The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1935, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 19385 RENTER OF STORMY { | RAGE CONTROVERSY Sttipping Gr lan O’War of 15 Th CIWAHA IS RATED STRONG. e Honel Bradley's Boxthorn Is! Formidable Contender in | Saturday's Classic ouisville, roach of another Kentuck the sixty-first and by far miest since the epo y , Friday, finds tion, above all othe ur horse-racing fraternity. give this serious subject a light frivolous touch, the issue con- as the ability of a lady of unqu ed thoroughbred class to kick 4,4 in the eyes of 15 or more bluc- ded gentlemen, right out in full * of perhaps 60,000 horse racing cts, gathered to witness the run- of Americ: most colorful ic for three-year-olds. DERBY FACTS _ (By the Associated Press) | Time and Place — Churchill | owns, Louisville, at approximate- ‘5 p.m. (central standard time) Saturday May 4. —Sixty-first, running, | iI | i wanddaughter of Man O'War ‘short, Can Nellie Flag. stripling idaughter of Man O'War who | the best filly of 1934 and has ined to the races this year with Shing success, overcome the dicaps of sex and precedent suf- ntly to whip a somewhat ordin- fi field of colts Saturday atfter- 1 in heavy going over the mile @ quarter route at Churchill ; bable Entries—21 of which 17 } fe likely to go to post. ns 1 the face of it, the odds seem} ve 59 to 1 against Nellie, Only} filly in the past 60 years has | m the way home in the derby. le |e ruled sccond choice in the bet- i at no more than 5 to 1 it appeared altogether possible splace Cornelius Vander- | Whitney's colt, tod: as the 4k favorite by the time the derby | 4s called to the post jot only rained but it thundered pourcd Thursday jorning, ef-) and night. Upwards of four ies of rain have fallen in less | 24 hours. Teday, Omaha Strong wo sons of famous fathers, Today Omaha, may be the Nellie. Their respective -| Barl Sande up, and one of the big money-win- of all time. ean run in the mud but so most of the other well-played les. It's never safe to discount E. R. Bradley's eniry and this the master of Idle Hour Farm. has seen his colors on top in! derbies, has another formidable in Boxthorn. year’s race, with $40,000 add- expected to draw one of the crowds in derby history, de- the sudden turn of bad weather. Gibbons Beats Dukelsky at St. Paul Paul, May 3. — (P) —- Flashing ) of the form that made his famous, Jack Gibbons, St. Paul ht, Friday night won an r Gibbons weighed jand Dukelsky 161%. the referee's verdict, Gib- , Who is a son of Phantom Mike 3 one of the terrors of the it class 15 years ago, won as d, taking eight of the ten The other two were even @ 22-year-old prospect who has fighting as a pro less than a x, pumped punches from short Jong range, jarring Dukelsky | @ vicious left hook as well as } | @ hard right which kept the middleweight off balance of the fight. ky tried hard enough and shot of punches but the old Phan- @ boy usually made such a shifty that he finished the fight al- unscathed. There were no the semi-windup, Everett Right- 125, Sioux City, la., whipped -ODowd, 119, Chicago, in tounds. Lee Saveldi, 175, Andy (Kid) Miller, 177. ‘City, in the second of a sched- ruond fight. Wood, 126, St. Paul, and Connolly, 131, Minneapolis, ‘@ six cound draw and Wayne @ecisioned Johnny Adams in Both are from St, Paul weighed in at 131. ‘an-Grid Official res From Service , May 3,—(#)—A chunky m who has rushed along be- play on football fields the nation for 30 years next fall. 0B. cpriiaraied ad aie gridiron. offic! point o! ce, has refereed his last contest. regard for the reputation and the press of his du- . director of housing, public HICKEY ADVOCATES AGGRESSIVE ‘PLAYING AS ASSOCIATION TONIC v players. Bush devoted a part of an, Paul, stepped Andy (Kid) Miller, i if q not been acted upon, due to failure of |couraged by a promise of warm weather after nearly a fortnight of wet chilly days that made serious jtraining almost impossible, track and ..{Umpire’s reports to reach Hickey s of- ‘fice, Bush protest ~ |catcher had interferred with ¢ ‘| ting activities «f one of his men. ifield stars of twenty-two colleges were fastest field in | ‘ ———_—_———_—_—_—-? President of League Laments;| Fights Last Night PSI EST A dae and growls every day may be the way] Francisco (10); Baby Tiger Flow- to promotion and pay for American| Genaro, 135, New York (6); Tony Association ball players. | Roccaforte, 146, Reno, stopped president of the league, doesn't ad- St. Paul—Jack Gibbons, 160'4, portunity or using spikes as weapons.! sky, 16134, Chicago (10); Everett he agrees with Donie Bush. manager; Rightmire, 125, Sioux City, out- | of the Minneapolis club, that there; Pointed Bobby O'Dowd, 119, Chi- ship” has invaded the game. D, k R | Ar | “not only cent obvet to piavers WAKOtA Kelays Are; ne ee | ickey said. “I see no reason for! Aid d b W hi 1 friendliness on the field, ‘They are| M@e ry eat er, to win games. Aggressiveness helps; Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates staged Monday does no harm.” | tory over Minneapolis Tuesday has! Sioux Falls, 8. D., May 3—(P)—En-| neapolis-Kansi numbers on Thursday's schedule, were postponed because of rain. Guy Bush, now hurling for the|Saturday afternoon. story of this week's famous Chicago tana, Sioux Falls, in weights will battle which sent YEAR-OLD FLY IROOKIES ARE CUE TO S 1 HAW, EGAD~THERE WAS NO DOUBT IN MY MIND, AT ANY TIME BUT WHAT MY HORSE WOLILD “ROMP AWAY WITH THE GLORY, IN HIS RACE AGAINST MENULTYS STEED ! HM-M=TELL ME IL DONT KNOW RACE HORSES~ — FAW [Shon SHE WAS S ONW A BIRA~HURD IN A GILDED CA-WAGE 57 TH CURTAIN CALL ON YOUR NAG WINNING} 1 ONLY GOT UP AT DAYBREAK TH LAST THREE WEEKS, TO TRAIN HIM-T SPOSE TH ONLY SLAP ON TH BACK TLL GET, WILL BE IF TM i ———__——+ | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | KNEW YOUD TAKE CROKING ON . FISH BONE és =] Friendliness, Asks Few ¢ ‘Ss , (By the Associated -Press) Snarls and Growls Oakland, Cal—Maxie Rosen- _—— bloom, 184!:, New York, outpoint- Chicago, May 3.—(P)—A few snarls! ed Homer Brandis, 180, San ers, 132, Omaha, stopped Mickey While Thomas Jefferson Hickey,| Tommy Corbett, 145, Omaha (6). ‘ocate trading punches at every op-| St. Paul, outpointed Solly Dukel- is too much friendliness among enemy! ¢4g0, (8); Lee Savolidi, 175, St. idle day at Kansas City Thursday| 177, Sioux City (2). lamenting tha: a “feeling of friend- arling al each other, but T like i rot out there to form friendships, but! in games and the snarling player|Special 100-Yard Dash Will Be, ally is an ager ve player. i Even stich a battle as the Chicago| Feature of Meet for Col- lege and Prep Stars Bush’s protest of Kansas City’s vic- | The St. Paul-Milwaukee and Min-(and thirty-one high schools from City games, the only ; verged on Sioux Falls _ Eleven final events and prelimin- aries of five more were on the pro- Cub-Pirate Embroglio {stam Friday for the army of athletes . _ representing colleges and the high Version Told by Bush] schoots in Minnesota, towa, Nebraska and the Dakotas, with finals of Pittsburgh, May 3—(/?)—Lanky|thirteen more contests scheduled for Pittsburgh Pirates but late of the Haines of Valley City, N.-D., in the Chicago Cubs, is telling his own | broad jump and Deb Hall of Augus- y and some oth-/lead the assault on records in the er Corsairs and Cubs to the showers. | | field events. Salient parts of Guy's statements! A special 100 y d dash with the ‘al years is ex That Bill Jurges of the Cubs and, pected to be the feature of the meet. not Cookie Lavagetto of the Pirates!Herman, Carleton, who has been hit first; that Bush did not rush pre-! clocked in 9.6; Haines, Valley City; cipitately into the mixup; that Bush| Hanson, North Dakota State; Nich- didn't cut Re Joiner's face wih ajols, Iowa State; Gross, Yankton, blow but Joiner was cut by a finger-| South Dakota conference titlist, and nail of Coach Jewel Ens of the! Fansher of Simpson, were favored to Pirates as he tried to push Joiner| qualify for the finais in the trials South Slope Prep Athletes From Eight Schools Will Participate in Event at Elgin Saturday (Special to the Tribune) Elgin, N. D., May 3.—Eight schools |will send athletes to Elgin Saturday in an effort to capture the track and field crown of the South Slope con- ference now held by the host school. Elgin won the meet last year and will enter a strong team.in the de- fense’ of their championship. Other schools in the conference are Carson, ;Flasher, Mott, Leith, Regent, New Leipzig and New England. Preliminary events will be run off \Saturday morning starting at 9:30 a. m. with finals slated to begin at 1:30 p. m. Final events in the order of running will be 100-yard dash, shot put, 220- yard dash, pole vault, 440-yard dash, discus, high jump, 880-yard run, jave- lin, broad jump, mile run, 880-yard relay. Jim Londos Pins Track Meet Set scien jobs has started a few of the veterans toward comebacks. It 5: Mike by nearly 10 pounds. Opponent at Fargo World's Champion Ends Bout With Series of Body Slams and Airplane Spin Fargo, May 3.—(@)—Jim Londos of St. Louis, 203, world’s heavyweight wrestling champion, pinned Mike Nazarian of Little Rock, Ark., in the feature wrestling match of a card here Friday. The end came after a series of body slams and an airplane spin, 29 minutes and 53 seconds after its inception, In the semi-windup, John Freberg of Minneapolis, 220, and Andy Moen ,of Fergus Falls, Minn., 215, wrestled (30 minutes to a draw. | Ray Richards of Lincoln, Neb., 220, pinned Frank Topas of Bulgaria af- ter 11 minutes and 37 seconds. Topas scaled 210. | In the opener, King Tut of Minne- apolis, 155, won from Adolph Haavis- {to of Fargo after 13 minutes and 16 seconds, Haavisto being forced to withdraw after injuring his wrist fol- loving a fall from the ring in an un- successful attempt to connect with a a this afternoon. | OUT OUR WAY ais flying tackle. Haavisto scaled 160. © By Williams | fa / WHat Do \/AWP—HeRe / YOU_MEAN | GOES ASHOE. “THERE YOU GO— ALL OF A SUDDEN “TH! FAMILY US INTO THIS | SMACK HIM TH’ ELITE FLOCK TO Shs Inte. THis. / je ~ Di et / ii Hn his MY; fency housing corporation, twin Causes of his retirement. ee mnenrencsahn cme memeneonr— nennaenna oo © 1935 BY MEA SERVICE. NC. FAMOUS FER BEIN! DUMBER THAN EVER. BY TAKING O0~-T COULD DUMBELL !S A BIG LEADER. e MESS2 { FOR GETTING FOLLOW HIM —WITHOUT ASKED-AN! HE ENLY BECOMES ln Washington, Radcliff and White- head Appear to Be Cream ellie Flag Likely to Replace Today As Kentucky Derby Favorite UPRISING. STRENGTH. OF REDS, WHITE SOX Rounds Making Way for Potter-M'Lean Scrap A double semi-windup of two five- round bouts has been booked by of First-Year Crop jIsham Hell, matchmaker, as the main preliminaries to the Dick YOUNGSTERS PRESS VETS Demeray-Ernie Heatherington scrap Pirates’ Cy Blanton Has Made which will headline the local fight card here next Thursday. Previously announced as a six- id _affgir, the Rusty Gramling- Sensational Stast; Bell, Eddie Kline melee has been changed to five rounds to make way for an- Almada Lead Hitters other five-rounder between Ernie 'Potter, (By the Associated Press) champion and Eddie “K. It seems to be an almost unbreak-|195-pound Seattle, Wash., battler. able rule in baseball that youth must be served — especially in the early | Will complete the card. spring. That goes a long way toward RECRUITS HELP KEEP ‘Hall Books Double Semi-Windup to CHIGAGO ON INDIANS’ |Hetherington-Demaray Engagement HEELS IN AMERIGAN;2remntin Sou xo fie) DOPING Lie Our Reigh May Repeat Deed of Daddy in Kentucky Derby By MAX RIDDLE NEA Service Turf Writer Our Reigh won three of his 12 starts, Bat McDaniels, now fighting out} was second in one, and third in two, explaining the positions of the Chi-}0f Bismarck, will meet Bud Larson|earning $2,650. cago White Sox and Cincinnati Reds!0f Jamestown. in the current major league standings | as well as a number of other April surprises. The White Sox, running a close second to Cleveland in the American League, appear to have skimmed the cream of this season’s rookie crop with Vernon Washington, hitting .305. Ray Radcliff in the outfield, and John Whitehead on the mound win- ning his first three games in fine style. Vets Forced Into Action Cincinnati's freshmen haven't been so impressive at the plate—Lew Riggs tops them with a .286 average—but either their inspiration or the realiza- tion that they nave to battle for their helped to put the Reds into the first division scrap. In the number of rookies playing daily the Reds still are at the top. Riggs, Billy Myers and Alex Kam- poruis, who scarcely was graduated from the recruit class, are in the in- field, Ival Goodman on the outer line. Bill Campbell catching and Gene Schott and Al Hollingsworth: taking their turns on the mound. In contrast to this array, the rest of the National League's rookie. crop looks slim. Pittsburgh presents Dar- rell (Cy) Blanton, sensational young hurler who has won three games, granted only 15 hits and whiffed 22 batsmen. Bell Leads Rookie at Bat In the American League the stand- outs in the hitting line are Roy ser and Kid Brooker, will trade earlier this winter but went down for the count before. the Demaray’s dynamiting left hand. Although Rusty iret Demaray’s ring experi- ence and cunning, the local scrapper is expected: to make this up in ag-|American zone Davis Cup tennis gressiveness and should give Kline| competition opens Friday on the clay Plenty to think about before the five|courts of the Club Deportiv, with rounds have been completed. Two Mandan boys, Sonny Schlos- Canadian Is Tough Demaray, making his first appear- Dick will concede the: Winnipeg Kline made an appearance here Potter, who changed his style of (Beau) Bell of the Browns and Meljis expected to have considerable dif- Almada of the Red Sox, with batting | ticulty with McLean, who comes with series, comprising two singles matches averages of .333 and .327 respectively. good record in the West coast en- Roy Hughes has been performing 0} counters, well in the Cleveland infield that he may be hard to oust when Billy The department of agriculture is! Since the general class of 2-year- Re-matched for their second en-jolds last year was inconsistent, Our counter will be LeRoy Purtell of]Reigh may be said to be one of the Fort Lincoln and Ted Hall of Bis-|}best of an arbitrarily chosen second flight of Derby contenders. It is seven years since Mrs. Hertz’s Reigh Count splashed to his Derby aie in the four-round curtain| victory, and it has been nearly eight raiser. since Anita Peabody and Reigh Count raced one-two in the Futurity Stakes, richest of all 2-year-old ance since fracturing his hand in a|events. bout with Jock Moore of Duluth,| Our Reigh is a product of the sec- will find the going pretty toughjond mating of these two famous 5 against the Canadian, who built up/stablemates, the disappointing,|Blossom. Again at Pimlico. He was a@ good reputation in his fight with;}though occasionally flashy, Our|blocked out of contention in the Jack Gibbons of Minneapolis at|}Count having been the first. Grand Forks recently. Hethering- In May of last year, Our Reigh| He atoned for this defeat by nab- ton lost the decision in that bout but/won his first race, beating a band of|bing a victory in a three-quarter- was outweighted by the son of Phan-| maidens by four lengths. He did|mile allowance race at Pimlico, not win again until October, being three times out of the money. He boy just about the same number of/then scored over Exhibit, Polar pounds and whether the difference] Flight, Van Bachelor, and others,/ possibly favor the longer distances in weight and the fact that the Cap-|winning by a head. ital City welterweight has been out of the ring for nearly two months|Handicap, due to interference, but will make’ a difference remains to be}came from behind to be second to seen. He had little chance in the Remsen Mexico, Cuba to Open Zone Davis Cup Play Mexico,, F. D, May 3.—(#)—North Mexico matched against Cuba in the first of three qualification rounds. fighting enough to gain a draw with|‘The ultimate winner will represent. “Wild Bill” Hasselstrom in ten rounds| this continent in England next July. The winner of the Mexico-Cioa Friday, a doubles match Saturday and @ pair of concluding singles Sunday, will met the winner of the series be- tween the United States and China, Knickerbocker is able to’ play again.! conducting a world-wide survey to| paired to meet in a three-day test but Louis (Bozie) Berger hasn't yet|find grasses well adapted to hold| next week-end. The final will start come up to expectations. Ellsworth | down soils and prevent dust storms. j May 1. Dahlgren, Red Sox first basemai also is a doubtful quantity. Our Reigh is one of two sons of Fort Lincoln heavyweight|the immortal Reigh Count which McLean, /Mrs. John Hertz has nominated for the Kentucky Derby. The second, Three four-round preliminaries} Count Arthur, still is a maiden, but DERBY. ‘Our Reigh Walden Handicap. Reigh Count was one of the great- est distance horses of his day either here or abroad, and Our Reigh may jmore than Our Count. But unlike his daddy, he seems to have no liking for the mud, and yet has to prove he can carry weight. EIGHT WIN HONORS Underwood, N. D., May 3. — Eight students won scholastic honors in the Underwood schools for the last six- week period, Superintendent 8. C. Norem announced. They were Le- land Swanson, Emma Lou Caldwell, Carl Saldin, Leona Jensen, Doris ‘Thompson, Josephine Swanson, Lora Lois Miller and Ted Saldin. ‘The Santa Cruz Country Conserva- tion Association is sponsoring a 76,000 acre recreational area in Santa Cruz and Santa Clara counties of Cali- fornia. Duke University, founded at Dur- ham, N. C., in 1924, on a $40,000,000 endowment left by the late James B. Duke, now has an enrollment of 3,215. Recruits and veterans alike were scheduled to meet new and perhaps stiffer tests Friday with the opening of the first East-West rounds in both leagues. Thursday’s three game program was ® washout, as rain and cold halted the New York-Brooklyn and Philadelphia-Boston games in - the National League and Detroit-St. Louis in the American. GOPHERS MEET WILDCATS Chicago, May 3—(?)—Minnesota was Northwestern Friday for its first game of the western confefrence baseball season. The Gophers enter the title race with a record of six straight non-conference victories be- hind them. Friday's game was the first of a two-day visit to Northwest- ern. Wisconsin also had a two- game assignment with Iowa at Iowa City. Many mountaineers of western North Carolina, who turned to pan- ning gold during the depression, are still at it, although few earn more than $1 a day. “Stories in STAMPS By iS. Kleis Four HUNDRED TEN years after Columbus discovered the little West Indian island of St Christopher. now St. Kitts, this British possession, with the nearby island of Nevis, issued its first postage stamp—and got it wrong! For. say some stamp collectors, tt the stamp is supposed to show Co- fumbus sighting land, he shouldn't have’ been depicted using a tele scope, which hadn't been invented until more than a century after his death. Collectors revel over that error. but some fconoclasts ‘say it's no error at all, because that isn’t Co- lumbus. The man on the stamp. vs pee, they contend. is Sir Thomas Warner | who established the first settlement on H St. Kitts in 1623, when he might have used a telescope to locate the little Aslan, (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) | Every Office in North Dakota Should Have This DOUBLE-DUTY FASTENER Here is a stapling device, made from the | . s sturdiest of materials, which will clamp together your papers and documents “temporarily” or “‘per- manently,” according to your desire, without i a damage. Just the thing for school teachers, bookkeepers, cashiers, accountants, stenographers, lawyers, doctors, dentists—in fact, anyone in any type of office. _ ALLOWANCE WILL BE MADE ON YOUR OLD STAPLING . MACHINE, REGARDLESS OF ITS AGE OR CONDITION It will clamp your papers temporarily or permanently, without damage, ac- cording to your de- sire. Exclusive Markwell Fastener Dealers for Southwestern North Dakota BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY Markwell Stapling Machines are guar- anteed against de- fective material or i workmanship for 10 4 years!!!

Other pages from this issue: