The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1928, Page 9

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| "e 7] } 4 mame 147 7 ATHLETES ENTERED IN CAPITAL CITY TRACK MEET - BISMARCK H HAS | LARGEST LIST WITH 20 MEN Further Entries Today Ex- pected to Swell Number Over 150 Mark SOLEN HAS ONE ENTRY Record-Smashing Carnival Looked For With Great Cinder Stars Here A total of 147 track and field ath- letes_ from North Dakota high schools had entered the fifth an- nual Capital City Track and Field Meet which is to be held at Hughes Field here on Saturday. beginning at 9:30 a. m., Frank Brown, manager, announced today. Further entries from neighboring Missouri Slope schools are expected today, which will bring the total well over the 150 mark to set a new meet entry list record. Bismarck has the greatest num- ber of participants entered. After time, distance and jumping __ trials yesterday, Coach Roy McLeod selected 20 men to carry the Demon colors. Mandan has 15 stars registered while Solen has the distinction of having only one man _ competing. New Rockford will come the gre: est distance to the meet, the Eddy county seat having seven men en- rolled. “If the weather is good, the fans can look for a record-smashing carnival,” Manager Brown said to- day. “There is no doubt that the finest field of athletes in years has entered the meet and with the track in excellent shape and all-time marks should fall in many events.” The schools and entrans follow: Bismarck—1. Benser; 2. Brown H.; 3, Brown F.; 4. D: ; 5. Green; 6. Hoffman; 7. Hultberg; 8. Jacob- son; 9. Martin; 10. Meinhover; 11. O'Hare; 12. Paris; 13. Roberts; 14. Rubin; 15, Sell; 16. Slattery; 17. Spriggs 18, penine® J 19, Thornberg; ). Yor! Carson—21. : tte, HL; 22. Hu- ber, C.; 23. Peterson, D. Center—24, repel R.; 26. Lehmkuhl, M.; 26, Lehmkuhl, W.; 27. Schultz, R; 28. Stetson, D. Coleharbor—29. Fuglie, Cheste: 30. Peightal, R.; 31. Saldin, D.; Sigurdson, N.; 33. Vetter, O. Dawson—34. Engle; 35. Hoover; 3s Johnston; 37. Swanson; 38. Wat- » Denhoff. 39, Aklund, A.; 40. Aklund, 0.; 41. Hansen; 42. Hempel; 43. Koth; 44. Liebig; 45. Penski; 46, Swanson; 47. Wahl. Elgin—48. Bender; 49, Loeffler; | tn 50. Reich; 51, Vossler. Fort Yates—62. Halsey; 53. Haney; 54. Hokanso. Garrison—55. Akan; 56. De Hav- en; 57. Goldan; 58. Ireland; 59. Steffan; 60, Twilling. Hazelton—61. Batzer; 62. Lar- vick; 63. Mastel; 64. Roesler; 65. Schanlaber; 66, Steiner; 67. Weiser; 68. Zerbes. Mandan—69. Belinsky; 70. re- son; 71. Dietrich; 72. Fleck; Heidt; 74. Helbling; 75. Jarvis; 76. McDondid; 77. faery rd 78. Mor- ris; 79. Nichols; Se 81. To- man; 82. Voss $3. Williams. McClusky—84. "Bauer; 85. Bech-|, .told; 86. Bruns; 87. Dahl; 88. Glarum; 89. Hirsch; 90. Kriesz; 91. Moore; 92, Peters, H.; 93. Peters, T. Napoleon—94. Fulton; 95. Kuhn; 96. Laughlin; 97. Meier; 98. Shafer; 99. Thoreson. New Rockford—100. Bymoen; 101. Harris; 102. Jahnke; 103. Kjos; 104. MacLachlin; 105, Robertson. New Salem—106, Kirchmeir; 107. Rohs; 108. Swartz. Solen—109. McDonald. ied Pece ete peo lll. eer; 112, Boespflug; 113. Falconer; 114, Finlayson; 118, Fortune; 116| Yesterday’s Games ; Goetz, M.; 117. Goetz, S.; 118. Me-| @————® penaias: si 119, Neibauer; 120. NATIONAL LE AGUE e Washburn—121, Palbottens 122, Johnson, en 123. Johnson, R.; 124, Pitalursh ee 4 nf 4 McGuire, Mis 125. McGuire, Mil-| RFI, ‘basison and Gooch, Smith; lard; 126. Nielson; 127. Olson; 128, Schulz; 129. Swallow. Trian Remember Bob Martin, Only a Few Years Ago | Fighting for His Life Toast of a Boxing Nation? It seems hardly more than yesterday when Sergeant Bob Martin of the A. E. F. was the toast of a boxing nation. heroes returning from France was a national frenzy and feeling areinet| Sergeant Bob Martin came back f1 the front, a fighting product of a fighting force, the heavyweight ch: pion of the inter-allied armies and the best young candidate in sight for "! the professional championship of the world. under the astute direction of Jimmy Bronson and seemed headed for the| Jack Dempsey was at its height. Enthusiasm over the mt He stepped into a fortune) title held by the unpopular Dempsey. But prosperity and fetes showered on him by his army buddies turned his head. He went into many fights | out of condition and took many beatings until he descended to the clays of | Then he was almost killed in an automo- second raters and trial horses. bile accident and finally was sent to Walter Reed hospital at Washington for treatment. He said he was dizzy and had lapses of memory. thing medical science could do for him was done for over 2 year und then had-to-give-him-up. His disability did not-come. in the line of, military duty and he was discharged from the hospital to—die. said he had cerebral lesions, but the men in the boxing racket have an- He left, the hospital and went back to other name for it—punch drunk. Terra Alta, W. Ve., to fight his own battle. anies visiting fairs and expositions. it carries four popular rides and a variety of sideshows. Jack Sampson, famous ari al wrestler of Wahpeton, N. D., has joined the Northern Exposition com- ‘|pany this year and will bring a wrestling show here that is_pro- peaimed one of the best in the United tates. While the management is dicker- ie for the high class entertainment at is being planned for the Mis- souri Slope crowds, horses that will run here are gradually coming to Bismarck for training on the new track which was completed recently. “The ideal spring weather of this territory makes the Bismarck track a logical training ground for north- west horse owners, “Mrs. Bryan said, “and some day Bismarck will be regarded as an ideal training center.” Jones, Nehf and les. Wilton—130._ Aune, H.; 181 Brezdon, H.; 132, Gumbriel, C.; 133. Jolie, E.; 134. Pfiefer, A.; 135,| Brooklyn Polonsky, 1.; 136, Thompson, J.; 187.] New York Wilmot, W. Elliott, Do: Wishek—138, Gall; 139. Herr,|ton and Hogan. Josh.; 140, Herr, John; 141. Herr, 142, Krein; "143. Kundert; 144, H E Sayler; 145. ‘Thompson; 146, Wack- Boston .. Pd 2 er; 147. Will. Philadelphia 1 Wirts, Goldsmith, Edwards and ROMAN CIRCUS AND SHOWS TO APPEAR HERE Sport of Kings Inaugural on Bismarck Track Has Ad- ditional Features Fovulshiag. additional entertain- ment, Cull ’s circus and oriere Exposition shows will appear in conjunction with Bis- mares first racing meet on June 1! and 21. me 28 ee of the signing of inca aaa ei inal o1 ings in fas made y by ital City, w: rs. C.K a » mal ‘of the Bimarck ‘Race and Ri associ- ation. Culbertson’s Roman circus is one Taylor, Urban; Benge and Wilson. R H E Cincinnati . . ‘ 9 0 it. Loui 10 2 Mays and Ficinichs Reinhart, Haid, Johnson and Mancusco. AMERICAN LEAGUE R 4H E u s oar and Schang; ‘Uhte ‘i L R #H E 4 “a : 1 ; Gonnatly, Cox, Barnabe and Crouse. R H E New York .. 5 A 0 Washington. 5 ry 0 Hoyt, Johnson, Covelesitie and Grabowski, Collins; Jones, Braxton and Ruel. Philadelphia-Boston, postponed, of the most famous riding troupes partoeming at fairs and eerie AMERICAN ASROTIATION throughout the cleo States. From R E ! coast to coast, the circus with its| Indianapolis see A 3 i feat Ss every appearance, ere! ite: aL a | ., Ten girls and boys compose the| Gaston. i Circus, Sixteen ly trained horses ' are used. A num el Ua ane are chariot races, Roman standing rid- ing, mule penal rries The Northern Exposition shows is [one of the larger groups of com and i Jumping . R H E Toledo ...seee 6 12 1 Milwaukee 7 BT 4 Palmero and O'Neil; apna ard, Wil- lis and McMenemy. Amarillo 8; Omaha 5. Others postponed, rain. Explaining Their One easily understands why the Detroit Tigers had such tough tuck at the start of the season wher it is remembered that they made 19 errors in their first seven games. Walk about the Princet.n cainpus these days and you'll learn that Princetonians expect much of their present crew. They’ a trip to the Olympic game Every- "re hopeful of TAD Pu BISMARC An FIRST SPRING RACING TEST Coaching Columbia and Pennsylvania Under Scrutiny HAS WASHINGTON TINGE Yale’s Five Year Supremacy! keepsie Champs By ALAN J. GOULD Associated Press Sports Writer New York, May 3.—@)—No early season college regatta in many a moon has attracted such widespread l interest as the triangular contost this Saturday on the Schuylkill river among the varsity crews of Yale, Columbia, and Pennsylvania. It is not only the first racing tes' of the spring, for these three boat- loads, but in one and the same r ‘gatta, for the first time, the coach-; ing systems of the new castern big three will be subjected to test. These three guiding minds out the intercollegiate ship eight at Columbia 1. Ed Leader, whose Eli varsi lost only two races in the last five years; and Rusty Callow, at the Pennsylvania helm for the first time after five years of brilliant | success with Washington’s oars- men. champio 4 Stroke Against Stroke It will be the famous Glend stroke against a brace of varicti: that have a Washington _ bac’ jground, for both Leader and Callo jcome from the same school of row- three-cornered i the p le has won regutta, now involv sion of the Blackwell challenge cup, five successive years but it will be an upset if they beat Columbia this week. Penn is the rank outsider. not always convincing but it ay | pears that Columbia’s veteran maie- ‘rial and experience are sufficient to loffset any conditioning handicaps that the New Yorkers have labored under, Columbia has six veterans of last Pennsylvania has only three sur- vivors of its 1927 crew and Yale They|one, outside the coxswain, Captain Pete Stewart. | HTS LA IGHTs: (By the Associated Press Cincinnati. — Red Hollo H E| Indianapo outpointed Mii 5 4) Lucas, Cleveland, (6). 10 0 ee Zinn and Danville, IL—Kid Yokum. University of Illinois, 0: pointed Hershic Wilson, Gai Ind., (8). Bud DeHaven, Pari It, and Marshall Leach, Ga drew (8). Meadville, Pa—Larry Brig- nolia, Erie, Pa. knocked out Toughy Mayne, Columbus, 0., @). Johnny Pollock, Youngs- town, O., won on a foul from Jimmy Reed, Eric (4). Louis Severo, Meadville, outpointed Johnny Slate, Youngstown, (6). San Francisco—Johnny Pres- ton, Honolulu, knocked out Billy Hoon, Chicago (2). That Tropical Flavored FOR BIG TRIO Systems of Yate.) Likely to Fall Before Pough- pee are | “Young Dick” Glendon, who turned ve These early spring regattas are! year’s Poughkeepsie triumph while | gular Shell Regatta on Schuylkill Attracts Attention ‘BUNNY BRIEF a STILL WIELDS WICKED WAND ; Brewer Veteran Has Perfect Tey Against Toledo; Blues, {| Saints Win ted Press). j pent most Eunr of hi [pee juts ing up ball gam ting his third first base, Bunny has anding factor in the | e for the 1928 pen- ing out five home runs | afely almost every time ivictory depended upon his manipu- | jlation of the willow, Yesterda: still | car-old veter- its second: cr Toledo, 7 to] ii a triple, double, single and} 1 ‘two walks for a perfect day. Blues Still in Lead | s City clung to its _ first ith St. Paul hi filed in ght champion. second and 5 P Ind The to 1, rried out. This picture is from 19 and Jack 21. feated Columbus, the tWird str B for of a dead past arose the other d ‘The Good Old Days—’ cn of 1916 Maxine Gates w York City to reopen divorce procesdings againat Maxine, a former dance hall girl, { charges “Dempsey was a bum” wien she met and married him in Farm- ington, Utah, in 1916. She was granted a divorce in 1919 and paid $1500 by Kearns, but she charges that promises Dempse “the The rumor was circulated four years ago that Maxin2 had been burned to death in a rooming-house fire in Albuquerque, N. M. ade have not been good old days” when Maxine was ?aul downed Indianay so for the third time in eee Botts held the j while 16 to home to} m lead in the | on with Brief as oe right GLENNA COLLETT ARRIVES ABROAD That! two he ome runs Man Behind America’s Great- est Turf Classic First Saw cery Wagon—Has' Had Charge of Churchill Downs Since 1890 Learrs With Surprise By CHARLES (Associated Pres: Chicago, Ma leote ago, a en footed, went with rocery wagon to wi running of the Kentucky Derby. The boy is 66 years old now, y-haired, with a complexion like chool girl and a love of lif ie man behind the derby. He °-/ Colonel Matt J. Winne—Matt to friends—-general manager of She Is to Play Mile, Thion aa aL tae bi lin the Britis |the defendin the Churchill Downs course at Louis- “|ville, the setting of the derby. For 28 years *!conducted this French |fond Colonel Winn has! c of the Amer: | ican turf. The race is a monument | to him. By exhibiting showman- | ip as astute as Tex Rickard ever layed, Colonel Winn has de- veloped the race into one of the most colorful sport events in Ameri- ca, if not in all the world. nino later, | American \ rival when they met in the fi conquered her women’s tournament Bat Slips, B Boy Dies es ‘Alley-ball’ inning back in 1875, ides won the event, re- warding his owner with a purse of $2,850, to the present day, when the' has boosted the attendance from a mere few hundred when a |shed-like grandstand = was __ big lonough to house the crowd of 1875 a few minutes. “Personally, I have never acquired a taste for to- bacco. For most cigarettes seem to burn my tongue and sting my throat. The only time I ever smoke, therefore, is in courtesy to someone caming to my house, who would lay her accustomed cigarette aside unless I at least lit one, too. “It seemed absurd, at first, that I should be chosen to attempt this blindfold test’.’.. except that never having become a smoker, my taste is extremely sensitive to the burning harshness of the average cigarette. “But I was very much surprised to find that I had chosen OLD GOLD as being perceptibly smooth, stingless and pleasant to taste. In fact, 1 now quite easily understand why the OLD GOLD compart- ment in my general cigarette box must be so con- stantly refilled.” merger ou © P. Laritard Oo, Ret, 1900 Made from the heart-leaves of the tobacco plant. the Ponies Run from a‘Gro-| small) cloped the derby from | ; ; winner collects $50,000 or more. Heja half. i : test of leading Cigarettes, Mrs. Emily Post selects OLD GOLD MATT WINN, AS BAREFOOT BOY, SAW FIRST KENTUCKY DERBY 53 YEARS AGO MATT J. WINN to a throng of 80,000 or more that will witness the race between the premier three-year-olds of America on May 19 in the fifty-third renew- al of the event, Since he took charge of the derby in 1890, the event has grown in rac- ing interest by leaps and bounds, For many years it was just a local ffair in Kentucky, attracting en- s from only the Blue Grass state ters 20 years the derby was over a panisbing distance of a mile and After Colonel Winn took charge of it, the distance was re- luced to a mile and a quarter be- se he believed it was too severe t for three-year-olds so early .-. in scientific POPE FROWNS ON ATHLETICS AMONG WOMEN Protests Against Gymnaetlé Exposition for Young Girls in Rome Rome, May i ae competition in rg by girls disapproved by The pontiff has yeti ry open let- ter to Cardinal baealih vicar of the Rome diocese, protesting aa a gymnastic fg ata for girls which wes to have Sela to- morrow. that the The letter complains +o the epunit games, which the pope unseemly and contr: of womanhood, should occur the eyes of the head of the Cal aoe hleti ition i e athletic competition is cially disagreeable, the welts, jsince it comes in the month of May whieh is dedicated to Blessed hop of Rome,” says the ‘cannot in fact fail te de- plore that here in the Holy City ef Catholicism, after 20 cent christianity, the sensitiveness attention to the delicate cate to young women ahd girls be shown to have fallen lower thak pagan Rome.” Bowling Alley Chain King Killed by Aute — Chicago, May Ss oe A. Lavan gtr heared Ral fd a chain of bow! alleys known in Ameriten bowling sci was killed Inet night Lege in the path of an coir? ule, ——— Two Greats With Dodgers Brooklyn has twe of the greeteat (etal in the mejor leagues in jess Petty and Dazsy Vanee. in the year. The race was shortened in 1896 and has been over thet route since. Since ne Iso when he first sow the derby from a seat in his ie Sekar’ grocery wagon, Celenel Winn ‘been tremendously interested “ racing. He was born in ie. Love of the sport was in his He _ grew to manheod in and, following the footeteps father, became @ grocer, wholesale grocery salesman, entering the merehant er bree clin 8 a wholesale grocery ibe traveled through Kentueky, 1 ways showing a keen “me tn \the thoroughbreds in the state. When a crisis threaten Ne sport in Kentueky, Colonel Wittn was select to: reform recon. struct racing. The tracks had beeh losing money, a $1,600 purse seems ed the last word in a stake for the derby, and interest | From the day Colonel Winn bres: charge of the sport, int it gan going upward until y s Kentucky derby stands cut as hve most famous in sentiment and colof jen the Ameriean turf. e MRS, EMILY POST GIRS. PRICE PORT) Asthor of “ETIQUETTE” and the Authorisativs Arbiter of Geoled Uiade Only the heart-leaves of the tobacco plent are - good enough for OLD GeLns. That's the bedrock reason for “not like smoothness. Mote @ cough in a carload.” The tobacco itecif! That's the meme whole story of OLD (~".D's honey- ence even in

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