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BRINGING UP FATHER BOO-HOO-THATS THE FOURTH MAN THAT HAS BEEN KILLED IN THIS ACT- PASTOR GOES LIMIT WITHBR LOUIS HOWEVER GIVEN DECISION, ., ENDTENROUNDS Crowd of Over Eighteen Thousand Spectators Howl at Verdict “CLEANUP” REPORTS QUICKLY CIRCULATED Negro Outsmarted at Every! Turn Even with Ad- vantage in Weight i | NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—Bob Pas-| tor, former New York University football player and star boxer, al-{ though losing the official decision, sprang a major fistic sensation last night by going the limit of ten rounds against Bomber Joe Louis and without once being knocked off his feet. A new capacity crowd howled at the decision as Louis got the ver- dict. No Dynamic Punch | Louis got the unanimous decision of Referee Arthur Donovan and the two judges. Louis, however, failed to show anything resembling his customary dypamic punch against his opponent/who heat a swift re- treat most of the ume but likewise outsmarted the negro at nearly ev- ery turn, Louis also had a big advantage in weight, going into the ring weig-| ing 203'; pounds while Pastor tipped | the scales at 179. Louis was slow last night and wild. He was bleeding from the nose at the finish. A. P. Score Sheet The Associated Press score sheet is as follows: Louis credited with five rounds— first, fourth, fifth, eighth and ninth. Pastor took the sixth and tenth. The seventh round was even. The crowd is officially placed at 18964 and the gross receipts at $111,570. ' Ringside critics quickly circulated reports of a “cleanup” by Broadway betting men. There was plenty of money wagered, it is reported, against Pastor going the limit. | The fight by rounds: ROUND ONE Louis and Pastor came out of vheir corners slowly. Both sparred for an opening. Pastor backed off; to the ropes and feinted without a blow being struck. One minute| elapsed before Louis chopped a hard right to Pastor’s neck. They ex- changed rights to the head. Pas-; tor backed off after a hard right to, the face. He was cautious and kept back pedalling. Louis connected with! a left hook lightly then shot out| a right. Pastor landed both hands| to the ribs and ducked a hard right‘ swing. Joe pawed the air with his left. He seemed in no hurry. Pas-| tor stuck a straight left to the chin - but Joe did not change expression. ' They were still sparring cautiously at the bell. Louis’ round. ROUND TWO i Louis bounced out of his corner' and shot three lefts to Pastor’s face. Joe worked his left rapidly as Pas-| tor backed off. Bob Kept moving and connected with a light left be- | fore clinching. Louis clubbed his' rival twice with short rghts to the| ear in the clinch. After Louis had! landed a short left uppercut, Pas-| tor landed both hands to the stom- ach as he bounced off the mpes.‘ Swinging briskly, Bob shot a right | to the body, but missed a hard right to Joe's chin. As the pace! grew faster Louis showed little in- clination to mix. Pastor stung Louis with two sharp lefts to the jaw.! Joe blinked and countered with | hard right swing that grazed Bob's' chin just before the bell. Pastor’s ROUND THREE round. ! Pastor circled Louis in midring and connected with a light left,! then ducked in time to miss Joe's | heavy right counter. Pastor cut| loose with both hands to the body and forced Louis into a corner. Joe | was wild trying a counter punch.| As the) v NG second, third, i la jting set YES-MY DAUGHTER- ALONE IN THE WORLD-| HAVE LOST EVERYTHING- M BANKRUPT-WHAT WE ARE WILL | DO- MY CHILD? kept shifting, and locking for open- ings. Bob dug bis left into Joe's ribs and clinched before the Bomb- er could start a counter punch. Louis looked slow and uncertain as he tried to solve Pastor’s batfling style. New Yorker's round. ROUND FOUR Pastor moved around the ring, keeping out of range and 2voiding Joe's attempts to manzouver him into a corner. The negro missed by a foot h a left hook. Pastor retaliated with a right and lett to Joe’s nose. Louis connected with a long left to the side of the head, but Bob bounced away and, with quick thrust, shot a left to the fact Louis drove Pastor to the ropes with a smashing right, but Bob kept hLis feet &nd clinched Pastor was all over the ring in his efforts to prevent Louis from get- for a punch with either hand. Just before the bell, Louis clubbed both fists to Pastor’s head Louis’ round. NOW, IE_THEY'D GIT SHOT RIGHT AWAY WE COULD GO HOME-THANK GOQDNESS THERE 15 ONLY ONE MORE OH-DEAR- AV ME-DADDY-I'LLL NEVER LEAVE MULLINS GETS LOYOLA BERTH La., Jan.*30.— of St Bene- but made Joe lock foolish as the negro failed by a fool with a right swing. Pastor varied his back ped- alliny tac! y to rush in and grab Louls’ waist Bob backed away from Joes lefts but was still very much on his feet at the bell, while Joe wore a completely baffled express W OF rounu Was even. | ‘ & M iy £ erwiive I Atchison, ReGERR b i o 1 < n nemed head football coach to Pastor continued o circle the o ... 4 pddie I at Loyola Uni- Cnccolate clouter. Bob barely es- Pard ceped being floored by a vicious right hand which glanced off his (emple as he backed into the ropes. They exchanged lefts to the body. Louis jarred Pastor with a left to the chin, but Bob was socn bouncing around like a rubber ball again. Louis was still slow and bewildered as he pumped his left in the direc- tion of Pastor’s chin, but missed more often than he connected. The crowd booed lustily as Joe con- tinued to chase his opponent around until the bell rang. Joe's round. NI AT > Dame full- late Knute nced that the 1 would be in- 1936 Benedict team cated and untied. vas given a three-year contract. Amount of the salary is announced - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 30, 1937. By GEORGE McMANUS HUH-SHE'S BEEN CRYIN' ALL. NIGHT= AN NOW SAYS SHE HAD A GOOD TIME -, OH-1 NEVER EVENING IN MY LIFE-THE PLAY 1S GRAND- OMBER week was G. H. Leonard, who chalk- ed up a score of 199/prone, 185 kneel- ing, and 167 standing, for a total of 551. He was closely followed by O. H. Waterud, last week's leader, with 542, and J. P. Williams count- ed 541 Ten high scores for the Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club for the third week were: The first column des- ignating prone, second Kkneeling, third standing, and last column be- ing the total: G. H. Leonard O. W. Waterud J. P. Wiliams Kenneth Junge V. F. Williams J. G. Osborn Louis Garrett Roy Hoffman Ed Hoffman H. C. McKinney LOCAL RIFLEMEN HOLD FAST PACE FOR THIRD WEEK Leonard Leads with 551 This Week in Inter- city Shoot 199 195 194 189 188 194 195 188 189 182 185 186 178 188 178 167 169 17 177 142 167551 161—542 169—541 159536 168—534 161522 147511 136—495 123489 —424 Totals 1913 1741 1301-5045 *-Did not fire this position. SRSl 5 Try an Empire aq. Juneau Rifle and Pistol Ciub marksmen nicked enough bullseyes to give Petersburg riflemen but lit- tle chance to catch up, despite their snoose, in the third week's scores of the inter-city postal shoot. Juneau riflemen totaled 45 points more than an even five thousand, | even though their tenth man, H. C. McKinney, failed to shoot in the standing position. High man of the e e ATTENTION PAINTERS! ley cup contests when struck by as to whether he would [ RINGERS RING again. Mark—Armadillos, trade and that sent Chabot to Tor- | from througn, Cnabot topped the pered by the blunderings of the Three years ago he was named hooked into the 1-3 pocket. 1uat is | A | 5 offs in 1928, Chabot found himself‘ | traded between seasons. | i | Chabot suffered a severe eye in- | a flying puck. For weeks he re- mained in a hospital dark room. lose the sight of his eye. When the bandages Then' out of a clear sky, came word that the Rangers had acquired Badgers Win onto. In his bitterness and deter- | minaticn o show the Rangers’ man- | With the alleys to themselves last | major league goalics in the all-im- | multitude, proceeded to dish out an portani n of shut-outs | awe-inspiring demonstration of how | the most valuable goalie in the ma-|—that was the idea—to E‘V_C such a jors. Wnoen the vegular season |demonstration—and they did Tather | Jjury during the course of the Stan- GANNONADER UF i | Physicians dared not venture a guess were removed the world was bright Mustangs Hang Up Large the acrobatic Joe Ross Roach in a ager, Les Patrick, ihat he was far night, the mighty Ringers, unham- Once The “Mest Valuable” ball after ball should be deftly | rolled around Chabot found himself | well at that; only two of the eigh- teen pinmen scoring less than 500. ROUND FIVE ROUND NINE 4 |on the Chicago Black Hawkes' bench (rushed the Bomber with both hands. Pastor continued his back pedal-| ing, but his knees sagged from a left hook to the chin as Louis nailed him in n ring. Louis shot both fsts to the head and had Bob re- treating at full speed, until Pastor got inside of a straight left and clinched. The Bomber stalked his rival but still found him a diffi- cult target. There was a slight trickle of blood from the negro’s nose from the effects of Pastor's left jabs. The crowd began to boo as Pastor refused to mix and con- tinued his defensive tactics. Joe/ clubbed Bob with a short right to!The Bomber shot both hands to the| the chin just before the bell. Louis’ round. ROUND SIX | Pastor blocked Louis’ left and received a command from his cor-| ner to keep moving. They clinched)| twice in midring as Louis failed to find the mark with his left. Louis| caught Pastor with a right upper- | cut as Bob rushed. Pastor whaled | Joe’s body with both hands and Joe backed into the ropes. Louis took a hard right to the jaw and was backed into a corner after miss- ing with two attempts to reach Bob's jaw. Pastor showed more aggressiveness as Louis shifted his attack to the body. Louis dug his right to the rigs as rastor again| Pastor’s round. ROUND SEVEN Louis moved more quickly, try- ing hard_to connect, but was wild with a left hook and missed a right uppercut. Joe chased his rival and twice Pastor took light lefts to the face after bouncing off the ropes, i The two fighters mixed briefly in midring, then, after a complete cir- cuit of the track, Pastor stung Joe with a left to the head and de- flected the negro’s counter punch. The crowd jeered as Joe landed both hands without doing any damage. Pastor slipped and grabbed Joe's knees to keep from dropping to the tloor. As they clinched, Louis hocked a hard pun’® to the head, but found his opponent too elusive when he attempted to follow up. Blood trickled from Joes nose after Pastor reached it with a left hook. head, but again Pastor was prompt in getting out of range. Louis’ round. ROUND TEN They shok hands in midring. Joe started a left, but Pastor back-ped- alled furiously, then swung both hands to the body before clinching. Pastor shot a hard right that jolted the Bomber, but the latter counter- {punched with a left and half swung| Pastor around into a clinch. Pastor recoiled from a hard right and al- most slipped to the floor as he side- stepped rapidly out of the grapple. Bob swung a hard right to Joe's neck and they slugged furiously in midring. Pastor had a slight cut over his right eye. Bob charged Joe twice, punching to the body, and stung Louis with a short left after he got inside of Louis' punch- | Pastor connected to the body, es. just before the final bell. round. Pastor’s Lode and piacer location rnotices for sale at/The Empire office. Sport Slants 2, By PLAP | Lorne Chabot, idle hockey goal | tender since last March, got a break | when Ray Worters, the New York | American’s goalie, was forced out ‘i »f the lineup. Chabot, a victim of | more unfavorable breaks, possibly, than any other major league hockey | player, jumped at the chance to get ! back into harness even on short no- tice when he was not in the top of | physical condition. When he stepped {out on the ice the other evening he ihad been on skates only twice in I more than nine months. | Last spring when Chabot decided he was through, he sold his pads and equipment. But the very first thing he did when he got the S.0.8. from the Americans was to rush out and )buy the pads back. He has used them all through his major league career and, being superstitious, felt that he could not carry on without | them. } Chabot was never a colorful play- ier, but he has been rated with the best of the goalies—one of those |chaps who goes about his duties | without fuss or fanfare. Generally, 'he was too busy defending his net to bother with acrobatics. A Thorn With Every Rose Strangely, most of Chabot’s dis- | appointments—and there have been |many—followed his triumphs. After |the New York Rangers, with Cha- bot at the nets, battled their way to victory in the Stanley Cup play- Dail;.y S ports Cartoon —By Pap R. Roastala HE WAS INJURED IN THE STA SERIES NLEY CUP N 1928 AU Righis Regerved by The Assciaied Prose |nursing an injury sustained in train-| ing, while young Mike Karakas pro- tected the nets. Chabot finally found his way to Montreal where he work- | ed untl Wilfie Cude replaced him.! Then Chabot decided that his ma- Jor league career was over. He went into retirement. Perhaps his lat- est break may pave the way for a few good breaks—after all, Lorne has had more than his share of the other kind. At 34 he is not too old, even for a game as strenuous as ‘hockey‘ - .- EVEN SCORING ALLEY MATCHES AT BRUNSWICK Consistency was the watchword of the night at the Brunswick alleys last night. Two of the winners, in the three matches rather than the scheduled two that filled the slate, taking their matches with 1,508 to- tals, while the other victorious squad’s total was only two pins more. Playing off a postponed match, the Sanitary Grocery defeated the Arctic Beer Parlor with a total of 1508. But, the Arctic trio staged a comeback in its closing match against the California Grocery. With Mike Seston rolling the high single game of the night, 209, and J. Hendrick- son placing in both the total score and single game columns with 550 and 204, the Arctics blasted 1,510 pins. In the intermediate match, the Alt Heidelberg squad, paced by Ed Radde’s top total of 564, crashed over 1,508 pins to submerge the Free Lances. In commercial league matches at | the Brunswick tonight, the Green House triumvirate opposes the Sani- tary Grocerymen at 7:30, and the Columbia Lumberman square off against the City Cafe team at 8:30. | Scores rolled last night were: Arctic Beer Parlor J. Carlson ... 134 130 129— 413 J. Hendrickson 152 164 193— 50y . 147 171 213— 531 1453 Banitary Grocery .Ugun ... 166 185 152— 503 . Kaufmann .. 149 179 194— 522 . Blomgren ... 139 171 173— 483 1508 Free Lancers 160 129 151 162 159 157 136— 425 166— 479 191— 507 1411 Alt Heidelberg . Jakeway ... 135 166 Baker . 132— 433 177— 511 191— 564 1508 California Grocery . 143 182 202— 527 187 181 157— 525 151 171 118— 440 1482 B. Schmitz George Arctic Beer Parlor J. Carlson ... 145 127 J. Hehdrickson 204 165 M. Seston ... 177 140— 412 181— 550 162 209— 548 | Shattuck The 596 beating thta Carey Tubbs of the Crocodiles gave the pins was the fanciest of the night, but it suf- ficed not to overcome Frank Boyle and his Mustang cohorts, who, in taking all but the first game of the match, really hung up one for the lads to shoot at in their team total of 1,663. Tubbs also rolled the ruling single game, 215, while Boyle’s 569 was next to top total and A. R. Duncan’s 213 was second high single game, for the evening. The second match saw Jimmy Barragar lead the Armadillos to a three game sweep over the not fully materialized Unicorns. The closing match was decided, though not known to be at the time, when Nick Bavard, of the Badgers, rolled 201, rather than just an even two cen- turies in the first game. That extra point resulted in the Badgers win- ning the game, 29 to 538, and de- veloped to be match-point when the other two games were divided be- tween the two squads. Tonight will be Orioles’ night at the Elks' alleys, the ladies con- gregating for two matches in which‘ the Skylarks will versus the Tow- hees at 7:30, and the Sagehens will exchange pecks with the Wax-| wings at 8:30. The pins took the following beating last night: MUSTANGS 201 176 . 169 173 190 201 .. 560 550 CROCODILES . 190 165 215 204 158 167 563 536 ARMADILLOS Barragar, Jr. 185 195 Halm 189 166 Kaufmann . 179 189 . 553 550 UNICORNS 148 144 183 176 . *174 174 . 505 494 ZEBRAS 170 198 . 189 213 | 192— 569 | 199— 5411 162— 553 5531663 Boyle Blomgren Benson Totals 178— 533 177— 506 186— 511 541—1640 Ugrin Tubbs Cleveland Totals 18"— 549 183— 538 177— 545 Totals 549—1632 15— 451 154— 513 174— 522 4871486 Sides Sperling . Redman Totals 142— 510 148— 550 163— 509 Lavenik Duncan Totals 170— 549 138~ 44fF 178 — 54¢ Stevenson Delebecque Bavard 152 158 201 167 Totals 439 518 486—1543 *—Average score. Did not bowl. ————r——— ANGELS SIGN UP SAILOR BALL STAR LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 30— Michael Joseph Blasinsky, much sought after star pitcher for ‘the U. 8. 8. Tennessee, has been signed by the Los Angeles baseball club, it is officially announced. At the same time is was announced that Ralph Baxton, Los Angeles pitcher, had been sold to the Oklahoma City Club of the Texas League. B POSTPONEMENT The ladies of the Trinity wish to announce that The Valentine Luncheon and Contract Party that was scheduled for February 6 has| 1510 ——————— Today’s News Today—Empire. been indefinitely postponed. adv. ’ e l Today's News Touay—Empire. 448—1539 > ALL PAINTERS OF LOCAL 1092 Urged to Attend Important Meeting TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2—7:00 P. M. R. TREFFERS Secretary To the Public Our retail store continues open and we are making our own Complete Line of Pastries However, in order to set before you the actual facts of our situation, we wish to state that we are entirely out of bread flour and therefore are making NO BREAD Juneau Bakery will again be placing on the market the bread hosts of Juneau house- wives have learned to ask for, just as soon as supplies come through. JUNEAU BAKERY H. S. SULLY, Proprietor ELECTRIC Portable Electric Machine us.‘ety F'mn DAY OR NITE SERVICE RICE 8 AHLERS CO. Phone 34 Nite 571 FRESH TENAKEE CRABS EVERY MONDAY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery Trevor Davis You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- self and a friend or relative to see “The Golden Arrow” As a paid-ap subdscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering. Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE