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Bi smarck Nine W ill THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1933 pen Home Season Sunday Against Beulah LEGIONNAIRES MAKE \ CONNIE MACK’S REVAMPED ATHLETICS RISE TO FOURTH PLACE SPECIAL PLANS FOR|| our BoaRDING HOUSE ‘BOOSTER DAY’ TILT Two Great Clubs of Missouri Slope Will Clash At City Park At3 P. M. PITCHERS NOT ANNOUNCED Manager Neil O. Churchill Re- Z Ga Z Z IN THAT OLD CAR TM NOT FATTENI SUST A MINUTE, SIR RONALD LARDTUB ? YOUVE BEEN BLOWING THE BUGLE AROUND, ABOUT GETTING A #300 REWARD FOR FINDING A STOLEN PEARL NECKLACE YOU BAD f-—~ WELL , ING YOU UP FOR A STATE FAIR—<SO,LETS HAVE A PART OF THAT MONEY—-SAY, ABOUT #75 / 1 NEED SOME NEW CLOTHES —~ TM SICK OF GOING AROUND, LOOKING LIKE A SQUATTERS TENT? cruits New Men to Strength- en His Lineup Next Sunday will be “opening day” in the Capital City, with the Bis- marck and Beulah baseball teams, among the strongest nines in the Mis- souri Slope area, scheduled to battle at the city baseball park here in the first home game of the season. Lloyd Spetz post of the American Legion, sponsor of the local nine, has dubbed the day “Booster Day” and has made elaborate plans for the opening day program. Legionnaires Friday will canvass the city in a special ticket sales campaign. Season tickets for men cost $3 and for women $2. Admission prices for individual games will be 40 cents for adults and 10 cents for children, ac- cording to Harry W. Rosenthal, Le- gion official. Bismarck fans will get their first Teal look at the local team Sunday, though the club has been working out diligently for the last three weeks. ‘The Capital City club will be decked out in the new cardinal, black and gray uniforms purchased this spring by @ group of baseball-minded busi- ness concerns. The game will begin at 3 o'clock, it is announced by Manager Neil O. Churchill. Churchill has not yet an- nounced his pitching choice, but the starter will be Smiley Simle, Honey Boy Becker or Lefty Klein. Churchill said he may use a new man in the infield, a performer who was with the Wiikes-Barre semi- professional team in the Pennsylvania circuit last season. He is Niles Kit- chen. ‘The Capital City manager also ex- pects Roy D. McLeod to make his first start of the season in the outfield and | said he may bring George Heidt over from Mandan for one of the garden posts because of his hitting ability. Beulah, which has claimed the state championship for the last two seasons, will come here with an all-salaried team. In a game at the Mercer county city last Sunday, the Miners nicked Bismarck 3 to 0 in a brilliant tussle which saw four pitchers allow only three hits to each team. Beulah eked out its margin by tak- ng advantage of Bismarck errors and timely breaks. The Capital City crew makes no secret of the fact that it expects to avenge last week’s defeat in the game here Sunday. Moorhead-Fargo Loses Ninth Tilt Second Game of Doubleheader | Is Tied 7 to 7 At End of Extra Inning St. Paul, May 25.—(P)—Rain again stopped Northern League baseball teams Wednesday except at Moorhead, where the Twins lost their ninth con- secutive game and played Eau Claire to a 7-7 tie in 10 innings. ‘The Wisconsin team won the first engagement 11 to 6 through some ex- cellent pitching by O'Keefe, who al- lowed only five hits. It was the first victory for the Eau Claire hurler in four starts. The winners counted seven runs in the seventh inning be- fore halted by darkness. Each team wored in the last inning. ‘The life of an ewe is five years, during which period. she yields five) crops of wool and an average of four! \ambs. One bee would have to work every day for an entire year in order to make one pound of honey. OUT OUR WAY REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. © 1933 BY NEA SERVICE, INC] NES, #75 WILL LET ME GO OUT IN ks THE DAYTIME / By Ahern | Stanford Track and Field Team. FIVE ROOKIES TEAM Favored to Win I. C. 4-A Honors HANDY NEW GOLF CLU PAID FOR HER COMPLETE WARDROBE, WHEN SHE WAS LADY-IN-WAITING TO THE QUEEN / Ted Meinhover of Bismarck Among Stars Expected to Smash Marks Grand Forks, N. D., May 25.—The North Central Intercollegiate confer- ence track meet, featuring some 70 of the finest track men in the northwest. will get under way here Friday in Me- morial stadium. South Dakota State, defending champions, and the Uni- versity of North Dakota are the fa- vorites, Last year, the Jackrabbit team from South Dakota State eked out the ‘championship by a one-half point margin over the Sioux of the Univer- sity of North Dakota. The meet was not decided until the final event on the program, the mile relay, which was captured by State. This year, these two teams again will battle in much the same fashion, with the University of South Dakota and North Dakota State each expect- ed to play a part in the scoring. The Sioux claim an advantage in the 100 and 220-yard dashes, where Ralph Pierce holds both conference records. His :098 for the centutry and :21.8 for the 220 enabled him to win both these events last year. South Dakota State will enter Palmer and Andres. Palmer who runs the hun- dred in 10 flat, will force Pierce to his best ‘form. Quarter-Milers Good In the 440-yard run, the tables are reversed, and here the Jackrabbits claim the edge over the Sioux. Joe Plihal, the South Dakota State entry, has run the distance in less than the conference record time, :49.9. Nich- ols, the University of North Dakota entry, too, has bettered the conference record. Plihal, State's 220-yard hurdler, is favored in his favorite event over Wayne Hill, Sioux entry. Plihal has stepped the distance in :24 flat, while Hill is not far behind. The conference record is :245, set by Ole Sand of North Dakota State in 1930. In the distance events, the Univer-. sity of North Dakota expects to regis- ter three first places. Roy Mosher, in the half-mile and Roy Pearson in the mile and two-mile races, are confer- ence champions, and the latter finish- ed sixth in the mile race in the Na- tional Intercollegiates in Chicago last June. His conference record for the mile run is 4:22.8. The pole vault record, 12 feet 216 inches, set by Blakeslee of North Da- North Central Athletes Trek to Grand Forks for Record Efforts FISCHER LEADS TO ANOTHER GOLF CROWN kota State, is doomed by the prowess of Larry Hansen of South Dakota State. In the Dakota Relays, the Jackrabbit star vaulted 13 feet 4 inches. Count on Meinhover ‘Ted Meinhover, six-foot-seven-inch captain of the Sioux team, is the fa- vorite in both the shotput and discus field events. His heave of 45 feet 6 inches last year set a new conference record, and his unofficial throw of 150, feet this spring, marks the conference record of 148 feet 8% inches for aban- donment. State will recoup some of the points lost in those events if Kortan and Crippentog are in good condition Kortan won the javelin throw last captain of the South Dakota State team. The conference high jump record, 6 feet %s inch, set in 1925 by Simpson of Des Moines, has been bettered this spring by O'Connell of State, who has leaped 6 feet ‘2 inch. North Dakota State’s entries are ex- pected to reap points in the spring, in which Fritz Hanson, former Minne- sota high school state sprint cham- pion, will compete; in both hurdle events, in which Marquardt, former Minnesota high school hurdle cham- ‘pion, will race; and in the javelin throw, in which McKay will enter. South Dakota University’s confer- ence champion is Wirth, who ran the 440-yard dash in :49.9 in 1931. He is favored to repeat his victory. March of South Dakota University is one of the leading hurdiers in the conference, and Caddes should be among the point-getters in the half-mile face. The meet will start at 2:30 p. m. Metropolitan Open Headed by Olin Dutra, the defending champion and national P. G. A. title- holder, a field of 80 odd golfers, in- cluding the pick of the metropolitan district stars, set out Thursday in pursuit of the Metropolitan open golf championship at the Winged Foot By Williams AW LL GIVE 1T To 4OuU,FER WALKIN’ OOT IN TH MU ROAD AN’ YOoOR FEET wert-/ AN’ IM G | | AUTELL HER Too! ANY WAY — 1 poy GETTIN ONNA WELL, ULL GiT TH DiCHins, I WALUY ON TH SIDE WALK, L CANT RESIST LOOKIN’ =| DOWN JUST ONE CRACK FER LOST fF] MONEY —THEenr L CANT RESIST TH’ NEXT CRACH,ER TH NEXT ONE, ER TH NEXT One ! \ THESE GROCERIES FER SUPPER, A. SHE WANTS SO YOU BETTER SHLODUP! year and is favored to repeat. He is} Golf Tourney Opens ol Mamaroneck, N. ¥., May 25.—(7)—| St ,10u MICHIGAN Comes in 14 Strokes Ahead of Minnesotan and Team- Mate in Tournament Evanston, Ill, May 25.—(?)—Johnny Fischer, lanky University of Michigan junior who hopes to cut quite a fig- ure in the national open and amateur golf tournaments this year, has won ne second straight western conference le. The Cincinnati youngster made a brilliant finish Wednesday at the Kil- deer Country club to round up a 72- hole total of 301 strokes, 14 bette: than Earl Larson of Minnesote, and Ed Dayton, another Wolverine, who tied for second. With Dayton, who defeated Larson in the playoff for second: place hon- ors, and Carl Markham and George Davis, Fischer helped give Michigan its second title in a row. The Wol- verines had a four-man total of 1,291. Minnesota, the 1932 runner-up, fin- ished second again with 1,306. Northwestern was third, scoring 1,- 328, Ohio State was fourth with 1,373, and the other four teams finished as follows: Wisconsin 1,379; Illinois 1,- 384; Indiana 1,401, and Chicago 1,431. Purdue and Iowa were not represent- gs CS andin AMERICAN LEAGUE w iL New York 0, Pet. 645, 563 543 AT2 An A687 457 361 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION wu Columbus .. St. Paul . STL 545, 533. Kansas City . NORTHERN LEAGUE wiuLh Winnipeg” 9 Major Leaders (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) ( Wednesday's Games) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batt — Martin, Cardinals, 371; Hartnell Gu Hits—' , 367. ‘Traynor, Pirates, and Fullis, Phillies, 48. Home runs—Berger, Braves, 10; Klein, Phillies, 9. Pitching — Parmelee, Giants, 4-0; Meine, Pirates, and Carleton, Cardi- nals, 5-1, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—West, Browns, .381; Chap- man, Yankees, .370, Hits—Simmons, White Sox, 47; West, Browns, 45, Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 8; Bore, AMiics, and Lazzeri, Yan- Pitching — Brennan, Yankees, 4-0; McAfee, Senators, and Mahaffey, Athletics, 3-0. Trichogramma, a species of wasp which preys on injurious insects, have ee sold in California at $10 a mil- WITH VETERANS 10 MAKE STRONG CLUB Jimmie Foxx, Mickey Cochrane and Lefty Grove Are Steadying Influence WERE IN CELLAR AT START Pittsburgh Pirates Increase Lead Over New York Giants By Full Game By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. (Associated Press Sports Writer) When Connie Mack sold three star Players to the Chicago White Sox and maintained the Philadelphia Athletics still could put a team on the field that would be a pennant contender. echoes of the more or less subdued laughter of the “experts” rang ali around the American League. But it appears that after all the “tall tac- tician” knew what he was talking about, An outfield including Ed Coleman, Bob Johnson and Roger Cramer, all youngsters; a rookie, Frank Higgins. at third base and another, Eddie Ci- hocki, at short, hardly looks like the material of which a contender is made, but with these players, plus Jimmie Foxx, Mickey Cochrane, and Lefty Grove, the A's have been win- ning ball games. A week after the season started the Athletics were in the American League cellar. Move Up To Fourth They made the final step into fourth place Wednesday by walloping the St. Louis Browns 7 to 4 in a game ‘cut short in the sixth inning by a thunderstorm that flooded the field and started a small fire when light- ning struck a recently vacated part of the stands. Cleveland was rained out at New York.. The Chicago White Sox gained second place when they were kept idle at Boston. The Washingtno Senators, ‘previous holders of second, went down a notch as Detroit won 3-1. Tommy Bridges faced only 29 men, allowing one hit as he narrowly missed a perfect game for the third time in his short career. In the National League the Pitts- burgh Pirates increased their lead over New York to three games by pounding steadily at Brooklyn pitch- ing until they won out 6-5 in the 10th inning. The Cincinnati Reds mean- while gave the Giants a 3-1 setback. The Chicago Cubs, after two defeats by the last-place Phillies, turned around and administered a sound 5-2 drubbing to their oppressors. Boston and St. Louis were rained out. Scores by innings: ‘ NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Nick Giants New York.. Cincinnati. 000 00x—-3 7 1 Uhle, Bell, Starr and Mancuso; Smith and Hemsley. Pirates Win In mS Brooklyn 030 001 010 0—5 13 Pittsbu: irgh— 110 100 110 1-6 14 Stauten 4 fingo and Lopez; Swift, ute, Mur H Harris, Chagnon and Padden, Fin- ney. 000 102 E 0 Cubs Rally In Sixth Philadelphia 000 010 00I—-2 8 @ Onlceso-:. 001 004 OOx—5 10 0 Holley, Pearce and Davis; Warneke and Hartnett. Boston at St. Louis, postponed, rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE Bridges Pitches Another RHE weess 020 000 100-3 10 1 Washington 000 000 010-1 1-0 Bridges and Hayworth; Weaver and Sewell. . E Phtladelphia (Six innings, rain) Knott, Hadley and Ruel; Cain, Claset, Grove and Cochrane. Chicago at Boston, postponed, rain. | Cleveland at New York, postponed, rain, Peckinpaugh Warned By Cleveland Owner Cleveland, May 25.—()}—The. Cleve- land News says Roger Peckinpaugh Pei will have to pring the Indians out of Joe Vosmik, Cleveland's sock- | ing lett fielder, was in a slump. Seeking an explanation for his trouble, Indian officials sept ! | discovered Joe to an eye clinic and it was his vision was faulty. Glasses may correct it, | 47-yard run and May kicked the ex- When the golf pros met at Phi ladelphia the other day to battle for the medal-play championship of the Professional Golfers’ Asso- ciation of the Quaker City, it rai ined so hard that officials had to postpone the meet until May 22. Ed Dudley, right, title holder, and Denny Shute, both members of th is year’s Ryder Cup team, found an umbrelle handy during the downpour. SEEKS NEW HOME RUN MARK their slump or there will be a new manager for the Tribe. President Alva Bradley, the News says, laid down this ultimatum in New York Wednesday. “If we don’t win under you we'll have to try someone else,” Bradley was quoted as saying. Peckinpaugh, reached in Boston where the Indians were to open a ser- jes Thursday, denied that Bradley “read the riot act,” but when told of reports he might be dismissed, he re- plied “well, that may be true.” Nodak Grid Team Beats Bison 19-7 New Men, Falgren, Kupcinet and Charbonneau, Score For University Grand Forks, N. D., May 25—(>)— Something new in collegiate ath- letics had its premiere here Wednes- day night when the University of North Dakota defeated the North Dakota Bison 19 to 7 in a spring football game under the floodlights at Memorial stadium. i It was the first regular spring foot- ball contest between bitter colle- glate rivals ever held in the north- west, and it evened matters with the Bison for the 7-6 defeat they handed the university last fall at Fargo. The Sioux scored all their 19 points before the Aggies counted. Falgren went over for a touchdown in the first quarter and repeated in the third, when Kupcinet also connected. Charbonneau got the extra point after Falgren’s second score. All| three will be sophomore members of the 1933 machine next fall. Schollander scored for the Aggies in the fourth quarter on a brilliant tra point. 5 Coach Jack West of the univer- sity and Coach Casey Finnegan of the Bison used nearly their full squads as a fair-sized crowd cheered in No. 1 football fashion. Bison Newman Heine . Reiners . Thompson Erlenmeyer | University Reichert. ++» Sowl Schwartz .. Sauer Gehrke . Goethel Olson 5 Sloan oe Thorson Neuenschwander . ++. Falgren . Kupcinet «6 013 0-19 Aggies ... .0 0 0 7-7 Touchdowns—Falgren 2, Kupcinet, University Schollander. Points after touch-| downs, May, Charbonneau. Substitutes — University, rd, Smart, Cohen, Leidholdt, Eckholm, Levitt, Olson, Bentz, Welch, Belgum, we Fait, Babiarz, Braverman, Dahl, Meyers, Cain, Will, Kramer, Dehn. Bison, Meyers, \- ler, Schollander, Gove, Hanson, May, Thomas, House, Peschel, Hill. Head linesman—Bohnhoff, Con- cordia. Referee — Michelsen, Morningside; umpire, Kimball, South Dakota. | Yesterday’s Stars (By the Associated Press) Adam Comorosky, Pirates—Singled in 10th to drive in Dodgers 6-5. Tommy Bi Tigers—! ators to one hit and fanned eight for 3-1 victory. John Moore, Reds—Made two hits, scored two runs and drove in third against Giants. Mickey Cochrane, Athletics—Clout- jed double with bases full in rally that |; beat Browns. Gabby Hartnett, Cubs—Drove in winning runs against Phillies with Tait| Has Clouted 13 Circuit Smashes in 13 Games; 121 Full Games Remain Chicago, May 25.—(#)—At the rate he is going now, Joe Hauser, the Am- erican Association's champion home run hitter, has a big chance of setting @ new league record. Hauser, out of action a good share of last season with injuries, managed to help the Minneapolis championship cause with 49 circuit drives, five short of the record established by Henry Nicholas Cullop, now of Columbus, in 1930 while a Miller. The big Minneapolis first baseman Thursday had siugged out 13 homers in 33 games. Barring time out for injuries, he has 121 games in which to work on a new record. He got his 13th Wednesday, but it failed to keep the Millers from los- ing to Milwaukee, 8 to 5, and dropping into third place behind Columbus and St. Paul. 8t. Paul stretched its winning streak to nine games by taking another from Kansas City, 4 to 3. St. Paul's victory left it only one and one-half games behind the lead- ing Columbus Red Birds, idle because of wet grounds at Indianapolis. Louisville made @ clean sweep of its three game series with Toledo, win- ning behind John Marcum’s good pitching, 6 to 1. Scores by innings: Brewers Turn = Milwaukee. 002 011 112—8 18 Minneapolis 001 000 031—5 10 Young; Hol Braxton _ ant Tauscher, Baecht and Grif! Saints Win aes Kansas City 000 000 102-3 it; 9 St. Paul.... 001 021 OQ0x—4 8 Niggeling and Brenzel; Munns Fenner. E 0 1 W, E 2 1 and Marcum Bags os Toledo..... Louisville.. 300 003 Pearson and Detore; Thompson. Columbus-Indianapolis, wet grounds. 5 Ox—6 9 > Marcum and | i homer. . I HAUSER, SLUGGING MILLERS, “= With Few Breaks, However, Southern California May Win Fourth Straight Cambridge, Mass. May 25.—(P)— The powertul track and field teams representing Stanford and Southern California were at the end of a 3,000+ mile journey Thursday for the dou« ble purpose of settling their own ric valry for the 1933 season and deters mining, in the process, which will beet Ak a intercollegiate - . jonship troph; Le peal Golden’ west,” 4 na lay carnival that me ises to be a record-smasher, Bian. ford’s latest array of speed and “| brawn is the favorite to take the team title from Southern California, which retired the last trophy with tetas Straight Trojan victory in The race for points between these coast rivals, who divided honors in home-and-home dual meets this spring, may be closer than was ex- pected, chiefly due to the condition of two Stanford aces, Ben Eastman and Bill Miller. Eastman pulled a muscle early in the season, Since then he has run only one race, a slow 800 meters, and probably will confine himself to that distance, Miller, the Olympic pole vault king, injured an ankle last Saturday, in addition to which he will be up against the greatest competition ever brought together for this I. C. A. A. ae x Roar preliminaries Friday afternoon at Harvard Stadium, which will cut down the talent for Saturday's finals in 13 of the 15 events, will give the first definite line on team prospects. On paper, however, Stanford figures to pile up a winning margin of about 45 points. U. 8. C., despite the loss of several 1932 aces, has enough tal- ent to roll up at least 40 points and, with few fortunate breaks, might U. S. Tennis Stars Are Big Favorites *| Ready to Face Argentine Stare in Final Play of Ameri- can Zone Washington, May 25. — (®) — ‘The United States’ Davis Cup quartet, ready for the referee's call of “play” to open tennis hostilities with Argen- tina on the Chevy Chase club courts, Thursday ruled a top-heavy favorite to complete its American zone battles without the loss of a match. Ellsworth Vines, American and ‘Wimbledon champion, was pitted by the draw against hard-hitting Adriano Zappa, Argentine captain, for the opening singles tussle. Blond Wilmer Allison, American captain, was ready to take the courts in the second singles match against Hector Cattaruzza, playing his firs: Davis Cup tennis in the North Amer- ican zone. George Lott, who will team with Johnny Van Ryn in the doubles Fri- day against Zappa and Adelmar Eche- verria, remained off the courts Thurs- day to favor a slight cut on his racket hand. Officials said, however, there would be no bar to his playing Friday. No state has ever had a woman as @ lieutenant governor. LL NDBERGH made his epochal hop IN 1927 (May 20-31). Lady Godiva took her celebrat- ed ride through COVENTRY, ENGLAND. The Parthenon is in ATHENS, GREECE. THIS CURIOUS WORLD — THE CHINESE HAVE EACH OTHER IN INFANCY, ANO A PLEDGED BOY MUST Always J TORN OVER ALL HIS FISH CATCHES YO HIS SWEETHEARTS PARENTS: f