The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 16, 1931, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ee | Additional Sports Hi OUT OUR WAY THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1931 By Williams Tryout for Rifle Team Announced Captain S. W. Fraser Will Be in, Charge of Civilian Compe- tition July 26 | | | Devils Lake, N. D., July 16—(7)— Tryouts. for place on the North Da- kota civilian rifle team will be held at the Camp Grafton rifle range here July 26, Father Leo Kaufman, Mun- ich, team captain, announced Wed- nesday. ‘The team will compete in the shoot- ing events at Camp Perry, O., next month, Father Kaufman said. Captain S. W. Fraser, Bismarck will be in charge of the competition at Camp Grafton. He said this is the first time North Dakota will send a civilian team to the national meet Any civilian in the state may enter From the field, 13 civilians will be selected to go to Camp Perry, Fraser said. The national matches will be conducted Aug. 23 to Sept. 13. Mem bers of the team will be reimbursed for traveling expenses and given $1.20 a day for subsistence expenses dur- ing the meet. | 0) | Game Heads Will | Meet in Bismarck U. S. and Canadian Officials Will Discuss Open Seasons | on Certain Birds | St. Paul, Minn., July 16.—()—Wil- \ ReG. US PAT. orp. BORN THIRTY YEARS Too SOON, ‘ ele satles era ih a dla wa ele Atl TRWILLIAMS 7-Ib (9.1931 BY NEA SERVICE, ne. « wt to con-_ field of nine horses from the Dakotas, y representatives of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Towa. the fish and game departments of North Dakota, Montana, Saskatche- wan and Alberta. ‘The conference has been called, Stewart said, for a discussion of r ulations regarding opening dat certain game birds, especially tea | for proposals to shorten the season and limit the bag on certain fowls. “It is probable that the conference | will result in recommendations being made to the government biological | survey as basis for possible changes | in federal game laws,” Stewart said. | | Philadelphia, July 16.—()—"Keed” Chocolate, the polished ebony warrior from Cuba, stood Thursday on a mod- est pedestal, a champion everywhere but in New York state, king of the Chocolate Kayoes _ Champ in Seventh Cuban Wins Junior Lightweight Title From Benny Bass in One-Sided Bout Steele Juniors Rally To Beat M’Clusky Nine junior lightweights. Tuttle, N. D., July 16.—Scoring two “The slender, : s , grinning runs in the last inning, Steele's jun-| newsboy scored a technical knockout for epee iva rer arte sa er over Benny Bass, Philadelphia, be- Clusky youngsters, ; rill | tore 15,0 tie Rake eve. jfore 15,000 of the home folks in the , York from Cuba three years ago. Havana | National League ball park Wednes- day night to rise to the chamiponship heights that had been forecast for him ever since he arrived in New three-day test between American and British players will meet France a week hence. Captain Hardy of the American squad is not at all sure of the out- Chocolate was a champion Wed- come. He has made a great effort to \nesday night of almost any of the keep the youngsters of the squad, Frank Shields and Sidney Wood, from becoming over-confident. 1,200 FANS WATCH AUTOMOBILE RACES Archie Powell, Daytona: Beach, and Shano Fitzgerald, Chi- cago, Are Winners Twelve hundred fans watched | Archie Powell, Daytona Beach, Fia., ‘and Shano Fitzgerald, Chicago, snare most of the honors in the automobile racing program staged on the Bis- marck fair grounds race track Wed- nesday evening. | Powell and Fitzgerald, after win- jning the two qualifying heats, finish- led first and second, respectively, in {the final. ©. M. Tinglestad, Frazee, Minn., ‘narrowly escaped injury when his automobile crashed through a fence on one of the turns ‘and was badly damaged. The results of the program: First heat (Patterson Hotel Derby) —Archie Powell, first; O. M. Tingle- stad, Frazee, Minn., second; George Guttu, Grand Forks; Jimmy Belch, Kansas City; and Gene Mandeloff, St. Louis. Time (five laps)—2:45' minutes. Second heat (Bismarck Tribune Sweepstakes)—Shano Fitzgerald, first; Frank Sands, Orr, Minn., second; Mandeloof, third; Belch, out. Time —2:43 1-5 minutes. Record trials—Pitzgerald, one lap in 34.1 second; Powell, one lap in 31 seconds. . Special event— Frank Sands de- feated Elfrieda Mais, woman driver. Motorcycle race—Charles “Dutch” Graves, arck, first; Clayton White, Bismarck, second; Myron’ ‘Thistlethwaite, Bismarck, third; Joe Neibauer, Bismarck, fourth; Alex Neibauer, Bismarck, out. Time (five laps)—2:56 minutes. Final Heat (Sinclair Oi] Special)—| Powell, first; Fitzgerald, second; Guttu, third. Time (five laps)—' 2:40 minutes. |lighter classes as he put together all his speed, skill and punching powers to hammer Bass for two seconds |short of seven rounds, slash him jabout the face, mouth and nose and Itinally cut his left eyelid so badly | with crashing rights that Referee Leo Houck stopped the one-sided duel after 2:58 of the seventh. | Yankee and British | Net Stars to Clash Paris, July 16.—(#)—The inter-zone finals in the Davis Cup competition will begin on the Roland Garros court Friday. The winners of the Felch, who was a relief pitcher for the victors, was the individual star of the game. The score by innings: ‘McClusky Steele’ ... Gehring an ich; Felch and Hough. Kansas Trotter Is State Fair Winner, — | Fargo, N. D., July 16.—(P)—Bill), °° 4 Kemper, bay gelding owned and have ulce 011 040 0—6 021 040 2—7 Dornacker, | ' People who have broken veins or known as varicose ulcers THE MODERN WAY TO TREAT BROKEN VARICOSE VEINS | Powerful Germicide Treatment Being Used the Country Over With Splendid Results and Is Guaranteed bind it on snugly and let it stay all night—this is known as a moist or wet dressing. Why not try a bottle—you can get Twenty Grand Seeks Glory in Arlington Chicago, July 16.—(?)—Seventy-six grand for Twenty Grand—if he can do it. That is the sum the gallant son of St. Germans-Bonus, called the great- est three-year-old since Man O'War, will earn provided he gallops to vic- tory, as almost everybody expects he will do, in the $70,000 Arlington classic at Arlington park Saturday afternoon. N The race, as it shaped up Thursday, will have seven certain starters with @ gross valué of $87,400, making it the richest three-year-old stake in the world. ‘Twenty Grand, if triumph- ant, will drag down $75,900 to add to; his 1931 winnings of $134,194. The fca’s leading money earner of the season. a ; | SPORT SLANTS | OF I have the interesting results of a scientific study of the new golf ball from James Eugene Rowe, who was for 16 months chief ballistician at the Aberdeen grounds. Computatién of the ballistic co- efficient of the new golf ball as com- pared with the old is a trifle tech- nical but, to illustrate the main idea, Mr. Rowe explains: “with a given blow of his bat Babe Ruth is able to knock a baseball farther than he listic “coefficient of the baseball is greater than that of the tennis ball.” | SAME DISTANCE IMPOSSIBLE | From there, Mr. Rowe goes on t9/ Point out that since the ballistic co- efficient of the new golf ball is not so high as that of the old ball, “one has! drives.” A simple application of his! coefficient indicates “a stroke which would give a distance of 100 yards with the new ball would give 112 “Of course the total score of an factors,” Mr. Rowe said. “However, if we assume that the total score ob- en are big three-year-old already is Amer- | Play would be able to knock a tennis ball) with the same blow because the bal-' no right to expect to make as long! yards if the old ball had been used. | 18 hole course depends upon many) is inversely proportional to its ability to pierce the air... the new par of the balloon golf ball would be 81 as compared with 72 for the old ball. “Players who have been accustomed to make scores of 85, 95 and 100 with the old ball might be expected to make scores of 96, 107 and 113 with the balloon ball. In short, your score with the old ball multiplied by 1.124 (the ballistic coefficient) should give you your normal score with the bal- Toon ball. MEDIOCRITY COSTLY 4 “One im) t factor, that funda- mentally fectuectee all athletic ef- ficiency, has been entirely neglected, continues Mr. Rowe. “A very excel lent player will more efficiently solve new difficulties than @ mediocre) rer. | “My own fee! is that a poor or) abanane Sunes more affected by ®& change in the type of ball. If ~e consider who were accustom- ed to make scores of 72, 80, 90, 100 and 110 with the old ball, these same play- ers might be expected to make 81, 90, HAVE A COUPLE OF ON THE BLACK | LIQUID No wonder 102, 113, 124 with the new ball if 20 knowledge of athletic ability and technic is taken into consideration. However, if this factor is considered, the new expected scores might be 75, , 98, 110, 122. et me emphasize the fact that I do not attach very great importance to these numerical values. I do claim, a8 a scientific fact, that the ballistic coefficient of the new ball is less than that of the old ball, and that ve do. not have the right to expect as’ iuch | distance with it. | “Moreover, I claim that with a lit- tle attention to such scientific prin- ciples, a better ball—even a bigger and better ball—could have been de- signed, and that a better ‘all can be designed to replace the present bal- 1 Joon ball by employing the same prin- ciples.” Paul Berlenbach, former light heavyweight champion, is trying to “comeback.” Berlenbach, after being in retirement for several years, is fighting in small clubs around New ICE CREAM CONES . FLAG COMPANY! Black Flag Liquid costs less. It saves you enough to buy something else you want—often enough for a couple of ice cream cones, for instance. And you get the surest, quickest insect-killer going. Black Flag kills mosqui- toes, flies and other insects—dead! Yet harmless to humans, pets. A pleasant-smelling vapor. Money-back guarantee. Get Black Flag—save money! BLACK FLAG>- KILLS FLIES AND MOSQUITOES=DEADS ©r0s1,0.r.c0. switching to Camels The steady increase in the number of women who are switching to Camels is a tribute to the mild- Srgniigch. B, Day, Emporia, "Will be glad to know that the most//it for 85 cents from Service Drug Co., of this cigarette. carried off first place in the feature “itect and effective way to treat them ftail's Drug Store or any other mod- $1,000 stake race, the 2:18 trot at the |S Known to pharmacists as the anti-/ern druggist with the distinct under- North Dakota state fair here yester- |S¢Ptic Emerald Oil treatment. |standing that it must help you or Gay. t takes but a few minutes each|money back. Heal those broken veins Abbe Guy, black stallion, owned and | but the good results and swift and ulcers with Moone’s Emerald Oil. riven by Frank Bundy, St. Paul, /Telief is so noticeable that users are; NOTE: Being such an effective an- showed the way to the field in the | invariably supremely grateful. | tiseptic remedy, Emerald Oil is much 2:14 pace to win the $350 purse. Simply saturate a piece of cotton/used and with splendid results for of parched, dry-as-dust tobaccos. A 2:10 pace and a event for colts gauze or clean white linen in Emer-|Eczema, Skin Blemishes, {tching ‘will be on the program today as well|ald Oil and apply it to the broken/Skin, Pimples, Acne and often Psori- @s a running race which includes a|vein or ulcer before going to bed—|asis—Advertisement. Rie fo 9698 mabe | | 6 : throat-friendly blend of fine Turkish and mellow : : Domestic tobaccos that require no parching. Camels are milder, second, because all peppery dust is removed by a special vacunm-cleaning proc- ess before Camels are air-sealed in the Humidor Pack of germ-safe moisture-proof Cellophane. Camels are milder, third, because this wrap- ping of moisture-proof Cellophane prevents the cigarettes from drying out. The natural moisture of the tobaccos is held intact. When you inhale the cool fragrant smoke of a Camel you enjoy all the flavor, all the aroma of blended fine tobaccos kept in prime smoking condition—without the sting and bite-and-burn of stale, dried-out cigarettes. Just try Camels, join the throng and switch to them for one day, then quit them — if you can‘ A woman’s throat is more delicate than:a man’s more easily irritated by the unkindly hot smoke Guaranteed both by us and by... Kelly- Springfield e Why pay more when you can get KELLY at these prices? LOTTA MILES Dow'rclass Kelly Lotta Miles tires with tires usually offered at these prices. By every standard of per- formance, safety and dependability, the Lotta Miles is fully the equal of many tires that sell for more money. We've sold plenty of Lotta Miles tires and we know how nfany satisfied customers we've made. @ NEW LOW PRICES © » (29x 4.40) . (30 x 4.50) (28 x 4.75) (29 x 5.00) » (29x 4.95) +. s (28x 5.25) oo + (30x 5.25) @ Don’t remove the moisture- proof Cellophane ! Package of Camels after you open it. The Humiéne Pace protection against perfume and powder odors, dust and germs. It delivers fresh Camels and keeps them right until the last one has been smoked 4.40 -21 4.50-21 4.75 -19 5.00 - 19 5.00 - 20 5.25 -18 5.25-20° 5.50 - 20 $4.95 5.65 6.65 6.93 7.10 7.90 8.30 8.95 30x5... 8 ply Truck Tire . . . "$19.95 32x6.. .\10 ply Truck Tire . ; . 33.00 Texts ©” CAMELS ooN@ CIGARETTY AFTER-TAGTE eee oe o- oe Tane in CAMEL QUARTER HOUR featuring Morton Downey and Tony Wous Columbia Broadcasting System —every night except Sunday 1 ee GOXS.50) 22 /

Other pages from this issue: