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j } if | if mars" ' the skidding Indians, .this time by ‘ASE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~ WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1929 Fight Between Athletics and Browns Pushes Yanks From rom Limelight HOWLEY AND CONNIE ‘American Legion Fight Ticket Requests Flood in From m Missouri Slope 7 MORE HIGH SCHOOLS ENTER _|®2: _ MACK HOLD PRIVATE INDIANAPOLIS HAS DAY’S REST - SOUFFLE IN LEAGUE, TO CONSIDER ATTACK ON BLUES > Less Said About Yankee Victory Over Senators Kinder It Will Be RED SOX BEAT ATHLETICS Browns Win Three of Last Four From Detroit and 10 in 14 for Season least, threatens 4 kees alike. Downfall | Is Slow the Red Sox hurled | back the Mackmen. The A’s remain favorites if the Yanks do fail, but the | gait of the Browns cannot be over-j looked. Two weeks do not make a/ baseball season, but the Browns al- ready have flashed enough to justify any fears which Messrs. Huggins and Mack may entertain The Howley tribe closed out in De- troit yesterday with a 6 to 5 victory, which made three out of four in the series and 10 out of 14 for the season. The triumph also gave the Browns more breathing space over the second- place Athletics, who have disputed the lead with the western contenders for about a week. Big Ed Morris was too much for the Athletics at the Fenway in a game which the Red Sox won by 4 to 1. One of the four Philadelphia hits was a homer by Simmons. The least said about events at the Yankee stadium the kinder it will be for all concerned. The champions pulled out a 10 to 9 decision over the Senators in the tenth on Fred Heimach’s double. The Hug- men had stood idly by while the Senators were scoring five runs to tie in the seventh. Each side mauled three pitchers, Tom Zachary being perhaps the heaviest sufferer. The White Sox won another from & to 4 Vance Wins Shutout The National league spotlight cen- tered upon Arthur C. Vance, who let the Giants down with three small singles at Ebbets field and won by 2 to 0, even with the mad Robins at his back. Vance fanned seven. The Cubs again stumbled upon misfortune at Redland field as the home team pulled out a 5 to 4 victory in the last Of the ninth. Sheriff Blake twice blew @ lead of one run in late innings as General Hendricks rushed fresh troops into the fray. The Boston Braves, still strangely leading the National league with seven victories and two defeats, won a j son. The record books show that Roland Locke, the Nebraska sprinter, estab- lished a world record for 220 yards in 1926 with a 20.6 second performance. If George Simpson, Ohio State star, knows whereof he talks, that record is due to go by the boards this sea- Simpson, who runs with a long stride, has come close to Locke's mark several times and feels sure that this is the year to establish a new record. He also runs the 100 for Ohio State. Derby Runners Cross Missouri Pete Gavuzzi, Bearded Italian From England, Has Nearly Four-Hour Lead Miller, Mo., May 1—(?)—C. C. Pyle's banion boys shuffled along today over the last Missouri clods on their trans- continental tramp. Tonight they rest on the banks of the Missouri river at Joplin before starting tomorrow's jaunt into Oklahoma. Pete Gavuzzi, the bearded Italian waiter of Southampton, England, checked up his second consecutive win and increased his lead over Johnny Salo, Passaic, N. J., police- man, to nearly four hours yesterday when he led the caravan into Miller from Springfield. Gavuzzi's time for the 33.7 miles was 4.15.10. Salo, who finished in a tie with Paul Simpson of New York for sixth place, con- tinued to pile up his advantage over Ed Gardner, Seattle negro, third in elapsed time. Gardner, handicapped by a shin splint, has finished far in groggy game from the Phillies, 14 to 12, with both teams out on their feet ae the finish. Cardinal-Pirate game in St. at fell a victim to rain. ! Yesterday's Games | NATIONAL LEAGUE % e E 1 . 4 Vance and De- H E 8 1 9 1 Blake and Angley: ‘May and Gooch, R H E Retscsssieses+ 16 16 2 See tee! ae Delaney, “Wertz and Tay- lor; McGraw, Willoughby, sat “ao ‘ining Liska and Spen- 2 ote, Heimach ¥ 8 ” Harder, _ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION caneas City ‘ 3 , Thomas and Peters; Win- the rear the last three days. Fessenden Lions Have Baseball 9 Fessenden, N. D., May 1.—The Fes- senden Lions will open the baseball season in Wells county next Sunday | With a team from Kensal as their opponents. The Lions are a group of Wells county stars including many players well known in this section of the state. Henmiller and Hulsebus of Heaton, Remboldt of Bowdon, Kanikkeberg of Cathay; Cook, E. and A. Martin of Fessenden; Stedmoen of Sheyenne and Boese, a recent arrival from Cal- ifornia will start for the Lions. A new ball park has been laid out at the Wells county fair grounds at Fessenden and the local team held their first workout last Sunday. Scout for McGraw | Undervalued Trio New York. May 1.—In the: matter of scouts making mi es in judging baseball talent, John McGraw, who manages the New York Giants, likes to tell of an ivory trip that Art Dev- lin, former big icague star, once made for him. “I sent Devlin out in 1920 to look over some fellows that had been rec- ommended to me,” says McGraw. “On this one trip, Devlin reported that ‘Pie’ Traynor wasn’t worth $10,000, that Charlie Grimm was no bargain! at $2,500 and that Joe Sewell's $8,000 tag was far too much. I took his word and passed ‘em up’ Peycd Traynor, is one of the vest | third basemen in baseball, Sewell has ably for the Cubs for many seasons. i Fights Last Night 0. 3 te (By The faseraied Press) Providence, B. (1), After a Record \ Kansas City Defeats Toledo 4 to 3 to Maintain Two-and- | One-Half-Game Lead | } | power WINS THIRD START omnes Clings to Second; | Tie; Milwaukee Wins Slug- fest From Colonels | Chicago, May 1—()—An open date for all American Association clubs | today gave Bruno Betzcl's Indian- | apolis Indians plenty of time to con- | centrate on plans for taking a reef in {the two and one-half game lead | owned by Kansas City when they} jopened a four-game series on the | Blues’ field tomorrow. Kansas City left Toledo yesterday | ¢; j after making a sweep of a four-game {program and returned home in the {whip seat. Thomas relieved Nelson jin the ninth inning yesterday in time to halt a Toledo rally and preserve a 4 to 3 edge for the Blucs. Penner pitched and won his third |start of the season for Indianapolis against St. Paul, enabling the In- |dians to remain tied with Minnea jolis in second place. Clyde Bar jhart, former Pirate outfielder, ham mered out a triple and a homer to provide the Indians’ winning punch. The count was 3 to 1. Minneapolis clung to its share of second position by taking a hitting | bee from Louisville, 8 to 6. The Mill- ers peeled off 15 safeties. Brillheart received credit for the victory but fine hurling by Flint Rhem in the last three innings stopped the Colonel attack in time to prevent trouble. Columbus and Milwaukee also in- dulged in a free scoring fracas, which the latter took, 16 to 10. Badgro, Brewer outfielder, cracked out a homer off Pete Jablonowski, with the bases filled in the eighth. While the Indians are opening at Kansas City tomorrow, St. Paul will entertain T: ledo, Columbus will go to Minnea olis for a series and Louisville will oppose Milwaukee at Milwaukee. (INCLUDING GAMES OF APR. 30) (By The Associated Press) National Batting—Stephenson, Cubs, .438. Runs—Critz, Reds, 13. Homers—Harper, Braves, 4. Stolen bases—Maranville, Braves; Flowers, Robins; Allen, Reds, 4. America n Batting—Jamieson, Indians, .477. Runs—Blue, Browns, 1 Homers—Blue, Browns, 4. Stolen _bases—Fonseca, Metzler, White Sox, 3. Indians; | HURLEY INDETROKT |Matchmakers Expect Crowd of | MANAGER MAY NOT COME TODAY FOR MILLER, PETROLLE SCUFFLE at Least 1,000 if Weather ls Favorable Al Van Ryan, Headliner, Ex- pected Tomorrow but May Arrive Friday With reserved seat requests re- ceived from Beach, Garrison, Reeder, Wishek, Ashley, Napoleon, Steele, Dawson, Hazelton, Dickinson, and several other cities on the Missouri Slope, members of the local American Legion post anticipate a large ticket sale for their 36-round boxing card at the Dome pavilion Friday night. This announcement was made by Tex Hall and Bill Godwin, comatch- makers for the Legion, who said that reserved seat tickets now may he secured at Harris and Woodmansee's, the California Fruit store, the Olym- pia Cafe, and the Patterson and! Grand Pacific hotels in Bismarck. and the McDonald and Lewis and Clark hotels in Mandan. Hall is particularly enthusiastic | over the prospects for a crowd of 1,000 spectators or better because of the favorable condition of the roads leading into Bismarck. With good weather Friday, Hall says, Bismarck may expect to play host to the larg- est fight crowd ever assembling here. That Jack Hurley may not accom- pany Al Van Ryan here is the latest development, according to the match- makers. Hurley is in Detroit today, where Billy Petrolle, another one of his fighters, fights Ray Miller tonight for the right to meet Sammy Mandell, lightweight champion of the world, sometime next summer. Al Van Ryan, who meets Lee; Cavanagh, Bismarck welterweight, in the 10-round headliner of the Friday card, is expected in Bismarck tomor- row. However, if he does not come until Friday, it is possible that Col- Jack Hurley will accompany Petrolle, Mille: Mille | Ready for Battle; Fargo Lightweight Will Get Crack at Champion if He Wins Tonight Detroit, May 1.—(7)—Ray Miller, Chicago exponent of the left hook, and Billy Petrolle, Duluth, West Is Claiming Tallest Battery Bellingham, Wash., May 1.—(7)— Although Iowa may take all the prizes for tall corn, Washington will give any state a good run for the cup for tall ball players. At Fairhaven high school here Coach Lee Rankin has what is be- Heved to be the tallest high school battery in the country. Endersbe, the catcher, and Winter- burn, pitcher, each stand 6 feet 3 inches. Hunting of Game Grows in France Paris, May 1 *)—The shooting of game is on the increase in France. One person out of 28 has a hunting license this year, a somewhat greater Proportion than drive automobiles. The state reaps a rich harvest from the hunters, for it levies not only on their guns, cartridges, dogs and horses, but also their clothes. thing that has to do with sport is fair sport for the tax-collector. Hunt- ing yields about $15,000,000 a year to the French treasury. Coach Scores Too Heavy Sports Work Pullman, Wash, M May 1—(?)—The old idea held by some coaches that athletes must work in the gymnasium or on the athletic field until nearly exhausted is passe, in the opinion of Dr. Wilbur Bohm, athletic trainer at Washington state college. Supple muscles, endurance and the necessary development of the heart and lung capacity can be acquired H been an outstanding shortstop for| without the arduous grind through an Aiijus and L. Se-| years, and Grimm has played first]understanding of dieting and health tules and ponricteny grain train- 9 eee : the athlete “gun gach tuning will make him live than the individual who has had fe Maat of athletic work,” Any- | tice. Minn., lightweight, will resume in Olympia arena tonight the argu- ment which ended in a draw in Brooklyn recently. The winner is to get a chance at Sammy Man- dell’s crown some time this sum- mer. Both men expected to weigh in at less than the lightweight limit. Newport Will See Collegiate Tennis Newport, R. I, May 1—(4)—New- Port is to be the scene this summer of the biennial tennis matches be- tween the Cambridge-Oxford team and Harvard-Yale racket-wielders, according to James 8. Cushman, chairman of the tennis committee of the Newport Casino. pid for the board of governors, he offered the use of the Newport courts to the college teams. The date of the tournament has not yet been fixed. These British and American uni- versity tennis teams played their matches abroad in 1927. At tna time a British victory gave the Cam- bridge-Oxford team possession of the trophy offered by Bernard S. Pren- English Miners Have Golf Links Seghill, England, May 1—(7)—A golf course for miners and their wives is being constructed here, but the men must shave and put on a collar and tie before they can play. That is Fidel-Chocolate | Winner May Have Bantam | Pinnacle {Californian and Cuban . Fight May 21 for Charley Phil Rosenberg’s Crown New Yorl:, May 1.—(P)—For the needed to raise a bumper crop of glares and evasions in the office of the New York state athletic commis- sion was the question, “Whom will the Commission recognize as the ban- tamweight champion?” That problem was one the fistic fathers never have been able to settie satisfactorily since Charley Phil Ro- senberg forfeited his 118-pound crown. Now the commission believes that at last a solution of the problem has been found. Two boys will fight at Jess McMahon's Bronx coliscum at 118 pounds May 21. If the winner looks the part of a champion, fights like a champion, and wins as a cham- pion should, to him will go the recog- nition held back from others. One of the fighters involved is Kid Chocolate, the flashing cbony “Keed” from Cuba. The other is Fidel La Barba, Stanford collegian on leave of absence, who reftises to go back to school until he has added the ban- tam title to the flyweight crown he ; gave up. The new system of the commission is simple. No bout in a disputed di- vision can be advertised beforehand as a title affair, but the boxers may weigh in at the class limit, fight, and then come to the’ commission to find past two or three ycars all that was|® out whether newspaper men and coms @ ground rule. It is a nine-hole, course, with some natural hazards, and the men will have a professional to teach them. Al- BF ad there is a membership of about “7 Probably is one of the most re- markable clubs in the country. The subscription is 12 cents a week. There are 1,000 men cmpioyed at the colliery. Yankee Will Seek Alfred W. McCann, long ‘ pure foods and sanitary factories. Cremos are made under his standards of hygiene and are certified by him as eanitary and pure. BISMARCK TRACK, FIELD MEET |= missioners will accept the winner as a champion. Both Chocolate and La Barba promised today to weigh 118 j pounds for the match. First Triple Play Of Season Is Slow; | | Sox Trick Indians | Chicago, May 1.—(®)—The first triple play of the major league season in Chicago took so long in execution at the White Sox park yesterday that it was quite @ while before the boys in the press coop figured it out. With Jamieson and Hodapp on first and second base, respectively, in the seventh inning of the Chicago-Cleve- land game, Lind grounded to Cissell and was thrown out at first. Hodapp tried to score and was caught between third and home and tagged out by Third Baseman Kamm. During the excitement Jamieson reached third. The players then re- sumed their positions, but Kamm re- tained the ball, hiding it behind him MY his gloved hand. Jamieson, not suspecting chicanery, ambled non- chalantly off third, and the tricky Mr. Kamm him out, completing the triple play. HARD TO UNDERSTAND Although Cleveland, O., is regarded as one of the greatest cities in the country for sandlot baseball, only one Clevelander is playing in the major leagues today. He is George Uhle, with Detroit. COLLEGE BASEBALL St. Olaf 6; Carleton 4. noted as a crusader for Coach Roy D. McLeod Enters Squad of 15 Men From Capi- tal City High School ENTRIES NOW TOTAL 145 Others Are St. Mary's, Carson, McClusky, Flasher, Wash- burn and Stanton Entries to the Capital City track and field meet being conducted here this week-end yesterday swelled to 145 on a march toward a goal which is expected to be nearly 200, accord- ing to an announcement made by W. H. Payne, meet manager, and Roy D. McLeod, Bismarck high schoo) ath- letic director. terday came from marck, St. Mary’s of Bismarck, Mc- Clusky, Carson, Flasher, Stanton, and Washburn. More entries were ex- pected today from Reeder, Devils nein Ashley, Wishek, and Entries received benno follow: Bismarck—Leo Benser, . Fay Brown, Lester Dohn, Wallace ‘Green, Earl Hoffman, Ben Jacobson, Elmer Klip- stein, Ted Meinhover, John O'Hare, Robert Paris, August Schwartz, Ed Spriggs, John Spriggs, Harold Tait, and Frank Walz. * St. Mary's, Bismarck—Leo Boes- Pflug, Ted Campagna, Harold Fal- Carson—Harry Butnitsky, Fred ae Greene rane eld, ant Flasher—Leo . Vi cg rel Davis, » Ivold po Milton_ Moorehead, bert: Rodenbough, Thomas, Oliver Torkelson, Everett Westrum, and Lyle ‘Westrum. Stanton—Howard Feurst, Werner Grill, Herman Leinius, Johnnie Sailer, Nestor Sailer . Washburn—Ciaire Anderson, Pir sell Barlow, Ralph Eckstrom, Ralph Johnson, Berthold Klein, Mike Mc- Guire, Millard McGuire, Clarence Miller, and Addison Parks. Buffalo to See Mushy Callahan Manager Jack Kearns An- hounces Match With Either Goodrich or Lawless Los Angeles, May 1—(7—Jack Kearns, mi r for. Mushy Calla han, junior welterweight champion, has announced he has accepted ould for a title match in Buffalo, N. late in May between Callahan ‘and the winner of Jimmy Goodrich-Buck. Lawless bout scheduled next week in the eastern city. JOHNSON COACHES AT PENN Wallace Johnson, nat known tennis star of other prncod is now coaching at rng He is a graduate of that school. ‘’m proud to certify CREMO’ “The day of the disgusting cigar factory, with its stuffy, dark, ill-ventilated workrooms—an ideal culture for germs—has, I hope, to a great extent passed,” Alfred W. McCann asserts. He is impressed by the fact that at the Cremo factories every sanitary precaution known to modern hygiene is none too good fér Cremo. The Cremo factories are protected by white walls and plenty of sunlight—safeguards of cleanliness. “No wonder,” says Alfred W. McCann, “that Cremo is a cigar that can be trusted by smokers who want enjoyment and safety, too. Every tobacco leaf entering the Cremo factories is scientifically sterilized by U. S. Government approved methods.” He says we ought to call our Cremo factories ‘the Cremo sanitary kitchens” because in cleanliness they are precisely what all food factories ought to be. » » oY In addition to the health protection outlined by Alfred W. McCann, Cremo gives you the greatest possible cigar enjoyment, being made of selected tobaccos, all ripe and mellow. Over $7,000,000 was spent in perfecting the method and means of manufacture that in Cremo insure uniformly fine cigars. Cremo comes to you fresh, germ-free and proof —being individually foll-wweapped Distributed by WINSTON & NEWELL CO., Minneapolis aS e s a * , ny a i }