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be _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 9, 1982 1) RUNNER-UP BERTH | 0UR BoaRDiNG HoUsE WITH TOTAL OF 46) Three Records Are Broken as = Contestants Run on Soggy Track at Field Here Nou"VE “TMED NSELF PERFECT Wt o sHoW UP DES” AS I'VE FINISHED \ PAINTIN? TH? LAST WINDaW ScREEN ! Vou WAS SUPPOSED“ HELP MEy. Now BIG FAT CHAIR- BARNACLE! WELL, WHEN IT COMES “TIME “To PUT THESE SCREENS UP, You"LL Do rTloe AN" TLE BE IN BACK OF YoU WITH AN ELEPHANT PROD-HOOK, To HUSTLE You ALONG ! A LALY Pee SAY ee Nouw"D “THUMB A ARIDE OM A GLACIER To Move THREE INCHES | if DOHN BREAKS HURDLE MARK Benzon is Star in Dash Events; Takes 100 and 220- Yard Events Handily ¢ Bismarck piled up 57 1-2 points in «the ninth annual Capital City Track and Field meet here Saturday to de- throne the defending champions, the Fargo Midgets, who were runners-up with a total of 46 points. The Demons earned their victory through outstanding strength in the dash events. 4 Ashley captured third place hon- ors with 11 points while Mandan was > fourth with 8 1-2 points, Hazelton * was fifth with six, Turtle Lake sixth , with five, and Coleharbor seventh with 3 1-2. Other teams winning points were Garrison with three, Menoken with 1 1-2, and Fessenden with one. Bismarck won eight first places, taking all the running events except | } the mile and half mile. Fargo took three firsts, the broad jump, discus and javelin. Other first places went BUT,FATHER ~DIDNT You GET MY MESSAGE 2 By Ahern LEFT WORDT PUT OFF PAINTING THE SCREENS UNTIL TOMORROW ~e ~ I HAD-% Go-% FULLERTON ON A BUSINESS DEAL ! ~~ EGAD, I LOVE PAINTING SCREENS S RELAYATION CHAMPION, WoRK —i-%, DODGER= wes re s@ Conference Nines | Have Busy Slate to Mandan in the mile run, Hazelton | f the half mile, and Turtle Lake high| jump. | Lester Dohn of Bismarck led tx: TOUGHRAN WILL TRY COMEB ACK ‘ field by a wide margin to set the first | A new record of 17.3 seconds in the 120- | yard high hurdles, bettering the old! AG AINST H ARD-HITTING H AM AS ft =smark by nine-tenths of a second.| is Randall, Mandan, ran the mile inj 1 four minutes 48 seconds to exceed by! four seconds the previous record, and! Fight Cards This Week Will See! °Te Murphy of Bismarck tied Arneson,| > | Hi Iner rac en Fargo, in vaulting 11 feet 41-2 inches} Walker, Risko, and Schaaf | a to a new record. The height in the : . H pole vault was two inches higher than | in Action Win Tournament the previous record. . Dohn and Benzon captured indivi-} = dual scoring honors in the tourna- ment, each contributing 10 points to the Bismarck total. Benzon paced the field in the 100 and 220-yard dashes while Dohn picked up a first in the hurdles, third in the pole vault and second in the broad jump. Kruetz of Fargo was next high man gathering seven points for the Cass! county delegation. | The highlight of the meet was | rounder at Philadelphia Wednesday P reached in the mile race when Ran- | night. " S dighe male. ae f) Gall of Mandan ran the event in 4:48) Tt was Hamas, incidentally, who |seyedy City subnets who plled wo f for 'a new record which was 14 sec-|sent Tommy into his most recent re- |More than 200 athletes from 36 heh p onds lower than the previous mark.|tirement. After Loughran had ab-| schools participated, setting a record Pushed all the way by Brantziz of! sorbed a tertific lacing from King/in number of onicse ee er Fargo, the Mandan boy staged ajLevinsky in Madison Square Garden! Weaver, Ruuten and si fighting finish to win by inches atjin December, he was sent in against prought second humors fn oevie eee Captain Lloyd Murphy of the De-!Hamas knocked him down and out tere 3 me points. Jamestown placed mons and Arneson of Fargo staged a/with one terrific punch to the jaw i for tq wee, qucndale, ‘champior great battle in the pole vault to!the second round. for two years, counted ten. Other break the record for the event. Both| Heavyweights top the program in |S°h00ls scoring were Oakes 8. Kindred cleared the bar at 11 feet, 41-2 inches jother fight centers this week. Ernie Me oe eee eo or a tie. Schaaf, Boston contender, meeis oy 3 aa Berg of Turtle Lake and Kafer of Philadelphia southpaw, pee aoe High and Verona one each. Hafelton proved to be dark horses|in the Garden Friday night; Mickey |_H@"S0" of Jamestown set a new in winning first places. Berg won the| Walker, Rumson, N. J., battler, tack-|Tecotd, in the pole vault when he high jump while Kafer ran a great jles old Johnny Risko of Cleveland in|<l¢a7ed the bar at ten feet, 6.5 inches. half mile to outdistance the rest of!a 12-rounder at Cleveland Tuesday; |The former mark of ten feet 5% inches the field. and Charles Retzlaff of Duluth and| 4S held by Welch of Harvey. Dick- The summaries: Jimmy Braddock of Jersey City |°™5°2 of Oakes bettered the javelin 100 yard dash—Won by Benzon,!tangle at Botson Friday. throw with 159 feet one inch, com- Bismarck; Kransler, Ashley, second;| In the far west, Lee Ramage of pared with the mark of Orness of Owens, Bismarck, third; Chase Garri-/San Diego who recently stopped| Valley City who threw it 146 feet and Son, fourth. Time 10: |Hamas’ sensational winning streak,|Si* inches in 1926. tee | ' the’ Valley City Delegation Score 49 7 20 Points to Annex Kiwanis Meet New York, May 9.—(A)—For second time in three years Tommy |Loughran is about to hit the come- back trail he hopes will lead him once |More into boxing’s “big money.” The popular Philadelphia veteran) tackles the deadly punching Steve: Valley City, N. D., May 9—(Pji— Hamas of Passaic, N. J. in a ten|TWwo records were shattered Saturday jin the ninth annual Kiwanis track jand field meet which was won by i 120 high hurdles—Won by Dohn, | Bismarck; Kruetz, Fargo, second; i Percy, Mandan, third. Time 17:3. i Shot Put—Won by Boelter, Bis- 7 marck; Les Johnston, Ashley, second; 4 Purcht, Fargo, third; Heier, Bismarck, I fourth. Distance 45 feet, 2 2-8 in. High jump—Won by Berg, Turtle in Lake; Beylund, Bismarck; Saldin, ks Coleharbor; Percy, Mandan, and Hul- i bert, Menoken, tied for second. Height } 5 ft. 6% in. Broad jump—Won by Clemants, Fargo; Dohn, Bismarck, second; Sald- in, Coleharbor, third; Comrie, Fargo, fourth. Distance, 19 ft. 3's in. Discus—Won by Charbonneau, Far- g0; Heiser, Bismarck, second; Boelter, Bismarck, third; Johnston, Ashley, q fourth. Distance, 109 ft. 11%3 in. Javelin—Won by Kreutz, Fargo; fi Johnson, Fargo, second; Agre, Bis- marck, third; Scott, Fessenden, fourth. Distance, 159 ft. 4 in. 4 Pole vault—Murphy, Bismarck, and Ke Arnson, Fargo, tied for first; Dohn, x Bismarck, third; Parsons, Hazelton, fourth. Height, 11 ft. 4% in. (record). Half mile relay—Won by Bismarck @otter, Shepard, Welliver, Benzon); ne Fargo, second. Time, 1:40.2. i 220 yard dash—Won by Benzon, Bis- marck; Kransler, Ashley, second; e Chase, Garrison, third; Owens, Bis- qi marck, fourth. Time, :24.4. 440 yard dash—Won by Green, Bis- marck; Matson, Fargo, second; Com- f rie, Fargo, third; Rittenmiller, Ash- 3 ley, fourth. Time, :56.4. 4 220 yard low hurdles—Won by Pot- be ter, Bismarck; Frederickson, Fargo, second; Still, Fargo, third; Beylund, fe Bismarck, fourth. Time, :29.4. Half mile—Won by Kafer, Hazel- ton; Brantseg, Fargo, second; Welli- ver, » third; Matson, Fargo, fourth. 4 Mile run—Won by Randall, Man- dan; Brantseg, Fargo, second; Welli- ver, Bismarck, third; Peterson, Far- go, fourth. Time, 4.48 (new record). ee re Travers Shoots 80 ‘ In Exhibition Play | 7 e gpk one a dart | \, OO meets Yale Okun of New York at Los Angeles Tuesday while Max Baer, Livermore heavyweight, faces Walter Cobb of Baltimore at Oakland, Calif., the following night. | SUBSTITUTES ON CARD Chicago, May 9.—(P)—Joc Merhar, Butte, Mont., heavyweight, and Pete | Wistert of Chicago will meet in a 19 jround bout at White City tonight. Merhar replaces Les Marriner, who withdrew because of an infection in his arm. MOHALL RETAINS TITLE Kenmare, N. D., May 9.—(?)—Mo- jhall high school retained its north- western conference track champion- jship in a meet here Saturday. Schools placing in the events besides Mohall included Kenmare, Carpio and Lans- \ford. || our our way | AW, TH’ = UTTLE | DAWRILIN ! ISNT HE TH! Willy UR l( hn ie a George Fait, Valley City, was the star individual performer, collecting four jfirsts and one second for 23 points. towards total points was won by the Valley City quartet, of Fait, Jeffery, Reid and Rice. f Jamestown College Wins Dual Tourney Minot, N. D., May 9.—(?)—James- town college defeated Minot teachers college, 72 to 59, in a dual track meet Saturday. The track was slightly heavy from recent rains but the time in some of the running events was {better than in Minot’s meet with Val- ley City here last Monday. Golden of Minot was high point man with 15. He won firsts in the 100, 200 and 440-yard dashes, WELL,OF ALL THE AND The relay race, which did not count j {Chicago Will Play Two Game Series With Gophers Fri- | day and Saturday Chicago, May 9.—(P)—All activity lin the Western Conference baseball championship campaign will be con- centrated at the end of the week, with Michigan, the leader, playing two games. The Wolverines will engage Ohio | State Friday and Saturday at Ann Arbor, Chicago will play a similar schedule at Minnesta, and Iowa wiil tackle Wisconsin on the same da: In addition, Illinois meets Northwest- ern at Evanston, and Purdue will be at Indiana Friday. Michigan won its second straight Saturday, defeating Chicago, 5 to 1, while Illinois trimmed Wisconsin, 7 to 2, for the Badgers’ first defeat of the season. Northwestern went on a bat- ting spree to defeat Minnesota, 17 to 3, and even up their series. Graham is Beaten by Illinois Entry !Gopher Representative From Devils Lake Outpointed in Big Ten Match Chicago. May 9. — (P) — Johnny Walsh of St. Thomas college, St. Paul, |Saturday night won the central inter- collegiate with an impressive one round knock- out victory over Carl Gerold of the University of Wisconsin at the Chi- cago stadium. Joe Oakley of the University of Michigan won the featherweight championship after a hard battle with Vaness Hall of Wisconsin. The bantamweight title went to Warren Sandstrom of Armour Tech, who outpointed Frank Diamond of the University of Minnesota, in three rounds. Illinois gained a title when Christ Chibucos outpointed Milford Graham of Minnesota in three rounds for the Welterweight title. The battle was close all the way and was one of the best of the card. By Williams OH. NIGHT, BRING ON THY DARKNESS SOON PLEASE HOLO BACH TH BLOOMIN' MOON Tit T CAN GET HOM THIS HACH = eT CHAMPION OF TURE INDEFENDING TITLE Expected to Go to Post in Rich Preakness Classic at Pimlico, Md. ADDS $52,350 TO COFFERS Son of Bubbling Over Gives Colonel Bradley Fourth Triumph in Event New York, May 9.—(?)—Monarch of bred crown won in the Kentucky Der- by. The newest champion of the famous racing establishment of Colonel Ed- ward Riley Bradley of Lexington, Ky., Probably will go to the post this Sat- urday in the rich Preakness at Pim- lico, Md., against most of the eastern lightweight boxing title! colts beaten so soundly Saturday by the son of Bubbling Over. Thus the tide of three-year-old battle is reversed with a western champion coming east to seek further conquests, where in the last two years Gallant Fox and Twenty Grand moved victoriously from east to west and back again. Two records were smashed and a third equalled by Burgoo King’s triumph in the 58th running of the Derby, which carried a gross value of $62,875 and added $52,350 to the Bradley coffers. Marks Third Victory It marked Col. Bradley's third vic- he shared with three other owners. Likewise it gave his trainer, H. J. (Dick) Thompson, the distinction of saddling a third winner, for another record. Bradley entires ran one-two in 1921 with Behave Yourself-Black Servant and again in 1926 with Bub- bling Over-Bagenbaggage. The “father-son” achievement of Bubbling Over and his chestnut off- spring, Burgoo King, duplicated the record of Halma, 1895 Derby winner, and sire of Alan-a-Dale, victor in 1902. | Having proved the best of the lot at Churchill Downs, Burgoo King will go to the post a favorite in the Preak- ness but it may prove another wide- open race, May Have Better Luck The five eastern colts that trailed the Bradley Star in order—Economic, Stepenfetchit, Brandon Mint, Over! Time and Tick On—may benefit from better racing luck or the shorter dis- tance, one mile and three-sixteenths. Tick On, the Derby favorite, may re- deem himself for the bad behavior that ruined his chances at the Barrier Saturday. Earl Sande, the popular New York rider who piloted Over Time in a vain attempt to capture his fourth Derby, will be upon mad pursuit in the Preakness. The winner's time was 2:05 1-5. Burgoo King paid the good price of $13.24 for each $2 mutuel ticket, go- ing to the post at odds of slightly bet- ter than 5%2 to 1 to win. Tick On was the 9 to 5 favorite. The betting was the smallest in many years, only $277,000 passing through the machines on the feature race as compared with $495,000 last year. MAJOR LEAGUE RS (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE | Batting — Mallon, Phillies, .388; | Whitney, Phillies, .383. Runs—Klein, Phillies, 21; Collins, Cardinals, 20. Home runs—Terry, Giants, and Col- lins, Cardinals, 7. Stolen bases—Frisch, Cardinals, 6; P. Waner, Pirates, 5. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Foxx, Athletics, 419; Rey- nolds, Senators, .403. Runs—Vosmik, Indians, 23; Porter, Stolen bases—Chapman, Yankees, and Blue, White Sox, 5. Anglers in State Shining Up Tackle North Dakota anglers are shining up their fishing tackle. For the season on trout and land- locked salmon opened May 2 to Sept. 30, while the season on wall-eyed pike, northern pike and perch begins May 16 and ends Oct. 31. Bass, crappies and sunfish may be taken from June 16 to Oct. 31. The fee for a resident fishing li- cense is $1 and for a non-resident li- cense $3. Residents under the age of 18 may fish without a license and non-residents under the age of 12 are not required to buy a license, All per- sons fishing in the state must carry their licenses on their person. The law provides that no person shall in any one day take more than five bass, trout or land-locked salmon, nor more than 10 wall-eyed pike or northern pike, and not more than 10 combined. The limit is 15 crappies or sunfish, and not more than 15 where these are combined, while the limit on perch is a catch of 25. Anglers are prohibited from having in their possession more than a two-day’s limit at any one time. Chicago, May 9.—(#)—The Chicago WILL LOSE NO TIME the three-year-olds, Burgoo King will) lose no time defending the thorough- | tory, thereby breaking the deadlock; tand Milwaukee played a doublehead- }23 doubleheaders had been stacked Indians, Foxx and Cochrane, |Columbus.. 000 000 510-6 6 0 letics, 21. ‘ane, Ath-|viilwaukee. 200 000 000-2 8 0 Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 7; Hill and Rensa; Stiely, Braxton, Ruth, Yankees, and Gehringer, Ti-|Siles and Bool. gto Split Twin Bill $52,350 to the Bradley coffers. for each $2 mutuel ticket, going to ASSOCIATION TILTS MARRED BY WEATHER | Traveling Delegations Move on to New Scenery; Hope For Sunny Skies Chicago, May 9.—()—The traveling delegations of the American Associa~ tion Monday moved on to new scen- ery, hoping, along with the stay-at- home, that the shifts might also bring @ change in the weather. The last week-end proved a grand bust from a box office point of view, and as the week-ends are supposed to} make up for the short-comings of the rest of the week, club owners are ex- periencing pains in the pocketbooks. The attendance figures were shy not because the fans were unwilling to watch the teams—the fault was with the weather. Only four games were played Sat-| urday and Sunday, and the number was four only because Kansas City er. Milwaukee and Columbus played both days, but the rest of the clubs were kept from their chores because of rain and wet grounds. As the new series opened Tuesday. up. The new lineup had Toledo at Milwaukee, Columbus at Kansas City, Indianapolis at Minneapolis and Louisville at St. Paul. Sunday’s doubleheader helped Kan- sas City to get one game off its de- layed list, but it also cost the Blues first position in the league. The Mudhens won the first game, 6 to 4. and even though Kansas City came back with a 17-hit attack and a 13 to 4 victory, the net result was to drop the Blues two percentage points be- hind the idle Indianapolis club. Columbus finally cracked Milwau- kee's winning streak at six straight when Fred Stiely blew up in the sev- enth inning. Stiely had not given Co- lumbus a hit and the Brewers were leading 2 to 0 as they went into the seventh. By the time Stiely had been replaced by Braxton, the Red Birds had scored five runs and finally wound up with a 6 to 2 victory. Saturday, Milwaukee defeated the Birds, 5 to 3, as Jack Knott accounted for his fifth straight pitching victory. Brewers Beaten Milwaukee—Columbus cracked Mil- waukee's six game winning streak by taking the final contest of the series, 6 wie RHE Kansas City—Toledo and Kansas City split even in a doubleheader. Toledo took the opener, 6 to 4, and Kansas City the second, 13 to 4. First game. 4 RH Toledo .....010 200 012-6 11 0 Kansas City 000 100 111-4 9 1 Lawson and Henline; Fette, Thomas and pottns. Second game. Re Toledo .... 300 001 000—4 3 2 Kansas City 000 831 10x—13 17 6 Lee, Rabb and Devormer, O'Neill; Carson and Phillips. YEST DAY'S ST (By The Associated Press) Moe Berg, Senators—His single in winning run against White Sox. Burleigh Grimes, Cubs—Making first star of year, survived three-run ers, 12-5. Luke Sewell, Indians—His four hits aided in defeat of Athletics. Danny MacFayden, Red Sox—Pitch- ed effectively and collected double and single to beat Browns. Cardinals with six hits to win 4-1, Wally Gilbert and Mickey Heath, Reds—Led attack on Braves’ pitching with three hits apiece. WHAT OSTRICHES EAT herbivorous and on attack in first inning and beat Dodg- 8 ' Wins Kentucky Derby | | i | } Bradley's thoroughbred, ran away from the rest of the field to win the 58th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs Saturday. Burgco King paid the good price of $13.24 His victory added the post at odds slightly better than 5'2 to 1 to win. AMERICAN LEAGUE ws Pet. Washington . 16 5 .762 New York . -12 6 667 Cleveland . 164 9 = .640 Detroit . 12 8 600 St. Louis . 11 13 458 Philadelphia . - 8 12 400 Chicago . - 6 16 273 Boston ... - 6 16 Pet. Chicago 16 6 927 Boston . 2 8 | Philadelphia 11 9 550 Cincinnati . 130 542 St. Louis . 10 13 435 New York . 8 ll 21 Brooklyn .. 7 12 «368 Pittsburgh T 4 333 Louisville Toledo . St. Paul . SUNDAY’S RESULTS American League Cleveland, 8; Philadelphia, 5. Boston, 7; St. Louis, 5. Washington, 6; Chicago, 5. National League Chicago, 12; Brooklyn, 5. Cincinnati, 6; Boston, 5. New York, 4-5; St. Louis, 1-6, American Association Columbus, 6; Milwaukee, 2. Toledo, 6-4; Kansas City, 4-13, Grove Giants Win From Ft. Lincoln Prison Aggregation Sets Down Soldiers, 11 to 4; Glenn is Mound Ace Restricting his opponents to four R H 1200] St. Louis... 200 110 010-5 11 1 i Bismarck Annexes 5714 Points to Capture Capital City Meet | FARCO-MDGETS N_ BURGOO KING WINS 58TH KENTUCKY DERBY AT CHURCHILL DOWNS Grimes Back in Harness as Cubs Win Chicago Aggregation Has Three Game Advantage Over Bos- ton in National Loop (By The Associated Press) Burleigh Grimes, whose name is synonymous with baseball courage, is back in harness again and the Chi- ‘cago Cubs, tough enough without him, are just that much more formidable. An attack of influenza laid low the veteran right hander just as the 1932 campaign opened but he came back Sunday to survive a three-run attack by the Brooklyn Dodgers in the first inning and finally beat them, 12-5. Max Carey's hopefuls, with Hack Wilson still out of the lineup, pounded Grimes for six hits and four runs in the first two innings. After that they mudged the ancient elbower for only six more safeties and could not score again until the ninth when the Cubs already held a 12-4 lead. This victory stretched Chicago's ad- vantage in the National League to three full games as the Boston Braves lost ‘their fourth straight to the Cincinnati Reds, 6-5. The New York Giants and St. Louis Cardinals split a double bill. The Giants won the opener, 4-1 and the Cardinals the nightcap, 6-5. ‘The Washington Senators main- tained their lead in the American League by nosing out the Chicago White Sox, 6 to 5, in 14 innings. Moe Berg's single drove nome the winning run. Ted Lyons traveled the full route for the White Sox. Cleveland walloped the Philadel- phia Athletics again, 8-5, and the Boston Red Sox broke an eight game losing streak at the St. Louis Browns expense, 7-5. AMERICAN LEAGUE Indians Beat A’s Cleveland—The Indians moved to within one game of second place by defeating Philadelphia, 8 to 5, before 21,000 fans. R HE Philadelphia 002 000 021-5 9 2 Cleveland.. 000 320 30x—8 15 3 ‘Walberg, Bowman, and Cochrane; Brown and Sewell. Sox Finally Win Boston—The Red Sox broke their eight game losing streak by beating St. Louis, 7 to 5. . Boston .... 010 010 50x—7 13 3 Hebert, Kimsey, Cooney and Fer- rell; MacFayden and Storie, Connolly, Senators Take Rubber fate pas a tense 14 inning struggle, Washington won the rubber game of the series from Chicago, 6 to 5. The veteran Ted Lyons, pitched the entire game for the Sox. es Chicago... 002 002 001 000 00—5 11 2 Washington210 001 001 000 01—6 16 2 Lyons and Berry; Marterry, Burke, 2 Fischer, Ragland and Spencer, Berg. Detroit at New York, rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cubs Increase Lead Chicago—Burleigh Grimes, making his first start for the Cubs, was hit hard but his mates did likewise and Chicago defeated Brooklyn, 12 to 5, to increase its league lead. HE Brooklyn. 310 000 O0I—5 12 4 Chicago 025 031 10x—12 11 1 Vance, urston, A. Moore, Hoyt, Heimach and Lopez, Sukeforth; Grimes and J. Taylor. Braves Lose Again Cincinnati—The Reds made a clean sweep of the four game from the Bos- fon: Braves by taking the final game, RHE Boston .... 100 002 002—5 12 3 Cinctnnait. genio Oox— oo 0 a im ant ave; Johnson and Lombardi. Cards, Giants Split St. Louis—The Cardinals and Giants split even in Sunday’s double bill. New York won the opener, 4 to and the Cardinals the afterpiece, 6 First game. R New York.. 310 000 000— 4 te ooo 100 000—1 1, t H 8 6 n scattered hits, Pitcher Glenn led the Grove Giants to an 11 to 4 victory over Ft. Lincoln in a baseball game at the Glenn whiffed 13 of the doughboys. McKay and Bjornson, of the prison team, each swatted a home run. After pitching six tight Conrad, Soldier hurler, ae the seventh and was sent to the show- ers after the Giants launched one of their hitting sprees. Ullrich and Leitz finished the game in the box for the army men. Next Sunday the Giants will cross bats with the Beach Independents at the penitentiary park. The box score for Sunday's fracas: Wargo, cf Murgatroyd, Holcomb, rf B Bl oniswiswmnuncmene Sl emaasaaae: Bl mccooneony al PocccoooHoHMHomy Sl wonnnenanpy al coconconnoconcoy alonmmnonoocot wl comocconocoroom State penitentiary Sunday afternoon. |S! St. Louis. Hubbell and O'Farrell; Johnso) Mancuso. Second game e New -York.. 000 201 200-5 13 it. Louis. looney, Walker, Luque and Hogan, O'Farrell; Dean and Wilson. H Be JUDGE'S FARM RELIEF Houston, Tex.— When it comes to farm relief, Federal Judge Kennerly has some ideas of his own. Charlie ‘Weis, farmer, was convicted of mak- ing whiskey at his home. He was fined $300 and given 45 days in jail. The judge, however, suspended the fine for five years and gave Weis 30 days in which to do his early planting be- fore he reported to start serving his sentence. SPRING FEVER Los Angeles—’Twas warm, and the breath of summer was in the air, Pa- trolman Charles R. Fallon of Beverly Hills heard @ noise on his beat and saw ® man enter a grocery store, “Ho hum,” yawned Fallon. And he sat himself down to wait for the thief to convict himself. Sure enough, Wal- ter Kilpatrick shortly emerged with the contents of the store’s cash reg- ister. Potion bag no trouble at all in