Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PARMELEE LOST AND SCHUMACHER HASN'T HIT REGULAR STRIDE World Champions Realize Carl Hubbell Cannot Do All of Hurling STILL ON CHICAGO’S HEELS Yankees, Tigers, Indians, Cards, Phils and Pirates Are Winners (By The Associated Press) Even though they are pounding the new National League ball in bet- ter style, it looks as if the world champion New York Giants might have to travel over a long and rocky route created by pitching weakness to reach their goal of another Nation- el League pennant. ‘The Giants have run into two severe setbacks already this season. Roy Parmelee was rendered temporarily inactive by appendicitis and Hal Schumacher hasn't been able to touch his 1933 form. The trial of the Port- land rookie, Joe Bowman, as a start- ing pitcher Tuesday resulted in a vic- tory which put the Giants close to the league lead but it still emphasized the fact that the durable Carl Hubbell can't do all the pitching this season. ‘The Giants beat Brooklyn 10-9. The Cubs lost to Pittsburgh 4-1. ‘The Boston Braves took an 11-6 shel- lacking from the Phillies. Burleigh Grimes won his second vietory for St. Louis in as many days when two homers by Jim Collins led the Cardinals to 3-2 decision over the Cincinnati Reds in 11 innings. ‘The New York Yankees, going into the ninth inning against Washington with the score tied, belted three suc- cessive triples and finished the inning with five runs and a 10-5 triumph. Detroit's Tigers beat St. Louis 5-4. Henry Johnson pitched the Red Sox to a 7-2 victory over the Athletics. The Cleveland Indians trounced the Chicago White Sox 12-1. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Rally To Win 2 RHE t.. Louis. -000 301 000— 4 8 1 troit .. -000 102 02x— 5 10 3 dley, Knott, Wells and Hemsley; er, Marberry and Cochrane. 2 Yanks Crush Senators RHE .003 000 110— 5 15 1 Smythe, Uhle and + Stewart, Crowder, Burke, *’ « and Berg, Klumpp. Indians Tomhawk Chisox RHE ‘Dleveland . +200 005 203—12 15 0 Chicago ........000 000 100-1 5 1 Hudlin and Pytlak; Gaston, Pomor- tki, Stine, Lyons and Shea. Bosox Beat Athletics owt Marcum and Berry, Hayes: . Johnson and Hinkle. NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Cop Slugfest RHE Brooklyn .....100002402—9 15 5 New York ....02601100x—-10 9 4 Leonard, Page, Herring, Carroll and Lopez; Bowman, Luque, Hubbell anc ‘Mancuso. Birkhofer Tames Cubs R 0/ 9 0 Boston 3 Philadelphia ..30400400x—11 13 1 Frankhouse, Mangum, Brown and Cincinnati ..00000100001—2 9 Bt. Louis ...00000000102—3 11 i Johnson, Brennan and O'Farrell; Gallahan, Haines, Grimes and V. Da- vis, Delancey. wrod (per, Red Sox, and Vosmik, Indians, 19. Home runs—Bonura, White Sox, and Foxx, Athletics, 4. # E/ April Auto Sales | | Dakota last month soared to a fig- Despite Better Hitting Gilp WS & SAAME TH’ WAY YOU NEGLECT TH WORLD AT LARGE WITH YOUR INVENTIONS) WHATS TH MATTER, HAS TH OL HEAD NEST GONE COLD’? You HAVENT HATCHED OUT ONE IN MONTHS / om BZ WHEN THE UM-M-OH, T ONLY THINK UP THOSE THINGS IN MY SPARE TIME JAS SOON ASIGETA FEW DAYS FREE,I AM GOING TO WORK ON MY FLEXIBLE COAT HANGER-'\TLL BE MADE A PART OF THE COAT, SO THAT OFF ,|T HOLDS ITS SHAPE ACROSS THE Z COAT \S TAKEN More Than Dozen High Schools Enter Capital City Track-Field Meet Here St. Andrews Natives Are Shocked by Startling Play of Young Americans St. Andrews, Scotland, May 2.— (?)}—The oldest natives around St. Andrews still were shaking their heads Wednesday after watching the fledglings of the American Walker Cup team tear around their hallowed course the last two days. “I never saw anything like it,” said one gnarled inhabitant af- ter following a foursome com- posed of Johnny Goodman, Gus Moreland, Lawson Little, all members of the American team. and Johnny Dawson of Chicago through their second day of prac- tice over the links where the in- ternational matches will be played May 11 and 12. The visiting team planned to take a complete rest from golf ‘Wednesday. — | Yesterday’s Stars || > (By The Associated Press) i Hank Greenberg, Tigers—Walloped homer and 2 singles against Browns. Ralph Birkofer, Pirates—Limited Cubs to five hits. Don Heffner, Yankees—Tripled in ninth to start five-run rally that beat Senators. Burgess Whitehead, Cardinals—His single in 11th drove in winning run against Reds. Henry Johnson, Red Sox—Struck out eight in pitching six-hit game) against Athletics. George Watkins, Giants—Led at-/ tack on Dodgers with two homers and single. Willis Hudlin, Indians—Held White |- Sox to five hits and one run. Ethan Allen, Phillies—Batted in) three runs against Braves with homer and two singles. Show Big Advance} Sale of new automobiles in North ure four times as many as the sales during the same month last year. The figures were compiled by Com- mercial Service, Inc. ‘Total passenger car sales for April were 1,179 compared with 377 for that | month last year. To date this year passenger car sales totaled 2.278 com- | pared with 877 for the first four months last year. Truck sales totaled 366 last month compared with 36 for April, 1933. For the first four months of this year sales of new trucks totaled 694 compared with 98 for the same period! Pitching—Ruffing, Yankees, Thom- ret Senators, and Hildebrand, Indians, NATIONAL LEAGUE Wilson, Phillies, 389; Al- ‘Hits--Moore, (les, Urbanski, Braves, and Klein, Oubs, 18. Home .runs—Ott, Giants, Hartnett and Klein, Cubs, 5. ree Pitching—Bush, Cubs, 4-0; War- neke, Cubs, and Hubbell, Giants, 3-0. |Forks 104, Ward | Austin, of the Phillies. last year. Leading counties in sales of pas- Senger cars were Cass with 195, Grand 100, Burleigh 79, Stutsman 59. In truck sales Cass also was high with 59, Burleigh second with 30, and Ward third with 17. m YOU'RE TELLING ME Carl Tremaine, who once was an outstanding ring attraction in Cleve- land, is down and out and thankful to gain admittance to Public Hall there . +» Moore is a grand old baseball name + «+ and there's five of the family tree playing taday—Joe, of the Giants; Gene, of the Cards; John of the Reds; Randy, of the Braves, and « Wis- consin’s crew, under Mike Murphy, is working out ‘trenuously for a sched- ule that lists only one meet . . . and last year Mike didn't have a race on his bill of fare. . . . They say Arky Vaughn, Pirates’ shortstop, is going to become one of the game's greatest hitters . . . and his talent is entirely due to the coaching of Honus Wagner, who was some shakes as a clouter himself. ST | Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) New York—Midget Wolgast, 19, Philadelphia, and Lou Calica, 119, Brooklyn, drew, (8). Los Angeles—Peter Jackson, 138'4, Los Angeles, outpointed Tony Herrera, 140, El Paso, (10). L WOULDA DROPPED em | [Nearly 100 Athletes Expected to Participate in Events Here Saturday With more than a dozen schools already having sent in names of their entries, nearly a hundred high school athletes are expected to participate in the annual Capital City track and field meet at Hughes field here Sat- urday. Among schools already entered, be- sides Bismarck, St. Mary's and Man- dan, are Mohall, Fargo and Dickin- son, it was announced Wednesday by W. H. Payne, principal of Bismarck high school, sponsor of the affair. ‘With a crew of men working on the field this year, the track is expected to be in A-1 condition for the var- fous events, Payne said. Grandin S (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE L Pet. 3 «769 3.750 5 45 6 500 7 AIT 8 «333 9 250 AMERICAN LEAGUE . 8 ¢ 667 7 4 636 6 4 600 6 6 500 ie 462 4 6 400 5 8 «385 Chicago ... 4 7 364 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis . 1 83 = 67.69 Indianapolis . 7 5 583 Louisville 6 5 45, Toledo 6 5 545 Kansas 6 7 462 Milwaukee 5 8 385 Coulmbus 4°67 (364 St. Paul 4 8 2333 Wilbur Glenn Voliva has decid- ed to admit smokers and pork eat- ers into his church. He figures the world will end anyway next September. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams | HOWS COME You DIDN' DROP THEM FLOWERS WHEN TH' BANK CAVED IN AN' BURIED You? MOST ANYBODY WELL,I Guess I'M DIFFRUNT. PROBLY THOT, IF t DION’ GIT OUTA THIS, TD BE SURE OF FLOWERS. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1934 , Giants Are Worrying About Their Pitching anaes tenia TENE RL a AND CAVALCADE ARE NEXT BEST CHOICE Charles T. Fisher’s Tomboy Asks No Favors From ‘Men’ in Contest SERGEANT BYRNE IS LIKELY Blue Again Only Horse of.Col- onel E.R. Bradley Fig- ured in Running Louisville, May 2—It is time for all good—and bad—Derby prognosticators to step in, so to speak, and wet their feet. Despite the coldness of the wa- ter, this observer plunges right off the deep end and comes up with a mouthful—Mata Hari first; Discovery cond; Cavalcade third. ladies and gen- Claim Two Western Horses Are Fastest Louisville, Ky., May 2—()—With two record-breakers in the invad- ing lineup giving the East a decid- ed edge in Saturday's Kentucky Derby, western turf followers tightened their belts another notch Wednesday and staunchly main- tained that the two fillies, Mata Hari and Basaar, are even faster than Cavalcade and Peace Chance. Mrs. I. D. Sloane’s Cavalcade broke the track record for a mile and a sixteenth at Havre De Grace Saturday, and Joseph E. Widener's Peace Chance sheared a fifth of a second off the great Twenty Grand’s record for a mile at Churchill Downs Tuesday. tlemen, free, gratis and for nothin, Charles T. Fisher's tomboy, Mata Hari. She can run like Top Flight, and asks no favors from the gentle- North Dakota’s rs Pathfinder (Wkiy) 1 Ye. 1 ¥r MeCall’s Magasine, 1 Yn Pictorial RSeres it "Value $6.85, You save $3.06 | ® SELECTS MATA HARI AS FAVORITE TO WIN KENTUCKY DERBY Home-Run-a-Game Hauser to Try Skill In Other Ball Parks of Association |men in the party. She is reported to be merely a front runner, and we know all about her unpredictable temper. But any Derby candidate is an unpredictable quan- tity at best, and should Mata Hari get out in front with racing on her mind, she'll run off and hide trom the rest. * * Remember Blue Larkspur. ek * * Sir Thomas, you say? Well, give him consideration in the mud. But on a fast track, remember the exces- sive miles of training he’s had in preparation, and his 11 straight fail- ures last year. | Discovery? Here's a ground burner, certainly, but don’t forget his pen- chant for getting into trouble—and making it. Should he start swerving, or boring in, he won't be first at the wire. Too many bent on racing for monkey shines. Cavalcade? Now here's one that might really get fresh with our little lady, especially since his record-equal- ing win in the recent Shenandoah Purse at Havre de Grace. out of that. this department knows is this: had a real Derby candidate. quarter in :24 4-5, pulled up. * ek Ok Possibly, if you combine Derby facts with fancy, you will come as near a winning prediction as you would by any other method. Hunches have been known to pull in chips by the Maine Woods to Continue Title Training thousands, and fant its a wide inawse, se New York, May 2.—(?)—Tommy For example: Loughran has been doing very little training for his 10-round bout with Walter Neusel, young German heavy- weight, in Madison Square Garden | Priday night. A Futurity winner never has won the Kentucky Derby. This fact elim- inates Singing Wood, even should Mrs. John Hay Whitney change her mind ond send him to the post. But, a number of horses which finished sec- ond in the Futurity have won the Derby, such as Reigh Count and Sir Barton. ‘This brings Sir Thomas into consid- eration. And moreover, Sir Barton was a maiden like Sir Thomas. And ell three bear noble names. Primo Carnera, world heavyweight champion, came to town from the Maine woods for a brief stay before leaving for Pompton Lakes, N. J. where he will train for his 15-round | title defense against Max Baer in the Garden’s Long Island Bowl June 14. Tenner Eligibility Is Big Ten Problem |_ Minneapolis, May 2.—(?)—The Big |'Ten will pass final judgment on the year he slipped over 8 similar coup! eligibility of Bob Tenner, star end, for with Broker's Tip. Bearing this in) mind, eliminate Bazaar, Boy Valet,| (2, University of Minnesota football and Baker's Dozen. That leaves you ova! This was virtually assured Tuesday Piatra to Blue Larkspur, named | py professor Otto 8. Zelner, chairman ‘i of the Minnesota eligibility board, Throw out the Bradley horses in case of rain. Tt's tradition that they) eee ee ine ane ry itself on won't run on a muddy Derby track.'jn6 partied eek * E. R. Bradley has pulled many a fast one on the Derby pundits, as wit- ness the publicity for Brother Joe when Burgoo King really was the “Kunnel’s” hot horse. The following The Bismarck Tribune Bismarek, North Dakota Oldest Newspaper OFFERS , 10 THE PUBLIC > TCA TN y PR Sergeant Byrne will burn up & mud- dy track, as he demonstrated in beat- ing Winooka. And moreover, he ap- pears the best sprinter that has run for the prize since Morvich. Morvich was named after @ Russian and Sgt. Byrne after a cop. If you know your stuff you'll make some sort of hunch But the best tip, and the best hunch The late Jimmy Rowe, a great trainer, said that if he had an entry that could run the last quarter of the mile and a quarter in 26 seconds, he Mata Hari recently ran that last Loughran Training Little For Battle Primo Carnera Returns From Joe Smacked Two Tuesday as Leading Millers Crushed St. Paul 10-4 Chicago, May 2—(#)—Joe Hauser land his average of one home run & game left the home park st Minne- apolis Wednesday to test his big bat ‘on the right field fences in the east- ern half of the American. The Miller first-baseman brought his average up to one a game Tues- day by belting out two more homers in helping Minneapolis defeat St Paul 10 to 4. ‘The Indians downed Louisville 8-2 Columbus took another beating, 3- 2, from Toledo. Kansas City bunched its 11 hits te defeat Milwaukee 8 to 2. Garland Braxton, who had won three straight, was batted out in the fourth inning and was charged with the defeat. Scores by innings: Millers Crush rece St. Paul .... 100 001 O11—410 1 Minneapolis 402 300 02x—1015 0 Trow, Claset, Heimach and Giuliani; Ryan, Petty and Hargrave. Hens Nip Red Birds * Toledo ..... 000 021 000—3 Columbus .. 000 000 020—2 Sundra and Desautels; Cooper, Ash and O'Dea. Indians Scalp Colonels RHB Indianapolis 201 010 400-813 2 Louisville... 000 110 002—211 2 Bolen, Tising, Wright and Riddle; Weinert, Penner, Nachand, and Thompson. H 8 6 ont Blues Beat Brews Kansas City 020 400 020~—811 6 Milwaukee . 020 010 O01I—4 9 3 Harris, Fullerton and Brenzel; Braxton, Pressnell, Walkup and Young. VINES WINS ANOTHER Des Moines, May 2.—(}—Elisworth Vines ran his string of victories over Bill Tilden to four straight Tuesday night as they resumed their series of Professional tennis matches at the a here. The score was 3-6, 6-1, ON LEADING MAGAZINES SS CLUB Ne. 8-128 Pictorial Review, 1 Yr. Household Magasine, 1 Yr. Good Stories, Pe Mother's Home Life, 1 Yr. American Poultry Journal, OLUB Ne. 8-123 CLUB Ne, 8-197 Liberty Magazine (08 sues) Radioland, 1 Yr. Re: ‘Werld, Value $9.25. You save All Four for $5.85 OLUB No, 8-196 1 ¥1 The Country Heme, 1 Yr. Bismarck Tribune, 1 Year Value 97.50. You save $2.00 All Seven fer $5.50 $5.40 CLUB Ne. 6-135 Review, 1 Yr. American Magazine, 1 Yr. tardy These Club Offers are not| true Story Better Memes & Gardens, 3 eed ta the city of Ble 3 % are marck, at prices quoted in Sdverticement, Sub-| THe, bers living outside of state must add $1.00 to any club offer described herein. ‘Tribune, 1 Year All Siz fer All Six for *NOTE—If you prefer (] Liberty, [] True Story, CO Real America, (] Outdoor Life or (] Redbook to American Magazine—check magasine dgstred. Bargain Offer No. ....0.ceccsesseece NAME Preeti rer iter! oe ceceeveee: ‘THESE OFFERS NOT GOOD IN THE CITY OF BISMARCK AT PRICES QUOTED IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT America, (6 Months) irck Tribune, 1 Year 93.40. Bismarck Tribune, 2 Value $10.00. ‘Tou cave 4 GENTLEMEN: Enclesed you will find §........ for which please send me your ine eee