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SWS NOG NAT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1983 . Ernie Schaaf Succumbs From Beating Taken at Hands of Carnera BRAIN HEMORRHACE | PROWLER, COMPANY A RESERVES AND EAT SHOP QUINTS WIN APPARENTLY. DUE T0|| oR BoaRDING HoUSE BLOWS FROM GIANT Hope Abandoned At Midnight Following Three-Hour Operation Monday UM-M, JASON*SMACK, SMACK™L NEVER KNEW FRIED CHICKEN COULD TASTE SO DELICIOUS~AND THESE | BISCUITS ~UM-M—~EGAD, I SAY THIS SURPASSES THE MEAL) 5 T HAD IN BUCKINGHAM PALACE, VERILY !-—BY JOVE, THE PRIMO NOT HELD TO BLAME MILK DIET Happened to Boxing,’ Says Promoter ‘Most Terrible Thing That Eve| | To Hold Primo on Technical Charge ie ea Blow Proves Fatal | Mrs. Lucy Schaaf, and friend, Johnny 0: a Garden fight by Bud Tavior, | Terre Haute boxer, and died two days after an operation similar to which Schaaf underwent Mon- @ay. Three hours we required for the operation on aaf. It was per- formed, a bulictin by the doctor: id, “to relieve intra-cranial pressure.” All Hope Abandoned At midnight Johnny Buckley was Had Ambition to Enter Priesthood | a tion of enter the | ne devout || Sa close || Steuver he ERNIE SCHAAF edly for “action” and raised the con- tant cry of “fake.” |. Spectators were struck with the ifact that during most of the fight || Schaaf offered only a desultory de- ifense to the lumbering attack of the ;buge Carnera. At times he walked into Carnera’s swinging gloves with ~ his arms almost at his side. ‘istress and plainly showed it. Car- imbered into him with renewed He shot a left jab to Schaaf's nd the Boston man dropped. Cries of ‘Fake’ Echo ‘The cries of “fake” echoed through rit |the Garden. It did not seem that a tight. \jab as lightly landed as that could Throughout the 13 rounds between jhave caused a knockout. The crowd the 207-pound Boston fighter and the |did nos know what was known Tues- 250-pound Italian the crowd of 20,006/day, that Schaaf was “out on his med thi den to} feet,” and that any blow, or as one shouted repeat-Idoctor later put it, “no blow at all,” OUT OUR WAY n had been suffered i co Rut HERES SOMETHIN’ To WIPE HORE THING—~IT CERTAINLY hee «|CMAKES FOOD TASTE jf rz By the 13th round Schaaf was in/ DOES ONE cra GGLED: SNACK ll Nodak Cagers Trample On Quastes | mignt cause his final collapse under ithe 10-times sweep of the referee's count, Jack Sharkey, heavyweight cham- Pion of the world, who was in Schaaf’s corner, rushed into the ring and help- ed drag the fighter back to his stool. ‘The cries of the crowd continued, eb- bing only when Schaaf, still uncon- scious, was carried from the ring. Sharkey was part owner with John- ny Buckley of Schaaf's contract. The fight between Carnera and Schaaf was originally made vith the inten- tion of having the winner meet Shar- key later this year for the heavy- weight championship. There was such public protest, however, (because of Sharkey's part ownership of Schaaf's contract) that the Garden manage- ment announced that only if Carnera won would a championship bout be arranged. Had Nothing To Gain As a result, Schaaf entered the fight, with nothing to gain so far as the title was concerned, and everything to lose. Experts at the ringside scored most of the rounds in favor of Carnera. tut most of them were struck by Schaaf’s seeming diffidence and fail- ure to make a fight of it. After the fight it became known that Schaaf only a fortnight ago had recovered from an illness of influenza, and this was advanced by his sup- porters as accounting for his unfavor- able showing. Buckley disclosed Monday that Schaaf had trained only 10 days for the Garden fight. Doctors at the ringside commented that Schaaf had shown aes of distress as early as the fifth round. Sharkey, who left for Miam! Satur- start of the 13th round. Members of the boxing commission had not indicated early Tuesday what action might be taken in consequence of the tragedy. There was no word that Carnera was held to blame in any way. In the case of Frankie Jerome in 1924, the medical examiner held the death was purely accidental. Bud Taylor was questioned and exoner- ated. The police homicide squad sum- moned everybody concerned in the Carnera-Schaaf fight to appear at Madison Square Garden Tuesday for an investigation of the fatal injuries to Schaaf. BOXER DIES AFTER HIS FIRST BATTLE Chicago, Feb. 14.—(#)—Henry Zu- al By Williams day, sald Schaaf had appeared all | Benson, c right when he left his corner at the |Bankert, g By Ahern HUSH YO MOUF, BEFO" MRS, HOOPLE HEARS Yo (FE SHE KNEW AH WAS SNEAK IN’ FOOD TO YO WHILE YO IS ON DAT MILK DITE, SHE'D SMACK BEE HIVES ON MAH HAID, AN’ DEN WEAR A BROOM /Y HANDLE DOWN Z TO A MATCH, A, ON YOR Meinhover and Mullen Lead North Dakota to 46 to 19 Court Triumph Brookings, S. D., Feb. 14—(}—Uni- versity of North Dakota's basketball team tramped on South Dakota State hnere Monday night in a North Central Conference game, 46 to 19. The Jackrabbits held North Dakota in check during the first 15 minutes, but a determined drive by the visitors gave them a 15 to 5 advantage at half time. The game started fast, with Mein- hover scoring on a foul by Arndt. Baskets by Mullen and Dablow gave WILD IN HEADLINER Faculty, Methodists and Nation- al Guards Are Victims in éity League 35 POINTS SCORED BY TRIO Only Six Field Goals Scored as Restauranteurs Down Co. A 20 to 9 With Eddie Agre, Ernest Manney and Myron Benser running wild, the Prowlers Monday evening defeated the faculty entrant 46 to 18 in the feature tilt of a three-game city league basketball program at the World War Memorial building. Agre, Manney and Benser scored 35 points between them. Every man on the floor for the Prowlers suc- ceeded in scoring field goals while Themar “Smiley” Simle and Tracy were the only faculty men able to net goals from the floor. In the other games the Company A reserves trimmed the Methodists 26 to 14 and the Grand Pacific Eat Shop quint nipped the National Guard regulars 20 to 9. Johnson, Helsworth and Smith were the big guns for the Company A re- serves, With A. Faber, P. Faber and Putnam doing all the scoring for the losing Methodists. Restricted to five field goals, the Eat Shop sharpshooters cashed in on 10 of their 15 free tosses. Seven more free tosses were made by the Nation- al Guards, who were able to count only once from the floor. The summaries: the Sioux a 5-1 advantage. Dehnert connected with a long heave, and followed in a short shot to bring the score within two points of the north- €rners, However, baskets and free throws by Mullen, Dablow and Witas- ek gave the Sioux an advantage as the gun ended the first period. After being dogged by Arndt in the first half, big Ted Meinhover began to hit his stride in the second period and when he started dropping the counters the whole Sioux machine started to click. Meinhover was held without a field goal during the first half. Paced by Mullen and Meinhover, the Prowlers (46) FG FT PF Agre, f ...sssseeee 5 4-4 Croonquist, f . 2 0-2 1 Schneider, c 1 1-2 1 Martin, ¢ .... 1 58 8 Manney, & 5 1-2 0 M. Benser, g .. 4 #23 9 18 10-16 «5 Faculty (18) Simle, f 2 23 2 ‘M. Goetz, f 1 0-0 0 ‘Schaumberg, ¢ 1 00 3 Hays, g .... 1 ep Van Wyk, & 0 1-1 3 Anderson, & 0 00 oO Tracy, f 2 00 9 7 #45 12 Ernest Benser. Referee: Co, A“B” (26) Johnson, f . Anderson, f Smith, c Helsworth, g . Papacek, & Masseth, & . FG 0 2 3 0 1 10 wlococeu’ Methodists (14) f.. ziak, 21-year-old amateur boxer, died early Tuesday a few hours after his an. ring appearance as a contender in the preliminaries of a local tour- ney. The youth left the ring in the sec- ond round after the referee had called the fight following two knockdown blows by Zuziak’s opponent, Al Berg. Returning to his home, Zuziak told his parents of his defeat and then be- came ill, He died before a physician arrived. ———_———* | Basketball Scores | (By The Associated Press) one State 31; Illinols 29 (over- e). Minnesota 25; Northwestern 41, Concordia 20; Hamline U 39. North Dakota Univ. 46; South Da kota State 19, Montana 56; Montana Mines 40. Cortez. with about 600 men, conquered the entire AZ- TEC NATION by holding si emperor. Montezuma, as hostage More RICE is con. sumed than any other food The United Statés is represented in FIFTEEN foreien countries by. northerners connected with the loop eho oat almost at will and plerced the Jack- 2 oe rabbits’ defense with their deceptive |Pu a oe floor plays. The summary: |P. Faber, g ..+ 2. 2 8. D. State (19) Fo Fr rp (Kinser, € ..... ee eee Griptentrog, f .... o 1 1 Gp, ae Dehnert, f ..... Kortan, ES 4 ° 4 Referee: Ernest Manney. eee FG FT PF 0 34 38 a. 4 Arndt, g Dt 2 3 Hed H Phihal, g a2 2 0 00 2 Tolpis. :.... 506 Pr ae ae 3 i r U. of N.D. G6) FG «FT TP 0 00 0 Mullen, f wore S 8 10 0 00 1 Tait, f 2 0 23 0 00 0 Witasek, 1 ae a io ae 2 9 a 5 10-15 11 3 0 6 0 24 0 Te ae 0 0-2 3 taka o 12 2 o 2 0 23 2 Totals ..... Perro Nee ey 1 oa 6 Referee: Harmon, Wisconsin. -— = 1 -15 1 Referee: Van Wyk. Petrolle, Ross May Be Matched New Group Asks Judge For Per- mission to Operate Chi- cago Stadium Chicago, Feb. 14—(7)}—A request mn to rent the Chicago * stadium, which is in equity receiver- for boxing shows, was before ‘ilkerson a Judge James M. Wi! Tuesday. ‘A new group is seeking permission to use the huge building, which su- I promotion of the sport when the stadium corporation was thrown into receivership several weeks ago. Nate Lewis is expected to continue as matchmaker, and the group's first offering may be Barney Ross, Chicago lightweight contender, and Billy Pe- trolle, the Fargo, N. D., veteran, next month, Chicago Would Have Two Golf Tourneys| be the site. SIGNS FOR 21ST YEAR Cincinnat!, Feb. 14—()—Eppa Grange Quits, An Era Ends Red Grange . . . hangs up old No, 77 and his cleated shoes, Griffiths Signed To Meet Von Porat Chicago, Feb, 14—(%)—Otto von Porat, Norwegian heavyweight, who recently returned to the U. S. after a two-year sojourn in his native land and Tuffy Griffiths of Sioux City, Ia., at last have been signed for a bout. ‘They will meet at Coliseum Feb. 24 ‘(Denny Shute Out For Third Victory Cleveland Star, Winner Star, Winner of Gas- parilla Open, in Florida With Big Field Jacksonville, Fla, Feb, 14—(7)— Denny Shute, Cleveland professional golfer will try for his third victory in five starts this winter in the Orange ro open tournament at Lake- The slender 28-year-old star was at top form Sunday in winning the Gas- Parilla open at Tampa and collected first prize money of $300 which brought his winter's earnings to around $3,300. All the country’s best sharpshooters are in Florida now seeking the $19,500, awaiting the low scores in this and the other five tourneys still on the winter slate at Miami, Coral Gables, Radium Springs, Ga., Charleston, 5. C., and Pinehurst, N. C. Coaches Generally Favor Rule Changes ‘New York, Feb. 14—(7)—With few exceptions, coaches and officials have given unqualified approval to the two ‘changes the football rules committee has made in the playing code for 1933. Comment was centered mostly on the new side-line zone rule, providing automatically for the ball *to be brought in 10 yards whenever it goes outside or is downed within the side- line zones. Captain Lawrence M. (Biff) Jones of Louisiana State was about the only objector. He thought the new rule would “lower the value of strategy and kicking accuracy.” PLENTY OF TONNAGE Four of the New York Yankees will tip the beam at an average weight of 220 pounds this season. They are Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Don Brennan and Walter Brown. SEALS TRY YOUNGSTER The San Francisco Seals of the Pa- cific Coast League have signed up Vance G. Couble, of Benedict, Kans., 19-year-old left-handed pitcher. He 4s @ product of Arkansas university. BACK TO THE MINORS Jesse Hill, New York Yankee out- fielder, has been sent back to the Newark farm of the Yanks for a little more seasoning. CUBS GET LEFTY ‘The Chicago Cubs have at last ac- quired that left-handed pitcher they've been yelling for. He is Beryl Richmond, who played two seasons with the Baltimore Orioles. NOTICE DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP Notice ix hereby given that the part- 1-31 2-7-14-21. |At, NEY AD |KO Defeats Wini In Extra Session MYRON BENSER RUN | Buckeyes, Still Leading Confer: ence, Near Record For Close Decisions Chicago, Fed. 14—()—Along with heating the western conference bas- Awtball parade, Ohio State Tuesday bad # dandy start toward a record for Cawe decisions, Monday night the Buckeyes scored ther sixth triumph in a row to re- {sam the lead in the championship race. but had to go overtime to con- quer Illinois, 31 to 29, and were out- scored in field goals. During their raid through the northwest end of the league a week ago, the closecall boys from Columbus escaped with one-point victories over Minnesota and Wisconsin. Monday night's set of five games produced only one alteration in the standing. By walloping Chicago, 41 to 21, Purdue jumped over Ilinois and Wisconsin into fifth place. The Gophers gave Northwestern a tussle for 20 minutes, but could not stand the pace and the Wildcats went on to win, 41 to 25, and hang onto second place with six victories and one defeat. Michigan defeated In- diana 32 to 25 at Bloomington. Towa beat Wisconsin 31 to 25 at Towa City. Another five-game bill will be work- ed over Saturday night. Ohio State will meet Purdue at Columbus, North- western will entertain Chicago, Iowa and Michigan will play their critical battle at Ann Arbor, Indiana plays at Wisconsin, and Illinois meets Minne- |sota at Minneapolis. $$$ ________—_-® [ Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) Philadelphia — Tommy Loughran, Philadelphia, outpointed Walter Cobb, Baltimore, (10); Ray Impelletier. Peekskill, N. ¥., knocked out Charley Werner, Paterson, N. J., (1); Obie Walker, Atlanta, Ga. knocked out Joe Doktor, Buffalo, N. ¥.. (2); John- ny Pile, New York, and Eddie Hough- ton, Philadelphia, drew, (8). Pittsburgh—Fidel LaBarba, Los An- geles, outpointed Mose Butch, Pitts- burgh, (10). Chicago—Johnny Pena, New York, and Jackie Sharkey, Minneapolis, drew, (10); Solly Dukelsy, Chicago, outpointed Johnny Phagan, Chicago, ). Miami, Fla.—Eddie Shea, Chicago, Snooks Campbell, Miami, (7). Leicester, Eng.—Larry Gains, To- ronto, defeated Reggie Meen, England, nersbips heretofore conducted by I. = | able. foul, (4). ———— NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Notice is hereby given that th: certain mortaago, executed and d livered by William C. Cashman, mo! gagor, to P. B. Webb, mortga ed the first of December, one thousand nine hundred and thir- ty-one, and filed for record tn the © fice of the Register of Deeds of Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, on the 26th day of December, A. D. 1931, and recorded therein in Book 184 of Mort- gages on page 445, will be foreclosed by sale of the premises in such mort- gage and hereinafter described at the front door of the Burleigh Count North Dakota, court house in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. on the 18th day of March, A. D. 1933, to satisfy tho amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sa ‘The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to me are described as fol- east one hundred and ten face in Burleigh County, North D: kota, according to the plat of said Addition now of record and on file in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota. The said mortgagee hereby declares the entire unpaid part of the whole mortgage indebtedness due and pay- There will be due on such mortgage at the dato of sale the sum of eight thousand five hundred and nineteen dollars and twenty. ($8,519.27), besides the foreclosure. Dated February 6, A. se Pig even cents costs of this ‘Webb, ania Borteauee, George 5S. Register, ey for said mortgagee. oh.