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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1934 5 Capital City Track and Field Meet Will Be One-day Affair MORE THAN 187,000 FANS ATTEND OPENING LEAGUE GAMES [OUR BOARDING HOUSE ——~—~S~CSS*~«éy Ahm INABILITY 0 SECURE COTS IS REASON FOR SHORTENING CLASSIC High School Athletes From Throughout State Invited to Participate DEMONS DEFENDING CHAMPS Preliminaries Are Scheduled for 10 A. M.; Kimball Will Be Referee Abandoning plans for the usual two-day meet in favor of a one-day meet, officials of Bismarck high schoo) have broadcast invitations to high schools throughout the state and par- ticularly in the Missouri Slope area to send athletes here for the 11th an- nual Capital City track and field meet Saturday, May 5. Officials feel the one-day meet is desirable in view of the fact that they will be unable to obtain cots for the convenience of visiting teams. In previous years these cots have been Placed in the high school gymnasium for the use of visiting athletes. This year, however, Fort Lincoln, U. S. army post here, will need the cots for accommodation of civilian conservation corps companies, and they will not be available for the ath- letic event. For teams which wish to come here the day before the meet, however, lo- cal hotels are offering special low rates. Coaches are instructed to be on hand promptly at 10 o'clock the morn- ing of the meet to draw for heats and lanes and to scratch men who may be withdrawn from events. The schedule of events for the class- te will be as follows: Preliminaries 10 a. m—Shot put, high jump and 120-yard high hurdles. 10:15—100-yard dash. 10:30—Discus throw and 440-yard 10:45—Broad jump, javelin throw and 220-yard low hurdles. 11:00—220-yard dash. 11:15—Half-mile run, Finals 1:30 p. m.—Pole vault. B te pu :15—100-yard dash. 2:30—High jump, discus throw and mile run. 2:45—440-yard dash. 3:05—220-yard low hurdles. 3:10—Javelin throw and broad jump. 3:20—220-yard dash, '35—Half-mile run. :50—Half-mile relay. Trophies will be awarded to teams winning first, second, third and fourth places, it is announced by W. H. Payne, principal of Bismarck high school, as well as to the team win- ning the relay race. Individual winners will receive gold, silver and bronze medals and ribbons. Schools entering must be members {nm good standing of the North Dakota high school league or the North Da- kota, consolidated school league. Breakfast and Banquet Breakfast will be served to all con- testants and coaches Saturday morn- ing, while the annual banquet will be held at the dining room of the Grand Pacific hotel here at 6:30 p.m. All medals and trophies will be present- ed at this banquet. “Interest in the Capital City meet ‘would indicate one of the largest and best meets we have ever had,” ac- cording to Payne. Ten records were broken last spring fs Bismarck won first honors in the 10th annual meet. Fargo nosed out Mohall 31's to 29 for second honors. Other teams finished as follows: EGAD, BUSTER TRAFFIC TICKET ,TM IN A DILEMMA! UP AT THE OWLS CLUB,T TOOK A A FELLOW WAS GIVEN FOR SPEEDING, AND 1 SAID I COULD GET IT COOLED, AS 1 WAS A PERSONAL FRIEND OF SUDGE RENCHY—AND I DON'T KNOW HIM FROM A PERSIAN SHEPHERD /~I DONT KNOW WHAT CAME OVER ME,AT THE MOMENT, EXCEPT TO APPEAR-AH-Um-INFLUENTIAL, ~~ -» ster 197,000 SEE CHAMP YOU LOOK BAD FROM BOTH SIDES J YOu COULDN'T GET To JUDGE RENCHY, UNLESS, YOU WERE A SHAVING BRUSH) TRY TO HAVE HIM CHILL ATICKET, AN* HELL HANG You IN TH’ SMOKEHOUSE 1994 BY NEA SERVICE, thc. FOR BO DAYS/ SS 4-/6- North Dakota College Track and Field Prospects Above Average Valley City Teachers, 1933 Champions, Hope to De- fend Loop Title (By the Associated Press) Prospects for a good season among track teams in the North Dakota in- tercollegiate conference are above av- erage from early season indications, Valley City Teachers College, 1933 champion, is preparing a strong ag- Sregation for defense of the con- ference title. Minot prospects are re- garded as bright. At Jamestown, grad- uation leaves a “fair” outlook with strength in certain events. Wahpe- ton and Mayville also are reported to have strong clubs, Gronlie, captain at Ellendale last year, will be one of the Valley City Viking’s best point collectors this year. He was an outstanding man in last year’s conference event, winning in the high hurdles, pole vault and high jump in addition to placing in the low hurdles and broad jump. Another veteran, Warren Pederson will concentrate on the middle dis- tance runs, the discus and broad jump. In the field its also will be point- winner Earl Shannon. Two-milers are Martin Jacobson and Stanley Mettler. Eddie Winterer who led the Viking hurdlers last year and placed first in lows and second in highs at the conference meet, will Press Gronlie hard in both events. He also pole vaults. Newcomers Give Balance Willard Pierce is the only veteran half-miler back. Newcomers with ability are expected to give the school @ well-balanced team for conference competition. Coach J. W. Morrison is training 29 candidates who are expected to make a Minot team better than that of a year ago. Newcomers must fill vac- ancies but several veterans assure Hazen 9%, Linton and Minot 7 each, Coleharbor 51s, Underwood 5, Dick- Strength in certain events. Outstanding prospects at Minot are Earl Golden, a former conference record-holder in the 220, Edwin Wos- ter, pole vaulter, high jump, shot put; Howard Dunnell, high and low hurd- les, and Melvin Johnson, who will enter as sprinter, jumper, vaulter and weight man. Johnson holds the con- ference javelin record with a heave of 163 feet 73-8 inches. Minot will enter a quadrangle meet, including Jamestown, Ellendale, and Dickinson at Jamestown, May 5; a conference at Valley City. With. track prospects dulled at Jamestown by the graduation of four Stars, Coach E. J. Cassell is trying to give the squad some polish before the inter-class mect this week-end. Cassell described the team’s pros- pects as fair, but, while additional loss through ineligibility is in prospect, the Jimmies are expected to progress rap- idly after a delayed start on the out- door track. Hall Veteran In Dashes The squad includes Don Hall, dash man who holds the conference record in the 220 and anchors on the re: y team; Captain Helmut Bertsch, Fred Summers, and John Woll in the 440; Dwight Behan, who set the state high school state record last year for Mo- Jamestown Plans Strong 1934 Nine Two Negro Pitche al Semi-Profe: Already Signed Jamestown, N. D., April 18—(P)— Jamestown’s 1934 baseball club is be- ing whipped into shape and practice sessions will begin soon after the ar- rival of imported players. Lefty Brown will be the ace pitcher. Carter, procured from the Pittsburgh hall; Douglas Evans and Sydney Melby, also half-milers; Carl Strutz and Chester Wyngarden, two-milers; Reslock, Eugene Delange and Bernie Olson, hurdles; Victor Hilden, Res- lock, Edward Agre, Bertsch, Fred Chamberlain, Don Hall and Gus Sch- lickenmayer, in the field events. The schedule includes, Aberdeen re- lays at Aberdeen, April 27; dual meet with Aberdeen Normal, April 28; quadranglar meet at Jamestown May 5, Minot, Dickinson, Ellendale, Jamestown; pentangular meet at Jamestown, May 12 (Huron, Aberdeen, Valley City, Ellendale, Jamestown); sexangular at Valley City, May 18 (Moorhead, Ellendale, North Dakota University and Agricultural College, Jamestown and Valley City); and the conference at Valley City. Four lettermen were among the 25 Crawford club, will be the other! moundsman. William Perkins, who has been managing the Birmingham, Alabama, team, will catch for the Jamestown nine. Another new player is F. Thompson of the St. Louis Browns, who will per- form at the shortstop position. He will arrive soon, bringing two men from Joplin, Mo, who have been training with him. Construction of a new grandstand at the baseball diamond, proposed some time ago, remains under con- sideration. Yesterday’s Stars (By The Associated Press) Danny Taylor, Dodgers — Clouted homer, double and single against Braves. track candidates reporting to Coach H. J. Weinbergen at Dickinson. They are Heiser, shot, discus and javelin; Ross, shot and hurdles; Krause, 440 and half-mile; and Quill, high jump. Two other lettermen will be unable to compete. Bennett is in- eligible and Kostelecky has an ine jured knee which refuses to mend. The Savages will engage in a dual meet with Minot there May 5; in a quadrangular meet at Jamestown, and in the conference meet. Weinbergen may enter a squad of his best talent in the Aberdeen relays. ‘NEVER FELT BETTER’ New York, April 18.—()—William Watson Clark, once considered the |eauat of any southpaw in the Na- | tional League, reported to the Giants Wednesday after undergoing treat- ment for a lame arm and announced dual meet with the Dickinson May 12; he never felt better in his life. Joe Cronin, Senators—Doubled in llth to start rally that beat Red Sox. Lon Warneke, Cubs—Shut out Reds with one hit, fanning 13. Bob Johnson, Yankee pitching for double and two singles. Dizzy Dean, Cardinals — Limited Pirates to six hits to win, 7-1. Marvin Owen, Tigers—Knocked in three runs in 8-3 triumph over White Sox. Carl Hubbell and Joe Moore, Giants —Hubbell held Phillies to four hits; Moore scored three runs and batted in two, Oral Hildebrand and Lloyd Brown, Indians—Combined in six-hit pitch- ing performance against Browns. A sports critic says Primo Car- nera is not so easy to hit as he used to be. He must have gone on a diet. GIANTS BEAT PHILS 33,336 Pay Way in to See Washington Defeat Boston Red Sox in 11th WARNEKE HURLS FINE GAME Chicago Cubs Ace Restricts Cincinnati to One Hit in Ninth Inning (By the Associated Press) Major League baseball clubs Wed- nesday settled down to the serious business of daily games, hopeful a glorious round of opening contests had set the keynote for the entire season. Enc by fine weather, the fans poured through the turnstiles in Greater numbers Tuesday than in either of the last two season inaug- urals although the aggregate attend- ance fell far short of the 1931 record turnout of 249,010. In all more than 187,000 attended the eight opening games. The world champion New York Giants attracted about 37,000, and the faithful were rewarded by seeing Carl Hubbell, last year’s world series hero, pitch four-hit ball to beat the Phil- lies 6-1. Red Sox Attraction The rebuilt Red Sox were the lead- ing attractions of the American Lea- gue as they clashed with the champ- ion Washington Senators. The crowd of 33,336 which filled Fenway Park ‘was one of the best on record in Bos- ton and it had plenty of thrills in an 11-inning struggle which Washington won, 6-5. ‘Throngs of around 30,000 also ap- Peared at Brooklyn, where the Dod. gers beat the Boston Braves 8-7, and at Cincinnati, where the Reds proved victims of Lonnie Warneke, Chicago's stellar right-hander. Pitching in mid-season form, War- neke missed a no-hit, no-run game by one throw as he blanked the Red- May 5 ‘ American Association’s Inaugurals Attract 33,000 Through Turnstiles BEHIND PORT-SIDER|| Bill Terry Tickled Over Giant Power nnn * DOUBTS ARE | World Champions Look New York, April 18—()—You could almost see the canary feathers sticking out of the corners of Bill Terry's mouth—he was so pleased see PELLED eon @ * jo e Fine in Opener Never to do, With the count two balls and no strikes, Jimmy slugged the next pitch into the stands for a home Tun, hardly cricket under the cir- cumstances, but a homer neverthe- s Dis * with the world in general and his/less, world champion Giants in particular. “They had me worried a little in the South, but I’m afraid everything is going to be very much all right,” he grinned. xy sure look good in there. This is quite a ball club.” The Giants had just finished pick- ing up against the Phillies in the opening game of the season exactly where they left off last fall against the Washington Senators, even though the caliber of the opposition ‘was scarcely the same. But there was Carl Hubbell, any- And Blondy Ryan, who couldn’t buy ‘a hit all spring, subbed for the ailing Hughey Crits at second, got himself! two fine hits. “Yep,” said Terry, “the only two men I’m worried about on this club now sre Mel Ott and myself. ‘We're not hitting. But ‘speaking thing but a champion this spring,| Terry pitching beautifully again, starting the season with what might have been a shutout if Jimmy Wilson, the new Philadelphia pilot, hadn’t done what managers teach their players bination,” Terry said. “Blondy is our| second-baseman unt (niles eSPORKS Joe Walcott, the great Negro fighter, and Mysterious Billy @mith fought a number of hard battles in the old days—but Billy always had the edge on Joe because he had the Negro in a panicky state in every brawl. Before one of their fights, Smith sent word to Joe that he was going to| ’ legs 6-0 and whiffed 13 batsmen. Cin-|. cinnati didn’t get a hit until after one was out in the ninth, when Adam Comorosky connected for a single. Chuck Klein, imported from Phila- delphia to aid the Cub’s slugging, celebrated his debut with a home run. Athletics Beat Yanks The Athletics defeated the highly- touted Yankees 6-5 in ® mixed-up game that saw 18 passes given out. With 21,000 fans looking on, Cleve- land’s Indians made eight hits good for a 5-2 victory over Rogers Horns- by’s Browns as Earl Averill smacked in three tallies with a homer and a double. Mickey Cochrane and his Detroit Tigers converted six blows into an 8-3 triumph over Chicago. The St. Louis Cardinals, with Dizzy Dean holding forth on the mound, pounded out the day’s high total of 13 hits ae trimmed the Pittsburgh Pir- ates 7-1, Homers by Dan Taylor and Hack Wilson contributed five runs to Brook- lyn’s early lead, which lasted through a ninth inning rally by the Braves. Scores by innings AMERICAN LEAGUE Athletics — Raked | Pytlak. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams | Geaieanit=— BOOSTING OF THIS MESS. if HER UP To LOOKIN A BIRDS NEST? BAAH!— IVE A GooD NOTION TO LET You GET YOURSELVES OUT (F YOU DO, WELL DIE RIGHT HERE! T CAN'T GET OFFA HER LEG TILL SHE GETS IT OUT OF MY SWEATER, AN' SHE CAN'T GET OUT TILL I GET OFF HER \ LEG. — WE'VE TRIED EVERYTHIN: phe OF HIS Voice, SO TH' NEIGHBoRS' COULD SEE ME LIKE THIS! I bite both his ears off—and Joe wanted to call off the fight right away. “If he bites off your ears, it’s a foul and you get the decision,” con- soled his manager. “I wouldn’t trade mah ears fo’ a million decisions,” Joe protested. “In the ring that man’s got no conscience. He's mean, and he'll do jus’ what he says he will.” Joe! All th the fight anal Poor Joe! throug! ig! war livid pping hadn’t been for the referee have lasted more than a round. at his ears. 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