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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1934 Bismarck Man Among Three High in State Checker Tournament ~ Rm Svan suits |CUNNINGHAM SETS RECORD FOR 1000-YARD CANADIAN RACE International Yacht Racing Season Will Be Officially Begun March 31 AMERICAN TENNIS STARS TAKE PAULEY CTTYPLAYER|[ ovr BoaRpiNe House By Ahern | A MPPICAN RUNNER ek oe FEATURE OF MEET TO STAY IN TOURNZY ; YES BASIL- 1 HAVE A GREAT THING IN MY itere| GOLD MINE ‘THE UTTLE 20 United States Crafts Enter. \T WHEN YOU WERE pionship Will Go to Dietz, Jamestown, King, Fargo, or to Local Man ELECT ALL OFFICERS ontenders at Jamestown Meet Retain Dr. T. H. Lewis as State Leader Jamestown, N. D., March 22.—(?)}— C. Dietz, Jamestown; Harold King, 0, and Fred Svaren, Bismarck, contenders for the North Da‘:ota bunds finished. King is the only one undefeated. eliminated in the first two ds were F. H. Nichols, Dick‘n-on, iy King, with two wins and one A Bhellito, Valley City, was defeated y Svaren, one win, three draws; holas defeated L. E. Allen, Hank- nson, who played instead of Frank d, Montpelier, one win, three raws. Officers elected are Dr. T. H. Lewis, ident; W. J. Carroll, Valley City, jones, Hank- lected. Prowiers Will Play Dunn Center ill Wind Up 1934 Season Sun- day Afternoon in Game at Dunn Center Bismarck Prowlers basketball team wind up its 1934 season in a game gainst the Dunn Center independent um Sunday afternoon at Dunn Cen- The Dunn Center c handicap of playing on a 12 , and be'ieve when they get penned in their own sma: they can give them a real bat- Pre Cardinals proved their worth s a basketball team when they won + district title early this month. preliminary game will close the on for the Dunn Center high ol quint when it meets the in- dent reserves. e independent squad is composed Timon Ebeltoft, Paul Dawkins, Bosch, Arthur Olsen, Arthur sme:s, Irwin Ebeltoft, Carroll s. Alvero Hansen and Olaf Fos- » for the Carital City five. LE . forward; ho received & Mes mythical ; Hays, guard, wl oaches ath- etics at St. Mary’s school here; and Myron Benser, high-scoring guard. Five American-Owned Horses in British Race Liverpool, Eng. March 22.—(P)— Over a course made famous by the Incofbeats of some of the world’s gerd jumpers, 33 or fewer horses, ive of them American owned, will start Friday the four and one-half milc journey at Aintree known as the (Grand National. Not all will finish. At least they mever have. ‘The owner of the winner awaits all honor associated with the world’s steeplechase. Paget’s Golden Miller ruled choice at 11 to 1 on the eve of running of the race. On the Golden Miller in the betting W. Parsonage’s Forbra, sur- in 1932, and Major Noel Really True, runner up to horse, Kellsboro Jack, ify ae ; i i i : ! f Fa f i | [ : wrestling icf Hed PHOEBE “—- AND FIGURE ON WORKING IT ~YES —ILL BE SATISFIED WITH TWO OR THREE 1 ITS BEING A BREWERY! MILLION ~UM-STHEN RE championship with two TM GOING TO ENGLAND BUILD “HOOPLE HALLS MY { ANCESTRAL HOME ) ONAH IH LOOKED \T UP WHEN HI WAS IN DONCASTER } \N TO INVEST SOME OF HIS MONEY IN THAT USED NOW AS TRRING THE SouP FOR BOOTHBY Will Be New Kind of Pennant Race This Year Says Manager Hornsby Slugging Browns’ Pilot Warns Clubs of Tough Opposition in St. Louis Nine pes: ‘cwiy St. Louis Browns still were in the American League after so many \years of their baseball failures. One hour with Rogers Hornsby would change all that! Hornsby doe.n’t just talk baseball. He burns baseball into you. The old war horse is fierce about it. I put in one hour with Hornsby in! his hotel suite after he just had re- turned from @ hard workout. He started with his pitchers, taking pen- cil and roster and explaining in de- tail why his 1934 staff is much better than last year's. “Take Blaeholder and Hadley. Each won 15 games last year. That proves they're pretty good pitchers, doesn’t it? But look at the games they lost! “Iadtey 20, avd Blaeholder 19. Can Y 82: che q Ny hod but two starting | p.ehers. And, with such a situation, | [Bow they came to win 30 ball games he { between them, working as hard as they did, is undoubted proof that they're the pe tie, league. “This year it’s going to be a lot dif- ferent. We have seven pitchers who can start games, and I mean they can finish most of them, too.” Hornsby squinted at the roster and marked the names of Andrews, Coff- man, Gray, McAfee—then he paused and looked over the others—New- scme, Baecht, Wells, Weaver, Walkup, Knott, McDonald. Ther a n— “Well, our seventh starting pitcher is there’—and he made Patel check—“let ‘em guess who.” It could not be argued that Horns- by had shown the staff had been im- Proved. The talk then went directly te the subject of runs, a matter about which the Browns have been grossly neglectful pony Se last few vears, Young itrange, the shortstop bought from Hollywood, is the center of Hornsby’s hopes, both on the left side of the diamond, where the Browns have been weak, and at the ® young man who likes to|almost up, and the j BY GOLLY, You NEED BELFIELD WHIST ball. To succeed in this game rot to play in the day league. outfield. You know West, Campbell and Garms. And Campbell is Proving. But when we took cinelli and Pepper from Rochester taking over the club last year. chain store. And when those two Players realize they're getting a chance with a real outfit like the Browns I expect them to show more than they ever did.” Hornsby almost had the case won. Forty-five minutes had passed and he had proved not only that | the elevator. money, 5 eg5k H i f : : Feds tleed [rie nue tir i i neared the door, the hour jury was A NECK SHAVE BAD, WORRY WART! ee. 2 Se sss X34 A SN NA SS we got just what I've wanted since| CLUB ENDS NEW ENGLAND'S LIST OF WINS | wow Englanders Take First Loss in Two Years Play; Won 25 Straight (Special to The Tribune) ‘New England, N. D., March 22.—Af- ter nearly two years of undefeated tournament play, the local whist club lost 672 to 737 to Belfield in a team for the New England pasteboard ar- “I know them from the Cardinals’ | tists. ‘Two weeks ago the Belfield club was nearly able to count a win over the New Englanders, but fell just eight points the | teams AT HAMILTON, ONT. Kansan Clocked in 2:12.2 to) 5. putin” Miss World Standard by Fraction of Second PEARSON BEATS METCALFE 20-Year-Old Canadian Out- sprints American Negro Star in 40 and 60 Yards Hamilton, Ont, March 22—(7)— Glenn Cunningham, the durable Kan- tan who cracked the world indoor mile record with his 4:08.4 perform- ance last Saturday, Thursday had the Canadian record for 1,000 yards to add to his collection. Cunningham was clocked in 2:12.2 as he ran away from Phil Edwards, the Hamilton Negro veteran, in the featured event at the 91st Highland- ers meet Wednesday night. The time was just one-fifth of a second slower than the world indoor standard, which hes stood against all assaults since Howard Cutbill established it in 1922. Despite the brilliant performance, Cunningam had to share the night’s honors with Bert Pearson, the youth- ful Hamilton sprinter, and Hank Cie- man, heel-and-toe traveller from To- ronto, The 20-year-old Pearson came through with a pair of smashing sprint victories over Ralph Metcalfe, the Marquette University Negro speedster, at 60 and 40 yards. He ne- gotiated the longer distance in 6.5 seconds and equalled the Canadian 40 yard record with a 4.6 performance. Cieman clipped a tenth of a second off the world one-mile walking record which has stood since 1910 as he ‘marched through s handicap field to cover the four furlongs in 6:25.7. An- other Canadian, George Goulding, es- tablished the mark. pals | Fights Last Night | —-— 7 Brook! tt Tamagnini, and Al Roth, 128%, New York, drew, (10); Joe Rossi, 145, New York, outpointed Joe Glick, 145, Brooklyn, (10); Cas- par La Rosa, 145, Brooklyn, out- pointed Harry (Kid) Wallace, 147, Philadelphia, (6). Milwaukee—Tony Bruno, 161, Milwaukee and Karl Ogren, Ken- osha, Wis. drew (8); Mickey O'Shea, 150, Chicago, knocked out. Toots Bernstein, 147, Milwaukee (2); Billy Miller, 145, Milwaukee, outpointed Dick Sisk, 144, Chi- cago, (6); George Black, 156, Mil- waukee, outpointed Mickey Misko, 157, Seginaw, Mich., (6), ed in St. Petersburg-Ha- vana Sea Marathon Service) » Fie. ‘When the crack of sounds from the deck of cutter off the shore of noon, March 31, some 20 est craft in the United usher in the international ing season by casting off on annual St, Petersburg-Havana marathon. This race, growing in interest dur- ing the last four years, has attracted entries from various parts of the east, and these Yankee skippers will out to break the hold southern yachts have had on the race. eee ‘The 56-foot schooner Windjammer, owned and skippered by Commodore Garner H. Tullis of the Southern ‘Yacht Club, New Orleans, and Hali- gonian, belonging to Houston Wall of St. Petersburg, have dominated the sailing to date. ‘Windjammer won the race two out of three years in Class A—in 1930 and 1932—and finished second in 1931 to the Sunshine, owned by H. 8. Denni- ston, of Mobile, Ala. She did not compete last year, : Haligonian has won out in Class B each year and last season finished first in the classic. The boats race in two classes—| Class A for yachts not over 75 feet overall; and Class B for yachts not over 50 feet. Schooners, yawis, ket- H af i i E z B rife beak DOUBLES FROM FRENCH ACES Jones, in First Tournament in Four Years, Co-Favorite With Runyan Stoefen and Lott Beat Borotra and Boussus in Interna- tional Series New York, March 22—()—Follow. Gal tee ae ee national indoor championshtj week, the tennis forces of the United States held Thursday a decision over France in the fourth renewal of the Played, ‘The Americans swept the first three matches of the competition. Wednesday night Lester Stoefen and George Lott, America’s indoor and grass court doubles champions, took a terrific battle from Jean Boro- tra and Boussus, The scores were 2-6, 12-10, 4-6, 6-3, 11-9, and the length of the 69 game struggle indicates how th close it was. Stoefen and Gregory 8. Mangin had taken the opening “imatches from Boussus and Merlin professionals’ Jones cham} ‘tees off Thursday at lowest odds of 6 to 1, a co-favorite with Paul Run- yan, ches and sloops are cligible to com- Frese wv pete. The distance of the race is 284 nau- tical miles. The boats sail from the starting line 17 miles down the bay to Flashing Red bell buoy. Then the course follows the coast of Florida for 130 miles to Rebecca, Shoal light- house and from there 85 miles across the deep blue of the Gulf of Mexico, with the trade wind almost abeam, to the finish line at Havana. * * * The course is not an extremely the distance should furnish the sai- lors with all the elements that go’ to Make ocean racing an exciting sport. Endless variety is there, for seldom! Ra) are two days alike under sail at sea. Anyone who ever has had any ex- perience in open sea racing knows what it is to crawl out of a bunk a mid-watch; to feel the ship shud- der as she sticks her nose int comber and hear the splash of across the decks that follows; to on wet oilskins and hand-haul yourself on deck, and sit huddled at the wheel. with eyes alternately aloft at the flutter at the throat and down at the compass before you. ‘Yes, it’s a great sport, mates, as any of the owners of the following entrants will tell you: R. Artemus, owned by Frank B. winter circuit and a group amateurs, including Gi the national titleholder, accepted vitations to joust with Jones. Par 72 for this 6,700 yard layout has been broken a dozen times in piactice and the course seems in shape for some sensational scoring. Control and putting, as usual, will decide the payoff. Denny Shute, MacDonald Smith, Craig Wood, Leo Diegel, Willie Mac- Farlane and Horton Smith, along with Runyan, were regarded as Jones’ out- standing rivals. Play for the $1,500 first prize money starts at 10 a. m. Soreag time) with| th ; Marlene II, Kent Curtis, Bar Harbor, Me.; Little Dipper, Wally Cleveland; Pieces of Eight, Bishop, |¥. G. Wagner, Portland, Me.; Cyno- sure, Leon B. Lewis, St. Petersburg; Wampatam, Homer Agee, St. Peters- aig Gamecock, William C. Al- Tuesday, Mountaineers Have Tough Boxing Team By NEA Service Morgantown, W. Va., March 22.— ‘Those University of West Virginia Mountaineers are tough babies, Since pro-' 1932, that school’s boxing team hasn't Jost an encounter, running up a string of 14 victories in its league—against Temple, Bucknell, Pitt, Duquesne, W. and J. and Carniege Tech. Coach Eddie Vacheresse has turned out two real champions in Bil ssn Sista tents title holder, and ja, featherweight king. The latter competing as a 118-pounder ae has-never Jost a college ‘This is Vacheresse's last season as ring mentor of the Mountaineers, He is a student at Ruth School of Medi- cine, Chicago, and received a leave of absence for one quarter so he could pilot his boys through the Eastern ~ Tntercollegiate Conference schedule, Maroons Will Meet New York Pucksters division, plays the Toronto Maple Leafs, last year’s league champions. Meanwhile, the second palce clubs of the two sections, the Montreal Cana- diens and Chicago Blackhawks, clash at Montreal. it. Petersburg. 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