The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 30, 1933, Page 10

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Primo Carnera Knocks Out Jack Sharkey -PONDITALN ‘BIG TED MEINHOVER HU USESHIS HANMLKE (ov Boarpive House RIGHT FOR VICTORY 201-Pound American Boxer May Not Yet Know What Hit Him in Jaw CLIMAX WAS SPECTACULAR, Gargantuan Had Been Outbox- | ed and Outfought Early Rounds in | | New York, June 30.—()—Under cir-y cumstances that still seemed baffling | end somewhat incredible Friday to at! jeast a share of the fight fraternity. Primo Carncra, the 25-year-old, 260- pound Italian giant, stood astride the boxing world like « modern colossus | as the new heavyweight champion. With one migh ap of his ham- Uke right fist, Carncra took the title | from Jack Sharkey, 201-pound Amer- | ican, on # knockout in the sixth round | of a 15-round match Thursday eve-| ning. | The finish came with a suddenness | that was as dramatic as it was start-| rd of 35.000 spectators, | Iittle more than half filling the Madi- gon Square Garden bowl. An inside right uppercut, brought up swiftly as) MAMMA, PAPA BE HAPPY New York, June 30.—(P)—The || new heavyweight fighting champ- ion of the world, Primo Carnera of Italy. sat back in the corner of a blistering little room out on Long Island Thursday night and beat his great hands together like a delighted child as he chanted in roughshod English: “Boy, oh boy, oh boy! Now my mamma and papa be happy! Now my mamma and papa be happy! Primo’s champion! Now they be happy.” the giant came to grips along the ropes with his foe, felled Sharkey as though he had been a tree hit by the ‘woodman’s final blow. The champion fell to the canvas, face down, scarcely moved except to lift his head once and crop his mouth- piece to the floor, while Referee Ar- thur Donovan finished the count of 10, after 2 minutes and 27 seconds of! the sixth round. Sharkey Had Advantage It marked the second time in his erratic career that Sharkey had lost an international battle, with the title ‘at stake, and it baffled most of those @t the ringside who had watched the MUSSOLINI IS DELIGHTED Rome, June 30.—()—Primo Car- nera’s victory over Jack Sharkey was the first piece of news com- municated to Premier Mussolini when he arose Friday. His secre- tary told him Italy now holds the world’s heavyweight boxing champ- ionship for the first time in his- tory. Il Duce expressed himself as being delighted with the success of the huge Italian fighter. News- Papers devotea most of their front Pages to the match, although the fight ended too late to permit edi- torial comment. Bostonian drop after outboxing, out- smarting and outpunching Carnera by a wide margin in the first five rounds. There was no question about the power behind Carnera’s final thrust, the climax of a spectacular closing flurry that saw the champion flounder suddenly, lose almost complete control of his defense and crumple under the ponderous punches of the biggest man who ever scaled the world heavy- weight heights. It was an uppercut that had everything Carnera could muster in his huge frame behind it and Sharkey looked “cold” if ever a fighter did, as he went down. It was hhis “secret punch,” Carnara exclaimed exultantly, after the tight, and per- haps he was right, for Sharkey didn’t see it coming and may not know yet what hit him. It required several minutes in Shar- Key's corner to bring him around to the point where he could stand on his own feet and acknowledge the wild enthusiasin of his conqueror, who had been tossing his squad of managers THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1933 Z FOR #50 YSEE IM A PALOF YOUR £2 my NAME IS BROTHER JAKE,IN CHICAGO~ WERE LIKE SWISS AN* RYE~YEH-—~ HE TOLD ME TO HOP IN TO GIVE You’ TH’ PUMP-HANDLE HOWDY BEFORE TL LEAVE TOWN ~~ TM HEADIN’ NORTH TONIGHT, AN’ 1 WAS WONDERIN' \F YOU'D CASH A CHECK By Ahern BARKER ? THERE USED HOUSE LAST LEAVING FOR TO BE A HOOPLE FAMILY LIVING HERE, BEFORE I TOOK OVER THE MONTH f T RECALL THE HOOPLES SAYING 3 / ¥ SOMETHING ABOUT 2 TH MAJOR IS FAST ON TH TRIGGER? THAT BLOKES CHECK IS ONE OF THOSE ON TH’ BANKS OF TH’ WABASH J HES TOURING . TH COUNTRY ,, “HANGING PAPER fh <A Blk TANT MUG Z WOULD FRAME A PIGEON pom Jesse Owens Bested By Another Negro, Jimmie Johnson, From Illinois Chicago, June 30.—(?)—The main event of Chicago's three-day track and field show—the 46th renewal of the National A. A. U. championships— will be decided Friday night under the floodlights at Soldier Field. One of the anticipated features, a sizzling 100-meter race hetween Ralph Metcalfe of Marquette University and Jesse Owens, the Negro flyer from Cleveland, has been pretty well spoil- ed, but there are plenty of other con- tests promising as much or more, bril- liant action. Jimmie Johnson, another speedster, representing Illinois State Normal, took care of the Metcalfe- Owens affair in the junior champion- eee and seconds around like so many bags of sand. Hooked Carnera Dizzy Up to the finish, Sharkey was the master of his gargantuan rival. The champion started slowly and lost the first round, taking at least one hard right-hand clout on the chin, but he seemed unhurt, and for the next four rounds gave Carnera a boxing lesson. He feinted the big fellow off balance, he hooked him dizzy with lefts and tried desperately at times to apply the “crusher” with a looping right to the head. In the second and fifth rounds, Sharkey staggered Carnera with right-handers to the head. Primo, when most flustered, resorted to bear- like wrestling tactics and employed backhand blows that drew warnings from the referee in the third, fourth and fifth rounds, Carnera came out for the sixth round with a wide grin. They grap- pled along one side of the ring, then another. Sharkey tumbled half through the ropes, going to his knees after rebounding from a left to the head. The champion tore back at Primo without a count and connected Fourth of July address at Fargo, | with a right that shook the Italian. speaking to the Young People’s Lu- | For the third and last time, then, they went into the ropes and Carnera ap- plied the final stroke. | OUT OUR WAY Negroj ships Thursday. He gave the Cleve- land youngster a sound beating in the 100 meters, and ran well enough—10.4 | seconds, to promise the Marquette Negro at least a battle. His time was only a 10th of a second short of the world record, held by Percy Williams of Canada. Gorilla Will Risk Middleweight Champion Will Clash With Babe Marino of San Francisco |_ San | Francisco, June 30.—(P)— al Boxing association middleweight champion but still possessor of the belt emblematic of the title, Gorilla Jones, | Akron, Ohio, negro, risks his claims |to the trophy here Friday night against Babe Marino, San Francisco, in a scheduled 10-round bout. Jones was recognized by the asso- ciation as champion until recently, when he was suspended for engaging in a bout that did not meet with of- ficial approval. The association said nothing about returning the belt Jones won in an elimination tourna- ment two years ago and the negro still considers himself the champion. Shipstead to Speak At Lutheran Meeting Washington, June 30.—(?)—Lyder Selvig and his group of Norwegians who have been visiting the world fair at Chicago and points in Minnesota, gave a dinner Thursday night at the Ambassador hotel. Senator Henrik Shipstead was their guest of honor. The senator is clos- ing up his affairs here and planned | to leave Friday for Minnesota. | Senator Shipstead will deliver the ther League. The group will assem- |ble there from all over the north- | western states, By Williams IH——[ I JUST WANT TO WAT) WARN YOU, YHOONG ¥ FELLER! LAG MOV INTO TRov! “OU BREAW Fi ANOTHER WINDOW AN (TS UABLE TO GIT ~ B-4-H1-HOO WE CAN NEVER HOLD OUR HEADS UP AGAIN BLE His Title Tonight: Drummed out of the ranks as Nation-/ Yankees and Cardinals Resume _ Courses Toward Loop Pennnats| CLEVELAND NEGRO BEATEN IN | ame JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP DASH Each Gain Full Game on Sena- | tors and Giants in Thurs- | day Games By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. (Associated Press Sports Writer) | Taking divergent paths toward the top, the New York Yankees and St. | Louis Cardinals have resumed their courses toward the leading places in the major leagues which they lost not so long ago. Seizing upon the first sign of slackening in Washington’s winning streak, the Yanks battered their way into a tie for the American League lead Thursday at the expense of the Cleveland Indians. The Cards opened |& direct attack on the New York |Giants, and walloped the National League leaders 7-3, The Yanks did a great job of bunching their blows against Cleve- land to win 9-3. Lefty Gomez was jeffective in the pinches and Babe Ruth set the hitiing pace for the fourth straight New York victory. The Senators, meanwhile, bowed 5-4 to the Detroit Tigers. With Lefty Grove on the hill, the Philadelphia Athletics defeated the St. Louis Browns 4-1, Jimmie Foxx | hit his 19th homer, The revived Phillies continued to knock off the National League's first- division clubs as they hung a 6-4 de- feat on the third-place Pittsburgh Pirates. Bush's steady pitching and an 11- hit attack gave the Chicago Cubs a 7-2 victory over the Brooklyn Dodg- €rs, Rain halted the Boston-Chicago American League encounter while the Braves and the Cincinnati Reds ‘had an off day in the National. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Athletics Trip Browns | RHE Philadelphia 002 002 000—4 7 0 St. Louis... 001 000 ee a Grove and Cochrane; Blacholder and Shea. Detroit Nips Senators R H Washington 200 100 001-4 11 Detroit .... 000 031 001—5 10 Whitehill, Russell, McAfee, Burke and Sewell; Rowe, Ht = ane 8 logsett and Hay. E Yanks Trounce Indians R H New York.. 200 020 212—9 13 Cleveland.. 000 020 001—3 12 one Harder and Pytlak. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cards Crush Giants R St. Louis .. 006 000 010— 7 ig New aek . ae hia 3 10 ‘arleton an yn; Clark, Li 5 Bell and Mancuso. nay * Cubs Wallop Dodgers Gomez and Dickey; Hudlin, Bean, | * E 1 0 'BRRORS BY MATES ROB COLOSSUS OF SHUTOUT VERDICT | Crushes Sweet Shop En- | try By 10 to 1 HIT WAS SCRATCH VARIETY Emil Martin Scores in Last | Frame When Mickelson and Slattery Err ! STANDINGS Won Lost Pet. O. H. Will Co. .... 6 3 .666 Highway Dept. . 5 3 626 A. O. U. W. 5 4 «555 Sweet Shop . - 8 4&4 A P. Restaurant .. 3 4 429 C'assic Barbers 4 6 400 Company A . 2 4 333 Big Ted Meinhover Thursday eve- ning pitched a one-hit game but was robbed of a shutout by team-mates’ errors in the last inning as the Grand Pacific Restaurant defeated the Sweet Shop 10 to 1 in a city diamondball league contest. With two out in the ninth inning, Emil Martin of the Sweet Shop reach- ed first on Grant Mickelson’s error and scored on Jimmy Slattery’s mis- Play for his team’s only counter. Even the one hit the Sweet Shop secured was of the scratch variety. Earl Hoffman at second retrieved the ball but was unable to catch the run- ner at first. The scorer called it “too hot to handle.” It was Emil Martin's | hit. Larry Schneider, Sweet Shop twirl- er, was wild as usual Thursday night. Eddie Agre relieved him in the fourth after Schneider had allowed five hits {and walked 11 men, giving the G. entry a 5-to-0 lead. With three men on base, Agre retired the side after two more runs had crossed home plate. The G. P. men failed to score again until the ninth, when Agre weakened to allow four hits and three runs, In the last half of the ninth, Mein- hover walked Lee, who became a vic- tim of a double play. With two out Martin came to bat and the two mis- Plays allowed him to score. Lester Dohn, Mickelson and Harold Tait of the victors each hit safely times and the latter only thrice. Dohn at third handled six infield Plays without an error. The box | Score: G. P. Eat Shop (10) |E Hoffman, rss. |B. Larson, 2b... L, Dohn, 3b. J. Cowan, If R. Kranz, cf. G. Mickelson, 1b \H_ Tait, c...... |B. Stackhouse, Iss J. Slattery, rf.. 5 a Py E 0 Sl mowsmmnmans Brel osoococooHooIS | Heer mH MHoS F. Lee, \E Agre, Iss-p. |E. Martin, rf. \A. Schneider, rss. 'H. Hugelman, If. {N. Agre, 2b-lss. |E. Maney, 1b.... |R. Boelter, cf L, Harlan, c.. \L. Schneider, p-2b. Totals. Score by G. P. Eat. 83 | ps no none 00 e909 eo on Mel occoocooHooMS |! HHommoonee wtin | unccocoocotin! oxocHoce0 «014 200 3—10 1 Sweet Sho) +000 0001-1 1 2 Summary: Sacrifice, Stackhouse. Two base hits, Mickelson, Tait, Slat-| tery, Meinhover. Double plays, Hoff- jman to Mickelson. Hits off Meinhov- er 1 in 7 innings; off Schneider 5 in 3 1/3 innings; off E. Agre 5 in 3 2/3 innings. Struck out by Meinhover 4; by Schneider 6; by-E. Agre 5. Bases on balls off Meinhover 2; off Schnei- der 11; off E. Agre 1. Umpire, George \Hays. Scorer, B, Hummel. i> S ~ _ ve Fights Last Night | (By the Associated Press) New York — Primo Carnera, Italy, knocked out Jack Sharkey, Boston (6), won world heavy- weight championship; Tony Shucco, Boston, outpointed Al Stillman, St. Louis (6); Bob Moody, Boston, outpointed Har- old Mays, Bayonne, N. J. (5); Arthur Huttick, New York, knocked out Vic Bernard, Boston Chicago ... 100 030 021— 7 a ri (1); Leonard Del Genio, New Brooklyn... 001 100 000—2 7 | York, stopped Phil Bruno, New | Bush and Hartnett; Beck and| York (3); Innocente Baiguerra, ed Italy, fipointed Chester Matan, PER New York (5); Frankie Edgren, | Phils Defeat Fltaies - < Cheyenne, Wyo., and Hans Birkie, Pittsburgh. 100 010 002— 4 ,| Germany, drew (5). eine, Harri re iJ Rhem and Todds "eb; Elliott.) Neron, Chicago (10). a | Yesterday’s Stars | ——— (By the Associated Press) Harvey Hendrick, Cubs — Pasted | two doubles and triple against Dodg- ers. Senators 5-4 Tex ninth inning t of season. Jimmie Fox homers Carleton Chuck Klein, Browns. singles to beat Pirates, 6-4. Gerald Walker, Tigers — Singled in ninth driving! in run that beat Carleton, Cardinals — Shut} out Giants until win 11th victory and Bob Johnson, Athletics — Their brought | 4-1 victory over Phillies—Drove in six runs with two homers and two Babe Ruth, Yankees—Led attack| on Indians with double and two! The term, “call money,” is applied {to money which is loaned on condi- jtion that the loan be repaid at any time the person making it calls for the money. to x Max Baer is a resideut of LIVERMORE, CALIF. The HERRING is the world's most important food fish, although outranked by the cod in North America, QUITO, the capita) ‘of Ecuador, is less than 20 miles south of the Equator. Grand Pacific Restaurant Ten| | marck's junior baseball set-up. {third inning against the Athletics, bunching their hits at the same time in Sixth to Win Title RLS ONE-HIT DIAMONDBALL GAME Errors Are Important in Double of Junior Baseball League : Indians Defeat Athletics 8 to 4 As Senators Wallop Yankees 9 to 3 Despite the fact that they made fewer hits and more errors than their opponents, the Indians Thursday aft- ernoon defeated the Athletics 8 to 4 in an American League game of Bis- In the other American League game in the twin bill, the Senators took advantage of opponents’ errors to trim the Yankees 9 to 3. The Indians scored six runs in the the Athletics were bunching their er- rors. Likewise, the Athletics scored four runs in the fourth inning. T. Fox of the Indians allowed four hits while J. Bowers of the losers granted only three. The Yanks and Senators each se- cured five hits but the Yankees made half a dozen errors and the Senators only one. H. Clausnitzer pitched for the victors, R. Boelter for the victims. A National League doubleheader was scheduled for Friday, the Cards against the Giants at 1 p. m. and the Cubs against the Pirates at 3 p. m. There will be no junior games on duly 3 and 4, it is announced by Di- rector Myron H. Anderson. The Ath- letics and Senators will clash July 8. P.!H. Clausnitzer, p .. Box scores for Thursday’s tilts: Yanks (3) ABRH POA B. Patzman, c ... J. Bowers, cf M. Schultz, 1b R. Boelter, p W. Larson, 2b . 8. Schneider, 3b H. Koch, If .. B. Houserd, rf ... T. Fox, ss WINN NO Co ConmcsoHHS S2DCHOwWON Totals ........: Senators (9) R. McCabe, cf A. Fiest, c ... N. Schneider, 2b . F. Weisgerber, rf. J. Ibach, If ....... J. Entringer, 3b . B. Burckardt, ss D. McCabe, 1b Yanks Senators Summary: Hits off Boelter 5 in an o Clausnitzer 4; —lIbach and Welch and Bolton. pires—Peterson and Welch. Oeandin AMERICAN LEAGUE wi iL |Pesek Pins Richards Down in 28 Minutes ling match Thursday night. John Freeberg, 30 minutes. . innings; off Clausnitzer 5 in 4 in- nings; struck out by Boelter 6; by bases on balls off twice, the first two being at bat four| Boelter 5; off Clausnitzer 2; umpires Indians (8) AE|the Red Birds’ closest threat, failed N. Schneider, ¢ 3 0 0 8 0 Oto capitalize on the chance to gain, T. Fox, p .. 3 2 1 2 2 0) losing to Kansas City, 6 to 4. B. Burckardt, 2b ... 1 1 0 0 0 0) Minneapolis, with Joe Hauser lead- B. Welch, 3b 110 0 0 2/ing a 17-hit attack, defeated Mil- ‘MO ’Gchults, 1b 3 1 1 4 0 1) Waukee 9 to 8 in 10 innings. Hauser’s Cy tonnson jet 3 1 1 0 0 O\32nd homer of the season tied the EB Reff, rt . 2 1 0 0 0 O'score in the ninth, Scores by innings: H. Smith, ss 210101 Blues Defeat Saints L, Mitchell, If .....2 00001 R HE Kansas City 300 000 120-6 7 1 Totals . 315 2 5|St. Paul... 300 000 010-4 7 1 Athletics (4 Shores and Brenzell; Garland, Ydej; B. Patzman, cc .....2 1 0 5 0 0/and Fenner. J. Bowers, p . 211000 G. Abbot, ss 201010 Colon Os Yearencos: 4 C. White, 2b . $011 2 Olnoteds ..). 000 101 oa BF K. Morris, 3b .....3 0 0 0 1 1)Louisville..” 000 024 00x—6 13 1 H, Asselstine, 1b ... 3 0 0 6 2 1) Lawson, Bachman and Healy: Mar- T. Dolan, If N. 2.1 1 1 1 O}cum and Thompson. R. Penner, cf .....2 1011 0 as H, Rishworth, rf ..3 0 010 0 Millers Win In 10th | Totals 82 1 . Minneapolis 006 000 00221—9 16 2 Indians arenes 35 Ge ianines 1, Hi 7 v2 ly, Pressnell, Hillin, Braxton, Athletics +. 000 40-4 4 2/Polli and Young;’ Murray, Tauscher, Summary: Double plays—Penner}Hilcher and Henline, Glenn. to White; hits off Bowers 3 in 5 in- nings; off Fox 4 in 5 innings; struck out by Bowers 5; by Fox 7; bases on balls off Bowers 4; off Fox 3; um- gs June 380.—()—John Pesek, Ravenna, Neb., pinned Ray Richards’ shoulders to the mat in 28 minutes and 39 seconds in a wrest- heavyweight, and Abe Kashey, Syrian heavyweight from New York, slugged and kicked their way to a draw in Andy Moen of Fergus Falls, Minn., defeated Jack Edwards of Oklahoma City in 15 minutes and 27 seconds: [with & series of flying mares, E NODOMONOO Louisville Hurler Effective; Saints Fail to Capitalize on Chance | Chicago, June 30.—(#)—With a lit-! tle steonger team, Johnny Marcum, Louisville’s husky young right-hander, | might be up among the American As- sociation’s prize pitchers. Marcum Thursday accounted for his 12th victory of the season, defeating Toledo 6 to 4. He allowed only five hits until the ninth inning. Columbus was the victim of a two- run rally in the ninth which gave In- dianapolis a 6-to-5 decision. St. Paul, 1 6 1 5 R H Milwaukee. 012 020 003 0—8 15 Indians Beat Colmnbes H Columbus.. 210 000 200-5 11 0 Indianapolis 002 002 0022—6 11 2 Winford, Teachout, Dean and De- lancey; Thomas, Boley and Riddle. Anderson Slips But Retains League Lead St. Paul, June 30—(P)}—Johnay An- derson, leading batter of the Northern ie almost since the schedule JOHN MARCUM COULD BE ACE — WITH LITTLE STRONGER TEAM Pence of Minot High Amateur in State Trapshoot Breaks 98 Out of 100 in Singles and 44 Out of 50 Targets in Handicap Grand Forks, N. D., June 30.—()— Dr. J. R. Pence of Minot, state singles champion, was high amateur gun in the annual trapshooting tourna- ment of the North Dakota Sports- men’s association as it closed the pre- liminary round Thursday and prepar- ed for the championship events Fri- day. Pence was high among the state marksmen in the warm-up singles with 98 out of 100 targets, broke 44 out of 50 in the handicap and the same number in the doubles for a to- tal of 186. Captain Billy Fawcett of Robbins- dale, Minn., was high amateur in the singles with 99 out of 100 while J. R. Jahns of Spirit Lake, Iowa, profes- Sional, tied with him. O. L. Spencer of Grand Forks and W. H. Lenneville of Dickinson, 1932 doubles winner, had scores of 96 and 95 respectively. L. A. Hughes of Fargo captured most of the money in the preliminary handicap event with 48 out of 50, Lenneville and C. G. Matson of Thief River Falls tied for second with 47 each. « Pence was high amateur in the deubles with 44 out of 50 and Lenne- El ville next with 43. H. E, Secord of Grand Forks, professional, had the best score of the day in that event, however, with 45, Jahns turned in the best grand total of the day at 187, topping Pence by one point. Captain Fawcett tied with Pence at 186. The first half of the state singles championship was to be fired Friday along with the doubles event. Spunk Collins Sets Mark at Sioux Falls Aberdeen, 8. D., June 30.—(#)— Emory “Spunk” Collins, Sioux Falls, S. D., world’s half-mile dirt track champion, set a high qualifying mark of 30 seconds for once around the tri- state fair grounds oval here Thursday and copped the majority of honors in. auto racing billed as summer festival Other drivers who competed includ« ed Dave Champeon, Grand Forks, N. Champeon placed third in a two- and-a-half mile. run with his Chev~« rolet Special. He came in fourth in q three-mile and a. mile-and-a-hal To counteract the Monday “blue™ feeling, a firm in Birmingham, Enge jJand, has a half hour of community singing before beginning work on that morning. Berger, Braves, 13 Pitching—Carieton, Cardinals, 8; Cantwell, Braves, 9-3. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Simmons, White Sox, 372; Cronin, Senators, .362. i- Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 19; Ruth and Gehrig, Yankees, 17. Pitching—Van Atta, Yankees, 6-2; Crowder, Senators, and Grove, Ath- leties, 11-4. Only six or seven persons in a mil- lion are struck by lightning, accord- 18 to estimates, In 1834 and 1836, Henry Blair wag granted patents on a corn harvester: he was the first Negro to receive @ patent on an invention. Average length of a lion's life ig i Pet. | opened, was held hitless Thursday for Washington oT iee ‘632 |the second consecutive day. New aee $$ 2% -8%| Anderson, manager of the East! Rio 34 34 500|Grand Forks Colts, who were swamp- Cleveland 34 36 .484/ed by Winnipeg, 12 to 1, lost 25 points Det 33 36 .478)during the two days, dropping from 27 41 ~—«.307| 488 to 463. He remains in the lead 45 (357 ba only six points ahead of Dom- fe as k, Moorhead-Fargo outfielder. NATIONAL LEAGUE =| Greenwald who ranks next to An- 24 .625|derson among the regulars also went a 29 .567| Without a hit and had 11 points 32 529 clipped from his: percentage. Piet, | entertainment, 34 — .514|Maroon second-baseman, was the big 35 .485/gun in the triumph, with a single, = ony triple and home run. . D. 4 ‘ It was Goldworthy’s twelfth victory Philadelphia . 42 391 otitis genean” AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Brandon continued on the losing W LL Pet.jend of the score when Superior won Columbus -609|3 to 1. Ledin permitted the Cana-|event. . -548|dians only four hits and knocked out 337/a triple. '500|__Zau Claire was to play at Brandon 1478 |Friday, with Crookston moving on to .458|Moorhead. Winnipeg and East Grand .351| Forks were to continue their series. r ; ret,|| Major Leaders | Winnij 858 | i | (By the Associated Press) Superior ell NATIONAL LEAGUE .500/ Batting—Klein, Phillies, 371; Da-| -441| vis, Phillies, .362. Brandon ..... 25 3 Hits—Pullis, Phillies, 105; Klein,| 40 years. Moorhead-Fargo . 25 306 Phillies, 1. Home runs—Klein, Phillies, 15; ate: oh, Bismarck the | Member of TheOrder of the GoldenRuleis — CONVERT’S : FUNERAL SERVICE ‘AService for ALL. regardles: ‘of financial circumstances / x 3:00: low ly k bull feed £00 er pac! Ibs. tere 400 | rb cost sale:

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