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| Bismarck Humbled at Dickinson; HEMMENWAY ALLOWS ONLY FOUR SAFETIES 10 LOCAL STICKERS Simle Officiates in Mound for, Capital Citians; Nicked for Nine Hits COWBOYS WIN IN EIGHTH Score Three Runs on as Many Hits Combined With a Walk and an Error “Lefty” Hemmenway, Dickinson mound ace, held the Bismarck team in check Friday night and the Cow- boys won a 6 to 3 decision at the west- ern city’s ball park. Hemmenway allowed only five scattered hits and retired six local batters on strikeouts. Simle officiat- ed on the mound for the Capital Citians and was nicked for seven safeties, three of which came in the eighth inning to give the Dickinson club three runs and the game. Play Valley City Sunday afternoon starting at 3 p. ™m., the locals oppose the Valley City club in the fourth game with the Hi- Line team this season. After a pair of victories by one-run margins, the Capital Citians stepped out and) handed the Valley City aggregation a! 12 to 2 shellacking last week, and the visitors are set to avenge this defeat. | In the Friday game Bismarck and Dickinson both scored twice in the eecond inning. Troupe drew a bye and Haley got on with a double. Goetz and Vincent hit safely to bring in two runs. Cowboys Score The Cowboys evened the count when Douglas, Taylor and Hemmen- way drew walks and Dermit got a single. The locals went into the lead ‘n the fourth when Haley got @ single and came home on two Cow- boy errors, but Dickinson drew abreast {n the fifth scoring one run. In the eighth frame the Westerners combined three hits with a walk and ‘an error to tally three times. Bis- marck failed to score in their half of the ninth and the game was over. Haley with three singles led the| Bismarck stickers and Goetz and! Vincent each added one to the total. Hemmenway's superb hurling was the feature of the game. All-Stars to Oppose THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SA OF TH LAW / , YOKE! ill Cards Defeat A’s in Junior Tourney DIDNT SAY WHO HE WAS——SUST ASKED FOR YOU,IN THAT OL COME-ON- ALONG-TO-HEADQUART | OUR BOARDING HOUSE YY reTTER PUT ON YOUR RUNNING SHOES/ THERE WAS A GLY HERE, LOOKING FOR YOU—AN'I SIZED HIM UP AS A PIECE HM-M-—EGAD, ° IT MAY BE AN EMISSARY FROM THE GOVERNOR, INVITING ME FOR A WEEKEND AT %s THE EXECUTIVE MANSION, See IPF DRAWINGS MADE Z WE TRIED To FAN HIM WHY HE WANTED YOU. BUT HE WAS AS BRIEF ASA BANKERS ANSWER! TO A BEG FOR A LOAN ! GLK N \ BY DISTRICTS FOR LEGION BASEBALL TOURNEY Three Home Runs Feature Sen- ators Win Over White Sox in Wachter League ROHOEP an Um Erickson, Cardinal hurler in the High School League of the junior baseball tournament. held the Ath- letics hitless until the ninth inning Friday as the Cards won, 7 to 2. Three hits in the last inning scored two runs for the losers. Clausnitzer, allowed only seven hits, four of which} were gotten by Lee of the Cardinal| team in as many trips to the plate. Superior in Northern, Crookston, Minn., July Names of members of the the mid-season Monday against that team, first half) title winners, were announced Friday by Danny Boone, president of the league. The lineup. as announced by Boone First base, r, Grand Forks; second base, Sperry, Eau Claire; third) base, Seghi, Winnipeg; shortstop, A.) Williams, Grand Forks; left field, A. Stemig, Duluth; catcher, Treadwell.) Crookston, and Pitchers Guzy and! Pocan both of Duluth, and Pollman,! Brainerd. { Harry Strong, manager of the Du-, luth club, will act as manager of the; all-stars. Umpires will be Delaney, and Knudsen. The second half of the! teason schedule for the league will open Wednesday July 11. MAJOR LEAGUE (By The Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Manush, Senators, .405; Gehringer, Tigers, .383. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 73; Gos- lin, Tigers, Werber, Red Sox, and Johnson, Atheltics, 67. Hits—Manush, Senators, 126; Geh- tinger. Tigers, 110. Home runs — Foxx, and Johnson, , Athletics and Gehrig, Yankees, 24. Pitching — Gomez, Yankees, 13-2; Marberry, Tigers, 10-3. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Terry, Giants, 364; Les- Ue, Dodgers, .356. Runs — Medwick, Cardinals and Vaughan, Pirates, 67. Hits — Medwick, Cardinals, 108; ‘Terry Gients, Leslie, Dodgers, and Allen, Phillies, 104. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 21. Klein, ;Baer Plans Benefit For Fighter’s Widow Philadelphia, July 7.—(?)— Max next fight will be in California Clausnitzer, p 7.—?)—| Farnum, 3b .... all-star |S. Peterson. c, ss nerthern league team which will play ; Fevold, ss, cf ... game at Superior ; Stratton, rf. ¢ . ; Koch, cf. rf . | Beall, lb . | whittey, 1 | Barbie, If Garnet. Lee, c | McGuini | Goetz, rf Athletics AB RH PO Mote, 2b 3) 1] 9| 0} | 0! | eee yor tt) c. Totals Cardinal: > lwowanvonwe edd | LaRue, 1b . | Shafer, If Beylund. 2b . Balzer, ss Erickson, p Olson, cf . Sorsdahl, If al onncesoHos PS = Score by innings: Athletics 000 000 002—2 3) Cardinals 120 002 O2x—7 7 WACHTER LEAGUE Three home runs featured the game between the Senators and the White Sox in the Wachter League. The Senators won easily by a score of 34 to 7. B. Welch got a four base clout for the losers and J. Longmuir and H. |Elizabeth Ryan, Mate j Schneider contributed circuit rT |es to the Senator's total. Entringer/Eight Area Champions Will struck out 12 White Sox batters. | The box score: White Sox Welch, c, p ... Aller, p, Ist . Schmidt, 2b, rf . Rosenberg, ss, Pp . Grienstiener, cf . Senger, 3b . Goetz, If . Welch, rf . Meader, c .. Schmidt, ¢. 3b . | AB R H PO| | 09 09 09 C9 09 89 HH 09 8 OD mm Ooncconen Or oonnoone 8 ° 14) H PO! Weisgerber, c, 2b . J. Entringer. p . R. Masseth, 3b ... N. Schneider, 2b, ¢ . M. Entringer, 1b . J. Longmuir, ss . M. Marback, rf . E. Oberlander, cf . J. Goetz, If . G. Brown, rf . lesan mama 1 5 5 5 3 2 1 1 3 0 ; 002 002 3—7 454 1515 x—34 Win English Doubles) Wimbledon, Eng. July 7.—(?}—| Elizabeth Ryan, former Californian | now living in London, and Mme. Rene Mathieu, of France, Saturday won the all-England women’s doubles tennis title for the second successive time, | Gefeating Dorothy Andrus, of Stam- ford, Conn., and Mme. Jung Henrotin, also of France, 6-3, 6-3, in the: final round. It was the 19th Wimbledon doubles title for Miss Ryan and further strengthened her claim to the title of | the world’s greatest woman's doubles Contend for State Title, Here, July 27-29 Drawings by districts to match American Legion Junior baseball teams entered in the state tourna- ment to be played in Bismarck, July 27-29, were made here Friday by members of the eligibility committee headed by Frank Webb, department Four games will be played Friday, duly 27 with the third district cham- 2/|Pions meeting the winners of the sixth 0 district elimination tournament at 2/9:30 a.m. At 11 a, m. the fourth dis- 8 trict entrants clash with the winners 5 in the seventh; at 2 p. m. the first and Othe fifth district titleholders meet 0 |and at 6 p. m. the second and eighth; 0 district teams play. 0| Winners of the morning games Fri- Oday, battle in the semi-final game — /|Saturday afternoon at 2 p. m. and the 17/two other semi-finalists meet at 4 |p.m. Finalists will play for the state 9|championship beginning at 3 p. m. 26 | Sunday. District champions which entered the state tournament last year were: | Enderlin, first; Fargo, second; James- | town, third; Bismarck, fourth; Dick- inson, fifth; Minot, sixth; Esmond, seventh; id Grand Forks, eighth. Fargo took the state and regional] titles in 1933 and represented North Dakota in the sectional tournament at Topeka, Kan. ‘ Yesterday’s Stars ——__—_________4 (By The Associated Press) Hal Lee, Braves — Cracked three homers in Braves’ victory over Phil- lies. Van Mungo, Dodgers—Held Giants to six hits and fanned eight. Joe Cronin, Senators—His triple in eighth drove across winning run Player. TH’ BULL O' TH’ WOODS JUST CRACKED HIS HAND, SHOWIN! THAT KID HOW TO DO IT. I DON'T KNOW WHICH 1S TH' WORST, A HASN'T, OR A HAS- N against Yankees. ROUTING 39 HURLERS ON A ‘BLACK FRIDAY” Reds Outlast Cards to Win, 16- 15; Braves Nose Out Phillies, 16-13 CUBS, DODGERS WIN TILTS Tigers Gain on Yankees With Win Over St. Louis; White Sox Beat Indians (By The Associated Press) Major league pitching hereafter will have a “Black Friday” all their own to observe with appropriate cere- monies, Thirty-nine pitchers, 24 in the Na- tional and 15 in the American, faced the batters in eight games Friday with the following disastrous results: League R H 2B 3BHRTBBOB National. 83118 30 4 10186 33 American. 60 79 18 6 3118 41 Grand totals. 143 197 48 10 13 304 74 Two of the dizziest games on record combined to send the National League slugging figures up into the realm of higher mathematics. The Cincinnati Reds outlasted the St. Louis Cardi- nals, 16 to 15. In the other, the Bos- ton Braves “nosed out” the Phillies, 16-13. The Cardinals sent seven pitchers, or everybody but Paul Dean and Bill Hallahan, to the mound in an effort to salvage the game with the Reds but all to no avail. The Chicago Cubs, trounced Pitts- burgh, 9-1. Van Mungo stopped the Giants with six hits as Brooklyn earned an 11-2 decision. In the American League, the New York Yankees’ lead was shaved to half & game when the icCarthymen dropped a 9-8 decision to Washington while second place Detroit nosed out St. Louis, 4-3. The Boston Red Sox hammered four Philadelphia Athletic pitchers for 20 hits and an 18-6 vic- tory. Cleveland's Indians fell back into fifth position, dropping a 7-5 de- cision to the Chicago White Sox. AMERICAN LEAGUE Red Sox Swamp Athletics RHE «100 003 002— 6 11 6 x—18 20 1 Wishere, Lagger and Berry, Hayes; W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell. Philadelphia Boston Senators Defeat Yanks RHE +++ -002 021 220— 9 10 0 001 030 120— 812 2 Whitehill, Russell and Sewell; Ruf- fing, Van Atta, Murphy and Dickey. Washington White Sox Drop Indians RHE Chicago 200 220 001I— 710 5 Cleveland 020 101 001— 5 9 1 Gaston, Heving and Shea; Wine- garner and Pytlak. Tigers Win in Fifth St. Louis... Hadley and Grube; Cochrane. “NATIONAL LEAGUE Braves Outslug Phillies RHE 410 122 312—16 23 2 Philadelphia ....040 040 212—13 18 5 Brown, Mangum, Rhem, Betts and Spohrer; Holley, Grabowski, Hansen, C. Davis and Todd. Cubs Win Sorrell Pittsburgh | OUT OUR WAY By Williams A HAS-BEEN, BECAUSE ALL A HAS-BEEN CAN SHOW YOu IS NOT NEVER GET ENOUGH DONE TO SHOW YOU How TO DO IT. THEY HOW “TO DO IT. \ € E ‘ aay? im 5 Caran * TRWILLIAMS 1.0.000.0.0.par.or7, Chicago ... 0; Hoyt, Birkofer and Padden and Hartnett. Dodgers Trounce Siento. Brooklyn .......021 015 20x—I11 1 Bowman, Smith and Man Richards; Mungo and Lopez. Red Beat Cards RH 711 501 100—16 15 062 002 212—15 16 , Johnson and Lom- Lindsey, Vance, J. New York.. Boa Sonn ont Cincinnati 8t. Louis. Frey, Bre! bardi; Haines, d Plays Valley City Here Sunday | SLUGGERS STAGE ‘FREE-FOR-ALL’ IN MAJOR LEAGUE GAMES CLOUT 497 SARETIES ‘Goofy’ Gomez to Oppose Carl Hubbell In All-Star, National-American Game In This Corner . . . By Art Krenz WOOD WOULD! OAM 23-YEAR-OLD NEW YORKER WHO PROVED HIS RIGHT To SERIOUS NS COP SINGLES PLAY CONSIDERATION TOWERING , FRANK SHIELDS TEAMMATES, LES STOEFEN, IN ENGLAND........ AND IN LONDON... NDIANAPOLIS HITTER MAKES BID FOR ASSOCIATION HONORS 25-2... 25,22 Southpaws Continue to Domin-! ate Pitchers; Brewers Take Team Batting Lead Chicago, July 7.—(?)—Although. an injury kept him out of all but one game last week, Earl Webb of Milwat kee clung to the American Associa- tion batting leadership. ‘Webb's mark dropped off four points to .378, according to figures which include Thursday afternoon’s games. Washington of Indianapolis, in 13th Place among the regulars a week ago, made the sensational gain of the pe- placed Webb in base hits, his collection to 115, while the Brewer star had 108. The other honors, however, remained in the same hands. Milwaukee had driven in 78 runs, as) well as ranking as the leading scorer with 70 runs. Joe Hauser returned to action in seven games without getting a tun, but his 24 total stood up more. Ted Gullic of Milwaukee led in _two-base hits with 33; Ray Rad- cliffe of Louisville had 11 triples, and Mel Almada of Kansas City leading base thief with 17, The Dean, Walker, Mooney, Carleton and edo, Davis. Berlin Sculler Wins | British Championship SUNDAY, JULY 8 3 P. M. regulars, with 12 games won and four lost. a" POE SIRE Indian, | contin sel ce in strike- outs with 89. ” Milwaukee went into the team bat- ting lead with an even 300, and St. Paul retained team fielding honors with 978. The Saints and Minneap- clis were deadlocked in double plays, each having completed 85 double kill- .-Wan Noy, 192, Dallas, (6); Max -Maxwell, 170, Los Angeles, and Larkin Cooley, Miller Homers Fail To Halt St. Paul Saints Make It Four in a Row; Brewers Defeat Blues, 3-2, in 11 Innings Chicago, July 7.—(4)—Columbus’ Red Birds, flying high during the last three weeks of the American Association season, invaded Minne- Joe Hauser's home run bat found the range for the first time in weeks Frid: ind set off something like a league record, without helping Min- neapolis to conquer its St. Paul jinx. Hauser slugged out his 25th homer of the season in the fifth inning, and inspired by the example, Buzz Ariett and Pinky Hargrave, the next two! Millers in the batting order, fired off circuit clouts. In spite of this brave show, however, St. Paul made it four straight, 10-6, Milwaukee defeated Kansas City, 3-2, in a brilliant 11-inning battle. Indianapolis, on their way to Kan- sas City where they start a western swing, stopped off at Belleville, Ill., for a night game, winning, 8-4. Saints Win Final St. Paul. 000 230 221-10 15 0 Kanas City...100 000 010 00— 3 Milwaukee ..000 101 000 01— 3 Fullerton and Brenzel, Crandall; Polli and Rensa, (Only games scheduled). Grant Faces Mako in Tennis Semi-Finals Chicago, July 7.—()—Bryan (Bit+ sy) Grant, of Atlanta, seeded at the top, faced red hot opposition Satur- day in his semifinal round of the Na-. Los legiate title. Frankie Parker, ‘Milwatikee's gift to tennis, was matched with Don Cronin and Terry Name Batting Orders and Starting Line- Ups for Tuesday (By The Associated Press) New York, July 7.—Nominated in advance by popular acclaim, Vernon (Goofy) Gomez and Carl Owen Hub< bell were definitely selected Saturday as starting pitchers for the all-star Same between the American and Na- tional Leagues at the Polo Grounds Terry, and master-mind of the National League forces, picked the two crack southpews for starting duty and thereby assured a pitching natural for which the baseball world has been Charley Gehringer, Detroit, second base; Heinie Manush, Ws 5 left field; Babe Ruth, New York, right field; Lou Gehrig, New York, first base; Frank Higgins, Philadelphia, third base; Al Simmons Chicago, cen- terfield; Joe Cronin, Wi 5 shortstop; Bill Dickey, New York, Catcher, and Vernon Gomes, New York, ae outfielders in the e did not open tii morning. Will, Sweet Shop and Soldiers Win - Transients, Collegians and. Highway Department Teams Beaten Friday an 18 to 0 victory over the Friday night. J. Zehn in the mound for the Will team allowed only one hit in the seven irmings and struck Cut 12 opposing batters. Meinhover ” and Benger, in the mound for the- Collegians, allowed 11 hits which .. coupled with six ed i : i Tr u anf lig! geek i 2 dinl?li . TER A BE SSSSesesr & & New York. Detroit Boston Cleveland St. Louis geese SES82 BRE euseesss sesgges & a & E 28 , 8 if Ssese™ ssse Chicago . Betensns<h Bg sats BeEs5822 F i E z BI i of