The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 26, 1933, Page 8

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‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1933 Templeton Says Stanford’s Chances Depend on Eastman and Miller “CARDNALS MENTOR |ELIZA BETH RYAN STILL ONE OF BEST DOUBLES PLAYERS OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | AMERICAN AND WME, | HERE’S THA’ SAYS STARS AREN'T IN BEST CONDITION g HOW ABOUT LOANING AN ’ Z; ZZ Zi veuwenee MATH 0 FRANCE, REACH SEMI - FINALS; TIGHT ot RUSTY OLD SAILOR WITH A LIMP A COUPLE OF LEAVES OFF NUT f.SOME. Miss Ryan Also in Quarter-Fin-| VAUNTED YALE VARSITY . Defeat of Southern Californians THAT#}300 HEAD OF CABBAGE DAY YOULL COME . Hinges on Work of Run- YoU PICKED UP 2——~ No AROUND PLAYIN ner, Vaulter KIDDING, THIS MONTH GAVE Rist d ee . — ME A MEAN PUSHING AROUND, : BUT, DRAT IT, T CANT 9 T HAVE PLANS AHEAD THAT | ‘METRIC SYSTEM ATTACKED Coaches Protest Switch From] Yardage Scheme in Track Events Cambridge, Mass. May 26.—(P)}— Stanford's chances of justifying the Position of favorite in the track and field battle for intercollegiate A.A.A.A. thampionships, starting with the qualifying. trials Friday, apparently hinged upon the ability of two dis- abled stars to come through—Cap- tain Ben Eastman, middle distance ace, and Bill Miller, the Olympic pole vault champion. Despite the general conviction that the Indians can recapture the team _ title from Southern California and the best the East has to offer, with- out winning performances by either Eastman or Miller, R. L. (Dink) ‘Templeton, Stanford coach, was pes- simistic. “With all our men in first class | shape I would not hesitate to pick our team to win,” said Templeton Friday, “but as it stands now, we will need | every point we can get.” Trials Friday afternoon in Harvard Stadium, in 11 of the 15 championship events, starting at 1 p. m. (E.S.T.) ‘were expected to give a definite line on the relative strength of Stanford and U.S.C. Yale was regarded the strongest of 30 eastern entries but the best the Elis could hope for was third onal barring some spectacular up- Bel ‘Use of the metric system of meas- ‘urement for track events, for the first time in the 57-year history of the meet, assured establishment of a flock of new records but also has aroused the ire of a big majority of the | Coaches. At a stormy meeting Thurs- day night, the track coaches’ associa- tion voted 22 to 3 against meters and in favor of the old yardage system. ‘Templeton, long a stormy petrel in track circles, charged the metric sys- tem was “railroaded” through the | LC.A.A.A.A. as well as the national A.A.U., which adopted the European standard at its 1932 convention. The | coaches decided to exert all possible pressure to restore the old system of measurements. Cold, wet soil in the spring favors] the development of covered smut on Wheat. Smut usually is more pre- valent in the eastern half of North Dakota because the soil is heavier, more Moist and cooler in the spring. or Railroading? Coach Dink Templeton of Stanford university is considerably aroused over | the change from the U. S. yardage system to the European metric sys- U. track and field meets. At a meet- ing Thursday night he charged the change was railroaded. tem for the I. C. A. A. A. A. and A. A.| Rogand Parshall, 149, of Billings.!120-yard low hurdles, eight-pound \knocked out Mickey Mack, 1391, Min-j shot put, junior discus, broad jump, \neapolis, in the first round of their] high jump and pole vault, As Dod AN $20 WILL TAKE ME OUT OF TH ALLEY 7 HOW ABOUT ~ \T,OL PALO Brooklyn's Balloon WILL REQUIRE EVERY FARTHING OF THE MONEY / DOWN LIKE A BUSTED Is Deflated gers Make Western Jaunt 1 Athletes In Conference Meet North Dakota U and Two South Dakota Schools Are Rank- ed Favorites Grand Forks, N. D., May 26.—(®)— Seventy-one athletes, cream of north- west colleges and universities, were to compete in the north centyal confer- ence track and field meet at Memor- {ial Stadium Friday. Preliminaries in | four events were to start at 10 a. m. while the finals were scheduled for 2:15 p. m. | Not since the conference was or- \ | schools as at present, has there been | Dakota State, Morningside, University |of South Dakota, North Dakota Agri- ‘cultural college and University of | North Dakota. . Record-holders in six events were to'compete in the 1933 champion- ships, while the list also included sev- en stars rated as potential record- breakers. With probable winners in seven jevents and sufficient balance to count points in every other except the pole vault, University of North Dakota, with its greatest track team, was fav- ou to capture its first conference le. The Sioux were figured to have | Strong competition from the two | South Dakota schools. North Dakota Aggies and Morningside entered indi- vidual stars, but neither was conceded Power enough to break up the three- cornered fight for top honors, Billings Battlers Billings, Mont., May 26.—(?)—Twice jdown for léng counts, “Young Tom- jmy” Loughran, 163, Billings, launched @ late counter offensive to gain a \draw with Ned Lambrecht, 158, also of | Billings, in a featured bout of a fight card here Thursday night. scheduled six-rounder. ganized and included twice as many |that there was little doubt as to the |@ field that could compare with the; one entered this spring from South|Ryn and George Lott against Adriano In Draw Engagement Junior Capital City track and field 'U. S. Tennis Stars In Easy Victories Need Only Win on Doubles En- gagement Friday to De- feat Argentines Washington, May 26.—(#)—The| United States Davis Cup team went} out to clinch American zone honors |Friday, needing only one more victory |over Argentina’s hard pressed players. ;. Clean-cut wins in the opening sing- les Thursday by Ellsworth Vines and Wilmer Allison, the American team ‘captain, put this country’s cup-seek- ers in such a commanding position finish of the five-match series. Friday's play pitted Johnny Van Zappa, Argentina's quick-footed cap- tain, and Adelmar Echeverria. Even if the American doubles com- binations conquer the Argentines Fri- day, however, Vines and Allison will Play out the two final singles Sat- untayi switching opening day oppon- ents. Junior Athletes Ready For Meet Boys of Seventh, Eighth and/ _ Ninth Grades Eligible to Participate Athletes of the seventh, eighth and ninth grades were to participate in meet at ‘Hughes field Friday after- | noon. j The meet was to begin after school classes were dismissed. Only nine events and a 440-yard relay, with each of the four men to Tun 110-yard legs, were on the pro- gram. Events included the 50-yard dash, 100-yard dash, 880-yard dash, | OUT OUR WAY By Williams | GOOD NIGHT, WworRRY WART ! RING TH DOOR BELL AN’. THEY ‘LL LET YOU INTO TH PARLOR, SO YOU CAN THROW \T ON TH’ PoRcH , Y) a ' iy Mice SWLECUE tt ste, Have Lost Six Out of Their Cast Seven Games; Macks Beat Tigers in 12th By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. (Associated Press Sports Writer) ‘The Brooklyn Dodgers, who looked for a while like one of the important teams of the National League, have undergone a thorough process of de- jflation since they began to tour the, | Western half of the circuit. After winning the first three games in the west, the Dodgers turned around and lost five out of six to Chi- | champion, cago and Pittsburgh and then ran in- to a 4-1 defeat in their first game at Cincinnati Thursday that dropped them into seventh place. Walter Beck, the big recruit, was| the victim of Thursday's defeat. The! Reds pounced upon him for five ‘hits { and three runs in the first three inn- | ings while Paul Derringer held the! Brooklyn batsmen in check with seven! well-spaced blows. i The victory sent Cincinnati into; fourth place again as the Chicago Cubs knocked Boston’s Braves loose from their first division berth with aj 3-0 victory. i Leaders Arc Idle i The first three clubs in the stand- ; ing were idle as New York and Pitts- burgh were rained out and St. Louis and Philadelphia had an open date. The American League's feature | game presented the familiar spectacle of Lefty Grove stepping in to save a game for the Athletics. He did it for! the fifth consecutive game, pitching the last four innings as the A's beat the Detroit Tigers 4-3 in 12 frames}! and moved into a tie with the Chicago White Sox for third place. Washington regained second place | by pasting three St; Louis pitchers for! 14 hits and a 7 to 2 victory. Cleve- land’s four game losing streak ended in Boston when the Indians edged out} @ 3-2 victory. The opener between the White Sox and the New York Yankees was halt- ed by wet grounds. Scores by inn- ings: 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Paint Brooklyn Cincinnati: incinnati. ‘Beck, Thurston and Lopez, Outen; Derringer and Hemsley. H Cubs Blank ssa Boston.... 000 990-- Chicago... 102 000 00x 3 7 Zachary, Seibold and Hargrave; Ma- lone and Hartnett. New York at Pittsburgh, wet grounds. : Only games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Macks Win In 12th R H.E Detroit 010 002 000 000-3 12 0 1 Soe a 100 000 101 OO1I—4 8 Sorrell, Hogsett and Hayworth; Earnshaw, Peterson, Grove and Coch- rane. Senators Club Browns RH E St. Louis... 020 000 000-2 6 3 Washington 011 110 30x—7 14 0 Henert, Gray, Knott and Shea; Crowder and Sewell. Indians Nip Bosox R HE Cleveland.. 101 010 000-3 7 1 Boston .... 100 000 010-2 7 2 Harder, Hildebrand and Spencer; Rhodes and Ferrell. Chicago at New York, wet grounds. Fights Last O-RWILUAMS INC. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. (By the Associated Press) Savannah, Ga.—Jose Estrada, Mexico City, and Lou Terry, St. Louis, drew, (10). Dallas—Baby Manuel, Havana, outpointed Chief Paris, Bartles- ville, Okla., (10). The American Automobile Asso- ciation estimates that one-third of the automobiles in use in the United States are obsolete. Experiments designed to produce a cheap motor fuel from wood are be- ing carried on in Czechoslovakia. cobb wwii 1. One-fourth of all the mohair con- | WELL LET YOU | als of Mixed Doubles, Teamed With African HELEN JACOBS ELIMINATED: California Girl Making Prepara- tions For Drive in Singles At Auteuil Auteuil, France, May 26—()— Elizabeth Ryan has been an interna- tional tennis figure for 20 years but the Californian still ranks as one of the world’s greatest doubles players. With Mme. Rene Mathieu of France as her partner, Miss Ryan has gained the semi-finals of women’s doubles in the French hard" court championships, now in progress here, and is conceded an excellent chance of sharing in that particular crown for the third time since 1925, when the championships first were thrown open to players from all countries. Miss Ryan and the South African, Nat Farquharson, also are among the survivors in the mixed doubles divi- sion but their chances are not con- sidered so bright. Miss Ryan and Mme. Mathieu gain- ed the semi-finals of the current tournament by eliminating the Eng- lish team of Mary Heeley and Freda James, 6-1, 6-0. In the semi-finals they were to meet Josane Sigart of Belgium and Margaret Scriven of England. In mixed doubles, Miss Ryan and Farquharson defeated Miss Heeley and F. H. D. Wilde, 7-9, 6-2, 12-10 to reach the quarter-finals, where they will be pitted against Jean Borotra and Mme. Henrotin of France. The only other American survivor in doubles play was Frank Shields of New York. He and Daniel Prenn reached the quarter-finals of men’s doubles through default of the South Africans, Farquharson and V. G. Kir- by. In the next round the German- American combination was to meet Vivian McGrath and Adrian Quist of Australia. Helen Jacobs, United States singles eliminated in women’s doubles Thursday, was to start her bid for singles honors Friday against Jacqueline Fournier of France. ‘S Yale is expected to give a good account of itself on the water this season. shown above, probably will take part in the Pacific coast regatta in July. left to right, are: Richard Davis, John Pillsbury, William Kilborne, James Agen, hart, Jobp Jackson, Ben Taylor, William Garnsey and James Standart, cox, ‘ The varsity crew, Pictured in the shell, James Urqu- ! Kansas City’s Losing Streak and St. Paul’s Winning Streak Ended Blues Club Minneapolis 12 to 2’: Ball Players Held While Milwaukee Trims In Louisville Fight dieu. | Louisville, Ky., May 26.—(P)—Arthur } Shires and Jimmy Adair. American Chicago, May 26.—(P)—St. Paul's Association baseball players, were winning streak has been stopped and among five persons charged with a long victory drought for Kansas City | malicious assault after a fight early Thursday was at am end. Friday in which Jack Deacon, 32, re- straight for the best run of the Amer- ‘right leg. i: ican Association season, were beaten| Shires, Robert Armstrong, 26, and by Milwaukee Thursday, 5 to 2, and Carrie Potts were cut and bruised in the Blues, victims of a big share of |the fight, which occurred at the Dea- the St. Paul streak, gave Minneapolis|con home, and had their injuries @ 12 to 2 pasting. \treated at a hospital. Adair, only Led by Willingham, who drove in slightly hurt, did not require hospital five runs with a pair of homers, Kan- | treatment. sas City collected 14 hits off Taucher,| The two baseball players, Deacon, The Saints, who had won ninejceived a compound fracture of the! | arniatione and the Potts woman al? | were charged with malicious assault | by police, who were called to the home to quell the disturbance. Shires had two bumps on his head and a cut on jose. Officers said Shires told them th? fight started when an attempt wae made to steal $125 from Adair. Dea- con pulled a blackjack, according to | Shires’ story, and Shires chased him into the street, with the woman fol- lowing behind and hitting Shires over the head with a chair. Shires is first baseman for the Co- lumbus team. A misdemeanor in one state may be an indictable felony in another, according to the law of the particu- lar state. them. Walter (the original great), Mails, gave up nine hits, four of them | by Spencer Harris, | Hileher and Baecht, wasting few of SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark ville to three hits, the Colonels defeat- ed the league-leading Columbus Red | Birds, 2 to 1. Although Jim Lindsey held Een Che CStandin AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww. L. Columbus St. Paul .. Milwaukee Indianapolis Minneapolis Toledo Louisville ... Kansas Cit . New York Washington Chicago ... Philadelphia Cleveland Detroit ... St. Louis . Boston ... Pittsburgh.... New York St. Louis . Cincinnati . ; Chicago {Boston . Brooklyn Philadelphia Superior Winnipeg ..... East Grand Forks Eau Claire . Brainerd Crookston Moorhead-Fargo . NORTHERN LEAGUE Ww. 2 8 6 & 6 4 0 jin a night game. Scores by innings: | Saint Streak Broken 000 20: land and Fenner. Millers Singing ane 2 H E Kansas City 031 502 010-12 14 2 Minneapolis 000 000 101-2 9 3 Mais and Brenzel; Tauscher, Hilch- er, Baecht and Griffin. Colonels Beat Birds RHE Columbus.. 000 001 000—1 i in 0 Louisville.. 010 000 O1x— 2 0 Lindsey and Delancey; McKaii id Thompson. an Toledo at Indianapolis, wet grounds. Indians Scalp a, H Toledo .... 000 200 300—5 10 Indianapolis 100 022 10x— 6 11 big , T. Lee, Pearson and Hen line; Tising, Cooney and Riddle. |Moorhead-Fargo League-Leading Blues Wallop Twins 9 to 2; Morris Arnovich Hits Hard St. Paul, May 26.—()—Moorhead- )|Fargo’s losing streak was extended to 10 games Thursday when the league- leading Superior Blues triumphed 9 to 2 while rain and darkness again forced postponment of two more games. The hard-hitting Morris Arnovict: featured the Blues’ attack on a pair of Twin pitchers. He pounded out gpm S288 | Yesterday’s Stars | jtour ‘hits including swe” doubles al (By The Associated Press) Bob Boken, Senators—Ht trip», double and single! against Browns. ‘@/home run and a single, and batted three runs across the plate besides scoring twice himself. the second best made during the sea- curt, 910% ¢lson, his team-mate Joe Goldfine com- Braves to two singles, winning 3- bining a home run, two doubles and three singles for 11 bases on May 6. Loses 10th Game’ is total base count of nine was; Indianapolis defeated Toledo, 6 to 3! a | R H S jaukee 3 000— 5 10 St. Paul 1 == Caldwell and Young; Harriss, Ci | | | | | | “Say, buddy, are you really working for the city, or just being initiated into some lodge?” Night || Athletics— Clout- to beat Tigers 4-3. twice against Dodgers. Earl Averill, In- | Malone dians—Drove in { two runs against | Red Sox with double and single. a aaeeae ? | Major Leaders +—____________» (By the Associated Press) | NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Martin, Cardinals, 3713 | Frederick, Dodgers, .366. Hits—Fullis, Phillies, and Traynor,| Pirates, 48. | Home runs—Berger, Braves, 10; Klein, Phillies, 9. Pitching—Parmelee, - Giants, 4-0; Meine, Pirates, and Carleton, Cardin- als, 5-1. Johnny Anderson of East Grand Forks cena Hissin has made the next best count, eight, | ed homer in 12th;°" May 5. { The Twins and Blues were to clash} i dams, |®8ain Friday, while Eau Claire was to! legal ae yen be at Winnipeg and Brainerd at East! singles and scored|Grand Forks. There are slightly more than 3,-| 000,000 miles of rural roads in the; United States, with 330,000 miles in: state highway systems. 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—West, Browns, 381; Sim-! mons, White Sox, .372. Hits—Simmons, White Sox, 48;! Manush, Senators, 47. ! Home runs—Gehrig, Yangees, 8;: Foxx, Athletics, and Lazzeri, Yankees, ” Pitching—Brennan, Yankees, 4-0; sumed in the United States is used [in autos. 'McCafee, Senators, and Mahaffey, i Athletics, 3-0 \ ‘ENRY T. Prerent THE U. 8. HOUSE OF REPRE- RAINEY is the SPEAKER OF SENTATIVES. The symbol stands for SILVER. RUSSIA, FINLAND, SWEDEN, NOR- . WAY, GREENLAND (DEN- MARK), CANADA AND ALAS- KA (U. S.) extend! north of the Arctic Circle. THIS CURIOUS WORLD

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