1915
They Give Barney Oldfield Badge 2,236, and He Broke Rod
The number thirteen is not popular with drivers of racing cars, and it was noticed that no car at the Astor cup race bore that number. And thirteen did not appear on the official score board.
Barney Oldfield had badge number 2,236 given to him quite by chance. An hour or so before the race W. Bob Holland of the speedway publicity department was talking to Oldfield, and he noticed the badge number.
"You have a hoodoo number, Barney," he laughingly remarked.
"What's the matter with it?" asked
"Add the figures together," said Holland.
Barney turned the badge up. "Two and two are four and three is seven and six is thirteen," he said slowly. He eyed the badge suspiciously for a moment, shrugged his shoulders, and remarked: "Oh, I'm not superstitious; I guess the badge is all right."
An hour or so later Oldfield completed six laps, twelve miles, in the race for $50,000 in prizes. While negotiating the thirteenth mile the connecting rod of his car broke, and he was out of the race.
—Saturday Blade, Chicago, Dec. 18, 1915, p. 8.
Wednesday, July 4, 2007
2 Plus 2 Plus 3 Plus 6 is 13
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