The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 31, 1933, 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)

i 8 Gorilla Jones and Ben PANS IVENPLENTY | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 81, 1933 Jeby Win Sensational Middleweight Battles ONES alld DEN Leoy Win oensauonal Niuadieweignt battles OF ENTERTAINMENT [our BoarpiNa House By Ahern_|/rupnpy ppp peniice -ONCLEVELAND CARD “Akron Negro Scores Clean Knockout Over Slaughter For N. B. A. Recognition FINISH OF OTHER IS WEIRD| deby Awarded Decision in Sixth When Pirrone Delays En- trance For Nine-Count Cleveland, Jan. 31—(#)—One of ‘Willie (Gorilla) Jones’ famous punches ‘Tuesday had placed him once again at the top of the American middle- weight boxing heap, A right to the jaw of Sammy Slaughter that traveled little more than three inches Monday night re- turned to the Akron Negro the Na- tional Boxing association title he lost @ year ago. Scarcely, however, had the 8406 fans concluded one of the wildest ovations in Cleveland's history in tribute to the husky battler than they witnessed a weird finish of another fight that sent them home arguing. Ben Jeby, recognized in New York state as the middleweight champion. ‘won the unusual battle by decision of the referee but as he climbed out of the ring he left a widly gesticulating Paul Pirrone urging him to come back and fight some more. Pirrone had been floored six times | 4n the first five rounds. When the} bell clanged for the start of the sixth he sat unconcerned, obeying the com- mand of his manager, Eddie Mead, to ‘wait for a count of nine. Jeby, floor- ed once himself, stood punching the gir above Pirrone’s head and begging the Clevelander to “come on” as Ref- eree Freddy Block pumped out the count. When Pirrone’s handlers finally gave him the “go on,” Block lifted Jeby's hand in token of a technical knockout. So, while Pirrone stood in the center of the ring asking more fight and spectators milled about threatening dire punishment to Jeby. and his handlers, Jeby donned his bathrobe and called it a night. ., ‘The boxing commission upheld the @ecision. Jeby’s title was not at stake. | Jones’ winning punch was delivered | 4m the seventh round and, just to be) sure he'd concluded things decisively, he rushed over and clipped Slaughter with an extra right as the Terre Haute, Ind., Negro stagzered to his feet at the conclusion of Referee Tony Labranche's 10th count. That purgh, HMF ~SO THIS IS THE TERRIFIC CRASH I JUST HEARDI~ ~GET UP, YOU TWO HEAPS OF FAT, BEFORE 1 MELT YOU DOWN WITH A HOT ray BROOM HANDLE? SS “ROLLING LIKE EMPTY BARRELS ~~ wo ‘DOWN AND MRS. HOOPLE AT BAT = GUESS TLL HOP MY BIKE AN RIDE OUT TO TH DUCK POND? ~I DONT WANT MY CHIN TO BE IN TH’ WAY (IF SHE STARTS SWINGING HER Volleyball Teams to Clash To night City League Schedule For Next ASSOCIATION TITLE TO BE DECIDED IN PLAYOFF PLAN Month Announced By John W. Reel, Director Three matches in the city volleyball league will be played at the World War Memorial building tonight, be- ginning at 7:30 o'clock, it is announc- ed by John W. Reel, director of rec- reation, The First National Bank is pitted against the Comets in one game while in the other two Company A will face the American Legion and the Elks will meet the Knights of Columbus, Tonight's matches will be the sec- ond for each team in the first round of the schedule, Each team may use six men or less, Reel said, and team members need not which Jones explained he delivered because he wasn’t aware the fight ‘was over, was good for a 50-count, Both fights were scheduled for 12 rounds. Californians in Serious Matches Welker Cochran and J. N. Boze- man, Jr., Still Three- Cushion Leaders Chicago, Jan. 31—(#)—Welker Cochran of San Francisco, and J. N. Bozeman, Jr. of Vallejo, Calif. sharers of the leadership in the world three cushion billiards championship tournament, shined up their cues for what promised to be their most ser- fous tests Tuesday. Cochran was pitted against Augie Kieckhefer, little Chicago southpaw, who Monday night was bounced out of the title picture by Johnny Layton | of Sedalia, Mo. and Bozeman had Layton himself, for his foe. Layton took advanta-™ of a feeble start by Kieckhefer Monday night,! to ruin the defending champion’s} chances of repeating, 50 to 33 in 47) innings. j Frank Scoville of Buffalo, N. Y., nd Allen Hall of Chicago, closed out their schedules Monday, the former in victory and the latter in defeat. Scoville defeated Jackson 50 to 46 in 65 innings of erratic play, and Hall eee const do 40 in 42 inn Improved Sentinels Defeat Model High (Tribune Special Service) Sentinel Butte, N. D., Jan. 31— Showing marked improvement in all departments of play, the Sentinel Butte team defeated Model High of Dickinson 40 to 16 here. D. Theisen, L. Theisen and J. Boi- fen scored 34 points between them for the victors while Gabbert, Dickinson forward, scored 10 of his team’s 16 ters. count ‘The Sentinels had defeated Belfield 41 to 11 and Wibaux, Mont., 21 to 17 necessarily belong to the organiza- tion which the tcam represents, Five games will be played in each match and each game will count in the percentage standings, No games ie postponed except by order of e The remainder of the first round. schedule and the second round sched-. ule have been drawn up as follows (with the first game mentioned to be played on court No. 1, second on court. No, 2 and third on court No, 3): First Round Friday, Feb. 3—Knights of Colum- bus vs. Comets, Company A vs. First National Bank and Elks vs. American Legion. Tuesday, Feb. 7.—American Legion vs. Knights of Columbus, Elks vs. First National Bank and Comets vs. Company A. Friday, Feb. 10—Comets vs, Elks, Knights of Columbus vs. Company A and First National Bank vs. American Legion. Second Tuesday, Feb. 14—First National Bank vs. Knights of Columbus, Come ets vs. American Legion and Elks vs. Company A. Friday, Feb. 17—Company A vs. American Legion, Elks ys. Knights of Columbus and First National Bank vs. Comets. Tuesday, Feb, 21—Elks vs. Ameri- can Legion, Company A vs. First Na- tional Bank and Knights of Colum- bus vs. Comets, Friday, Feb. 24—Comets vs. Com- pany A, American Lggion vs. Knights of Columbus and Elks vs. First Na- tional Bank, Tuesday, Feb. 28—First National Bank vs. American Legion, Comets vs. Elks and Knights of Columbus vs. Company A. | OUT OUR WAY GOOD GAWS1\, IcK, Mov BETTER CHANGE PANTS AFORE TH' ow LADY SEES YUH, SHE Best Team in East Will Play Best Team in West At End of Season Chicago, Jan. 31.—(#)—Figuring up the standing of the American Asso- ciation during the 1933 campaign will be a somewhat complicated job, un- der the playoff plan to be adopted at @ special meeting Saturday, but Presi- dent Thomas Jefferson Hickey is con- fident the arrangement will produce ‘profitable season. The leading eastern team and the highest ranking of the western clubs, will meet in a playoff series after a 154-game schedule is completed, simi- lar to the national hockey league plan. The International League,’the champion of which meets the Asso- ciation champion in the “little world series” each year, has adopted a play- “items involving the first three clubs, ‘The league is well divided geograph- ically, Columbus, Toledo, Indianapolis and Louisville representing the east, and Minneapolis, St. Paul, Kansas City and Milwaukee being the west- ern members. ‘The Association standing will be kept in three sections—the league a8 @ whole, the eastern half and the western half, Under the new ar- rangement, the first five clubs in the general standing will receive bonuses. Frank Wykoff Ranks Eddie Tolan As Best Competitor He Has Met New York, Jan. 31.—(?)—Frank ‘Wykoff, the fastest human of them all through 100 yards, has raced against many a speed de- mon in eight spectacular years on the cinder paths. But at the head of his list of the 10 greatest sprinters he has met in competition stands the be- spectacled, squat little Negro from Detroit, the Ebony Flash who fled down the Olympic cinders in Los Angeles last summer to victory in both the 100- and 200-meters —Eddie Tolan. g 1, Eddie Tolan. 2. Emmett Toppino. 3. Ralph Metcalfe. Charles Paddock. 10. a ‘Wycoff, only 23 years old, com- his scholastic work at Southern California two weeks ‘ago and is here for a month of indoor competition, the first of his career. ORGANIZE NEW CONFERENCE Ray, N. D., Jan. 31.—(?)—At a meet- ing of the Williams County School- masters’ association here, by-laws were drafted fora North Missouri On, 1 DONT Know! HE COLLD TELL HER HE LSED A LEGGER'S KNOWS ALL ABOUT CLOTH | HIP POCKETs> FER athletic conference consisting of 12 classified and consolidated schools in the county. The conference cham- Pionship will be determined on a per- centage basis in the various sports. Oe tournament will be in Decision to recommend that the board of Burleigh county commis- stoners accept an offer from the Bis- marck Loan and Investment company for taking a piece of city property at @ consideration of face velue of taxes for the last three years was by the Bismarck city Monday evening. The property involved is 50 feet on’ the northwest corner of the intersec- tion of Ninth St. and Avenue B, Taxes on the have not been paid for 1930, 1931 and 1932. Repre- senting the loan and investment company, Frank E, Shepard offered to purchase the property through ‘were waived. The commission also received the December report from the chief of po- AN SHE'LL SHORE KNOW PATCHES. Yor BIN ASITTN' MoREN, MUH BIN: ASTANOIN’ lice and approved a grist of bills, Use the Want Ads By Williams payment of taxes for the three years providing the penalty and interest|Jack Pallat, Cleveland. (1). T0 SIGN CONTRACTS AT TERMS OFFERED Believe Cardinals Offered Sec- ond-Baseman in Neighbor: hood of $10,000 FOUR YANKEES STUBBORN Cincinnati Reds Offer Sunny dim Only $8,000 For Watching First Base © New York, Jan. 31.—()—Baseball’s winter complaint, holdout fever, has struck in two new quarters, Frankie Frisch, veteran second baseman of the St. Louis Cardinals, and Jim Bottomley of the Cincinnati Reds both have revealed dissatisfac- ion with the terms offered them for Frisch declined to say what his con- tract called for but in view of the Cardinals’ announced policy of big salary slices, some baseball observers} Fred believed Frankie probably had not been offered much more than half the $18,500 he was reported to have Teceived last season. Bottomley, sent to the Reds by the Cardinals during the off-season, said he had been offered a contract for $8,000, a cut of $5,000, which he mains tains was too much. The Yankees made no progress with their list of holdouts, which includes Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Ben Chap- man and Johnny Allen, but announc- ed they had received signed contracts from Wilcy Moore, Walter Brown, Lyn Lary, Bill Werber, Sam Byrd and Marvin Duke. ‘The Giants signed Bill Shores, form- er pitcher for the Philadelphia Ath- ‘There were rumblings that the Brooklyn Dodgers might have to add Pitcher Hollis to an al- ready heavy hold-out squad. Beach High Cagers Nose Out Dickinson (Tribune Special Service) ‘Thom, R. Jones, B. It Davis, Agnew, Totals. ©., knocked out Sammy Slaughter, ‘Terre Haute, Ind. (7), for N. B. A. middleweight championship recogni- tion; Ben Jeby, recognized as middle- ‘weight champion in New York, stopped Paul Pirrone, Cleveland, (6), non-title; Paul out- pointed Ross Fields, Cleveland, (6); Phil Cohen, New York, knocked out, THE “CITY OF NEW YORK” was used by Admiral Byrd in the Antarctic. The flag shown is the national emblem of 8]- AM, 6 OR 56 PER CENT is the fuel ottcbongy of. ~~ E i FRANK FRISCH AND JIM BOTTOMLEY JOIN HOLDOUT RANKS Jimmy Cagers Defeat Macalester | They Just Couldn’t Live Apart Mac Regulars Unable to Over- come Lead of North Dako- . tans Near Finish he tiring sec- ond-stringers could not stop them for some minutes. Then the Macs got going and tied the count at 18-all but McLain, high point man with five field goals, sent in two baskets ahd Hall counted a couple field goals, Bison Trample On Jackrabbits North Dakota State Chalks Up Another N. C. Win in 42- 22 Cage Game Brookings, 8, D., Jan. 31—(#)—The North Dakota Stat game was rough, and at times close, but the visitors had the advan- tage in height over the Jackrabbits leooo Bloonmmone El ecomonmon Totals ...0....seceseel! 8. D, State (22) bf oe CoommHHe & aloccoonwne Bl emomnmmes After having first decided that they couldn't live with each other, Art (What-a-Man) Shires, famed in baseball and pugilistic circles, and Mrs. Shires have now found that they couldn't live apart. So, after a brief separation, she has dropped her suit for divorce and they have patched up their differences—and if you don’t believe it, just look at this picture, taken ices! Lue, announced their reconciliation icago. ————_____________—-» if Basketball Scores | (By The Associated Press) Jamestown, N. D. College 33; Mac- alester 26. Michigan School of Mines 21; Su- Perior Teachers 41. Yankton College 21; Sioux Falls -| College 38, North Dakota State 42; South Da- Gouth| kota State 22. ——$—$—_____________+ | Basketball Problems realize how much of a detriment it can become when it is being cone o sistently broken up. I have seen many @ superior team finish up on the short end of'the score because it has insisted on trying the play even though the opposition was stealing the pass on every attempt. JAYS WALLOP LA MOURE La Moure, N. D., Jan. 30.—(?)— Jamestown’s Blue Jays won a 53 to 20 victory over the La Moure high school basketball team in a game aod Jamestown led 29 to 5 at half France produced 892,410,000 gallong ot wine in 1926. st ; Te ephone ol WANT-AD RESULTS | WHATBA REPRINT? SOMETIMES your newspaper ad carries a pertinent paragraph that you feel is worth reiteration. You feel 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 2 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. 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE JOB PRINTING DEPT. + Phone 32 and a Representative Will Call

Other pages from this issue: