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PAGE EIGHT FIGHT 10 ATTRACT Tony Brown Stacks Youth and Vigor Against Experience of Fritz Kowalski RECORD CROWD EXPECTED, Billy Meek, Recently Imported From Wibaux, Makes First Local Appearance THE CARD Lee Cavanagh, Bismarck, 145, vs. Herb Shipman, Ellendale, 154, 10 rounds. Jackie Grey, Bismarck. Boomer Brooker, Mandan, rounds at 126 pounds. Tony Brown, Bismarck, 188, vs. Fritz Kowalski, Fargo, 182, 6 reunds. Denny Wells, Bismarck, vs. Marry Ulrich, Fort Lincoln, 4 rounds at 135 pounds. Billy Meck, Bismarck, Joe King, Fert Lincoln, reuntls. Mickey McGuire, Mt Frankie Ekroth, M. “rounds at 110 pounds. Time—Decrs open at 7 p. Beuts begin at 9 p. m. Place—Bismarck auditorium. Referee—O. W. Roberts, Bis- marck. vs. 6 m. North Dakota tion here, t bouts of 34 1 of the entertaining features on their three-day program. Lee Cavanagh, Bismarck welter- weight, will attempt to win his sec. ond victory from Herb Shipman, Jendale boxer, in the 10 round liner on the card. Herb, on the hand, is confident that the capital city clouter will not wis tonight. s firemen, in conven: ht will witn 1,000 Are Expected With an attendance of almost 1.000 femen a convention possibility, Isham “Tex” Hall, promoter, is look- ing forward to a record attendance at tonight's program. Firemen have kept Hall and his associates busy looking after seat reservations the last week. Women are urged to at- tend the program, which Hall says will be one of the most pleasing ever staged in Bismarck. With most of the fans not having seen Shipman in action, they are hesitating to pick a winner tonight. Those who have seen Cavanagh in action, however, are picking him to cop the verdict again. Cavanagh learned “plent in his fight with Al Van Ryan, St. Paul Dutchman, and has changed his offensive style com- pletely, followers of the game say. Shipman is arugged boxer. His manager, Frank White, says his pro- tege has shown 100 per cent improve- ment since his encounter with Cav- anagh. Cavanagh scored a knockout in the ninth round in the first en- counter between the two. Since his knockout at the hands of Van Ryan, the Bismarck Irishman has shown a great determination to come back. Semi-Windup Is Thriller The Grey-Brooker bout should be worth the price of admission alone. Hall believes. The two boys have mixed twice before, with each gaining a decision over the other. Both are ready to put forth their best in the “rubber” encounter. They are said to be the classiest scrappers in their class in the state. As boxers they are elegant. Neither packs a terrific) wallop but, at the same time. neither is willing to expose any vulnerable Point. Tony Brown, Bismarck’s big bruis- er, is looking for a victory over the veteran Kowalski tonight but the Fargoan is taking a victory for him- self for granted because of his exper- ience if for no other reason. Brown | has adapted himself to the game rapidly, however, and has yet to take @ beating, or anything approaching a beating.. He is amazingly clever at! the game for his size and experience. Harry Ulrich boasts that he will give Denny Wells a lesson in the gentle art of fisticuffs tonight. Ul- rich, a Fort Lincoln doughboy, is making his first appearance in a Bis- | marek ring. A basketball, track, and baseball athlete, the doughboy is in the “pink” the year around. Wells, not a newcomer to Bismarck fans, is @ good boxer and has been training vigorously. Meek Flashes Action cal fans will have their first op- Portunity of seeing the flashy Billy Meek in action tonight. Meek, whom Hall imported from Wibaux, Mont.. is said to be the cleverest boxer in Hall's stable. The Montanan weighs but 112 pounds, but never considers fight- ing a man less than 117 or 118 pounds. He is fast and packs a hard punch. |5°! Joe King, his Fort Lincoln opponent, is. training quietly, making no com- tment or prediction regarding the plucky Mandan ‘vanquished | abe Eckroth on two previous occa- leatherpusher, sions, hopes to take another verdict from the Eckroth family when he meets Frankie, Gabe's older brother. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _ Firemen Will 1 Pack Auditorium to See ee Cavanagh and Shipman n Mix REY AND BROOKER 'HETTINGER CONFIDENT OF WINNING. PAIR FROM GRAY OUTFIT Horse Expert Says Bismarck Fair PANS’ ENTHUSIASM Has Northwest’s Greatest Racing Babe Improves New York, June 18.—(7}—Much improved in health, Ba Ruth is back in town but he still needs a few days of rest before getting back into the New York Yankees’ lineup. The Babe has been spend- i] ing the past week on a fishing trip near Washington in an ef- fert to recover from a severe cold | that forced him out of the Yankec lineup nearly a month ago. MINNESOTA GOLFERS ~ SEK NATION'S TITLE | Bill Fowler, North Dakota Ama- tuer Champion, Member of Big Ten Champion Team | | Minneapolis, June 18.—(P)—Lester | Bolstad, Don Burris and Bill Fowler, |the present triumvirate in Goplrr [golf who with George Huntington. fourth member of the team, won the | ‘Big Ten championship in the recent | |tourney here, will leave Minneapolis We ednesday night for Deal, N lwhere the national intercollegiate | |championship will be settled, next ' week. The three Minnesotans will com- | pete againsi the talent of the coun- try’s college represeniatives over the Hollywood club course from June 26 to 29. Since they number only three, the Gophers will not be able to win the team championship, which requires the participation of four men, but | they will be classed among the favorites for chief individual honors. | Fowler, a young sophomore from | Fargo, Nort Dakota amateur cham- | pion, who made the Gopher team in | his first year of competition, is the | only so-called rookie. both Bolstad } and Burris being veterans, has several titles in his keeping, among which are two Big Ten cham- | pionships acquired in the last three | years. i EDGELEY 13; FREDONIA 2 FREDONIA AB H PO A scar Gackle, 1 J. Wolf, 1b 0 T. Giesu, rf . 0 Hoime, c Ketterling, Otto Gackle, cf . F. Giesu, 3b . Miller, If .. C. Wolf, p xHuber, If . Sono aloomnessune Totals ..... 1 xBatted for Miller in ath. penee A Nagel, i | Siloustein, 3b Cooke, c .... Solie, 2b... Olson, 1b Brennan, p Teed, cf ... Muslin, If . Kinslow, rf z Hall, rf ... eB 3 z eaneaee, Bilecotes 6 4) 2 1! a 4 1 17! Blioccscuceusn | Totals .... | 2 Batted for Kinslow in Score by innings: Fredonia— oo0o0001 | Edgeley— 11 Errors—Oscar Gackle 1, Hoime 1, F. | , Giesu 1, C. Walf 1, Cooke 1, Olson 1. | Stolen bases—J. -Wolf 1, Otto Gackle | 1, Teed 1. Sacrifices—T. Giesu 1, Otto | Gackle 1, Muslin.1. Two base hits— | | Nagel 1, J. Wolf i. Three base hits— | Cooke 1. Double play—Edgeley 1, Na- | gel to Siloustein to Olson. Hits off! Wolf 19 in 9 innings; off Brennan 5 | in 9 innings. Struck out by Wolf 10; | by Brennan 5. Bases on Wolf 3; off Brennan 1. Wil Wolf 1. Time of game— pires—Philbrook of Edgeley; Walker | of Fredonia. NAPOLEON 3; WISHEK 2 Napoleon— ABH POE J. Herr, ¢ France, If . Mitzel, } ‘W. Meier, 2b .. S. Meier. p = 001-2 balls of! f NOHe ry i Sl ormaanaacan lesmmonnocoot! Honnooenune foc becuse coc eentus tel cscecsc & Ss s we {South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, wlornosccocoomal!l cosHooce~ ‘Frank iM . Weve, Recognized Expert, Euthu- Nationally: Orr A ATRIOS | siastic Over Program |COMMENDS MRS. C. K. BRYAN | Races are Scheduled for 2 P. M. and 7 P. M. All Four Days of Bismarck Fair Kerse race lovers are urged to be present at the Bismarck Fair racing track at 7 p. m. tomorrow for the running of the Governor's Cup $500 purse racc, the 2:24 pace far North Dakota-owned horses, by Mrs. C. K. Byran, manager. This is the first all-North Dakota pacing race ever staged. Following the Governor's Cup race Wedacsday evening will be the 2:24 trot, in which 12 trotters. are entered. By FRANK 3. WEYEL Official starter at the Bismarck Fair and nationally-recognized horse racing authority By long odds one of the best race programs ever staged at a North Da- kota county fair opens tomorrow at Bismarck. About 90 head of horses are on the grounds and the entry list is not only a large one, but the; |quality of the various horses now her and ready to race is exceptionally Racing stables from seven states! Dakota, is- consin, and Illinois—and it quite unusual to see so good a lot of high class performers at a county fair in any western state, especially so carly in the season. Are Fresh and Sound These horses are all fresh sound and “raring to go” the opening of the racing s2ason aid {horses that are here nov have not are here—Montana, North Bolstad (been drilled and raced out as many Cincinnati a.e later in the season after the long strain of 60 to 90 days of hard racing. ‘The horses that are named at Bis- marck are from stables that race) \cach season at the various large fairs | and Grand Circuit end the class of | res local of rea and the |Bismarck Fair grounds in: race enthusiasts three da; sport, the Sport of Kings B ASEB. ALI \horses that is now quartering at the! Root, r) a | | King of Sports. Races are programmed to start cach day at 2 p. m. and the evening} race card will be called and started | at 7 p.m. All races here are under 1/the sanction and rules of the Harness | minneapolis 2 Horse Association of America and on | st, Paul .. u |tae three-heat plan, every heat a race. | Indianapolis 1 | Eligibility is based on the money Won [onisville 4 by each performer, and as this plan |Columbus . 4 of racing makes for fast, snappy Con-/| Toledo .. 0 | tests, no pulling or laying up of heats | yijwaukee |or stalling of any kind, the public gets | 9/a real run for its money and honest | | racing. Horses to earn any part of! A|the purse must be up and coming all! the time and all the way. Large attendances and pleased au- 2\diences have been the rule every-| ‘where since these new rules of racing | ing has become again the outstanding feature attraction at all fairs in| | America. Can't Afford Missing It The people of this section cannot | jafford to miss the Bismarck Fair this | ;year, Where can you go to see better | ‘racing or better grandstand attrac- | tions than are offered at the Bis-| j State fair in the west gives you a bet- | ter quality program than you will see| 0 0 4 0 2 5 x—I3/at the Bismarck Fair and this, with ‘the high class of all vaudeville and leireus acts in front of the grand-| stand, at bargain prices makes this fair a real fair of the people in this section. Mrs. C. K. Bryan, secretary and manager, is deserving of great credit |for hersenergy and push in getting up a show of this quality and magni- tude, and it is up to all western | North Dakota residents and boosters | to get behind the Bismarck Fair and jturn out strong attendance records | |for the fair dates this year—June 19-| 22. Programs are scheduled for 2 p. m. and 7 p. m. each day. | Every one going to the Bismarck \Fair this year is bound to get twice 2 his money's worth of entertainment | and probably the best race program | ;to be held anywhere in the northwest {this season. ANCLUDING GAMES OF JUNE 17) (By The Associated Press) National Batting—Herman, Robins, Phillies, .388. Runs—Douthit, Cards, 56. Homers—Hafey, Cards, 17. Stolen bases—Cuyler. Cubs, 15. ; peng Genes: Pirates, 10 wins, loss. ODoul, Amcrican Batting—Foxx, Athletics, 406. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 56. Homers—Gehrig, Yanks, 17. Stolen bases—Miller, Athletics; cial, White Box; Fonseca, Indians, 1 pitching Grove Athletics, 10 wins, CARSON 13; REGENT 2 Carson, N. Dak., June 18.—Carson defeated ‘Regent Sunday on the lat- ter's home diamond 13 to 2. Culver, on the mound for Carson, pitched steady ball, while Ketterling, for Re- gent, was hit hard and given ragged support. OF THE CLUBS. AMERICAN LEAGUE Standings Won 39 i Lost jadelphia 13 York . St. Louis . Detroit Cleveland . Washington . Chicago Boston ... tees Gomes Yesterday R Chicago Philadciphia Faber and Bergby, Quinn, Rommel, and Cochrane. First Gam: Detroit .. Boston .. 10 Carroll, Stoner and Shea; Ruffing and Berry. Second Game: E Detroit Boston Uhle and Phillips; roll and A. Gaston. H 17 M. Gaston, Car- Others not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Standings Won St. Louis ...... i Pittsburgh Chicago New Yo. Philadelphia Brooklyn . Boston Cincinnati CHARLIE BOARDMAN |H SLATED AS HURLER IN OPENING CLASH sh etenieer Followers Say Grays Will Have to Improve to Be in Running |DAVIDITES HERE THURSDAY 3} Love Slated to Hurl Tomorrow Night; Hettinger Has Sev- eral Strool Men Bismarck's Grays will have to play better baseball than they did against Steele Sunday if they want to give Hettinger a good game tonight and tomorrow night. That is comment made by Het- tinger fans who watched the Sunday game here. ttinger Fans To Au Attend Ball Game and Fight Visiting Hurler Married to Man- ager'’s Daughter Early This Morning Hettinger, N. D., June 18. ~Fresh from carly season victories over the outstanding baseball teams in the southern Slope country, the Hettinger baseball team this morning left for a series of two games with the Bis- marck Grays tonight and Wednesday in conjunction with the state fire- men’s convention. Hettinger, the seat of Adams coun- ty, always has becn noted for turn- ing out ‘athtetic teams above par for towns comparable in size and this year appears to be no exception. With Captain Peters, more fami- Marly known as Hobo Pete, directing the field play of the team and O. M. Tripp, managing the club, Hettinger this year has athered together an aggregation wrich appears destined to win the great majority of its Hettinger this year boasts one of | ames. j the strongest teams in the southwest- ern part of the state. Some of their performers played with Strool, 8. last year when the South Dakot: celebration. man, big southpaw who has seen lots of baseball in his day in many leagues, will pitch his first game of the se son puts cheer into the hearts of Bis- marck baseball ballyhooers. Charlie pitched considerably last year until his arm went wrong. He -|made his first attempts at the toss- ing game Sunday in the Steele game, holding the Kidder county boys hit- |less for two innings and striking out | two men, the first with his first three pitched balls. The big boy has not yet reached his customary lambasting hitting form. Doc Love is slated to hurl in to- Games Yesterday R Pittsburgh 1 6 Kremer and Hemsley; May, Kol and Sukeforth. St. Louis .. jand race meets of the Great Western | Chicago Mitchell and J. Wilson, C. Jonnard; Horne, Claude, Gonzales. ' Others not scheduled. | oe | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Standings Pet. 635 679 316 “509 463 373 358 357 Kansas City Jonnard and! morrow night's game. Manager Churchill will change his |lineup tonight in an effort to “pep” up his infield. Long Jawn Sagchorn will be stationed at first base and Eddie Tobin will be moved to second. Johnson and Fuller will continue at shortstop and third. Louis Lenaburg probably wl not be in Bismarck for the games. In the ouftfield will be Babe Mohn, | Dutch Nagel, and either Doc Love or Charlie Boardman, depending upon which is pitching. George Heidt, Mandan’s youthful walloped Bismarck at a Dickinson : Boardman Will Pitch Announcement that Charlie Board- hurler, will oppose John Donaldson, of the Cuban House of David club, in | the twilight game Thursday, Man- ager Neil O. Churchill announced to- day. Heidt agreed this morning to hurl for the Grays in their aaene with the famed bearded negr setters Donaldson hes peed an all-star agg! ion. He is wel fortified in the aang line. He, of course, is the ace of the squad. Mugsy McGraw, manager of the New York ‘4:13-Second Mile ‘Leo Lermond Runs. | Giants, was so impressed with the lean negro tosser after watching him | work that he made the statement he | would offer $100,000 for him if he jmere a pies ena Louis Willame eres all I the catch- ing, and any man who can withutand | ‘the rigors of such a long tour marr 4 have been in vogue, and harness rac-; Boston A. A. Star Two-miler | Has Second Fastest Out- door Mile in Country New York, June 18.—(4)—Leo Ler- | mend, husky flyer from the Boston | A. A., had to his credit today the sec- ‘ond fastest outdoor mile ever run in ;marck Fair this week? No county or, this country. Lermond, who only a year ago was the best of America’s crop of two- milers, clearly demonstrated his right to head the list of present-day milers in this country when he turned in a an13 performance for the eight fur- | longs in a benefit track and field meet at the Yankee stadium last night. Lermond’s time was the fastest any American has done the mile since | 1915 when Norman Taber. of Brown reeled off the distance in 4:12 3-5 at Cambridge, Mass. Taber's time, inci- dentally, stood as a world’s record un- til Paavo Nurmi lowered it to 4:10 2-5 in 1923. The other feature of the benefit | meet for New York's public school athletic league, the 100-yard invita- tion dash, provided a thrilling duel which saw Claude Bracey, Rice insti- tute speedboy, nose out Eddie Tolan, | University of Michigan. negro, by inches with Karl Wildermuth, | Georgetown, I. C. A. A.A. A. cham- | pion, third, and Reginald Pete) | Bowen, University of Pittsburgh, 1. C. A. A. A. quarter mile title-holder, {fourth and last. Bracey was timed in 9 4-5 seconds. Al Brown Favored To Beat Gregorio New York, June 18—()—Al Brown, janky Panama negro, and Vidal ped of Spain, meet in a 15- round bout at the Queensboro stad- jum tonight to determine which shall reign as “defending bantemweight champion of the world” in the eyes of the New York State Athletic asso- ciation. ‘The Brown-Gregorio tussle tops a card for the benefit of the National the plate is worthy of great notice. Charlie Hancock, left fielder, is the |Babe Ruth of the team. Street, third sacker, is a neat wal- loper, and Manville Boldridge, first | baseman, is another who has a tend- jency to clean up the sacks when he strides to the plate. Nick Jones is the speed boy of the outfit and a dangerous man on the paths. Art Hancock is a natural place-hitter and an enigma to hurlers. The colored outfit has three other pitchers in addition to Donaldson. They are Foster Blake, a right hander; Tom Porter, a southpaw with several mean hooks; and Lefty Wil- son, another southpaw whom many rank next to Donaldson. Jack Potts, a fifth hurler aveling with the club, was drowned in reservoir at Dilworth, Minn., Por shortly after the Davidites had played the Fargo-Moorhead Twins. Others on the club are Hilton, sec- ond, and Ernest Worley, ball-hawk who plays in the outficld. Fights Last Night ‘ (By The Associated Press) Cook, Austra- L. (Young) Stribling, Macon, Ga., outpointed Babe Hunt, Ponca City, , Last Thursday the Hettinger team clashed. with the strong Sioux City stockyards nine and led them for six innings only to lose in the last two innings by a score of 8 to 4. Het- inger held the fam famed traveling out- Hoven. toe elosest eones:of ity, Can in this section of the country. The Hettinger clan also holds vic- tories this season over Bowman, N. Dak., and Lemmo. and Strool, 8. D. A romantic setting is being ba no for the Bismarck games. bp? Hettinger pitcher, sane one the rier of the ae was lite Dorothy Tripp, daughter of of Manager ‘Tripp, early this morning. Eneberg will hurl the open- ing game tonight. Accompanying the team will be a score or more of firemen from the Hettinger volunteer fire department and a number of baseball and fight fans, Thirty-one seats have been reserved at the fight prograr: by the Hettinger delegation and many more are expected to reserve seats before the fights tonight. Minneapolitan Is Trapshoot Victor Fort Snelling, Minn., June 18.—(?) —J. E. Dickey, Minneapolis, yester- day won the Minnesota state singles trapshooting championship with a score of 196 out of a possible 200. John Cunningham of Sturgeon Lake was runner-up, winning a shoot-off from Roger Fawcett of Minneapolis. Each finished with 194, and then Cunning- ham scored 25 straight hits while Fawcett got only 23 out of 25. Blues, Millers Renew Struggle All Teams in Association Enjoy Day's Rest Yesterday After Heavy Week By WILLIAM A. WEEKES Chicago, June 18.—(P)—Witu a day of rest behind them, top teams of the their struggle for per eir st & commanding lead. ‘ace nection of President T. J. y's Cc It arranged yesterday's oft day by doubling up Sunday and prepared for a set of four-game series, Kansas City, leading Minneapolis by @ matter of 6 percentage points, invaded Toledo to engage Casey Stengel’s seventh position Mudhens, bead oe ea ian tit pe into Louis. ville, located in Position by a margin of two and one-half games over Columbus, Bubbles Hargrave’s St. Paul en- trant, pegging away in third: place, five and one-half games behind its twin, tackled Indianapolis. The In- dians were to open the series four games behind the Saints and had an outside chance of cutting down the margin between third and fourth Places. Milwaukee, in last place, moved -into Columbus with an ex- cellent chance of climbing out of the cellar position. The Senators were sixth, but were less than a game out | Of eighth place. Distorted Evidence No amount of statistical evidence, distorted in an effort to mislead the public, can disprove government figures showing the gain of c pure smoking delight. Its exclusive, secret toasting sieomeen antees the tobaccos free from irritants and cea ae in the opinion of 20,679% physicians, makes Lucky Strike less irritat: ing than other cigarettes. have been checked and certified to by LYBRAND, ROS: BROS. AND MONT: pecs Accoun: ‘ (SIGNED) “It's toasted” No Throat Irritation- hookup over the N.B.C. network. slender figure, no one can deny the truth of the advice: “REACH FOR A LUCKY- INSTEAD OF Lucky Strike to be greater than the combined increase of all other digarattes. 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