Wisconsin last week, will lien pitching at a mark on the Jackie Grey, Bismarck featherweight.| next year,” Connie Mack said, “But! face the job of testing Minnesota's! barn wall. and the everlasting drilling ‘in control constituted Shawkey's daily ‘fare for three more years. 2 | ‘Then Truman declared the time ters ihad come for Bob to begin his ca- reer in baseball. A tip to a manager hawkey made his debut Mexico City, Oct. 18—U)—Organ- | friend and Shemeet ‘Clyde Rutherford beat Thomas Fins in their “grudge” battle by virtue of | shades in the last three rounds. The | blonde had too much reach for his| dark-haired adversary. Petey Aller shaded Red McGarry in| the second best fight on the program | because he had a weight advantage and greater reach. McGerry proved a spunky mixer, however, and the fans howled with glee as the two boys| Pounded each other in the curtain- : Finnegan Fears Jackrabbit Team More Than 6,000 Will See N. D A. C. and South Dakota State Battle . N. D., Oct. 18—P)—With McMillan, regular guard still on sidelines, agricultural college foot- fans are looking forward to a battle with South Dakota State in the home-coming game Saturday, 5 only @ slight possibility of a victory. to compare team of former years with the pres- ent aggregation. There is no com- nouncement that Oswald Baxter, a brilliant halfback candidate, probably wquid be eligible by Saturday. * Fights Last Night — pushover in Andy Kerr's team which oo (By the Associated Press) London.—Frankie Genaro, New York, outpointed Ernie Jarvis, England (15). Primo Carnera, It- aly, stopped Jack Stanley, i land (1). ne 7 Eng: Author of the most sensational up- Milwaukee.—Joc Azzarello, Mil- 8¢t_ of last’ week's play, Purdue will ; waukee, outpointed Eddie Ander- take it easy tomorrow. meeting De- | son, Chicago (8). Johnny Ryan, [P2uw. Chicago also will take on mi- Milwaukee, knocked out Frinkie |r opponents, the schedule calling} Grandetta, Chicago (6). for a doubleheader with Ripon and | Cleveland, O.—Joey Goodman, Cleveland, outpointed Armando ‘Shackles, Belgium (6). Paterson, N. J.—Joie Harrison, | Passale, outpointed Jimmy Good- rich, Buffalo (10). Floridans Have Tonsils Removed Gainesville, Fla., Oct. 18, () Oper- ations for removal of tonsils seems to have become a fad among University Colgate bowed to Wisconsin two {weeks ago, but came right back iast {week and gave Michigan State college ia thorough beating. Indiana normal. STILL WORK TOGETHER Jeff Cravath. former Southern ; California fullback, and Field Thomp- | son, a backfield mate at the same | time. are head coach and backfield coach, respectively, at Denver Uni- versity. jized labor has found its way into the, | Mexican bull ring. ‘The American Red Cross was in- | ‘The banderilleros and the pica-|corporated by an act of Congress of «hopes to gain the edge in its dealing Prepare the bull for the kill which ‘with western opponents this season. Subsequently is performed by the matador. \ of earthworms that grow to be from three to six feet long. parison. Both were one-man teams./ Indiana, another upset victim last |dores, who play the minor roles in the Frederic (ee ere for week, will attempt to duplicate Wis-|national sport, have formed a union, we. : 3 : ‘cousin's triumph over Colgate, in-|with the object of keeping out for-! nA REA vader from the east. The Hoosicrs |eign ition and setting a stand-| gaye will be up against anything but alard wage scale. ‘The banderilleros and P Service Deserving CONFIDENCE Successful business men soon look beyond the dollar and cents their mental and physical energy earns. So with this agency. It seeks to merit your trust and con- fidence—your implicit faith. INSURANCE When this agency merits your belief in it, the dollars and cents will come natural- ly. Not a penny has ever been lost through consider- ing our client’s needs first, his premium payments | later. There are several tropical species | HENRY GEORGE NIG? STATION Local Agency of ‘The Hartford Fire Insurance Company MURPHY “The Man Who Ksews Insurance” 218 Breadway Phone 57? Look for this gun the taboo pumps. Ue 1s your sure ofa = KNOCKLESS moter fal: Much like bucking a breeze with a bellows. 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