The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 29, 1930, Page 10

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| 20 [Two Baseball Ga ROVE GIANTS MEET TMS AND WORKMEN PAGE STEELE OUTRI el Duane Meets Battling Mos- ; sett in Headliner of 26- | Round Ring Show THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1930 mes, Boxing Show on Memorial Day Program -: 38 POWERFUL MOTORS ARE TUNED UP FOR 500-MILE GRIND gage in their first golf tourna- ment of the season—an 18-holc medal score handicap affair —it ‘was announced this morning by E. E. LaFrance, secretary. Martin S. Hagen will be in ser- eral charge. Club handicaps wilt prevail, Entrants may begin their plays at any time between 9 a. m. and 3 p. m, according to Mr. La- France. olfers to Have Meet Country Club Plans 18-Hole Medal Score Handicap Tourney Tomorrow BIGGEST FIELD: SINCE| 1944 GETS READY FOR MEMORIAL DAY RACE | New and Rebuilt Autos Will Face the Starter at 10 in the Morning TO LINE UP THREE IN A ROW ‘Billy Arnold, Chicago Youngster Who Made Fastest Time, Draws Pole A nominal entrance fee will be charged and numerous prizes are offered. LA PALINA JAVA WRAPPED -THE SECRET OF THE BLEND Members of the Bismarck Country club tomorrow will en- ISITING TEAMS ARE STRONG: efty Barry Will Pitch for Gi- ants; A. O. U. W. Battery Not Announced i Bismarck fans will see two base- all games and a boxing card Me- rorial day. The Grove Giants will battle the ‘amestown College nine at the state , enitentiary diamond at 1:30 p. m./ hile the Bismarck A. O. ‘W. will | lay Steele at the city athletic field t3pm. Del Duane, Bismarck lightheavy- reight, will fight Battling Mossett, fapoleon, in the eight round windup 9 the 26 round boxing show at the tex theater, beginning at 8:30 p. m. n the other bouts, the Illinois Kid nd Tuffy Sccco battle in a six round meets Matt Hum- and Sunny s and Battling fulbertson and Bud Cunningham aise the curtain. Indianapolis, May 29.—(}—Roaring motors, scheduled to bark their battle \cry at Indianapolis Motor Speedway tomorrow in the eighteenth annual 500-mile automobile race, were given their final inspection today by their 38 drivers and mechanics. | ‘The track was closed for a chemi- {cal bath intended to remove all the ol that has dripped from the cars during the last 30 days’ practice pe- {rlod. Following @ drivers’ meeting ‘late today, however, there was a like- |lihood the boys would be given a {chance for a few final tuning spins. ‘The Grove Giants expect another % 3 ae ’ i ietory tomorrow. Swede Evenson, hortstop, has been developing a fast licking infield rapidly. He is mak- ng @ great second baseman out of ‘ohnson, a recruit. Garver, Stoller, md Glenn will take care of the gi lens in the Jamestown game, Man- ger Clarence Orton announces. efty Barry will hurl his second game f the season, with Beaudry catching. Though Steele has an im lub this year, Charlie Jelinek, man- ier of the Workmen, is confident he Bismarck aggregation will win to- norrow'’s engagement. He has not ‘et chosen his starting lineup, but ays it will look something like the eam that trimmed Fort Lincoln 6 to : last Sunday. Steele is represented | Four major state athletic championships in a row! That's the record Bismarck high school athletes, under the supervision of Athletic Director Roy D. McLeod, completed at the state track and field meet this spring. First came the track title in 1929. Then football and basketball and track again. And the string may be extended more next year. The Demons scored 25 1-2 points in the fastest state track'meet in years this spring. Ellendale was second with 20, Fargo third with 18. In the picture of the 1930 state track champions above are: seated—Lucas Harmsen. Lloyd Murphy, Frank Potter, Walfred Hultbetg, Theodore Meinhover, Captain Harold’ Tait, Wallace Green, Wade Green, and John Spriggs; standing—Emil Martin, Lester Dohn, Earl Hoffman, Edward Wherland, John O'Hare, Dale Brown, Virgil Luyben, Russell Enge, Gilbert Benzomy and Leo Benser. Meinhover, Wallace, Green, Hoffman, O’Hare, and Enge received their diplomas last night and will compete no more for Bismarck. At Least Three I. C.4-A Records Are Threatened vy practically the same lineup that von runner-up honors in the James- own tournament last season. The Fort Lincoln baseball nine will lay Washburn at the McLean coun- y city tomorrow. Stewart Pitches Browns to Victory Detroit Is Beaten 4 to 2 in Game in Which Tigers Get Only Six Hits 4 y 200 000 000—- 2 3 001 000127— 4 9 0 Ww rgrave; Steward ind Ferrell. — Chicago-Cleveland postponed; cold. Boston-Philadelphia pos @foned; rain. Washington-New York postponed; rain and cold. Phillies and Reds Receive Setbacks Boston Braves and Chicago Cubs Win in Only Games in National Loop Boston, May, (®) —The Bra’ sot into action erday, after thi postponements, and beat ‘the Phillies Sto 1, Berger of Boston hit his elev- onth Homer of the season. Philadelphia 000 000100— 1 6 2 Boston .. 110 001 203 5 8 Collins, Alexander and McCurdy; Seibold and Spohrer. CUBS OUTLAST REDS Chicago.—The Cubs scored four runs lin the first inning and outlasted the Cincinnati Reds to win by 6 to. 6. iincinnati . 000 013 001— 5 Chicago. 00 011 003— 6 Frey, Kolp and Gooch; Bus! land Hartnett. New York-Brooklyn postponed; rain land cold. St. Louls-Pittsburgh postponed; wet grounds. Rus Van Atta Shuts Out Brewers : 5 to0 Millers Make It Two Out of Three From Blues; Colo- nels Win in Twelfth 92 Malone St. Paul, May 29——(—Rus Van ‘Atta pitched his first complete game for the Saints yesterday and shut out Milwaukee 5 to 0. Milwaukee 100 000 000 0 61 20 200 10$— 5 11 2 id a Van Atta and Grabowski. MILLERS WIN AGAIN Minneapolis.—The Millers made it two out of t in their series with ansas City, winning the final game 0 1. Kansas. City 010000000— 1 70 Minneapolis 02000 00$— 3 55 Thomas and Angley; Dumont and Gonzat — INDIANS ARE THUMPED Columbus.—Columbus took the odd game of the series from Indianapolis 001 000000-— 1 2 2 10 400 71t—13 21 1 Doyle TH final les from Toledo 4 to 3 by staging @ one-run rally in the twelfth innil Louisvili 000 030000001 4 81 0) . 100 110 000 000— 3 11 0 Poli, Wilkinson and T! Heimach and Smith. ey and Crouse; LS WIN IN TWELF' ‘ole Louisville won the fame of the ‘hompson; (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—P. Waner (Pirates), .405 Rune—Terry (Giants), 38. Home runs—Wilson (Cubs), 13. Stolen-bases—Cuyler (Cubs), 10. ; “AMERICAN LEA PPatting—Rice (Senators), :411. Runx—-Ruth (Yankees), 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club— Ww. St. Louis Brooklyn Pittsburgh Chicago . New York . Boston Cincinna Philadelphia AMERICAN LEAGUE Club— Washington . Philadelphia Cleveland New York Detroit St. Louis Chicago . Boston SESSSaror SP Columbus St. Paul . Indianapol Toledo .. Kansas City . Milwaukee .. Minneapolis . | Feats Yesterday (By the Associated Press) Walter Stewart, Browns—Won sev- Re ererteteted BeeSa acces! enth game of season, holding Tigers Reds to one hit in 2 1-3 innings, Cubs and winning 6 to 5. Socks Seibolds, Brat completed his ninth game, Phillies 5 to 1 for his seventh victory of season. Walter Berger, Braves—Hit eleventh 9 6| home run of season to help Braves defeat Phillies 5 to 1, OUT OUR WAY, NoW, DAN ~~ BEFORE WE START, IT IS UNDERSTOOD HAT. WE PLAY STRAIGHT GOLF! ~NOTHING SENSATIONAL, LIKE ~ HOLES IN ONE ! we WE EH 2 I MAY BE A BIT OFF FoRM ~~ ~~ HAVEN'T PLAYED FoR A FEW NEARS f .- LAST GAME WAS '} AGREE “To “THAT, A-TWosome with }at least three world’s records are not) t, | will not be because of any lack of ri- ’|from Stanford and Southern Cali- ct; | field classic, now 54 years old, likely .| century in 9.4 on the coast without 2 | Michigan, Wykoff, Krenz and Rothert Are After Century, Discus and Shot Put Marks By ALAN GOULD Cambridge, Mass. May 29.—(?)—If! buffeted about in the intercollegiate A. A. A. A. championships starting tomorrow in the Harvard stadium, it valry between the two squads of strong-armed and swift-legged youth fornia. The expected battle between the two Pacific coast universities for the | DF) team championships in this track and will see the 100-yard, shotput, and discus tossing records subjected to the severest pressure. Marks in the high jump and low hurdles also may be toppled if the boys are in top form and conditions favorable. Frank Wykoff, who has done the starting blocks, is concentrating all his efforts in this event, in which his main rivals will be Eddie Tolan of the new world’s record holder at 9.5, and Hec Dyer, the Stan- ford star, who beat Wykoff in 9.6 at Los Angeles. The I. C. A. A. A. A. record for the century is 9.7. Dyer will be a favorite in the 220. Stanford's team prospects are built largely on the bulky shoulders of Eric Krenz and Harlow Rothert. two weight tossing stars hope to cele- brate their final eastern appearance ‘as collegians by cracking a few rec- ords. Krenz, in the discus, and Roth- ert, in the shotput, not only have the meet records at their mercy but fig- ure to menace the world’s records in their specialties. Krenz recently gained official credit for his world’s mark of 163 feet 8% inches in the discus, made last year. He has tossed the platter four feet farther already this spring. Rothert has a more difficult job since the world’s shotput mark was HAGEAS f ee ALAS oN THE LAST Hote LT BLEW UP witd A MISERABLE lome rune—-Ruth ¢ JONES BELIEVES HE WAS LUCKY TO BEAT LONG-DRIVING TOLLEY moved out to 52 feet 7% inches, the achievement of Germany's Emil Hirshfeld. Nevertheless he has beat- en 52 feet this spring. Southern California’s jumpers and hurdlers, relied upon to help the Tro- jans replace the Cardinals as team champions, may do some record-bust- ing of their own. The Trojan high- jumpers, Van Osdel and Stewart, are capable of 6 feet 5 inches or better. The low hurdiers, Carls and Payne, ve touched record time and will be hard to beat. California has a star in Captain Al Pogolotti. Yale’s cap- tain, Sid Kieselhorst, winner of the 220-yard low hurdles for the past two years, is a doubtful performer, hav- ing just recovered from an operation for appendicitis. Michigan Threat to Tie Wisconsin Grows Chicago, May 29.—(#)—Michigan’s threat to blast Wisconsin's dream of an undisputed Big Ten baseball championship is growing daily. ‘The Wolverines, who came out of a slump to hand the Badgers their first defeat of the season at Madison, Wis., last Saturday, gave another demon- stration of heavy hitting and good These| pitching yesterday by crushing Cin- cinnati untversity’s strong team, 15 to 2, at Ann Arbor. Saturday the Badgers must win or be content with a championship tie with Llinois. Ohio State bettered its position in the Big Ten race yesterday by over- whelming Chicago, 14 to 0. Indiana beat Northwestern, 4 to 0. DIEBOLD TO COACH CARLS Northfield, Minn., May 29.—(P)\— Marshall Diebold, former star at the University of Wisconsin, was appointed basketball coach at Carleton college. WELL SA-AY w~' You"RE “foo HicH GEARED FoR ME ~~ ABOUT “TH” SEVENTH HOLE | I CANT EVEN HiT A GRAPE-FRuT! HALF “TH? Time T HiT -TH? WaoDEN S'POSED “To Do}: a HOLD THIS BAG WHILE You PoKE-TH’|; BALL INS ANN baseball | British Champion Was on Green With Drive on Two 300- Yard Holes z By 0. B. KELLER St. Andrews, Scotland, May 29.—(>) There have been better golf and more protracted battles than in the big match of the British amateur cham- pionship yesterday, when Bobby Jones defeated Cyril Tolley at the nine- teenth hole, but I heve never wit- nessed its equal for fighting spirit and unbridled ferocity. Never more than one hole apart, the match was squared six times and un- squared finally by a long-range stymie {at the extra hole. Immediately after | the battle Jones said: | “I was frightfully lucky to win. All through the match I had an uneasy feeling that Cyril was hitting the ball {better than I was. Certainly he was driving better. I never had any confi- dence in my putting, and I must con- fess this was one match which I felt all along I was going to lose. “Tolley’s tiny pitch over the bunker close to the flag at the seventeenth was the most exquisite shot I ever saw. After outmaneuvering him, as I thought, and aided by a good break, I suddenly found myself with an eight-foot putt for a half to keep the match level. I'm sorry the match ended in a stymie, but I guess it’s just as well for me that it did. I feel six years older than I did this morning.” The English champion said he en- joyed every minute of,the match. “It was a great battle,” declared Tolley. “That little pitch over the bunker at the roadhouse was the best shot I ever played in my life. As for the stymie, I left myself open by jloose play. It is the fortune of war.” To the Americans scattered through the gallery of at least 12,000 it seemed j incredible that Bobby was being out- ) driven. Tolley reached the green at the 306-yard ninth while he was across the green and near the pin at the 314-yard twelfth. At the 527-yard fourteenth he was 100 yards ahead of Bobby’s pulled shot and four feet from the pin with his pitch for an eagle three to square the match once more after Jones’ 12-yard putt at the thir- teenth had sent the American open titleholder out in front. Fort Totten Athlete Wins Haskell Letter James Grant, Fort Totten, N. D., has been awarded a track and field letter at the Haskell Indian Institute, where he is a student, it has been an- nounced. Grant, entered in the decathlon event, took second place at the Kan- sas relays, while his team-mate, Wil- son “Buster” Charles, was winning the event and setting up a new meet record. Grant also was a,football letterman at the Lawrence, Kansas, Indian school, having been captain one sea- son, He was an end. i ee If Fights Last Night | | (By the Associated Press) New York— Fidel La Barba, outpointed Bushy » N.Y. (10), Joe ontpointed Haakon (8). Henry Pirpo, 1» outpoint jreenwood, Mian. (| y Cline, Fresn ed Eddie Ballatin, ilwaukee,— King Levinsky, go, knocked out Mits Minkel, kee (1). polis, Ind—-George Cook. A lin, outpointed ek Wigs linnapolis (10). ringtield, Ili,—John Schwanke, ‘outpointed Frankie hin (10), Peewee » knocked out Kid ‘uba (5), r—Johnny Simp- Tex. knocked lew,” Philadel~ | The 38 cars which qualified for the ‘event mark the largest field that hag participated qn a 500-mile race since 1911. For many years, the racing au- thorities limited the number to 33, but the expansion came with elimi- nation of the super-charger and the passing of the single-seated speed- ster models. Qualifying trials, which began last Saturday, ended at suncown yester- day. Eight drivers put their hopefuls through their paces on the final day to swell the field to its unusual pro- portions. America’s foremost speedway driv- ers, and two foreigners—Baconi Bor- zacchini and. Letterio Cuccinotta of Italy—will complete for the $115,000 cash 5 Louie Meyer, American driving champion; Peter De Paolo, Wilbur Shaw, Shorty Cantlon, Lou Moore, and Billy Arnold, who rode to recog- nition by piloting his mount faster than any other to qualify, are among those in the race. New cars and old ones rebuilt for this battle of miles will face the starter at 10 o'clock tomorrow morn- ing. Cars will be lined up three to @ row, with Arnold, by virture of the fastest time for the 10-mile qualifying trial —113.268 miles an hour—in the pole position. Others will follow in order of the speed they made and their or- der of qualifying. GOLDEN BEARS INVADE EAST Four University of California ten- nis players, with their coach, will in- vade the east this summer to play more than a dozen matches with mid- dle western and eastern teams. The netmen will be gone more than a month. Detroit, May 20.—(#)— Paulino Uzcudun and Johnny Risko have been matched for a bout at Olympia sta- dium on June 19. CELLOPHANE © 19 POPULAR SHAPES end SIZES From the lush, tropic island of Java,we import the finest qual- ity tobacco leaf grown, to be used for the La Palina wrapper. That's what makes La Palina different — better — milder — smoother, La Palina’s choice filler of blended tobacco com- bines with the Java wrapper to give you a truly superior cigar. CONGRESS CIGAR CO, INC. PHILADELPHIA, PA. LISTEN IN on the Le Palina Progeam, Co- lumbia Broadcasting System, every Wednes- day evening at 91:30 E.D.T. end Sunday evening ot 8:00 €.0.T. AMERICA’S LARGEST SELLING HIGH-GRADE CIGAR Distributors McKESSON - MINNEAPOLIS DRUG CO. Minneapolis, Minn, Copyright 1930 by Dodge Brothers Corporation DODGE BROTHERS SIX ‘835 AND UP, F.O.8B. 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