The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1929, Page 8

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PASE EIGHT Emory ‘Spunk’ C LOVE AGA Cornell’s Threat at Poughkeepsie | ARCH POWELL HURT AS GAR 1S HURLED | i _ FROM RACNG OVAL Mrs. E. G. Patterson Is First| Woman of Year Approved as Official Finish Judge ART CHANDLER PROVES FAST New Records in All Events Are Established by Collins and Chandler Saturday AUTO RACE RESULTS Qualifying trials (half - mile) Emory Collins, Frontenac, Regina, Sask., 30 4-5 seconds (new rec- ord); Art Chandler, Frontenac, Indianapolis, 34 1-5 seconds; Miles Parmenter, Fronty Ford, Christine, and Don Voge, Front Wheel Special, Minneapolis, and Jack Walters, Chevrolet Special, Grand Forks, all 34 2-5 seconds; George Guttn, Kemick Special, Grand Forks, 35 1-5 seconds; Ernie Johnson, Falls Special, Hickson, 36 seconds; Arch Fow- ell, Newfor Special, Galesburg, 3% seconds; John Osterhouse, Dusenberg 8, Stanton, 39 seconds; Den Schulsten, Ford, Minneap- olis, 40 4-5 seconds; Dewey Baum- gert. Nash Special, Fargo, dis- qualified. Bismarck Tribune Sweepstakes (Five Laps) First heat—Won by Emory Col- lins; Art Chandler, second; Don Voge. third; Miles Parmenter, fourth. Time—2 minutes 55 1-5 seconds. Second heat—Won by Miles Parmenter; Jack Walters, second. ‘Time—2 minutes 53 2-5 seconds. Third heat—Won by Art Chand- ler; John Osterhouse, second; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bur ke. Don Schulsten, third. Time—3 minutes 2 1-5 seconds. Finals—Won by Emory Collins; Art Chandler, second; Miles Par- menter, third; Jack Walters, fourth; John Osterhouse, fifth. Time—2 minutes 52 2-5 seconds (new record). Mrs. E. G. Patterson Special (Three Laps) Won by Art Chandler. Emory Collins, who finished first, dis- qualified. Time 1 minute 35 2-5 seconds.. (New record). Starter—Barncy Sullivan. Finish judges—Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Patterson, F. L. Loomis. Timers—O. W. Roberts and Capt. H. A. Noyes. Scorers—E. D. Rose and M. 0. Steen. By WILLIAM S. MOELLER Finishing first in every heat in which he was entered Saturday ait- ernoon, Emory “Spunk” Collins, Re- gina, Sask., automobile racer, snared most of the honors at the snappy Bismarck Fair auto racing program. New records were cstablished in the three distances on the program. Collins made two new records when he covered one lap in 40 4-5 seconds and five laps in 2 minutes 52 2-5 sec-| ° onds. Art Chandler, Indianapolis, set up a record for three laps, covering the distance in 1 minute 35 2-5 scc- onds. Mrs. Patterson Judge Setting aside for the Bismarck Fair @ standing rule that only men be ap- pointed finish judges, the interna- tional Motor Contest association ap- proved of Mrs. E. G. Patterson as a finish judge for the Saturday races. Mrs. Patterson offered a special trophy, a silver cup, to the winner of the special three-lap race, Art ‘Chandler, and presented it to him at @ banquet Saturday evening. Arch Powell, Galesburg, was in- jured in the only accident of the day. At the start of the second heat of the Bismarck Tribune sweepstakes, the five entrants gained remarkable speed for the first turn on the east curve. With the cars bunched, Powell's left front wheel brushed the right front wheel of the front wheel drive special driven by Don Voge, Minneapolis. Powell's car caromed off Voge’s ma- chine and was struck broadside by jone driven by Erine Johnson, Hick- on. Powell's machine through the wooden railing of the outside of the track, rolled over once jand landed on its four wheels. The ecident was only partially visible to e spectators because of the dense louds of dust. Powell suffered a fractured shoul- der blade, bruises, and undetermined Injuries as a result of his crash. He prevented further injuries by ing in the car under the steering wheel rather than jumping from his eat, it is believed by officials. A parade of 16 makes of automo- biles entered by 13 local automobile concerns in Bismarck was the first S the racers tomobile mo- the track. Made Solo Trials Don Schul Isten, second and third. Final Is Thriller The final in this event, in doubt until the checkered flag flashed, was Johnson, incapacitated. Parmenter, winning the heat, estab. lished a new short-lived record for the five laps, covering the distance in 2 minutes 53 2-5 Art Chandler won the third heat in slow time, 3 minutes 2 1.2 sec- onds. John Osterhouse, Stanton, and Minneapolis, were Voge and Parmenter going into the second heat with Jack Walters, Powell and Johnson. injured in this heat and the cars driven by Powell, Voge were Powell was and Miles seconds. close enough to force Collins to break Parmenter’s mark. Neck-and- neck for five laps, Collins surged ahead on the home straightaway stretch and copped first honors. Collins and Chandler, because of their spectacular races in the heats of the s: pete for her spcci started in pole position but had not sweepstakes event, were chosen by Mrs. Patterson to com- cup. Collins covered the first lap before Chandler had taken it away from him. Los- ing the pole put Collins to a disad- vantage temporarily and he trailed for most of the second lap. On the third and final turn, however, he took greater chances dh the turns and pulled up even with his opponent as they reached the home straight- away. With his auto a trifle faster, Collins surged ahead by three.quar- ters of a length. Twenty from the finish, the adian champion cut in front of Chandler to prevent Chandler from passing grandstand. fied Collins for his le chance. Chandler's ly saved the h in front of the The Dewey Baumgert, a Nash spi the time ti unbalanced car would not ecial, was judges disquali- tacti ies. have on the curves, however, and Starter Barney Sullivan waved him from the track. Baumgert, on the west turn, turned completely around twice. Races were completed just before a heavy shower descended upon the ground: The Gray at Play s. HITTING g | witness the regatta. | has aroused record intere: Champion California Crew and Husky Columbians Again Are Made Favorites 1S DARK HORSE! CORNELL sea has felt the pulsing beats of many @ great race but his ancient depths, seemed to quiver with a new thrill today to receive the mightiest college fleet ever brought together for na- tional championship honors. Drawn up in imposing battle array for the grand climax of the 1929 row- ing campaign were 22 crews, repre- jsenting nine institutions from the cast, middlewest and Pacific coast. Nine Are Entered Starting at 5:15 p. m. (eastern day- light time) seven will row for fresh- man honors at two miles, six more boats will go to the marks for the three-mile junior varsity race at 6:15 and an hour later, as a record smash- ing finale, nine slim cedar craft will begin the four-mile battle for blue ribbon varsity honors. California beat out Columbia last June in a record-breaking varsity race and most of the experts expect to these same rivals lashing the waters side by side again, perhaps to another record tune. Fully 100,000 spectators are expected The record fleet of contesting crews, apparent , for what ever the Poughkeepsie affair may lack Chicago . Boston ... Chicago . St. Louis Adkins, Gray and Shang. Philadelphia . New York .. Ehmke, Earnshaw and Cochrane; Wells, Zachary and Dickey. R Detroit .. 8 pb Cleveland rae eee 3 Uhle, Stoner and Shea; Hudlit Miljus, Grant, Zinn and Myatt. H NATIONAL LEAGUE Standin, ‘The dangerous Cornell crew, winners over M. I. 'T., Harv ard, Princeton and Syracuse, beaten only half a length by Yale. is pictured above. Cornell is regarded as a possible dark horse in the Poughkeepsie championships June 25, Coach James Wray is pictured at the top. left, anc, Com modore 8. W. Abbott, right. Members of the crew, left to right, are: Behrman, stroke; O'Shea, Clark, Scott, Heidelberger, Mann, Abbott, Stillman, and, below, Coxswain Mightiest Fleet Set for Poughkeepsie 22 Crews Representing Nine In- AMERICAN LEAGUE aeeiaa, uh e 3 Standings stitutions in Three Thrill- | Won Lost |Philadelphia . 480015741 ers on Program |New York 35 4503 St. Louis 3524593 By ALAN J. GOULD Detroit .. 34 30531 Poughkeepsie, N. ¥., June 24.—()— | Cleveland 27 30° 474 Old man river rolling along to the | Washington 25 32 439 355 306 eet 5 in tradition or color, as compared essa € 3403 ro with the ancient Yale-Harvard re- St. Louis . 36 26 581 gatta at New London, it more than | New York. “3425576 makes up in competitive features. Brooklyn . 2 34 406 Overnight, thousands of race fans|pocton |.” 34424 Poured into town while the river| piiadeiphia 330421 boasted the biggest fleet of visiting Cincinnati 37 362 craft it proves. Has ever ned, iets = 4 ing from outboard motorboats terda: triple decked steamboats. ene R Hy CE Bears, Columbians Favored New York 8B 10 0 ‘The advance forecast of expert Brooklyn : 9 2 2 opinion bracketed the details of the "a4 innings) . 7% world’s champion Californians and New York's own Columbians, 1927 champions and 1928 runners up, as , |CO-favorites in the varsity struggle. Guidas Nagel . Johnson . Lenaburg Sagehorn crashed | Loy Each car entered in the races then Je ide a solo trial race against time to qualify for starting positions. aaeey Collins made the fastest time and the pole position,’ but Art ler, Miles Parmenter, Chris- Don Voge, and Jack Walters, Forks, all proved that they machines. er and Home runs—Johnson, Nagel 1. ; Triples—Nagel, Sagehorn, and Love * Doubles—Guidas and Nagel 3; Pull- Johnson Lenaburg and 1. Runs—Johnsoni 15; Sagehorn 14. Stolen bases—Johnson 6; 8s 5 Sacritices—Tobin, Fuller, and Sage- La horn 4; Guides 2; Nagel, Cosgriff, and second base; Nagel, and 9 | pressed observers. ‘he Californians, seasoned, confident and unbeaten, loomed as champions. Columbia, however, was conceded to be | even better than last year, when the | New Yorkers were barely three- quarters of a length behind the Gold- en Bears in the fastest four-mile col- lege race ever rowed. Cornell, pace setter for the first half of last year’s race, and Washing- | ton, varsity champion three times in recent years, also figured as outstand- ing contenders. The navy accustomed to champion- ship contenders, appeared below its jusual high standard, but Pennsyl- vania and Syracuse have not im- Wisconsin was a factor again while Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology prepared to make its bow in four-mile company. Stanton Too Good For Lahr Knights | Lahr’s Knights lost another base- ball game to the Stanton nine at the northern city yesterday afternoon. The score was 9 to 5. Stanton scored four runs in the opening frame, two in each the fourch and fifth, and one in the eighth. The Genewich, Fitzsimmons, Walker and O'Farrell; Vance, Koupal, Ballou, A. Moore and Deberry. Pittsburgh Chicago . Meine, Hill, Swetonic and Hai Tr E 0 greaves, Hemsley; Malone, Bush, Nehf and Gonzales, Schulte, Grace. First Game: R H Philadelphia . 1 6 Boston ... 5 ou Willoughby, McGraw and. Dav’ Susce; Seibold and Legett. id Lu Kansas City Minneapolis Columbus Bismarck clan counied four runs in | Toledo third 2 is, CHIROPRACTOR FANS 14 SWATSMITHS AS BAPTISTE WEAKENS Grays Pound Out. Runs in: Sec- ond, Third, Fourth, Sixth for 7 to 1 Victory LOVE LOSES OWN SHUTOUT Louis Lenaburg, One of Lead- ing Hitters, Only Gray to Go Hitless Yesterday Dame Fortune played a nasty trick on Leeds diamond men yesterday; they forgot their bat bag at home. On the other hand, premonition may have moved the fickle old lady to Provide a ball player's alibi for the 14 added strikeout topes Doc Love has curing in his season's collection and the 7 to 1 victory of Churchill's Grays against the Leeds nine at the city park yesterday. To add to the trouble of Pete Bap- tiste, Indian hurler, Churchill's men took pains to choose their favored bludgeons in turning over spare tim- ber to the Leeds batsmen and the Potency of Indian signs waned after the first stanza. The Grays pushed over two runs in the second inning and solo counts in the third and fourth frames before Baptiste gave way to Melvin Brustad. Brustad’s sojourn was quite as unpleasant on the mound. The Bismarck lads aoe over three more tallies in the : Love Allows One MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1929 _ 2 Leeds garnered one run off Doc} Leeds Love's afternoon offerings, that in the lucky seventh. The Bismarck Pet. |bonesetter has himself to blame for all this, however. With Grady on third base and with two away, Love served up a luscious one that Riffe, Leeds leadoff man, drove through shortstop to score Grady. It was Love's lone strikingly gift pitch, for he re- sumed wicked hooks there- after to whiff Kabeary in the eighth id Whitefeather and Grady in the Leeds made to score was in the sixth inning. Manager Charles Geil flied out to Lenaburg to open the frame, but Brustad and Kabeary drove hard singles into centerfield. The Bis- marck hurler bore down, however, to strike out Whitefeather and Perkins, who took the ozone count for the third time. A pass, a base wallop, a fielder's choice, and two more one-play hits {netted Bismarck two runs in the sec- jond inning. Love drew the free ticket to first base; Kelly Simonson slashed a hot bingle into centerfield. Love hotfooted it to third and Kelly made second on the play at third base. McLeod flew out to Brustad. Babe Mohn dumped one down to Brustad, who threw out Love at the plate. Floyd Fuller hit into centerfield to Score Simonson and Mohn. Nagel's drive was knocked down by Baptiste with his bare hand, but the Dutch- man was safe as the sphere rolled out of Baptiste’s reach. Tobin's fly was gathered in by Brustad for the final out. Leeds Slips in Third In the third, Brustad’s error put on Johnson, who was forced at the key- stone sack by Lenaburg. Love drove a hard low drive that careened off Brustad’s glove for a single. Lena- burg tried legging it to third. The hotbox play of Leeds’ infielders was not so hot and Louis slid whiskers first into third base to later score on Simonson’s blow that went for a fielders’ choice when all hands were safe. Nagel’s double down the first base line, Tobin's rap to centerfield and a boot on Johnson's roller to second 5 | aeanemaca CHonommnen mmonnomnnh cookenumeg Cocunewmoy ecoocooroon oooh 3 eoon « wom © anog 3% ~swop © snot os Sake Rie Fs Oe sacri- bases Love 14; hits allowed by Love 4 in 9 innings; Baptiste 6 in four innings; Brustad 3 in 4 innings; stolen bases —Johnson, Lenaburg, Love, Mohn, Leeds ; umpires Schultze, final frames. The only other threat | Stokes. An unusual action picture of Doris Goldsworthy, 15-year-old girl athlete of Pulham, England, taking the high hurdle, is shown above. Doris has won several championships in running, jumpi ing and hurdling, and is ex- pected to develop into one of England's finest woman athletes. MAX AND PAULINO WILL ‘HOG’ WEEK’S FISTICUFF SPOTLIGHT { Majority of Fans Pick German as Winner and Next Occu- pant of Tunney Throne |rops 45-ROUND CHARITY GO George Godfrey, Young Strib- ling and Johnny Risko All Swing Into Action New York, June 24—Heavyweights in general, and Paulino Uzcudun and Max Schmeling more particularly, will “hog” virtually all of the nation’s fistic stage this week. The so-called “German Dempsey” and the Spanish Woodchopper clash over the 15-round route at the Yankee stadium Thursday in one of the year’s most important bouts. Some of the pant of the heavyweight throne va- cated by Gene Tunney. These would- be seers are basing their belief on the OER! eee eat Knol (INCLUDING GAMES OF JUNE 23) (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL Batting—O'Doul (Phillies), .385. Runs—Ott (Giants), 62. Homers—Ott (Giants), 20. Stolen bases—Cuyler (Cubs), 20. Pitching—Grimes (Pirates), won 11, Jost 1. AMERICAN Batting—Foxx (Athletics), .404. Ri (Tigers), 61. Homers—Gehrig (Yanks), 20. Stolen bases—Miller (Athletics), 10. Pitching—Grove (Athletics), won 11, lost 1. Jimmies’ Rally Beats 1 Trainers Rallies in the last two innings en- abled Jamestown to defeat the Man- a State Training school team at lamestown yesterday. Mandan 100 011 000—3 8 2 000 001 021—4 9 3 Heidt and Thornberg; and Gray. Batteries Sims, Poseley “No risk if says Alfred “CERTIFIED for your PROTECTION” Cremo—All leaves are sterilized.” D. Litt., 4.B., LL.D. | theory that Schmeling will win de- cisively. Paulino, the Basque, has fought ;them all and never been dropped. He has lost a few decisions here and there, but the majority of his ap- pearances have been winning ones. There is considerable doubt in the minds of some experts whether ee right hand can halt ie ever-crowding woodchopper and whether the Teuton can withstand Paulino’s body attack. The Paulino-Schmeling battle tops a 45-round card at the annual milk fund charity ring carnival. Otto Von Porat, bone-crushing Norwegian Puncher, meets K. ©. Christner, Akron, O., another heavyweight slug- ger, in the 10-round semifinal. Although the milk fund show over- shadows all other of the coming Week's fistic shows, there are a num- ber of other first-rate attractions. George Godfrey, Young Stribling and Johnny Risko, all leading heavy- weights, all will swing into action. a egg pence Griffith, the Sioux iy vyweight, in a 10- rounder at Detroit Thursday night. Stribling meets a rugged, if mediocre, Mich, tonight, “Godfrey ‘engages . engages Chuck W: Indianapolis veteran, * ACLS: at Cleveland Tuesday night. Blues Widen Gap And Minneapolis Runs Into Slump Indianapolis Takes the Millers Twice in Row While Kan- sas City Splits Series By WILLIAM A. WEEKES 2 Chicago, June 24—(P)—If Edwara H. Zwilling’s Kansas City Blues con tinue to play the kind of baseball during the remainder of the present | road trip as they have since they left home June 13 they probably will cele. brate their return to Muehlebach park July 4 with a commanding lead in the American association. With Minneapolis, the Blues’ big- gest threat at present, in something approaching a serious slump, Kansas City has pegged along until a margin of three full games separates it from the Millers, The Blues were forced to accept an even break in yesterday's double- header with Columbus, but gained ground anyway, Minneapolis helping by dropping two games to Indianap- olis, Kansas City overcame a six-run lead in the first game and finally licked the Senators 9 to 7 in 11 in- ton benina wren took the second, 4 yi song’s strong pitching. Bill Burwell Minneapolis with four hits in the first game of @ doubleheader at Indianapolis and the Indians copped, 5 to 2. Teachout was rapped for 10 hits in the second, but kept them scattered to give In- dianapolis a 7 to 2 margin. Milwaukee's Brewers, operating un- der new leadership in the person of Marty Berghammer, split a double bill with Toledo, both games being de- cided by the same count, 3 to 2. Rosy Ryan restricted the Mud Hens to four hits in the opener, and Bud Par- malee, Toledo's young but high-priced righthander, came back to pitch the occupants of Swayne field to victory over Charlie Robertson in the second contest. Parmalee drove in the tying scored the winning marker on Smith's sacrifice. Louisville and St. Paul also broke even in a doubleheader. The Saints hammered out on 11 to 6 victory in the first game, but bowed to Joe De- berry, 9 to 5, in the twilight contest. if Church and Golf j ‘ | Made Attainable | For Caddy Tribe eo Chicago, June 24.—(P)— The LaCoste Absent from British Net Tourney. London, June 24. ‘The British: championships, of all tennis spectacles, opening on Wimbledon’s famous courts today, had an entry Ust in excess of 200. 2 The only notable absentee is Rene ‘LaCost » Of France, men’s singles: champion last year. Jean . Henri Cochet, Big Bill Joh Lott will fight it: Van Ryn, George out for the men’s title. Helen Wills: is an overwhelming favorite for the women’s title. an ollins Snares Most of Automobile Race Honors || : IN MASTER OF SITUATION AS GRAYS WALLOP LEEDS Champion in England es cee : you smoke W. McCann »

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