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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1923)
Nebraska Tiremen Threaten to Displace Murphys From Top Berth in Metropolitan League Race -* •> _ •_ _—_ -— Amateur Games May Be Stopped Again by Rain Two Double Headers in Class A Circuit Will Attract At* tention in Sandlot Circles. SUNDAY. Thirty-second and Dewey. 1:30—Vinton Street Merchants vs. De Molav s. 3.30 W. G. Clocks \s. Standard Laun dry Fontenelle. 1 :30—Nebraska Tires vs. Murphys. 3:30—Nebraska Tires vs. Murpnjs. Miller. 3:30—Barker Clothes vs. Pe Molsys. 1^:30—Schneider Electrics vs. W. U. tv. Klvrrvlevv. I :30—Christ Child Juniors vs. Nsples Banks. 3:30—P. O. Employes vs. Betsy Ross. West Elmwood. 1:30—Dietz Club vs. Sherman Avenue Merchants 3:30—Y. M. H A, va Corr Electrics. East Elmwood. 1:30—Leavenworth Street Merchants vs. Brown Park Merchants. 3:30—Western Union vs. Kinney Shoes. Athletic. 1 :30—West Side Boosters vs. Union Stockyards. 3:30—M. W. A. Omaha Canrp vs. Christ Child Centers. Carter Park. 1 -30—K of C. vs. U. P. Englnenren. 3:30—K. of C. vs. U. P. Engtnemen. Carter Luke Club. 3:30—Paxton Billiards vs. Carter Lake ;iub. THK Murphy-Did-It baseball team will meet one of its real tests of the season today at Fonte nelle park when Ike Mahoney's out fit is scheduled to oppose the Ne braska Tire nine in a double-header, the result of which may displace the automobile team from the top rung of the Metropolitan league. Continued ratal throughout the w^Jk again threatened to stop all of Sunday's scheduled amateur games. All of the Class A teams remained idle last week and the condition of the diamonds Saturday seemed to indi cate that no games would be played today. Two Double-Headers. There are two double-headers sched uled for the Metropolitan league. The MurphyTireman game will attract the majority of attention because of the close position these two teams ;njoy in the pennant chase. The oth •r double header will see the Knights if Columjius and U. P. Kngineers en gaging at Carter Lake park. The Murphys enter today's contest without having lost a single game, while the Tiremen .have defeated all other teams in the league with the exception of the leaders. Manager Britton will send Prohst in to stop Mahoney and his outfit during the ipenirig clash, and Jones, his other aurling ace, will perform during tlie secorfd encounter. Inf the American league Deuce Bel fork's undefeated Paxton Billiards vilf tackle the Carter Lake club out 'it on the clubmen's diamond. Many other interesting encounters ?re booked for the different amateur lamonds this afternoon. / - BASEBALL RESULTS and STANDINGS/ WESTERN I, EAC.l K. W. L. Pet. W. L. W ichita . 2* 19 .596 .604 .58 4»nmh» 28 21 .571 .580 .440 rule* . :;n 22 .577 ..,85 .666 Oklahoma city .. 24 20 .545 .556 .523 Des Moines . 25 22 .532 .542 521 •s* Joseph . 22 28 4 40 451 .431 Sioux City . 19 26 422 .4 35 .4 1 3 Denver.17 33 340 .353 333 .. . .. ' esterday’a Results. Wichita. 8; Omaha. 5, Tulsa. 11. Des Moines. 3. Si Jos' ph -1 >cn ver, rain Bloua Clt>•Oklahoma ‘ ity. rain. STATE LEAGUE. TV. L. Pet. W L. Pet | Lincoln 22 9 .710] Beatrice. 15 19 .441 Falrbtiry 2ft 13 .6ft6 G Island 14 2ft 412 Norfolk. 15 14 .617J Hastings . 9 20 .310 Yesterday's Results. Norfolk at Beatrice, ram Grand Island at Lincoln, ran. Hastings at Fairbury. rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE. W.L.Pet Cincinnati 24 22.522 lNew York 34 14 .708; Chicago 2 4 24 50ft Pittsburgh 27 2ft .57 4 Boston 17 31 354 Brooklyn 28 21 54 3, i f Z IE tl *l.«imd Ft. Loulg 25 23.5211 W L. Pet Yesterday's Reault*. Brooklyn. 2. St Louis. ft Cincinnati. 12; Philadelphia. 2. 1 New York. 6. Pittsburgh, ft. Chicago. 4. Boston. 3. COAST LEAGUE. S>J* Lake. li. Oakland. 1ft ((11 ln n£T* > f-*n Francisco. 10; Portland. 1. L "rnon, 6. Seattle. 5 /Loa Angeles. 11. Sacramento, 5 / TEXAS LEAGUE. / Dallas Fort Worth. r;iin. ( * Shreveport 5; Wichita Falls 11. San Antonio 2. Galveston, 1. | Beaumont 1; Houston, 8. V. AMERICAN I.EAME. C3 • W 1. I*. 1 w I. Pet , ew York >ft 1 6.652 St Loula 21 24 467 C 'hila’la 26 2ft .5651 Waahing’n 2‘» 26 .435 » lev ela’d 26 21 .553, Boston 1 7 23 425 2 Detroit 23 25 .4791 Chicago 15 26.375 ,1 Yesterday's Results. I _ Cleveland, 13; New York. 3. | " Detroit. 8 . Philadelphia 6 I j* St. T.ouls. 5. Washington, 4 Chicago at Boston, rain. \ — AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. 1 • W.L.Pet.! W L.Prt , Kan nty 3j 8 .795' Mllwa'e# 1 7 27.386 » St Paul 3ft 14 .68 2 Toledo 17 27 .386 C. < olumbiii 24 2ft .5451 Mlnne'olls 1 6 28 .364 Lou’villa 24 21 .533! Ind apolia 15 28.349 I Yesterday’s Results, j Kansas city. 6; Columbus, 3 (1ft In* ' nlngs.> ( Toledo. 9: Milwaukee. 2. Tndinnupolis, 7; St Paul. 4. Minneapolis. f»; Louisville. 3 (11 in nings.) Zev Captures Belmont Stakes on Slow Track New York, June 9.—Xfv, son of the Finn Miss Kearney, carried the Run nous silks to victory today in the )ld Belmont stakes, among tho best known American turf classics, and established himself ns the top of the 1923 3-year-old division. The same court Re and dash that marked his triumphs In the Ken tucky derby and In the Withers car ried the steady Rancocas colt under the wire, an easy winner over ns likely a hand as ever faced the l>ar rler in the more than 50 years of Belmont stake history. Harry P. Whitney's Chlckvala fin . 4 |shed second, a length and a half liehlnd Zev, and Rialto, of the Green Tree stable, which ran coupled with t'hbkvnlo, was third, four lengths away from Chlokvale. Z"v's time, 2 minutes and J9 seconds, was exceptionally good for the Julie and three furlongs, ss the truck was slow and dead Zev's eaiiilngs were in creased $38,000 by th« victory, Karls Bonds mansuvered Xtr In Ipont of hla Held In ths opening iy&$» si ih* BARNEY GOOGLE- Sparky Didn’t Want Barney to Get Mugged. Drawn for The Omaha Bee by Billy DeBeck ^ (Cop) right, 1321.) All ORAoy SAT. 3UHr % MJt. J)CWBY EMYA'S? 3SAORV-eilX. &M1HES WART'S teOARV •ST'et 9PRIME *>RS SKTcjFEEO CANARY ><jCAWOfAAT TiuCClf OS JSAP SWf*«AA S><oRO«*li»»<J PAlATJ ®PftOoY FARE ©TWO OW A 6*N<M [ J>Bvj6*4ouS* CA*IF ©CAIN ANO OAVPND0AT ©UKUESRut OABV g>CoME To CAterooNiA ®fAD Siytv oNe ® JUST A HEEL. 01101.0 v«j« PEACE 0BAROE«s rrcn - - i KICK VQV; 1 acl Turn LATONIA. First race: 6 furlongs: Suave Prince. 106 (Gross) 26 60 9.50 5.60 Ararat. 100 (Parke) . 8 40 6.50 Quince Garden. 116 (Kennedy) .... 4.20 Time: 1:12 1-6. Mav Blossom. Jouett. Pegasus, John Finn. Martha Fallon. The Plainsman, Also ran. Second race: 1 1-16 miles: Major Childton. 108 (Pool) 1 1.30 6.50 3 20 Little Ann. 100 (Doyle) . .. 12.70 5.20 Grand Dame. 105 (Brothers) . 2.60 Time: 1:47 1-5. Miss Claire. The Colonel. Juba. Albert L.. Cappy Ri«ks, Alluring Romana. First Call also ran. Third race; Mile and 70 yards: Lady Myra. 97 (Parke) 24.50 11.10 6.50 Wapiti. Ill (Pool) . 6.60 6.00 Rocky Mountain. 113 (Connelly) ... 7.80 Time 1:43 2-5. Vendor. Tippo Sahib. Yoshiml. Winner Take All. Kinburn, Runquoi. By Gosh. Anglum Maid, Balg neur also ran. Fourth race: 5 furlongs: Ruddv Light. Ill (Denny) 3.00 2 «0 2 50 aBob’a Mary. 107 (Ponce) .... 4.30 2.«0 bCh<*rokee. Lee. 114 (Connor) . ... 2 60 Time: 59 3-5. Edna V.. aBefuddle, bBeautlful Addle. May Loyd, Paloma. Delectable also ran. •Coupled; bCoupled. Fifth rac#; 6 furlongs: Ten Lee. 100 (Parke) . . 76 20 34 50 17 80 Fair Phantom. 117 (Lunsford) 5 90 6 30 CorrdXR. 97 (Abel) . 22.10 Time: 1:11 1-5. Braedelbane. Pindar Peel. Chatterton. c*ho Cho, Right on Time. In Memoriam. Sweetheart. Jim mie Daw. Dr. Clark. Gen. Thatcher also ra n Sixth rare: 5 furlongs: Sanola. 105 (Kronk) 7 30 4 oo 2 7<> Battle Bent. 10| (Pool) . 5 10 3 50 Lady Jane, 109 (Garner). 2.80 Time: 1:00 4-5. Peggy O.. Shining Gold, Hello Great Northern. Strutter, Passport. Cheoko also ran Seventh rare: 1 3-16 miles: Smuts. 102 (Kronk) . .. 8 60 5.50 3 70 Sportsman. 1U7 (Doyle) . 10 00 7 ho Attorney. 107 (McDermott) . f, 90 Time: 1:69 4-5. The Wit. Ben Valet, kirnpalong. Bob. Kirk Levfngton. Flying Prince also ran BELMONT RKSULAT8 BELMONT. First race: 6 furlongs: Pat Casey. 119 (Lagere) ....3-1 6-R 2.5 Delcadia. 100 (M. Fator) . ..even 1-2 Anna M., 106 (Turner). * - Time. 1:12 2-5 Sea Wolf finished first disqualified for foul Sagacious. Fifteen Cent*, Brass Band. White Ro-k. Tikeh. Rork and Drift. Evelyn. Ruth (. True Eves. Ocorra also ran. Second race: 2*4 miles Waldo Jr., 162. (A J. Davis) even out out Loehiel II. 162 ((J. Brooke) . .. out *iut Luckv Penny, 152 (J. Andre**) out Time: 6:14 Three starter* Lucky Penny and Loehiel II. coupled. Third race: 6*4 furlongs: Mint Briar. 112 (Johnson) ..6-1 6-6 1-2 Initiate. 109 (Coltilettl) . T-4 out Peter King. 125 (Turner) .out Time: I :05 2-5. Stake Me. Sunny Sal. Transmute also ran. Courle Sunny Sal and Mint Briar. Fourth race- Mile and three furlongs; Rev. 126 (Sande). .. 4-5 1-3 out Chlckvale. 126 (McAtee).7-2 2 5 Rialto. 126 (Coltilettl).2 6 Time. 2:19. Messenger. Martin* Ce. Hyperion, All American, Miss Smith also ran. Rialto and Chlckvale coupled. Fifth race; Mile; PiftruH. 150 (J. Xucker ) . . . . 11 -5 7-10 out Overtake 153 (H. Tucker*. 1-3 out Rekab. 144 (Alher*). 2-1 Time. 1:41 2-5. Bereagliere also ran. Sixth race: Five furlong*: San Rajah. 115 (Johnson).9-6 1-2 out Squire*. 115 (Stutts)..1-3 out Sun Pal, 115 (Carroll). out Time. 1:01. Byron. San Dima*, Coue also ran. 4mateurs May Have to Play Twilight Games All of Saturday's Games Are Postponed Because of Wet Grounds Here. LOCAL sandlotters were again forced to remain Idle yesterday afternoon when the weather con ditions would not permit the Sntuday amateur contests to be pulled off. The schedules are gradually being lengthened on account of failures io play off the carded clashes and In order to complete the usual schedule it may he necessary to play some of the postponed contests in the form of twilight games. Yesterday was the third time this Ht.ison that the Saturday diamond artists were un able to play on account of weather conditions. May Feature Game. The wet grounds caused several feature contests to rest by the way side for some time. The league lead ers still remain in the limelight al though a few upsets were expected to appear In yesterday's results. Th» Clifton Hill Presbyterian, leaders of the Northern Chureh league, were to meet the Pearl Memorials yester day in one of the focused clashes while the North Presbyterians were forced to sit. idle against the Dietz Memorials at, Rlverview in a game l hat had promising exhibitions in store. lead Creamery I e-ague. The Kirschhrauns still lead the Creamery league with a clean slate after seven contests while the Cudahy nine leads the first group in the "Y" ndustrla] league with the Guarantee Fund Life artists mount high In the lower division. The Clifton Hill Pres byterian Is lieing forced for the lead ership In the North group of the Church league. The North Presby terians who have to date shown championship form remained tied with the Wheelers who have been handed three forfeits for high honors In the Southern Church league. The Sunday School leagues were not effected by the postponement since no contests were on tap for the youngsters Saturday. The regular schedule will again be taken up pro viding weather conditions permit next week end. New York’s Team Wins Golf Title Philadelphia, Pa.. June 9.—New York's well balanced team of women golf players today won the Frances C. Grlscom cup, emblematic of supre maty over Boston and Philadelphia Led by Mr*. Alexia Stirling, three times national champion, whd played a brilliant game, the New Yorkers took eight out of ll> matches from Philadelphia. It was the second suc cessive yrsr New York has captured the Inter city tropy. The Boston team, though It In cluded the national champ fan, Miss Glenna Collette, was forced nut of the running for the clip as It lost to New York on Thursday, five matches to 10, and to Philadelphia yesterday, four matches to 11. J. ft Cosden colt, which ran second to /cv In both the derby and the Withers, attempted to force the early pace. August Belmont's Messenger started behind Martingale, with the field far hack. Entering the stretch Martingale cracked. Chick vale saved ground by hugging the rail and moved Into second place, while Rialto UuBtjd ahead of fur. thlid 6 000 See S •> jIrwin Entry Cop Pur se Wild Heather Finishes Two Lengths Behind After a Spurt on Last Stretch —Track Muddy. Abadane Pays $3.20 Aliadane tarried the C. B. Irwin colors to their second consecu tive victory .n the Ak-Sar Ben King's derby Sa'urriiy i lltrnoon. Skeezix, star from the George Drumhiller stable, which was expected to give Irwin's hig horse stiff competition over the route of a mile and one eighth. was scratched at noon because of the muddy condition of the track. There were hut five horses In the event, Abadane, Ten Buttons ami Reap being unjier the Irwin entrf Wild Heather and Dorius were ttie other starters. TV-lante, the Omaha entry, was scratched during the morning. The track was a sea of mild but all the six races on the afternoon pro gram proved Interesting and were well contested. A crowd of *,000 pi r sons was on hand to witness the third renewal of the derby. Two lengths Ahead. Abadane won without trouble. Its stalilemate. Ten Buttons, with Jockey Cantrlll up, set an early pace with Wild Heather, second choice in the betting, hanging on. Abadane hung back and as the far turn was reached Jockey Martinos moved him up to a forward |>osltion, but Wild Heather also showed new speed and ■ for a time the three horses were on even turns. Aliadane. however, wa^j the claaa of the field and gradually pulled away from the other two, and held the lead, winning with ease by two lengths. Wild Heather closed the gap some what Juit before entering the stretch hut could not catch the fast Abadane. Reap, which held a back position up to the three quarters pole, moved up on the far turn and became a danger ous contender for the place but lost by a head to the Colorado stables' entry. Time was 2:04 2 % Bays $3.20. Straight mutuel tickets on the Irwin entry paid 13.20. There were no place or show bets taken. Korbly won the first rare of five and one half furlongs with Mistake second and Pineorest third. .Straight mutuela brought II on the winner. Carl Roberts won tlia second i ice over the same route and paid ffMifl on the nose, l’lantnon was second and Our Leader third. Ilr. Mack Is Winner. Dr. Mack II took the honors in the third rare over a similar dlalance and was followed by Roscoo t loose and Bond, the favorite The winner returned III.<10 for straight mutuel tickets, 15 to place, and |2.80 to show Roscoo (loose paid |x,21( to pint «- and |3 to show. Bond paid $2 4'* to show. / The fourtli race, a dash of five furlongs, whs declared off because of too ninny scratches. tlrnnny la-e proved the beat winner of the current meeting hy winning Its third race when It missed lli> wire flrat in I he fifth race ahead of Mitde Rule and Hazel Dale It paid flO.HM on tile nose. Czardom, Walter Dant and Mays villa finished In that order in the day, u. milt tace. , ( Gibbons Early Decided Upon Successes of Brother Prompt ed Dempsey's Challenger to Take Up W ork. PAUL. June 9.— Just about the time the most anx mis fathers are "feeling out" their sons to ascertain their life work desires, a young man of St Paul—"hardly more than a kid." his friends said—grip ped the lower rung of the ladder of pugilistic fame. It was his selec tion for a life pro fession. and how well he has mastered it will he dem onstrated July 4 when he seeks to wrest the heavyweight boxing crown from Jack Dempsey at Shelby, Mont. For the young man who decided on fisticuffs ns a life work was Tommy tlibhons of St. Paul, only a youth of it years when he answered the lure of the game. Many tsixers have gained their start In the ring througli their prowf«H rough-and-tumble mixers, with seirnre developed later ns a necessary requisite to greater success. Not so with Tommy Oibbcns. It was purely a business proposition with him, and ho selected his career for the same r* •*. n that ninny other young men hvl intend Uss vlJ.nt professions. It was the attraction of more money th«n he could make any other way. .Mike Persuades Him. Tommy* path had been beaten by his brother. Mike Gibbons, live yearn his senior, whose boxing skill later gained for him the sobriquet of -The Phantom." It was the verbal persua slon of Mike, coupled with his suc cess at tight.ng, that decided Tommy. "I had left school and had gone to work for tbe Great Northern rail way here." he said In recounting his start. "Of course, I was only mak ing a little money; no more than any kid of that age is likely to make. "One day Mike came to me with a proposition that I enter the ring, lie sa d he could pay me niore than i the railroad company could, and as I watched with some envy the money Mike was making, I decided to take him up. "Mike was a great teacher, and from that time until very recent years, when Mikes eyes have been bothering him, he gave me thorough Instruction. It is to this, of course thHt I owe much of whatever boxing ability I possess." It was the luster cast over him by ills brother's siicces that took Tommy into hia first lights—Informal quiet alfairs at a little "athletic club" the young men maintained out in the Gibbons' neighborhood Matched With Big Boys. "The fellow* expected me to !*e a lighter .lust because Mike was." Tom my said, "and so they generally matched ms with the big fellow* I didn't have'mueh to gam. for they all expected me to win my lights, hut I had a lot to lose—at least, it seemed a lot then—ami so I naturally fought 'over my head’ as a rule." The father of Mike and Tommy had a keen aversion to fighting, it was over his strong protest* that Mike entered the game, hut when the senior Gibbons saw the remuner ation that might r< suit from a single engagement, his opp - it ion gradually vanished and had disappeared by the time Tommy was ready tor the pro fessional ring. However, the senior Gibbon* never saw either 'one of hia sons in the ring. He d.cd on the night that Tom my fought Billy Miske in New York last October; a fight Tommy entered with knowledge of Ills father's seri ous illness, Tile bout terminatad when Gibbons fouled Miske. Tommy was the youngest member of the family, and, he deplores, "na turally somewhat u favorite." He tells with a smile of the day lie ami Mike "framed'' a bout with their father a* the only spectator. Till* mix up ended when Tommy "knocked out” Mike. He was glad to ace the younger one get the heat of it. Hie senior Gibbons s.^d, after he saw Mike was not seriously hurt. Firpo to H^lit Herman Today Havana. June t» Everything In ready for the Kit po llerinnn fight to morrow .1 ft• i a*mu owing to the un certain NtHte of tin* weather, the event will take plan* Indiana Flipn lodav declared he wan In the heel of condition and would weigh in nt 214 pound* rtngaide. Herinno ha* been training hi « Ryalematle manner and hopcN to cNcape a repetition of hie previous experience with Firp©. when ho wo* knocked outt Zev's. Winnings i for Year $117MOO: Tops 3-Year-Olds Belmont Park, New York, June !).—By his victories in the Bel mont, the Kentucky derby, the Paunionok, the Rainbow and the \\ Itliers, Zev brought his earn ings for the season lip to $117, H00, topping the list of purse earners for the season. Zcv covered the distance here today in 2;’9, remarkably fast time considering the heavy con dition of the track. Ray Fails to Lower World’s Mile Record Cambridge, Mass., June 9.—A heavy track, chilly temperature and a drizzling rain conspired against Joie Kay today and ruined his chances and hopes to break the world record for the mile at the open handicap track meet conducted at the Har vard stadium under the auspices of tlie Harvard association. , The little Chicagoan covered his di-'ance in four minutes 27 3-0 sec onds and compared with the mark of t minutes 12 3-0 seconds established on the -ante track in 1910 by Nor man S. Taber. Old timers, however, were agreed that the conditions un der which Taber made his record was much more favorable than today. Kay was clocked at the quarter in ; a n o seconds: at the half in 2:07 2-5 and at tlie three quarters mark at 3:18. Hagen and Kirkwood Beat Duncan-Mitchell Glasgow. June 9.—Walter Hagen and Joe Kirkwood defeated Duncan . nd Mitchell, Kngliah stars, one up in a 36-hole match on the Bon nylon links this afternoon. Rain fell and a high wind blew throughout the match. (Jumps Afh. Civil War Vpt. Retired Contractor, Dies James Afh, 86. retired contractor lid civil war %’eteran, died at the i i den< e of a daughter, 2910 Crown Point avenue. Mr. Afh has lived in Omaha 25 years and is survived by four daughters and a aon, William D . of Atlantic, la. Mr. Afh serve,1 in the Fifth Kan. cavalry. Company K. and was a member of the old Guard of the G A R. Funeral services will be held at the residence Monday afternoon at 23°- _ Japan Answers Chinese Demand ^ ilh Destroyers fly \«*nr Cite.I Pr**». Tokio. Juno 9—Japan'* reply to » hina's note demanding apology for the shooting of <’Junes* rioters by Japanese marines at Changsha. Prov ! im*e of Hunan. June 2. and the with I ilnwnl of Japanese gunboats from «’• was the dispatch today of fmr destroyers from the Sasebonl - • bho base to reinforce the Japanese patrol on the Vangtae riser, and the afement that Japan was determined in defend the lives and property of, it* nationals in China. Women "f Kii Klux Klan Parade in Fort Worth Kort Worth, Tex.. June S.—Three thousand meintiors of the Women of the Ku Klux Klan. an organization which laat night «>■ officially rec ognized as auxiliary to the Knights Wizard H. W. Evan*. poind'd to the Ku Klux Klan by Imperial through the atrreta of the business district. Delegation* arrived during tgie day from Diiltn*. Houston, Wsco, Austin and San Antonio In special trains. There were many special floats. In eluding one which bore the Inscrip tion. "Wives und Sweethearts of the K. K. K.'m of the Sixties." Dry Law Kiiforrmirnt by tT. S. Vlonr Would l'«»t Hupr Sum N*vr York, June 9.—Enforcement of prohibition m Now York state by federal ofR< era would coat ItOO.OOO.AOO annually, Prohibition Director Can* field declared In a letter to Mayor Hylan, t Hanking him for his prwnite of co operation fntiti local police. 2 \\ i;ttor» Dio iu Fall. IVorla, Ill . June Ctareno* Ill-own. I'llnl, I,"XH, 111 , and Martin Nixon, 23, nttidr-nt, Atlantn, 111 , were kllli I last night whan th*li plane fell 2,000 fret. When Buying a Bicycle It Pnyi to Buy the Bent RANGER BICYCLES Will Out-Loit All Other, The only bicycle made with a 5-year guarantee. INcbr. Motorcycle & Bicycle Co. Factory Distributor, AT 2r>«7 1512 Howard St. Opp. Cat Office Leading Track and Field Stars of Country Enter Chicago Meet Chicago, Juno 9.—The climax and finale of the most brilliant track field season in the history of collegiate sports Is the principal attraction on lha week's sport schedule. The event, the third national collegiate athletic association's championship carries at Stagg Field, University of Chicago, Friday and Saturday, will bring together tl»e winners of many events In the season's eastern and western collegiate meets. Twenty four states are represented In the en try lift. From the east will com», among others Pennsylvania State college, Washington and Jefferson. Amherst, New York university, John? Hopkins, Bowdoin and Haverford. Stanford and the University of Southern Cali fornia will carry tha colors of the Pacific coast, and Dixie will be rerpe seted by Georgia. Tennessee, Georgia Tech, Texas, Baylor, S. M. U. (Dal las), Mississippi A. & M., Alabama Polytechnic and Vanderbilt Univer sity. Among entries of the middlewest, exclusive of the Big Ten, are: Beloit, WIs; Kansas University; University of Nebraska; Drake; Washington university St. Douis, Orinnell, Haskell Institute, Lombard; Des Moines university, Kansas State Aggies; Hamlin, Minn.; Ohio Wes leyan; Miami, Ohio; Butler, Ind; Gibbons Starts Today to Train for Title Bout Heavy and Welterweights in Camp Ready to Help Put Challenger in Shape. By tnltunal SerTlre. Bhelby, Mont., June 9.—Tomorrow marks the opening chapter of Tommy Gibbons' determined effort to wrest the world's heavyweight crown from Jack Dempsey here on July 4. When the St. Paul challenger steps into his training ring his four weeks* siege of preparing for the titular bout will be on In earnest. Jack Clifford, heavyweight; Jimmy Delaney, light-heavyweight, and Pets Bross, welterweight, arrived here to day, ready to begin swapping punches with their fellow townsman. Bud Gorman, another sparring mate, has been here for a week doing his pre liminary work along with Gibbons. Sammy Mandell, featherweight, and "Kid" Herman, the welterweight streak from Los Angeles, are due to join the Gibbons camp Monday. Must Extend Self. With this array, fight critics declare Gibbons should be able to unloose all his speed and power of his punches during the daily workouts. Gibbons plans to don the gloves with both Gorman and Delaney for three rounds each as a starter. The challenger and his family failed to be Initiated Into the Blackfeet tribe today. They motored to the reser vation, but the agent would not per mit the braves to stop their corn planting long enough to take part In the ceremony. Chief Mountain, whose guest Tom my was, promised to attend the fight in full war paint in reply to Gibbons" invitation. |dni«hiB«€ “Wot” A<U Will Aid Yob T« Fi^O»iceHeip, S»letnitBJ « of Attraction \ « ‘want’ad^ ,_. ADVERTISER, (jU U It takes more than columns of words set in type to build a service .like that given day in and day out to the people by the “Want” Ad section "of The Omaha Bee. • U The real story back of the hundreds of ads that you see under the different headings is in that sendee that these advertisers and the thousands of readers who watch the wants and offers are getting every day. H It’s a sendee that works “both ways from the middle.” The hundreds of people whose ads appear in every edition are looking for results. The thousands who 1 consult the "Want” Ad columns of The Omaha Bee are on the lookout for opportunities. H And The Omaha Bee gives both groups what they want. That’s service! § U Look through the “Want” Ad columns every' day. Read and I'se Omaha Ree "Want” Ads— the Bee-Line to Results