The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1932, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1982 j ; 1 BISMARCK WILL BE ~ AMONG CONTENDERS | AT ARGO CLASSIC Captain Lloyd Murphy and Ben- zon Seen as Potential Winners at Meet | HUNDREDS WILL COMPETE » Pole Vault and Half Mile Marks Will Be in Danger at A. C. Tourney (By The Associated Press) | Tracks and fields at high schools} throughout the state are being nego- tiated by the young hopefuls with in- _ creased ardor this week, similar to the “cramming” which is rife at the time just prior to exams. With the records available on last week's major track events, athletes entered in major mects to be held ' Saturday know how their performance will compare with that of other cin- dermen. Those not already qualified * will extend themselves to the limit in an effort to pass the eligibility re- quirements for the state interscholas: tic classic at Grand Forks May 20 and 21. Rules of the state meet provide that the tracksters must place first or second in one of nine recognized ma- jor meets or first in approved county contests. The May Festival tourney at Fargo is an ption, however, with track men placing first, second or third being qualified for the state af- fair. Ranks Second Fargo’s May festival ranks second | in importance to the state meet and | :| Eight Demons Are ‘ Entered in Meet Fight Bismarck cindermen will carry the colors of the Bismarck Demons into action at the May festival at the North Dakota Agri- cultural college over the week-end, || Coach Roy D. McLeod has an- | nounced. They are Captain Lloyd Murphy, who will perform in the pole vault; Gilbert Benzon, entered in the 100 and 220-yard dashes; Les- ter Dohn, in the broad jump and | high hurdles; Wade Green, in the quarter mile; John Heiser and | John Boelter, in the weight events; Bill Owens in the high hurdles; and Marvin Welliver in | the mile. will attract considerable attention from sports followers. Besides the Fargo track carnival, three other ma jor meets will be held this Saturday. | ‘They are the Lake region at Devils Lake, the Northwest at Minot and the | * Dickinson track and field meet. Hundreds of track and field athletes | representing scores of schools will participate in the sectional events | Saturday. It is becoming increasingly difficult to better existing state high school track records, but early performances | of young athletes over the state indi- cate that at least two marks will be in danger when the pick of the ficld gathers at Grand Forks. | we At Bismarck Lloyd Murphy, winner jpy s i ten and allowed six AMERICAN LEAGUE mas got across several damaging of the pole vault event last year, has| Pyne ou ten ? WL _sPet.| blows to the jaw. . gone 11 ft. 6 in. This is five-eighths of |" pyasnlngton 5 -173| ‘Two rounds contained most of the an inch better than the present mark Saints Beat Colonels oe eae iM R03 |action. A wild rally started in the made by Don Thompson of Devils; gt. Paul—St. Paul defeated the Cleveland 10 ‘g15| fourth when Loughran jarred Hamas Lake in 1924, and Murphy's coach pre-/ Louisville Colonels, 4 to 2, to take a2 philadelphia . 12 ‘429|Who clipped Loughran on the jaw dicts he will go 12 feet at the state|to 1 lead in the series. Slim Harris gt, Louis 15 ‘423|™making the Philadelphian’s knees meet. On a soggy field Saturday Mur- | equalled a season record by striking Chicago 17 ‘261| buckle. Hamas then backed him phy only vaulted 11 ft. 4's in., and/out ten batters. Boston 17 .190/@gainst the ropes to press his ad- was tied by Arneson of Fargo. It was! R H E, vantage. But Loughran rolled with good enough, however, to exceed the |Louisville.. 990 900 200-2 7 1) NATIONAL LEAGUE the punches and weathered the meet record. {St. Paul... 120 000 ole 4 es ba Ww L Pet. | storm. Behan, Mohall distance runner, is| , Penner and Shea; Harris and SnY- Chicago ......... 17 6 .739| In the final round both threw cau- credited with having run the half |“ eee ‘ : a aH Hon aia os tried for a kayo. mile in 2 min. 2 seconds at Kenmare . 5 ‘ lamas landed first with rights to last week. This is two and four-fifths | Minne eine iadians cianihis 'Philadelphia soe 522) Loughran’s jaw but Tommy clinched, | seconds better than the 2:04 4-5 mark ¢ourth straight game, as the Minne- New Sark 14 -440/ and in a mmenot returned a right to) that has stood for ten years. {foils Millers” ‘defeated the league NeWyiont 12 -400/Hamas’s left eye, partly closing it. Dash Events Fast |leading Indians, 9 to 4. S ‘Pittsburgh’ 15 ‘218 The bout attracted 14,000. Sprinting events were completed in especially good time. Winners of the 100 and 220-yard dashes negotiated | the distance in better time than was shown at the state meet last year.! McCain of Mohall, Fait of Valley City, | Benzon of Bismarck and Sommars of | Carrington have been well under 11} seconds. McCain is credited with) equalling the record of 10 1-5 seconds, | but the best he has done in a meet is| 10.4. Fait has twice gone the century in 105. Sommars’ 23.7 seconds is the best! made in the 220, but additional train-| ing and practice is expected to cut this down considerably. Randall of Mandan who won thej mile at Grand Forks last year in 4) minutes 59.2 seconds, has brought his time down to 4:48, but is still nine and a fifth seconds short of the record that has held since 1910. He ran the | mile last week in 11 seconds less time than he did a year ago and is figured to turn in the best mile since Cruick- » shank of Fargo hung up the record. Other outstanding track men in- clude Lester Dohn of Bismarck, high hurdles; Jack Charbonneau, Fargo, | discus, Boelter, Bismarck, shot put, » and Kreutz, Fargo, javelin. | OUR BOARDIN'! BUT, FATHER +REALLY, I Ett You ~~ I'm A Futter UMP ~ AH-- ULP ~~ Yau MAKE A FUGHT FIRST ~THEN Come DOWAS AND TLL BE COMPOSED “TO GO ALOFT WITH You fw ~ MY BLOGD PRESSURE IS QUITE HiGH -TADAY, AND IT FEAR “THAT AH -- Um. COME ON f+ DONT BE GETTIN" ESKIMO FEET AT “TH” LAST MINUTE | a TLL TAKE You uP HIGHER THAN YauR Brood PRESSURE ! a. TLL STRAP THIS PARACHUTE ON You AAT, IF You DONT Like TH” Goins’, Yau CAS BALE OUT ANYTIME f HEY, CHUCK / WARM "ER | McMullen. Nis WON'T NEED “THE CANE, MAORI Five Teams | Struggle Knitted Together When Millers Beat Indians and Blues Lose Chicago, May 12.—(?)—The struggle for the American Association flag is getting to look lik more and more every day. | With the race just one month old, five clubs were in the thick of the |battle. The struggle was knitted tighter Minneapolis defeated | , and Columbus, a jburied Kansas Cit 13 hit barrage. ‘The result |dianapolis on top with a one game ladvantage over EK: ‘ity and Minneapolis, with Milwaukee, idle| yesterday because of rain, in fourth place, two games behind the leader. | Ruble and Benton supplied the! t turned back the Indians ‘Wednesday. While Bénton held them to nine hits, Rut d out a home run and a runs. The Millers hammered Ern’ | Wingard for only nine | bunched many of them with errors "| { score six in the second ii Columbus salted avvay its the first inning against Kansas Ctiy. The Red Birds in that inning, scorea four runs and never were headed. Slim Harris was the hero as st. Paul defeated Louisville, 4 to 2, to} take a two to one lead in the current | series. He equalled a season's record j H E Indianapolis 200 002 000-4 9 3! Minneapolis 060 003 00x—9 9 3 Wingard and Riddle; Benton and Columbus Wins Kansas City—Columbus took the second straight game from Kansas | City 10 to 3. Whitehead led the Columbus attack with three hits in four official trips to the Blate- seo Columbus . 413 101 000-10 13 4 Kansas City 000 001 011-3 7 1 Blake, and Rensa; Dawson, Bayne, Thomas, Davis, and Phillips. Milwaukee-Toledo game postponed, cold, Gopher Athlete Receives Medal Earl Loose Adjudged to Have Best Combined Character With Study and Sport 12.—(#) — Earl everybody's race swing is to learn to keep the body! ‘has . running exactly through the center Vie for Association Lead The first essential of a good golf bent. Unless a player can keep the body in a certain plane throughout the swing it is a waste of time to keep the left arm straight or to em- ploy a certain grip. Many golfers stand comfortably in a fine address position, but at the top of the backswing the body has straightened out .If the body straightens at any point in the back- swing it is almost impossible to get it back in its proper position. The; only result can be a sliced or topped ot. I would advise the golfer who has this habit to practice the pivot with a turn of the hips and shoulders. Imagine the torso turning on an axis of the body. of their Madison Square Garden go last January. The 23-year-old Penn State letter- man tried for Loughran’s body \throughout the bout but the veteran kept him away with his left. Ha- AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Burleigh Grimes refuses to throw Ww L Pet.|his “spitter” for photographers, fear- Indianapolis . 7 682 “ ” Minneapolis 9 "625 ing lest he disclose the “secret” of Kansas City . 9 7625 | his preparation of the ball. Milwaukee . 212 8 -600 Columbus 14 12 538 Louisville ~7 4 333 NOTICE \Toledo . ‘e, | 14 .333| We, The Air-Way Electric Appli- St. Paul . ery 17 ‘2a7| ance ‘Corporation, Will no longer be —— inade by Stichael Bartley as he is. no WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS longer connected with us. id merican League New York, 3; St. Louis 0. National League Cincinnati 4; Philadelphia 1. Brooklyn 6; St. Louis 3. American Association St. Paul 4; Louisville 2. Minneapolis 9; Indianapolis 4. Columbus 10; Kansas City 3. Loughran Drops Second Contest to Steve Hamas Although Losing 2 to 1 Decision, Veteran is Impressive in Comeback J. W. CALNAN Funeral Home Phone 22 208 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. PERRY FUNERAL HOME Offers Convenience and Privacy GHOUSE By Ahern | WU PRC DPLIVER AS CLUB BATTING GOES INTO SLUMP Pipgras, Ruffing, Gomez, and Allen Allow Only Four Runs in Four Starts | REDS BEAT PHILS, 4 to 1) Brooklyn Dodgers Travel 12) Innings to Set Down St. Louis, 4 to 3 | (By The Associated Press) The New York Yankees no longer) are getting the flamboyant batting that had opposing clubs hanging on the ropes the first fortnight of the ‘campaign, but their pitching sud- denly has become a thing of beauty. In scoring four consecutive victor- setting sail after the flying Wash- ington Senators, Joe McCarthy's cur- vers have more than atoned for a marked falling off in the club's at- In four games the quartet of George Pipgras, Charles Ruffing, Vernon Gomez and young Jchnny Allen has allowe onlyd four runs, two of which would have been averted by snappier support. Pipgras and Allen have registered shutouts. Allen, the rookie from Toronto who barely was hanging on until he bob- bed up with a great job of relief twirling last week, won himself a starting berth Wednesday when he set the Browns down, 3 to 0, on five scattered hits. The victory enabled the Yanks to narrow the gap between them and the leading Senators to two games. All the other American League teams were weatherbound at Washington, Philadelphia and Boston. - The Brooklyn Dodgers traveled 12 innings to beat out St. Louis, 4 to 3, to break a four-game losing streak. In the 12th “Wild Bill” Hallahan uncorked three wild pitches, tying the major league record for that specialty, passed one man and al- lowed three hits and three runs. Cincinnati fans enjoyed a large afternoon as their Reds made it two out of three over the Phillies, 4 to 1. Not only did “Red” Lucas hold the Phils to five hits and his battery mate, Ernie Lombardi, lead an as- sault on two visiting moundsmen, but there were fisticuffs in the bargain. Leo Durocher, displeased when he was tagged out stealing second, planted a right on the jaw of Dick Bartell, Phils shortstop. Bartell went down and Durocher went out. Wind and rain caused postpone- ments at Chicago and Pittsburgh. AMERICAN LEAGUE Yanks Blank Browns New York—The New York Yankees The honor of serv- ing you at a time when expert and efticient service is so badly need- ed obligates us to dc everything @s_ nearly perfect as possible. You can rely upon us, WEBB BROS. Funeral Directors Phone 50 Night Phone 50 or 887 STORIES SERVICE Law, whose friends know of his office as a Court of Peace. He knows that most quarrels are but the result of misunderstandings, Such a lawyer's fee is never com- mensurate with benefits dis- pensed. TELEPHONE 304: 112 THAYER AVE. | pez; Hallahan, and J. Wilson. ies over Detroit and St. Louis and|® won their fourth straight game as Johnny Allen shut out the St. Louis RH E Browns, 3 to 0. St. Louis... 000 000 000-0 5 New York . 000 010 02x—3 8 Gray, Kimsey and Ferrell; Allf and Dickey. All others postponed, weather. NATIONAL LEAGUE Lucas Beats Phils Cincinnati—Red Lucas held the Phillies to five hits to give Cincinnati a 4 to 1 victory. Lucas won his fifth game of the season against one de- RHE Philadelphia 010 000 000—1 5 0 Cincinnati. 000 102 10x—4 10 Collins, Grabowski and McCurdy; Lucas and Lombardi. | feat. AS POWERFUL Expresses Confidence on Eve of Zone Matches With Mex- ican Delegation Eugene Dixon, non-playing captain of the U. S. Davis Cup team which Friday starts its engagement with Mexico in the semi-finals of the North American zone, expressed ut- O}most confidence on the eve of the match. POTENTIAL UNIT Although considered outclassed by the United States, the Mexican play- be have improved their game stead- lily as they gradually acclimated |themselves and accustomed their ; strokes to the lower bounce of the New Orleans, May 12—(?)—Fitz/ball which they find is heavier than |at their high altitude home. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed ‘As the American team of Ells-| worth Vines, Frank xX. Shields, Wilmer Allison and John Van Ryn entered final practice it bore the label of its captain: “The best po- tential team I have ever seen.” Van Ryn’s sudden development un-} der the tutelage of Coach Mercer Beasley of a faster, more accurate and lower flying drive brought from! Captain Dixon the remark: “The} team now has four singles players. It is ready for anything.” | The eye is an organ you can't afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, Robins Trim Cards St. Louis—Wild Bill Hallahan made three wild pitches and gave four hits in the twelfth inning, as, Brooklyn defeated St. Louis 6 to 3. m E R Brooklyn. 000 003 000 003—6 1 1 St. Louis. 000 210 000 000— 3 9 0 Mungo, Shaute, Richards and Lo- Other games postponed, weather. Bice Sl een French Want Wine On Training Table > | i > Paris, May 12—(?)—The French Olympic committee is still hoping that American prohibition au- thorities will allow French ath- letes at Los Angeles to have a quart of wine a day. “If the Americans knew how great the effect on our boys will be if they are deprived of wine, they would be sporting and let us take as much as we need with us,” one official said. “We are accustomed to wine with our meals and to suddenly stop drinking it might lessen our chances in the games.” The committee has agreed to carry reserve supplies under scal and to obey any regulations which prohibition officers wish to impose. 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NOTE: For best results, use either Sinclair Opaline Motor Oil or Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oils These oils have been de-wexed, end freed from petroleum jelly at es low as 60° F. below zerve Copyrighted 1932 by S. R Co. (Ine) hy | High School Track Stars Will Assault Records at May Festival * BRILLIANT PITCHING OF YANK MOUNDSMEN KEEPS TEAM IN RACE CAPTAIN SEES DAVIS CUP TEAM | | |

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