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THE BANBINO SAYS HE WL NOT ACCEPT. | OUR BOARDING Babe Ruth Reveals | HOUSE CUT OF ONE-THIRD Shy Consensus Is Final Contract Will Provide Not Less Than $60,000 1932 CHECK WAS $75,000, TH’ CHALLENGE SAICES- WHEN King of Swat, Defending Own- er, Doesn't Believe Rup- pert Responsible | | | | ITU oe i fe New York, Jan, 18.—(.P)—It was an| offer of $50,000 for 1933 that Babe | Ruth rejected so quickly and ve-/ hemently. i The Babe himself revealed the exact terms the New York Yankees! had offered and put himself firmly on record that he would not accept any $25,000 cut in the $75,000 salary he received last yea “I don’t believe Colonel Ruppert ever saw the contract that was mail- ed to me,” Ruth said. “The colonel al has treated me pretty cel even if we hi d our little argu-! ments about s ne past. While | T expected to ive some cut, I can't | believe he would go so far as a third | off. I'll never sign for that.” | It was the consensus that Ruth | 1993 8Y NEA SERVICE, ih. = | * LISTEN HERE,SON~ You | {4 WAS JUST KIDDIN WHEN YOu SAID YoU'D TAKE ME ON FOR ARASSLIN' MATCH, WASNT YOU 2+HM-~-SEE LF YOU CANT PERSUADE THIS KID, MAJOR, TO TAKE CIRCULATION !- GOSH BOILER MAKER 1 COULD TAKE A TANK AN’ SQUEEZE RIVETS AB T AIN'T PUTTIN’ ANY CHALLENGE BACK IN TH’ BAS! OUT OF Iwas A NTIL TH’ THE SURGEONS EVER Berter pacnd out, Bus! By Ahern IIGENE SARAZEN'S A - SUGGESTION HAS || CAUSED THOUGHT Open Champ Would Make Cup; Eight Inches in Diameter For Experiment -RASH, HEADSTRONG YOUTH , SAKE I~ TI WARNED HIM ABOUT YOUR FAMOUS OCTOPUS HOLD, BUT HE SCOFFS AT (T PXBY THE WAY, JAKE, WHATEVERL BECAME OF THAT GIANT GREEK WRESTLER YOU DEFEATED? DID WOULD GIVE GAME THRILLS Diege! Enthusiastic; Wood, Du- tra, Guest and Runyan STRAIGHTEN HIM OUT Are Luke Warm * OF THAT \ Los Angeles, Jan. 18—()—Gene Sarazen’s one-man campaign for big- ger and better golf holes probably will not result in the wholesale in- stallation of eight-inch cups immed- jately but it has started discussion among ranking players. Some of the stars are unreservedly for it, others are opposed and a few favor a compromise, something like five or six inches, All agree that in- creasing the size of the cups would bring a greater thrill to the galleries. Leo Diegel speaking: “Great. The players who get close to the pin would get their putts down. I have thought a circle around the cup and others farther out with poins to be scored in proportion to the position of the ball in relation to a Kennard, Casey | Battle to Draw Jimmy Slattery, Bismarck, Loses to Brother of Charley Retzlaff | Heavy Snow At Training Schoo \ Responsible; to Play in February Fargo, N. D., Jan. 1 ?)—Sherald Kennard of Fargo and Ceddy Casey of Davenport, Ia., welterweights, bat- tled six close rounds to a draw at the Fargo Elks club Tuesday night. The fight, over the six-round route, was close all the way, with both missing frequently. But Casey settled down long enough to win the third whlie Bismarck and Mandan high school |the Capital City institution. the other four even. Ray Cossette of Moorhead, welte! weight, shaded Johnny Moran of De- troit in four rounds. Al Retzlaff of Leonard, lightheavy- weight brother of Charley Retzlaff, ‘biles difficult. The postponement was floored for an eight-count in the third. Mutt Smith, Grand Forks middle- weight, and Herman Bergh of Kin- dred drew in four rounds. Harry Larson of Staples, Minn., lightweight. beat Bob Sullivan of Fargo. Ray Baker, Grand Forks, 110 - pounder | shaded Larson of Fargo in three | rounds. OS | N. D. High School ; Court Schedules ¢—_____________+ WE! Lakota at Larimo: Sherwood at Tolley Goodrich at McClusky. announced in the near future. War Memorial building. Denhoff Cagers in to 7. | Denhoff took the lead at the start, THURSDAY | ture. Cavalier at Neche. | Sinmas a pe apeeaiya iene aii anal Mocchead fee lees a) Rae ee gs negotiations were being made for 9 Valley City at Bismarck. | Morlock fee ale re nieces ey re Nome at Enderlin. McKinnon... - 2 1 1/Gehtral League, a semi-pro loop oper- Coleharbor at Turtle Lake. | Akland - 0.1 1 (SURE enneeta Cape charles Edgeley at Jud. Relle .... - a, hy pil association championship will be de- Paaneecrisal, Underwood. Beasen ic) FG FT PF | cided between Kansas Cty, winner of Carrington at Fessenden. |Blauer ... oD De the first half, and th team which Harvey at Maddock. | Harding oar es Sicaitne maak ae e Oakes at Ellendale. | rore a . . o 4 E Lehr at Kulm. )Alfson . . o 2 Spiritwood at Cleveland. Gier . 0; 0 | open ae er Binot Beaver Kits at Max. Emerson . 10 1 2) eee ger aag eee Hatton at Portland. Referee: L. Oeder (Goodrich), Perlatende gga Cando at Minot. | Hannaford at Binford. Regent at Elgin. Lakota at Crary. Marmarth at Scranton. Alexander at Williston. New Salem at Dickinson (Model). | Sherwood at Lansford. Beach at Dickinson (A). | Aneta at McVille. | Carson at New Leipzig. i Wishek at Ashley. | Donnybrook at Bowbeils. Hope at Finley. | Cooperstown at Sharon. Hankinson at Wyndmere. Crosby at Flaxton. Hillsboro at Grafton. Fergus Falls, Minn., at Wahpeton. La Moure at V. C. College High. Kenmare at Mohall. Jamestown at Devils Lake. New Effington, S. D., at Lidger- | ‘wood. i | es Eee ag f Basketball Scores oe | Minnesota 22; Notre Dame 30. Macalester 50; St. John’s U. 32. Washington (Chestertown) Western Maryland 24. Wooster 31; Heidelberg 33. Capital 29; Marietta 30. Muskingum 29; Ashland 40. OUT OUR WAY 37; <s-s- watt Milnor at Lisbon. Leonard at Mapleton. Harvey at Maddock. { McClusky at Drake. New England at Mott. Reeder at Bowman. Sentinel Butte at Belfield. Cooperstown at Sharon. Tioga at Epping. H Watford City at Sanish. { Ray at Wildrose. i SATURDAY \ i | Valley City at Mandan. Camp Brook at Marmarth. New Salem at Dickinson (B). Kenmare at Sherwood. Beach at Dickinson (Model). portrait is of RICHARD (AGNER. The current size _- paper money nas been in use since sine 1929. The abbreviation _ meens FOR EXAMPLE. basketball teams will not begin their annual feud until some time next month, it was announced Tuesday by ;Roy D. McLeod, athletic director of The two teams were scheduled to jclash in their first game tonight but the contest was tponed because Kennard carried off the fifth, with | heavy snow in the Tenney, of the state {training school gymnasium at Man- dan, where the game would have been played, will make parking of automo- decision was Bh reached at a conference between of- decisively outpointed Jimmy Slattery ficials of the two high schools. The of Bismarck in four rounds. Slattery| date of the pdstponed game will be Bismarck will face Valley City’s Hi- Liners here Friday night at the World Win Over Heaton: | Denhoff, N. D., Jan. 18—The Den- | | hoff high school boys basketball team || defeated Heaton on the local floor 20; | the score at half being 13 to 2. For | Denhoff the work of Morlock, Akland |and Hieb was outstanding. For Hea- j ton the work of Harding was the fea- | | ip ER re | | Ss-s-s-STt= IF You'LL WAIT A MINUTE ER TWO, WE WONT HAVE TO CLEAN THIS Bismarck-Mandan Game Postpone the pin would be a good thing.” Craig Wood, winner of three win- ter tournaments, is satisfied with the game as it is. Olin Dutra, P. G. A. champion, | MOVED TO 1/Northern State Without Sextet in League For First Time in History American Hockey association for the first time in its history was without a Minnesota representative Wednesday as plans went forward for transfer of the Duluth and St. Paul clubs to Wichita, Kas., and Tulsa, Okla., re- spectively. Definite announcement of the shift was made Tuesday night by William F. Grant, president of the circuit, af- ter long distance telephone confer- ences with officials in the two north- ern cities. As soon as the shifts are made, probably within a few days, play will begin in the second half of the split season. A tentative schedule calls for the appearance of Kansas City at Tulsa, either Saturday or Sunday, and for the Oklahoma sextet to inaugur- ate the professional brand of hockey at Wichita the following Tuesday or Wednesday. President Grant said he had been *|assured by the Duluth players they would be willing to play under the Wichita banner for a percentage of the receipts. The players had ex- pressed dissatisfaction because of non- ing held at McClusky, Denhoff was picked as the 1933 county tourney site, with Supt. A. W. Larson as the manager. It will be a one-day tour- nament Feb. 22, with two games in the morning and two in the evening, | with a girls game in the afternoon between the leading girl teams in central North Dakota, followed by free throw contest. Towns in the tournament are: McClusky, Goodrich. | Martin and Denhoff. i oT warts .|MINNESOTA’S HOCKEY CLUBS ~ Kansas City, Jan. 18. — (®) — The suggeste? eight inches would be too big. “About five would be better,” said Dutra. Charlie Guest also voted for a com- promise. He said: “For experimental purposes it might be better to try six-inch cups.” Paul Runyan, winner of the recent Agua Caliente tournament, thought bigger cups would result in shorter courses and tighter greens. WICHITA, TULSA 1 | | —_——_———_______ ' Sues Max Baer for | $250,000 ‘ In Angle Tourney Welker Cochran, Balkline Star, Defeats Hall At Three Cushions Chicago, Jan. —(AP)—Welker Cochran of Hollywood, Calif., Wed- nesday was off to an impressive start in his first attempt to win the world three-cushion billiards title. Cochran, famous at bdlkline for {many years, won his first match in {world competition at the angle game | Tuesday night, defeating Allen Hall ‘of Chicago 50 to 49 in 52 innings. Two former champions, Otto Rei- selt of Philadelphia, and Arthur Thurnblad of Chicago, who expected to make a fight of it for the title, lost their opening matches, Tiff Denton of Kansas City defeat- ed Reiselt 50 to 39 in 40 innings, and J. N. Bozeman, Jr., of Vallejo, Calif., beat Thurnblad 50 to 37 in 71 innings. ———————————. Olive Beck, above, wants $250,000 from Max Baer, contender for the heavyweight title. She told a Cali- fornia court that when she was & waitress and Baer was a butcher boy in Livermore, Calif.. Max was going to marry her. After a two-year be- trothal, he broke it off and married Helen Bina Will Skate in Norway Baer ts scheduled to fight Max|Captain of U.S. Olympic Ice under Ji & ae pg Team Will Sail For Eur ope Sunday ‘WOOD FROM CORN Ames, Iowa.—The fast dwindling forests may necessitate the use of cornstalks as a substitute for wood. Corn will do the work quite as well, it is said. Dr. O. R. Sweeney, of the Tall Corn State Jnastintion, has Feit cee Producing “! ” from a at Trondhjem, Norway, Feb. 17-18, cornstalks., Dr. Sweeney makes Pen | Miss Bina, 1932 U. S. women’s “wood” by cooking the under pressure in steam until they |champion, will sail for Oslo next Sun- are reduced to fibers not more than | day, and will skate in a series of spe- two to three hundredths of an inch |cial races Feb. 4, before trying for long. The resulting pulpy mass is |the world title. hardened in forms, a a Basketball Problems i By Williams By NAT HOLMAN Player, Coach and Author of Basketball’ Chicago, Jan. 18—(7)—Helen Bina of Chicago, captain of the U. 8. Wom- en's Sirrenle skating team, will pass Star may frequently be the final cause of the loss of a game. , after the ball is recovered from ‘backboard, iT july Win fifi) BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1933 Original Offer from Yankees Was Only $50,000. RANKING U. S. GOLFERS DISCUSS INCREASE IN SIZE OF CUP Jimmies and Wildcats Lead League Connie Mack’s Daughter a Bride Cornelius McGillicuddy, who's better known as Connie Mack, manager of the Philadelphia Athletics, has become a father-in-law. His daugh- ter, Mary Cornelia McGillicuddy, Reilly of Germantown, Pa. But the wedding was not announced un- til the couple, pictured above, returned from a honeymoon trip. | Pace-Setters in State College Loop to Clash Thursday At Wahpeton Minot, N. D., Jan. 18—()—The Jamestown college Jimmies and Wahpeton Wildcats are tied for the lead of the North Dakota Intercol- legiate conference, according to of- ficial standings released by Coach J. ‘W. Coleman of Minot teachers col- lege, secretary of the circuit. Both teams have played and won one game of one victory and one defeat. ‘The official standings: Jamestown scheduled Thursday, Friday and Sat- urday. Dickinson will play a double- header at Valley City, one game Thursday and the other Friday. An- other tilt Friday will find Ellendale at Minot. From Minot, Ellendale continues on to Bottineau for a game GR: — a game swing of the state last week Minot defeated Ellen- ‘© |dale and Dickinson, but lost to victory raised them above conference aggregations as the out- standing contender for the state col- lege championship. was married Dec. 31 to Francis X. WIDENER OPTIMISTIC OVER | THOROUGHBRED PROSPECTS Widespread Interest in Winter Racing Program Proves Encouraging (Editors Note: Joseph E, Wide- ner of Philadelphia and Palm Beach, vice chairman of the Jockey Club of New York, govern- ing body of thoroughbred racing in America, and chairman of the board of the Miami Jockey club, in the following article written exclusively for the Associated Press presents his views on the prospects for thoroughbred racing in the South this winter.) Miami, Fla., Jan. 18.—()Thorough- bred racing is entering its greatest year in South Florida. The quality of the stables represented, the pro- gram of racing scheduled by the Mi- ami Jockey club and the widespread interest in the winter meeting here lead me to this belief. Stables which never before have sent their horses to southern tracks are in training here for the winter neces starting Jan. 19 at Hialeah 11 The program of stakes and purses offer more than $300,000 to horsemen. The rising tide of interest in thor- WHATIS A SOMETIMES further that it will be very effective if it is sent direct- ly to certain prospects and customers. And perhaps you feel that it will be still more effective if it is dress- ed up a bit—given a distinctive border, or maybe printed in colors, Bring your problem to us, and we will evolve a satisfactory REPRINT of the paragraph in question (or even the whole ad, if you prefer). Let us print as many of these as you can use and then mail them out with your correspondence or statements, or to a picked mailing list: This method of advertising is often used by large companies who wish to stress certain value in some particular product. It works for them: it will work for you. | Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) Ore. ° Mont., (2). 5 Indianapolis—Paul Pirrone, Cleveland, outpointed Rosy (Kid) oughbred racing has been demon- strated by the number of inquiries received from all parts of the coun-| Baker, Anderson, Ind., (10); Wil- ‘try. Railway lines, travel bureaus.| lard Brown, Indianapolis, and motor clubs have sought detailed] pointed Santiago Zorilla, Panama, information of the race meeting. An unusually large number of race patrons have applied for box reserva- tions and club-house memberships for| Davenport, Is., drew, (6); Ray ithe meeting. ite, R . outs | To make this stimulating and col-| pointed Johnny Moran, Detroit, orful sport available to a large num-| (4); Al Retzlaff, ) N. D., ber the Miami Jockey club has sharp-| Outpointed Jimmy Slattery, Bis- ly reduced its admission prices, cut-} marek, (4). ting grandstand admission in half and reducing the price of club house ad- mission one-third. Watson Approved oa Gnine Sohnewa, Port Beening, By. Commissioners New York, Jan. 18—(}—Seaman qualified for a 15-round title bout with Kid Chocolate, recognized in this state as world’s featherweight champion, in Madison Square den Jan. 27. After listening to three commissioners state their as to the Briton’s boxing prowess, New Yor state athletic formally approved the bout. i En THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE JOB PRINTING DEPT. your newspaper ad carries a pertinent paragraph that you feel is worth reiteration. You feel Phone 32 and a Representative Will Call Pe