The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 10, 1931, Page 6

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Detroit SENATORS CLOSE TO LOOP-LEADING | PHILADELPHIANS Connie Mack’s Team Defeats, Tigers 12-3 by Scoring 10 Runs in Two Innings KLEIN POUNDS OUT HOMER} New York Giants Take Second Place Away From Chicago Cubs With 10-2 Triumph (By The Associated Press) The plignt of the Detroit Tigers has become a serious matter to fol-/ lowers of the team. j Due largely to injuries to Dale! Alexander and Charley Gehringer, | the Tigers fave lost the greatest part of their batting punch and the work of the rest of the team has suffered accordingly. Wednesday they had dropped to last place in the American League standing with a record of 20 defeats in their last 23 games. Bucky Harris, who had not played as a regular since he came to Detroit. even went into the lineup himself at second base in one of his numerous shakeups and the Tigers led up to the seventh inning, Then young Tom Bridges weakened badly and the Tig- ers committed four errors. As a re- sult, the Athletics scored 10 runs in two innings to win 12 to 3. The victory did not increase Phil- adelphia’s margin of leadership, how- ever, for Washington defeated Chi- cago 9 to 3. The other two American League games were rained out. The Cincinnati Reds, who have been making a determined effort to climb out of the National League cel- Jar, made is six victories in their last seven games Wednesday by trouncing the Boston Braves 7 to 2. | The New York Giants accomplish- | ed the day's big killing as they took |“ second place away from the Chicago | ;; Cubs with a 10 to 2 triumph, going a full game ahead of their rivals. The Jeague leading St. Louis Cardinals held their 414 game margin with an 8 to 5 victory over Brooklyn. Philadelphia exchanged places with Pittsburgh i the standing, going in- to sixth with a 7 to 3 victory. Chuck Klein's 14th home run of the season Drought about the downfall of Ervin Brame. Kels Shut Out Saint Club 4-0 Ken Penner, Veteran Louisville | Right-Hander, Allows St. Paul Five Hits Louisville, June 10.—(P—Ken Pen ner, an Louisville right let ul down with five shut 4too RI St. Ps 600 006—0 Louisvill 160 03000x—4 9 11 Munn Penner and "Thompson. dy Athletics Trim Tiger Nine 12-3) Senators Defeat Chicago 9-3 to} Sweep Four-Game Series Against White Sox June 10,—-(P)—Aided arris, the De- threat to to sweep ep their st the White Sox 010 010—3 1 014 01x—9 19 1 te; Crowder and No other games p! Chuck Klein Wins Tilt for Phillies yed, rain, Giants Wallop Cubs 10-2; Cin- cinnati Gets Third Victory Over Boston Pittsburgh, June Klein, hitting his season, won a ball game for Phila- delphia over the Pittsburgh Pirat eg ea RH. E. Philadelphia .....100030 021-7 9° 6 Pittsburgh .°...'000 210 000—3 9 1 Dudley, Watt, J. Elliott and Davis; Brame and Grace, Phillips, 10.—()}—Chuck 14th homer of the GIANTS WALLOP CUBS Chicago—The New York Giants pounded their way back into second Place in the National league, gath- ering 18 hits to defeat the Cubs, to 2. R. HE. New York ......240010111—10 18 0 Chicago . +010 000010-— 2°98 0 Morrell Hogan; Sweetland, and Baecht, Teachout und Hartnett. ) two innings. ‘Expects Golfers | Tigers Hard-Hit by I Senator Nine Wins Little Four Opener in Tuesday Tilt | LITTLE FOUR LEAGUE Standing Won Lost Petg. | Senato! 1 01.000] Tigers L 0 1.000 | Indians Oe 4 ‘000 | Yankees "| ih “000 Bascball swung into action in the | Little Four junior baseball | ‘Tuesday with the Senators defeating | the Yankees 18-17 and the Tigers! credited with a victory over the In- | dians by default. Snyder, hurling for the Senators, allowed eight hits in seven innings, and struck out nine men. Ibach, who | started on the mound for the con-j quered Yanks, allowed three hits in| He struck out three men in the two innings. Peterson, | who replaced Tbach in the third in-| ning, allowed two hits in five innings | and struck out seven men. | Although victorious, the Senators | committed nine errors while the | Yankees were guilty of seven. | The Yankees grabbed the first run in the first inning, but the Senators | clouted in eight runs in the second | to the Yankees one. Playing supe-| rior ball, the Yankees made five more | runs in the third inning while hold- ing their opponents scoreless. In the fourth inning, the Yankees ; got four more runs to the Senators | two, The Yankees rallied in the fifth | and secured another five runs, but were held scoreless while the Sen- ators knocked in six rui In the | seventh inning with the count tied | the Yankees scored one run in their | half, but the Senators pounded in two runs in the last of the seventh to win the first contest played in the Little | Four league. hit roa FB 60 0 Of to Protest Ball’ Evans Believes New Balloon- Type Ball Will Bother in Northern Play Chicago, June 10—(\—Charles! “Chil ans of Chicago, low score record holder for the national open championship, believes there will be | a thunderous ery of protest over the new golf ball when the “big shots” try the northe:n courses. “Out on the Pacific Coast and down | south, the oys generally agreed the | new ball was all right,” Evans said, | “but wait until they get up north here and battle the stiff courses and} the stiff winds. They'll squeal plenty. | They'll not be within several strokes of their games with the new ball.” Al Espinosa, Chicago star, who topped the qualifying round in the Chicago district with a sizzling 135, ify. one irons,” Espinosa warned. will need em plenty.” Tigers Credited With Victory] Over Indians by Default |, league | | ome: Rabbit Poses _ Rabbit Maranville, diminutive big shot of the Boston Braves infield, never passes up a chance to show up another ballplayer. That's why he picked in big Buzz Arlett, above rear, | giant Phillies outfielder and a rookie | at 33. The Rabbit is having one of his best years, which is a big reason why the Braves are near the top in the National league. And Arlett is living up to advance notice with his bombastic hitting for the Shotton- men. Louisville Close on Saints’ Heels Colonels Within One-Half Game of League-Leading St. Paul Aggregation Chicago, June 10.—.P}—Louisville’s Colonels were camping on St. Paul's doorstep once more Wednesday in the American Association fight. In the of a current five-game series to ‘ecide temporary possession of first place, the Colonels Wednes- day dropped the Saints, 4 to 0, and crept up io within one-half game of the top position, Ken Penner hurled the opener for tie Colonels and in his own backyard was invincible, yield- ing but five scattered hits. The Louisville-St. Paul game was the only game on the schedule Wed- nesday. Plan to Reorganize Dempsey’s Casino San Diego, Calif. June 10—(7)— Jack Dempsey is planning reorgan- zation of Playa, Ensenda hotel and losses soon after opening last year. The former ring champion flew agreed with Evans, who failed to qual- from Reno, Nevada, where ive has: which he was president. AMERICAN LEA delphia . Louis’. Boston . Detroit < | Pittsburgh | Cincinnati m Philadelp Washington, 9; ‘Chicago, 3. Lengue Pittsburgh, 3, St. Louis, 8; Brooklyn, Amert Louisville, |Grove Credited | Slump of Vosmik: | Cleveland's Outstanding 1931 Rookie Is Regaining Hit- ting Eye of Early Play New York, June 10.—(P)—Joe Vos- |mik, just about the classiest rookie of ithe 1931 season, has Lefty Grove to jthank for pulling him out of a bat- son in the majors. jspring from a background of twao| years in slow minor league company and a boyhood spent on the Cleve- ;land sandlots. For weeks the Amer- ican League's crack pitchers couldn't ‘get him out. jhe hit it for distance. He was the | spring sensation, another Ty Cobb, a |.400 hitter plus. | “Then one day,” says Joe, couldn’t hit a thing. I couldn't fol- low curves and I couldn't hit a fast; fone if they laid it right on my bat.; 'I was in a terrible slump. { ras | Soldiers Rally in Ninth Inning With Ending Bat | ; more than five hits. \ting slump a few weeks ago that(and sixth mning while their oppon- wos threatening to ruin his first sea-/ents grabbed three runs but in the Joe came up to Cleveland this|ctew brougat in three more runs. CLEANERS DEFEAT SOLDIER TEN 13-8 IN TUESDAY GAME and Pound Out Four Runs But Fall Short NEIBAUER IS EFFECTIVE Company A Brings in First Run of Tilt; McPhee, Wetch, Warner Get Triples STANDINGS Won Lost Petg. 857 857 571 -286 -250 167 Northwestern Bell G. P. Eat Shop ... Capital Laundry O. H. Will Company A Bismarck Dai HBA Cr ere Continuing their winning streak of the week, the Capital Laundry d-ball team defeated the Company A-squad 13-8 at the municipal diamond in the only kittenball contest played Tues- i day night. Monday night the Cleaners disposed of the Northwestern Bell crew 8-7 in what was tne Linesmen’s first defeat | this season. The Cleaners have risen from fifth position in the league to third. Although rallying in the last inn- ing, when they pounded in four runs, the Soldiers fell short of victory by} six runs. Effective hurling by Nei-j bauer kept the Soldiers from getting Neibauer struck out 10 men quring the seven innings of the contest. Four of the Caynpany A crew were walked by Neibauer in the early innings. The Company A ten got the first run of the game in the first inning, |but in the next three, the Cleaners ; Pounded in i0 runs while holding their opponents scoreless, The Clean- ers were heid scoreless in the fifth first half of the seventh the Laundry Papacek, hurling for the Soldiers He hit everything and’ allowed seven hits in five innings, and he was replaced by Hedstrom, who permitted three hits in the sixth and seventh frames. Papacek fanned one man und Hedstrom struck out two. McPhee and Wetch of the Cleaners got three-baggers during the tilt and 6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 ———————— njuries Among Veterans in Lineup =—— (CAPITAL LAUNDRY D-BALL TEAM CONTINUES WINNING STREAK MCRARY AFTER THIRD TITLE IN TRANSMISSISSIPPI MEET Strong Field Expected to Com- pete in Annual Tourney at Minneapolis June 15-22 Minneapolis, June 10—(#)—A strong field of middle western amateurs, including three former champions and title-winners in many state meets, will compete in the Trans- Mississippi golf tournament on the rolling fairways of the Golden Val- ley course nere June 15 to 22. Robert McCrary, Des Moines, win- ner of the title in the last two an- nual meets, will be there, hopeful of continuing his effort to duplicate the famous performance of the late Harry G. Legg of Minneapolis, who won the title four successive years and five times in all. Johnny Goodman, Omaha's bid for national golfing honors, who won in 1927, and Arthur Bartlett, Ottumwa, Ia., who triumphed in 1928, also have entered. Emerson Carey Jr. Hutchinson, Kan., who does almost as well in golf as he did waen he captained Cornell's football team, and Emerson Carey Sr., have entered, furnishing the Prospect, nowever remote, of a father- son playoff in the finals. 1 There is a young man from Min- neapolis who has old habitues of Golden Valley speculating, a prod- uct of the host course. He is Pat Sawyer, youngest of a family of fa- mous golfers in this section, winner of the state amateur title last year | and a greatly improved golfer. } He is still a high school boy, but he has shot four and five consecu- tive par rounds over Golden Valley, | which should be enough to win most any meet /f he can duplicate this per- formance in competition. Dickinson Nine Beats Washburn! Correll Allows Losers 10 Hits arid Makes 14 Assists; Mar- tin Fans Seven Men Dickinson, N. D., June 10.—Dickin- son defeatzd the Washburn baseball team 15-7 here. Correll, hurling for the Dickinson nine, allowed 10 hits and made 14 as- sists, Martin, Washburn mounds- man, allowed 13 hits and struck out seven men. Washburn committed 10 errors and Dickinson had three. Washburn will meet the Bismarck Elks at Bismarck Sunday. “The tough thing about a slump,”;;, ‘asino project which closed with | he's hitting .350. He expects to wind | Up the season little under that mark. p explained the big-fisted 185-pound jyoungster, “is that you haven't any; jidea what’s wrong. You feel all right |but you can’t meet the ball. You’ pennant gee to righting the bat and the ball.| }You get worse. When you're hit- jting you don't think about a thing.! | You go right out there and slug. ! i_ “I sat on the bench awhile and then} | Lefty Grove came to town with the) | Athletics. The first two games I bat-j jted against him he blew the ball by) me. I never saw anything like it./ | The only thing I could do was shorten; ‘my swing and punch at the ball. I) {barely pushed the bat into one of his | fireballs and it bounced off the right, ! | field wall for a double. The next ; time I just met it again, another hit. {The slump was over. I've been hit- | ting ever since.” i} | Vosmik, one of the pleasantest) Score | youngsters in baseball, thinks Grove taught him the most important base- | ball lesson he ever learned. He's | meeting the ball every day now and Helene Madison, Seattle, | having gained five since last summer. | “TH? MADOR HAS? ~~ | IN TIMES OF DEPRESSIGN 2 IN AGAIN wti—The Reds made it three gut of four against Boston, winning 7 to 2. Boston , 00 000 011-2" 5 Cincinnati 010 410 10x—7 13 Mons, McAfee and Bool; Frey and Sukeforth, Se WHAT IS THIS HoG-PaX IT SOMETHING You GETS? HE SEEMS,ALL RIGHT, EXCEPT-THAT HE LookS% CRISIS IS REACHED LIKE A SPECKLED TRaUT! ~ AN” HIS APPETITE IS BATTING OVER 300! | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern SUAS why tS CALLED HoG-Pax, IN SLANG !~-THE PATIENT DEVELOPS AN ENORMOUS APPETITE ! — THE s ON THE SIXTH DAY, WHEN HE WILL WANT TO EAT ALL DAY = \F THATS “TH” CASE, HE'S HAD A “ToucH OF HoG-Pax ALL HIS LIFE fl aw i WOULDN*T IT BE IN KEEPING To FILL TH” “TUB uP WitH MuUD,So HE CAM WALLauws world’s | str stablished a residence purportedly to; champion woman swimmer, is much | “They might as well get used to divorce Estelle Taylor, film actress, to) stronger this year than she was last hauling out their spoons and number meet in Tijuana Tuesday with stock-| in the opinion of her coach, Ray “They holders of the Mexican rescrt, of| Daughters. 2 innings; ie 4 uer 10, by Papacek 1, by Hedstrom bases on balls, off P. Nei er 4, off Papacek none, off Hedst none. Umpire, Kelley Simonson, Scorer, Balzer Hum- She weighs 156 pounds, | mel | Ashley Legion Nine er B. Knoll, Warner of the Company A_squad| The box score: | pounded out a three-bagger. Doubles! Washburn (7. HW POA R| were made by Knoll, E. Cervinsid, B.| Mitchell. cf, Pees at Ashmore, Warner and O'Neil. Ripa: 310 0) The box syore: herer, 85 cyt 55 Capital Lawndry nro Ris o 1 210 0 a oe 90 0 0 } 1 o 0 o O11 0 9} « +3 2S 3} ¥ 18 If 000 0 3 V * Ekstrom, If 0000 1) | + MePh F. Wetch, 2b. P. Neibauer, p Totals .. B. AP KR. i 1 eoceus west 2 Register, If 0 1 McDonnell, rf + oo 0 Totals . 9 Capital Company Summar ac a! . Neibauer; nski, Be three-Dase ther; double », Neibauer n 5 ine Trims Napoleon, 36-4 Ashley, N. D., June 10—Led by Stroh, who clouted out six hits in eight times at bat, Ashley's Junior American Legion baseball team de- feated the Napoleon Legion crew 36- 4 here. Ashley slammed out 31 hits and pounded four hurlers from the mound. Straub and Ruemmele, Ashley, each got a home run and four triples. Ashley made 11 runs in the disas- trous third inning. Sunday the Ash- ley Legion tcam will battle Steele, 1930 runner-ups, at Ashley. Maroon’s Field House To Be Completed Soon Chicago, June 10—()—The Univer- sity of Chicago fieldhouse, providihg S$ ROUT ROBINS CARD! St. Louis—Eftective relief pitching and an 18-hit assault on six Brook- dyn piteh« re the Cards an 8-to: over the Sie. —_—_—_—_ E university in Atlanta, which compete in inter-collegiate hes employed six coaches to instruct students for sa RRs will be finished soon. The big structure will flank Stagg field and will have outside measure- ments of 354 by 156 feet. The bas- ketball court will lie along one end instead of in the center, leaving room for an eighth-mile dirt running track. Bartlett gym, a fine structure, but too small to accommodate varsity basketball crowds, will be used as an| 5. intramural sports building when the fieldhouse is put in use. Does Not Want Son To Go to Notre Dame Wichita, Kas. June 10.—(#)—Jesse Harper, new director of athletics at Notre Dame, doesn’t want his son, Mal, to go to college at South Bend. + The boy would be “handicapped” there, his father says, fnd lack the freedom to develop which would be his in another school. Young Harper, a member of the graduating class of 1931 in Wichita high school, probably will enter the University of Kansas. “ | rel: Ist adequate seating facilities for basket- i ball and room for indoor track work,| PLAYING ON A WINDY 3 DAY. Can yow give me any suggestion for playing in a gale? * * * Few golfers enjoy playing on a windy day. A majority blame every little miscue on the wind, whether or not the wind affects their game. The truth is that many of them are panicky before they ever start to play on a windy day. Bobby Jones offers some gord ad- vice for those who encounter stiff winds on the fairways. He suggests that the back swing be curtailed and the ball be hit less viciously. With a short, compact swing, the golfer is less likely to err. In a@ gale the ball must be more accurately struck, for Li pasanaed will be magnified by the wind. One Year Ago Today—Lefty Grove | lost his first game of the season when | the White Sox got to him for a run! in the 11th inning to defeat the A's 7 to 6 Grove appeared as a relief! hurler. | Five Years Ago Today — Young! Stribling wrestled Paul Berlenbach to} ‘one fall in the press row at Yankee | | ‘Tiger Chieftain | Forced to Play _ at Second Base Injuries to Charles Gehringer and Dale Alexander Forced | Harris Into Lineup | Philadelphia, June 10.—(?)—Injur- jes to his infielders has forced Bucky Harris, manager of the Detroit Tigers, to return to active service as a sec- ond baseman and he actually enjoys |the experience. In the spring of 1929 Bucky decided his playing days were over, but twice the Detroit inner works has broken down and the young leader (he’s only 37) has been compelled to direct the |team from second base instead of the | bench. | Bucky broke in against the world ;champion Athletics on Monday, be- }cause he had run out of infielders, Charles Gehringer, his bright star at second being on the hospital list |for the past month with a torn liga- jment in his right shoulder. Only a long rest will fit him for service again. | “I get a lot of fun out of it,” de- |clared Bucky, before boarding a train for Boston, “When I discovered that if the | Tigers suffered any more injuries I j might have to play, I started train- jing. That was three weeks ago and |I got into fair shape. How do I feel? —wWell, the first day I thought four trucks and a coupl€ of express trains had rammed into my back. It’s not | So bad now. I feel a lot easier. | “Gehringer and Alexander are the jpunch of our team. While they are out the Tigers, although they fight jhard, cannot be expected to stop jteams like the Athletics. It’s all we ‘can do when our full strength is on {the field to check them.” The double duties of playing sec- ond and directing the team do not bother Harris. He thinks it’s a lot |easier to manage the team in the jfield than to direct them from the bench, | He fielded faultlessly in two games, ;made a double off Earnshaw Tues- ;day and would have had a single but by Eric McNair. Dale Alexander has just rejoined ithe team after a long layoff due to |@ spike injury. Carnera, Redmond Ready for Fight Primo Is Favorite in Bout at Brooklyn Tonight; Giants to Battle 10 Rounds New York, June 10.—(?)—Weather |Permitting, Primo Carnera and Pat Totals ... SAS a F woh ol covcrsnes re by innings— = 100 020 2 ummary— her, Cor- losing pitcher, Martin; umpires, Wilberding and Chesworth; earned runs, Washburn 4, Dickinson 11;| uck out, by Martin 7, by Correll hits, off Martin 13, off Correll 10; bases on balis, off Martin 2, off Cor- rell none; hit by pitcher, Holtan. three-base hits, Roberts and Heck. two-base hits, Rellly, Matcjeck, Mit- |chell and Schweizer. FE T$ Last IGHT (By the Ansoctated Prean) Boxton—Lou Broulllard, Wor- M: knocked out Paul | dianapolix, knocked out Falegano, Davenport, Ia. (4). Pontiac, 3 W. Va—King Le- iengo, stopped Pat Mc- jon (4). myo AGU (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Ruth, Yankees, .298; Cochrane, Athletics, .386 | Runs—Simmons, Athletics, 44; Bish- op, Athletics, 40. Hits—Cronin, ‘Senators, 743 Combs, Yankees, and Simmons, Athletics, 71 Home ‘runs—-Foxx, ‘Athtetics, "13; | Ruth, Yankees, { apman, Yankees, &, Athletics, won | Senators, won 6) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Hendrick, Reds, .390; Terry, Giants. .3! 65. Runs — Klein, Phillies, 45; Ott, Giants, 39. i Hits—Terry, Glants, 66; Herman, Robins, 64. ‘ Homo runs—lein, Phillies, 14; Ar- lett, Phillies, 10. Siolen bases——Comorosky, Pirates, : Jackson, Giants, and Cuyler, Cubs, 6, Pitchiny -Derringer, Cardinals, won 5, lost 0; n 5, lost 1, Long Wins Sweater For Trick Wardrobe Baton Rouge, La., June 10.—(P)— Governor Huey P. Long has an ad- dition to his wardrobe. Besides a doctor of laws cap and gown, Cleveland Indians baseball uni- form, ‘ Louisiana State university bandmaster uniform, and the famous pajamas, he now has a sweater with a big “L” upon tt. sweater were awarded him by Louis- jana State university's athletic de- [Dartment for services to the school. | The letter and) Stadium but Berlenbach won the judges’ decision to retain his light heavyweight boxing campionshp. Ten Years Ago Today—Harry Heil- mann homered into the left field bleachers with a runner on base in the first inning but was called out for batting out of turn. Bobby Veach, whose turn Heilmann usurped, hit over the right field wall in his first appearance at the plate in the fourth inning. Bismarck Boy Makes Letter at College Frank Walz, Bismarck, distance | runner, is among the freshmen to be | awarded athletic numerals at North ; Dakota State college this spring, ac- | cording to word. received from Fargo. | Besides figuring in the recent vic-! | tory of the Bison frosh over the first | year athletes from the. University of | North Dakota, Walz distinguished! | himself in the spring inter-fraternity | | races, running a closé second to Er- nest Hall, varsity man, in the dis- ; tance events. | Frank, a member of Alpha Sigma | Tau fraternity, is just completing his | year as a freshman in the school of ; engineering at the college. Aberdeen Fighter Hurt in Accident Vancouver, Wash., June 10.—(?)— Leo Lomski, Aberdeen boxer, was; slightly injured Monday when his au- tomobile left the highway a mile south of Woodland and overturned. Mr. and Mrs. Sollie Stoops, of Port- PECTACLES MAY NOI” BE BECOMING BUT « “THEN HELP YOUR Looks: CANARY ARE PALS \ |Redmond, two large heavyweights, | will entertain an expectant crowd in Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, tonight. Ten jvounds, the two behemoths, grossing an aggregate of 510 pounds, will |travel unless one or the other con- nects wtih a finishing punch that ends matters more abruptly. Carnera is six feet seven inches tali and weighs 260 pounds, according to the best available estimates. Red- mond is a mere pigmy of six feet four inches and weighing 250. Car- nera will be the favorite. YEST ST (By The Associated Press) George Earnshaw, Athletics— held Detroit to six hits and hit homer and three singles. Bill Terry, Giants—Drove out two triples, a double and a single against Cubs, Benny Frey, Reds—Held Braves to five hits for 7-to-2 victory, Joe Cronin, Senators — Scored three runs and batted in another in 9-3 victory over White Sox, Allyn Stout, Cardinals—Allowed only one run in last six innings as relief pitcher to insure triumph over Robins. Chuck Klein, Phillies—Hit 14th homer of season with two on base to gain lead over Pirates, eeu hi a Ties | Wrestling Results | o DAY’S Ss . threw George Hill, 9:10; Casey Berger, Texan, and Jim Heslin, a im, Australian, drew, Idaho—Ira Dern, land, his companions, suffered) Lake City, heavy weln! ney bruises, qi Ontapoch, two ‘out of a three falls (Ostapoch first, 19; Dern necond, 7300, and third, tee Pittshurgh—Tiny Roebuck, 247, Nebraska, Ww Vanka Zeles utes, neconds. 194, Lithuania, threw Ab; = key, 195, New Jersey, in 16 min= 7 weconda, tanooza — Jim Lo Greece, defeated John Canada, in 48 minutes. Bengough Shows Old Form for Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wis, June 1 t difference between ie came Yankee stadium and the rickety stands of Morchert Field in Milwau- kee, but it might have been worse, believes Benny Bengough, | Brewer cat whom the Yi ei rv tne ver ‘ankees sold * ers like the bi hg comments Bengough, “but " think. T got a break when I was sold to the Brewers. The regular work I'm get- ting here will do more to bring my arm around than anything else.” Benny has been catching regularly for the Brewers—and doing a great back in the majors betare the present fore campaign ends, ait es of ian paid admission i rst nigl seball game play- ed in Atlanta, tied |for a beautiful stop in back of second - w Ps r?

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