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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1987 13 Bismarck Trackmen Take Part in Valley City Meet DEMONS WON FIRST IN 1936 RUNNING OF KIWANIS EVENT Six of Athletes Entered Helped Bismarck Get Second in Grand Forks Meet | SQUAD LEFT HERE FRIDAY Preliminaries Scheduled for) Saturday Morning, Finals for Afternoon Encouraged by their showing at the | state high school track meet at Grand Forks last Saturday, where they placed second to a strong Fargo team, 13 Bismarck high school trackmen left here Friday afternoon for Valley City to take part in the annual in-| vitational Kiwanis meet there. { Last year the Bismarck team came | in first in the Kiwanis carnival,) which was held at the same time as) the state meet at Grand Forks, and this year should find the Demons strong favorites to repeat. Fargo’s team, it was understood here, is not expected to take part. Take Three More Men ‘Three more men than made the trip to Grand Forks will compete at Valley City, Coach Myron Anderson and Charles Hook indicated. Both Anderson and Hook will accompany the team, along with Glen Hanna, Bismarck high school athletic direc- tor. Clayton Welch, captain, who took second in the low hurdles at the state meet, fourth in the half mile and third in the 440 yard run, will again compete in those events. Bud Beall, third place winner in the dis- cus event at Grand Forks, will com- pete in the discus and high and low hurdles. Bob Tavis will take part in the high hurdles, in which he took fourth last Saturday, and the high jump and discus. Bob Peterson placed in each event he took part in against the state’s best, winning first in the 220-yard dash, second in the 100-yard dash, and fourth in the high jump. ‘He will be entered in these contests again Saturday. Jack Bowers, who copped second in the javelin throw, will enter the football throw event at Valley City, since the javelin event hhas been discarded 5 Others Make Trip Others who made the trip are: | Harold Smith, broad Jump, 100 yard dash, 220 yard dash half mile relay; Charles Murray, broad jump, 220 yard low hurdles and half mile relay; Muriel Harding, 100 yard dash and low hurdies; Van Lee, 440 yard run and. 220 yard dash; Ray Wirth, half mile run; Hugo Renden, football throw; Neal Wilkinson, half mile run; John Peterson, pole vault. Members of the half mile relay team, which won second in the Grand Forks carnival, are Clayton Welch, Bob Peterson, Harold Smith and Charles Murray. Preliminary events in the Valley City meet were to be run off Satur- day morning with the finals scheduled for the afternoon. The Bismarck ‘team was expected to return here to- night in time for the junior prom at the high school. Bickel, Nihousen Reach Last Round Last Year's Finalists to Battle Again for Big Ten Tennis Championship Ann Arbor, Mich. May 22.—(7)— ‘History repeated itself in the West- rn conference annual tennis tourna- ment Saturday with Chicago's Nor- man Bickel and Bob Nihousen of Ohio tate, 1936 individual champion and Tunnerup respectively, matching strokes once more in the finals of the singles division. Bickel reached the finals Friday with a three set victory over George Ball, Northwestern, his second stiff Opponent in as many days, 6-4, 7-5. Nihousen, the only other seeded star, was favored by the draw and Polished off his front round opponent in straight set, but he caught a tar- ter in Iowa’s Charles Fleming. The Buckeye leader won, however, 2-6, 6-4, Chicago maintained its lead for the team title, building up its total to 11 points .. Northwestern, defending ein champion, was second with it. Ohio State improved its bid for sec- ond place, winning three matches to bring its total to seven. Michigan and Wisconsin, strong in the doubles, thad five points each. Iowa's abbrevi- ‘ated three-man team was next with four, while Minnesota and Illinois trailed wtih two and one point re- spectively. DICKINSON TUTORS TRIUMPH Minot, N. D., May 22—(?)—Dick- inson Teachers college was victor Sat- urday in a thrilling track meet held here. The Nickies collected 85 points, Minot 51% and Bottineau School of | Forestry 16%. c_—_—_——_—— i SEE THE INTERNATIONAL Cubs Jump From Fifth to Third NEW GEOGRAPHICAL Leading Brewers Appear to Be at Junior Legion Tourney Returned to Four - State Regional Basis Wykoff Advises Girls |Lawmakers, Newsmen Against Track Events} Compete on Diamond Santa Barbara, Calif, May 22—(7) Place With 8-5 Win Over Giants |Yanks, Indians, Athletics Win to Keep American League SETS HOOSIER RECORD LINEUP EFFECTIVE: UNDER NEW SYSTEM Top Permanently Champs ‘Show no Signs of ‘Washington, May 22.—(#)—The seventy-fifth congress and news- men of the capital sent 18 panta- looned players down the Potomac Saturday to commit various out- door errors in the name of base- ball. The scene of this second’ Race Static (By the Associated Press) It took Chicago's Cubs and Bos- ‘ton’s Bees a long time to find it out but they are finally convinced that baseball has never produced a suit- lable substitute for good pitching. For the entire firss month of the season, both outfits fooled around trying to buck the old belief, and both got nowhere—fast. The experi- menting Bees dropped to the National League cellar. The Cubs, trying to make up for pitching injuries by heavy hitting, creaked into the second division. FRIDAY’S STARS George Caster and Wally Moses, Athletics—Former stopped White Sox with four hits, Moses hit two- run homer, in 4-3 victory. Spud Davis, Reds—His pinch single in eighth drove in winning run in 6-5 win over Phillies. Hank Greenberg, Tigers—Hit homer with one on base in 4-2 vic- tory over Red Sox. Ducky Medwick, Cardinals—Hit homer and single, driving in four runs in 11-2 triumph over Dodgers. Johnny Heath, Indians—Hit two triples, driving in two runs, in 7-5 win over Senators. Stan Hack, Cubs—Led 12-hit at- tack against Giants with three hits and two runs. Danny MacFayden, Bees—Snap- ped Pirates’ winning streak with seven-hit pitching for 6-3 win. Lou Gehrig and Bill Dickey, Yankees—Gehrig hit homer, double and single; Dickey singled in win- ning run in 4-3 win over Browns. Have Winning Streaks At the moment, each boasts a four- game winning streak, chiefly because of top-flight flinging. ‘The Cubs, with Tex Carleton back from the hospital and Roy Parme- lee and Bill Lee doing their duty, have jumped from fifth to third Place, in front of the Giants. The Bees, with Danny MacFayden finally clicking, and a couple of rookies, Lou Fette and Jim Turner, producing, have climbed out of the cellar, and are now pressing Brook- lyn’s baffling Dodgers for fifth place. And the surprising part is that neither the Cubs nor Bees are knocking down any fences, Chicago has averaged around seven hits and five runs per game in the current streak. Boston has about four runs and nine hits, “Wallop Giants, 8-5 ‘The Cubs did the heaviest hitting of their streak Friday in walloping the Giants, 8-5, but it was as much the six-hit pitching of Clyde Shoun and Bill Lee as their own 12 hits that did it. The Bees, meantime, took on the league-leading Pirates and, with Danny MacFayden muffling the Bucs with seven hits, came through with a 6-3 win. The tight one-two-three race in the American loop continued un- changed as Cleveland, the Athletics and the Yankees all finished on top. The Indians nosed out the Wash. ington Senators 7-5 with rallies in the late innings. The Athletics, paced by George Caster’s four-hit hurling and Wally Moses’ two-run homer, came from behind to belt the White Sox 4-3, The Yankees were carried to 11 innings before topping the St. Louis Browns, 4-3, with Lou Gehrig connecting for his third homer. Tigers Go 11 Innings Another long distance affair found the Tigers trouncing the Boston Red Sox, 4-2, in 11 frames with the aid of effective pitching by Rookie George Coffman, and despite some equally fine flinging by Lefty Grove. Johnny Mize and Ducky Medwick mauled Brooklyn pitching with hom- ers and led the Cardinals to an 11-2 win over the Dodgers, while Spud Davis’ pinch single enabled the Reds to beat out the Phillies 6-5. NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Triumph RH Philadelphia ...100 200 110— 5 11 1 Cincinnati ..... 200 000 31x— 6 9 0 Passeau, Johnson and Grace; Der- ringer, Brennan, Grissom and Lome bardi, V. Davis. # Giants Lose to Cubs New York Chicago . + Gabler, Schumacher, Melton, Smith and Danning: Shoun, Lee and Hart- nel HE Boston .... 10 0 Pittsburgh +110 000 100—3 7 1 MacFayden and Lopez; Bowman, Hoyt, Brown, Bauers and Todd. Butcher, Henshaw, Jeffcoat and Spencer; Johnson and Owen. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Win Coffman and Cochrane; Grove and DeSautels. Indians Are Victors RH E| + 200 200 210— 7 11 0) --..000 300 011— 5 11 2 Cleveland . Washington Shong, Cohen and Millies. Yanks Beat Browns RHE St. Louis.....001 000 101 00O— 311 1 New York....210 000 000 01I— 413 0 (11 innings) Pearson, Murphy and Dickey; Hog- | sett, Caldwell, Blake and Huffman, Hemsley. ‘ Caster Holds White Sox ~ 4 5 This unusual photograph of a six-cylinder, streamlined creation built in Los Angeles by Art Sparks, was taken after smiling Jimmy Snyder of Chicago, in the cockpit, set an unofficial, one-lap record of 128.570 miles an‘hour in a test run for the 500-mile automobile Whitehill, Heving and Pytlak; De- a » race at the Indianapolis Speedway, May 31. DRIVERS TO TRY FOR HIGH, LOW IN SPEEDWAY TRYOUTS Present High Is 123 Miles Per Hour; Jimmy Snyder Rules as Favorite Indianapolis, May 22—(?}—“High- low” was the game at the Indianap- olis Motors speedway Saturday. Thirty-two drivers put final touches to their speedsters in. an effort to’ qualify for the Memorial Day 500- mile automobile race. Only twenty- two places are left in the starting lineup. Eight of them were ready to shoot for “high.” They announced they would “gun” for Bill Cummings’ qualifying record last week of 123.445 miles an hour. Twenty-two of the drivers were playing for “low.” Their intention was to go a little faster than the 116.348 miles an hour with which Deacon Litz qualified last week. The other two — Chet Miller and Russell Snowberger — admitted they were in the middle. don’t have the speed to compete with the “high” shooters and they're faster than those playing for “low.” Jimmy Snyder of Chicago headed the list of “high” shooters. Snyder, driving a new six cylinder job built by Art Sparks for Joel Thorne, has made 128 miles an hour in practice. MAJOR LEAGUE | LEADERS (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Cronin, Red Sox, 443; Bell, Browns, and Lary, Indians, .433. uns—Gehringer, Tigers, 26; Walker, Tigers, 24. Hits—Bell, Browns, 42; Walker, Tig- ers, 41. . Home runs—Johnson, Athletics, 6; Selkirk, Yankees; Bonura, White Sox, and Greenberg and Walker, Tigers, 5. : Pitching — Pearson, Yankees, 4-0; Hudlin, Indians, 3-0, NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Medwick, Cardinals, .443; Arnovich, Phillies, 388. Runs—Medwick, Cardinals, 26; Galan, Cubs, and Bartell, Giants, 24. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 47; Arno- vich, Phillies, 40. Home runs—Bartell, Giants, 10; Med- wick, Cardinals, 8.. Pitching—Hubbell, Giants, 6-0; War- neke, Cardinals, and Bowman, Pi- rates, 5-1 Michigan Favored For Big 10 Title Don Lash Will Have Job of| Mrs. Keeping Track Crown for Hoosiers Ann Arbor, Mich., May 22.—(?)— Donald Ray Lash, Indiana’s iron man ot the distance foot-racing paths, was| swer t! trying to handed’ tie) sco aaeye at North Dakota to Be in Region With South Dakota, Wyom- ing and Nebraska Information that play in’ Junior American Legion tournaments this year will return to the old four-state regional basis was received in Bis- marck Friday by 8. 8. Boise, manager of the local junior team. Last year the Legion, which an- nually sponsors the play of some 500,000 junior teams, adopted a sys- tem whereby two states would con- stitute a region, placing North and South Dakota in that category. Win- ners of the two-state competitions were eligible to participate in district competition. It was this system which brought the best eight teams from 16 western states to Bismarck to play in the Western sectional tourna- ment last August. Now, however, orders have been is- sued for regional tournaments in- volving four states but placing North Dakota in a new geographical lineup. Whereas the old region consisted of the Dakotas, Minnesota and Wiscon- sin, the new one will consist of the Dakotas, Wyoming and Nebraska. The regional tournament will be held this year at Aberdeen, 8. D., on August 13, 14 and 15 and the winner will be eligible to participate in the western sectional competition. North Dakota's entry will be deter- mined by @ state tournament to be held in early August at Grand Forks. ————— { Baseball Standings i o (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE WwW. L. Pct. Pittsburgh .. 18 7 .120 8t. Louis -15 1 SIT Chicago - 14 12 538 Hoosiers could do, however, could a * B Keep Michigan, paced by its sensa- | Brooklyn -1 le tional Negro sophomore, Bill Wat |Cincinnati «9 15 278 son, from making the 37th annual | Philadelphia +10 17 370 meet the occasion for its 15th cham- ra penal AMERICAN ASSOCIATION e wien w Le Pet, waukee .. 7.159 Rizzo Heads A. A. Minneapolis . 13 552 In 3 D Toledo . 15 516 St. Paul. 14.462 lepartments | ce ic, 1 Mo Louisville , 16.429 i Columbus 17 (Ald Consecutive Game Hit Streak| > Aamaolis 16 407 Keeps Columbus Slugger in Front, Storti Next AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland .... + 12 8 600 1 Chicago, May 22—()—Riding along a2 on a great early season consecutive 560 hitting streak, Johnny Rizzo, a pros-| w, 462 pective St. Louis Cardinal now slug-| ¢ 435 ging for the Columbus Red Birds, re- 429 mained far out in front in the Amer- 348 ian Association batting parade last week. 4 The Columbus youngster’s average + shoved @ lost Of ght points ter tee| Mayville Trackmen period, but he still had a handsome| Defeat Nodak Team 429 left, and had hit safely in 20 straight games, according to figures which inuclude Wednesday night's games. His mark gave him a margin of 57 points ovef Charlie English, Kansas City’s third baseman who was second with .372, Ralph Boyle, an- other Kansas City slugger, was third with a 370 average. Mayville, N. D., May 22.—(?)—May- ville Teachers college defeated Uni- versity of North Dakota trackmen, 73 to 53, in a dual meet Friday, with Bob Torson, leading the way with 24 points. He took firsts in the discus, high jump and broad jump and sec- onds in the javelin, pole vault and shot put. Departments Rizzo alyo retained possession of three specialty leaderships. He had 48 hits, 77 total bases, and six triples. Ted Gullic, Milwaukee outfielder, was boss of two departments with his nine home runs and 36 runs batted in. Lin Storti, of Milwaukee, had 12 dou- bles; Red Kress of King stealers with 14 thefts. Bill Zuber, Milwaukee's rookie pitching prize, won. one victory dur- ing the week to share the lead with his teammate, Forrest Pressnell. Each had four straight. Morton Cooper of Columbus, continued to lead in strike- outs with 34 in nine games. F Minneapolis maintained its 324 pace to retain the team batting lead- ership. Milwaukee improved its field- ing two points to .981 to grab top po- sition from St. Paul. Toledo's double play combination manufactured nine Brive gs and topped the field wi . —_—— ss SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- TY OF BUR! . IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. The Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul, a body corporate, Plaintiff, vs. James F, Watkins and Tilda Wat- ‘kins, his wife; Joe Schmidt and Joe Schmidt, his wife; North Dakota, doing bu: s Hail Insurance Depart nd The Bismarck National ment; Farm Loan Association, @ cor- poration, THE STATE CF NORTH DAKOTA TO THI: ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- and for said County tate of North Dakota, co your Answer upon you, of the day of service, and in of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be paren egeioss you by default for the relie Oo upon the fol- lowing described real estate in the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, towit: Tl closure of a Mortga 1 Northeast Quarter (NEX) and the Bouthwost Quarter {sw alt in Section Three (3), Township One Hun- dred Thirty-nine’ (139) North, Range Seventy-eight, (78) West of ‘the sth pa leridian. "Dated this 13th day of May, A. D. Chicago . Philadelphia Stratton, Brown and Sewell; Cas- | ter and Brucker. 7, at Bismarck, North Dakota, aie GEO. F, SHAFE! y for Pisintitt, ice and Post Office Bismarck, North Resi A dd Dakota. §-15-22-29 6-5. Defendants. | Olympic Performer. HORIZONTAL. Answer te Previous Puzzle 15 Alleged sree 1Champlon ice TETSHLIFIRET] decueee eek od o Bites, 11Cud of ute ; a INI RIVAL 22 Measure of SMEPIATTMAILIE! | area. PIMOIUVIONE IMIPIRIDIDIEINIT] 24 Downy CESMETIAIE!S] feathers. far ge 19 Expensive. [OMICIHIALTEEMTEISIANESIA 20 Persian coin. [NJAIRIEIS MESIEINT MEP Hops IN) TTL Olw]E! (IIT! LIN] stone. 67 His native city. " VERTICAL 1 Kinsfolk. al Mid aid ere aor ee te wall Ew mi aan 0 MQ OO rt | BeR, Cracking Despite 11-4 Loss [1 toy help with the dizhea No| amnual struggle between the law- to Colonels Friday peed foe) td a Reedley sears makers and the scribes was the fe wi ‘Marin Quant Chicago, May 22—(7)—They don't| Tree Gichples should ber —_s pay off on May or June standings,| ‘The speedster recommended swim- FIGHT TICKETS ON SALE but it’s beginning to look like most of} ming, golf and tennis for girls. New York, May 22.—(7)—Although the American Association fireworks will be provided in battles for second and third places, Milwaukee's champion Brewers, al- though whipped 11 to 4 by Louisville Friday, haven't shown signs of crack- ing from the form which has put them in first place by more than 200 percentage points. If they do slip, however, the result may be one of the hottest fights in Association history. Minneapolis, Toledo, St. Paul, Kansas City, Louis- ville, Columbus and Indianapolis trail in that order, and ‘all are closely grouped. : Louisville displayed a 14-hit attack in salvaging the third and final game of its series with Milwaukee 11-4.| ( Shortstop Bill Mathewson led the Colonels with a double and three singles in five trips as Al Milnar was driven from the Milwaukee hill in the third. Buck Marrow went the dis- tance for the victors and allowed nine safeties. Two of three night games scheduled were rained out. They were the St. Paul-Toledo and Kansas City-Indian- @polis contests. Minneapolis couldn't match Columbus’ 17-hit attack and the Millers took a 10 to 2 defeat. Max Macon went the route for the Red Birds, allowing the Millers nine safe- Qs gs ties, Milwaukee . Louisville ...... Milnar, Sivess and Helf; Mar- row and Berres. Blues Trounce Millers fi RHE Minneapolis ....000 010 010 —2 9 3 Columbus 16 120 0Ox—10 17 1 it Game) Bean, Bultand and Dickey; Macon and Chervinko. Others rained out. Sere Sa ee | Fights Last Night | ———_—_ —o (By the Associated Press) Mickey Misko, 165, jimmy Mich., ropa Erjavec, 18044, Kansas City—John Henry Lewis, 115%; light heavyweight cham- pion, Phoenix, Ariz, knocked out Jack Kranz, 194, Gary, Ind., (3) (exhibition). Duluth, Bobby » 129%, Madison, Wis, outpointed Jimmy Kouba, 135, Winona, Minn., (4). . Eau Claire, Wis—Eddie Schnel- der, 175, Marshfield, Wis. and Eddie Wenstob, 174, Edmonton, Alberta, draw, (10); Al Bache, Superior, Minn, stopped Ray Blum, 133, Janesville, Wis., (5). IRIUIMEIR) MEN 3 ae Pals lin. He is now principal of interia, $e ge grammar here. public interest so far has just about American 100-yard dash record, Wy-|cqualled that shown by Jimmy Brad- dock, it has been announced and con- firmed that tickets are on sale for -|the Braddock-Max heavy- the Carp-|weight championship at the Madison Square Garden bowl June 3. ALL.ODDS AGAINST PLAYER Declarer Finds Every, Card of Defense Held ‘Wrong,’ But Makes His Contract by Clever End Play By WM. E. McKENNEY b Sf Today’s Contract Problem South has the contract for six spades. Any effort to es- tablish the diamond suit will fail, for lack of sufficient en- tries. How, then, can South avoid losing one trump and one heart trick? None vul. Opener—h Q Solution in next issue. my with the king. The jack of clubs SS A delicious noonday lunch be- ing served at the Glass Brick Front, 20c, 25¢, 35¢c. Foot-Saver Shoes for Men He was sure was led, and West won with the queen. A diamond was returned and. SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM Opening lead—@ 6. won by declarer, who led a heart to dummy’s king. Another club was returned, fines- sed, and won, py West with the king, West played @ club, and Wilks now decided to try the spade finesss, but East won the queen with the king. East returned a heart, upon which ‘West discarded a diamond, thus dis- posing of the chance of the needed trick by establishing a thirteener in the-suit. ‘There remained one resource and that was to find the spade jack with East. Hoping for this, he cashed the heart queen and the diamond queen. When East discarded a heart on the diamond, declarer led his last heart. East won this trick and had to return a spade up to the combined tenace in the closed hand and dum- my. Every card was “wrong,” but the contract was fulfilled by careful play. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) * Sold in Every State in the Union! KING EDWARD Cigars, 2 for 5e—10 for 25¢ Distributed by NASH-FINCH CO. Bismarck, N. Dak. e Finest of Foods e Tastefully Prepared © At Economical Prices DEAD ANIMALS snz0x HORSES, CATTLE, SHEEP, HOGS REMOVED PROMPTLY AND FREE OF CHARGE within 2 radius of 75 miles of Bismarck Phone Bismarck 2313 co! immediately when a dead animal is Northern Rendering Co. lect dtecevered