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4 i i iq URC FIELD WILL AMPETE AT CLASSIC MR CHAMPIONSHIP al Representatives Can Fig- tre on Five Firsts With Reasonable Safety GETS ARE UNCERTAIN : of Valley City Expected to Make Bid For Individual Honors and Forks, N. D., May 20.—(?)— all, but very select field of 150 ttes from 49 schools were ready he starter’s gun which began the minaries of the 30th state inter- lastic track and field meet at the ersity of North Dakota this aft- on. jal tests wil cut down the lists for finals Saturday when the young- remaining in the running will © for individual and team honors @ varied assortment of medals trophies. mination meets held over the » since the first week in May in- xe Valley City, Fargo and Bis- sk will fight it out for the 1932 apionship. Valley City will pre- George Fait, picked to win high ridual honors, but the Hi-Liners wt appear to have sufficient ad- nal strength to match the scor- ability of either Fargo or Bis- ok. the two teams which have had gs their way in track for the past years are expected to stage an- r duel here Saturday. Back in and 1927 Central High of Grand 3s captured first honors. In 1928, jo ran away with the meet but tarck made its first bid by finish- second. The next year the ath- ; from the Capital City came ugh to take their first track npionship, following through with cond in 1930. Lose Last Year smarck and Fargo fought it out n last spring with the Cass coun- thletes beating out the western- in a close battle. But his year ooks very much as though the ital youngsters would deprive Far- of one of the three high school s resting down there at the pres- ean figured to qualify a great- iumber of athletes in the prelim- 4es than Bismarck, but the boys n the west are better fortified 1 outstanding athletes. The De- 1s have a powerful scoring team in en, Benzon, Murphy, Dohn and lter. They can figure on firsts in sprint, the 440, shot put, pole It and high hurdles with reason- : Bafety. } a the other hand Fargo is not ain of a single first place. Eithet | wrbonneau or Kreutz may take the us throw, but neither has put the iter out as far as Shuman of Ant~ Kreutz has a good chance to win javelin throw but he must beat kinson of Oakes. n the basis of marks made, Bis- sck has a chance to score in ten ats while Fargo cannot count on ‘ing in more than eight. From : angle, considering the number of ts the Capital City lads probably ‘win, Bismarck looms as an almost vain winner. merican Women To Meet British For Golf Honors ll Play at Wentworth, Eng- land in First Anglo-Amer- ican Matches ——— 2 Water, Surrey, Eng., May —(®)—Picked feminine aces of the > great golf-playing nations meet ‘Wentworth Friday in the first of- al Anglo-American women's team ry. Aodelled after the Walker Cup ts of masculine golf, the competi- n will consist of three foursomes, be played in the morning, and six in the afternoon. All matches at 18 holes. American team, captained by irion. Hollins,. will go into the battle jhout the psychological superiority the tradition of victory which sir brothers may feel on British ks, The only previous women’s um match between the two coun- es, an unofficial competition at mningdale two years ago, Was won Great Britain in decisive fashion. Miss Hollins’ squad this time is a smidable array including, as it does, 2 American champion, Helen cks, Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare, aureen Orcutt, Mrs. O. S. Hill, Vir- | Jimmy Foxx Connects For 11th THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1932 BIRTHDAY PRESENT! uel WAS WAITIN? FOR YoU “To SAY “THIS IS YoUR BIRTHDAY THEN I'D KNowW You WAS THROW" OUT A HINT FoR A PRESENT, AN” I WoULDAT A GIVEN Yo NaNe! we ANYHOUS ~~ MANY HAPPY y RETURNS OF “TH" DAY! Connie Mack Has Lost Confidence In Rube Walberg Homer as A’s Beat Boston, 4 to 2 (By The Associated Press) Connie Mack, able leader of the Athletics, appears to have lost hope that Rube Walberg, the big lefthander who won twenty games for him last year, will recover his winning form and be of any material assistance in the current flag race. | Walberg, one of the big factors in; the A's drive to a third straight Started five games, been; knocked out of the box the same number of times and thus far is charged with four losses and no} wins. Mack as a result, has about quit starting his former star and has fall- en back on Grove, Earnshaw and} Mahaffey to carry the burden. Only once in the last three weeks has Wal- berg been given a starting assign-| ment, and that time he was crowded by Cleveland. The rookie, Merrit Cain, was regarded as a possible re-| Placement for Walberg in rounding | out the staff's “big four,’ but he failed when given a starting spot against Detroit the first of the week. With all his pitching problems, however, Connie Mack still can sum- mon a smile when he observes the way Jimmy Foxx is belting the ball, The stocky first baseman is having} one of his greatest years. Thursday with the bases loaded and cracked the pellet over the left field) stanes for his 11th homer and enough | Tuns to beat the Boston Red Sox, 4-2./ It was the A's third win in a row and} boosted them to an even .500 stand-| ing for the first time in a month. | Forty-nine thousand fans suffered} at Yankees’ stadium as the Washing- ton Senators captured both ends of a double-header, 8-6 and 12-7, and went into a virtual tie with the Yanks for the American League lead. The Sen- ators led by half a game in games won and lost but trail four points in| percentage. In both games the slug- ging Senators came from behind with | a murderous attack in the late in-| nings. Heinie Manush’s kept rolling, gave Washington the! winning runs in the tenth inning of) the first game. Babe Ruth hit his! eighth homer in the nightcap. | Burleigh Grimes was hit hard but! silenced Cincinnati's guns in the) innings to win, 4-3, and increase their | lead in the National. Riggs Stephen-| son was the winner's batting hero, hi double driving in the tying run and! averting defeat in the tenth and his) single putting Richbourg across with the winning score in the 12th. The Pittsburgh Pirates got to Joc Shaute and Jack Quinn for two runs in the last of the eighth to edge out Brookly in their final, 3-1 Half of the clubs in each league spent the day traveling. AMERICAN LEAGUE A’s Trim mn Philadelphia — Jimmy Foxx's eleventh homer of the season, made in the first inning with the bases loaded, gave the A’s a 4 to 2 victory over Boston. | | | | to 6. First Game RHE Washington 002 020 002 2— 8 12 New York.. 200 001 012 0—6 12 Crowder and Marberry, Spencer and Berg, Maple; Pipgras, Gomez, Wells and W. Brown, and Dickey. Second Game RH Washington 022 000 332—12 12 New York.. 204 001 000—7 14 L Brown, Fisher and Ragland, Berg and Maple; Ruffing, Rhodes and Mur- phy, and Dickey. m0 E 1 ~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Pirates Down Dodgers Pittsburgh—The Pittsburgh Pirates scored twice in the eighth inning to defeat the Brooklyn poate: =F 2. Brooklyn... 010 010 000—2 6 1; Pittsburgh. 100 000 02x—3 10 1 Shaute, Quinn and Lopez; Spencer, Chagnon and Grace. Cubs Defeat Reds Cincinnati—Stephenson of the Cubs hit at opportune moments in the tenth | and twelfth innings to give Chicago| the National League leaders a 4 to 3 ictory over the Cincinnati late H Chicago.. 000 002 000 101-4 16 0 Cincinnati 000 100 100 100— 3 14 0 Grimes and Hartnett; Carroll and | ombardi, Maniot Only games scheduled. Dates Are Set For By Ahe | OUR BOARDING HOUSE. m | HERE SON, IS P5Q FoR OUR Z BY Save, He OLD GENTLEMANS MEMORY IS GETTING FRAYED te MY BIRTHDAY IST UATIL A MoNSTH FROM “TODAY | ~~ BUT TODAY I(T Kansas City Blues Beaten by Saints Two Times in Row Bingle in Seventh Inning Robs Van Atta, Apostle Twirler, of No-Hit Game Chicago, May 20.—(7)— Kansas City’s batsmen will be tickled silly when St. Paul and its pitchers get E out of town. Bryan Harriss became one of the American Association's pitching im- mortals Wednesday by pitching a no- hit no-run game at the expense of the Blues, and Thursday young Russ |Van Atta was cheated of the same glory when Pat Collins knocked out. a double in the eighth inning for the only Kansas City hit. Van Atta and the Saints defeated ithe Blues, 5 to 1, and for seven and two-thirds innings, it looked like a |second no-hit accomplishment in two days. But Old Lady Luck figured |that she was overdue somewhere else, and Collins got his double with a run. Indianapolis strengthened its hold on first place by defeating Toledo, 4 to 0, while Columbus and Minneap- ~ olis were losing. Bill Bi aN National Matches = Mudhens eight hits, but kept them apart and was helped along by two double plays. Howard Craghead To Stage National Open Golf/also gave up eight hits, but they Meet on Long Island; Amateur at Baltimore New York, May 20.—(?)—The Uni. ted States Golf association has com: pleted arrangements for the sectional qualifying rounds of both the na- tional open and amateur champion- He came up in the first inning/ships. For the open, to be played at the |Maguire. Fresh Meadow Country club, Flush- ing, Long Island, June 23, 24 and 25, sectional qualifying rounds will be conducted in 20 cities on June 6, When the lists closed, a total of 1,010 golfers, 131 fewer than a year ago, had entered the open. Of these 32 are exempt from the qualifying test. These including the 30 low Scorers of the 1931 open and two for- eign stars, Jose Jurado of Argentina and Tomekichi Miyamoto of Japan. The other 978 entrants will battle for 118 places in the field. The open is limited to 150 players. For the amateur at Baltimore Sep- tember 12-17, sectional qualifying which slipped past Earl Combs and August 16. Last year there were 20) sectional rounds but two have been eliminated this year. Qualifying rounds for the amateur will be played at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Atlanta, Dallas, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chi- pinches as the Chicago Cu's went 12/0289, St. Paul, St. Louis, Kansas City,| Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Borne, Ore. Omaha and Cincin- ati. - ’ Vines Impresses Australian Team Philadelphia, May 20.—(?)—To quote Jack Crawford, the “Bill Tilden of Australia” and Clip Sproule, “banker-netman,” “we heartily agree that Vines is every inch the netman we've heard he was. He plays a rip snorting game!” The members of the Australian Davis Cup team, here to regain Possession of the famous tennis trophy, made this comment Thursday after watching Ells- worth Vines, 20-year-old cham- pion and member of the American team, practice in preparation for the final round of the North o | © | hitless ini came in run-making bunches. Columbus’ drive toward the lead was checked, 8 to 0, by Louisville and Phil Weinert’s southpawing. He gave the Red Birds only seven hits, struck out six, and received flawless support. The Colonels clipped Al Grabowski and Miller for 14 hits, in- cluding homers by Mervyn Shea and Les Bell, a triple by Bell, and doubles by Jose Olivaries, Weis and Freddie Milwaukee and Minneapolis staged j® big afternoon of hitting and errors with the Brewers finally escaping with a 15 to 14 decision. The Millers got 20 hits and made four errors, while the Brewers made 17 blows and won in spite of six fielding misplays. jJoe Mowry, Minneapolis outfielder, \continued his sensational hitting with two home runs and a pair of singles, Dutch Hoffman got a pair of doubles and two singles for the Brewers, Colonels Blank Columbus umbus 8 to 0 in the opening gains of e opel game of the final series of the present home ‘double, founds will be played in 18 districts | Sand: Tt was the second shutout re- ceived by Columbus this season. RHE Louisville.. 110 002 220-8 14 0 Columbus.. 000 000 000-0 7 2 Weinert, and Shea; Grabowski, Miller and Hill, and Rensa. Saints Win Again Kansas City—Kansas City, which | went hitless because of the pitching tained only one hit off Van Atta, and St. Paul made it two out of three by winning, 5 to 1. It looked like another no hit per- formance when the Blues went to bat in the eighth after 16 scoreless and inings, but with two out, Catcher Collins doubled to score Kelly, who walked. Van Atta had good control, issuing only two passes and forcing the Blues |to repeatedly hit pop flies to the in- field. Jefferies connected for two home runs. RH Kansas City 000 000 010-1 1 2 we Atta, and Fenner; Carson, Col- man on, to give the Blues their only| El ilwaukee, (10). EXPRESS RULING AS 810 5 FAVORITE IN BATTLE AT CHICAGO 15,000 Spectators Expected to See Second Episode of Ring War BOTH MEN ARE ITALIANS North Dakotan Gave Former Featherweight Champ Beat- ing in Previous Setto Chicago, May 20.—(7)—Episode two of Billy Petrolle’s and Bat Battalino's blood and thunder fistic show will be presented in the Chicago stadium to- night. This pair of rough Italian boys staged episode one in Madison Square Garden last winter, Petrolle winning by a technical knockout in the twelfth jand last round. Tonight’s showing is billed for ten rounds, and both have made the usual predictions that the bout will not go the limit. The bout shapes up as another one of those “crucial” affairs, especially term as world featherweight cham- { |for Battalino, After a very creditable |pion, the Hartford youngster made a raid into the lightweight ranks to knock out Al Singer. He tried to take care of his featherweight affairs, but was unable to make the weight for bouts with Lou Feldman and Freddie Miller, losing his title by official edicts of the National Boxing associ- ation and the New York athletic com- mission, | Successes in heavier divisions fol- |lowed until he met Petrolle. Petrolle almost knocked his nose off, and Bat lis back to get even for that one, and prove that he is still a championship contender. | Petrolle has been washed up two or three times, but always has come ‘back just a little bit better each time. |He never has held a title, the big reason probably being the fact that jhe has not had a crack at a cham- Pionship. In his latest comeback, he jhas won one and lost two with Jimmy ;McLarnin, knocked out Billy Town- send, and Justo Suarez, and Eddie |Ran, and stopped Battalino. Both boxers are after a chance at the lightweight championship, held by another Italian, Tony Canzoneri, and the stadium has promised the winner the opportunity. Petrolle was a 7 to 5 and 8 to 3 choice. Around 15,000 spectators were seats. Injuries Strike Job of Qualifying Confronts En- trants in Conference Cinder Meet Chicago, May 20.—()—The impor- tant job of qualifying for the finals confronted Western Conference track jdium, Northwestern university. Trials in all track events except the |mile and two-mile, and in the field events, except the pole vault and high jump, were scheduled for Friday aft- ernoon, and finals of the thirty-sec- ond annual championships for Satur- day. The more the experts figured, the less they could tell about the probable outcome. Ohio State, Michigan and Indiana, stood out from the rest of the field, and the class of competi- tion, especially in the pole vault, hign jump and javelin, appeared so uni- form that any of the three had a chance to win by a comfortable mar- gin. i Michigan, with stars in several events, depended upon a return to jform by Jack Campbell and Lamb in the sprints, to help with enough ex- tra points to win. Indiana needed Bryce Beecher at his best in the pole lvault and high jump, along with |Crouch in the hurdles and the broad jump. The Buckeyes were banking heavily on a pair of first places each from Jack Keller in the hurdles, and Don Bennett in the sprints. that Henry Brocksmith of 'Tndiana might set new marks in the mile and two-mile, drooped when it mastery of Slim Harriss Thursday, ob-'l was definitely decided that Georg? ‘Wright of Wisconsin, winner of the two-mile last year and holder of the Big Ten outdoor record, and Kirk, a good mile runner, would not be able to compete because of injuries. An- other Badger star, Ralph 1» & 13 foot, six inch pole vaulter, also was out with injuries, removing whatever chance Wisconsin had of retaining the team title. Green Bay, Wis.—King Tut, Min- neapolis, outpointed Mickey O'Neil, Mason City, Ia—Harold (Kid) , |White, Mason City, outpointed Leon- ard Cotter, Albert Lea, Mii Elmer Brown, Fort Dodge, » 6); 6). L Wilton vs, Bismarck * expected to sit in the stadium's red i At Big Ten Stars and field stars Friday at Dyche sta-; Louis pointed Bob McLaughlin, Des Moines, Bismarck Strengthened by the insertion of two recruits into the lineup, the Bis- marck baseball team will go into ac- tion against Wilton at the municipal ball park here Sunday, Smiley Simic, manager of the locals has anonunced. It will be the second start of the season for the Capital City delegation who dropped the season’s opener to Napoleon last Sunday after seven in- Walter Johnson Says Pitching Will Settle American Two players, whose performances League Tangle with Mobridge, 8. D. last seasoe stam} m as out a i rota beseball, have ‘een added to the|, New York, May 20—(@)—The vist- local club, ‘They are McCarney, n|*0fs' locker room in the Yankee stadi- flashy third baseman, and Krueger, who works out behind the bat. ber winctn fi The paid are expected to add the hiicsophical control of his sense in front in state crenpeelson. outthe sat naked as the rest, squatting While starting lineups have not Fy definitely been determined, Simle in- dicated that Lefty Klein probably I would get the mound ee a . [ The Wilton management NOtlmnat’s the way our Senators looked determined what players would belicging four straight to the Browns, used as starters. that's how the Athletics looked un- til Grove and Earnshaw started Two Show Heels Pits wea talking about the New York To Gene Venzke Yankees, the current hysteria of the American League, who had just been made to look very bad, indeed, los- ing both ends of a doubleheader to bee Senators, 8-6 and 12-7. Ronser and Bullwinkle Lead] ,..., crm Taekee Strong icc Sensational Pottstown great pitching in that winning streak and so they looked immense. Then the pitching goes bad, like it did for | Schoolboy to Tape New York. And they look like any New York, May 20—(@%—Gene|let it fool again. They'll look good season, already has found # conqueror outdoors. ‘The Pottsdam, Pa., schoolboy, who ran the mile in 4:10 this winter, fin- ished third in a special 1,000 yards run at the New York curb exchange track and field meet Thursday night. Both Otto Rosner, former Princeton star, and George repaneend vd brid Cc. led redid Soicliey ran the distance in} Once in a while you will see a first 2:12 2/5, only a fifth of a second off|ciass golfer wander off line. This the American record set by Larry/means that he has let the left hand Brown in 1921. {quit too soon. Usually this will cause a the star golfer to hook and the duf- i fer to alice. HOW its share of the work properly at the moment of impact—guiding the club HE Y —the right hand can bring about dis- ~ |tance without getting it at the ex- Mac Smith says he lets the left hand control the swing until just be- fore the ball is hit. He keeps the With the left hand firm and doing STAND [re cate a \ ee oe Pet.jtight hand out as long as possible New York . 19 8 .104| without making the swing an entirely | 00 |left-handed affair. '900|Pirates, Watkins, Cardinals, and Klein, Phillies, 5. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Foxx, Athletics, 456; Dickey, Yankees, .400. Runs—Foxx, Athletics, 31; Myer, 29. Pe Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 11; | -850 Ruth, Yankees, 8. | Stolen bases—Blue, White Sox, 7; iChapman, Yankees, and Burns, ee two hitless innings as relief hurler A ‘Washington, 8-12; New York, 6-1. Pitboree 3; Brooklyn, 2. Chicago, 4; Cincinnati, 3. Louisville, 8; Columbus, 0. St. Paul, 5; Kansas City, 1 Milwaukee, 15; Minneapolis, 14 Indianapolis, 4; wees AS (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Hafey, Reds, 429; Terry, Giants, .369. Runs—Klein, Phillies, 33; Collins, Cardinals, 26, P. Waner and Vaug- han, Pirates, and Herman, Reds, 4. Home runs—Terry, Giants, Col- lins, Cardinals, 8. Stolen bases—Frisch, Cardinals, 8; Stripp, Dodgers, P. Waner and Piet, STRAW HATS $1.95, $2.45, $2.95 Wilson Bros. All Wool Swimming Suits $1.95 ‘ 415 Broadway , Jemons Favored to Wrest Laurels From Fargo at Track Meet WINNER OF PETROLLE-BATTALINO BOUT TO MEET CHAMPION Will Meet Wilton Sunday WASHINGTON TEAM IS JUBILANT FOLLOWING DEFEAT OF YANKS we're a better all-around team than the Yankees—better balanced, better defensively and equipped with better other ball club, only worse. But don't| pitching for a season’s campaign. “But I've got this hunch. We'll be : again when they get the pitching,| Just heads apart, all three of us, by Venuike, invincible during the winter) Again, RIES tS? Gee ching they’ lihe time September rolls around.” “WE LEFT HAND SHOULD BE "IN CONTROL UNTIL “THis STAGE OF THE SWING 15 REACHED © @NEA and enabled Pirates to beat Dodgers, 3to2 , Riggs Stephenson, Cubs—His single Marte drove in winning run against Jimmy Foxx, Athletics —Clouted llth homer with three on in first to beat Red Sox, 4 to 2. Use the Want Ads LAN PHER HATS Dahl Clothing Store BISMARCK, N. D. IN THE NATION’S CAPITAL I1°S! he WILLARD: WASHINGTON, D.C. _ SUNDAY, CITY BALL PARK - - 3 P. M. ADMISSION 50¢ At my farm thive niles east of one, black. No brands, Weg around er ares ven, a ENA ESE STYLE Style and service considered, the Lanpher has always been @ good hat buy.:. today, when values are ultra portent, it is the best buy. 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