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TWO HOMERUNS IN BISMARCK VICTORY Locals Collect 13 Hits to Drop Highly-Touted Colored Club, 7-0 BEVERLY RETIRES IN FIFTH Troupe Gets First Four-Base Drive of Season Inside of Ball Park The Kansas City Monarchs may be the world’s colored champions to some People and they may be the semi-pro champions of the United States to others—but to the Bismarck baseball team they are just another clan of players to be pommeled and brow- beaten into submission. And the Capital Citians demonstrated how they felt about the matter by hand- ing the colored outfit a 7 to 0 shel- lacking in a twilight game here Fri- day. It was the slugging “Beef” Ring- hofer who evidently harbored the strongest feelings, for he laid on the pitching of Beverly and Cooper for two mighty home runs over the right field fence and a long double. Mor- ris and Troupe had some ideas of their own on the strength of the op- position. Morris showed utter disrespect for the much-publicized reputation of the Monarch sluggers and held the the 4 i Tay New Rockford Here @unday the Bismarck team will put on: another exhibition for the local fans when they meet the New Rock- ford aggregation. The Capital City crew has one victory chalked up over the Eddy county team Lert since a the opposing hine has shown great it, winning games from , Devils Lake and the of David. Roosevelt pitched for Bismarck last ibtless will start on the for New Rockford and will by either Carter or Vin- game will start at 3 o'clock. artillery of the Bis- d out Friday the'bmoke had clear- rin the local line- the two colored least one safe hit. the key position in line, getting three hits in to the plate, while Mass- Desiderato each got two. Morris performances that delight dia- fans. Only one Monarch, De- t, saw second base and that man two of the three hits that Cit itt aye i g papeee HECHT tH A bycrae(Ele a ‘Troupe Bags Homer Troupes homer started the scoring the rourth inning but it was the e's barrage of five hits, equal number of runs, up the game for the Morlan struck out in that in- jorris followed with & it to second on Mass- EpEgee i Morris Tames Kansas City Monarchs; New RNGHORER CLOvS [ILL LUCK HAUNTS GIANTS AGAIN; even shells—Na California is Penn--will struggle. ail shells, each powered by eight straining oarsmen and urged on by a slave-driving cox- historic four-mile Pouchkeepsie regatta course on the Hudson river today, a lapse of one year. Above is a typical finish of the race, and below is the use, Columbia, California, Washington, Cornell, and ending champion. Scene of Historic Crew Classic Saturday : | Red Birds Following Precedent That ‘They Don’t Repeat in Association’ Bow to Toledo, Stage Eighth Inningf Rally To Beat Millers Chicago, June 16.—(?)—Their cause is not hopeless yet, but the Colum- bus Red Birds appear to be on their way toward demonstrating that Amer- ican Association championship win- ners do not repeat. | ‘The Birds lost another Friday night, bowing to Toledo, 5-3, due largely to the wildness of Bud Teachout and St. Paul staged an eighth inning Minneapolis, 3-1. Threatening weather at Kansas City | kept the Blues and Milwaukee out of| action, while the Louisville-Indiana- Polis game at Indianapolis was moved | fielders. into a doubleheader for Sunday. Saints Beat Millers «. 000 000 03x—3 5 1 Star and Hargrove; Trow, Fette and tory, oo allowed during the entire nine si | Madhens Win | RHB| 002 100 000—3 10 2 _ 000 002 03x—5 8 2) Teachout, Klinger and Gooch;. Lar-| kin, Perrin and Desautels. Milwaukee-Kansas City, (postponed, weather). Louisville-Indianapolis to be played Ht Ege gh the two of them came iderato’s fast grounder bounce over the short- and went for two bases. a single, scoring Desidera- ‘Troupe was out at Ringhofer’s home run scored him. Vincent was baseman’s error but of McCarney’s drive Kansas City center-fielder re- the side. Rinhofer got his sec- circult clout in the seventh in- ended the scoring. of seeing & superb pitching Barney Morris, to ® near per- exhibition on the part of Heel He : bE ry F iter aah E z ip a5 5e eccoece000ed Cowowocccot couowowaceg COCOCOwOUND eoorosrooolm | aeaaenen C3 eaversmscomsmares co Rl mama S| as part of doubleheader Sunday. Gehringer Hitting at Fast Clip in American New York, June 16.—(P)—Charley | Cubs. Gehringer, the Detroit swatter, con-| tinued to set a fast pace for his) American League rivals during the In the seven days which ended with Gehringer hit an even 500 with 10 hits in 20 times up and hoisted his average from .400 410. Friday's games, The close race for National League < $280, LS Re 3 ‘S, Ss? or See 3s rakes fees : 3e38 So Se BS9eSC9 roe ah Ses boS £2 So .373 while Leslie dropped from .365 to 358, Newly-Organized K. C. Team Begins Practice ‘Working out for the first times this week, the newly-organized Knights of Columbus baseball team prepared for games that will be arranged in the near future by Father Henry Holle- man, manager. On the roster of the K. C. club, Father Holleman has two pitchers, Joseph Deibert and Al Simon; and two catchers, Dr. M. S. Priske and Clem Kelley. Other players are Se- uprising against Ray Starr to defeat pastian Goetz, first base; Steve Goetz, second base; Nelson, third base; Joseph Boehn and George Middaugh, shortstops and Nick Zauhn, Dick Schmidt, Schneider, and Schreiner, After a few more practice sessions |the team will be pitted against such RHE clubs at Fort Lincoln; the Grove ++ 000 000 100-1 6 0) Giants, state penitentiary team; Wil- ton and other towns in this terri- | Yesterday’s Stars (By The Associated Press) Ben Chapman, Yankees—Hit triple, | double and single against Browns. night. game} ane) Freitas, Reds—Scattered nine iant hits for 2-1 victory. Baxter Jordan, Braves—Led attack on Cardinals with five hits. Tom Zachary, Dodgers—Drove inj three runs to help win own game from Pirates. Adolph Camilli, Phillies—Walloped | homer in ninth to tie score against Grove Giants Play Fessenden Sunday Harve Cook, semi-professional pitcher for many years, will bring the Fessenden ball team to Bismarck Sun- day to oppose the Grove Giants, state penitentiary club. The game is called honors found Joe Medwick of St. Louis | for 1:30 p. m. Flanders is scheduled ahead as he continued to hit at a good clip while the co-leader of last week, Sam Leslie of Brooklyn, dropped back to fourth place. During the week Medwick lifted his mark from .365 to OUT OUR WAY IT'S FUNNY -You'vE WORKED THERE ALL THESE YEARS AND NEVER BEEN PROMOTED) AND YOUR SON GOES THERE TO WORK AND, IN THREE MONTHS, |S PROMOTED TO A FOREMAN— THAT'S to get the pitching assignment for the Grove Giants and will probably be pitted against Cook for the Wells county club. The penitentiary team has lost only one start so far this WHY, PA, YOU'RE MAD! YOuR SON ~ TICKLED yo season but will get a severe test in Baer = the Man-About-Town Promoters Probe Advisability of Elimination Tourney to Pick Challenger New York, June 16.—(#)—Heavy- weight champion of the world and immensely pleased with it all, Max Baer resumed his old role of man- about-town Saturday while his ad- visers discussed the advisibility of a September bout for him. There was talk of re-matching the cocky Californian with Primo Car- nera, the giant he so decisively whip- ped on Thursday; there were sugges- tions that perhaps it would be best to return to the old elimination tour- nament system to discover a logical contender and keep the new champ- ion in cold storage until next summer. But it was all talk. Baer Limself wasn’t much interest- ed. He spent his first day in the Royal Purple dashing in and out of haberdashery shops, visiting his tail- or, yachting on Long Island Sound, and catching up on his night-club routine, a trifle rusty after the two months’ training period leading up to his successful challenge for the title. Baer is under contract to Madison Square Garden for one title defense within a year. Under the terms of the agreement, the Californian can name the challenger and set the date for the fight by giving the Garden 30 days notice. Suggested as possible participants in an elimination tournament, the winner to fight Baer next summer, were Carnera, Max Schmeling, Walter Neusel, Art Lasky, King Levinsky, Tommy Loughran, and Steve Hamas. The distress signal, 808, stands for no words; the letters were select- ed because of their easy detection when sent in code. pec eee, By Williams | I AM-CERTAINLY TAM! BUT, COMIN' HOME HERE, YOU SHOULD | TELLIN’ HES A FOREMAN, BE PROUD OF | MAKIN' ME LOOK LIKEA FATHEAD— THEY GIVE HIM A LITTLE KIDTO HELP. HIM IN TH' BLUE PRINT ROOM NOW HE'S A BOSS-A LOOK CUT! FOREMAN— HE'LL BUST ON You! Rockford Here Sunday LOSE TO CINCINNATI, 2-1: IFTZSINMONSHURIS |LOURBoaRDINc House By Abn J, FIVE HIT GAME BUT LOSES CLOSE TILT Boston Wallops Second Place Cards, 10-4; Phillies Beat Cubs, 4-3 MACFAYDEN HOLDS BROWNS Detroit Hammers Out 11-4 Win Over Red Sox; Cleveland Drops Athletics (By the Associated Press) The “luck” of the Giants seems to be working again. They provided an example Friday when they dropped a game to Cin- cinnati 2-1 despite a five-hit hurling job by big Fred Fitzsimmons. The second-place Cardinals suc- cumbed to Boston’s 19-hit assault on four pitchers by a 10-4 count. The Phillies conquered Chicago's Cubs 4-3 in 10 innings. The Brooklyn Dodgers turned back the fourth-place Pitts- burgh Pirates, 6-4. Manager Joe McCarthy of the Yan- kees reached into his pitching grab- bag and pulled forth Danny Mac- Fayden, who hadn't won a game since April. Danny hurled a five-hit game to beat the Browns 6-3. Detroit slammed out an 11-4 deci- sion over the Boston Red Sox. Cleve- land's third place Indians beat the Athletics 12-6, and Washington took an 8-7 decision over Chicago. NATIONAL Phillies Even Series RHE Philadelphia .. 010 000 002 1—4 9 0 Chicago ...... 000 111 0000-3 7 0 (10 innings.) Collins, Johnson, Grabowski, Davis, Darrow and Todd; Warneke and Hartnett. Pirates Lose to Brooklyn R Brooklyn ... Pittsburgh Zachary and Lopez; Lucas, Chag- non, Swift and Padden. Reds Defeat Giants RHE 000 001 000—1 9 1 000 100 10x—2 5 1 ind Mancuso; Freitas New York Cincinnati RHE HIGH SCHOOL LEAGUE Boston ~ 100 014 040—10 19 1]House of David— AB R HPO St. Louis + 101 110 000— 4 10 O)LaRue Ist .. - 300 5 Brandt and Spohrer; Haines,|Larson, If .. »- 210 0 Mooney, Winford, Lindsey and V.|Hugelman, s5-p -100 0 Davis. Walters, c-ss-c - 311 4 AMERICAN |Sorsdahl, p-c-ss . ~3101 Crowder Beats White Sox Beylund, 2b .. »- 30221 RH E/McGuiness, 3b - 1001 Chicago ........ 020 010 112—7 13 1)Tellinghausen, rf . - 200 0 Washington .... 202 020 101—8 13 1/Beall, cf - 200 0 Jones, Heving and Madjeski; Crow- -—-<—- der and Sewell. Totals ........ secccceee 19 3 3 12 Indians Outslug A's Yankees— AB R HPO RH E|Peterson, cf . 220 0 Cleveland ..... 120 024 300—12 17 0)Garnes, ¢ - 311 8 Philadelphia .. 020 101 020— 6 11 0/Erickson, p 31211 Hildebrand and Pytlak; Mahaffey,|Elofson, 2b . 210 2 Lagger, Flohr and Hayes. Kanz, 1b , hie & Tigers Win xStraton, 101 0 RH E/Kenyon, 3d 100 0 Detroit + 103 004 210—11 12 1} Stuart, rf ..... 200 0 Boston .. - 010 200 100— 4 9 1|Goetz, ss . 200 0 Rowe and Cochrane; Ostermuller,| xLawyer 1000 H. Johnson, Welch and R. Ferrell. — Yanks Wa'lop St. Louis 6 315 RHE RH St. Louis ....... 100 010 001-3 5 3 0-3 3 New York -. 010 OOF Olx—6 8 1 x—6 3) Newsom, Wells and Hemsley; Mac- ‘ickson, Fayden and Jorgens. lugelman, 2. ickson, 4; off AB R HPO 10on oo 0 oo 1 22 0 o1 0 110 100 11 2 oo1 65 15 R HPO oo 0 110 o2 5 211 o1 32 00 7 10 0 oo 0 oo 0 a2 3 FULL BODY PIVOT MAY CURE 5 6 15 YOUR SLICE RH In many cases of slicing, the trou- o1-6 5 ble boils down to just this fault—lack 20-5 6 of body pivot. Soradahl, 1. Pivoting 1s one of the secrets of Kans good golf, and unless the left shoulder Hugelman 6 in is turned around with the club, any- ae thing may happen to your shot. In the full shot, some golfers, Bob- in none. ‘Umpire by Jones for example, turn so fully that their back is presented to the UE hole. the In- m YOU'RE TELLING ME “IN TH SUN AN’ Z YOULL SEE A PEC) - el : hanged pe OUT OF THREE SAILS, To i “TURN IT AROUND (| SURE, I SEE (7, BUT IT AINT ANY BIGGERN APIN B POINT /~-YoU SLEDGED NNOUGH ROCK TO BREAK FIND THIS SPECK OF GoLD!} EEAD, DOESNT THAT'D RUN ABOUT A $3 FINDING THAT BIT OF GOLD GIVE YOU A THRILLS YANKS BEAT HOUSE OF DAVID; CARDINALS DEFEAT CUBS, 6-5 Yanks Down Indians in Junior] Yanks High Division of City Base- ball Tournament E en «+ 111 002 001—6 16 0/ The Yankee team in the high school ++ 000 30: 000—4 9 O/league of the junior tournament Fri- Gay scored a 6 to 3 win over the House of David club. Erickson offi- ciated on the mound for the Yankees and registered eight strikeouts over the Davids. In the second game the same day the Cardinals beat the Cubs 6 to 5. Each team garnered five hits, Hugelman’s homerun deciding the game for the Cardinals 531 2000 00 00 co co 0 mes a Wey fererer et tod lmmmonmwcce «al rononmnmwo 1 w+ 0000 000909 09009 ao Sl eommnwone “Score by innings— TOMANS .-.secvcccceree 190 B— seceecses 423 1x—10 6 Hits off Smith 5; off Burckardt 7; off Bowers 1; struck out by Smith 2, by Burckardt 4, by Bowers 3; bases on balls off Smith 5, off Burckardt 2, off Bowers 3. ‘WACHTER, WILLIAM MOORE In the Wachter league the Senators walloped the White Sox 12 to 5 be- hind the hurling of 8. Schneider who held the White Sox to three hits. In a@ game played Thursday night the Midgets of the William Moore league broke even on hits with the Giants but came off with a 20 to 10 victory. The box scores: White Sox— T. Glaser, c F. Rosenberg, H. Schmidt, 1b R. Olson, ss A. Windgerter, A. Grinsteiner, Ed. Schmidt, 2b A. Wetch, 3b . G. Goetz, If-p 5 wt | mocccomnmunetal cComnmommons 1 090 v0.09 co co me bs com im BS | 09 nares 00 09 09 09 09 00 & ottal coco Hee ee eel Hoonococonm Summary: Home run, ble play, Guthrie to Aug! A Sleneanncoo S| eoooacnae 8 f ‘Summary: Home runs, 8. Schnei- der; Glaser 1. Struck out by Schnei- der 13; by Rosenberg 8; by Goetz 5. Umpires, B. Welch and 8. Martin. Midgets— AB RH PO Stewart, 1b ..............4 2 0 4 weeee4 3238 4422 -4210 4101 3205 -3 200 2212 -4.231 Totals....seseses2+++-323 20 9 18 Giants— AB RH PO Tilson, 1b-c 4228 Skodge, 2b . 41132 Augney, 3b-c 4233 Rose, If-cf . 4100 Mitchell, cf- 4110 Beylund, rf #4110 Guthrie, 3014 Jones, c-p . 3010 Fevold, 2211 estas eceeeee +++-323:10 9:18 jo 9 0 F y bao BE aE Bedore Threatens Webb’s Hit Mark Climbs to Within 8 Points of Association Leader; South- paws Top Hurlers Chicago, June 15.—(#)—Earl Webb of Milwaukee held the American As- sociation batting leadership for the fourth straight week, but Fred Be- dore, Indianapolis’ clubbing third baseman, moved up to a contending Position during the past seven days. ‘Webb's average dropped eight points to .394, while Bedore added 25 points to his mark to go into second place with .386, according to semi-official figures which include afternoon games of Thursday. ‘The Minneapolis pair, Abby Wright, and Joe Hauser, however, still monop- lized the other honors. Wright, al- though he slipped from second to third place, headed the pack in three divisions. He had 92 hits for 166 bases, and topped the field in doubles with 24. Hauser, while he played in only two games during the week, hit one home run to increase his total to 24, belted in 62 runs, and led the scorers with 60 trips across enemy Plates. The other members of the select first ten regulars organization were: Wright, Minneapolis. 374; Galatzer, Toledo, .369; Kloza, Milwaukee .364; Ganzel, Minneapolis .346; Alamanda, Kansas City .343; Hargrave, Minne- apolis .342; Todt, St. Paul .338, and Storti, Milwaukee .337. A pair of southpaws who have been around a bit, Jess Petty of the Mill- ers and E. Garland Braxton of Mil- waukee, topped the hurlers. Petty, who won one decision, had nine victories and two defeats, and the Brewer star had won the same pee while three. raxton headed the } in strike- outs with 61. sii Minneapolis’ batting mark remain- ed at .310, while Milwaukee had 3, for second place. St. Paul led in pleted 65 doubleplays to top 8t. Paul by one. Qtandings See ere NATIONAL LEAGUE Club— Ww Pet S2SRssssr REEEEEER? bSSeuEes? ENSEEEEE ae