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4 Fans S THINK CONNIE MACK peculating on Rumored Shake BRITISH WOMEN STARS COMPETING IN EASTERN NET PLAY Pee eee reaerene Ory MIGHT REBUILD HIS [OUR BOARDING HOUSE «By Aorn || QA RIDLEY DEFIES BASEBALL MACHINE: Many Believe Present Philadel- phia Team Nears End Of Winning Streak STILL GOING STRONG SMELL Lefty Grove Turns in 23rd Win) For Season to Beat De- troit Tigers, 8 to 1 | | (By The Associated Press) j Every so often during the fanning | bees this season, the word has gone out that Connie Mack is about ready to break up his current baseball ma- chine and start building a new team of Athletics for the purpose of win- ning future pennants. He did it] once, and those who believe the pre-| sent Philadelphia team is nearing the| STEADY, MADOR, STEADY! we DONT LET'M GET AWAY FROM You ! HoT DAG ~I CAN \T ALREADY ~ SIZZLING IN “TH” PAN, «© : WITH BUTTER AN? y ONIONS ¢ oe , BRIDGE War wae EGAD, MOOGAN ~ IF THIS WAS SALT WATER, I'D SAY IT WAS A TARPON ~~ BUT T CAN “TeLL BY “HE PULL AND STRUGGLE “HAT ITS A. ' MUSKELLUNGE ! ~~ DEUCE TAKE : ME IF (T ISN'T AT LEAST FIFTEEN | POUNDS | we HAW ae AND ( He WAY L WILL cook IT, | 9 WILL MAKE YouR H BDICT AND WILL SAY Wightman Team Is Play- ing ‘On Her Own’ —C XS When They Meet Cali- fornians Wednesday Rye, N. Y., Aug. 12—()—Unlike | most of her British sisters of the rac- jquet, Joan Ridley, competing in the eastern turf court tennis champion- talk. H “I'm -here on my own,” she says, end of the championship road are| willing to believe that Mack will re- |“and I don’t worry about no-talking jedicts. Besides, I like to talk.” peat that startling experiment. | Miss Ridley, who failed of selection But the Athletics lineup for the! past three weeks indicates Mack will] not have such a long hard pull in re-{ building his team if he does decide to} make important changes before next} year. For about three weeks the A's have been theoretically crippled. Joe Boley and Jimmy Dykes have been| out of action and a third infield regu- lar, Max Bishop has missed a good| many games, Added to that, Mule| Haas was hurt. In that three weeks, however, the} Athletics have won 15 games and| and came over to this country on a jtour of “vindication,” admits to 28 ; years, six of them in tournament ten- nis. She thinks her greatest tennis jachievement was in reaching the isemi-final round of the 1929 British championships at Wimbledon along , With her close friend Mrs. Elsie Gold- sack Pittman. also competing here. |Both were eliminated in the semi- finals, Miss Ridley by Helen Jacobs and Mrs. Pittman by Mrs. Helen Wills Moody. Jost seven, proving that Mack has| some substitute who can go along | winning games in the accepted Ath-| N dd G F d Ietic manner. Dib Williams and Eric| edda Guy Favore McNair have served well in the in-; . field and Jimmy Foxx has been able! In Ea Cl to move over to third when it was) stern jaSSIC required, while Roger Cramer is show-| DREN 5S eee ing up well in the outfield. The trio of “substitutes” got in be-/Six of Nation’s Fastest Three-| hind Lefty Grove yesterday and heip-| ed produce an 8 to 1 victory over the| Year-Old Trotters to Run Detroit Tigers in the first game of| ‘ the new western tour. McNair start-| In Hambletonian ed the deciding rally in the second inning with a home run. Williams| followed with a single and scored the! Goshen, N. . Aug. 12—UP)— 1 for their own protection, instead of pulcaee ‘lon the home fields. | 4 second counter of the inning, which| Weather permitting, six of the coun-) Detroit | “Many footabll players have beetles ecsave veel) Lidia saw four runs accross the plate to/try'’s fastest three year old trotters NATIONA |injured by the crowds, many specta-jagainst Bryan Grant Sigh | drive Vic Sorrell to the showers. | will face the starter this afternoon in Grove did his part, pitching effective-| the $60,000 Hambletonian stake. ly to win his 23rd victory of the sea-| The stake, richest of all American son. He gave eight hits and walks but made them ineffective. | petition in three one-mile heats. The Fred Marberry, second ranking,first heat was scheduled for 2 p. m. pitcher of the American League, kept! (E. 8. T.) Washington in its customary place’ The outstanding favorite was W. behind the Athletics by shutting out H. Cane’s Nedda Guy, 2:03 3-4, the Chicago White Sox, 3-0. 1 Danny MacFayden of the Boston ers and drivers follow: Red Sox came out ahead in yester-| First the horse, then owner day's other major league game, get-| driver. ting a 4 to 3 decision over the St.; Calumet Belricka, J. O. McAllister, Louis Browns. | William Hodson. New York and Cleveland in the} Keno, John M. Berry, Fred Egan. American League and all three games; Calumet Bush, W. H. Davis, Mar- on the National League schedule were) vin Childs. rained out . | Calumet Butler, American Association stars who, Richard MeMahon. have been sold into the major leagues,; Charlotte Hanover, Hanover Shoe are not relaxing their efforts to prove | Farm, Thomas Berry. that they are of major league caliber.| Neddg Guy, W. H. Cane, Len Koenecke, sold by Indianapolis | Stokes. ‘to the New York Giants for $75,000 worth of players, celebrated by slam-/ ming out a home run and single, to| MA OR LEAGUE help the Indians to an 8 to 3 victory ‘ 72) W. M. Wright, over Kansas City. George Davis, St. Paul outfielder | The probable starters, their own-)| and| Harry! | | | | 1 Be St. Louis... i fouriharness horse events, calls for com-! fost jc Ls ie ! | 1 > oF Philadelphia’: Although both she and Mrs. Pitt- | with a mark of .378 and came close to!man have played well in the early {finishing on top on one or two other |rounds of the turf court champion- | occasions. Simmons broke through!ship, trouble looms just ahead. To- \last year for the first time with a fig-| day, unless the weather man delivers jure of 381. {another knockout, Miss Ridley was aches against Josephine Cruick- | Ss |Shank of Santa Ana, Calif., and Mrs. |THE NOBLE ROMANS ip a * | ‘The violent spirit of Italian soc-!gittman against Dorothy Welsel of +, [eer football followers, writes Andrue} Other quarter-final matches pitted 22 | Berding from Rome, has produced the | Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup STAND Bi teams to piay on neutral grounds, | Boston avai , and Sarah Palfrey of inst her sister, Mianne. |tors who cheered the opposing team! John Van Ryn. Philadelphia, versus have been beaten and their automo-|-Ted Burwell. Charlotte, N. C.. and \biles cut, gashed and slashed,” helrester Stoefen, Los Angeles, against | declares. Cliff Sutter, New Orleans. “When Rome played Lazio a tie jgame, thus preventing Rome from) |winning the national championship,| York 5 eS tisburgin neinnati the crowd surged onto the field and) YE ST DAY'S \maltreated as many Lazio players as! i {had not fled for their lives. When| S° r sS 10 Rome played at Naples, motorists from Rome were besieged by crowds! jafter the game, injured by flying 24 |stones, their windshields broken, tires eighth ‘punctured, and paint scratched off. {eat | “Players of visiting teams are} ‘ri, uck out six for (learning to run like mad the moment jthe referee blows his final whistle| y, and beat the crowds to the exits. i = ofatad | “Italian crowds seldom if ever} Chinese laborers outnumber all cheer a good play by an opposing,other foreign Oriental workers in player.” \Manila with a total of 8,000. ed Press) ed Sox—H in Rhyne with run that 4 nators: hits to ‘opped in, 3-0. Colum’ Paul, “SPORT SLANTS | By ALAN GOULD You have heard, no doubt, about up in Roster of ANYTHING SHE LIKES Tennis Star Who Failed to Make | ON TOUR OF VINDICATION English Women Face Trouble shios now in progress here, likes to| |to the British Wightman cup team| ti {unusual situation of forcing the big|##4inst Mrs. Lillian Scharman Hester Billy Doeg, Brother of U. S. In men's singles, outstanding third{ single injround of the junior event. thletics— Scattered {favorite for’ the boys’ title, drew a z ro) > re) a | w > Lm | @ | rd ° | ‘who will go the Phillies next season, | and second baseman Jack Salttzgaver, | who has become the property of the Yankees, performed well for the| Saints, although the league leaders suffered their fifth defeat in their last 20 starts. Billy Herman, young Louisville sec- ond baseman, who will go to Catalina Island with the Cubs next year, didj his part by driving in a run and scor- | ing one. but it was the great Art Shires who grabbed the glory. With Milwaukee trailing by one run, and ‘two men out and two on in the ninth, Shires rammed one of Ken Penner's pitches out of the park to give the Brewers a 7 to 5 decision. Toledo and Minneapolis divided a ‘double-header to break even in a six game series. The Mud Hens won the first game, a slugging match, 9 to 4, and the Millers won the second one, | 7 to 3, AMERICAN LEAGUE | (By the Associated Press) { (neluding gam 1 Al Simmons of the Mackian border Batting eee a patrol, but these few following ex- Ruth Yankee: |cerpts from the play-by-play story of Geb , Yankees, 109; the recent double header between the Athletics and Washington Senators show what a handy fellow he is to have around the premises: y “First game, third inning, Simmons ‘| doubled to right, scoring Cochranc. Miller singled, scoring Simmons. “Eighth inning, Simmons made a high leaping catch of Spencer's long fly for the third out (with two on base.” * { Ruth, | ons, Athletics, 168; Webb | | ichrig, Yankeos, 31; pman, Yankees, 4 Pit i lost los thletics, won 23; Marberry,’ Senators, won 13, NATIONAL Lr. Ratling-—Davis, Phill Phillies, . amen os Phillie TereS "(The A’s won this game, 3 to 2) Hits—Klein, Phillies, 150; 1. Waner,} “Second game, first inning, Myer ae eee ag tripled. S. Rice flied to Simmons and Myer was doubled at the plate, Sim- i; |mens to Cochrane, “Second inning, Simmons dropped a home run over the right field wall. ; “Fourth inning, Simmons singled to left. Foxx hit a home run over the roof of the left field stands, scoring Simmons ahead of him, tying the Essex is a Super-Six irove Wins 240 000 020-8 14 9} F TS 01 000 000—-1 8 1 chrane; Sorrell, Sulli- | 1GHT | to 5) van and Hayworth, | LAST G Soaton wonton Beat ag (By the’ Assovinted Press) | BREEZES BY RUTH St. Louis” 001 010 100—% 9 2\knoc Host: | It was on the same occasion that MacFayd nd Berry; Collins, ’ Boston, | Simmons passed Babe Ruth, at least Braxton and Ferrell. Senators Blank Chiengo Washington 000 201 000—3 Venport, Sullivan, for the time being, in the race for score.” the .American. League batting crown. (The A’s won the second game, 6 All who know the facts recognize that Ta.—My Chicago 000 000 000— 3 sto] 1 ‘Milli ‘a It = oa ha Marbe fipansers WaDie, Moore [Re (Tr ee MEL 9 Ome | te te nara oct nie cote in performance, smoothness and reliabil- and Tate, Grube. vearon bino, nearing the end of his career, : : New York-Cleveland, postponed— Slaughter ‘Tetry |@nd the rampant Simmons, just now ity the Super-Six principle gives Essex rae 4" y a (10); Pat Murphy, Dan- jin his prime, should afford one of istincti i (xo gXATIONAL LEAGUE tpointed Jack Malone, |the few exciting features of a season @ distinction that canna: he likened to the clutch, AMERICAN ASSOC! ie 'ieta.— Joe Guzman, |that has seen the two pennant races any other car, With it, vibration is re- sie. Brewers ‘Take outpointed “Johnny | turned into routs. duced to nil. taueniie. $ Bislte. aly York, (10): Eddie Wilson, | Simmons has youth in his favor car. It is inches Gearin and Grouch, Manion; Penner |Havana, drew, (10), *rminde Vidal, Havana, drew, (10). and Shea. ns Triumph 100 200 000-3 7 4 300 013 10x—8 8 1 Parris 8 and Peters; Bur- rs _and Toledo Split” First Game y= we . nf 000 000—4 11 1 ‘oledo.... yer Rabb, Shottuer and Hen % oftner lenline, hn ‘Becond Game lis... 100 140 010-7 13 2 Ova ee 002 001 000—3 7 1 ‘gna Griffin; DeVormer. Stickler Solution | o—. 3 Ryan and 30 Tie 10 H ‘th, rain \down the stretch, plus the helpful |fact that he doesn't have to do a portion of his swinging at the slants of Grove, Earnshaw and Walberg. No motor was ever so well known. None has ever shared its fame for re- liability. On that one score Essex, be cause it alone can use the Super-Six, stands distinctive in the six-cylinder field. But the difference is not limited to its” Super-Six motor and Super -Six performance. Now Essex includes Selective Free Ruth won the batting title in 1924 Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant Vacuum Cleaner, paint the castings, the grates and smoke all for $3. All Repairs'at Reasonable Prices Phone 141 Distributors’ Phone 1500. With Exclusive Features of Super -Six Design and Super-Six Performance Selective FREE WHEELING Further Emphasizes the Difference Wheeling. That adds another joyous motoring sensation. Driving takes on a new zest. You shift gears without using In its price field it is also the largest wider—leg room is greater—and every- one who examines it closely also finds it more carefully and finely built in respect to chassis detail and body appointments, Essex quality goes beyond its motor, fittings and upholstering. It goes to the very foundation. Isn't it a satisfaction to know you can get such quality ina car so easy toown? Coach of Business Coupe $595, Standard Sedan $695, Sport Roadster $725, Town Sedan $735, Touring Sedan $775, Special Sedan $855, 7-Passenger Sedan (long wheelbase) $895— Selective Free Wheeling $35 additional. All prices f. 0. b. Detroit—special equipment extras Sandin - Wilde Motors, Inc. Hudson-Essex Parts and Authorized Service Athletics MESES utr BATUsROL Gor CUB ene A Naot ME it }] j IN (915, HE PITCHED i . ty onenit GAMES. / ad oe | H IN To OF THE BAKES HE Mu ‘wom NNING “NATIONAL ANATEUR- (926* 5 ing Harold Upton of St. Joseph, Mich. Doubles in both divisions were Scheduled to start today. Locals Will Face Wilton Thursday Louie Klein, star twirler for the Bismarck Elks, is scheduled to start for the locals, when they journey to Tennis Stars in National Junior Remain in Meet Ranking Player, Wins Second And Third Round Culver, Ind., Aug. 12.—(?)—The list of seeded stars still was intact, but the going was expected to become tougher today in the national junior, and boys’ tennis championship. Billy Doeg of Santa Monica, Calif., brother of Johnny Doeg, the national singles ‘titleholder, romped through. his second and third round engage- ments yesterday, and Ramey Dono- van, New York; Jack Lynch, Taft, Calif., and Jock McLean, Washington, D. C., made their way into the fourth Capital Funeral Parlors Jos. W. Tschumperlin Prop. 208 Main Avenue Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day or Night—22 Frankie Parker of Milwaukee, the first round bye, then swept Miller! Sherwood of Grand Haven, Mich.,! aside without losing a game. Gene, Mako of Los Angeles, another young-! er star, won two matches, defeating Bill Condey of Chicago, in love sets, jand dropping two games in eliminat- | Alike= Jonger—seats are inches Bismarck, N. D. Bismarck Tribune WANT-ADS DO GET RESULTS Folks who read the Bismarck Tribune (and who doesn’t?) spon form the habit of reading the want-ads. Because they invari- ably find some item, some bar- gain or business opportunity or proffered service that fits in precisely with one of their needs, The want-ad section of the Bis- marck Tribune is the city’s only real market-place, where every- one gathers with something to buy, sell or exchange. That’s why the Bismarck Tribune want-ads are natural result- getters. The Bismarck Tribune © Want-Ads™ Wilton Thursday night to engage the Wilton Miners. The Wilton management has not yet announced who will be on the mound for the McLean county out- fit. It is expected, however, that either Bochm or Conley will be draft- ed for the assignment. Both are credited with several fine pitching performances for the miners. The game has been called for 6:30 p.m. at the Wilton diamond. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect.” Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. - AND Your Market Place Phone 32 e