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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1928 East Boasts Five Victories and One Defeat in Intersectional Games BABERUTH'S [ HarvardSecxs tine |Slope Track Stars to ANCIENT ADAGE ! ‘BAT CRUSHES | fava cenit ede iste Sees Be Honored at Banquet ee PROVED; KELS r 4 3 Opening Baseball Game BE AT | DHEN | Tremendous Interest Through- U N : : CHICAGO SOX out North Dakota in Out- ns ten of Spee ‘ 1:5" Mumping Joe’ Dugan Pounds Nenad til Bl tat tr Hagen’s Defeat with Millers Leading, 10-3, , \ Pdeaiic gt Dopesters Think Western ¢ 3 Out Homer in First With E T Atlanta, Ga, May 5—(AP) Toledo Comes Back in Ninth ry: Nikce Men on ntrant May Take State!) When news of Walter Hag- With 9 Runs j en’s terrific lacing at the hands or Archie Compston was told to Bobby Jones, that ink man One consoling thought can come|| was the most surprised person to those boys who do not finish in|] in the world. the one-two-three class at the “I know Hagen was just off Capital City Track and Field meet || the steamer and that he had which is being held at Hughes Field|| been out in Hollywood for some today, that is that they will bej| time, but his being that far treated to a real feed at the Grand || down to any opponent is hard Pacific hotel at 6:30 tonight when|| for me toi realize,” he said. the Association of Commerce is Jones does think, however, host to the contestants and of-|] # ficials. Ed ieee British gol " Swelling the entry list beyond all|| Probably will prove a greater expectations, Underwood and Stan- | incentive to Britishers this sum- ton high schols late Friday regis-|]| ™er when they come up against tered five athletes per school. It|| American players in the various Title (By The Associated Press) § Casey Stengel and his champion E Toledo Mudhens again proved base- k ball’s ancient adage—thct a game isn’t won until the last batter is out, At Minneapolis yesterday, the Millers were leading Toledo, 10 to 3. When Toledo hitters were put out, they had scored nine runs. To cap the wild game, however, Minneap- olis came back in its half of the in- ning to score three runs and a 13 to 12 _victory. Harris, Miller outfielder, hit his fe) ATHLETICS | TIGERS| 1 “Senators, Red Sox, Giants and| Pirates Win; Paul Waner Scintillates © bmwmben (By The The firs 1, conflict in ; : pe apben Leeud. brought the total mumber of schools || tournaments. seventh ‘official home run of the mit ce an. Pena ena to 23 and the number of contestants The horse made a game start for this barrier in the Heavyweight Steeple-| season and his fourth in three days i ce Phe National to 162—a new lists record. chase at Sunbridge, England, but he wasn't able to clear it. His rider,|to increase his home run leader- ) west —contes On the basis of previous year’s however, kept on going. He is shown describing an ungraceful parabola| Ship in the American .association. League, showings, Bismarck was a heavy Six ALL-AMERICANS that landed him well on the other side of the fence. Muddy but Snbowee Zach Wheat, acting in the role as a “ Bate Ruth's t Herb) favorite to cop the greater share he remounted and rode on. pinch hitter for Minneapolis, made Pennock’ ae nee a of honors today. However, Man- good by hitting for the circuit in Eg Gd ae Ohi her @eecae dan has an unusually strong dele- the last inning with one on base to i New York 10 tod. The Sultan of celal artists herded Kgl = —_—_ KRESS LEADS GEORGE GRANTHAM baa er crept closer to Kansas ) ss ef " cite wett x ie other cl ni may resu! - { Swat oat phe Se ele) in an upset of the dope: id ‘Doc’ Spears, Minnesota Coach, City, first place holders, by winnin fon, a doub! % scored two ru ” aging Joe Du fy liver the most tet For the first tit in the histo: TOPS TIONALS its seventh straight victory. -Col- of the state there fe a tremendous Joins Joesting, Martin- OLD VETER ANS NA le ay be} Masep th ao 3. ace interest throughout Nort akota eau & Company Sees ra e1 a tripp gave in the results of the carnival. In Pirate Swatter and Blake of Seen ts a Leen! Pee ro and two s. It past years, no school from western t game. mping Joe” came to hat “i " St. Louis kie Shortst: i 4 e bas North Dakota has been a strong| Minneapolis, Minn., May 9 uis Rookie Shortstop cago Retain ning. ‘ : 1 | ee iintly. ened ne contender for the state title. This|—A half dozen former Far Afront in American Chi Bat and Other American association teams ; \ with a four-base drive into the year, with Fargo of | uncertain | ican players are in the lineup of an ° Mound Honors were idle yesterday because of rain. strength and the champion Grand | all-star gridiron cast appearing to- Batting Column ° New York, May 6-—-U)George | Bison Tracksters Win Forks squad with but one veteran, |day against the University of Min- bi i Dleachers, Pennock allowed 13 hits 4 1 in chalking up his fifth _ straight 4 At ; Be nmuahine the cinde osticators are turn-|Nesota regulars in a football game as — v4 { fL win but 13 Sox left languish r progn rt i BE Gia tases: poke clequestly ef tne| g : Me] ine their even wes rt of “University Appreci Chicago, May 5—UP—A 21-yeat.| Grantham of Pittsburgh and Sheriff Triangular Carnival { € lefthander’s effectiveness in the) +. Pied ANG Twins Show Power Be Ch Ww. § head | °!4 St. Louis rookie shortstop, Ralph | Frederick Blake of Chicago retain es be sain Even With 1927 Record ; a ‘ ee In the interclass meets at the re- oak of ‘the Gopher aievens anreeal Kress, is showing the old reliables | their crowns in the National League.|,, Valley City, May 5.—(?)—The With nine varsity letter men back on the squad, Harvard is shooting} spective schools, Bismarck and|to play right guard for the all-stars, for the eastern intercollegiate baseball championship. The squad work-|Mandan showed that there were a/who are captained by Herb Joesting, aaa Hs ets Coach Fred Mitchell, former manager of the Chicago Cubs,|number of very fine athletes on| twice given all-American honors and 3 “ran ‘put the Bambino even with} 4 in Howie Burns, star center fielder, includes some of the best|their squads who have an excellent | who led the Minnesota team in 1927. is record-smashing pace of last nt in the east. In the picture above are Burns and Mitchell| chance of bringing the first track| Other all-American players here year. In 1927 he drove out his fifth] and in the circle is W. F. Spinney, survivor of the Harvard college cham-| championship to the Missouri| included Bert Baston, Johnny Mc- wand (UEC ls sixteenth | pion team of 1874, who was one of the spectators at the opening game. lope. Govern, Arthur “Dutch” Bergman, a he cares patihve Selena Staging the silver anniversary | and Earl Martineau. fated Jn sag iy the ane CBee state track and field meet, the Uni-| The proceeds of the game and of eiieate Richa shoNe isa few versity of North Dakota on May|other ceremonies in connection with H> days back of his pear adarachedule. 18 and 19 may crown a champion| Appreciation Day will go toward de- , Meriilcdelphia, Connie Mack's OF SUCCESSIVE TRI MPH! R S from the western half of North|fraying the expenses of the Univer- Athletics Fenced, their sntertn ted Dakota. This is no nn toneasaa but | sity of Minnesota’s 60-piece band on Mein ‘streak by f P a very possible “possibility.” its tour to Europe this summer. ve ak by pounding out a my | The t first held i = 10 to 5 verdict over Detroit. _ Six e state meet was firs = Pa i ird inni i Si 9 ii "s Galfop- 1903, and year by year has grown { ruris in the third inning decided the| Since 1912, Finland’s Galfop: ihe idedted herbed ray eel MOORE JU MPS northwest. This year, according to = issue. In this frame, Sammy Hale Paul J. Davis, director of athletics at the university, more than 50 schools with 250 selected stars, are expected 8 + North Dakota So jetta Bisons won the Bison-Viking-Jimmy track meet here yesterday with Valley City second and Jamestown college of the American League a few tricks |Grantham tops the batsmen with a in batting. merry .463, while Blake yet has to bascbne ae oven oe suffer a pitching reverse against the star of the Western League, is far|three decisions he has won. The| third. afront in the race for individual bat- | figures include games of Wednes- ‘Ths “paints “were. scored. as fol- ting honors for the second succes- | da, lows: North Dakota A. C. 63 2-3; sive week of the junior circuit’s ed er City, 36 1-3, and Jamestown campaign, His average for 51 He has batted eighteen in runs,|33. No new marks were set. times at bat is .490 or 69 percent-| Which leads the league in that de- age igi heh then ti cen [Nee Crane tee pe| 185 Prep Stars Enter rival iller of ie iladelp! ; e 2. Athletics, unofficial averages show. |! fe fifty-four times. . Valley City Tourney Herb Pennock, New York Yankee |, Jablonowski, the Cincinnati pitch- ace, had sole possession of first ried — fhiteee spite sty both! Valley City, May 5—(—One place for pitching honors up to and|t0P Grantham in the averages, but! hundred and eighty-five athletes including Wednesday's games with | © “itl ahr = oe games! trom 22 schools began gathering four victories and no defeats, He {19 entitic, him ! leadership. Jab-| here last night for the annual Val- has pitched 33 innings, allowing 27 aa kK iy f Chk -600 and Grimes,| toy City Kiwanis club invitation hits, ten runs, six bases on balls and |;471. Kelly of Chicago is runner-up| track meet to be held here today. striking out 14, a record which rant wi a A tennis tournament with 25 p iy means victories for a hurler work- Frisch Is Pilferer ers from five towns will also Ruth’s clout, driven into the right centerfield bleachers in the sixth DISTANCE RUNNING CHAMPS Distance Running Champs Unser Joe” Hauser followed with] es beet ol ionfith round-trip clout ot the] Staged a Procession-United |} Olympic 5.000, “and "1,009 = year, with one on. got in on! States Has Best Chance in!] their times: > the fun with another drive into the} 5,000 Meters BE at homer with’ two on and} img Ground Aces, Have ’ te to set a new attendance record. leachers with one on i i fears in Comi ster- . a West Well Be Strong ing for the heavy hitting Yankees. 5 A pe |. Teams are ent for the ee the Sone] so eae aicomingeimeten 1912—Kolehmainen, Finland |] Western North Dakota should be|Kansas City Outfielder Hero| "Sam Gray of the Browns and Al-lis hitinse S82, jumped into the lead trai meet frome Mandan, Saumee- hammered five St. Louis Browns| dam Games 18:36)3:0.. well-represented. Bismarck an i i phonse Thomas of the White Sox] in ntolo® bases with si town, Fessenden, Oakes, Lisbon, = pitchers for 13 hits and carried off| NOTE—This is the sixth i 1920 — Guillemot, France— || Ashley have always sent strong] Of American Association | 2ach has turned in five victories and|'" yn sduition to Blake’ eleven Na-|Enderlin and many smaller towns <& ® 18 to 6 decision, A five-run t ive See eee ‘ - delegations, Mandan, Wilton, Gar- Bat Averages one defeat. George Uhle of Cleve-| tional League pitchers have yet to| near by. ; in the fifth gave the Senator c ee Finland— ||rison, New Rockford, Washburn land this week lost his first game|taste defeat. safe lead. thesOly nice, and other strong entrants are also ic record. World’s in five games. 1 tend the league |, Red Lucas of Cincinnati, with four| Peter Gavuzzi Will x Beat Indians ae aed expected to send sizable squads. Chicago, May 5.—()—Jimmy victori nd A By ALAN J. GOULD d, 14:28 1-5, by Nurmi. 4 f & § if #5 C7 ictories and one defeat, has been . Danny det t pitched iselatnll ane record, 2 » by Nurmi. That track is fast assuming a/Moore, Kansas City outfielder, was team batting with an average of perk brill itch l ea De to Ci t> Willis Hudlin at "Boston and —the| Associated Press Sports Editor) 10,000 Meters popularity in the state equal to that|the hero of the American Associa- 3.28 oF. six points higher than last Dea optaes His moiegt hayes d thy ad 5 Red Sox nosed out the Cleveland] New York, May 5.—When it|| | aes — cee: Fin- Indians, 3 to 2, in the only game of istance runni |] tend 3 the day in which the winning team ae e rear alias enn os 1920—Nurmi, Finland — failed to score 10 or more. runs, | {Ure Of the Olympic program there |} 31:45 4. Each club got seven hits but the| isn’t much to it beyond a tale of 1924—Ritola, Finland— Red Sox bunched their quota in the| Finnish triumph, ates 30:23 1-5 (x). fourth and fifth frames for their| ,, Since 1912, when this little Scan- (x) Olympic record. World’s | + three runs. The Indians scored two|inavian nation first made a big dent | record, 30:06 1-5, by Nurmi. | § fn the first and called it a day. in the Olympic surface, it has been of basketball is indicated by the|tion’s third week of campaigning, namber of meets that are being | jumping from eleventh to first place staged. Aside from the big three—|in the individual batting averages. week. Boston has taken first place | much to keep the Reds within hail- i E —Pet an eae tigher: than’ Philadel i ee Gavusal of” Southampton, England, Bismarck, Fargo and Grand Forks| Unofficial averages for games| phia. baiting mackie Sih wkichioaniy |e ene steward, —Valley City, La Moure, Devils|ending Wednesday show Moore bat- I a st in is pacenthiert the 288. was still far afront the bunioneers eek rccpveae ey aca [rcgertege nmr cpr pag Penn Leads Colleges Chicago, St. Louis and New York Feet heat igemaerringy pm and others are laying the founda-/than the first two weeks of play. are tied for fielding am the lap to Chicago with a aes mn ti for annual invitation affairs. by Foss, St. Paul _ infielder, i i i 7 REO ee a ee meee since mee intolerance vie ae) Olympic Winners) cits at 70, ‘with Brookly time of 384:52:08 for the 2,359.1 The New York Giants adde little short of a procession for Fin- ; fag were 250 high school boys engaged | average and was followed by Ernest ee fourth place only two points away. | miles, while Ed Gardner, Seattle bther win for the east in a National | land's distance running aces. {ere Bouin and in this manner won |in track work in the state 15 years |Orsatti, Minneapolis first baseman.| «Now Pp kiiorrf Pg cea Tiger Grid Captai paces, cece the aa valinrlan trom: eague encounter at Cincinnati| Kolehmainen, Nurmi and iz, erest | seo, today there are nearly ten|Freddy Heimach, of St. Paul, the ye aeine Univea| Liger Grid Captain d ‘where they bowled the R re the Big Three so far as the his-| and finest long distance race that % figu have won more R ——_—__—_—— Il to 7. Seven Pitchers saw sie ory of the 5,000 and 10,000-meter | has probably ever been witnessed.” aggtorn pepe yee eeg am at the of See Anpen Atnclationeicre States in the ee ics pes Nae Forced from School Dead Horse Is Winner and 32 safe hits were made. The|Taces is concerned. Nurmi and|Kolehmainen’s margin in time was| Various meets that have been held|ers with six straight victories and|0f any other collegiate | instiition: in ‘Cl In Britain’ Giants got 19 off four Red mounds-| Ritola will be back again this year, | Only one-tenth of a second. te so far this spring.|no defeats. “He has pitched 50 in-|2ccording to a tabulation Columbia, Mo., May 5.—()—Ab- men. Lefty Faulkner stopped the| seeking fresh laurels at Amster-| Another Frenchman, Josef Guille-|°V" seen ae Pree struck out 15 and allowed but by ~ Pigmnle ress = the sence of Francis Laces, 255-pound — oF | 84 hits, seven runs and eight bases | (rr CS Sith their total|captain-elect, when University of! Ledbury, England, May 5.—(#%)— Yesterday’s Games |jon balls. His teammate, Betts, is| Shines Missouri football candidates re-| A dead horse won the last race in a ry second with four straight wins. — 141, Michigan 87, Purdue sponded to the spring practice call, | steeplechase meeting here and its Indianapolis took the lead in hit-| go Princeton 52 11-12, Harvard 51, | Pre his probable absence next| rider came near sharing its fate. ne Ohioans dead after Barnes and|dam, and there doesn't seem any|mot, broke the Finnish streak in Chaplin had been severely pum-| prospect of heading off either of!1920 by beating Nurmi, then only meled. Pid Purdy, sensational] these s 19 years old, in the 5,000-meter race NATIONAL LEAGUE ting with an average of .310, while y fall when the Tigers bid for the new} “Ben,” the horse, was past the gE 6 St.Paul holds fielding honors with | Chicago, 474. Sumacuse, 45, If Big Six conference title. post a head in front of the runner- Boston .. se 8 5 a 978 average. Columbus dropped | 35° 1.4 Dartmouth 27 1-4, Southern|, Lucas left here to enter business | up, but crashed into a fence, fell, Cincinnati outfielder, suffered a! Certainly the United States isn’t|at Antwerp and handing Paavo his Sprained ankle when he slid into a/ likely to upset the parade of the|only Olympic setback. Nurmi got base in the thir. F revenge on Guillemot in the 10,000- Pirate: t 21 Hits meter race. In 1924, Paavo broke 8 At Forbes field, the Pittsburgh | of Boston, Dave Abbott of Illinois |the Olympic record in the 5,000 but | Pittsbu 13 2 iti 5 ts ston, 5 " second place in team hitting and Fy 7 in Chicago after having been twice| and broke its neck. tes recorded the west’s sole| and Harold Keith of Oklahoma may/|stayed out of the 10,000-meter| Greenfield, Genewich, ® tie for second in team fielding | California 27 1-4, Stanford 24 1-0,1 eliminated from the univergity for i ‘triumph with the Boston Braves as| give America the chance to score a|event, which went to Willie Ritola| and Taylor; Grimes and Gooch. with Kansas City. onsin 14 2-3, Penn State 13 "11-12, | scholastic deficiency. Faculty mem- the victims, 13 to 3. The Pirates| few points. in record-smashing fashion. Morehart, St. Paul keystone|Grepon 13, Notre Dame 11, George-| bers were doubtful about his re- unleased a ferocious batting attack! France alone has given the Finns| Second place is the best an Ameri- , is leading in stolen bases| tows 10, Williams 9 2-3, B ii 4 r sacker, turn, possibly onl, their special} ried against three Braves pitchers. Kent| a real tussle in either of these long|can has ever gained in either of | New York.. having pilfered seven. California 8, Indians #*,, Rovio Fg deen Aa pecis' | where he was declared the winner. oe riield, nemesis of the Corsairs| distance features since they first|these races. Lewis Tewanima, the| Cincinnati ........ ———_ Brown 7 2-3, Wesleyan 7, Bow- candidates for the cap- pagel 5 t season, was knocked out of the|were put on the program, Hannes|Indian, was runner-up to Koleh-| Barnes, Chaplin, doin 5. ig e tainey after Missouri won the final CAPTAIN INELIGIBLE jox in the first inning. Before it] Kolehmainen, first of the great Fin-|mainen in the 10,000-meter race in| Hogan; Luque, Edwards, Kolp, Jab- Sree ee IE championship of the old Missouri was aver Donie Bush’s rampaging | nish champions, scored a “double”|1912. In the 5,000 meters the same | lonowski, and Hargrave. RENE LACOSTE WINS Valley conference last fall were W. Wan jad collected 21 safe hits. Paul| in 1912 but he had a hair-raising | year George Bonhag was fourth and peasy Bournemouth, England, May 5.—|E. Smith, tackle, and Miller Brown; bs rer and Hie, Traynor accounted | duel with Jean Bouin of France be-|Tel Berna fifth. Since then the Others postponed. (®)—Rene Lacoste, French Davis|end, both prominently mentioned in aa aan, fae 5 Aaa d poison’s” string| fore winning the 5,000-meter race|only American point winner in ——— cup tennis star, won the all-England all-star teams. Lucas, ie Gas opps and a triple.| on the Stockholm track. cither event was Johnny Romig, the AMERICAN LEAGUE (By the Associated Press) hard courts championship by defeat- for oe Grimes hurled steady ball} From all accounts that 5,000-|former Penn State runner, who was RH EE New York—Joe Glick, Brook- | ing Patrick D. B. Spence in straight’ all-American winners. meter final 16 years ago was one of |fourth to Nurmi in the 5,000 four Chicago 4 18 0] lyn. defeated sets 6-2, 6-2, 6-2, é Jis in St. Joseph, Mo. 10 11 1 Rain prevented hostilities between| the greatest distance races ever run.|years ago. Not a single Yankee Foilipeies Islands (10). Andre the 1 as : Thomas, Cox and Crouse; Pennock the A. A. U. i in, Ne b. Down the Derby Stretc! tomer 2 the Brooklyn Dodgers and Cardinals Bouin, who has a stadium named | placed in either race in 1920. New York.. Routis, France, outpointed Sam- after him in Paris now, set the pace} The outlook is brighter but not and Collins. OLYMPIC ROOTING RULES Amsterdam, Holland, May 5.—() : of St. Louis and the Phillies and my Dorfman, New York (10). most of the way and fought off|sensational this year. Lermond, a § | = Cubs at Chica , Frisco Grande, Enlingine Is- ° Kolehmainen’s challenges right] rugged youngster, should give a lands, won over jarvis, = Paavo Nurmi Learned | down to the stretch. good account of himself at 5,000] ° RH El England, on a foul (2). ; to Run to See Gi “With only 20 meters left,” runs| meters. In the longer, race, his| Detroit ......0++06 . 2 —_— . j un ee Girl) the official story, “The Finlander| Boston club-mate, Robert Dalrym- Pilladalohie Hee 2 Suen Milwaukee — Carlo Garcia, ee —. pressed up abreast of Bouin, who} ple is nominated as our best bet| Whitehill, Sullivan, | a | Mexico, and Pedro Amador, New Orleans, La, May 5.—()—| now, possibly, involuntarily because |by Jack Ryder, his coach. Joie| Hargrave; Quinn and Foxx. Panama, drew (10). Eddie An- Nurmi was noted for his|of the unheard-of strain of the race,|Ray has his heart set now on do- nee H E| derson, Chicago, _ technically | Fe @voidance of girls in his tour of| pressed Kolelmainen out to the|ing the marathon but if his feet s 6 10 g| knocked out Luis Ramos, America, but the fleet-footed Fin-| right hand side of the track while,/cannot stand that route Joie may’ St. Louis. 7 ae Be sistance star. literally ran after.| at the same time, he did his very|turn to either the 5,000 or 10,000 Bi een aa rT: ‘Wright, girls of his native land so much | utmost to hold his own against his| with a good chance of doing some- N eel 7 er, de nd Sel pr| Minneapolis — Dick Daniels, the became a champion, his| rival. But Kolehmainen, with thing. Among the college men, Bill gg Libis if t Ruel,| University of Minnesota, de- » John Nurmi, declare: stubborn energy, gained decimeter!Cox of Penn State and Dave Ab- senbee, Brown, "| feated Buzz Griffith, Sioux . John is in New Orleans as chief; after decimeter, and, just on thei bot of Illinois, are good -prospects City, Ia. (10); Ollie Bartlett, farpenter of a bridge construction | very winning post, flung himself be-|at 5,000 meters. H =| Minneapolis, knocked out How- - 4 rd Mayberry, Duluth (6). i 0 as ) “ealled Alavo, where the girls were A Hudlin and L. Sewell; Mact an Another Golf Course ; ney Md + eager aee Els A 7 5 5 ludlin and H fsyden| Anotner : 68 2, Shed to call on some “Triends 18 |___ Lightweight Champ Signs for Fight | sapien on U. 8.-Canada Line] -} and 29 for Minnesota. 7 : ae BOCIA — : pel BMS Cs of merely walking the <<< TE : Rican AMIBICAN ABBOCIATION Vancouver, B. C., May 5. se VE EWEN CONNECTIONS. — and began running. I ran iohal i Ke first, but Paavo was too swift z P : ‘ Chumban : Oe + LA gy aad sontien co. ihe nectlgne ip Paving Distr A ges St. Paul.. Canada boundary| §: : Ms and I gave it up. lly} Cee eae Fishbaugh, may become quite the thing in the the Cit rscnived oy North, Dako 4 eee = me so good that track men c Polli, McQuaid, and Gaston. future. ors heard of him and Bs 2 : z j While announcement was being Bese cred tats a, chanpiog. > a : R H made at Boston of the establish- inrians, and specitications iri rail FE 4 i Toledo ment of a golf club on ite Nemeer work on a thle nf - ot later 1st, 8 Gustes border, another internation: fielated “wot "cet tae Sey B.C. Each bid must be Samuél Hill of Seattle, good r & certified check 4 peace advo- Hundred, ($600,) Louisville, Ky., May 5—(AP)—Reigh Count, Mrs. John D. Herte’s July. The course will be! chostaut colt, has reigned for many months ‘ss ths ‘Memos tine near. Peace Arch, t_by Mr.! favorite. Not only is this due to the stellar work of the blaze-faced thor-| with Hill some years ago to commemo-| ooughbred during the fall racing seacon of 1927 but also to the splendid | £°F™ rate 100 years of between! way he has responded in winter and spring training. “ry Canada and the United States. oeartectly proportioned and of a beauty: 80 pronounced as to attract fhe sum ft ne Thousand , pen yeas 5 re 01 course, Reigh Count a rs guar! Jbumy McLarnin, Pacific coast boxer, became the official challen Works for Walter Johnson | fessina, As a two-year-old he started in 14 facon, ‘Fle wos four of these | Perkormance, of the contract the lightweight ed Rage the prevtiations picture anes were former White Sox] and was yn in three, Pag napiaced in seven of the starts. He| reserve’ the right 1 ci Mandel! title-hol signing contract ¢ gained In_ purses owner, winning the Kentucky Jockey | bids. for a 15-round go in New York, May'17. Tex, Rekard, right, 1» promotor fohn-| Club Stakes and the Walden Handicap and finish! oF the, bot. , ern Shore Handicap and the Belmont Futurity. = "°°°"4 '@ the East- 5. u é PS Abhaee ete EL 1b Raa age + trapadtanbabeeadh sesh +