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TWO GIRCUIT SWATS WITH BASES FILLED ARE FIRST WARNING Bucs Crush Phillies 10 to 0 as Floyd Vaughn and Earl Grace Slug GIANTS TWO GAMES BEHIND Young Oral Hildebrand Wins Fourth Game, Defeating | White Sox 8-1 BY HERBERT W. BARKER (Associated Press Sports Writer) ‘The East has taken one glance at Gibson's Pittsburgh Pirates and prom- Ptly hoisted storm warnings. Moving into the Atlantic Seaboard a day ahead of their western con- ferres, the Buccaneers rattled 17 hits off the fences of Baker Bowl Monday, trounced their old jinx, the Phillies, 10-0, and strengthened their grip on the National League lead. The Cor- sairs’ triumph, their lth in 14 games, left them two full games ahead of the New York Giants. ‘Two smashing home runs by Floyd ‘Vaughan and Earl Grace, each with the bases loaded, spelled ruin for the Phillies and not a little embarrass- ment to “fidgety Phil” Collins and Austin (Cy) Moore. Vaughan’s round trip drive was made off Collins in the third while Moore was the victim when Grace connected with two out in IN, RIDING the seventh. The only other game played in the Majors Monday saw Oral Hildebrand, youthful right-hander of the Cleve- | land Indians, stop the Chicago White Sox with five hits for an 8-1 victory, his fourth in a row without a defeat. Cleveland’s victory left the Wash- ington Senators holding second place in the American League all by them- Selves and dropped the White Sox into a tie with the Indians for the third rung. Scores by innings: NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘irates Trounce Phillies mane Pittsburgh. 004 000 501-10 17 0 Philadelphia 000 000 000-0 9 2 Swift and Grace; Liska, Butler, Col- lins, Moore and Davis, Todd. Only games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Hildebrand Wins an H Chicago ... 000 100 000-1 5 Cleveland. 002 312 00x—8 10 Durham, Faber, Frasier, Murray, Miller and Berry; Hildebrand and Spencer. att games scheduled. . | Fights Last Night | Oe pe ‘3, wend (By The Associated Press) Philadelphia—Kid Chocolate, Cuba, ; outpointed Johnny Farr, Cleveland,! 0), retained junior lightweight title; | Johnny Lucas, Camden, N, J., out-j Pointed Phil Rafferty, New York, (6); Pete Gulotta, New York, outpointed Lew Lafferty, Philadelphia, (6); Vin- cent Reed, Philadelphia, stopped Mike De Camillo, Philadelphia, (2); Johnny Carven, Philadelphia, outpointed Jack SAW ONE YESTERDAY ~AN OLD, DECREPIT CHARIOT THAT I WOULDN'T BE SEEN OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD,LADS-T AM THINKING ABOUT BUYING’ AMoToR CAR ~AND IVE MADE UP MY MIND I WONT PAY MORE OUT OF A FOREST FIRI POPPER THAT WILL RUN FROM ONE REPAIR SHOP To ANOTHER ? ONE THAT CAN, By Ahern | THESE DAYS, YOU CAN MAKE #50 GO FARTHER THAN TH’ CAR YOu'D GET FOR THAT Open Golf Field Hit by Depression DERBY EVE CROWDS TO HAVE TWO RING ENTERTAINMENTS Rosenbloom - Belanger and Shade-Firpo Bouts Sched- uled Friday Evening Louisville, Ky., May 2.—()—Derby eve crowds seeking sports entertain- ment will have two fight programs to choose between Friday night, A 12-round non-title bout between Maxie Rosenbloom, light-heavyweight. champion from New York, and Charley Belanger, Winnipeg, * Can- ada, headlines a fistic show to ge staged across the Ohio river at Jef- fersonville, Ind. A fight show in Louisville that night will be headed by a 10-round- er bringing together Dave Shade, New York, and Henry Firpo, Louis- ville, both middleweights. Qtandings (By The Associated Press) AMERICAN BEAGDE! ‘Tracy, Philadelphia, (6); Norman New York . sa Rahn, Philadelphia, outpointed Joe Washington 6 625 Allen, Camden, N. J., (4). Chicago .. 7 588 Buffalo, N. Y¥.—Wesley Ramey, Cleveland .. 7 588 Grand Rapids, Mich. outpointed Detroit... Bo on Tony Sciolino, Buffalo, (10). iSt. Lous Sag, fae Hartford, Conn.—Eddie Reed, Hart- Boston . 4 11 267 ford, outpointed George Leone, New| ‘York, (6); Joe Rossi, New York, stopped Sailor Sharpe, Hartford, (4); L Pet. Dick Carter, Hartford, outpointed 3 +786 Jack Pettisham, New York, (6). i ae Baltimore — Lew Raymond, Balti- fae more, knocked out Jimmy Reed, Erie, 8 429 Pa, G). 7 Alf 9 400 a| St 2 4 ee ss a 1 313 9, Yesterday’s Stars | : ae ?| AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | (By the Associated Press) Milwaukee . 9 5 (648 Floyd Vaughan and Earl Grace, Pi- ' Minneapolis 8 5 615 rates—Their homers with bases filled Kansas City 9 8 529 beat Phillies. ae raul y 7 8 461 Oral Hildebrand, Indians — Held | 2dianapol Hiaae oan ‘White Sox to five hits for fourth suc- Toledo . 6 8 499 cessive victory. Louisvill 6 9 400 ‘Young ducks have claws on their QUT OUR WAY The United Kingdom drinks six ‘times as much tea as it does coffee. “100 GO OUT AND FIND HIM! GET HIM HOME , HERE !” He AD A CAN OF FISHING WORMS BEHIND THE KITCHEN DOOR, AND TL HNIOCKED IT OVER WITH THE BROOM ! WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY. FIND HIM, FORM PLUS! ——_—_— W ELL, here's form in quan- tity, anyway. The golfer is Oliver Hardy, member of the movie team of Laurel and Hardy.- He's supposed to be hitting a golf ball at Catalina Island, Calif. The mortality among cutlery grind- ers is 330 per cent greater than that of the average occupation, due to the inhalation of silica dust. Two of the latest aviation motors developed have one horsepower to 1.04 pounds of motor weight. By Williams WHY , MAL THEY CANT OR NILLIAMS, © 1933 BY NEA SEAVICE INC. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. 52 Entries Seem Certain to Fall Below 1,000 For First Time Since 1927 New York, May 2—(#)—For the first time since 1927, entries for the national open golf championship seem certain to fall below 1,000. Probably not more than 800 golf- ers will have filed: entries when the deadline is reached at 6 p. m. Tues- day night. There were only 550 in hand Monday and United State Golf association officials anticipated not more than 250 last-minute entries. Last year’s total was 1,012. Sectional qualifying round play for the open will be played May 15 with the finals at Chicago June 8-9-10. Make Plans For Legion’s Junior Ring Tournament Diamond Gloves Tourney Will Be Held in St. Paul Au- ditorium June 15-16 St. Paul, May 2.—(?)—Announce- ment was made Tuesday that the first annual American Legion dia- mond gloves boxing tournament will be held in the auditorium here June 15 and 16. ‘The tournament will be under the tules of the Minnesota branch of the Amateur Athletic Union and the Minnesota state athletic commission. It will be open to all registered ama- teur boxers. Championship trophies will be awarded to the winning boxers in each of the eight divisions ranging from bantamweight to heavyweight classes, Preliminary shows will be staged in various cities throughout the state where boxing licenses have been issued. Following these contests there will be district shows in which the winners will qualify for the cham- Pionship flights. Every Legion post in the state will be invited to enter boxers in the va- rious district tournaments. Any profits made fro mthe show will be used to carry on Legion welfare work. we J. Lund will manage the Ow. Heading the Legion committee is Harry M. Walsh, chairman of the legislative committee. Other mem- bers are Joseph Windlay and Mark Haywood. —________»> | Major Leaders | ——_—_____—_-9 (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Frederick, Dodgers, .424; Bartell, Phillies, 382. Hits—Traynor, Pirates, 22; Bartell, Phillies, 21. Home runs—Berger, Braves, 5; Bot- tomley, Reds, 3. Pitching—Fitzsimmon, Giants, Lu- cas, Reds, French, Pirates, and Carle- ton, Cardinals, 3-0, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—West, Brown, .403; Schulte, Hits—West, Browns, 29; Schulte, Senators, and Porter, Indians, 23. runs—Gehrig, Ya 7 Pesbing: Hilgebrena, Indians, 4-0; Ruffing, Yankees, HULL TENNESSER. FARTHER York Tit ELLIPSE. is from ROME Is NORTH than New plane shown ix an THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1933 WITH re Hoisted as Pittsburgh Pirates SHIRES BEGINS COMEBACK Invade East ROUSING BAT EXHIBITION GETS FIVE HITS IN/Beulah Miners Set for Big Season | AS MANY ATTEMPTS, | INCLUDING A HOMER Columbus Red Birds Trounce Minneapolis, Erstwhile Leader, 15-1 MILWAUKEE LEADS LEAGUE Brewers Get Eight Hits and Seven Walks to Defeat Indians, 5 to 4 Chicago, May 2.—(#)—Charles Ar- thur (the Great) Shires has fired the first blast in his campaign to prove that he belongs in the major leagues. Sent down to Columbus of the Am- erican Association by the St. Louis Cardinals last week, Shires, showing no signs of the knee injury that caused the Boston Braves to release him, gradually found himself and Monday gave a rousing demonstration of batting. He went to bat five times, hit safe- ly every time, including a home run and a double, and drove in three runs as the Red Birds defeated the cham- pion Minneapolis Club, 15 to 1. The defeat bounced the Millers out of the league leadership, Milwaukee defeat- ing Indianapolis, 5 to 4, to move into first place. While the Red Birds were clouting out 23 hits off Harry Holsclaw, Elam Van Gilder and Phil Hensiek, Clar- ence Heise, Columbus recruit left- hander, gave the Millers very little to hit at. He gave a double and two singles and fanned four men. Man- ager Ray Blades and Charley Wilson, another hand sent to Columbus by the Cardinals, chipped in with four hits apiece. Milwaukee gave another exhibition of making the hits count in turning Indianapolis back. The Indians lean- ed on Garland Braxton for 12 hits, but he went the whole way. The Brewers made only eight hits off Stewart Bolen, but he helped them along by walking seven batsmen. Frank Sigafoos rammed out a home run in the third to account for three Indianapolis runs. ‘The Toledo-St. Paul game was post- Poned because of wet grounds and cold weather kept Louisville and Kan- sas City from going through their exercises at Kansas City. Scores by innings: Brews Nose Out oe Indianapolis 003 010 000—4 12 Milwaukee 203 000 00x— 5 Bolen and Riddle, Braxton Young. Et E iY oO and Red Birds Trounce peers Columbus.. 011 021 442—15 23 0 Minneapolis 100 000 000—1 3 Heise and Delancey; Holsclaw, Vangilder, Hensick and Glenn. ‘Toledo-St. Paul, grounds. pepisrleseausas City, postponed, es if Gopher Grid Star | Works in Bismarck | a eeseseseesseshhhhfhh Postponed, wet ‘The husky young man who call- ed signals for the University of Minnesota football team last fall Tuesday morning began work for the Montgomery Ward store in Bismarck. He is Gerald “Jerry” Griffin, who was the Gopher quarterback until near the end of the season, when he was stricken with appen- dicitis and underwent an emer- gency operation at the Univer- sity hospital. Griffin is the fifth “big time” quarterback turned out by Devils Lake high school in the last 15 years. The others were Roy Burgess at the University of Cali- fornia, Howard Elliott at the University of Southern California, Clarence Crawford at the Univer- sity of Washington and Fred Hov- de at the University of Minne- sota, who recently returned to Minneapolis from England, where he was a Rhodes scholar. Griffin was a member of Devils Lake football and basketball teams and received all-state mention as @ fullback in the former sport. GOLF w= By ART KRENZ === Sean eee SEVEN OPEN CHAMPS MUST QUALIFY THIS YEAR pions, Farrell, Macfarlane, and one Ryder Cup nominee, Hor- ton Smith, must Play in the dis- trict qualifying rounds of 36 holes May 15 to prove their right to com- pete in the 1933 Shore Golf club, Glen View, Ill, June 8 to 10. ee ® In the list ¢ failed to get in the select group #f the leading 34 of last year’s Open : John Golden, the Espinosa brothets. Jock Huchinson, Bill Mehlhorn, Topty Manero, Willie Klein and Mike Brady. Twenty-one districts will stage thie qualifying rounds. They are: Bost/on, Woodland; New York, Cherry Valley; Philadelphia, Old York Road; W4sh- ington, Manor club; Atlanta, Atlanta Athletic club; Dallas, Brook Hojlow; Pittsburg! Oakmont; j Canterbu Detroit. The club; Chicago, Medinah; 8t. i Midland Hills; St. Louis, N HOLDING UP THE TEAM oa oe eas YHUCK MUCHA, guard of the University ot Seattle, has a lot on his shoulders ng practice, shows Chuck with 900 pounds of football ‘This time they bappen to be teammates, sd ing players on his back. all’s well. Washington, at The picture, taken dur- Manager Roy Seibert Already Has 20 Promising Per. formers At Work (Tribune Special Service) Beulah, N. D., May 2—The Merce: county community noted yor its large coal mines and fast baseball club— comes out this spring with one of the fastest nines it has had in several sea- sons, Roy Seibert, well-known Missouri {Slope athlete and former league per- former, will be manager and coach of the team and already is working with about 20 aspiring players. A long schedule will be started in May, with Bismarck, Dickinson, Mi« not and Williston among opponents, Teams desiring games are urged to communicate with Secretary Frank Pitzer here The Miners’ pitching staff again will be headed by Frank Stewart, for- mer National League hurler, Harold Viestenz and Don Martin will com- plete the staff. Catching probably will be taken care of by Dutch Wessels, a 200-pound fence-buster from the Texas League. Bert Webber and Olaf Thoronson, big guns of last year’s heavy-hitting artil- lery, also wail be in the lineup again, Baseball Men to Work Out Tonight Warmer Weather Gives Manag- er Chance to Order Stren- | uous Practice Hampered thus far by cold weather, candidates for the American Legion’s Bismarck baseball club will report for their first “real” workout of the seas son at the city athletic field Tuesday evening. Manager Neil O. Churchill said he refused to work his men much in the first few workouts, not: wishing to take @ chance against injury of any of his recruits by working them in chilly weather, With the weather considerably warmer this week, however, the pilot expects to begin practice in earnest. All men desiring to try out for the Cubs’ Philosophical Manager Not ay lea are urged to report at 6:30 o'clock Worried Over Bruins’ Poor Start Kansas City, Blue Hills; Denver, Lakewood; Los Angeles, Hillcrest; San Francisco, California; Portland, Ore., Fircrest; Omaha, Omaha Field club; Dayton, Miami; Buffalo, Niagara Falls Country club; Nashville, Belle Meade: * * # All golfers must enter, regardless of exemption, and pay a fee of $5. Entrants must state in which district they intend to qualify. Otherwise the y}committee will assign entrants and no jtransfers will be permitted. The num- ber of qualifiers from each district will be determined after the entry list closes May 2. There will be 116 places open for qualification, 34 golfers are exempt, and 10 places are reserved for foreign entrants. Between 1760 and 1765, one wolf in central France devoured 93 per- sons and mangled 30 more, It weighed 165 pounds. New York, May 2.—(AP)— Charley Grimm, left-handed first baseman and philosopher, just about the only man who kept his head and sense of humor when a world series blew up around him last fall, carefully piloted his Chicago Cubs into the lobby of a stately midtown hotel. “Everything is going to be all right,” he announced cheerfully, “as soon as we.start hitting. Kiki Cuyler’s leg is healing fine and he'll be back in uniform in three weeks. We've been getting grand pitching, but no runs. We still need a left-handed pitcher, and how have you been?” Grimm led his National League champions east for the first round of intersectional duels against the Giants ,with his club in fifth place, winners of six of the 14 games they've played so far. Seven former National Open cham- Walker, Barnes, Evans, Ouimet and Travers, | Open at the North; fr other stars tht CONTRACT BRID ie IDGE EXPERTS PLAY IT BY WM. E. McKENNEY Ae KENNEY om @ hand well, you must learn how to Tuesday evening. interesting defensive play that came up in the following hand. The Bidding South, the dealer, while holding three tricks and a biddable heart suit, should not open the bidding, as there is no flexibility to the hand. | Possibly the best declaration for this type of hand would be no trump, but the hand is not strong enough to make an original no trump bid in the constructive one over one system. After the pass, West opened the bidding with one club. North bid one Spade and East passed. South now bid two hearts, West passed and North bid two spades. , i} " Secretary, American Bridge League | defend it properly or you have but/ South, wishing to make another con- There is no doubt but that the bid-/ little chance of defeating this pair.| ding in contract provides and pro-|Therefore, when on the defensive,| duces most of the thrills. But what is the use of good bidding unless it |Pl4¥ no card until you have given it is combined with fine play? Again, if you find a pair that bid | some thought. I want to call your attention to an A SOCK IN SOCCER | i | { 1 i } iN } )3 T pionship game hetween St. Louis and New York teams indica’ there’s.e healthy sock in soccer now and then, ers are colliding. St. Louis won two straight and the lenge cup. ‘Fwo St. Louis play: ional Chal- structive bid, bid two no trump. It is sound to reason that if North jhas any side strength it must be in ;clubs, When North bid three spades, {South went to four. H The Play East's opening lead was the six of clubs, which West won with the ace. West returned a small club, which declarer won with the king. The king of spades was won by West with the ace. He returned the queen of clubs, declarer trumping. as queen of spades picked up East's jack. In order to make game, declarer can lose but one more trick. If he can find the king of diamonds and the king of hearts in the East hand, it will be easy, but the bidding in- dicates that West possibly holds them. However, the declarer led the six of diamonds. A careless East player would allow the contract to be made, | You have heard an old auction rule {Which says “Second hand plays low.” | You must forget those auction tactics when playing contract and must stop to think before playing a card. | You know that the declarer stil! {has four trump and three other cards. If you play a small diamond, the de- your partner. Your proper play is te your partner. Youd proper play is te go right up with the ten of diamonds —this will set the declarer one trick, If you play the deuce, declarer will play the eight from dummy and West will win with the nine. Regardless of what West now leads, the declarer has the rest of the tricks. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.)