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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1934 IMPOSING FIELD 10 - START COMPETITION SATURDAY MORNING Golf and Tennis Tournaments Arranged as Well as Track-Field Events PLAN BREAKFAST, BANQUET Final Events Set for Hughes ' Field, Beginning at 1:30 in Afternoon Bringing together high school ath- letes from as far apart as Mohall and Fargo, in opposite corners of North Dakota, the 11th annual Capi- tal City track and field meet, includ- ing golf and tennis tournaments, will get under way at Hughes Field here Saturday morning. With Coleharbor and Mandan en- tering more contestants late Thursday, the entry list rose to 137 youths from 18 scattered cities and communities. Preliminaries in the track and field events will start at 10 o'clock. Ten- nis players will begin competition on the concrete courts at Hughes Field 8 half-hour earlier, at 9:30 o'clock. Mashie-swingers entered in the golf tournament will begin play in their 18-hole medal score affair at 9 o'clock over the course of the Bismarck Country club, not far distant from Hughes Field. Here ¥s Schedule Preliminaries are scheduled as fol- lows: 10 o’clock—Shot put, high jump @nd 120-yard high hurdles. 10:15—100-yard dash. 10:30—Discus throw and 440-yard dash. 10:45—Broad jump. javelin throw pand 220-yard low hurdles. | 11—220-yard dash. | 11:15—880-yard dash. Final events are scheduled to be- gin at 1:30 o'clock in the afternoon. ‘The schedule follows: 1:30 o’clock—Pole vault. 2—Shot put and 120-yard high hurdles. 5—100-yard dash. :30—High jump, discus throw and mile run. '45—440-yard dash. 05—220-yard low hurdles. throw and broad ;20—220-yard dash. 35—880-yard dash. 50—880-yard relay William H. Payne, principal of Bis- marck high school, is manager of the carnival, while Charles H. Kimball of Fargo will be referee and starter. Other officials include: J. C. Gould ‘of Mandan, head judge; George H.| Schaumberg of Bismarck, assistant} manager; R. B. Murphy. E. B. Cox, Robert Byrne and J. J. Green, all of Bismarck, track judges: Myron H.! Anderson and Edward Heer of Bis- marek, judges of weights; A. C. Van Wyk and Themar Simle of Bismarck. | judges of jumps; Paul O. Netland of | Bismarck, L. G. Thompson of Man- dan, and R. W. Johnson of Carson, timers; Charles Goodwin of Bis marck,, manager of golf and tenn: tournaments; C. W. Leifur, scorer; | Elmer Brown, police; Norman Agre, announcer; Roy Neff and R. L. Wells, tickets. Breakfast and Banquet Out-of-town contestants will be} guests of Bismarck high school at a! breakfast in the high school at 7:15) o'clock Saturday morning. The an- nual banquet will be given in the din- 1 room of the Grand Pacific hotel :30 p.m. All medals and trophies | be presented at this banquet. | ‘Ten records were broken last spring | as Bismarck won first honors in the| / 10th annual meet. Fargo nosed out | Mohall 31° to 29 for second honors. Other teams finished as follows: Hazen 9%, Linton and Minot 7 each, 5%, Underwood 5, Dickin- / gon 4, Gladstone 3, Solen and Stanton 2 each and Garrison 1. ‘Trophies will be awarded to teams ‘winning first, second, third and fourth places when points are totaled, P as well as to the team winning the relay race. i Individual winners will receive F gold, silver and bronze medals and ribbons. List Additional Entries Late entries from Coleharbor and Mandan were numbered as follows: Goleharbor: 124—Donald Carlson; f 125—Russell Jefferson; 126—Clinton | Graft; 127—Bob Saldin; 128—Cari Saldin; and 129—Toby Saldin. Mandan: 130—Charles Gardner; 181—Roe Percy; Schwartz; 133—Frank Stumpf; 134— francis Taylor; 135—Rogers Thysell; 5 ‘Wilkinson; aud 137—Clay- F J (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Allen, Phillies, .385; Ott, _Runs—Klein, Cubs, and Vaughan, Pirates, 15. ‘Hits — Moore, Giants, 23; Leslie, Dodgers, Berger, Braves, Allen, Phil- igites, Medwick and Martin, Cardinals, | Home runs—Ott, Giants, and Klein, ‘Cubs, 6. _—Bush, Cubs, 4-0; Hubbell, 4 AMERICAN yee me ‘Batting—Reynolds, Red , M51; ¢ Indians, 442. Morgan, Red Sox, 13; Vos- Caer uhel and Manush, the big Vancouverite, three six-day bicycle '137 Youths GENTLEMEN WILL NOT BE OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern IF IT ISNT NICE AND SHARP IT WILL BE HARDER, AND TAKE LONGER FOR From High Schools Will Participate in Capital Meet CUTTING TIME-' 1} Ty ray i NEIGHBOR, Ze Only Two Association Winning Percentages in Standings SUMMER -GRASS FAR OFF, MISTER / —IS YOUR _ LAWN MOWER ALL SET O-—TLL TAKE § IT TO THE SHOP AND SHARPEN AND Olt IT UP IN FIRST CLASS SHAPE ]—~YourR JUST GAVE ISNT ME TO NEXT DOOR, ME HIS,TO SHADOWS BEFORE LAWN-~ IF SASON \SN'T AVAILABLE) EGAD, SIR=AS REMEMBER, OUR MOWER IS A STUBBORN MESS/ COME, WELL Teams Boast | MOW THE os SEE THE VINCE DUNDEE CHALLENGER SECOND TIME Middleweight Titleholder De- feats 20-Year-Old Al Dia- mond at Paterson Paterson, N. J., May 4.—(?)—For the second time since he won his middleweight title. Vince Dundee has succeeded in turning back a lenger. In a 15-round championship en-| Bagement Thursday night, Dundee demonstrated his ability at the ex- pense of 20-year-old Al Diamond of Paterson. Dundee, blazing away through the whole 15 rounds with a potent right hand blow to his opponent's left side. won at least 11 rounds. The referee gave him that number, presented one, | the third, to the challenger, and called the other three even. Lake Region Meet Set for Saturday Devils Lake, N. D., May 4—iP)— | After a lapse of two years. prep track teams will renew competition here in the Lake Region meet Saturday to officially qualify for the state meet at Grand Forks. The meet was dropped following the 1932 event for lack of financial backing. Numerous requests of schools prompted Devils Lake officials to seék necessary assistance to stage the meet this year, O. J. Berg, tournament manager, said. Silver trophies are offered team winners of first and second place, with gold, silver and bronze medals for the individual place winners. Devils Lake and Carrington retired the team trophies, which must be won three times for permanent pos- Session, in 1932. Heading the list of entrants this year will be Carrington, Central North Dakota Conference champion, and Devils Lake, where Doug Smith is grooming a team whose greatest power is in the field events. STANLEY CUP—VALUE $32 The premier trophy in hockey, the Stanley Cup, is valued at only $32.50. chal- | TURNS BACK Former Pitcher With Beulah Miners and Dickinson Cow- boys Is Signed | pointed St. Devils Lake, N. May 4.—(P)— Devils Lake's 1934 baseball club ap-| pears set for the season's opener here|__COlumbus : 1 inst Rollard Stiles, May 13 against Jamestown's powerful | 284inst re outfit, with the acquisition of Ken °nough to give the Red Birds a 4-1 victory over Milwaukee. Olson, right-hander from Sebeka, Minn., who fills the last gap in a | revamped lineup. The battery mate for Olson, former Scores by League and for the Dickinson Cow-| Toledo .... boys and Beulah Miners, will be! er. Milt Kabeary, veteran Laker) pitcher, is available for relief duty. Captain James Currie, first-sacker with the Grand Forks Colts in 1933,/ Milwaukee. Bus Niclai, second-baseman, Harry | Columbus. Silvey. the club's leading hitter at) baseman, form the infield combina-| Gene Kulawick, Gil Blanken- ship and Kabeary will patrol the Louisville. Star and Dick Demaray Beats Penner and Moran at Jamestown | (Tribune Special Service) |_ Jamestown, N. D., May 4—Dick |St- Paul... Demaray of Jamestown |Johnny Moran of Beach in the six- round headliner of a boxing card here )@nd Sprinz. Thursday evening. won two rounds, Moran | | one and the others were even. They | are middleweights. | Rusty Gramling of Bismarck de- | Jamestown in one of the two five-|beat Reds. 1ound semi-windups. s beat Swede Larson of Jamestown. | Four amateur preliminaries proved /entertaining for an | crowd of spectators. pitching. er and two Minneapolis and Are Setting Pace in Class clubs in the American Association, | | _ | Minneapolis | For Devils Lake boasted winning percentages after |two full weeks of endeavor. The Millers, who opened their east- ern invasion with a neat 6-1 victory over Louisville Thursday, had won 11} ;Out of 14 games. victory against five defeats. Frank Nekola gave Kansas City only six hits, but the Blues defeated Toledo 5-3 in 10 innings. Blues Cop In 10th hurler for Brainerd in the Northern Kansas City 000 010 010 3— 5 Hockett and Brenzel, Gaston; Ne- | Ernie Folden, slugging young catch-|kola, Sewell and Desautels. Birds Have Big Inning R Stiles and Young; Beckman, Teach- shortstop, and Chuck Wood, third-| out and O'Dea. Millers Club Colonels R outer gardens. | Minneapolis 000 220 002—6 11 1 Indians Scalp Saints R |Indianapolis001 310 00x—5 10 0 oped Thomas, Trow and Fenner; Logan OO | Yesterday’s Stars | (By The Associated Press) Danny Taylor, cisively outpointed Irish McCurdy of jin two runs with single in rally that Herman Bell, Giants—Gave Pirates In the other, Wild Bill Hazelstrom | only five hits in six innings of relief Joe Medwick, Cardinals—Batted in enthusiastic | five runs against Phillies with hom- Indianapol AA Circuit May 4—(P)—Only two} and Indianapolis, Friday The Indians out-j Paul 5-3 for their eighth had one big inning and it was innings: R H 6 8 et 100 010 000 1— 3 001 000 000-1 7 0 004 000 OOx—4 8 1 HE 000 000 OO1I—-1 8 2; Hargrave; Bass, McLean, Thompson. H 000— 3 6 ~ ot 100 101 Dodgers—Knocked singles. | OUT OUR WAY MA! HE WON'T GO OVER AND SEE IF THAT'S A SNAKE ! THERES A WORLO OF PRETTY VIOLETS OVER THERE. 'T DON'T MAKE NO DIFFERENCE \F I GIT SNAKE BIT. By Williams | ithe one fe 5 sewed up the game in the ninth. MATA HARI, BAZAAR WILL GET NO FAVOR IN KENTUCKY EVENT Three-Year-Old Thoroughbreds Will Renew Classic for 60th Time CAVALCADE BIG FAVORITE Famed Track Event Will Not/ Begin Until 4:15 P. M. (CST Saturday Louisville, Ky., May 4.—4—The beauty and the chivalry of the three- year-old thoroughbred world will r: Saturday for the honors that so victory in the most famous stak the American turf. the Ken! Derby, but, take it or leave can put down this tip from th man the dlacksmit see the ladies hom Perhaps one or equine beauties i Charles a lady is to e umph, it is more 1 Isabel Dodge Sloane. Florida sports’ S colt Cavalcade rules the 2 to 1 favorite me Clock. crack | | the betting odds the word of the bla affix the light alum to the twinkling hoo! m racing plates of the Brook- | is been silent. Saturday 14 or olds battle for the vi roses and the major p% the big race. tor's wreath of of $40.000 in a forman Church's Riskulus and Alex Gordon’s Maiden Ss, have shown real Only one a 4 in 1915, has captured the Derby in 59 years. running of the Derby bears all the earmarks of a com back, except the added money | around 4:15 p. m. (Cc. 8. T.) Crookston Nine Wins Brainerd, Minn., May 4. — imi — Crookston defeated Brainerd-Little Falls 7-5 in the opening game of the Northern League season here Thurs- | day. Two pitchers used by each team were freely hit. Brainerd-Little Falls’ only bid for victory came in the fifth inning, when | Corbett hit a home run. scoring two ahead. Crookston retaliated in the eighth with three runs and then} Home Run Gives Eau Claire 6-5 Victory Eau Claire, Wis., May 4.—(4)—Mike Abraham's home run in the last half of the ninth with Schack on base Thursday brought a 6-5 victory to Eau Claire over Winnipeg in the opening game of the season here. A three-run rally by Winnipeg in the first half of the same inning had given the visitors a 5-4 lead. Winnipeg got only five hits off Juntenan while Eau Claire was col- lecting nine off Ebnett. s Errors contributed largely to the scoring of both teams. oe tandings 1M ON'Y JIST ONE O TH' MALE PART O' TH' FAMILY. O' COURSE, WE'RE S'POSED TO BE EQUAL, BUT AND STOP BEING SO OBSTINATE. PUMP TIRES ~ YEH, EQUALITY! YOU NOTICE WHICH OF TH’ SPECIES HAS TO FIGHT MICE, SPIDERS, SNAKES, AN' i TRwairwUAMs S-H L Pct. New York.. Wo 3.786 Chicago . . 10 5 667 Pittsburgh _ a £ 538 ae! 6 538 . -o TO) Brooklyn ..... - 6 8 429 Philadelphia Her | 9 308 Cincinnati .. » 3 iW 214 AMERICAN LEAGUE New York..... 8 5 615 Cleveland . - 6 4 600 Detroit .. . a 5° Bes Washington 2 3 eh Boston .. i 6 OT St. Louis. . 5 6 455 Philadelphia .... 6 8 429 Chicago .... et ae AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Milwaukee St. Paul. Minneapolis wee TD 3 186 Indianapolis 8 5 615 Louisville ... 6 6 500 Kansas City..... 7 7 ~~ 600 Columbus 6 7 462 Toledo ....... 6 7 462 5 9 4 9 Hoke, Barton Assail Boxing Commission Minneapolis, May 4~——()—Express- dng themselves as dissatisfied with the manner in which professional! boxing is being conducted in Minne- sota by the present state athletic commissioner, Billy B. Hoke and George A. Barton of Minneapolis, vet- eran referees, Thursday announced they would not request a renewal of their licenses. They have held li- censes since boxing was legalized in Minnesota in 1915. In a joint statement the two said they “no longer cared to officiate in bouts” until “some effort is made to Place control of boxing in the hands of more competent men.” Barton is sports editor of The Trib- une, eade Stal is f eee | O'Leary Turns Golf Course Architect | re 50. .000, the |Bismarck country club has worked| Ps eee Shes “The oo be overtime as @ golf course architect mains at 36 strokes, with its length ‘ : |inereased from 3,006 yards to 3,010 Northern Loop Start crise" at Hazen. ‘seventh. The first remains the same, length. 430 yards. but the green has| which, though flat for the most part, is pleasantly brightened by some roll- with sand pits. Par continues at 4. |ing and wooded fairways. He described the course as follows: one, 478 yards. par 5; two, 208 yards, par, 3; three, 260 vards, par 4; four, The tee for the sixth|578 yards, par 5; five, 312 yards, par fifth |4, six, 102 yards, par 3; seven, 270 ae Dery ry ee 275 yards, par 4; and nine, yards, par 4. H i A he Osanna a ibe stan. the Leading Heavyweights Believe “sportiest” hole, Tom says. The golfer | drives from one knoll to another The tee for the seventh has been/knoll on which the green is located, making a near-perfect pitch necessary |made in the sixth and seventh holes. | |Par-3 obstacle. jnow lies directly behind the CHIVALROUS TO LADIES IN DERBY St. Louis Cardinals Beginning to Justify Early-Season Predictions Sculptured in Tenseness , & la Charley on sprinter. is a Lost Seven of First Nine Gamea But Have Won Last in Row (By The Associated Press) The St. Louis Cardinals, riding the crest of a hitting wave that has sup- Planted their supposedly invincible Pitching, now are justifying the pre- dictions made for them before the National League season started. After losing seven of their first JURGES OUT OF LINEUP Chicago, May 4.—(?)}—Billy Jurg- es, the Chicago Cubs’ shortstop, who suffered a mild attack of ap- Pendicitis just before Thursday's game with Boston, probably will oe - in the lineup by next Mon- Ye nine games, the Cards began hitting and an 8-7 triumph over the Phillies Thursday made it five in a row. The Boston Braves came through with a smashing 6-0 victory over Chi- cago’s Cubs. Chicago's troubles start- ed even before the game when Billy Jurges, regular shortstop, was carted off to the hospital with a mild atteck of appendicitis. The New York Giants improved their position at the top of the stand- ing by defeating the Pirates 5-3. Brooklyn and Cincinnati battled through seven scoreless innings be- fore the Dodgers got to Ray Kolp for three runs, enough to win, 3-2, in the eighth. Rain wiped out all four American League games, Scores by innings: NATIONAL LEAGUE Brandt Blanks Bruins t picture of action t lad is expected to do | RHE great things in the 100-yard event t year. Boston 102 001 20—6 9 0 ______— | Chicago 000 000 COO—- 0 2 1 Brandt and Spohrer; Malone, Lee, Ward and Hartnett. Giante Nick Pirates | * * * * = ARE! New York.. 003 001 001-5 12 2 | ALTERS SET-UP HERE = "Ger i oot 3 Lays Out Interesting Course at Hazen Seeking new fields to conquer. Tom! but the length and par remain the| Cincinnati. has |O'Leary. veteran professional of the same. Tae Par for the Bismarck course re-|and O'Farrell. this spring. In addition to revising three fair- | yards. ways and holes on the Capital City On the Bismarck cou:se. the three holes changed are first. sixth and| been built up and heavily-trapped The most radical changes were The sixth formerly was a 215-yard green instead of west of it, as it was! formerly. The length of the fairway has been increased from 215 yards to 282 yards and per estabiished at 4. Meve Tee For Seventh moved several rods southwest of the old tee, so that the drive now is north-|to obtain par. west instead of west. The fairway slopes to the green, making for a simple tee shot. reduced from 296 to 233 yards on the seventh and the par changed from four strokes to three. The second also is an interesting hole, he said, having a dog-legged The length has been| fairway through a wooded section. Golfing enthusiasm is running at a high pitch in Hazen, the professional noted, with mashie-swingers eager to The ninth green has been heavily} get construction work on the course trapped, also, and a bunker built up,| completed as early as possible. | Smith, Hoyt and Padden, | | ! RH E | | Dodgers Nip Reds R 000 000 030— 3 000 000 020— 2 Benge and Lopez; Kolp, HSE Brooklyn.. 9 0 5 0 Shaute Phils’ Rally Fails RH EB O'Leary was invited to Hazen to lay | pnijadel BS course this spring. Tom this week laid | out the course there by Edward Mar- He tae he out what he terms a “pretty little; tin, secretary of the golf organiza- tion in the Mercer county community. Hazen Course Interesting Tom laid out a 2.900-yard course with a par of 36 strokes on an expanse Louis.. 002 402 O0x—8 11 0 P. Collins and Wilson; Rhem, P. Dean, Haines and V. Davis. AMERICAN LEAGUE All games postponed, rain. Carnera and Baer Favor Loughran Veteran Will Defeat Walter Neusel New York, May 4—(?)—They're feeding another young and ageres- sive heavyweight to Tommy Loughran in Madison Square Garden Friday night—Blond Walter Neusel of Ger- many. For a time it looked as though the Philadelphia veteran would be a short-ender at 8 to 5 but the odds Ouimet Diplomatically Tells Walker were shrinking rapidly Friday. Both Primo Carnera, heavyweight champion, and Max Baer, who'll fight ° Primo for the title here June 14, think Men St. Andrews Greens Are Tricky j="! tix tier emeccay St, Andrews, Scotland, May 4.— ()—In a diplomatic way, Captain Francis Ouimet has suggested to his Walker Cup golfing team- mates that special technique is called for in approach shots at St. Andrews where the interna- tional matches with the British Saturday. will be played next Friday and In practice, nearly every mem- ber of the American team has been losing several strokes a round on full approach shots which skid over the stone-like surfaces of the greens and skip into rough or cavernous traps. 50. mt YOURE TELLING ME It took a crane 200 feet high to aid in stepping the 167-foot mast in T. ©. M. Sopwith’s the America’s Cup Greater Grand Forks Crushes Duluth Nine Duluth, May 4.—(#)—Blasting out |drive. 18 hits, including four home runs, Greater Grand Forks ushered in the Northern League competition Thurs- home runs, circuit this season. Johnny Anderson, Colts’ manager, Chapski, left-fielder, drove in Du- luth’s first two runs with a circuit|been in America since the middle of THE ONE AND ONLY The only Belgian in day with a 13-5 triumph over the Du- | baseball is said to be Emi luth White Sox, a newcomer to the | Brooklyn pitcher. Alfalfa is a perennial legume of the | business these challenger, Endeavor . . . and on that gartner and A. Williams also clouted | mast will-be spread plenty of canvas ... enough, Sopwith hopes, to carry back to England the cup that has the 19th century. .. . Belligerent Na- tional League umpires had better watch their step in arguing with Lou ale eee Sas ce eel ae -.. Lou formerly was Ht Leonard, rossional middleweight", "Tiere va little mazuma in the beak busting days.... Frankie had a perfect day at bat, getting five |same family as peas, beans and clover.| Frisch, the Cards’ manager, was one hits in as many times at bat. He|Alfalfa hay and pasture are eaten|f the greatest backfield men ever connected for a home run, a double |readily by all classes of farm live-|‘© Tun over @ gridiron for Fordham and three singles. Basti Baum- ! stock. «. It is plain that the Cleveland In- Here’s Highest e wins When Walter Marty, young Fresno State athlete, heaved himself over the bar at 6 feet 9% inches during the recent dual meet with Stanford. he chalked up a new world record, breaking the 10-year- The above picture shows Walter old mark of Harold Osborne. going over the bar ip his record leap, High Jump dians can’t cross their Bridges ejcire mae gam Sosa ® pocl acad and cigar store in Duluth. ont Fights Last Night (By The Associated Press) Paterson, N. J.—Vince Dundee, 157, middleweight champion, out- Pointed Al Diamond, 156%, Pater- son, (15); retained title; Roy Lo- zar, 190, Paterson, outpointed itis Fiducia, 185, Newark, N. St. Louis—Clyde Chastain, 174, ma, Outpointed Al Still- ae 1, _ aid oe wenport, Ia, — East Moline, oul tac. Slaughter, Terre Haute, (10); Lou Taylor, Moline, outpointed Nick Serandos, East Moline, (6); Speedy Riccio, Denver, outpointed Sonnie Lloyd, Davenport, (6); Jackie Dallas, Milwaukee, stopped = , Galesburg, Ill. son, 141, El Ll Frankie Graham, 136, Oklahoma City, 0), ‘ Ed Brandt, Braves—Shut ou with two bite fee ons