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: 4 5 y £2 (4), Neighbauer (1), Goetz#(7), Me- as J 4 YANKEES AND PIRATES HAVE BIGGER LEADS: Superb Pitching and Heavy ; Artillery Work Give N. Y. and Pittsburgh Wins \ (By The Associated Press) Pucking a punch in the pitcher's} well as at the plate, the Yan d the Pirate t in front) of their respe s with an i ed lead tod “ avery fan knew. the bombarding Buccaneers could hit, but few lo for such a pitching performance Meadows turned in 3 nting just four scattered Chicago helpless ked Pirate It was pa same order to their first at the expense throwing arm Senators Beat Athletic h Hollis Thurston , the Washin 1 4-0 vietory Cleveland after a pitcher n and Hollaway ried in the ninth a Levsen to Tiger rally s Buckeye rep away the Two pitchers in the tilt at St. Browns won in t from the White Sox \ ing tight , Gaston of the ‘ Browns and Teddy Blankenship of Chieago exch hammered out a homer | accounted for several runs. — | Play Eleven Innings | The man in the box had a much ured. prominently puis which the} eighth, 5 to 4,! Besides pitch o- ah Pennant Progress | i 4 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis si Paul 2 waukee Toledo ti vbu SPO WwW. oL. ame: ATIONAL LE (1 innings) SOUTHERN As Birm Mot N ch harder time of it in an off again, on | 4—— between Boston Hl-inning struggle again, ts and the Braves. the ¢ Yesterd scored six runs in the lucky seventh g&— to tie the count at 8-all, and twice thereafter—in the ninth and tenth each club added a run. It finally ended in an 11 to 10 victory for the! fter doubles by Hornsby and| ‘arrell. | Brooklyn descended still farther| inte the cellar when the Robin coul! serape only seven hits and lost to the Phillies, 7 to 3. The Quakers fo ne Rob MeGraw’s offerings in the third and scored five runs then and there, enough to win Old man April pitched showe: over the plete at Cincinna strike out the scheduled game between the} Reds and the Redbirds. JUNIOR HIGH 5 _.. GAINS SHIELD Romps to 53-10 Win Over Si. _ Mary’s Grade—St. Mary’s Frosh Are Second By defeating the St. Mary's ade School quint, 53 to 10, the Junior High eagers Satur night won the Knowles Shield and have it as a p manent possession by virtue of win ning it three years in succession. The junior high team ran_ wild from the very start of the game an kept g steadil lead over its opponents, were unable to stem the onslaught. The individual scoring: Junior high—Eddie Agre (6), Le Dohn (18), John Spriggs (1 r Harold Cordon ( mounting { O'Neil (0), B.C man (0). Following the final game, the ref- erecs announced their choice of all- city, teams, as follows: > First Team Dohn . Second Team . Smith Agre » Butler ale e: P periods and some good individual work.was displayed. The game end- ed im-a tie, each team scoring one field goal. The St. Mary’s Freshmen quint took Recon re in the final stand- eating the high school y to 5. Individual scoring: St. Mar: Fortune (5), Balzer Donald (0). High school—Enge (1), Smith (1), (0), Tait (3), Skaff (0), Pot- 3 “Butler jer (0) The Nut Cracker ire Henry getting messed} Ford wreck is like John D. on a dime, Bol Jones announces that from if wants to be called “Bob” he’s no longer kiddish . . . be no connection but he right after witnessing one! msman Willie-Boy Strib-| bureer, out Mrv O’Goofty has a very, very; lar girl .-. . she can count ithe fellows she's don one . » “one hundred, two hun- three hundred—” iirins and Ruth were walking : a Florida Beane grote, Hug trample a huge ran- ier foots. “Hey, don't!” | t to Harvard | r its ree ein to bs congratulated Sar oate s f have shown a healthy every yest, he": ho fought gamely but) * B. Henry, Ra by; — Mills, Smith, Brooklyn Philadelpt McGraw, son, Willoughby Pittsburgh . Chicago M yan Others Mog eananine * lay’s Games | (11 innings) arnes and Devormer, Clark d Wilson, R 9 Smith; AMERICAN LEAGUE Re vat Boston . New York rriss and Ho! Grabowski. 0 3 Bey un; Philadelphia Kansas Cit Toledo . Cochrane; bid 9 8 Leysen, rice Messenger, Olson, bers and l Others Yr post McCullough, F ffrey, Ba uxter, Parme! in. oned, WESTERN 3 Tulsa 4. postponed.) AFENDRICH a Fine Cigar SAGUE i e ine; Carl-| Kaufman, Ruagher and THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE lho save his life, but today it was | said ete operation had been post- poned. |Berlenbach Says Wife Jnsists He Continue Fights New York, April nbach, former. light: heawy- ht champion, who is. on his: honeymoon, says he is going back ing at the behest of the} ies of his family. Not only his bride, but his mother: and sister, too, want him to go back to boxing. “I don’t want him to retire with the s a of a knockout attached to his last fight,” Paul’s mother told Humbert Fugazy, promoter, who ex- t pects to have Paul fighting again| Will Celebrate 51 Years in) some time in July, ; Baseball, When Team Plays at Home Tomorrow ‘LARGER PARK: TS FINISHED BY COMISKEY Has the batsman at any time} ver had four strikes? | What have been the changes/ lative to called balls? 3. When was the present pitching | rubber introduced? 4. When was the pitching distance made the present regulation 60 feet. | 5. When was it made a rule that! first without throwing 60,000. at 17 5. professional, feinting to si was a balk? e| THIS TE IT r and| 1, In 1887 four strikes were re- The! quired to retire a batsman, but this o Dubuque, Towa,| rule was in vogue only one season. first base-| 2. In 1880 the ball rule was] cover} changed from nine to eight. The) not) following season it was cut to-seven.| foot In 1884, six balls entitled the bats-) man to first. In 1888 it was five.! there and he graduated; The following year it was cut to Browns, winning four! four where it has remained ever! One year with: since, in 3. During the season of 1893, 4. The same year. ‘sing such deception on a base- k in 1899. was with one "the Brotherh H with th Boston, April 19.—{)—More run-| han have ever essayed the \s grind from Hopkinton to Boston crowded the field today for tHe 31st renewal of the Boston Ath- letic association’s annual marathon, Adis $909,080 Imp ements i e added $900,000 to the! increasing the — seating) with double decked stands| around the entire field except a tiny 19.—@)—Pauli ' T° “f had indigestion so bad 1 was| pwhieh this year carries with it the American title. One hundred -and ninety-five as- irants from Johnny Miles, Nova otian star Who captured the race last y and Clarence De Mar, four- time victor, down to a host of vir-. tually unknown but determined plodders, awaited . the - bark of the Starter’s gun at noon. in any previous competition, the course which was recently given scientific survey, is exactly 26 miles and yards, PERSSON sirsereer reac MeN i Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) Los Angeles—Bud Taylor, Terre Haute, Ind, knocked out Young Na-|the men again. tionalista, Filipino (6). George God- Longer this year by 176 yards than| | 'Barbara Register, Daughter of Mrs. Mary J. Register, For Herself at Nerth Da- kota. University—Training Helps Her in Studies — North Dakota coeds have beaten Great athletic stars have come into the limelight at frey knocked out Leon’ Chevalier, Oakland (4). Tulsa—Warnie Smith, Bartlesville, knocked out Floyd Bowers, lowa (3). Pittsburgh—Cuddy De Keesport, (10). Marco, Me- | eat Jack Zivic, New York Harry Harris, Bellaire, Ohio, Buftalo—Billy (Young) Stribling.) Atlanta, beat Benny Ross, Buffalo| (10). (Jimmy Slattery, Buffalo, bent! w Chester, Philadelphia (6). { Rochester, N. Columbus, ’ beat Rochester (6). Phil O'Dowd, Mike Marcells, Milwaukee—Billy Bortfield, Mil- waukee, knocked out Eddie Johnson, La Crosse (4), Tortono— Newsboy Brown, New! York, defeated Alex Burlie, Canadian flyweight cNampion (10). | Newark, lyn, knocke ark (1), J—Joe Glick, Broo! ‘out Bobby Jones, New- _—— | Fights Tonight | Minneapolis — Tiny Herman v: Otto Von Porat! (oy, : Wilkes Barre — Johnny Risko vs.| Romero Rojas (10), : , Even Rice Hurt | Girl’s Stomach | afraid to eat even rice. done me so much good that now J} eat anything.”—-Ardenia Howard Adlerika relieves stomach gas nid sourness in TEN minutes. Acting on BOTH upper and lower bowel, it re-| moves old waste matter you never! thought was in your system. Let Ad-| lerika give your stomach and bowels a REAL cleansing and see how much| better you will feel. It will surprise you! J. Hutchinson, druggist —Adv.| Adlerika has ction of unroofed bleachers in cen-| rfield. For many Comiskey’s health} been a matter of concern but two | rs of outdoor life have made him| in a vigorous figure in the con-| t of his club, He is 68 years i'Tea Baron Wants to See Babe Ruth ,| Deliver Home Run 3 fork, April 19.—4)—Sir Lipton is determined vo see th hit a home run. fi ing! sportsman Yankee-Red Sox game Babe hit nothing but Mr. Sir terday but EI 0 0} is when going this?” quired today. “No one to tell me, so I can e is nothing for me to myself comfortable in the Stadium and stay there until the big event happens. “] understand that Mr: Ruth de- livered one of his stgpendous, awe- inspiring blows on F¥idays Had he p| let, me know that he contemplated such a thing T'would have been there | arto regret tiat\ Twas not | ja : Loss of Petty Hampers Robins y York, April 19—()—Brook- Robins, playing in hard luck the cellar in their ed the hardest s of Jess Retty, one to know Ruth Thomas has been ee that the >| do but is blow of all in the l through appendicitis. : tow long the veteran southpaw, the * ver Fox” of Wilbert Robin- son's hurling staff, will be kept out of the game could not be stated posi- tively tday by surgeons at the jmaritan hospital, Brooklyn, where taken yesterday when first it, was thought an imme- | diate operation would be necessary finds its “BISMARCK GROCERY CO., Distributor Bismarck, N. D, preference choice i ¥ tae he Say ead gas. e : PRESENT-DAY taste singles Camel as its ideal cigarette. This age ds 'itie most exacting ever’'inown and it rates Camel first. Camel taste and many a college, and won praise for their activities in one sport or an- other, But the University of North Dakota, where lately a feminine re- bellion put coeds in many offices hitherto held by men, today laid claim to a girl who beaten any, male college star by starring in not! one sport, but six—who at the same| beat Hugh Haggerty, Pittsburgh (6).| time is a successful student, busy/ eral discussion in the United States in campus. activities, and altogether | North Dakota’s most representative coed, Many a behemoth ‘of the gridiron has had to be dragged through math and Engtish lit. But Miss Barbara Register of B: daughter of Mrs. Mary Reg 406 Second street, junior in the col- lege of liberal arts, ranks high in her studies, was on the women’s | athletic association board of\ control in 1925 and 1526 and now is secre- tary-treasurer, is an Alpha Chi Ome- ga sorority member, and is busy in many other school activities, They called her a tomboy when she was _a little girl. They don’t any more. For Barbtra points to early tomboyishness as the foundation for her physical development which has put her in a state of health and! vitality far ahead of most coeds. yAtd 80 far her record reads like | ris: Member of the varsity coed hockey team in 1925, 1926 and 1927; mem- ber of the champion class hockey teams in 1925, 1926 and 1927; | three 1926. | Member of the champion class coed | basketball team and coed varsity basketball team in 1925, 1926 and 7. Member of the coed class track | team in 1925 and 1926, and ready to make a strong bid for track honors} gain this year. A tennis player in ‘1926 and 1926 and runnerup in the contest for ‘the campus coed title last year. A basketball player for three years, mémber of the coed champion basketball team in her sophomore year, and member of the varsity coed basketball team in 1926. A class volleyball player in 1925, yeats, and' hockey manager in} Has. Made Many Records) | statement from 2 German professor rp IE 1926 and, 1927, and membet-of the| vargity ‘volleyballteam ‘in 1826. ° | Outside of that, Miss Register is| not active in sports. But she is| ctive in (the classroom. Physical | training, helps her in. her, studies, she says, and clean living ‘and regu- lar habits have helped her in her| physical training. And she’s having] a lot of fun. Miss Register also works for her room and board. Chrysler Officials Say Women Drivers As Careful as Men Are women drivers less careful than men? Do they get into: more accidents while at the wheels of au- tomobiles? The question has been under gen- recently because of a widely reported that in his experience women were more liable to automobile collisions than men. Officials at the Chrysler Corpora- "TUESDAY, [BISMARCK GIRL FINDS TIME TO STAR _INSIX SPORTS AND KEEP UP STUDIES a 5 APRIL 19, 19 ’ tion factories are on the side of women in matter. , “From all the reports that re us about performance of our cars’ the hands of their owners—and get a great many of them—there’ only one answer possible from ‘a point of view to such a questio said J. W. Frager, sales mannger the Chrysier Salés Corporation, “8 far as Chrysler drivers are co cerned, women do not meet with ao disproportionately great number aceidents, ‘ “The reason is plain to our mind: | It is found in the exceptional drivin| characteristics of the in sits unusual abilit away and quick stopping. “Phere are two main causes for au tomobile aecidents — one is that a driver can not get out of the way o something that threatens to hit his! car, the other is that a driver cannot stép quickly enough to avoid hitting something or some person with his car. “If you have a car that can both start and stop quickly you will neces- rily escape a very latge number of accidents. And it it these quali- ties of speedy acceleration on the one-hand and quick an ositive stopping on the other that gives as- ’, sured ability te keep out of accidénts to Chrysler drivers, and especially to women Chrysler drivers because of the exceptionally easy operation of the eontrols which govern starting and stopping operations.” — Editor's. Note: This is the 12th chapter in the story of a former doughboy whois revisit- ing France as an advance guard of the “Second AE F. Hill 204 is over there in the dis- tance—the gravestones in the ceme- tery at Bouresches are shattered—a| group of villagers are working at the! road a French peasant has a straw) aS representative coed in hockey in all| stack in a field—and Myre dines on t j straw stack is a scarecrow — to frighten away the birds — and the| scarecrow is made of an American army blouse and a German helmet! Cyclists are pedaling up the| hills, over the roads where mata icans crept in their slow but re-| lentless advance — a woman walks; along with an umbrella—the church at Bouresches has never been re- built—it * apul ‘new signboards have replaced those which were de- stroyed—“Vaux 2K7"—the automo- bile coasts swiftly down the Avenue de Paris and through the avenue of trees past the one factory of the town into Chateau Thierry again. Out on the other side through Brasles, Mont St. Pere, ie wt! out fragt leiisb teden‘the ibboicdse: to! batcos grown. They lead to supreme jou'll of goodness than in this favorite cigarette. ‘Your own enjoyment will amddern’ smokers. "To know how mild and mellow the guality cigarette can really be— “Have a Camel!” eet pronoun =t — pam x¢Back PRIVATE f FRANCE 9 Charteves | sf s back, to Jaulgonne. Jaulgonne is on above that famous turn in the Marne—“Jaulgonne Bend” where the 38th U. S. Infantry repelled the German: In this little theater at the neck ‘of the Surmelin Valley there was, in 1918, one of the great- est conflicts of all tine. But the evidences have all been erased. A beautiful new. concrete+ bridge spans ‘the river, Coming | Tepair of a house in Vaux—along the| up the stream there's a huge barge, towed by two mules driven along the tow path by a young girl. The elderly skipper of the barge drops his mast to go under the structure. His wife, wearing a black bonnet and apron, handles the tiller. Slowly, at searcely more than a snail's pace, the clumsy craft slides upstream and fround the Jaulgonne Bend. : And in the lowland over there Colonel McAlexander (The Rock of the Surmetin Valley) stood with the right flank of his 38th fantry exposed—to win the epie bat- tle of the war. The barge moves on, the mules protesting against the girl driver's switehings. That battle was in 1918, TOMORROW: Sunday in Mont it. Pere.