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r REGATTA SEES LATEST FANCY Szent More Than Million Dot-| lars on His Sixteenth ‘Shamrock’ HE WILL NEVER GIVE UP Marks Himself as Real Sports- man in Consistently Backing Lost Cause : BY HENRY L. FARRELL Another million dollars was tossed on the water off Cowes ~ecently when a new Shamrock boat was en- tered by Sir Thomas Lipton in the annual royal ‘regatta just to sec what she could do. : Represented in the new Shamrock, the ’steenth of her name and spe- cies, was a fortune in money, more than two years of mental labor by the best of marine architects and the never dying hope and ambition of Sir Thomas that some day he will achieve the only desire that a fabu- lous fortune has not satisfied. The veteran sportsman, beloved in almost every country of the’ globe, wants to win the ancient America Cup, which is, perhaps, the most treasured trophy in the world. He has been trying for more years than he now likes to confess. He has spent at least ten millions of dollars in pursuit of his ambition and never hus he succeeded. But he insists that as long as he has the physical energy to commis- sion architects to pursue a almost hopeless mission and as long as he has the means to keep him in pur- suit of his great ambition he never will give up. Launched at Cowes The new Shamrock was launched and sailed in the Cowes regatta literally to see what she could do. The greatest yacht builders in the world were on board to pick her every flaw, to mark her every de- fect so that they could begin imme- diately to build a better yacht that would be ready in two years when Sir Thomas hopes to challenge the New York Yacht Club again for the slassic cup. The season is approachit.> when the outstanding ath'etie stars will be picked. There will be the voting on the most valuable ball players, the rating of the tennis and golf Stars, the adjustment of handicaps for polo players and the Nominations for the All-American football teams. It might not be out of place to institute a new class and design some kind of a citation for the world’s champion sportsman, There mignt not be many candidates for, while an elastic term, the title of A sportsman could have strict ine terpretations, strictions on the eligibility qual- tions, Sir Thomas Tipton: would be a hard man to defe: ~ Regard. less of what might have been sai about his motives, he has been co sistent. Perhaps his private busi- ness was infinitely benefited by the 1 exploitation that yachting gave his name but he, beyond all doubt, is in a rather sacred sport for only one purpose, and that is to win the cup. i Backs Lost Cause ie millions spent on is pm: tess efforts to win the cus dtr aarivr to his am- Yor the millions been only drops But he marks him- glass him as a my bition, it is true, he has spent have in his fortune. THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1928 World’s Champion Sportsman ee & His Never Dying Hope Is To Build a Yacht That Will Enable Him to Come to the - United States and Win the Most Sought for Cup in the World . WELTER CHAMPION JOE DUNDEE FACES THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE ELEVEN : Sir Thomas Lipton Spends Fabulous Fortu ANNUAL ROYAL |Olson Gives Bismarck One Bin ne ssaion GETS | ONLY SAFE HIT | FOR GRAY CLUB Addington, on Mound for Bis- marck, Has Bad Second In- ning Again ee @ OLSON WHIFFS ELEVEN Sagehorn Triples to Score Nagel 2nd Scores Himself on Overthrow Under a darkened sky that made it almost impossible to see the base- ball at-times, the Diainerd Northern Pacific nine defeated the Bismarck Grays last night by a score of 8 to 2. Less than 100 persons were scat- tered throughout the grandstand to watch the game, and perhaps an equal number were seated in cars parked around the diamond. During the last few innings the players had considerable difficulty in seeing the little horsehide sphere, many of the heavi hitters were chalked up with strikeouts. Many more strikes were called on the batters who thought they were safe in letting the ball go by. Addington, Bismarck hurler, had a tough stretch of luck in the second frame, when with two men on bases he gave Swanson, the opposing right fielder, a free ticket to the first sack, expecting to fan the next man up. The next batter, Uddenberg, Brainerd shortstop, and a weak hit- ter on the team, landed on the ball for a three base hit, bringing in Nutting, Ringer and Swanson. Ud- denberg was brought in on a single off the bat of Loom, Brainerd third sacker. Taking the diamond in an attempt to at least tie the score, the Grays managed to get two runs across the home plate, but could get no further. Nagel, who got to first on Peter. son’s error, made second on a p: d ball and home on Sagehorn’s triple sacker. Sagehorn later got home on Uddenberg. SIR Thomas AIPTON OFTEN DEFeaTEp— Never LickeD/ Handling of Combine Grain Is Problem to |priinent NP AB R HPO A E NEGRO TONIGHT BARRING MORE RAINS| “Elevator Operators =e o3 ° a seiaecneal son, p . . 21 ; ‘ Hurr, ¢ .. . Joe's Title Will Not Be at Stake| Deauville Censors — ae eee | Masse, 1b 52 a ot in Fight Tonight in Chicago, Its Own Morality): reports § received by the state rail-| Nutting, cf ..... 4 a However, for Young Jack vo hat worry is how best to handle | Ringer, If A iD : Thompson, San Francisco, ;grain threshed by combines. Tests| Swanson, rf .... 3 Y Among any number and with no|#?0ther deluge, Joe Dundee, the wel- Jim Mullen has postponed the bout between Rene de Vos, Belgian mid- dleweight, and Cowboy Jack Willis of Texas. from tonight to. next Thursday. self as a real oprtsman in so con- ‘ @ ful racing stable sistently backing a lost cause, Multi - millionaires seldom play along with hobbies to the frenzy point of fanatictism. They do not like to be associated with a losing use. If they can’t have a success. of horses they will ae have any stable. But the Eng- Sportsman goes hasing his rainbow, rie ue le is all the more remarkable Decause he has been told, and told oy the men who have made for- him indulge his hob- ever’ can hope to win the cup as long as the charter pro- vides that the challenger must: be across the Atlantic. yacht sturdy enough to sail across the Atlantic, he has been ‘old, can ever hope to beat the frail little things of teauty that are built in the United States. He has deen urged to seek some kind of a change in the charter that would place less of’ a specifications han- dicap in the challenging yacht, but he becomes horrified at the thought of it and tells his men to keep on duilding. The men in the fight racket mirht call him a sucker for betting acainst the sure thing game that he is trying to beat, bu 'n the game for that, He is play- ing for the sport of it, and if there is a more consistent or persistent |. sportsman, or a better: sportsman, Finns Accuse Russians of War-Like Measures ,Helsingfors, Finland, Aug. 30.— que ati iat eee speacines ing war! méastres ave been observed of late on the part of the Soviet the border give official color to many news- paper reports of Russia military preparations on Russia’s northwest- arn frontier. ‘ According to the Minister of De- fense, however, these movements are not of such a nature as to give ae for anxiety to Finland her- self. Observers who have been sent ‘by Finnish newspapers to the , border BEAUTY NO ART i bjt 8. D.— (cge a sg ve lor luces may be a wor! a but the South Dakota law calls the establishment s “work shop.” As such Attorney General Buell F. Jones classified them in stating that the minimum wage statute applies to the parlors. : EXPECT RATHER WEAK TEAM Wi Jefferson oft ne it oi ti Pros- are not ‘optimistic over : for their: football team this fall.. Too. many. stars graduated, they say. 3 Wed: 8. PAT. OP, HEROES ARE MADE-NoT BOR’ Deauville, France, Aug. 30.—(AP) (show that combined grain comes to Will Enter Over Welter|Gay and wicked Deauville has ap- the elevator with a relatively high |p: Totals ......34 2 45 pointed a moral censor. [percentage of motature, ‘This makes Bemarck "ABR TOA E Limit They call her the “Queen Bee.” lit difficult to store and ship. Se sana — She wens eC a oe sae wom- ‘i Only a few elevators = tee Guides, 4 3 0710 ae oad en and allows in the gambling casino ‘drying equipment, according to Ben ¢ ~ Aine Hed no Sipe only adventuresses with good char- Larkin, helen commissioner ae 4 3 . , 3 ight champion, a1 ung Jack | acters. charge of elevators, but more would |‘ hig 4 3 a6 Thowiaen Barren ee will| Here where millions change hands |do so if they were sure the com- Fyre aa : : . 06 4 battle 10 rounds to @ decision at | nightly over the green-topped tables | bine is hero to stay as a method of /comnoon.P (3-7 t 9 9 9 6 0 3|the White Sox park tonight. at baccarat or chemin-de-fer, gather |harvesting grain. «|Fuller, 3b: .. 3 0020 Dundee’s title will not be endan- | beautiful women from every country| Although the grain movement is} ci crs) ° : Aeon gered, as Thompson has agreed to|in the world seeking easy fortune in| constantly increasing and will soon |°"" BER POU eee ar ae enter the ring over the welterweight | return for smiles. reach its peak no complainis have Totals.......28 2 121 imit. In the code of the moral censor received of inadequate trans- Gesellsch 3 laced Si i ib beutorad somal fcons:toit mon heen spats mare, cere portation facilities or lack of cars i ert lschen replaced Simonson in |< night until tonight because of a|has been put on the casino’s payroll to make. shipments, Larkin said. ecm dimines: heavy downpour in the afternoon.|to prevent too much ~--rdal and ob- : Ge Brainerd . 040 100 3—8 10 5 mae fot pe ieee with oe viate that most disagreeable happen- FIRE HORSES SCARCE Bismarck = 020 000 0-2 2 2 0 -Dundee Promote! ing, a call by the police. he knows faces of almost all men Raa ascg Lea Grd pga Summary: Three base hits—Ud- | parade here was spoiled to some ex- denberg and Sagehorn; two base hits Actresses, artists, society women SPAR ER and adventuresses are under the cen- ST. PAUL KIDS WIN sor’s watchful eye. All must have! Denver, Aug. 30.—)—St. Paul cards of admittance and must do| defeated Salt Lake City, 13 to 5, in nothing to “hurt the reputation of | sectional American Legion junior the house.” baseball here. Monte Carlo, Aug. 30.—(AP)— Revolutionary agitation has spread through the principality of Monaco, and recent developments indicate that the country is on the verge of serious internal trouble. In contrast with the gaiety of the throngs in the casino and other re- sorts, a huge meeting of Monacan citizens has been held to protest against the present system of gov- ernment. Nearly 1,000 persons at- tended, and a delegation was named to lay their grievances before Prince Louis Il, This feeling of unrest h: OH , DON” SOHER ON MY ACCOUNT! We ONW BEEN LATE been owing steadily for two years. Ob- For wort THREE a say that it is more wide- MORNINS ris Weert. spread than is apparent on the sur- face, since tha several thousand em- ployes of the casino dare not join it openly for fear of losing their po- sitions. The complaints mostly enter round ine. administration of the a sino, which controls the principality AND ONY ONE yey financially and js the leading admin- istrative Yr. They also claim Pap WE on the prince has ceded practically all power to foreigners. TO TRAIN BADGERS . Bill, Fallon, former Missouri trainer, will serve in the same ca- pacity at the University of Wiscon- sin this THEY CALL ME TH LAST 5) 5 TOM MOORE CiCARS nes on Racing Yachts gle; Brainerd Shop Team Wins 8 to 2 He’s in the Army! 8 & e * @ “——~—=—--——4 Gunn, brilliant youths, inst John ie Beck and Dr. A. R. MacCallum, selected when two former British |champions were unable to take part in the matches, | Pagan Temples Link Charches With Past Stowting, Kent, England.—(AP) | —Near the old Roman road along ele Ba) canterary ae traveled, the site of an an pagan | temple, just discovered, supplies the Hlast link in the evidence that this | hamlet was once an important town | which boasted seven churches, The curious relationship of fiv- churches radiating at an approx!- mate distance of two miles from Star Football Player at West Point Smiles as He Grooms His Noble Steed in Camp Stowting church as a conter, has one puzzicd vians and topog- phers, Th vent church, how- ver, has never been found. | Now pre-historic stones have been unearthed in the foundations of some old farm buildings at | Town, which lies on a straight line |from Luminge church at a corres | sponding distance of two miles from Stowting church as a pivotal point and the cycle of seven related churches is compiete. | A village tradition that a chapel dedicated to St. Augustine former- | ly stood on this spot, confirms tho | theory of the lost pagan temple. When St. Augustine arrived in Kent | in the year 597 A. D. he found many temples in which the people oisered sacrifice. | He wrote Bishop Gregory for ad- | vice and the vencrable father of the |church recommended the conversion ‘of these temples into places of | Christian worship, in order that the people “may the more familiarly ort to the places to which they ve been accustomed.” REGULAR AIR SERVICE | Calais, France.—Air jaunts to Eng- ‘land in 15 minutes are offered the public at France’s first seaplane port. Three small seaplanes, each lcarrying a pilot and three passen- | gers, have opened a commercial com- |pany’s service, and 10 ships are to | be operated within a year if all goes | well. It d lete the best olar at the academy. E the routine of menial du: One of the cavalry to manicure and mass nd in the ze his mount Elias, star Army football player, is trying to smile while he grooms his | noble steed, Elias and a number cf other football sts members of the first class which recently lived the life of the trooper at the cavalry camp at Popolopen creck, near West Peint. RENEWS FIGHT Ss | Perhaps the thoughtful Ame i in the foursome: ining the most points | m of 12 will get the | i y intact. F al? Teams of Eight Men nic Johnston, Geo: , . |Jess Sw eighth ing on Rain-Drenched jj ee when a heavy bolt of lightnin inks | struck a wire fence near them and | Links | i ahs {almost threw the golfers to the | ground. They made their way as | best t t of wind : ne: hurried | warm | Von Elm and “td ps. n Wane noel Aipine ween spiced with lore, cowboy humor, friendly wild life? Get reservation By BASIL G. WYRICK iated Press Golf Writer) r o Golf Club, Chicego, Aug. If a mile (AP)—On a rain-drenched bat-' through ho! Britain and the United | clothin; The The lineup for George Von While the opponents fight with ali! =| i) their golfing acumen to win the v cPeticing, | Saeianls S aam Ask and women who frequent the place. tent because the committee on ar-|—Loom. Left on bases—Brainerd 4: | tors a marvelous fraternity 3 . Tweddell, |. gota, pres She is' able to pick out those who |rangements, after: combing this sec-|Bismarck 5. Hits—off Olson, 1; off | betwe e two teams of eight men|!a former Br: title-holder. "ieee polis, Minn, would steal a purse, and orders them | tion, was unable to produce more | Addington, 11. Struck out—by Oison, who stood at attention today for the| Bobby Jon M. Tait, OU Alle out. There are strict rules for prey-|than two pairs of horses to draw the|11; by Addington, 7. Bascs on balls |first affr: champion, _ ILM. 4 ‘Cana. Expense ing on the idle rich, and she insists | ancient equipment formerly used by|—Nutting and Swanson, Guidas| In the first clash there were to be merly national General Agent : ‘ana. fl that they should be obeyed. the fire ‘fighters. twice. Winning pitcher, Olson. Los-|four two-ball foursomes over 36 | champion, ai \ dicn Pacific ‘ours Some visible means of support is ing pitcher, Addington. Time of jholes. In cach foursome two Ameri- jlet, long a Ic | e the chief asset of a fortune-hunting PORK AND STRAWS me, 1:27, Umpires Schultz and|cans had to play one ball between |W. L. Hop woman in Deauville. She must be Sica Sulchars.and a. them against two Britons, alternat- Jimmie Johnston, na ian elegantly gowned, attractive, and| Rome Roman oe oe ——_—___ sling in stroking a single rubber pellet Minneapolis _y equip) with savoir faire. She i Prone occupy A the in match competition. A point goes |Ouimet, who h ¥ @ must never take a pocketbook, She premises alternately, since by the) Monaco Faces Menace |to whichever pair wins in the 36-hole land open, Kine, aeainct, et [hoo P must have it given to her. ‘There|time the light headgear season, be f Internal Trouble|™tc! 24 in case of a tied match {Storey and T. A. Torrance, stalwart [Mb ci IC '|must be no police scandal, but almost | ins | . g inance against hog kill- 0) nterna) FOUDIS each pair gets a half point. Britons. everything else is tolerated. ing is in force. System To complete the tourney, the men and Watts teeta ous pe To take a single-ride in the New Hudson Super- Glori ormance | : , Six is to revise your whole knowledge of auto- 8 | p 5 oO mobile values. i : It is the master car at every issue. And in every erformance asked of a motor it possesses ability Ser lectern > 1 ae Buyers can poy for cars out ¢/ income at lowest available charge for interest, handling end meuranse . 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