The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 29, 1928, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1928 BISMARCK BOYS TO ORGANIZE BASEBALL LOOP TONIGHT. LEGION PLANS Charlie Boardman Has Beén Signed to Pitch for Bismarck Grays BOYS’ SANDLOT GENE SARAZEN | Knights of Roaring Road Equipped with Sturdier Cars for Big Race WLEOD WILL |OSSIE ORWOLL ONLY MACK TWIRLER BALL SALVAGE THANKS HORSE | PACE MANDAN ABLE TO TURN BACK YANKEE HORDE mci ee, 2") FOR CONDITION MEMORIAL, DAY( aes c= sor ocr WALTER HAGEN hed Sorrow Nowe ort] ORITIGIZED BY tntere Beartnan Good: | Oe ateay | IRISH | GOLFERS © TRAINERS ARE STRONGER tis roe tae sete wai Storm of Recrimination possibly last, crucial series of the| Breaks About The Haig’ New Additions Bolster) season proved serious only insofar) fon Quitting Tourney 4 # it concerned Connie k’s Ath- trengt! ° pe Saath th of Fighting Man Before the tremendous hitting Pope ett Northern Ireland, May dan Club for Game power of the New York Yankees. (?)—Walter Hi eae an tt Pesala make criticized by the British is ed ired only one vic- fe The -Bismarck -Mandan | tory in the six-game series that Lanai ee Ce baseball clash tomorrow | ended yesterday. Consequently the|center of a similar storm in Ire- at the Slope Fair grounds Ruled me raiteen Had an ion | land today. diamond ‘has been called | Sn, tn fe eat” | tie auton withizew fom, the for 2:30 Manda: ‘pl se golf championship, start- 3 p. m. Mandan The last engagement saw_ the |i, He explained that he time. enn steam-roller the Mack-|was too tired because of his conti men into submission, 11 to 4. For! ental tour to compete. oe a Return to Winning Form At- ‘WORLD SERIES’ PLANNED, tributed to Horseback Ex- ercising Past Winter Boys from Coast to Coast to Play N. al Elimina- BY BRIAN BELL. | | | s the horse, it resident play ina tournament and series Bismarck bo} Fla.,” was the reply. former open and P. G. A. explained: el right this year for the Legion J requested ing to be TARO y " the id time in th ries, th i Le i s competitive golf. There are Charle Boardman has been signed | the secon le series, the} Some - i ce a al reasons, but I place the to pitch for the Bismarck Gre: 3 for famed speed of Lefty Grove failed | ing eons” ‘elit inated, pee \ local “Isa Founntienty the balance of the season. This was|t© stop Babe Ruth and company.|hut the golfing union of Ireland made a ; " a Ail. winter d xede: choeseback the announcement made today by| Grove was meat fer the champions! tumed, tives of, servi i Saunt iplayinecgole enRe Neil Churchill, manager. in the first game last Thursday and!" Alan Kidd, secretary of the union, faiias are inv eping. I have never been 4 uniform Sun.| it was no different yesterday. Aft-| charged that Hagen” had broken Hees a G My health has been nd made his 1928 debut by|¢t his teammates had red inne | £aith and violated an agreement to gto J don mostly off foe a working Jack Gesellchen of Mercer | four to two lead in the third inn-| olay in the Irish open p ided BR UCLAR ELE ee for a base on balls after he had| ing when Al Simmons hit a homer | DAY if che tran open provided jan ttn ahece, 1 wouldt hinted at the old time clouting prow. | With two on base, Grove was pound- | Proniion Bicrclt Was aueanged Ao GHAIIBIONEH pas ess by sending one of the Butcher | ed for five runs'in the fifth, Tony | him, in Dublin last, s arranged and t behind the horse I place Boy’s offerings into the west. Lazzeri crashin; Hagen playing with I. Qui Dub- riend Artie McGovern, who Charlie has been working his| Stands. Orwol fo Bod rh tort keh in id a lot for Babe Ruth's baseball stout left arm for the past two| ished the game. Henry Johnson| 72 Fons Wr ’wolon and W, Holley, “/and Johnny Farrel’s golf. Artie weeks and is ready for action at the and Archie Campbell, recruits, held | /°Stion fe Dy, Sion "Rtorned fixed me up with a diet list and a present time. Just when he will] the Athletics to eight hits Hagen, id’ telegraphing his wi preseiplion for Urinkingea Ieee take the mound for Bismarck is un- Satine dover lla ral, prenoeedh te. comtettate “bis : water and | worked in his gym decided OF all the sharp-shooters Mack | rave Pie escende of tie match 1 T went south for the winter. 6 While Churchill was strengthen-| Sent against the Yankees during the share of the proceeds of the match fen ANESHGEES GLU” aMeS 2 Paclo ine his pitching staff by signing the| 8eties only Ossie Orwoll was suc-|to any Irish Tne Meer and between them In cars made faster and better able to stand the gaff by a year of experimentation, the greatest auto |old American association and North- Ried cinaee totee every decided not eareeeeie Tengen’ yd race drivers in the game are tuning uy for the big 500-mile whirl Memorial Day at the Indianapolis Motor |¢F" league hurling hero, Roy Mc-| Phians to a & to 2 victory in the sec-) Oui, "aR Mice Oo Meee Hagen ® Se Speedway, an airplane view of which is shown above. Besides George Souders, Earl Devore and Tony |Leod suddenly blossomed forth as a] 0nd, game of Thursday's double. | tives aoe ae i REIGH COUNT HURT Gulotta, who finished first, second and third last year, the field of contestants for the $100,000 prize money | Prospective twirler also. Yankees pourtied out 66 hite cn| “Hagen not only has injured his is to include Cliff Durant, Cliff Woodbury, Phil Shafer, Leon Duray. and Pete De Paolo, 1925 winner and MeLeod Is a Hurler MEL beyracored “4a mies as rtsman here, but i tucerrecorashcliee: : McLeod, like Boardman made his| Which “hey scored 42 runs, an aver-jname as a sportsman here, but in, : first appearance of the season|®B¢ of seven run; and 11 1-3 hits|directly has hurt the good name of against Mercer. He is a versatile|® all Americans,” Kidd said. “Hagen ., baseball . The Bismarck forris, big right hander of | seems to forget that he not only rep- Cut Received at Start of Race Forces Withdrawal of Vic- tor from Races Beef and Iron Brigade Prepares for Olympiad [KANSAS CITY HAS ASSOCIATION LEAD igh coach can play infield or out- field, Church knew he could catch, and now it is learned that he is a pitcher. The additions of Boardman and McLeod to the flinging end of the the Boston Red Sox, saw a promis-| resents himself but his country as ing winning streak when! well when he comes abroad. When Tom Zachary and the Washington! he makes an arrangement to appear Senators beat him 2 to 0. jach|in the Irish open championship and pitcher allowed only five hits butjall arrangements are made, includ- the bi of the game favored the} ing the draw with a partner for him, tors. the Is his entry, we resent it.’ Percentage Column Tie Btoken club has been sorely, needed. At the) “"Walter Beck, former Western | ——————=—————> for First Time in Many | the only reliable. Jack Gesellchen | League pitcher, struck out nine men Days Monday on my Veeatiesaan After 20 Years Invulnerability, | ieago, May °7.—()—Mrs. John = D. Hertz of Chicago believes she and| Ralph Rose’s Record Tum- | her Kentucky Derby wit » Reigh + | Lou Gehrig said: * Count, are the victims of a°$50,000| bles—German Threatens ; 2 SEE ki Supremacy of Yank Aces—| any other sport Th ve p! | ese bay. Kuck to Lead Robertson's | | SHOT-PUT CHAMPIONS The Olympic shot - putting champions and their marks: Year Winner Country Distance 1896—Garrett, U. 8. 36 ft., 2 in. 1900—Sheldon, U.S. 46:3 1-8 1904—Rose, U.S. 48:7 ee ‘I 7 .| and allowed two hits as the St. ss y. Mil report June 1. With the hear | Eouie Browns nosed out Chicago, | “You're smoking so0 the Greys will need an experienced | ‘01, Seven cf the strikeouts came} j much,’ said my and guaranteed company of tossers. “ine patio Soe eee a “Tekee tip. go up fe ge Connally 00s i oe as though Churchill has id seven bits, one of them aj north for a time’ home run by Lou Blue, Brown first! | But I fooled him—I Boardman will not start against] baseman. switched toa milder many days there were no ties in the the Mandan Trainers tomorrow at| Only one game was on the Nation- cigar— U.S. 50:3 7-8(x) gprs saris ea ts top rung in|the Missouri Slope Fair grounds, poe rast but that saw the| | It’s Tom Moore—and 1920—Porhola, ® e pestis i: Hendy ce The management is emhpathic about cinnati Reds strengthen their it costs but a dime. seria f y OY gd that as they wart to bring the vet- | hold Finland 48:7 1-8 - Fs a1 oe By ALAN J. GOULD Oly mpi ‘4. World’: f ] will not be hurt. 2 to 1. Pete Donohue, pitch- Associated Press ‘Sports Editor) | record, St feet, by Ralph Rose, || GU3,-0F temporary leadership, The|” tye probabilities are that MeLeod | ing his first game of the yesr, held; Count could have won the Belmont 2 York, May 29.—The b 4 t] ‘1 the Cubs to feties, sensation- | kes and thereby establish full] icon brigade'is forming to the riche | @eis,SBrine Joka. Kuck, (Los |) to 7, but Zive bases on balls and il get a chance to do his stuff:| a tielding by tbe Reds cutting down | ‘i i oc” Love is ready for the mound im to three-year-old supremacy |for the big Ol: ympic heaving con- | feet 1-2 inch, and Karl Hirsch- bunched hits Proved - their undo: y Chicago, May 29.—(?)—Kansas City was in sole possession of first 40:4.4-5 place in the American Association 1908—Rose, U.S. 46:7 1-2 today and for the first time in 1912—MeDonald, le at the post in the Derby, the big red Chicago colt was kicked, suffering a cut about an inch long . on his left hind leg. When the| Coterie wound appeaied to be healing, he was entered in the $50,000 Belmont stakes, June 9. Yesterday it was announced he had been withdrawn ; from the rich stakes, as the cut was | still sore and bothersome. s. Hertz was confident Reigh “When I was a hayseed, I loved than anything else in th id and when I received my f r| to play professionally tha club that wanted me to pay me willing to do f Ty ¢ Boardman Cut Tomorrow NOTE—This is the twelfth in the series of inside stories on | the Olympics. ‘ s Ty Cobb: “ to make em better Eddie Co! great melti Amcricanism. As a further evidence of the junior diamond major league that the wo _ thr d but like Boardmar. Churchill will] the enemy whenever they threaten-| well as become the biggest money |tost. This year the athletic beef is | feld, Germany, has been credit- || “Sndianapolis climbed from fourth|*#ke no chance of the strikeout king | ¢2- Donohue ape Rite eer be transferred this week from [£0808 Out’ the 16-pound iron shot | ed with toss of SI feet, 9 1-2 |! to third place by winning its third|*PFinging @ ligament. pel a So a | Ne, to. Ar. |¢2, unheard of distances, at home| inches) straight victory over Toledo, while| assignment, the same lineup that| The St. Louis Cards have signed of a record-busting battle of brawn St, Paul dropped to fourth by losing |faced Mercer will take the field|ome of the best college players of Mig g@). Mm, (@]@) °4 a vi Mrs. . aceae, this 1912 tussle w: ivate fight.|@ heavy hitting contest to Minne- i the "s_crop in the south in ae ; y tl fell 4 : ussle was a private fig! x . It will be ic sear: P : permanently injured in the Derby here a week ago Sunday by a 7 to 6|C-) college captain this year. score, a . x foot circle at Amsterdam. | third qualifier for the finals but his 5 jof training simply to safeguard his )t.24 been shooting at the 51-foot | Short of the best of either McDonald feated Louisville’ 12 to 6. uture condition. We hope to race | pcorg hung up in 1909 by that |°r Rose. Pat, on the first attempt | 7° uisville, 12 to 6. | Jar series games. Teams entered in the Li tourney will b: ade up of pl: who will not have edt seventeenth birthdays by January/him again this summer.” famous Michigan mammoth, Ralph|in the final, got off his tremendous f 1, 1929. \ ETE Rose, but it wasn't until this spring |Tecord heave, breaking Rose’s 1904 GHTS Fred Miller, known as ti i Fs | that ‘they finally brought it down, | Olympic mark, It clinched the title, aire member of Notre Dame’s 1928 7 AMERICAN I Once softened up the record began | for Ralph was unable to touch it in 1G football team, will ISSUES INVITATIC ‘ to be kicked around with ridiculous | three attempts. Knute Rockne on his pei ‘ ae ae x ! M AT HONORS ease. Out in the | Pasitie Coast Petals bpd aed at ould of the ested Olympic and European tour } myrtation to } . John Kuck, the sturdy Kansas prod- | itors were is summer. a ze |uet, got in a fling of 51 fect 1-2/cqual to the task of checking the Paes asreclated Freee a a, ia, Dall teams and join : at inch. A few days later he put the| Finns in 1920 and Porhola broke) ,truadeiphla — Midge: | Wool BIGGEST ROAD RACE Legion junior league has been issued | Martin i by| ball out an inch or so further, al-|through to take the Olympic shot-| Witte Davies, Charleroi, Pa. Paris, May 29.—(?)—France re- by Bert Weston, Amcrican Legion | Defeats Martin Plestina by|¢hough this mark wasn’t allowed, In| Put championship from America for - oi ” |cently si what is believed to be athletic director. What Sports Writers Term Practice Kuck has been credited | the first and only time. Houser, Hills id the biggest road race on record with i June 1. . with heaves of around 54 and 55/ and Hartranft, finishing 1-2-3 in the 1,064 starters, of whom 640 finished. ! aoa Onpanze A ‘Swing to Jaw’ feet. «|last Olympics, got revenge on the New Orleans ~- Tony Conan Emile Chapuis, a miner, finished the j Before the echoes of Kuck’s rec- | Finnish stars. eri knocked out Claudie Wilson, |g 1.2 miles in 48 minutes, 24 sec- PERE ARAM RUE Ota ae raj 0rd toss had died away news of aj Bimiaaham, a). Bt aerome onds to win first place and a sedan ; where | Minneapolis, May | 20. (P)—Ed/ sensational heave by a German, baci knocked out Johnny automobile, but he lost his amateur ; tween teams represet g N - te in, i aul 5 gota, North and South Dakota and e vere called on to pro-|',0e, Bo0d enough to wi shot | Ree. cole Ge Meee | peahters; teat MAT j Wisconsin. Fach wrestler had gained a fall|Putter in probably the most consist- | Holtzer, France, knocked out | lowers of the Lubbock team in the ae nd they were. struggling for -a| ently good group the United States | Harry, Crisp, Cleveland, (6); | West Texas league are holding rain : CARSON BEATS FLASHER | | third when Plestina went down from| has ever had, Four years ago the/ © two ON SAME BASE say nese Grend Minas, | chaghh.. Whe: & sizone. wind. cov: ; Carson won from Flasher 13 to 8) ot ‘sports writers at the ring-| Bis, Three were Houser, Hills and] when » player is being run immy Russo. Grand Rapids, | ered the Lubbock diamond with a es doosely vie titi same, caused side said was ; swing to the jaw.|Hartranft. Hille is muy oF comnts down between the bases and the PR go Opa eet ro dense coed ot dust an bit te partly by the condition of the new) 7) fond ‘1 j|tion now and the comebacks of the rs at a game wit ‘oleman diamond. Baltcries for Flasher—| The champion: felon neering ae other two, including Bud Houser, the| following te scrunies the troit, (2). and “rain” checks were issued. 1-4 Peccraend er iat tone ron Fred Tonneman of Chicago who then|champion, are doubtful. ue year! the original occupant regain eeiterling & grass hurriedly left the ring when the|there are at least a half dozen) the base, making two runners field play of Paul Allen for Carson) cyowd. plainly displeased by the rul-|college or club stars doing close) Sy «he same base, who has the again featured. lnee suEPed aboue the See to 50 feet or hetter. TEAC tet AAC In ake i Plestina was unconscious for four| _ Herb Schwarze of the Illinois A. Sin hes CE SS C. broke the world’s. indoor record Peaper, way. t9. mane the. play? i | to the swing that sent the Chicago-| last winter in the National A. A. U. Did You Know That- an down peel “foul” which they aie championships with a mark of 49} | fase stray telenge t ee tended should have disqualified] feet. 6 7-8 inchs Dave Aldelman |°F!8inal occupan' a fo ing Junior Coen, the little fellow || Lewis and given the match to Ples-|of Georgetown, the indoor intercol- | runner advances to the base vacated, who made the Davis cup team, || tina. ; legiate champion, has bettered 49/he cannot be put out while holding eet Jewish It’s an Irish Lewis won the first fall with a|feet consistently. Besides Houser /that base, while the original holder not lin to George M. Cohan’ || te hold in 39 minutes and 40 sec-|and Hartranft out on the West is being run down. same en ce inthe ‘ballyhoo {| °"ds» while Plestina pinned the|Coast there are Eric Krenz, Stan-| When the original holder regains B mete in that "Feaeh || champion’s shoulders in the second|ford sophomore; Biff Hoffman, El-| the base in safety, it belongs to him business | eee will boom the || With a flying mare in 14 minutes|mer Gerkin and other huskies. and the following runne: who ad- Lockhart’s death will boom the |! and 33 seconds. The third had gone| It would be difficult to pick the|vanced there is not exempt from Indianapolis races ‘iil ph ence 1/4 r.inutes and 30 seconds before|best four out of this group but un-|being put out even though he is that the game is still danger- |) Piestina went down and Lewis was|less Houser breaks into the list|standing on the base with the ous . . . Cobb says Connie Mack 1! awarded the bout. again Kuck, Krenz, Adelman and| original occupant. is the greatest man in baseball |! John Freberg, Minneapolis, won|Schwarze may be nominated. Wien tao fen, ate. standing on --, McGraw is a shark at bridge || from George Hills, Rockford, Ill.,| The first Qlympic shotput cham-| the same base, the team in the field and three-cushion billiards . . - || after 27 minutes and 37 seconds of|pionship in 1896 was decided by alshould touch the player other than The golf association says that || the roughest sort of mauling, whilejtoss of 36 feet, 2 inches, a mark’ the original occupant, the player ese ishing toe hol e' acl imp- | asham: of nowadays. e m= " kind of good training ...He ran |] son of Wahpeton, H a ym-|down. Touching him with the ball DUTCH REG.U-S. PAT. OFF. No other than so skillful a blend of such fine, mellow, old, tropic-flavored tobaccos as the fine La Fendrich could impart an aroma and satisfaction so telished by particular smokers. at 10 cents D., in 23 min-|pic record of 50 feet, 3 7-8 inches i wager aipeniine to fond utes 57 seconds. oy set in 1912 by Pat McDonald, Honig Hes erie Henan be 1S one u ‘ish open pub- ————__—_____ the big New York policeman, as the The pros. say that || HOOSIER BASKETBALL PLAYS |culmination of one of the. greatest |toly vin races, ele en edennetd in the British Indianapolis, May 2).— Basketball rivalries of the old weight-heaving | a base, to return to his original base fans paid $205,708.09'to sce the an-|era, if he can get there before being nual Indiana high school champion-| McDonald and Ralph Rose, then|touched ship this year. ith ills paid,|the world’s record-holder, were two the Indiana High School Athletic as-|central figures of this long-stand- sociation still had @ balance of|ing duel of beef and brawn. Two ee scam leith te Leponnd Balk They aay wi eT . y ma NO MISSILES FOR FANS _|not have quite the technique % erg May 29. — Fans at|some of the modern weight men but Wrigley Field, home of the Chicago|for sheer bulk, strength and com- Cr no longer may cast a pop petitive spirit they have never been had won two previous Olym- pie champlonahipe end was ‘anxious ‘to make it three. From the start, at ae Brac 80! id into paper cups de

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