The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 29, 1932, Page 6

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M4 co) OUT{0BATTERS AS [ovr BoaRDING House . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1932 MIGARNEY STRIKES. By Ahern | ' i COMPANY A CONTEST 4 Capital City Nine Defeats Fast Colored Wolverine Troupe, 5 to 4 — G. P. EAT SHOP DEFEATS LINEMEN TO RETAIN CITY LOOP LEAD Apostles Seen as WEDDING BELLS FOR THEM ix g VOCAISSOIRE WIN (7 mete oe) Capcemeeetees) |WIN DARY OUTRIT ann | Sagehorn Blasts Out Only Home| Run of Game; First Time | in Uniform i A RABBIT, No FOoLt QUTSIDE § ~~ AH CAINS HEAR LAK HEAR A WORM BORIA’ ~~ BETTER BREW YOURSELF A Pot OF “TEA, (\F You FEEL SuUMPY ! . Ho HUM -- GUESS ILL Go UP AND GET FROG A } : s AN’ ~ AH COULD ENDS WITH DISPUTE (St. Paul Contingent Has Lost | 19 Games This Season by One Run Margin APPLE ! ~~ SOUNDS To ME LAK ; —_———— 4 ~ Se i . |Saints, the faded champioi ie LOCALS OUTHIT INVADERS, HERE AFTER DEM RUSSIAN |{ Tye SAVE FoR AN ACUTE phone +e ty Hamd- American Aasociation, ust aren't gi- " Se ' ; i jing the fans a for thei 5 . crown DEWELS ! EMERGENCY |_wIF MORE ae Bo far this ‘seakon, they. buva os Capital City Contingents Show, Improvement Over Early | Season Starts | { Bob McCarney and his Bismarck | HAN THREE MEN BREAK IN, THEN ff WAKE MEF} _u, UP! | THREE GET CIRCUIT CLOUTS | M. Dohn Gets Four Base Hits to | Capture Batting Honors exactly 19 games by the margin of one run—the hard luck championship irecord of the circuit so far. | The 19th loss by a one run margin lcame Tuesday as the Kansas Citv |Blues came from behind in the first game of a doubleheader with two jruns to win, 5 to 3, and then followed baseball team earned spurs Tuesday 8 night when they set down the fast of Evening | through by ‘winning the second battle et vi raveling src |by two runs, 4 to 2. | Colored Wolver . veling 0 he club, 5 to 4, at the city ball pa Minneapolis and Milwaukee staged It was a vastly improved local nine Won Lost Pct. |tWo thrillers and wound up even for | ' 4 0 1.000 the day. The first engagement lasted that took the dusky invaders into G. P. Eat Sho} camp. The Bismarck contingent out- | Company A os a 1.500 | until Hasuer came to bat with two on Mickey Rit 6G ‘ Associated Press Photo hit and outplayed a traveling troupe | Northwestern Bell ..2 4 .333. jin the twelfth inning and cracked out ‘ ickey Riley and Georgia Coleman, two of America’s premier divers, that came to Bismarck with a reput-) . ©. H. Will .........1 2.333 |@ home run to give the Millers an 8 are to marry immediately after the Olympic games In Los Angeles. Both ation as one of the strongest bari- Bismarck Dairy ...-1 2 333 |to 5 victory and Vandenberg, Miller iors aivtig mo Athletic club and are expected to star storming teams in semi-prof baseball. McCarney, on the bill for the Capi- | ‘ Keeping its record unsullied in loop games to date, the G._P. Eat Shop set down Northwestern Bell, 13 to 8, to retain the pinnacle position in the rookie, his seventh straight triumph. « The Brewers came back in the sec- ond to win, 4 to 3. Thirteen proved a lucky number for hitting department functioned. Kiki Cuyler has been a keen it to weigh 14 pounds. The inscribea record of the old days gave 90 feet tal City delegation, retired 10 b: FE % neue ‘ hat = 4 by the stri route, to outshine } commercial D-ball league Tuesday|Columbus. The Red Birds got that|/ disappointment since his return jas the distance. There is ni ‘ j WMeansi of the Wolverines, who whif- | night. many hits, beat the Indians 7 to 2 I! to the game. Hornsby may get |some question as to this 68! the and Hy fled only that number | The Co. A-Bismarck Dairy gameja night game at Indianapolis. and) back into the lineup himself for |ficial discus now weighs only 41% Sagehorn, Simle and Shune carried | was declared no contest after a dis-|thereby jumped ae bel ites hens the series with Cincinnati, start- pound. ; H the heavy guns for the loc to con- pute in the sixth inning. A new Columbus addition from} ing Thursday. “The next Olympics we nect for a pair of hits each ‘The G. P. Eat Shop entry hit Ed-| Rochester. Pitcher Wysong, retired | Beant te Atbeeen eare cela horn, in uniform for his first die Agre hard and often to win the first 15 Hoosiers who faced him! land allowed only 6 hits himself. It jized by the advent of the first cheer- Young Kostelecky of the season, blasted out a long handily from the Telephone crew. ing section. A feature of tl drive for the only home run of the “6: FRSA ca. us. ear or Brown of the Restaurantmen allowed | was his first start in a Red Bird uni- Ciniptss Gk SUMSHEN. Gan the Wee contest. ; aE “tl ms SHES Fo 1902 ey wea service, inc. 6-29 the opposition only seven hits while | form. bea 4 4 jception of the American team at the The game was featured by the stel- | —— a a his teammates were connecting for} Toledo and Louisville fought a close ins at 1C. ISON j cock, where a group of Swedes were ' lar fielding of both clubs with two| 17 bingles to win the game. M. Dohn|duel in the other night game and it Ned by a former American-trained err and Kiesel did the heavy sticking of \took a ninth inning sortie to win. for} coach in singing ‘My Country ‘Tis of chalked up against each side. | ‘The locals led in the theft of bases, | McCarney, S. Goetz, and Shune, s cessfully pilfering a sack apiece Both McCarney and Meansi allow- ed three bases on balls. The box score: the evening, Dohn hitting safely in|the Mudhens, 2 to 1. ‘Shoots 33 to Tie His Own as many trips to the plate while Kie- c ‘ourse Record; 47 Slope | Single Lapse | sel contributed three safe blows. Birds Trim Indians 4 él For the Li , Priske w: e | is—Columbus slugged out } Ae Olga espsrcesee Rt cet hed Raters oP dianapolis in al Golfers Participate | “In 1920 the scene changed to Ant- . werp. Sportsmanship had gained only batter to connect safely more |a 7 to 2 victory over Indianapolis in a; than once, getting two singles. {night game. Columbus collected 13) and except for an occasion where a | Sesienbre anette eey | Dickinson, N. D., June 29.—(%)}— Thee.’ c- Reds in Celler Despite Great Defense | Dan Howley’s Troupe ‘Has Al- lowed Opponents Fewer Bismarck AB R E «, | hn, E. § o! in hits and Indianapolis 6. d Sanne Pe acer Hits Than Other Teams | Seteienie Pith ies a ‘ | United States boxer resented a judge's i . sae | RH E/Playing a 33 to tie the course record | decision and socked him on the jaw Ce ss | Differences of opinion as to lead- | i wt edcie 7 \ ' 20 013—7 13 0{Set by himself, William Kostelecky, | closel; eds D. a is | offs at the bases led to disputes be- |Columbus.. 000 120 O1 \5 . ‘Y+|closely followed by the sock of the aR e i (By The Associated Press) | tween players and. officials in the |J7dianapolis 000 001_100— 2. 6 | 2) ah Monday won the championship;pead coach to the referee's mid-sec- ; 1 2 0), Probabiy the most cogent cemmen-| wren in a shallow trap, it 1s often Bismarck Dairy-Co. A game, The|,W¥song, Lee and Spring; Sse not era a Se ‘e cdl pared tion, the-games were a big success. he tense racter 2 ? Phar “A ‘ . { a vere Z ome the tense character Of {he best to use the ‘chip shot to come out, | tilt was declared no contest in_the |a"4 Fiddle | ape iat sis MEMGMINNON SPSWHEREA Tate Soe ee: 1 1 10 Reds, with the best| but when the bunker is high and| sixth frame and will be referred to| Hens Beat Colonels \Country club. lorieures savaliediicns veahe ancoes ies 0 of any team in the| the cut shot cannot be employed one the committee on protests for final| touisville-Toledo triumphed over| In the championship finals, voung\had bene winning by very wide mare a aL) t. ed out of eighth plac>! must rely on the expiosion. \ agro {the G. P. E | Louisvitle in a night game of 10 inn-| Kostelecky defeated Dr. C. 1. Stang-|gins, Sportsmanship “is easy when | xs EBLE AGS Bb tect sets e box score of the G. P. Eat/ ings, 2 to 1. ‘bye of New England, 5 and 4, and ‘ar ss . to save their lives. | Our best players have 1 varia- \ CLUB ENTERS seater y ngland, 5 and 4, and!you are ahead. Totals 3 2 3 a ‘ ‘st players have little varia: Shop-Northwestern Bell game fol- RH Ej fi 4 icki re Soe ee The fi ‘ove Dan Howley’s} tion in the method used for this shot. SANO 1 INCH lows: Toledo..... 000 010 0001-2 9 2/Lewis Kostelecky, Dickinson. scored| | “The next Olympics were held in | Colored Wolverines (144) AB R H ved opponents fewer] The ball is played from a point op- | Northwestern Bell (8) AB H RE |Louisville.. 000 000 1000—1 6 land “¢ Sects ig, Dickinson, |1928 at Amsterdam. Our athletes had ay ae ES ee a same than any team it} posite the left foot or slightly in \M. Winer, 3rd 4 1 1 0) Van Gilder, Winegarner and Pyt- |“ Golfer t _ {the idea all they had to do was to J Bre a tarting pitch- | front of it. The player stands fairly | \E. Agre, ps. .4 0 0 O/lak; Wilkinson and Shea. | neice cagatakn Gaatiieytes anes (ere in the morning, get a hair \ oe 7.4 ete contests to! erect with the fect not far apart. A | J. Schwahn, Iss eee ioe) | 3 pera Ys 4 -|cut and shave ‘and win first, second \ atl aoutide Matt full eying ta tak@n-and. the vetlio sis | G. Allen, If ‘at 4 el Blues Win Twin Bill land and Dickinson in North Dakota! and third places in all events. Con- \ Tage at come up with! driven into the sand about an inch | | R. Mason, 73 0 0 1. St. Paul—Karffas City took both }and Sidney and Glendive in Montana | trary to all expectatioris, we only won 1 ee a ae | behind the ball. | 5 cee 5 3 0 O Ojends of Te from St. bias Wetter in the two-day meet. Jone running event, the 400 meters, Re \ , as Se mes play neinna rhenee i 7 ’ racy, 2nd . »~2 0 1 0/4 to 3, an to 2. | ledalist in the tourney was Wil-|which was tak y Ray ee Pe Pres Vets aiUInee Lalow aire eee Gee EE Fy |B. Beaudoin, 1st “$1 1 ol First Game ux im Kostelecky, Sr., Dickinson, with ae ee | 3) 0) a ba caer a ca barat eae Reedy ete ow - . Manning, : 1 | William, Jr., holding second place.| “Noti 'tsmans! " held opponents to an average of enters the sand. This is sure to re- 4 “Doe” Pri 3 ges s es 4 ; loticeably the sportsmanship ot 1% The Chicago Cubs with 35) sult in a pop-up. of AGE) Reopen eta cag ei A SAAN ls Con $13 9 Fitst place in the driving contest also] all nations had improved and an out- ee ames pitdved and an oppo- ~ = =| Fon tas [BAUSON --ssssesersooee BO 9 Struith, and Collins; Adkins, Harriss,|Went to William, Jr, who drove his/standing event was the 800 meters ¢ of 44 runs per contest... | Pt ‘SPOT | eee ball 685 yards in three drives. Thejin which Engelhardt of Germany Fy ; : of 4.4 runs per contest. split a double header. New York tak- a4 | 7B ‘ approach and putting contest was;pushed Lowe of Englo { McC 1S P hs ie who amt | ing the first game, 7 to 3, and Brook-| @Ne> Totals .. Bk) 4B. 8 Second Game / won by K. I. Simes, Mott. ie He sh cars aut to a new hes hizher in the leagu: | yn the second $ to 3. | : RH E} ; ___ {Olympic record, after which they ran Shune 1 standing than the Reds, have allowed | First Game ree — G.P, Eat Shop U3) AB H R E/Kansas City 010 200 010-4 5 1}. The championship consolation off the field arm in arm. This was si! Home rur Sagehorn 1 rivals 5.8 runs per game and RH ‘Thomas, Coffman, Spencer and W- Kiesel, rss ... 4 3 3 0 St. Paul.... 010 001 000—2 9 2/flight went to D. Jaynes, Glendive,| only 10 years after the war. iy Hits off Me: 10 in cher g6 Rare - aller ey, E, Benser, r 4 1 1 1) Osborne, Collins and Snyder; Trow|who defeated Roy Peck, Dickinson, ’ ee eansi 10 in pitcher go New York.. 001 100 104-7 10 1 Aple; Allen and Dickey. Been ie ack. Arua penne laa eat off McCarn: 9 vooklyn... 001 000 020-3 10 2 ; ae es | : arco : f ' thE Struck out Meansi 5; by nati's misfor- __F nmons, Gibson, Walker, and | A’s Conquer Boston M. Dohn, 3r * as 4 =e Prize winners in the other flights time lies in its inability. to win the Hogan: Heimach, Mungo, Quinn and| Philadelphia—Philadelphia conquer- A.B +4 2 100 _{ Millers, Brewers Split jwere: First flight, P. B. Hurd, Sid- balls off Meansi 3; off | js Sukeforth. ed the Boston team, 5 to 4. A home | ©: SPr +3 2 2 0! Milwaukee—Minneapolis and Mil- ‘ney; second flight, K. I. Simes, Mott; 1 balls off Meansi 3; off close ones. Eighteen times the Reds ane eae ms ae p B. Larson, 2nd . °3 1 0 0,waukee engaged in a doubleheader, the third flight, H. Huston, Glendive; Vice hace obloien chi. ein Second Game run was made by Johnson of Boston. a jpn 4 a4 ight, H. n, ni i y ios have been beaten by a single run RHE RHE J; Spriges, If 13 1 0 O/first game being 12 innings. Minne-' fourth flight, Red Scheeler, Dickin-» -_ most of them well pitched. tightly New York.. 200 00M000— 3 9 Fal Boston..... 200 010 0100-4 7 1 |T. Rott, c . ~3 1 0 Olapolis took the first game, 8 to 5, and | on, fought affairs, They ran into Bl Brooklyn .- 100 001 03x— 5 11 3] Philadelphia 000 003 02x—5 5 1,7" Potter, ef +58 0) 0° 10) Milwraukanithe persng se 10/s) ts Hallahan yesterday when the south- “Luque, Walker and Orarret| Moore, Connolly and Weiland; | Se | ped iad ‘| SPOR' 3 il paw felt like pitching himself a ball v nd : , y PSURs nts cases 34°17 13 2 R HE | T SLANTS ji} Ate hey ion douse) meses candi Coelene Score by inniiigs mur a Mineapolis 300 020 oop ong—8 18 2) ax 4 AMERICAN LEAGUE re wae Be Louie 6 : ae HE; Milwaukee. 000— i 7 N GOULD iene F a oa pee en ese vameaarie Bosion ee Se Bastan Bip cei eauiee Northwestern Bell— Vandenberg and Griffin; Braxton,! Mr. Lawson Robertson seems to be New xo ne 4 Bd i fine game as the Boston Braves de- Braves held the Phillies ito four hits er oe terday’s St la. P. Eat Ns Ce teat clans and Sand woes |inganeelent voice for another Olym- Philadetp hin at eff au sated thi ies, 5 to 2. and went aS Boston took the rubber game of! esterday's Stars (| 204 133 x—13 17 2 E; ington 37 30 552 i is8 Ambitious Grapplers Compete into a ¥ tie with Chicago for the series, 5 to 2. H E}¢— ——#| Summary: Minneapolis 000. 402) 000-3. 6, 02 | en pune sbor auulet Apa. conchae Cleveland 36031 $1 + pan e ; second place. Philadelphi 4 z é |_ ‘Two base hits: Kiesel 2, Dohn,|Milwaukec. 020 001 O0I—4 14 0) Song an” ons SRG STADIA BR TLOUS odiee+so ake bh 508 | ra) in National Meet at Madi- New York and Brooklyn. divided a |Enlladelahia 000 200 000-2. 4 3 (By The Associated Press) \winer. ‘Day, Ryan and Richards; Stiley and Come and go for a quarter century. | Chicago 359 30na : apersipnae ih Boston..... 100 030 10x— 5 10 2] 2 iy | " " * 7 ‘He ran the sprints in Athens, learned | Boston .. 182 Fa of s Bow! |pair, the Giants winning the first. 7 “Conins, Berly and V. Davis; Brown | Lew Krausse, Athletics—Made his} Sacrifices: Schwahn, Manney. _ | Crouch. |fovspeak thes! Mrench ghimeesonae| : oe 4 son Square Bow to 3. and the aaa ihe second. 5 and Spohrer. ‘ : first start and beat Red Sox on seven |, Home runs: Dohn, E. Spriggs, | " % jently in Paris and eae pee : E 4 — to 3. Johnny Frederick. Bro yn hits. hn ite tai b - BRIM New York, June 20—iF/—The boys outiidr, ost the opener with a ds Carts Die ee tases and Joe Seve, van-| aeons wpm» | Wines Will Carry jist cera, rs amecets 2 lpucpuen x 2 who wrestle for the fun of it. and astrous error in the ninth inning, but Eee St. Louis Cardinals | kees— Their home runs beat Sena-| of gre 17 in 6 ‘i s | sterdam. chee 30 4 this year a chance to represent the came back to win the nightcap with | defeated the Cincinnati Reds 6 to 2.| tors, 5-2. |" Struck out b: A. Brown 6; by Agre Am H 1 Not on ston ... 31 ° ow United States at Los Angeles, wiil,an eighth inning home run. R H E! Johnny Frederick, Dodgers—Beat | 2, f in erican opes land Plies srry ess rape Philadelphia « 35 \ % i ti continue competition in the national) The Yankees demonstrated why St. Louis... 000 230 010-6 10 1) Giants in second game with eighth) Bases on balls off A. Brown 1; off ; RiGee rons f Brooklyn ....... 34 34 ' Ci shihe ‘ aur Fa ges POE q Cincinnati. 000 002 000-2 4 2 ing h | | sense of humor. | St. Louis 32 32 r ' Siig, CPampionships at Madison Square |they are Kingpins of the American Cie M ie |inning home run with one on. re 1. t eet wie he g00k- tha (1008, thetetaie kel mee work 3 4 swift Garden bowl tonight with high hopes|League in trimming Washington, 5 ,, Hallahan, Muncuso; Frey and Lom-| Bobby Brown, Braves—Held Phil-) Umpire: “Doc” Thoreson. 1S ‘th . J ie 459 Sat n " : rage * bardi. ie meeting of the American Phys- | Cincinnati 31 43 419 a — that they'll be able to finish up the to 2. They made only four hits off aa eal Lelia? ered a r} ical. Education association, he was omens i job by Saturday night. Al Thomas. but two of them were, wo oth lallahan, Cardinals—Stop} Reds | 2. a A is prepared to dwell upon the AMERICAN ASSOC! \ lye Starting a day late, the boys from|home runs by Lazzeri and Sewell. oy ie with four hits. . | r le etro le Ranking U.S. Tennis Star iene OR pen 8 fe peiain. ct aS CIATION 1 ingiq Florida, California, Oregon Maine,| The Fg cornet ems Erase | AMERICAN LEAGUE UNDERGROUND WATER : . Only Survivor of Team ago, at a time when the leading | Columbus .. 31 375 t Sola ANd Way stations wresteld through | made his first start of the season for Yanks Best Senators te cee ee | ‘ ibroad-jumper hopped across Ireland | Minneapolis 31 569 ; Sigg, eight rounds of action and 53 bouts |the Athletics and granted seven hits) New York—Washington was beaten | ,,,The quan ty of water underneath | ats Dattalino at Wimbledon |in three jumps and a javenlin tosser, 33 548 agg, Tuesday to complete the first round in beating Boston, 5 to 4. by New York 6 to 2, Home-runs were | the earth's surface is sald to be more - jafter one mighty heave, leaped on 34 ee ate i most of the eight cMsses. j is - = made by Sewell and Lazzeri. hiegueraiey Ed of the taal volume of 5 Wimbledon, Eng, June 29—(P)—|horse-back to pursue and grab the 4 a eg Three defending champions, Arlie NATION AL LEAGUE neces imnatiann RH B) ee core Nate, oon undergromnd Brother of Fargo Express Out-|4,1, rsworth Vines remained Wed-|SPear before it came to earth. nd a , en. Tomlinson, 145, Jack Van Bebber,! aLBee ‘ on lpr eee ie | é fi i . y ’s fight; “Tipperary finally won the meet,” ‘ | ise and Conrad Caldwell, 174, were| Brooklyn—New York and Brooklyn |New York.. 002 201 00x—5 4 springs with no visible sources. points Former Feather- gene to caby ah BOE uae + concluded Robbie, si Magers te St. Paul . 48 314 among the 160 grapplers who per weight Champ one of tennis’ most coveted titles. [Ireland is still claiming the cham- TUESDAY'S RESULTS | American League New York, 5; Washington, 2. | Philadelphia, 5; Boston, 4. ‘The American champion upset En- | Pionship.” rique Maier of Spain in straight sets | in the quarterfinals Tuesday but two|Robbie Remembers ~ compatriots, Sidney B. Wood and; Turn now to the modern Olympics | le: : tr®® formed. All three, former classmates bis at Oklahoma A. and M., when the) Aggies were sweeping all intercol-| OUT OUR WAY z By Williams New York, June 29.—(P)—The Pe- trolle family undoubtedly is a jinx Dukelsky, Chicago (5). orn legiate and national competitions. | + won their first matches easily and| for Christopher (Bat) Battalino. iFrank Shields were eliminated. with Mr. Robertson, his throaty bari- | National .League pe are favorites to repeat in their di-| s-s-sT The former world’s featherweignt|” yjnes’ semifinal round opponent |tone well conditioned, his imagina-| NeW York, 7-3; Brooklyn, 3-5. of | visions. | TH Box ! TH! champion absorbed two terrific beat-| will be the Australian ace, Jack|tion keen and his words fluent. Toi Boston, 5: Philadelphie, 2. pt CARD 8Ox! GOOD GosH! ings from Billy Petrolle during the Crawford, and the result seems a|Mr. Edward J. Storey, secretary of St. Louis, 6; Cincinnati, 2. cit You MIGHT AS 1 CANT SEE winter season and then decided he'd) tossup. Vines beat Crawford in the the A. P. E. A., I am indebted for | eeiean ahi | an e lg try his hand against Billy's less-|Davis Cup matches at Philadelphia |the following abstract: | oohanbee ts bo Ameri lis, oe | WELL LEAN NoTHIN’ WRONG [| famous brother, Frankie, who lives it|recently but he has been slower to| “At Athens in 1906... Mr. Robert-| ‘Toledo, 2: Louisville, lia ail Fs F 3) T § | pe aieey IN TIS PLAYIN’ Schenectady, N. Y. adapt his game to European condi-)S0n examined the old ciscus, a relic! Kansas City, 4-4; St. Paul, 3-2 ‘ They clashed over the ten round|tions than has the more experienced |°f former Olympic games, and found| Minnea lis, 8-3; Milt xe, 5-4 - bo CARDS , LONGS bi di eapolis, 8-3; Milwaukee, 5-4 or LAST IGHT | ’ route if the Queensboro stadium|Crawford. The latter defeated Fred : co 4 YOu AINT ‘Tuesday night and Frankie gave Bat-|Perry of England Tuesday. — — (By The Associated Press) GAMBLIN' talino a trouncing all the way to win} The other semifinal will send Chicago—Charley Retzlaff, Du- | sad the decision without trouble. |Henry W. (Bunny) Austin of Eng- luth, Minn,, stopped Les Marriner, —-— land against Jiro Satoh of Japan. puinee Ri tae a | MA OR LEAGUE |Austin eliminated Shields in the) : “4 » Ol ‘oly | quarterfi while Satoh upset FY D |Wood, the defending champion. | A large Eastern Life Insurance Los Angeles—Newsboy Brown, Klein, Phillies, Stripp, Dodgers, P. In Women’s singles, Helen Jacobs New York—Frankie Petrolle, : Schenediady, N.Y», outpointed | LEADERS | vas to piay het soitinal “round company wants a man with the qual- Bat Bettatino, ariterd, Coon. | AG The Aeraled oe [match against Mme. Rene Matbelu ifications for district manager with ‘Terre Haute, _Ind—Sammy Batting—P. Waner, Pirates, 381; / wis Moody's match with Mary Hee- | headquarters in Bismarck or Man- (Kid) Slaughter, Terre Haute, Hurst, Phillies, 372. ley was deferred until Thursday. | d eee oe, Bon ofa china -_ OA, Worth, ‘Tex—Lou Avery, crHome runeilen,” Phiies. | 2:|| Cubs Sent to Work | This is an opportunity for only a Bncke Detroit (0) Dodgers, 14.” eK |_After Dismal Trip 2] man with high qualifications. Com- Stolen bases—Frisch, Cardinals, 11;|"" “Chieago, June 29—/—Back | missions only to start with but more home after a dismal road trip Los Angeles, outpointed Baby fs *, * Avizmendi, Los Angeles, (10). Waner and Piet, Pirates, 9. | Rogers Hornsby Wednesday ord- responsibility will be added later for San Jose, Calif.—Fidel La Eiehing--BeMs, Repee Swe-| ered his Chicago Cubs out for — Barba, Los Angeles, knocked out tonic, Pirates, Bal. ; | Sreuite Haiite precios an a | the right man. Bobby Gray, San Jose, (8). AMERICAN LEAGUE ES ee eer ins | Aiea a9 batting Foxx, Athletics, 380;) National League pennant race. State age, qualifications, past ex- ‘al rr, Ts, . * ry .. y 2 s SOME TALKER! une_—Porn” ‘Auiletis, 73; sim-| ,,Weai hitting alone was blamed perience and financial standing in what Ted Lamb craved as he sat on mons, Athletics, 70. | cessful invasion, which netted reply. Interviews will be arranged his. front porch. Along came a Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 29;| only eight victories in 21 starts. rye Ginger, andi Laimp invited him to Z 7 Ruth, Yankees, 22. ‘ : Truphone the Bative Hay BeOS for those whose applications are sa- ait down and talk. The stranger talk- Stolen. bases—Chapman, Yankees,’ trom home, the Cub bombard- i ed so long that Lamp finally fel > Yi b 14; Jobson, Red Sox. 10.’ | ment was so weak that only 02 tisfactory on July 2. Address P. C. sadeep ule to slumber by the ehat- oP pllehing comer, "Yankees, 14-1: uns were scored and atleast Hammer, Prince Hotel, Bismarck. ~ found the stranger had departed, tak- Ud Y are | opponents. Pitchers were forced | ing with him the change Lamb had ORWILUAM: | Buy or Sell Through | to carry the load.in every: victori- | im his pockets. | The Tribune Want Ads ous game except three when the | i

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