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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, APRIL 30 Fists Fly As Cubs Annex 12-11 Victory in Wild Game With Pirates “'¥’ wus pi; [WRITER PICKS BOXTHORN TO WIN KENTUCKY DERBY SATURDAY, & — POUR PLAYERS IN oc BOARDING HOUSE By Ahem [qumONWEALTH AN)|Hleath Humbles Colonels As Indians oT FIFTH INNING RIOT] | (77 sero ee coo ne Gf ence wmace 9 INBUIE FLAG GIVENNNudge Red Birds Out of Top Berth Paul Dean Hurls Six-Hit Ball to SUSPENSE OF AW nosey" ANA NAPOLEON WAT POSITIONS IN MONEY DOPING Ge DAYS OFF ——umM—THIS if? THEY'D BE COMIN’ AFTER Turn Back Reds; Braves DM-FUFF-FUFE~<BY NOAHS /( AINT THUTYPE TO OWN A Derby Choice Is Far Better Le D E RBY Gullio’s Second Homer in Two Days Helps Brewers Beat Saints SUSPENSE OF AWAITING THE VOU WITH NETS, ROPES Conquer Phillies BEARD, L TELL YOU, ITS "RACE HOSS-NO ~—NOT ’, RED SOX BEAT ATHLETICS DRIVING ME DAFT I WITH THEM ROMAN CANDLE acre” E homme rena wits the home ioated Erggevitane Grown ax@en-| . oa an ae Pitter Pat May Be Trial Horse for American “Amocaton, eopecaly fo gals Score 18 Runs; Gomez > p\ a TAFFY PULLIN’ | CHANCE SUN DISAPPOINTING Belair Varsity in Derby of the Milwaukee Brew- era, Gullic belted one over the fence Shuts Out Senators Sunday with three on as Milwaukee walloped Kansas Psychic Bid Has Tremendous Speed But Staying Quall- FINES PLAYERS New York, April 30.—(7)—Ford » Frick, president of the Na- tional League, Tuesday fined and ” \ suspended Bill Jurges, Cub short- . : By MAX stop, and Guy Bush, Pirate pitcher, E their part in the fist fight marked Monday's Cub-Pirate a Ez ty i g ; ? a i HUG ii i i i ( Press) @horter baseball tempers, coincid- {ng with rising mercury in the ther- mometers, can be credited with an assist on the major leagues’ first full- grown “riot” of the year. The wildest game of the young season, the Chicago Cubs’ 12-11 vic- tory over the Pittsburgh Pirates, provided the setting for Monday's in which “Mississippt Guy” Bush, a former Cub, played the THE leading fisticuffing role. ‘The trouble started in the fifth Inning when Harry Lavagetto, young) Pirate infielder, ok ti score (By the Associated Press) Manager Pie Traynor with the run MERICAN that gave the Corsairs a 6-2 lead. as} © AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | Lavagetto slid into second, he g0t/rndianapolis .. himself tangled up in Bill Jurges'!columbus .. spikes. He leaped to his feet with|niwaukee . fists flying. Minneapolis ‘That brought on a small-sized bat-|S. Paul .. tle-royal. Players from both teams/rouisville . surged onto the playing field. In} Kansas Cit: the forefront was Bush, now wearing |/Toledo . as2 it i e a3 é ay ae eit | ii giz ? ine afk 259% az E 5 H z 8nF 4 Eee ; F Fi 4 | Freddie Lindstrom, Cubs—Led attack on Pirate pitching with home run, double and single, driv- ing in two runs and scoring three. Vernon Gomez, Yankees— Blanked Senators with four hits. Bing Miller, Red Sox—Singled with bases filled in eleventh to beat Athletics. | [ Mi E 8 i i rs tig | e Ht E fe) i ‘) ‘New Jerse ‘ Pre ff ne i Fake ize AL i a i See een vier acter, Oub ‘Tommy Bridges, Tigers—Allow- further aided his cause. bal exchange with Roy Joiner, Cub NATIONAL LEAGUE ed Browns seven hits and won by Nellie Flag was, in our eyes, thi o pitcher, Bush rushed his man and Ww Ls Pet. shut ‘out. only high class juvenile of last year. floored him with @ couple of rights./New York 7 2 778 Paul Dean, Cardinals—Stopped |No one who saw her races in the Chi Joiner wound up with a bloody nose|Brooklyn . 8 4 667 Reds with six hits and fanned /Matron stakes, Selima or Kentucky tihsettiod and a six-inch scratch on the left/Chicago 7 5 583 five, Jockey club stakes can fail to deny cago pore St. Louis 6 6 500 Larrs Benton, Braves—His ef- |she has great speed. Though nervous, Poultry w aaa Seats awa Cincinnat 6 7 462 fective relief pitching helped |she can be rated back ®& pace, jers defeated St. Paul 8 to 7, in an up- - * Butter | fran there ‘when Manager Charley Baan 5 9 at Se ese ted ‘osvpregre cos hill battle. specials Grimm of the Cubs ceraarte Lge a Philadelphia 2 9 ‘182 hed «+ 101 110 210—7 re : Hel monk hand but before any further damage so could be done, the umpires and AMERICAN LEAGUE titan rs cooler-headed Greate Se aht Pata w iL. Pet. ‘ x 4 Bees 364 the prospective battlers and the t | Clevelanc 8 2.800 : ‘ 254" was over. Jurges, Joiner, Lavagetto!Chicago .. 9 3.750 (By the Associated Press) 3 ieee a Ata ed Wael oe te! ae “AIT this Brn uy aor the Washingto rie | Ra Pe 48; Fights Last Night ry 23%; store Cubs from their lethargy for in the! Boston bf 5 583 F Pirat d of F Minneapol 1 ian eighth they sent 14 men to bat)Detroit 4 9 308 Moore, (By the Associated Press) ee i o attin< Site against Waite Hoyt, Johnny Salve-/St. Louis ~ 2 9 182 Chicago—Fritzie Zivic, 140%, Starr Hargrave; Page and Gas- rae the. | son and Bill Swift and scored 10 runs, | Philadelphia - 2 10 167 Pittsburgh, outpointed Freddie ton, George. pages for @ 12-9 lead. The Pirates came 140%, Milwaukee, Indians Halt Colonels broilers 22 back with two runs in the ninth but Phillies, (8); Henry Hook, 123%, Indian- Louisville—The Indianapolis In- 18 to 20, b Traynor fanned with the tieing and AMERICAN LEAGUE CY BLANTON Home runs — Canilli and J. Moore, apelis, outpointed Bobby O’Dewd, |dians defeated Louisville 7 to 1, in a A City, Ia. (6). ¢ t was halted by rain in a TT Sr Ree scera| me of the est pitching per- | PIMIME Ss ere a wags co lormances of the year have —l 5 = 5 o es o examuet the St. Louis Browns 18] turned in by Darrell “Cy” Blan- ger, Reds, and Warneke, Cubs, 3-0. pena Fp ashing- Henry ~ on oo H H 1 3 ton, rookie Pittsburgh twirler, who a. the ton, D. ©. (10) (6 innings—called, rain) National League program) R. H. E. AMERICAN LEAGUE re le . a = otherwise was quiet with Paul Dean| Detroit 140 001. 093-18 15 0] (eh tne Caan a a a come: | Batting—Foxx, Athletics, 291; John- ‘Tuesda: Fed mannetured in (Reem ahd Riddie; Molen, Mo : pitching six-hit ball to give the St.|/St, Louis 000 000 000—0 7 3! Site ‘stopped Cincinnat! with six thletics, 377. sation tase tone Braves handing the Phillies thelr then Sunday beat the great Dizzy ts -Gehringer, The original invention of paper was|rain. unchanged. eighth successive defeat, 7-5. A’s Bow to Red Sox Dean, when the: /Picates. mean announced in . D. ive Y~ : ‘A three-game American League! Philadelphia—The Athletics lost ured the Cards, 3-2. —_—_—_— By introduction into the blood of ers ri program was marked by two shut-|another ball game, bowing to the for ten-|small quantities of snike venom at Eegs, 31 puts with Vernon (Lefty)) Gomez of|Boston Red Sox in the eleventh, 10 Sees Bright Future -- Hadley, Senators, can become immune to 4 ors; special the New York Yankees and Tommy/to 8. rig: Whitehead, White Sox, 3-0. A fresh recel Bridges of the champion Detrolt| aso oop oxo 02h | |For ‘Babe’ as Golfer nd comme Tigers in the staring roles Philadelphia. 100 400 300 00-8 14 2 Sete Bush Leaguer Given ae Hy | (1 innings) — (PA % g ee neal, doving rather pihodes, H- Johnson, wuson, Wal- reer tha Long-Awaited Chance see wincing c to » Welch and Ferrell; Benton, +5 ‘2 a ‘ last year's Bet re omsd one. an|Caster, Cascarella and Foxx. jeer eerales fies pyre pigs atin. am = ) — Be ane Sa ker ge NP roosters 8; lew York—Vernon (| iy) eZ, | first royal a H seven frames but made them 8004) shutout the Washington Senators | game. from fortune and, in the changed. for six “Within a few months Babe should | his pitching days, has aeaeih ‘Walkup be the world’s greatest woman golfer,” |one of baseball's best relief 25-26; fowls In the .|declared George Aulbach, Dallas} For more than ten xpress quo (nthe |Country club rrofessional, in discus- | Pettit tossed his serene sing the rise of the one-time basket-| plates of minor pall iball-track star as a golfer. creditable jobs. But 5 Pict for edaao.a8. Clewslands, postonned,| cas wens Gee kemmatian sarees lee Beis I eices tnche go at veland, postponed, | en's fourth. vy Red i FROM UNDER DETAIL - @ long Chicago, Ay tenth beat- Btorage star re S RINTING uncovers a great deal of detail work. Whether eneh ws en this detail work becomes an irksome burden to your- aren score and self or is assumed by your printer depends largely on Roy é your choice of the printer. cay Here we like to assume responsibility for our customers’ printing. Most frequently, the work going through our plant has been left almost entirely to us in its execution. The paper, color, typugraphy, margins, as well as all the other numerous features of your printing that sometimes please or vex you—they are part of our job, we like it and you don’t have to do this part of the work yourself, Put your own time into the kind of work you do best, and let the printer do his part. it ct sf BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY JOB DEPARTMENT