The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 8, 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)

ane — ye ea THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1938 il . < ; ‘Jumping Joe Savoldi Shocks Wrestling World by Beating Londos CLAIMS AND DENIALS |SHAKEUP IN MAJOR LEAGUE OUTFIELDS WITHOUT PRECEDENT © - NUMEROUS AS GREEK ||_0UR BOARDING HoUsE By Aber ||ONLY FIVE QUITS (Baltimore Handball Star Gets Chance CHAMPION EXPLAINS F sean 4 Beha —. GZ EAE. ZA MADE NO CHANGES . CUBS ook Galea SOx ag ; gr = hyeint =" Adonis Claims He Relaxed in HES GOING /| Aovenaeenatia 4e woul ; AMONG FLYCHASERS CAGO TITLE ERIE Finally Wiss TO MAKE Ya Belief Referee Wanted HIMSELF A { ¢/ TWO OR THREE THOUSAND Teddy Lyons and Guy Bush inst week st the home of his sisters, Him to Break BIGGER ME To MARE THEIR PERMANENT Picked to Hurl in Open | | NEIGHBORHOOD! Tne SRS feet. THAR Yanks, Indians, Robins, Cardi- MATCH LASTED 20 MINUTES! | wim, PiczONG |) ‘THE GARAGE INTO A PIGEON nals and Braves Stand, M | TLL TURN 73 COTE /—BuT THE PROBLEM Pat This Year 1S, HOW WILL WE GET THEM INTO I(T Q-H-M-M- LET ME THINK= Fans Are Amazed as Former] Notre Dame Football Star Upsets Dope MANY STARS ON NEW CLUBS 4 PS NCANT TALK EM INTO GOIN’ INSIDEf-PIGEONS $_] \S JUST AS FLIGHTY. Hank Leiber, Lou Finney and Mervin Fox Among Prom- ising Newcomers : i si i & iE 2a Chicago, April 8.—()—Jumping Joe re ‘ . | lefending Savoldi, who used to shatter football lio, New York, 21-6, 21-6. Atcheson 5 : H i lines for old Notre Dame with his " . ‘Teddy Lyons, picked to hurl romped into the finals massive hulk, had one big area of the AS WOMEN ~\'6GOT League opener against with on euy victory over Richard ‘ professional wrestling world rocking TO LET EM THINK New York, April 8. pout Guan wan Onn Bruck, New York, 21-14, 21-9, and ; with claims and denias Saturday. THEY'RE HAVING i its Ome, ray were|was the favorite to win Saturday's ; { Regarded as just unother set-up, ow WA rg Joe strode into the Chicago stadium THEIR N big ‘Was cx AN’ THEY TRAP ring Friday night to tackle Jim Lon- | dos, the Grecian Adonis and claimant of the wrestling championship. To the amazement of 8,000 customers, he | walked out of the ring with a one-fall victory after 20 minutes and 26 sec- onds of tugging. The claims and denials then started to pop and Saturday “all was chaos.” | * First. Ed White, manager of Londos, | claimed that the match, limited to one | fall with a 90-minute time limit, was | not a championship affair simply be- | cause of a ruling by the old Llinols | state athletic commission that all wrestling matches were merely “ex-|———-— Hibitions.” The spectators howled ‘White down. nie or ard a satenesn MRE TTESHeEd Maple Leafs Are Confident which he denied that Savoldi had — thrown him, blaming Referee Bob Managoft for everything that hap- AMONG 1 nad’ aSapenece score on ev,» NOQDAK FOOTBALL ASPIRANTS 1 partly on my side and on my shoul-| —— Pened. Ger, Savoldi’s feet were tangled in Ted Meinhover, been equally large. ‘There isn’t a club in either 1 that won't offer new aoa aawonmeaweoousases BES nm AO Toronto Hockey Sextet “Counts Out” Victory Gained By Rangers “It was not a fall,” Londos said. “I ‘had a Japanese scissors on Savoldi Harold Tait,/in the 10-year period, 1922-31, inclu- the ropes. Referee Managoff tapped me on the shoulder with orders to break. I understood from that we were to start wrestling all over again trom a standing position because Sa- ‘voldi’s feet were tangled in the ropes. I let go and the next instant, the ref- eree tapped Savoldi in token of vic- tory. Irepeat. It was not a fall.” Referee Managoff could not be found for a statement but Joe Triner, new chairman of the Illinois state athletic commission, said he would take the entire matter up at the reg- ular commission meeting Monday. > EEE | Fights Last Night | oe (By The Associated Press) Pittsburgh—Frank Novak, Pitts- burgh, outpointed Jack Pallat, Cleveland, (10), Tiger Joe Ran- dall, Elizabeth, Pa., stopped Dan- ny Devlin, Allentown, Pa. (7). Frankie Edgren, Cheyenne, Wyo., outpointed Joe Doktor, Buffalo, ao). St. Joseph, Mo.—Tommy Cor- bett, Omaha, outpointed Henry Falegano, Des Moines, (10); He- rolf Matthews, Lincoln, Neb., out- pointed Vale Falegano, Des Moines, (8). Boise, Idaho—Harold Hawkes- wood, Des Moines, knocked out | Earl Hoffman and Tom Shepard to Report | Grand Forks, N. D., April 8—When Coach C. A. “Jack” West, University of North Dakota football mentor, blows his whistle Monday, signifying the beginning of spring football prac- tice, four Bismarck candidates will be among the 60 aspirants for regular Positions on the 1933 Sioux machine. Two of the boys, Ted Meinhover, giant tackle, and Harold Tait, end, are assured of regular jobs, while Earl !Hoffman, center, and Tom Shepard, jend, will be battling with veterans for their respective positions. hover, six-foot-seven-inch athlete, jStarring in basketball, football and i track, and captaining the latter, will be depended upon to bolster one side jof the Sioux line. Ted gives promise of being the best lineman in the north this fall. He will divide his time j between football and track. Regular as Sophomore Tait earned himself a regular end Position last fall, though he was only @ sophomore. He also earned a ma- Jor letter in basketball. Hoffman will be facing stern competition in Len O'Connor, substitute last year. Shep ard, working out at left end, finds ‘Mein- | Pipestone Sauer, regular 1932 center, and Ed) sive, a West-coached team won the Teague title seven times. His South Dakota State teams won the cham- Pionship in 1922-24-26; his Univer- sity of North Dakota teams won the honors in 1928-29-30-31. He is an alumnus of Coe College, where he starred in football, basket- ball, track, and wrestling. After graduation he coached at Mason City high school, Mason City, Iowa. There he produced a national high school football championship. His assistant, and head line coach, “Buck” Starbeck, was an all-North Central conference center for three years under West at South Dakota State, 24-25-26, He later coached at Indian school in Minnesota, and Eau Claire high school, Eau Claire, Wis. In the five years he has been here, he has developed no less than 17 all-conference linesmen. Baer-Schmeling Go Postponed a Week Jack Dempsey Wins Another Round in Promotorial Bout With Garden ‘Toronto, April 8.—(?)—The Toronto Maple Leafs, refreshed by a four-day the Test and full of confidence, were ready |Cardinals have Medwick, Watkins, Martin and Orsatti, and the Braves, Berger, Schulmerich, W and Randy Moore. The other 11 clubs all “You must stay in with Mr. Miller. He might give you a start, after you're through college” * ¥ it, but they figure conditions will be altered. The Rangers, also realizing the difference, were expecting a hard game Saturday night although they, too, felt sure of a victory. N.C.C. Track and Field Meet May Be —_THIS CURIOUS WORLD a: i i bee |four other candidates for the same position. He is only a sophomore, and earned his numerals last season. Due to curtailment of funds, there will be little, if any, early fall -prac- tice, and the coaches are eager to Shape their team this spring for the i Harry De Witz, Spokane, (2). San Francisco—John Henry Lewis, Phoenix, Ariz. stopped New York, April 8—(?)—Max Baer and Max Schmeling on June 8, Jack Sharkey and Primo Carnera early in July—that Saturday appeared to be the most probable lineup for Metro- Politan New York's two big outdoor Held at University Dates Are May 26-27; Nodaks To Send at Least Three to & s hg i 3 i ill Emmett Rocco, Pittsburgh, (7). i ty ; z i inf FE strenuous schedule this year. The] boxing shows this summer. National Meet Sioux will meet on ‘Washington | - Winning every round of his promo- Friday. university, Texas Christian university | torial battle with Jimmy Johnston of ry . and Loyola of New Orleans in inter-| Madison Square Garden, Jack Demp-|, Grand Forks, N. D., April 8—Al- Richmond _ ee 1 sectional games. sey received permission from the New | though not definitely arranged as yet, . oer. ae | Spring practice Monday marks the | York state athletic commission Fri-|the North Central conference track David called jeulmination of Coach C. A. West's|day to shift the Baer-Schmeling |Meet, exhibiting some of the finest By MARTHA BOSSERT F i “five-year plan.” In the five years match from June 1 to June 8. |that he and Starbeck have been at The effect of that move was to all is . and Engel days |the head of North Dakota athletics,} put the Garden to delay the|Pices of the University of North Da-| G. A. Bossert 4 |the Sioux have won the North Cen.’ | priser ee tore Se ies ae 26-21, ip ap | wate Tatreiey callers 6 Se oe eee, | tral conference title four times and | pionship bout until early in July. nouncement made by C. A. “Jack” |ley Siedlinger nee ‘have dropped but one conference i Paneer} of gc wilt be hae: John Weber, Jr., and son Ben-| é aii | game. here, Preis HE Great Pyramid is 430 ie Has Won Seven Titles Prk wg gee persons Were (run by South Dakota State college in| nie visited Wednesday evening at the FEET HIGH. DENMARK, West came to the University of | United Bicone oy er aairiene ot . Dan Bieglock home. parents GERMANY and = SWITZER- | North Dakota in 1928 from South Da-|13 per cent from 1931, The Sioux track team gradually is| Miss Theo E. Johns, LAND have practically no ile | kota State college, where he coached Working into condition for the vari-| Bennie Weber helped Arthur Berg ‘an Quebec, * Central conference was orga! L, ent aqui come 3 uanleed, and [in England are petitive running the team will do is}, Mr. and Sa ae ond dame scheduled for April 22, when the en-|ter Sarah Wilton were OUT OUR WAY th eg t ' H By Williams | I [ | F BEEF it a in E Be ane : af 1 Ul aE 4 E i E E i Bi h if HT g i u al : [ E i pitel E a ae

Other pages from this issue: