Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “Duckie Guidas, Firs t-rat DEALERS ENTERING EVIMMIE CLUB DEALERS ENTERING ! FACES GRAYS [pourra auto SHOW added feature of the profession- al auto racing program at the | « Steele's Record of Seven Wins; tT > Bismarck fair grounds \ | | - T Consecutive Prompted Grays “| to Meet Them Wednesday, July 4, it is now al- mest certain that every agency =P in the city will be represented ae The Me hi. Gil . ‘ aes The M. B. Gilman company 8 DICKERS WITH GIANTS) has nominated a Dodge Victory | brougham and a Senior sport sedan. Miss Betty Lofthouse | will drive the brougham, while | Miss Louise Keller will pilot the | a< © Local Management Anxious to! ) Arrange Caliber Games for sedan, ‘ ; The drivers have not an- 2 Gray Spectators nounced the names of those who t will ride with them in the pa: | S Bismarck will have a new catcher| "de. A for next Sunday’s game. The management of the G has just signed Duckie = I the rest of the se @ caught for Bisw 8 ago, will be the best £ North Dak eil Churchill a He is ne. only a good catcher, but | “=| APPROACHING 5 a ee is playin:, with. the /St- Louis Cards, Winning 21 of ¢) Streator, Ill, team now, but has'| 27, Whip Reds in 11-Inning Tussle club in Last romised local baseball beads that | she will be here Sund s:_ In an effort to > e the fans | who were disappointed with the, e@ Steele game Sunday, Churchill has p atranged a game between J town and Bisma.ck here (By The Associated Press) a A second division berth looms for +ithe Cincinnati Reds unless Jack | “41 The game displaces the |Hendricks can pull his faltering | t]Zame. Jamestown ‘olds two wins| nen” ae 3 ¢. over Bismarck, one at Jamestown 5|CTeW together within the next few iS 1. t} to 3 and the other here in ten innin; 18 to 2. | ~G Steele was given a game only be- ¢ cause of its good record ‘+f re la @ week. They had won seven straight | ; R games, including a 3 t 's that laid low several regu- Jamestown. Their showing was} Jars, and then ran into a slump in <n particularly poor Sunday because |the most unlikely place in the cir- r their signed pitcher failed tu arrive | oy t—Philadelphia. Since that time a from Fargo. Their challenge had to|they have lost 10 games in 12 starts b be accepted under the circumstances! and today were only three points to and their record seemed to insure|the good of the fifth place Brooklyn » nthe Bismarck management against | Robins, p the poor game. Neil s: To bring sti!i better baseball into Hi Bismarck this seas, Neil kk ering for a double-header The Reds atonal le: went east leading the ue parade a few weeks | aged to hold up during | of the eastern invasion despite Lose to Cardinals The Reds lost ground they ill could a yesterday when the -|Cardinal steam-roller crunched its | vay to a 5 to 2 triumph in 11 in- The steam roller was a bit etting into operation, mainly e Eppa Jephtha Rixey, elon- gated left-hander of the Reds, was having one of his periodical’ good | da He pitched on even terms with Jess Haines until the 11th when the storm broke. Jim Bot- » mainspring of the Cardinal started the rally with his rd double of the season. Soon the | bases were filled and Chick Hafey | did a Frank Merriwell with a sack-cleaning triple, scoring himself when Val Picinich let the throw-in c¢ hold wins over every team in rth t| Dakota. They won the Wahpeton- o Breckenridge state baseball tourna- ‘JT ment ast year. If they sign to come sto Bismarc! will be their first fitrip into this section of the state. | IGHT; H roll through his legs. Cincinnati 5b a, aa tek got one of these four runs back in - It AME Mancini, their half but it did nothing more 2 London, (15 than prove that Cincinnati's head ; [may be bloody but still unbowed. F echoston Roberto Roberti, incidentally it’ was the Cardinal's 4 outpointed King Solomon, | »1<¢ victory in their last 27 games. | Panama, (10). t f — Giants Now Second & _New York—Jimmie Sullivan, While the Chicago Cubs and @ Florida, technically knocked out | Pittsburgh Pirates were idle, the © Jimmy Royal, New York, (1). |New York Giants moved into’ un- Z Al de Cruz, Philippines, beat {disputed possession of second place £ Simmie Dyett, New York, (4). | with a double win over the Phils, 12| £ Pony Ligouri, Des Moines. Ta, to 4 and 8 to 2. Larry Benton | beat Joe Impeletto, New York, | chalked up his 12th victory in 15 t . starts, all complete games, in the | first. contest. Bill Walker, Denver b Toronto — Johnny McCoy, | southpaw, was an easy victor in the ¢} California, defeated Frency Be- nightcap. Freddie. Lindstrom got i. a ee ae ; ieee nine hits in 11 Bins to the plate. i Syracuse, lefea The Dodgers hit Ben Cantwe' T George Fifield, Toronto, (6). | hard and, chalked up theit fourth ——. |straight victorv at the expense of 4 Dayton, O.—Eddie Anderson, the Boston Braves, 9 to 3 Doug B ago, and Mike Dundee, | MeWeeny pitched a strong game for Rock Island, Ill, drew, (12). the Robins granting seven hits. Del = Bissonette w ‘ into a tie with Bet- pe Akton 0.—Gorilla Jones, Ak- tomley for home run leadership ; fom, won over Billy Algers, New with his 15th of the year. Howard =, York, (10), | Jack Rose, Akron, | Freigau changed from a Robin to a defeated Monk Eller, Pitts- Brave before the game via the , burgh, (6). waiver raute. S _ Little Rock, Ark. — Jimmy | Senators Trim Athletics E Watts, Atlanta, outpointed | The Washington Senators, now a Chisenros, Mexico, (10). playing the kind of baseball that had been expected of them, knocked —® off the Philadelphia Athletics twice Yesterday’s Games | |at the capital, 3 to 2 and 7 to 2. @ | Washington's 15 victories in its last | 21 games have brought the Senators from near the cellar to fourth place E/in the standing. Braxton and Brown, both left handers, held the |Athletics helpless in both games. Braxton gave up seven hits and Brown but three. The A’s double jreverse enabled the idle Yankees to |stretch their American league lead eo Pi NATIONAL LEAGUE R oH leWeeny and Henlinc; Cantwell, ‘R. Smith and Taylor, Spohrer. First Game 9 % an RH _ E|to nine and a half games, 2 an 2 abe Tigers again moved into the 4 9 3!cellar while Chicago was moving out |B, Benton and Hogan; Walsh, Sweet-| when the Sox battered out an 8 to 6 i fae, Willoughby, Miller and Schulte, victory at Detroit. Moe Berg led the Sox attack with two singles and a double. Morgan’s home run, one of five hit during the game, gave the Cleve- land Indians a 7 to 4 win over the Browns at St. Louis. Heinie Manush hit twice for the circuit. Lou Blue and Luke Sewell got one apiece. Second Game R H York ........ 8 11 phia rea falker and O'Farrell; Pruett, MeGraw, Sweetland and Lerianvoza- Yiuicko. — Garland oo... 7 # =|Spotlight Aimed at brent aE Bexdil; Cttma’| Women at Wimbledon “Others not scheduled. . Wimbledon, England, June 26.— ¢ ere a the ae of ied As rest al imbledon today in pla: 2” AMERICAN ASSOCIATION _| for the English tennis tie. Hen, 4 » @ H Wills, who holds the title, will not 2| make her debut until tomorrow, hav- 7 12 : 3 10 Ol ing drawn a bye into the third and McMenemy; Polli, pe Ee ig singe Gaston. Senorita Elia de Alvarez, who reached the finals last year, was H E| matched against Mrs. Randolph Ly- il 0} cett of England, Mrs. Molla Mal- il 2} lory of New York, against Miss L. 5 Benton, Williams | Bickerton. No women will farwick. the center court until. ‘allowing me NCY OUTFIT. (CECIL PARKS 70 FIGHT REDSKIN ON JULY 2 CARD Fort Lincoin Star Matched With Indian Tommie Short, Promoter Announces Announcement that Cecil Parks, Fort Lincoln middleweight, will meet Indian Tommie Short, Fe in an eight-round battle on the July 2 card at the Rex theatre was made today by Oscar Schneider. Battling Cecil, who Rogers and Hartself of + considered one of the b weights at the ar ¢ one of the headline: sincoln post smoker gram. K. O. M Yates, | jx hard time keeping track of the S|the platter in a Lion Tamers Tame Rotary Hubs, Now Lead Junior Loop Taking Bismarck’s and Mandan’s grown-up teams as examples, the Lion Tamers last night-trounced the | Rotary Hubs 38 to 9. This gave them undisputed lead jn the American jLegion junior baseball league. Kiessel, pitching for the Lions, held the Rotary sluggers at bay, allowing them only nine runs in the five innings that were played be- {fore it became too dark to continue. Green caught him, Bahmer, Enge and Mills could not |keep the winners from taming the ne’ to be their wont. Johnson was the Rotary catcher, John A. Larson and F. A. Lahr, the only spectators at the game, had runs as the batters streamed across ne that seemed never to end, John Karasiewicz, ath- letic director of the post, said today. The Legion Cubs and the Kiwanis Boosters, both ¢” whom los: their | first games, expect to put up a great battle to keep out of the cellar when they meet tonight at 6:30 o'clock at the city ball park. The standing of the teams: Lion Tamers . Rotary Hubs Kiwanis Boosters |Legion Cubs .. Lisbon Golf Fans Desire Clubhouse Lisbon, N. D., June 26.—(AP)— Plenty of toufnaments anrd contests | staged by the Hillside Golf club here is helping to increase interest in the ancient game among Lisbon resi- dents. In addition to the annual club open tournament, at which the local cham- pion is selected, the list of contests includes handicap, rotation, and Scotch foursome tournaments. The course has sand greens, and the 50 members of the club have am- bitions to ‘acquire a clubhouse in the near future. It was organ- ized in 1922, of the square to meet Lee Ca Wildcat, in the McLean is considered the pr champion at the army pos. Hi boxers in the United St when he was serving in that bra In a sensational mate. he lic Sam Hammar, colored Pacific coast boxer, in three rounds at San Fran- cisco. Cavanaugh, who used to live in Billings, Mont., has moved to Bis- marck and i: to resume | ing activities professionally. He ha lost close decisions to Herman Ratz- laff and Johnny Compton, Minot slammers, and enjoys a reputation as a rugged fighter out in the Mon- tana city. The card will include five or’ six good matches, the promoter said, and it will be just as good as the last card, in which Billy Petrolle kayoed Rusty Jones in the fourth round of a headline bout here Indians Beat Brews and Remain at Head (By The Associated Press) 'Bruno Betzel’s Indianapeli: dians, aided by some heavy work by Spencer and Layne, still topped the American association flag race by a game and If today, The Indianapolis club defeated Co- lumbus, 5 to 2, yesterd to hold its advantage. encer hit a home run and Layne tripled and got two singles. ukee, runner-up so far, re- mained close behind by downing St. Paul, 7 to Jonnard of the Brew- ers struck out eight men «nd con- tributed a single to the Milwaukee cause. A home run in the third inning, with bases loaded, by Moore supplied the punch that enabled to defeat Minneapoli: Toledo climbed into place with the. Sai Louisville, 8 to ting duel Turpie Favored to Win Women’s Meet Minneapolis, June 26,—(?)—With a medal round of 84 to her credit, Miss Marion Turpie of New Orleans, entered her first match play today in the women's trans-al ippi golf tournament at Minikahda club as one of the favorites. Her score in the qualifying round yesterday was one stroke over wom- an’s par at Minikahda and was sev- en better than turned in by the champion, Mrs. Miriam Burns Horn of Kansas City, who had a card of 91 to finish third. Miss Turpie drew Mrs. F. N. Davis of St. Paul, in match play _ toda: Mrs, Davis shot 105 yesterday. Mrs. Horn’s opponent was Mrs. M. Whitt- mer of Minneapolis, whose qualify- ing score was 105. Mrs. O. S. Hill of Kansas City, north and south titleholder, finished second yesterday with 90, and she was paired with Mrs. R. W. Little of Minneapolis, who had 105, Match play is at 18 holes each day except for the finals Saturday, when 36 will be played. ROMAN WINS TITLE Rome, June 26.—/P)—Shades of Julius Caesar! Another Roman has conquered all Europe. Jacovacci of Rome is now the continent's cham- pion middleweight fighter. Sweet News to Robby Overton Tremper, former Penn star and now owned by the Brook- lyn club, is burning up the Sally League this season, according to Nap Rucker, Robin scout. Not a Very Nice Start The first Pennsylvania crew de- veloped by Rusty Callow, who gained his fame with University of Washington championship crews, finished last this year in the annual Poughkeepsie Regatta. Some Important Lecturers ,Coach Hawley of Dartmouth, Line Coach Dunne at Harvard and Coach Steffen of Carnegie Tech are going to give lectures at the Northwestern summer coaching school _in August. Year <a The Republicans or ~ or what 7 ee eae Miss Betty Nuthall, youthful Eng- "Winters and Ferrell; Yde| lish star, scratched her entry to of Association Row}: TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1998 . DID YOU KNOW THAT— Jack Hendricks says the Reds are doing so well because they have raat esseece The jani- tor at Notre Dame might want to know where they got him Huggins says Henry be a star pitcher it he had control, . . And if Tunney could fight? . . Stran- gler Lewis wants $150,000 to rassle Steinke. . . The Brooklyn st.:rt their games at 3:20, . . . And the Brook- lyn fans yell at Petty: “What time are you going to bed to- night, Jess?” . .-. It cost Jess $1200 for staying out one night in Chicago. Jack Slattery was the first manag- erial casualty of 1928... . nd .they say Moriarty an Schalk have a chance to be next oe die Farrell has sinus trouble like Sisler. . . Jack Kearns says Harry Greb or Soldier Bartfield could have licked Dempsey in his best day se ee tee) is going to re- tire after the Heeney fight . . . Neither do I. PAUL COOK IS GOLF TITLIST \ — Youthful Bismarck Star Cops Western North Dakota and East Montana Meet Paul Cook, Bismarck’s 18-year-old smashing golfer, won the fourth an- nual Western North Dakota and Eastern Montana golf ¢ urr.zment at Dickinson_yesterday afternoon. He defeated Bill Kostelecky, Dickinson, |four up and three to play, in the | final match. The champion was presented with a silver cup emblematic of winning the championship, a silver casserole |for winning the approaching and | putting contest, and a sweater and | Solf socks for placing second in the | qualifying round with a 79. Phil Meyer, Bismarck, was pre- | sented with a leather hatbox for | winning the first flight, and A. W. e Catcher, Signed by Bismarck Manager Mundy won a driving club for taking low score in his flight. Thorberg, another local man, was beate: in the final match of his flight. Cook was forced to defeat four Dickinson men to win. In the first round he took Littig into camp, eight up and seven to play. John Koste- lecky fell second, seven up and six to play. Dr. Ringles was victim No. 3, three and two. About 60 golfers from Bismarck, Fargo, Valley City, New England, N. D., and Miles City, Wibeaux and Glendive, Mont., entered the tourney. Dr. Stangbye, New England, was medalist with a 76, Cook and Sor- lien, formerly of Bismarck but now of Fargo, trailing with 79 and 80, respectively. Sorlein was defeated in the semi-final match by Bill Kos- telecky. He Sees Only Georgetown Jack Mara, one of the best schoolboy athletes in New York City, announced recently that he would attend Georgetown ‘this fall. He played three sports, excluding football, which was barred at his school. “Lucky Strikes, I find, thrill the taste without irritating the throat. Since I changed to Lucky Strikes several years ago, upon the suggestion of my doctor, I no longer like raw tobaccos.” No wonder more and more doctors—20,679 to be exact— ‘approve the toasting process. \ 90 4 , ‘ i ! \ oa | e ; | ; ‘ we =————