The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1929, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1929 - Eddie ‘Kid’ Bowman Replaces Bobby Baker in Friday Semi- Windup ‘WATCHMAKERS WILL Quarter Mile Dash Will Be Headliner at Capital City Meet This Week “DISCIPLINE. BATTLER | aray Fie Soon | RRRN EYPECTS 0 BLUE SUCCESS ON ROAD GIVES _|Harmsen Runs | ATHLETICS APPEAR STRONGER _ ~FORTTAKING JOURNEY GET VICTORY FROW | THEM HOPE FOR FLAG CHANCE) Trial Century AS YANKS FAIL TO SET PACE “Tony Brown, Brute Heavy- f AST MOHALL MAN Gavuzzi Claims [kansas City Builds Good Lead|One-Man Team Finds That He nat: Reds 4 to 3. Charley Root kept i } { } } In Former Years Huggins and ae eae ae ee well scate Needs Plenty of Work eight men. Tom ef “4 orale uae survivor among Cub weight, Showing Great Im- 41-Mile Record! by Wining © of,11 Gon Tosing the Mark Company Broke Hearts of [cattners, tossed out two would-be i ' ; tests in East Seas 0 bese-stedlers: provement in Workouts Little Jaok Horner Clicked Off] 40. we: Rolf Harmsen, veleran track star Pponents at Start — | he pitsbungh Pirate, lost more Italian Waiter From England 2 who, as a one-man track team, has rcs than a ball game at St. Louis, where - a 440-Yard at Fessenden in \ Getey baad DUTCH ZWILLING PLEASED/chelienged the Bismarck high school/WALBERG MASTERS YANKS | the cardinals eked out a7 to 3 victory CAVANAGH REACHING PINK a ni Increases Derby Lead to | ae Yo eet ee cues wie aie Or Th Gia ail of eonsiiotsiing aun de 54.5 Seconds 3 Hours 15 Minutes Minneapolis Jumps Into Second oe igh school ol athletes were enjoy- | Tigers, Indians and Pirates Suf- phere Legs oe a er ta sinh ed a day Burleigh Most of Fighters on 36-Round = Springfield, Mo. April 30—(r7— Place Tie After 8- Run at is osaible that the broad jump fer Defeats in Yester- peel! eo aad te } . " shot. ents > . Legion Card Will Arrive SATAN RUNNER IS ENTERED| ith sn unofficial, record for tt Rally in Ninth coo wile ren ett tay. day's Games Mae a hee i Pea cae \ Some Time Tomorrow oe jan waiter of Southampton, England, ad Harmeen yesterday found that the dinals hopped on Lee Meadows for \ C. C. Pyle’s bunioners today were| Chicago, April 30.—(P)—Victorious | 100-yard dash is a little shorter and (By the Associated Press) the tying run in the fourth inning Aa os W. H. Payne, Meet Manager, |neaded for Miller. Mo. the Sist con-|in nine out of 11 games during thelr ee See tne New York Yankees to tree ons and then scored four runs in the Eddie “Kid” jowman, igeley trol point ot e cross country derby. . cen- = welterweight, will meet Slugger Expects Close to 200 En- | The distance is 40 miles. City Blues threaten to stretch thelr tury for the first time in six years secutive American leagu league pennants blot pitoh, the aid of five passes and White, Ellendale, in the eight-round | ,nare Routis, featherweight cham- tries for Spectacle ietrooe: Gorey ana Mellegfiahd yest into a commanding one during the | He said after his workout that his sence this year. marian semi-windup of the American Legion | pion of the world, recently returned ais \terday in 4 hours 51 minutes and 10| next three weeks. legs and lungs are in good shape and| In past years the Yankees have B Calls M t boxing card at the Dome pavilion Fri- |from a visit to his native France be-| Sport fans who attend the Capital |seconds, said his time for the dis-| After today’s final with Toledo, that he expects good results in a few | broken their rivals’ hearts by (ale yrne ee! day night. soy AR ee el enon he must defend his | ojty track and field meet here Friday pont was td Rul beset ean ih Pleat ee = go reel seid when he has completed his pre- hind once ra eae ate opex” Hall and 'W. J, “Bill” Godwin, sete eiepended. eae" Trost’ for, |#nd Saturday will sec many great Higha “the victory increased Gavural’s|in thelr own back yard always has| He will need plenty of work in| was not fatal. For Diamon matehmakers for the Legionnaires for | midable challengers are said to be Al | events. but headlining them all prob-|acvantage over Johnny Salo, Passaic. |been quite a task. The pennant | starting, it was evident, when he got | | Two weeks of campaigning this year the Friday night card. Singer and Benny Bass and a fight |@bly will be the quarter-mile dash. |w. J, policeman, to three hours and|hasn't flown over Kansas City since} off to a poor start yesterday. He | finds them in third place with five Bowman is being substituted for| between the champion and one of | For in that race Wallie Green. Bis-115 minutes, Te23 largely ‘because ‘of poor rosd| thinks the 440-yard dash will, give | Wins and four defeats, And the Phila-| €! ormers y : Bobby Baker, Bismarck, in the semi-|these contenders may be scheduled | M&rck’s captain and state champion —$—$—$—$—$—— teams, but this is one season Zwill- | him a better chance to settle into his | delphia Athletics, chief sufferers from windup role, Hall said. soon. uf uled' | last year, plans to take sweet revenge | g______________oling believes victory is a foregone | stride. the Yankee scourge last season, are Baker left Bismarck for Aberdeen : on Jack Horner, Mohall flash, who de- | ? Fights Last Night || conctusion, barring unexpected in- gaining some adequate revenge. Yes-| piamond ball fans, attention! S. Dak., about 10 days ago with the Le PS feated him in a scrappy race at the|! is ig! juries. ¥ terday they fell on Henry Johnson] Bismarck is going to have a dia- . intention of training at home with Central North Dakota meet at Fes- I i es fi It took the Blues 3B init Yo sub- Sonnenberg Wins and Gordon Rhodes for eight hits to} mond ball league. his brothers, who also are fighters. senden last week-end. (By the Associated Press) due the Mudhens, 7, yesterday. \cown the champions, 10 to 1. So pronounces Robert Byrne, dia- Hall instructed him to be in Bismarck Green is still stinging from that New York.— Kid Chocolate, |The hens staged a creer rally to Walberg Pitched Well mond ball -king and North Dakota's yesterday. When yesterday rolled race, and the knowledge that he will! Cuba, knocked out Tommy Ryan, jeven the count in the ninth inning With Pa Tackle Mule Haas and Al Simmons each | own secretary of state. around, Hall had not heard from the have te Be ee ay Eeatiahd life) Buffalo (1). Black BIW, Cuba, | but Johnny Morrison entered the pic hit for the circuit with one on in the]: He has called a meeting of all ‘Aberdeen youngster nor had Baker to ih Sener Hiltie ane es not! stopped Routier Parra, Chile (8). | ture and tamed them even a fourth, and Mickey Cochrane, after | diamond ball fans in the city at 6:30 reperted in Bismarck. ae le Tay hoevied Jack Horner | Babe Joe Gans, Los Angeles, out- | they did get one run in their half | Straight Wrestling Fails at Suc- | clearing the bases with a triple in the/ o'clock tonight at the William Moore He is expected to arrive here today e rata e My Eihenh hs a eaEa pointed Joe Reno, New Jersey (10). jof the twelfth. in Match With J -leighth, added insult to injury by; school auditorium. and Hall believes he can discipline W ANTS NEW TIL onds at Fessenden, which is consié-| T'Chicaga—Ted Ross, South ChI- | St. Paul and Indianapolis struggled | 088 in Ma joe stealing home while Rhodes was|” He hopes to organise a city league the rugged boy by taking the chance pak ah na sper rakemiee| ane outpointed Jack Scarton, /10 innings, and the Saints won, 4 to Malcewicz winding up. Max Bishop got five! at this meeting. Panenakec wee pels Ne aft rae u dle mavens ats also plans to show Leer ee Gi New goa tie wing feted bod creas extra three tien mabe Walberg held: the rT Roh hereto RricontonMabied is vi win a = __ rosso, Ne’ vi e b least four as many more .- fiaoe aver the Ellendale entry. Stanford University Student i earth ireeeithy wht a ony tie Tals Yore, es Marty oS frame, ariving.| ane ve home with Chicago, April 30.—(P}—Gus Son- aoe to six hits and fanned seven | as would be necessary to take care of of; weight, showing: veontlatent ieirore: Fights Kid Chocolate at |run. He finished in the half-mile Weiner, Washington Knocked out . Columbus continued ogee batting reading eal totne Ting Behind good pitching by Sam Gray pony ES eect ee | ment, and Lee Cavanagh, expected to New York May 21 ahead of eet all faipsitinad alc Frank Newton, Baltimore (4). rampage and sank Milwaukee for the | tackle. the St. Louis Browns clung on, close} Officers of the proposed league will | weigh in at his best fighting weight y Bismarck, at Fessenden, though Walz) Flint, ‘Mich.— Tony Herrera, |third straight time, 8 to 3. In the} ‘The champion attempted to turn behind the Athletics, by defeating the | be elected tonight. ‘ | tomorrow, Hall looks for a show Fri- eee “i his heels in the Chicago, knocked out Andy | three battles with the Brewers, the |back the challenge of Joe Malcewicz | Detroit Tigers 3 to 2 in 10 innings. A regular schedule would be drawn ¥ day night which will eclipse the By EDWARD J. NEIL wat er wanie eaene suumevager IME Gagnon, Montreal (6). Senators have scored 43 runs. Five/of Utica, New York, by straight} The Chicago White Sox hopped all/up after the organization. ° Cavanagh-LeRoy card in pleasing the| (Associated Press Sports Writer) af ‘ayne, mi Ruat ie ae ibcorel Philadelphia. — Benny Bass, {double plays were executed yesterday, vee, holds last night. But after | over four Cleveland pitchers to turn] Even James Morris, attorney gen- i fans. New York, April 30.—("}—A splen- | Hight announced ends gear Philadetphia, Outpointed Johnny | three o. them by Milwaukee: being spilled five times by headlocks,}in @ 13-4 triumph at Chicago. Ted|eral, and Kenneth W. Simons, state ‘Most of the fighters will arrive to- | didly muscled Italian boy, curly black |Ce!ved 80 entries, ¢: lusive 0: nis Farr, Cleveland (10). Jack Mc- Minneapolis jumped into a second|he downed Malcewicz for the first | Lyons was hit freely, but the Indians| correspondent for the Associated morrow. but Hurley and Van Ryan, /hair damp with perspiration, body | Peoates unat close wo 200 athietes| Fijuadephie Che wee” | Suactable "ninth inning. rely. ‘The | minutes and 38 scsonds, [ofthis nL hey’ plan tov interest, Governat } ~ | sine ‘ipplit der the hands of 5 marl e; in to interest one headliner, are not expected un- estate | rey cae rubbing table ia will compete here this week-end, as Youngstown, O.—Riccardo Ber- | Millers went into their half cf Catching his rival groggy, Sonnen-| Over in the National league the Gane e Shafer in the program. ursday. i uIty cy We locked likes college | most of the entries were mailed yes-| tazolo, Italy, knocked out Peter | ninth inning tied with Louisville, but | berg again reverted to straight wres- | Chicago Cubs could not do much with] ‘Th int out that Minot, Devils Cavanagh, Van Ryan, Bowman, siti, oath his dark, pleasant print terday, the closing day for pace Corris, Austria (8) George Ro- |before they could be retired, they |tling, winning the second fall with a| Pete Donohue except in the sixth in- Tans, ant Grand Forks have great White, Brown, and Plaunt will weigh | tures unmarred by glove wounds. ~ Entries yesterday wed Fecelv hanna, Cleveland, and Kid Sulli- | pushed over eight runs, winning the|crotch and half-Nelson hold in two | ning, when they bunched five hits and] success with their diamond ball nin public at the Grand Pacific rec- |" Fidel La Barba, one-time Olympic| {fom Mandan, Denhoff, Garrison,| van, New Castle, Pa., drew (8). game 12 to 4. minutes and 52 seconds. four runs, enough to beat the Cincin- | leagues. ree, pees Bismarck, at 3 p. m. | titicholder and flyweight champion of | Glen Ullin, Hazelton, Mohall, Na- the world, isn’t a college athlete and | Poleon, Solen, decades eral never can be one, because of his pro- | tn. Entries are seat ety New fessional career in the prize ring. But|L@ke, Fessenden, treed isconsin Ball . |his thoughts and ambitions today are | Pockford, reo eeenpcary . 5 centered on the campus of Stanford |, The list of men en 3 lows: Club Cops Pade | i anecs ie Mandan—D. Arthur, F. Boehm, 3. oF Se ad “Tt want to win the bantamweight | Fleck. H. eerie el a title, and defend it once or twice,” | McDonald, N. McKendry, J. a, Badgers Appear to Have Cham. | Fide! said, as the rubber industrlously ee eer plied his back muscles and nodded grea AL Akland, ©. Akland, #. pionship Contender After agreement. Outside the cell-like rub- aM Sic, Bena,” Many Futile Yea bing room jump-ropes slapped on the eo. . Liebig, J. Penski, L. rs floor, punching bags rattled against top-boards, and a few spectators Garrison—Willard Chase, Earl Gol- i den, Leonard House, and Harold Ire- Chicago, April 30.—()—After years Ws adiee egret Tob dapat land. training ring. This was fight talk that janie tee wsoal cover | oomed wr ne srrengigs | yoiet Te Ander, J fen baseball championship. “Then I'm going back to college,| oT 3o¢ Giess, John Goetz, Martin The Badgers scored their second | back to Stanford, and finish my edu-| Se We Sinks, Joan oe pease traight conference victory yesterday | cation. Later I shall learn the broker- ang AtGnGnee. MRUGSIL cob |: y defeating Chicago, 5 to 1. age business.” This was not fight talk, soot 4 ona wi beara ane Tllinois ‘virtually shoved Towa out|@Md amazed the rubber so that he| Kove: anes ghee nn f the championship picture, blank- | SPilled his lotions all over the floor. ns Hton--Btanley Frederick, Carl ng the Hawks, 5 to 0, at Champaign. Was Newshey Once Gregory, William Schanlaber, and on team has lost two m has lost two games. La Barba, once a newsboy in Los| GTEsOry. em caine Angeles, quit the ring as flyweight PT Esnalt sawieh Behan, Clarence Si < Falls Ho H t soeon ie Helio ape eek Ellingson, Jack Horner, Stanley John- Y) 10UX 08) the school year, passing all subjects,| £02, Donald Lee, Ingvald Ness, Neal Wade. and was married in the spring of 1928. = To43 Track Teams). cis, ie ree cent esd | pnt rie” clit “t did well in my studies, smoked a| So's" shater, J. Silbersagel, Ww. Pipe, had lots of knickers, and ‘made’ een er, J. Giberoagel, and Sioux Falls, 8D, , April 30.—(#)— | the fraternity I wanted. But I learn Thoreson. |= ‘rty-three high schools and colleges other things ant ‘went along. zane Solen—Jack McDonald and Philip = wave entered the Dakota relays to be| “I had enough money to live com- “. eld here Saturday and it was ex-|fortably, a car and everything, but I quniter wood —George Edgar, Bill ected the list would reach 50 before | realized that I might just as well get| Zanrom slmer Hepper, Hartman | ight. all I could while still young and in| reine) wari bac a ._ Ernest ‘The University of North Dakota | my prime. So I came back to the ring,| Lt/peh Earl Landgren, Edward Olson, ; Morningside college entered men | 10 pounds heavier, stronger and more] Gy qgusn 2 leck, and 4 the university section relays, re- | capable. Once I've won that bantam Wilton—Donald Ate fricted to members of the North title I shall go back to school and| ,Wwiltdn Donal alec, Harold fentral conference. Nebraska Wes- | never fight again.” peed eld pee A aunce Dan- ayan. and Columbus college entered Has Sophomore Eagerness tay, 0 ae el, Prank Mur- ‘he special events. Fidel, at 23, has all the cagerness| rar Max Nuvman. Albert Pfeiffer. Sixteen or more colleges are ox-| and pride of a sophomore in his col-| resie Bees: Harry Vincent, and ‘ected to enter the open class relays. | lege, his fraternity, and the attractive things about Stenford he believes “Yesterday’a Games {| 0 Suntec ot sanacee vee MAX SCHMELING Give yourself the pleasure of smok- eaten ing a fragrant, mellow cigarette like to play quarterback on one of | stantord’s great football teams or for- ward on the basketball five. However, i he doesn't resent the college attitude I 1 NATIONAL ama that his professional activities in the ring have made him a professional in —_— all sports. Hamburg, April 30.—()—Max ‘The soft-spoken collegian, who|Schmeling, who was cheered by thou- & eee, boxes the flashy “Keed Chocolate” | Sands of German boxing fans on his ae here May 21, returned recently from | @trival here some weeks ago from a 4 p @ combined business trip and honey- | sensational pugilistic campaign in the 7 + moon to Australia, where he won four | United States, left so quietly on the ) French, Brame 3 ves; matches. S. 8. Reliance today that he was prac- Wa” x “They're great at cricket, rugby and | tically unnoticed. His destination is ; % an ee Age soccer down there,” he said, “but | Montreal where he has an appoint. sia f 2 they're not so good at baseball. We|ment with William F. Carey. presi- S beat them 10 games out of 11 last| dent of Madison Square Garden, to ord talk over the possibility of a fight with the Spaniard, Paulino Uzcudun,, in New York, June 27. sip Selanne aaa: WHY CAMELS ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE z The Camel blend of choice Turkish and Domestic Linesin | (NCLUDING GAMES OF APRIL 29) ; tobaccos has never been equaled. This blend produces a delightful mildness and mellowness. taste. ‘ ‘They do not leave 4 sigaretty ie Gamels are a refreshing and satisfying suche, LEAGUE | out gives ian . rat] eon SewcSo-Seoe-t * BenSu-coucc-K 2

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