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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 12

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Two (Section Two)' Arizona Republic, Phoenix, Thuriday Morning, May 2, 1940 Telephons 3-11H HUT STOP; BV Piscatorial Copyright State Fith Trettiet' Mead, Colorado Datiu Bag Limits At tfaoasi WO TEAMS of football players waiting for the starting whistle or a group of spirited thoroughbreds champing behind the barrier have nothing on Arizona's trout fishermen, who are poised impatiently, waiting for the fish and game officials to fire the opening gun that will send them off to cold sparkling brooks for battles with the speckled beauties (copyright) in shadowy pools. Although it's a month before the trout fishermen can try out their favorite flies and spinners, open season exists on most of the state's finny citizens and "treaties" between Arizona and California and Nevada have clarified regulations in reference to streams and lakes that border the states. And while we're marking time until they give the "go Signal" on the wily trout, a recent list of regulations from the state game and fish commission may be in order. In case you are an addict of piscatorial pastimes and need a little brushing up on the whens and wheres of fishing, we relay the commission's release on to you: The Arizona Game and Fish Commission and the Nevada Game and Fish Commission have formulated joint regulations with reference to fishing in Lake Mead and the Colorado river where it borders the two states; the seasons and bag limits being as follows: Bass: May be taken all year. Bag limit, 10 fish, providing total weight is not more than 15 pounds and one fish per day or in possession.

Legal length, 10 inches. Channel catfish: May be taken all year. Bag- limit, 10 fish, providing total weight is not more than 15 pounds and one fish per day or in possession. Legal length, 12 inches. Except that in Lake Mead there is no bag limit or length limit.

Trout: May 30 to September 30. Bag limit, 15 trout, providing total weight is not over 10 pounds and one fish per day or in possession, except that not to exceed 60 trout may be taken in any seven-day period, not to exceed 45 pounds. All other fish: May be taken all year. Bag limit, 20 in the aggregate not to exceed 20 pounds and one fish per day or in possession. Licenses required for fishing in Colorado river waters bordering states of Arizona and Nevada: For residents of class resident fishing license.

$1.75 is all that is required to fish anywhere in the Colorado where it borders the two states, including Lake Mead. For residents of resident license of Nevada is all that is required to fish anywhere in the Colorado where it borders both states, including Lake Mead. For nonresidents of Arizona and special 15- day fishing license from the state of Arizona and a special 15-day fishing license from the state of Nevada, at SI each, or $2 for the two, entitles any nonresident of both states to fish in the Colorado where it borders both states. Also: A nonresident of both states, may, if he so desires, fish anywhere in the Colorado where it borders the two states with a regular nonresident fishing license from either Arizona or Nevada. Regulations with reference to fishing in Parker Dam (Havasu) lake, Imperial dam and the Colorado river where these waters border Arizona and California have been made to coincide; the seasons and bag limits as follows: Bass: May be taken all year.

Bag limit, 10 fish, providing total weight is not more than 15 pounds and one fish per day or in possession, catfish: May be taken all year. total weight is not more than 15 pounds and one fish per day or in possession. No length limit All other fish: May be taken all year. Bag limit, 20 in the aggregate not to exceed 20 pounds and one fish per day or in possession. Licenses required for fishing in Colorado waters bordering the states of Arizona and California: Resident licenses of either Arizona or California are honored on both sides of the Colorado river.

Havasu lake and Imperial dam where these waters border both states. Regular nonresident licenses of either Arizona or California are honored on both sides of the above waters, but a nonresident of Arizona may purchase an Arizona special 15- day fishing license for $1 and may fish on either the Arizona or "the California side. Legal length, 9 inches. Bag limit, 10 fish, providing STORM HITS DERBY LAND. MUDDY TRACK SEEN Featherweight Mishtu Bimelech Romps Home Handy Winner vrr Crown Given Petey Scalzo WASHINGTON, May Peley Scalzo, New York, was i-ecognized by the National Boxing Association today as featherweight champion of the world.

"The NBA," said Harvey L. Miller, president, "subscribes to the theory that titles are won in the ring, but Scalzo's caw presented the peculiar picture of various leading featherweights declining to box him in a title match." Last month the NBA withdrew its recognition of Joey Archibald as the featherweight champion. "When Archibald and Leo Kodak met for the NBA featherweight title over a year ago," said Miller, "it was with the understanding that the winner would meet Scalzo, who had just knocked out Archibald in a nontitle bout. The promise was never kept." The NBA president said that after recognition was withdrawn from Archibald, Scalzo signed an agreement to box Harry Jeffra, of Baltimore; Jimmy Perrin, of New Orleans; or Simon Chavez, of Venezuela. He added that Jeffra declined the Scalzo match; Perrin refused to box in Washington, insisting the fight take place in his home city of New Orleans; and Chavez demanded $7,500.

Scalzo, the NBA declared, had signed an agreement to box immediately any featherweight named by the NBA. The NBA said it would recognize the following as title opponents for Scalzo: Perrin; Chavez; Jeffra; Chalky Wright, of California; Frankie Covelli, Chicago; Jack Wilson, Pittsburgh; Nel Tarleton, England; Bobby Green, Philadelphia; Spider Armstrong, Canada, and Sixto Escobar, Puerto Rico. Col Ed Bradley's mighty Bimelech, already an even-money favorite to win the Kentucky Derby Saturday, is pictured here waltzing in an easy winner In the Derby trials at Churchill Down. Tuesday. Bimelech is leading Gallahadion by several lengths at the finish line.

Sirocco, not in the photo but in the pay-off, was Telephoto.) Phoenix FourRoll 2,549 (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) (Exclusive Republic Dispatch) rjETROIT, Apr. 30 Although George Hall cracked the uprights for a 577 series, the Arizona Rose Flour quintet of Phoenix came through with a weak 2.549 series in the five-man event of the American Bowling Congress tonight. The five Arizona keglers will combine to shoot in the doubles and singles events at 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Hiney Maffeo spilled 510 sticks; Warren Wolf, 449; "Doc" McClcery, 525; and Wayne Hopkins, 488, in gaining their 170-averagc "pin barrage." The Flour maple spillers entered the tourney with a team average of 927 and fell 232 pins short. Of the- five, Hopkins and McCleery were the only bowlers to have shot previously in the sport's major event.

Their showing left them completely out of the prize list in the team event, although the "boys" are determined to spill 'em in the doubles and singles to prize-winning advantage. Extra-Inning Tilts Spark City Loop (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) extra-inning contests had an exceptionally large gathering of excited fans in a dither at University Park last night in City Softball" League play that saw O'Malley Lumber and Del Monte Products battle to a 4-4 tie in eight innings and Hotel Westward Ho finally edge out the Safeway Employees, 7-6, in 10 innings. Glover of O'Malleys and Escobar, hurling for Del Monies, had bang-up support. Glover gave even more than was asked by smacking a home run hi the second inning. The Westward Ho victory sent the standings into a three-way deadlock for first place, with the Printery and First National also claiming a hold on the spot.

The Hotclmen got away to a four-run lead in the first inning, tallied again in the third, then waited six more innings, until the 10th, before they chalked up the win. Safeway counted in the second twice, in the fourth once, in the sixth twice and in the 10th once. Games tonight: 7:30, Bell's Sporting Goods vs. City Employees; 8:45, Highway Department vs. Arizona Sash and Door.

Invasion By Tempe Boxers, Title Fray Mark Amateur Card VLLIS ROSS, the lean handsome head man of Arizona's amateur lightweights, will lace the leather up his wrists and climb into the Legion Arena ring for another defense of his crown in the only title fuss of the Optimist Club's fight card at 8:15 o'clock tonight, but the ring faithful will see an invasion from Tempe that should outstrip anything Show Promise For Meet rpRACK prospects are looking up at Phoenix Junior College wher Conch George (Dutch) Hoy is training his Bruins for competitio here Conch George (Dutch) Hoy is training his Bruins or competition in the second annual national junior college track and field meet at Modeslo, Jure 1. It begins to look as if Hoy has certain point winners in Ira O'Neal, v-ho should score both in the field nn the track: Virgil Bryant. Scalzo Wins By Kayo From Lale Republic Edition Yesterday) YORK, Apr. 1 Petey Scalzo, New York featherweight title contender, hit the loor twice tonight and bounced right up to knock out Ginger Foran of Liverpool, in 2:07 of the fifth round of the main eight- rounder at the Coliseum. Foran, a 9-to-l underdog, upset Scalzo twice with sweeping left hooks in the third round.

Petey took a nine count each time and came back to flatten Foran with a right to the jaw. Foran also suffered a cut over the left eye in the fourth round. Scalzo weighed 12814, Foran 129 and on the track: irg Raymond Buyless. and possibly George Jackson. John Perkins and Hugo Olsson are a Httle less certain, but arc promising and may develop bpforp the nationals roll; but needs work on speed and endurance before he is ready for a top performance there.

Bayless should be able to do 22 feet in the broad jump, which will lot before np place, while he also stands a good nround. ArmandCaudillo. distance; cn to ace in the 44Q where man. nisapnointed last week. but he is running second to O'Neal.

inan, disappointed may come nrnund once he a persistent cold which has been handicapping him. The Bears' slock was given hie boost last week on the fniversity of Arizona track when O'Neal, runnine against Ariiona frosh competition, won feature 440 in the fast time of 51.S. The piant colored star won easily, coasting in after he rlanced back on the last turn found he had a 15-yard lead. He (should be able to turn the distance in 50 seconds or better, which may win for him in the nationals. The best time turned in on the coast this vear was a 50.1 quarter in a meet between Sacramento Pasadena, junior colleges.

While he has been working mam- ly on form in the shot and Improvement of O'Neal and Bayless in the 440 has led Hoy to shift Perkins and Olsson to the 880 where 1hey are teaming with George Jackson, who shows great promise in the event. None of the three is a top performer, but Olsson has cut his time in the half from to 2:05. while Jackson has (plenty of speed and endurance and needs only experience. The Bears will have a mile relay team which should come close to winning; in the nationals. They turned in the event in 3:31 at Tucson last week in a race in which the Phoenix No.

1 man ran a poor quarter. The best time turned in by roast junior colleges in the event this year is 8:21. If Caudillo comes around in the distances as well as expected, Hoy will enter a fairly well meet balanced JV U1I VMU flllfl O'Neal has shown enough to mdi- jn cate he has points in both events. i He is sailing the discus around 130 i leet. and pushing out the shot 45 rv feet and over.

Neither is a CLRC3 mark, but with a very little im, provement should place. Virgil Bryant is bettering six leet in the high jump consistently. Six feet, four should win the event this year, which means that the Bears have a good another first place. Hoy is particularly pleased with 'Bryant's improvement in the hijrh event in aaaea i which he is easily trimming the today. more experienced Senon Castillo.

Bryant will be expected to run the low Hurdles ai well, Pim lico Race (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) PIMLICO, Apr. Domkin, a lightly regarded three- chance at i year-old who began his racing career last season in claiming 'events, carried the colors of T. D. JEuhl to an exciting victory in the added Rennert Handicap at The son of Ladkin. paying S18.90 S2, nosed out Ship Biscuit and Knight.

Cowboys Win, 22-7 (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) T5ISBEE, Apr. (AP) Tucson Cowboys looked like anything but a cellar club here tonight as they handed the Bisbee Bees a 22-to-7 shellacking featuring four homers and other assortec extra-base clouting. Dick Jerome, pitcher, and Roy Herndon, second baseman, of the Cowboys each collected a pair of round-trippers. Jerome turned in a strange performance, whiffing IS Bees and Issuing 10 bases on balls. Lenny Rice, catcher, led the visitors at bat with a single, two doubles and a triple in six trips.

Fay Starr, outfielder, led the Bees with a triple and two singles in six tries. EL PASO WINS, 2-1 ALBUQUERQUE, N. Apr. 30 El Paso Texans continued their winning ways here to night by nosing out Albuquerque 2 to 1, behind the steady hurling of Jim Evans. Evans yielded only seven hits.

His single in the fourth scored Burris with what proved to be the win ning tally. GRID INTEREST LINGERS Football excitement hasn't die( out in Iowa as yet. Last fall's grea team, kept it alive all winter. Football films, being shown to schools and clubs, are booked right up to June 1 this year. Never in the past were they in demand after the first of February.

The Standings Brooklyn NATIONAL LEAtil'JE 9 1 Louis 131 (MSIVIJ'll I Cincinnati 7 3 .700 Pittsburgh 4 6 .400 Philadelphia 3 5 Chic 7 7 .500 4 4 Yesterday'n Resultl Cincinnati 9. Brooklyn 2. New Vork at St. Louis, rain. Boston at Chicago, ram.

Philadelphia at Pittsburch. ram. Today's Garnet Brooklyn at Qncinnati. New York at St. Louis.

Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. AMERICAN LEAGUE Pet. 1 7 .125 Cleveland Boston Detroit Washington 8 4 5 4 7 5 .583 6 6 .500 St. Louis New York Pet.

9 6 .455 Philadelphia 5 8 Chicaso Tcstrrdw'i Remits Boston 12. Chicago 4. Philadelphia 5. Cleveland 1. Detroit 10.

Washington 7. New York 5. St. Louis 3. Games St.

Louis at New York. Chic.iso at Boston. Detroit at Washington. Cleveland at Philadelphia. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE (Including Tuesday's Games) 1.

Pou 3 .273 San Diego 18 32 Oakland IS 13 .581 L. Angeles 15 13 .536 Seattle 14 14 .500 Sacmento U' Pet. 14 17 .452 Hollywood 14 17 .452 Frisco 13 16 Portland 12 17 .414 TEXAS LEAGUE (Includlus Pel. San Anton 12 6 .667 Houston 10 6 .625 Tulsa 9 7 Ft. Worth 9 .529 Okla.

City Beaumont Dallas Shreveport Pet. 9 .529 6 10 .375 5 9.357 3 11 .313 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pet. Minneapolis 2 .800 Indianapolis 6 4 .600 Kansas City 6 5 .545 Louisville 5 5 .500 Toledo Pet. 5 6 St. Paul 4 6 .400 Milwaukee 4 6 .400 Columbus 3 7 .300 YrKlfrctny'n Retultl (No games scheduled.) INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Pet.

Jersey City 1 Baltimore 3 .727 Montreal 4 4 .500 Newark Toronto Rochester 5 6 .455 Yesterday's (No games scheduled.) Pet. 4 5 .444 3 5 .375 3 5 .375 2 8 .280 in Norway. The simon-pure socker who will attempt to cover himself with glory and the lightweight mantle against Ross will be placid, bandy-legged Johnny Salas and the various cauliflower critics who are predicting a nap on the carpet for the young Latin would be wise to recall Salas' performance of Thursday last. Salas came wandering out of his corner in that affair with an almost timid expression where his fighter's grimace should have been. He absorbed 'a pair of booming blows to the body from Oscar Moore, his opponent, and the spectators figured the ringside officials would be tooting the whistle for the next bout within two minutes.

But slow-moving Salas quietly went to work with a pair of large and cutting hands. And before the scheduled three rounds were over Moore was bloodier than a nervous Hapsburg attempting to shave himself. Ross is a fast worker with a paralyzing left hand. Probably -the top piece on the card will be three matches in which thiee. "name" boys from the State Teachers College at Tempe will make their debuts.

L. Chapelle, Tempe assistant boxing coach, lined up the (Ripper) Pitts, Jorge Buckwoski and Joe condition them for a Tucson tournament later. Pitts, of Bulldog football fame, will attempt to transfer some of the driving power out of his legs and into his arms and march to fistic fame as he did on the gridiron last fall. Pitts is lightning fast with his left and his right is definitely a sleep producer. He is a light-heavyweight and has an eye on the state title.

The Optimist Club matchmakers will find some other such dreamer at ringside to give Pitts the works. Buckwoski will enter the ring with a reputation and he hopes the (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) INNING four points from 7 Up. the Beil Laundry gained a notch on the league-leading Top Hatters, who lost three to Lily Ice Cream, in the Ladies League at to Lily Ice Cream, in the Ladies Leazui the Gold Spot Bowlinz Alleys last night Lois Klein featured the Laundry 1 with a 211 Rame and 576 series, while D. Johnson was hitting 487 for 7 Up. M.

Dominick led the Lily team with her 205 game and 467 series. Dorothy Wood of the Top Hatters tallied a 477 series. Perry Casey's General Tires, led by C. Howard's 489 series, won three from Arizona Oil. D.

Willis shot, a 451 for the Oilers. Durkee's lost three points to Keen's Flowers. T. Hopkins led the winners with 545. E.

Wigmore paced Durkee's with 461. Charley Gehringer didn't accompany the Tigers north this year. He was given permission to stay in Florida's warm sunshine and work the lameness out of his back. Steinke Victory And Draw Mark Garden Mat Card (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) i fTARRY JACOBS, the 280-pound ll big wind from the Golden Gate, was administered a large and h-t- ter dose of his own medicine, Vincent Lopez and Dean Detton twisted and tugged their way to a highly controversial draw. Referee Earl Clemens suffered the worst defeat of the program and the unruly crowd added to discord the strife that colored Madison Square Garden's grappling show last night.

Horrible Harry's waterfront tactics boomeranged with a flourish when Hans Steinke, 240, crew tired of a series of Jacobs' mat devices and roughed the rotund Califomian up to take the third and deciding fall of a slated two of three- fall, one-hour limit affair billed as the first half of a double main event. Jacobs opened the party with a heated address to both Referee Jimmy Reynolds and the hooting spectators. Chuffing like the Robert E. Lee comin' round the bend. Harry applied a knee and a taped wrist to Steinke with considerable results.

Hans bounced a number of right hands chin, which ofJ Harry's chubby scared the big boy Reynolds disliked so much that he promptly disqualified Harry and awarded Hans the second fall in 3:13. The intermission gave Steinke time to recover and when the gong rang for the final trip, the roof caved in on Harry. Steinke rolled him over with a hook scissors, raked Jacobs across the eyes with the fat one's own tape. Steinko peeled the offending adhesive off Harry's arm, rubbed it in the protesting Californian's eyes, tossed him out of the ring a couple of times, flattened him three times with a hefty right and fell on liim with a body press to take the third and deciding fall. The whooped.

Clemens was the loser In the finale of the double feature, from a practical viewpoint. Detton and Lopez split falls, but the harassed officials came out of the match with a molar- marked brace of swollen ears and sundry and pains. The early going found the 220- pound Lopez clamping down oa rival with a punishing arm key- more than they hurt, and the San Franciscan tied up Steinke with a stepover toehold to take the first fall in 8:18. Harry went Immediately to work in the second heat and raked Hans across the face with his favorite weapon, taped wrist. Thus incapacitated, Hans couldn't do much to keep Jacobs from tieinr his lee the trick that lock that lasted over nine minutes.

When Detion finally wriggled loose and nailed Lopez to the rug with a figure-four leglock, the Mexican reached out and covered Clemens' eyes. Clemens went prowling around the pair and Lopez ornamented him with a head Detton increased the pressure and Lopez conceded the fail. But the Mexican saw that Clemens was lying face down on the carpst and leaped upon his opponent with a ctepovtrttoehold, which he main- the land of the living and awarded talned until Clemens returned to Lopez the fall in 35:13. Detton took the second fall some eight minutes later with a reverse arm twist and a full body press and the two growlers milled around for the remaining time to finish one-all. The Masked Panther lost a one- fall opener to Hans Schultz of Milwaukee, being disqualified by two referees before Schultz would call it quits.

Reynolds banished him the first time for swinging at him sind Clemens sent him, to the showers for kicking his prostrate rival. The bout was featured by the charge of a number of fans to the ringside, where one burned him with a match and received a lusty right in return. Chief Sugar and Manuel Murrietta turned in such a feeble exhibition in the opener match was stopped. that the club gives him J. colored dynamiter, D.

Shans, the to start with. He is a product of New York's famed Hell's Kitchen and learned the art of leather slinging in Jim Corbett's arena on Long incidentally getting to the finals in the Golden Gloves tournament in 1937 working in-the lightweight class. Gill, heavyweight Jouster, repeatedly has challenged Jolting Joe Davis, but that bout has been denied him so much he is losing faith and will hang around the ringside for anybody who wants to take him on. Irrepressible Willie Fie, the Arizona State Teachers College at Tempe pigskinner who was knocked loose from a winning streak last week by Tex Hammons, the state middleweight titleholder, will sally forth again, not a whit discouraged ay his narrow loss to toothful Tex. Willie's blazing attacks in the Eights that preceded his unsuccessful crack at the 160-pound crown are any criterion, his opponent, Leonard Moore of Gilbert Square, is due to soak up a lot of leather.

Jerry Davis, the blond belter, will have at Percy Moore in another bout that should be plenty fast. The same the most have made the Optimists' fistic frolicking lively affairs will hold forth in other matches. Willie Walker and Joe Jacova, a brace of 145- will renew their feud, Felix Fowler and smooth Nicky Taylor, both 145-pound clouters, meet in another. A newcomer, Joey Castello, will test his prowess against Burrell Amos in another fight that has attracted a lot of interest. Derby 'Hope' Sports New Shoes OS ANGELES, May Mioland, the California hope in the Kentucky Derby, will go into the race wearing a new set of "mystery shoes," and while the matter may sound like one of those dream- lamp affairs, the outcome may be different.

Seabiscuit, it now becomes known, wore these "mystery shoes" when he won the $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap, and Kayak II had on a pair when he ran second for Charles S. Howard. Hailed as an important discovery in racing, the shoes conceived by Jay Wheeler of California, and embody several departures in design from the old type. Owner Howard heard of them, and so did Tony Pelleteri, the New Orleans horseman, and between them they have bought all of Wheelsr's supply. Pelleteri has 800 sets ordered, Howard probably more.

The shoes are lighter; they feature a vacuum ground-gripping device; they prevent sliding on a cuppy surface, and tests are reported to have shown they'll speed a horse up one second to the mile. After experimenting with the shoes for some time, Howard and Trainer Tom Smith put them on the 'Biscuit and Kayak in the big Santa Anita. Later they fitted Mioland, and he outworked himself with them in a ran at Hollywood Park. And unless Pelleteri has something good in the derby, Mioland will be the only candidate so shod' in the classic of the downs. Another Surprised, too, by the way, was one man in the Howard stable about that mysterious ointment supposedly used on Seabiscuit's legs prior to the comeback of the Howard money-winner.

Asked if he thought this treatment had been of value, Harry Bradshaw, Smith's trusted assistant, answered: "Well, I don't know, because I don't believe I ever saw it around. All I ever used on 'Biscuit was a little camphor and some rubbing alcohol. We had to rub like the as far as I know, that's all we did use on him." Since Bradshaw was assigned particularly to help with Seabis- suit's conditioning, it would seem he knew what was what wasn't. Bimelech Held Big Favorite Despite Rain OUISVILLE, May l-(up) No more than eight, probably only seven, and perhaps as few six three-year-olds will run for richest Kentucky Derby prize of all here it will be no surprise at all if the track comes up dripping with mud. That wan the outlook today for the 66th running of the nation's foremost race as a blui.

tery rain storm drenched thg blue-grass land while tht praises of the "jjreatest horst since Man (V War" ran through every bar and bistro in every Kentucky town. For your 1940 derby tip is lech, it's Bimelech all the way. They've given up all hops of beating Col. E. R.

Bradley's beauty now. And from here on out all the running is for second money. If you want to believe the men who' have watched derby horses come and derby horses go, the only thinj that can stop big Bim is the weather. There hasn't been a derby run in the mud for 10 years. But if the skies that hung over Louisville today were to be interpreted as signs of things to come there'll be mud.

The big stampede for Bimelech followed the third running of ths derby trial. In that classic prep the son of Black Toney all but kicked seven opponents out of Saturday's race, and firmly installed himself as the most solid ill- I OUISVILLE, May Dit, with Buddy Haas in the saddle, worked the full mile and a quarter derby route today in 3:13 in preparation for the $75,000 added classic Saturday. Dit was clocked for the quarters in :26, :52, 1:18, 1:45 along the route. Royal Man, another derby eligible, owned by Harold A. Clark, worked out over a mile and one eighth in being clocked for'the quarters in :27 :53, 1:45.

W. L. Brann's IMctor, with George Wolf up, also worked a mile and an eighth in being timed for the quarters in :25, :50 1:18 and 1:44 The West coast's hopeful, Mio- land, blew out over one-eighth of mile in preparation for longer workout tomorrow. The Churchill Downs oval was muddy from heavy overnight rains. around, free-style, money-back, guaranteed sure thing ever named for the race of the roses.

Here is what he did: He ran a mile on a slow track in 1:38 flat. He won by two lengths. He paid only $2.20 straight He was exactly 10 cents to the dollar, while the second low- priced horse came in at 519.20 192 times higher. This performance reduced the derby field to five certain opponents." They were C. S.

Howard's Mioland, W. L. Brann's Pictor. J. E.

Widener's Roman, Arnold Hanger's Dit and 1 Royal Man, none of whom were in the derby trial. Milky Way farm's Gal- lahadion and Dixiana farm's Sirocco remained in the running. Galls- hadion finished second in the trial, but badly beaten. And Sirocco was another five lengths behind. The rest of the Po- tranco, Endy, Black and Connaught." were hopelessly outclassed and went out of the derby.

Snead, Guldahl Top Utah Pair (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday) SALT LAKE CITY, Apr. Snead and Ralph Guldahl, touring golf stars, defeated John Geertsen and Ed Kingsley of Salt Lake City, 3 and 2, in a golf exhibition at the Salt Lake Country Club today. Snead and Guldahl compiled a best-ball score of 64 for the IS holes. Individually, Snead made the best score, A that was three under par. Guldahl turned in an even par Geertsen and Kingsley had a best ball score of 67.

OLD TURF HAND By this time Henry W. Bull is coming to be regarded as the regular president of the Turf and Field Club of New York. He is starting his 15th season in office. He has been an officer 30 years. BOXING 10-ALL STAR, FAST BOUTS--10 Sanctioned by A.

A. IT. LEGION ARENA Aim. lH CM lei S33 WEST WASHINGTON League Sees Two-Hit Ball (From Late Republic Edition Yesterday' rpWO-HIT ball was pitched in two of three eames played yesterday in the city's 6 clock softball league. The Arizona Iron Worto amassed 23 runs to DeMolay at Monroe School, with Paul Lopez hurting two-hitter and striking out nine.

Ray Abril. IronmertJ first sacker, smacked a homer in the fourth with two on. The DeMolays garnered four rum off two hits. Tumlinson pitched a no-hitter when Walsh Bros, beat Nifty NOOK, 5-3. at University Park.

Western Union, riding behind tns fine mound work of Paul Kressan, defeated Barrows Furniture, 7 to Balsz. Bluejays won by forfeit from Standard Employees. HIGH LIFE The Champagne of Bottle Beer Since 1855 MIllER' BREWING COMPANY MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN.

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