Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 19

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

for foster service SUPerior 0200 I Public Isfsrwatits) Ssrt.re phone numbers SUPerior 0100 seen ON -TWO SPORTS 'MARKETS WANT ADS EWS PAPER THE WORLD'S GREATEST KE TUESDAY, JANUAKYi 7, 1941. 1" fo) "nrr jyuv lira lmj JV MOON MULLINS SMELLY. BUSINESS m)jiinrnii'inrn MM 7 msj iim in iii iiiiiwJ BUT I CHAMPED HIS HA1 AND TO THINK YOU MENTIONED KNOWS A BIT ABOUT MOVIE TO SHOW CAVALCADE OF TRIBUNE SPORTS i MIND QUITE QUICKIE AFTER I'VE WASTED WEEKS THE LAW MYSELF, JUDE. WELL, ILLIfll RALLY TO BEAT PURDUE QUINTET, 49-34 X. BURNED A BUNCH OF WANTING TO HAVE A QUIET CHAT WITH ME, JUD6E VAN TWERP FER INSTANCE, I HAD A TRYING TO COOK UP SOME SCHEME TO GET RID OF THAT GUY AND EARLY ANYWAY, MULLINS.

OLD RACiS AND RUBBEP IN A BUCKET AND LEAVING TH OOR "TO MY ROOM LANDLORD ONCT WHO INSISTED COULDN'T SO HERE I AM BRIGHT I AND EARLY. HIS WIFE 4 BREAK A LEASE OPEN ANI6HTORTWO-HA! A 1 1 Wisconsin, Michigan Hold Film Premiere Friday Night. HA Defeated. BY EDWARD BURNS. "The All American Way," the Chicago Tribune's sound motion pic e.

will be given its pre miere Frida (I night in the main studio of First Big Check Ex-Tiger Dies W-C-N. Arch Ward, sports ed i of The Tribune, will pre HOPPE WINS TWO OPENING BLOCKS FROM SCHAEFER sent checks to MAROONS WHIP PRINCETON IN OVERTIME, 32-31 presentatives of the i ed, a lie, and 2 "7 Jewish Charities during the pro- program. A ission to BY ARCH WARD. THE most highly paid figures in sport probably are Eddie Shipstad and Oscar Johnson, owners and stars of the Ice Follies. Each earned $133,000 in 1939.

Charley Gehringer, the Tiger veteran, never misses a home hockey game of the Detroit Red Wings. In an effort to prevent an epidemic of colds, Coach Cliff Keene of the University of Michigan wrestling team has warned his boys to wear hats. The penalty is a run of six laps around the track in Yost fieldhouse. The -grapplers are wearing hats. Eighteen hundred owners have shared in the distribution of purses at the Santa Anita race track in the last six years.

There has been a new outcropping of debris throwing at the Blackhawks games in the Chicago Stadium recently. Which means that some of these nights a few hoodlums will be grabbed by the scruff of the neck by some of Andy Frain's husky ushers and tossed into the street, Ted Esser, sophomore forward on Northwestern university's basketball team, becomes so nervous before a game he has difficulty the premiere will US hf'7r ft 4 1 if be by invitation but. be i ing Champion Takes 120 to Notre DameTops Wabash; Loyola Beats Ripon. 67 Lead in Title Match. Champaign.

Ill, Jan. 6 Special. Illinois soundly trounced Purdue, 43 to 31, in its Big Ten basketball opener here tonight. Coach Doug M.lls Illini won before a crowd of 7.1 S3 after trailing the defending champions. 20 to 15.

at half time. Keymen In the Illini victory werw Arthur Mathisen. tophomore center, who dominated play under both baskets and Robert' Richmond, senior guard. The first half was a nip and tuck battle, the score being tied six times. The Boilermakers took the lead late in the half after Coach Mills withdrew Mathisen and John Drish.

with the score tied at 15-alL Forrest Sprowl's basket and two free throws by Forest Weber, substitute center, and another by Don Blanken, gave the Boilermakers their five point lead at the half. Sachs Starts Rally. Harry Sachs, who substituted for Vic Wukovits at guard in the Illinois lineup, as the second half opened, started the rally with a shot frora the center of the floor. Richmond's free throw and basket cut Purdue's lead to 22 to 20, the champions having scored two points on free throws by Blanken. After Donald Blemker connecfel for a Purdue basket to give the Boilermakers a four point lead.

Mathisen scored from beneath the basket and made good his free throw on Charles Caress' fouL Sachs ccn-nected with another long shot hich put Illinois ahead. 25 to 24. Blemker's two free throws put the Boilermakers into the lead, but Richmond got a basket to put Illinois ahead again. 27 to 26. The Illini drew steadily in front with a free throw by Mathisen, two baskets by Drish and a basket and another free throw by Mathisen before the Boilermakers again scored on Sprowl's long shot.

Lineups: in lacing his shoes. Part of Babe Hollingbery's strategy as coach of I i CHARLES O'LEARY. JOHNNY BULLA. the West teams In the annual Shrine game in San Francisco is to have the East publicized as 2V4 to 1 favorite every year as soon as the tickets go on sale. Except in the pro-IIollingbery press, the East has not been the favorite for a half dozen years.

John Coleman, president of Ducks Unlimited, estimates 7,500 tons of grain are distributed over the California feeding grounds for wild fowl each year. Under the new Pacific Coast conference rule which gives all member schools a slice of the Rose bowl melon, Stanford's share of the 1941 receipts was approximately $45,000. This is less than half of what its cut would have been in other years. Jimmy Wilson, the Cub manager, experienced no end of kidding after the deal which brought Shortstop Billy Myers from the Reds for three players, but the quip that stopped him cold was offered by a Chicago baseball writer during the winter major league meetings. Wilson was encountered in one of the rooms of the Cub suite and, having a shave in O'Leary, Star of Old Time Bulla's 281 Chicago's Maroons, trailing at the half, tied Princeton at 29 apiece at the end of regulation time, then went on to win, 32 to 31, in an overtime basketball game before 2,500 in the Midway fieldhouse last night.

Chicago led with five seconds to go in the overtime period after Sophomore Mike McMahon had hooked the final basket. Then McMahon took a jump ball and batted it offside as the game ended. Capt. Joe Stampf of Chicago led the scoring with 16 points on six baskets and four free throws. Capt.

Dan Carmichael of Princeton won individual runner-up honors with 13 points. Maroons Take Lead. Trailing 15 to 14 at the half, Chicago took a 5 point lead on three successive baskets by Stampf, but Carmichael scored three while Jack Fons was making one and Chuck Wagenberg was tossing a free throw for the Maroons. Chicago led. 24 to 22, midway in the second period.

Takes Coast Tigers, Is Dead Charles T. O'Leary, whose first $10,000 Open professional baseball engagement was Los Angeles, Jan. 6 (P). with the White Sox and who later rCRBCE 1 1 Johnny Bulla, a North Carolina boy ILIJKOI3 140. became a cog in Hughey Jennings Detroit Tiger pennant winning mach who made good in the big city of 4 3 Chicago, came from behind today to 1 2 .1 1 .1 ine, died yesterday morning in the win his first tournament in four nri.h.f Kvers.f Wukovits.

Shirley.e hacbs.g 2 2 IrneT.r 5 0 Kbnkrn.r 4 ti Wen-liter. 1 I 3 Tmf.f Woodlawn hospital after a brief ill Stampf made another basket and years of major competition the Los Angeles open. ness. Death was caused by peritonitis, a free throw to give Chicago a 6 point lead with four minutes to go, but 1 1 i The former Greensboro, N. shot- 1 1 1 Born in Chicago Oct.

15, 1882, Kiefler.f Otnrad Kilev.c Free throws micaed Dnch fl BY CHARLES BARTLETT. William Frederick Hoppe, silver haired, 53 year old master of big league billiards, is resting very comfortably, thank you, ensconced up in Bensinger's arena, 131 South Wabash avenue, with a 120 to 67 lead over Challenger Jake Schaefer after the first two blocks of their personal battle for Hoppe's three cushion cue championship yesterday. After taking the matinee session, 60 to 28, in 39 innings, Willie returned in the evening to Increase his margin with a 60 to 39 decision that required 49 innings. Not only the luckless Schaefer, but several of those who will join him 'in the free-for-all marathon fight for Willie's title next week, were aware after yesterday's show that Iloppe will be, if anything, a touch tougher than he was last year when he took the crown with 20 victories in as many matches. Iloppe Puts On a Show.

While Schaefer was having no run of fortune, Hoppe was making all of the shots in the billiard book. You couldn't keep track of all the cushion first tries he wrought, and in the evening he contributed among other strokes a magnificent short angle shot, a teasing dead ball effort, a three-quarters masse, and a cross-table half masse that had the clients blinking, then cheering. Hoppe's high run for the day was an afternoon eight, not to mention a brace of evening sevens, the first of these. being followed by a string of 11 consecutive point-making frames. Schaefer's best single frame of the day was the night's eighth, in which he ran seven.

Since the play in the challenge match is continuous, Iloppe actually will be playing his 87th Inning In the third block this afternoon, the position of the balls being just as they were at the end of last night's play. His 39th inning of yesterday afternoon really continued into the first inning of his evening block, as will his 87th of last night into this afternoon's session. Play Six More Blocks. Six more blocks will be played, two today, two tomorrow and two Thursday, making a total of 480 points. All afternoon blocks will begin at 2:30 o'clock and all eveninir sessions at Bowersox scored once and John Mun-da twice on hooks to tie the score as time ended.

CHICAGO f.1-l PRIKCETON mil. O'Leary was an elevator operator at Mandel's and a member of the company baseball team when he was maker blasted out a sub par round of 69, two under par for the 7,000 yard Riviera Country club course, overhauled long hitting Jimmy Thomson and outdistanced the rest of the field to post a 72 hole score of 71 66 75 69281. at Bnwdage, next Monday, the TAm will be available to fraternal and commercial organizations, high schools, and colleges, luncheon clubs and other groups interested in sports. Arrangements for the feature can be made thru The Tribune Public Service bureau, 1 South Dearborn street. A Tanorama of Sports.

"The All American Way" carries the spectator thru the entire range of all the famed Tribune sports promotions. There are shots of the Silver Skates to start the ca'endar viih January, then on thru the sea-tons Golden Gloves, the first major league baseball All-Star game, the rlimax coming with some great first showings of play in the 1940 football time between the College All-Stars and the Green Bay Packers. The fly-rasters, the golf school, the interschol-astic regatta, the swimming meet, all have their innings in the film which Is at once entertaining, informing, and Inspirational. The entire sports panorama Is oven together with exceptional artistry, to the accompaniment of a musical theme and explanatory text ly barrator Bob Elson. The Story Behind the Film.

The title of the picture is discussed at the start in a shot of a lead paragraph of In the Wake of the News "The All American Way; Just a phrase often lightly spoken; yet the Jiving expression of all the ideals of rourage, free initiative, fair play and jrood sportsmanship which have made us a great people." More' of the purpose of the film is discussed by the narrator: "Many years ago The Chicago Tribune rec-egnized sport as a vital stimulant to the essential characteristics of clear thinking, aggressiveness, and physical JUness. Thru the years Tribune sports jrcmotions have been expanded to rover the entire year, Inspiring thousands and thousands of men, women and children of Chicagoland to try their skill and stamina in their favorite athletic endeavors. i A Chance for All In Athletics. "Fostered In the finest traditions rf democracy, this sports program fives every one, regardless of caste, rolor or creed, a chance to excel according to his or her abilities. Today, unknown, tomorrow some of these may hear their names saluted by the roar of the crowd.

We all love a fair rontest, spiritedly waged, and from the turnstiles that lead to Tribune ports events have flowed hundreds if thousands of dollars, helping to austain charitable enterprises devoted to the unfortunate and handicapped. Arain, a practical expression of the test traditions of democracy." Sports Leaders to Speak. Among the speakers on the premiere program will be Avery Brun-, Cage, president of the American Richmond, prowl lJ. Blankec t-1. (31.

Kree throws refnsed Porrlue. .1. So-ore at half Purdue. 20: ininv. 13 Referee Gale Kobinwin 1 Indiana i.

empire Clamo Bradley. summoned by the White Sox in 1900 to fill in for an injured shortstop. Fons 2 1 2 Winston. 111 Nelson. Hnwerok.f 1 2 Shaver, 3 llMovd.f 2 Staniof.c 4 2 2 Wauenberrr 1 3 Huese.e 10 3 McMalinn.K 2 tl Mayo.p 1 3 Crusbie.s: Kartlett.r 110 Later he was sold to the Des Moines, OHIO WHIPS MICHIGAN Victory Brings $3,500.

The victory, worth $3,500 to the 26 club and after three seasons there was purchased by Ed Barrow, I Hrnucjliael.r 6 10 year old Bulla, was cheered to the then boss of the Tigers. He was a Omcials Haarlow and Bee. mind, he had doffed his shirt. "Have you seen Bill McKechnie?" the scribe inquired. "No, why?" was the reply.

"Well, I see you've lost your shirt," answered the newspaper man. regular infielder with the Tigers echo by the crowd which had installed him as the popular favorite until supplanted by Donie Bush in NOTRE DAME WINS, 53-38 after a two stroke penalty for play 1909. Was Coach of Yankees. ing the wrong ball had set him be Sudden Thoughts. Notre Dame, Jan.

6 Special. Cy Singer, Jasper, junior, hind Thomson in yesterday's third round. After filling various rdles In the A guy will go to bat for a girl If scored 14 points in 25 minutes to minors, among them the management of the Indianapolis club, O'Leary re Craig Wood of Mamaroneck, N. she has the right kind of curves. Jonas Perlberg.

What should be the easiest job in lead Notre Dame to a 53 to 38 vic turned to the majors as a coach. He the world Is the hardest trying to tory over Wabash tonight. Singer was shifted from center to guard last week. He made six of his first served in that capacity with the Yankees during the reign of Miller Huggins as manager and also one sneaked into second place and $1,700 of the rich purse with a 68 today for 283, while the pace setting Thomson faded with a 74 for 285 one stroke back of Clayton Ileafner of Linville, N. who had a 70, and Benny Ilogan, White Plains, N.

who also had a 70. make EVERY ONE your friend. Al Morrison. Do You Remember Way Back When: year under Bob Shawkey. eight shots tonight.

Ray Greve, sophomore forward, led Ann Arbor, Mich, Jan. 6 Special. Jack McLain, Ohio State's junior center, led a spirited second half rally tonight as the Buckeyes swept to a 49 to 39 victory over Michigan in the Big Ten basketball opener. The Wolverines held a 21 to 20 margin at half time, but soon thereafter McLain went to work, aided by Dick Fisher, forward, and dominated the second half play. McLain's thre baskets and six free throws accounted for 12 points during the final period and, combined with his one field goal early in the game, made him the higa point man of the evening.

Fisher Next to McLain. Fisher dropped thru six field goals and a foul to take second scoring honors with 13 points. His total ai tied by Capt. Herb Brogan who paced the Wolverines. Thruout the first half the teams battled to a virtual stalemate and the score was tied four times.

A three goal spurt by Sophomore Center Jim Mandler enabled Michigan to hold its one point advantage at half time. The When Joe McCarthy, after being Wabash with 11 points, making 9 of them in a second half assault which Dad would stock the cellar with apples every fall barrels and barrels released as Cub manager, signed with the Yankees he took with him Jim Burke, one of the Cub coaches. To saw the visitors score 21 points to riaya Flrnt Nine In 3J. Bulla went Into the last round make room for his first lieutenant McCarthy released the one time trailing Thomson by one stroke. Still irked by that two stroke penalty imposed for playing Jug McSpaden's Tiger star.

Signed by Cubs. Notre Dame's 23. The Irish led 30 to 14 at the half. Wabash rallied to make it 31 to 19, but Notre Dame pulled away again as reserves streamed into the game. Sixteen saw action for the Irish.

Lineups: of greenings, northern spies and bald-wins to eat in the long winter evenings? Nye. The postoffice usually was located in the back end of the general store with a huge stove between the two departments? J. J. McNamara, Jackson, Miss. sK Where Neighbors Are Neighbors.

ball yesterday, he toured the first O'Leary was Immediately signed as a Cub coach by Rogers Ilornsby nine holes in 34, one under, and clipped another stroke off par for 35 who succeeded McCarthy in Chicago. NOTRE DAME fa.tl WABASH '381. on the way home. In the last few years O'Leary was 8:30 p. m.

Thomson needed 36 strokes to get 1 1 employed by the Sanitary district. Surviving are a brother, Frank around the first nine, and six to get li Risks, 3 Sobek.f 1 1 Uiliexiue.e Kneel. 1 2 7 From the Pontiac 111. Daily Kline.f Oreve.f Kelly.c Ransom. Kisher.u Ingram, Powd.c Hesler.g- untrapped and down on the tenth.

His game became as uncertain as 'the Continued on next pajre. column 5 ft 1 1 3 I 2 10 1 2 13 12 1 111 0 1 1 0 10 1 Parnes.f 2 weather, which turned from sun shine to rain and back to sunshine Craven.f The opening half of the evening block didn't run quite as swiftly as its afternoon predecessor, largely due to defensive tactics. Iloppe, picking up where he had left off in the matinee session, got three in the first inning of the evening block, and soon went into an 8 to 4 lead, but Schaefer soon adjusted this and ran seven, his best cluster to that point, in the Leader via Sierra Sue: I wish to thank the neighbors for their assistance during the fire at my home Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Elizabeth Flood.

All Around the Raspberry Bush. Stautz.I from noon on to dusk. College Basketball Quinn.c 3 1 1 Smith, 1 1 Hutler.f 3 1 2 0 1 K.van.R- oil Poiw.ir 2 Kagarus.f 1 Kennberiter. O'Leary, and two sisters, Ann O'Leary and Mrs. Mae Cassidy.

Funeral will be held Thursday at 9:30 a. m. from the residence, 7615 South Morgan street, to St. Leo's church. ALICE MARBLE WINS; PLAYS IN Willie Goggin of Miami, fin ished in a tie with Thomson.

Horton Smith of Oak Park, 111., turned on the heat with his putter and posted a FDR must have picked up that eighth inning for an 11 to 10 edge. Del Zoppo.s; 3 Free throws missed Sincer. Oninn 121, Buller. ieary, 1'ope, BaKarus, iisher L2J, Doud T21. Referee Knrieht tChicarol.

Umpire Bray Cincinnati. The Wake Depends Ipon Its Friends. You Can't Go Home Again. The halo of glamor that hovers around The things that we used to do, That tender, warming glow at the thought Of the folks that we one time knew, That faint little tug of loneliness At the thought of the old town square Are all in our minds, mayhap in our hearts. For they're really no longer there.

Life is only a one-way street, There is never a turning back- We pass this' way but once and then Time- gently covers the track Of the countless wayfarers passing thru. Destined for where or for when? There is no U-turn on the road of life. You cannot go home again! Jazbo of Old Dubuque. Good Old Joe. Time after time, when some cutie-pie had come Into my friend Joe's store and made a purchase and departed, I had asked him Interestedly who she was.

Last night when a veritable beauty came in the front door, Joe looked at me out of the corner of his eye, sighed, and whispered resignedly as he passed me to go up to wait on her, "I'll find out, Clancy I'll find Daniel Francis Clancy. Opportunity. A golden opportunity Is shlninc on the hill; It's meant for every ana of as Yon can hav It If you will. Kay or Old Chicago, si: Encyclopedia Americana. Gossip column Snitching post.

Austin Stegath. Pet reeves. The man who draws in his stomach and throws out his chest while being measured for a suit and later bawls out the tailor because It doesn't fit. TaUor E. V.

B. Radio comedians who get laughs from the studio audience every two minutes. No one can be that funny. D. K.

from the U. P. 4 He Little White Lies. I'll write every day. Honey.

Mary of Glen Ellyn. No son of mine ever will play foot STADIUM NEXT 69 for a 2S6. Top scorers in the tournament: Johnny Bulla, Chicago 212 69 281 Craig- Wood. Mamaroneck, N. 68 283 Clayton Healner.

Linville, N. CHI -4 70 284 Ben Hoitan. White Plains. N. Y.214 70 284 Jimmy Thomson.

Cliicopec, Was.2 11 74 285 Willie Goerin, Miami. Fla 213 73 285 Horton Smith. Oak Park. 111. ..2 17 69 286 Denny Shule.

Coral Gables. 7 287 LOYOLA BEATS RIPON Lwon Little. San Francisco. .215 73 Lloyd Mant-rnra, Oak Park 217 73 LAST NIGHT'S SCORES. Illinois.

49; Purdue, 31. Ohio State. 49; Michigan. 29. Minnesota.

44: Wisconsin. 57. Chicaco. 35: Princeton. 31.

Nslra Dame. 53; abash. 38. lyoyola, 43: Eipon. 34.

Mirhigan State. 37: Temple, 33. Milllkin. 53: Illinois rollese. 4.

Iowa, 43; North Dakota. Iowa Stale. 4tt Montana 5 La La C. 27. Cornell.

33: Grinnell. 53. Wet Virclnta. 59: Caraecie Teen, 45. St.

Joseph's. 45: North Carolina, 41. Olenville. S9; Fairmont State, AO; Illinois Wesleyan. 30.

Louisiana State. 37; Alabama. 58. Salem; AO; Bethany. 38.

South Dakota State. 36; Tarkie Me. rl-lese. 33. Pittsburg Teachers.

41: St. Reaje4iet'a. 5. Jersey City Tearhers. 33; lairersity t4.

lece Newark. 31. South Carolina. 48; Cieorsia. 41.

Roanoke, 41; Catawaba. 39. Springfield Teachers. 27: Tnlsa 21. Seton Hall.

41; Rider, 2. Toledo 55: St. Joseph's llnd.J. Kio Grande, 43; Mats Teach Fred Wood. Vancouver, B.

218 73 291 Loyola university fought off the attack of a fighting Ripon college team to win, 43 to 34, last nightat Loyola. Loyola gained a 23 to 16 half time lead over the defending Midwest conference champions. With five minutes remaining in the 291 Harold McSpaden, Boston 220 Al Krueeer, Seloit. Wis 219 73 2913 Dutch Harrison. Chicago 219 73 293 Emerick Kocsis.

Lake Orion, New York, Jan. 6 Special. Alice Marble, world's foremost woman tennis player, tonight launched her professional career in Madison Square Garden with a victory over Miss Ruth Mary Hardwick of Great Britain, 8-6, 8-6, before 12,371 spectators who paid in $25,614. The troupe appears next in Chicago Stadium on Wednesday night. The English player, also in her first match as a professional, surpassed anything she had shown in America as an amateur.

Donald Budge, the world's champion, subdued Big Bill Tilden, the 47 year old veteran, 63, 6-4, in the leading supporting match on the card. Budge won without unduly extending himself. Miss Marble and Tilden defeated 73 203 70 293 Continued on next page, column 7 294 294 295 95 Mich 221 John Barnum. Chicago 223 Horier McVeish, Los AnKcies. ,223 Willie Hunter.

Santa Monica. Cat 220 Mark Fry. Oakland 223 Johnny Dnwuon, 219 Ralph Guldahl. Rancho Santa Fe. Cal 220 idea of a loan to Britain some place.

Maybe he's been listening to one of those "give away programs on the radio. Paul Larmer. Headline: Bookies Look for Loophole. I just knew that sooner or later the subway would be a gamble. R.

P. Richards. Things We Miss. There are other homes that are finer far Than our modest domicile. But they lack so many features that Have their own familiar thrill.

In the dead of night there's the bathroom door With Its plaintive squeak so clear. And you know you're home when that strident note Sounds within your drowsy ear. On the kitchen wall is a spot that tells Of a splash from the Irish stew. And we have one lock that will only yield To the touch of a favored few. There's a tap that drips and a window loose That we miss when afar we roam.

And a host of things we're accustomed to That help to make home sweet home. B. L. Bruce. Ten Years Ago Today The White Sox sold Emil Barnes to Atlanta.

74 7 Olympic committee; Will Ilarrldge, president of the American league, and Kenneth 1 Wilson, athletic director cf Northwestern university. The checks which Mr. Ward will present to the three Chicago charities are the profits from the 1940 All-Star football game. Dexter Cummings will receive the check for the United Charities, Bishop Bernard J. Sheil for the Catholic Charities, and Samuel A.

Goldsmith, for the Jewish Charities. YOUNG ALLERDICE BETTER; FATHER IS STILL SERIOUS Indiana polls, Jan. 6 (P). David AUerdice 22 years old, Frinceton university football star, was reported in good condition and improving nicely tonight at Meth-rdxst hospital where he and his 53 vear eld father are under treatment for burns suffered early yesterday in a fire which took the lives of Mrs. ABerdice Sr.

and her youngest son. The father, who was captain of the University of Michigan football tsa in 1909, was "still serious "and his condition was unchanged, attendants said. Mrs. Cornelia Keasbey Allerdice, 43 j-rars old, and Anthony Allerdice, 7 years old. were suffocated in the tlaze which swept their second floor apartment.

Fight Decisions lie added to that advantage until he was in front by 23 to 18. It seemed as tho the champion never would quite catch up, but he finally clicked seven in the 29th, which left him ahead, 32 to 26, at the intermission. After Hoppe had drawn a blank In his side of the evening 30th, he dished up 25 points in the next 11 frames, including three threes and a seven in the 41st. Then he had to toil eight more innings to make the closing three billiards. After the intermission Schaefer's high was a six in the 34th.

lie's the Same Old Iloppe. In the first portion of the afternoon block, Iloppe required just 20 innings to arrange an intermission, scoring 33 points in that span and climaxing the performance with a run of six billiards, only two less than his high run of eight for the first half of the afternoon's work. The best Schaefer could do in the meantime was a paltry three In the fourth inning and a four in the 19th. Jake could count In only seven of the first 20 frames, while Willie scored in all but eight. Iloppe ran eight in the third inning.

Hoppe went into the finishing half 75 295 ..223 73 295 At Maricold Gardens Jimmy Tyth beat Mike Harry Cooper, Kd Dudley. Philadelphia .223 73 295 73 295 Paul Kunyan, White Plains, N.Y.223 ers. 45. Gamiera I10J; Jimmy Tierce beat Tito Taylor Matt Alilovich beat Andy Canal Billy Pierre beat I-elf Erirk-on 14; Frank MrBride beat Jack Whit-tinghill 4. Amateur.

Alderson Broaddns. 55: Potomac. 4. Long Island I'-. 50; Lawrence Tech.

43. Washington. 33; Drake. 35. Kansas Wesleyan.

68; Roekhnrst. 37. liar din-Simmons, 50; ew Mexico Acgiesv Miss Hardwick and Budge in mixed doubles, 6-2, 5-7. 6-3. At Hammond.

Ind. Joe Ghnouly beat Eddie Garfield Park Business Seott 10; George Dixon II. beat loum Rill Miller Bill Peterson knocked oat O'Dell Sparks HI; Mike Sopko beat Itnbhy BerKrr Mis Joe Pupont beat Bill Keardnn It; Vlto RIeko knocked out Tony lanle IH. Group Renames Stockholm Iowa State Five Beats Montana State, 41 to 27 Ames, Jan. 6 JP).

Iowa State, the only unbeaten basketball team In the Big Six circuit, wound up Its hon-conference play by defeating Montana State university, 41 to 27, tonight. In scoring their eighth consecutive victory, the Cyclones gained an early advantage and were leading 20 to 12 at half time. 48. Mercer. Rfi: PrebyteriaB.

41. Duke, 37; IhiTidson. 33. CI AMK9 TONIGHT. Amerieaa rollega at Wilsaa.

1ulu at Oklahoma Aggiea. Drake at St. Lenis. Washington at CreightM. Knreka at Carthage.

Hope at Western State fMichJ. Kansas State at Nebraska. At Baltimore. Md. Harry JerTra.

beat Billy Spcary IVil. Carl Stockholm, former six day bike rider and sports promoter, was elected for the third successive year to the presidency of the Garfield Park Business Men's association last night in the Midwest Athletic club. At Cincinnati, O. Leo Kodak beat Herschel Joiner 101. Ar New 1'ork Everett Kishtmire beat Monty Tisnatore 18.

The Brooklyn Visitations whipped the Chicago Bruins, 31 to 20, in a pro basketball game. Continued on next page, column S. ball. Esther y. N.

of Muscatine. i i mn ss rs.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Chicago Tribune
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Chicago Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
7,805,997
Years Available:
1849-2024