The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 20, 1935, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 20, 1935 ; hells Two Williston Pitchers in 14-5 Victory SCHUMACHER LENGTHENS ‘JINX’ WINS OVER REDS TO 13 GAMES ~ GROVE GIANTS BEAT STRASBURG BARRAGE FEATURES Bryant Eliminates ne ‘THREE HOME RUNS | Desiderato, Haley and Leary Hit for Four Bases; Wes- sel Boosts Average PAIGE RELIEVES ANDERSON Righthander Allows One in Four Innings, Weakens in Fifth 1 Young Hit Shelling two pitchers for 16 hits, including three home runs, Bismarck swamped Williston, 14 to 5, in a slow ball game here Sunday afternoon. Making their first appearance of xe 1935 season and their debut to pital City baseball fans, the Wil- liston team made a poor showing against the stronger local outfit and »\ gave erratic support to the mediocre \ pitching of Shupe and Folden. ‘The local team counted three runs in the third inning, added five more ‘-4in the fourth, two in the sixth and four in the seventh as they capital- ized on some heavy hitting by Joe Desiderato, Red Haley, Al Leary and | Carl Wessel coupled with 10 Willis- | ton errors. {| Ben Anderson, who started in the | mound for the Capital City club, tolled brilliantly for four innings, al- + | lowing only one hit and striking out six ing batters. Williston got ) | to the young righthander in the fifth frame scoring three runs on a pair | of singles, a walk and an error and | Satchel Paige finished out the game. | ‘The dusky ace in his usual colorful style toyed with the Williston stick- ers, shooting an underhand ball and | taking things easy. He was touched for four safe bingles, including two doubles and allowed the visitors to | score once in each of the eighth and | ninth innings. Desiderato Hits Home Run After getting 2 man on third in the first and second innings, Desiderato | landed ‘on the first ball pitched in | the third canto and drove it clear out to the centerfield fence to race home standing up. Wessel followed with a double and scored on Leary’s single. Haley was safe on Stutsrud’s error but Leary was caught trying to ‘come home on Leroy Drengberg’s ground ball to Berg, second baseman. scored when Berg muffed Mor- Jan's hot grounder. ‘Bob McCarney singled in the fourth |“ Desiderato’s single and stole home. ‘Wessel scored’ Desiderato with an- other single and Leary brought Wes- sel in ahead of him with the second | circuit clout inside the fence. y | drove out a long three bagger and } stole home for the fifth run. ‘Wessel’s three bagger started things | off again in the sixth and he scored } on Haley's double. Haley came home Stutsrud fumbled Morlan’s Haley Paige singled to lead off in the eighth, Wessel got a walk and Leary loaded the bases when the catcher threw bad to first after dropping the Haley cleaned up the bases with a long four hagger that carried far over the right field fence. ‘Wessel led the attack on Schupe ‘and Folden, who relieved him in the The big right fielder got a double, two singles and a trips to the plate. Haley in four times at bat to and Leary each col- in six attempts. the Bismarck outfit will ley 315 p. m., at the local park. are anticipating a great mound between Paige and Brown, Negro Jast year starred for James- Sunday's box score: i ieee 5 g j 3 Onennonond za i peceey one Cooma oone Eoeeuinnes eee is One vporennte i i | e i Fargo Noses Out Dickinson to Win PRATEY FOUR-RIN State Track Title at Fieler Lowers 13-Year Old Half- Mile Record; Raduns Wins 440-Yard Dash Grand Forks, N. D., May 20.—(4- Fargo high school retained the North Dakota track championship here Sat- urday. scoring 29% points in the 33rd annual state interscholastic meet here. Fargo nosed out Dickinson, which piled up 25 points in its first bid for a track title. Remainder of the scoring follow Grand Forks 15%; Jamestown 11; Grafton 10; Devils Lake 9; Bismarck 8, Carrington 6, Fort Totten, Vailey City and Gladstone 3 each; Fessen- den 314; Minnewaukan 2%:; Enderlin, Hoople, Leeds, Larimore, 2 each; and Cando and Mandan, one each, Morrell Sexton, Fargo’s brilliant hurdler and broad jumper, with three firsts, won the individual champion- ship with 15 points. Three double winners, Collins of Grand Forks in the 100 and 220 yard dashes, Feiler City in a game to bel. of Dickinson in the mile and half mile, and Cysewski of Jamestown in the javelin and discus events, made 10 points each. Although the weather was perfect and the track lightning fast, only one record was broken. Feiler, passing up a chance to lower his own mile record, went out and ran the half mile in 2 minutes, 2 seconds, to bet: ter the mark of 2:04.8 made by Muel- ler of the School of the Deaf, Devils Lake, in 1922. Fargo won the meet on the last event when Sexton and Peterson placed first and second in the broad jump. Dickinson had led through the entire meet and Fargo did not score until the tournament was half over. The winners counted 15 points in the two hurdle races and eight in the broad jump. The summary: One mile run—Won by Feiler, Dickinson; Aniyotte, Fort Totten, sec- ond; Fritch, Valley City, third; ‘Bak- er, Cando, fourth, Time, 4 minutes econds. 440-yard run—Won by Raduns, Bis- marck; Welch, Bismarck, second; C. Craft, Hoople, third; Geizer, Mandan, fourth. Time, 54.6 seconds. Shot put—Won by Nelson, Grand Forks; Burckhardt, Devils Lake, ond; Anderson, Devils Lake, third; Schatz, Valley City, fourth, Distance, 46 feet 1% inches. 100-yard dash—Won by Collins, Grand Forks; Samson, Gilby, second; Walery, Gladstone, third; ‘Whalen, ‘Time, 10.3 seconds. hurdles—Won by , Fargo; Anderson, Fargo, sec- ond; ‘'Hannel, Dickinson, ird; ae Fargo, fourth. Time, 17 sec- onds. Von by Tuma, Dickin- rrington, second; An- lerson, Fargo, and Pepp! ‘essenden, tied for third and fourth. Height, 10 feet 10 inches. Half mile run—Won by Feiler, Dickinson; Converse, Carrington, sec- ond; Numedahl, Grafton, third; Jor- don, Jamestown, fourth. Time, 2 min- utes 2 seconds. (New record). Discus throw—-Won by Cycewski, Jamestown; Maxwell, Grafton, second Tuma, Dickinson, third; Anderso: Devils Lake, fourth. 121 feet 10% inches. 220-yard Distance, on by Collins, Grand Forks; Whalen, Grafton, sec- ond; Kjelmyr, Leeds, ‘third; Walery Gladstone, fourth. Time, 22.9 seconds. High jump—Won by Shepherd, Fa: go; Melhouse, Devils Lake, second; Kempf, Enderlin, third; Nelson, Grand Forks, Olson, Fargo; Hannel, Dickin- son, and Helsper, Dickinson, tied for fourth, fifth, sixth and ' seventh. Height, & feet 7 inches. 22-yard hurdles—Won by ‘argo; Nassett, Dickinson, Rock, ‘Larimore, third; Eddy, Fargo, fou ime, second: Javelin throw—Won by Jamestown; Wench, Dickinson, innewaukan, tied for Sexton, second; Peterson, Fargo, second; Px third; Samson, Gilb; feet 1% inches, Half mile relay—Leeds and Dicki: son tied for first and second; Bi , third; Grand Fork: Time, 1 minute 40 second: Four U. S. Net Stars Enter French Event Paris, May 20.—(®)—The French hard court championships, first of the season’s major tennis fixtures, got under way Monday with the smallest American delegation in years. Only Helen Jacobs, the American champion, and Dorothy Andrus of Stamford, Conn., in the women's divi- sion, and Henry Culley and Wilmer Hines in the men’s will represent the United States, although virtually all the other leading players in the world are entered. fourt! ‘Minneapolis 201 000 010-4 9 0 1B, | | OUT OUR WAY W HITEHEAD, BLANTON NAMED PRIZE ROOKIES BY MANAGERS Hens Divide Twin Bill With Millers Saints Preserve One Game Lead ; by Trimming Red Birds; Other Teams Idle Twenty-Two Yearlings Given Best Chance to Make Good in Major Leagues Chicago. May 20—(7)—Johnny Whitehead of the White Sox and Pittsburgh’s Cy Blanton, a pair of pitchers who have been making a lot of good hitters look like so many wooden Indians, Monday were named the prize rookies of 1935 by the major league managers. Twenty-two rookies, a large major- ity of them from the south and west, were named by the pilots as the most likely to stick and go on to stardom. The American League outplaced the National, 12 to 10, in the poll taken by the old professor of the Associated Press with the White Sox and Athle- tics landing three rookies each. In- cluding Blanton and Whitehead, the following were named: Vernon Washington and Ray “Rip- per” Radcliff, White Sox outfielders; Lou Berger and Roy Hughes, Cleve- land infielders; Roy “Beau” Bell, St. Louis Browns outfielder; Joe Sullivan, Detroit pitcher; First Baseman Ells- worth Dahlgren, Red Sox; Southpaw Pitcher Vito Tamulis, Yankees; Pitch- er Vernon Wilshere, First Baseman Alex Hooks and Outfielder Wallace Moses, Athletics; Second Baseman Alex Kampouris and Outfielder Ival Chicago, May 20.—(?)—St. Paul's American Association leaders moved over to Toledo Monday, hoping the lowly Mudhens had worked out all! thelr meanness against Minneapolis during the past three days. ‘The Millers opened the eastern trip at Toledo, riding in first place. When they escaped from Toledo Sunday night they were down in third posi- tion, the result of three beatings in four starts with the Mudhens. After winning 5 to 0, Friday, Toledo came back Saturday night to trounce Donie Bush’s club, 8 to 1. The Millers won the first game of Sunday’s dou- bleheader, scoring three runs in the ninth inning for a 4 to 3 decision. Toledo, however, did a little last min- ute rallying of its own in the second game, collecting three runs in the ninth to win, 5 to 4. The events of the Minneapolis- Toledo series enabled Milwaukee, which was kept idle at Louisville be- cause of the horse races Saturday, and again Sunday by rain, to sneak into second place, percentage points ahead of Minneapolis. After losing a 4 to 3 decision to Columbus Saturday, the Saints pre- served their one game hold on the lead by trimming the Red Birds, 6 to 5 Sunday. An error by Chick Ful- lis in the eighth helped St. Paul to the winning Castleman and Outfielder Henry Lei- ber, Giants; Outfielder Terry Moore, St. Louis tdinals; Pitchers Jim Bivin and Orville Jorgens, Phillies; First Baseman Phil Cavarretta and Outfielder Augie Galan, Chicago Cubs. No superlatives were spared in the cases of BlantorY and Whitehead as the managers sent in their all-star choices, MAJOR LEAGUE (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Walker, Tigers, 405; John- son, Athletics, .394. Runs—Bonura, White Sox, 27; John- son, Athletics, 22. Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, Athletics, 37. Home runs—Johnson and Foxx, Ath- letics, and Bonura, White Sox, 8. Pitching—Whitehead, White Sox, 6-0; Tamulis and Allen, Yankees, and Wilshere, Athletics, 3-0. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Vaughan, Pirates, Martin, Cardinals, .367. Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 25; Med- wick, Cardinals, and Frey, Dodgers, 22. Hits—Vaughan, Pirates, 47; L. Waner, Pirates, 44. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 8; John runs. Rain also kept Kansas City and In- dianapolis from playing before » Sun- day crowd. For the other series open- ers Monday Minneapolis was at Columbus, with Milwaukee at In- dianapolis, and Kansas City at Louisville. Millers, Hens Divide ‘Toledo—Minneapolis and Toledo di- vided their doubleheader, the Miilers taking the first, 4-3 and dropping the second, 4-5. (First Game) 39; Johnson, H Minneapolis 010 000 003— 5 Toledo ... 000 012 000— Galehouse, Morrow and Boone and Susce. (Second Game) R 41 3.8 Georg RHE 409; Toledo .... 000 000 203-5 9 O Kolp, Marrow, Perrin and Leitz; Walsh, Buchanan and Garbark, Saints Trim Red Birds Commies ive runs in the eighth after a wild throw by Fullis gave St. Moore, Paul a 6-5 victory over Columbus. Bone: heaters Pee 1 % RHE id ; Pitching—Castleman, Giants, and St. Paul... 000 004 020-6 13 0 4 i Columbus, 001 103 000— 5 11 4| Carleton, Cubs, 3-0 Fette, Hunter and Guiliani; Kling- er, Chambers, Cooper and Ogrodow- er, Tenth-Inning Homer Wins for F-M Twins St. Paul, May 20.—(7)—A ten-in- ping pitchers battle, providing the Fargo-Moorhead Twins with their second victory of the season, head- lined the Northern League’s three- game program Sunday. Pitcher Charlie Suche, aided by Jim Shillings’s last minute home run, bested Cliff Homstad as the Twins won, 1 to 0, from Duluth, also the vic- tim in Fargo-Moorhead’s only pre- vious victory. Shilling’s circuit clout came with two out in the tenth. Scoring all their runs in three in- nings, Greater Grand Forks took the measure of Superior in another game, 8-6. The victors used three pitchers Nearly 150 scouts participated in|and the losers two. Jake Baumgart- cinder events here last year. Troop|ner was credited with his first vic- 58 is defending champion for 1935 5 competition. The meet will be divid- ed into two classes, boys 14 years and over in class A and below 14 in class Kansas City-Indianapolis, Baines postponed, rain. both Milwaukee-Louisville, both games postponed, rain. Valley City Slates Scout Track Meet Valley City, N. D., May 20.—()— Boy Scouts will compete in their third annual field and track meet here Monday, June 3, Rollie French .of Valley City, in charge of the event, announced today. All scouts in North Dakota in good standing since January 1 are eligible. their series from Brainerd, 8 to 2. Winnipeg and Eau Claire were idle. : By Williams Grand Forks] RALLY TURNS BACK Goodman, Cincinnati; Pitcher Clyde; Heved Each pitcher allowed nine hits as Crookston took the final game of 4 hits and fanned 10 batters. DODGERS AGAIN, 9-6 Brooklyn Remains in Second Place When Cubs Yield to Phillies, 3-1 STEWART BLANKS YANKEES Whitehead Chalks Up Sixth Straight Victory Though Failing to Go Route RE RE i (By the Associated Press) Although a couple of seasons ago it might have been a simple matter to become a “Jinx” to the Cincinnati Reds, Hal Schumacher has carried it so far it threatens to become a seri- ous affair now that the Reds are heading toward better things. Since he broke into the National! League as a regular in 1932, Schu- macher has never lost a game to the His string of triumphs, now going into its fourth season, has stretched to 13 games with a tie as the only interruption. The 13th triumph Sun- day was almost as shaky an affair as the drawn battle two weeks ago. After building up an early lead, the Giants saw it fade away when a homer by Alex Kampouris started a sixth inning flurry that tied the score at 5-5 and they had to go 10 innings to win out, 6-5. Hits Homer and Double Besides flinging a fine game ex-) cept for that one inning Schumacher knocked in three runs with a homer, @ double and a long fly and did a lot of fielding to help out the crippled Giant infield. The victory enabled the New York- ers, who looked as if they would be lucky to escape with their uniforms intact when Dick Bartell, Hughey Critz and Travis Jackson were put on the sidelines, to win the series 2-1 andj increase their lead over Brooklyn to two games again. The Dodgers took their second straight licking from Pittsburgh, 9-6 when a four-run flurry against young Harry Eisenstat in the eighth settled the swinging match. Brooklyn re- tained second place, however, as the Chicago Cubs yielded to the Phillies for the second time, 3-1. on Lou Chiozza’s homer with two aboard and Syl Johnson’s fine relief hurling. Dizzy Dean led the Cardinals to a| 9-3 triumph over the Braves that| placed them just a half game behind Chicago. In addition to pitching a seven-hit game, he belted a single with the bases full to climax the game-winning four run rally in the eighth. Indians Back in Second After one day in third place in the American League, the Cleveland In- dians returned to second with a 1-0 victory over the Yankees in the day's keenest battle in the junior circuit. Walter Stewart, making his first Cleveland start, got the better of an ll-inning mound argument with Charley Ruffing when Red Rolfe and Bill Dickey collided going after Lou Berger's bunt and the hit paved the way for the only run. Chicago’s White Sox continued to pull ahead with a 6-5 triumph over Boston although “Silent” John White- head, rookie hurling sensation, failed for the first time to go the route. He was belted out in a four-run spurt in the ninth but got credit for his sixth straight victory. The Detroit Tigers took the odd game and fifth place from Washing- ton, slamming out 19 hits and a 16-6 victory while the Athletics consolid- ated their hold on seventh by trim- ming the Browns for the third straight time, 6-5, with Doc Cramer's seventh-inning homer providing the winning run. NATIONAL LEAGUE Phillies Defeat Cubs Chicago—A homer by Los Chiozza with two on in the third gave the Phillies their second straight over the Cubs, 3-2. Syl Johnson, who re- Prim in the first allowed only Wold, p . Woodward, If Desbro, cf .. Stoller,:c .. Stoller. Hubbard and C. Kopp. Senators. Washington BEHIND MOORE'S FIVE-HIT FEAT Penitentiary’ Team Scores 6-2| Victory, Execute Three | Double Plays Charles Moore, dusky mound ace, limited the Strasburg nine, champions | of the Dakota league, to five safe hits as the Grove Giants pounded out ‘STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE New York .. Brooklyn a 6 to 2 victory in an exciting game! Chicago played at the penitentiary park Sun- day afternoon. Strasburg counted twice in the first inning but errors in the third permitted three Grove Giant batters to cross home plate. Identical double plays, LeMay to “Johnson to David- son, nipped two Strasburg scoring chances ‘in the seventh and ninth innings with two men on the paths each time. Mike Wold, visitors’ mound ace, al- lowed 12 hits and fanned eight bat- ters but received weak support from! his teammates in the clutches. Stras- St. Louis ; Pittsburgh Cincinnati Boston .. Philadelphia New York Cleveland Boston Detroit Washington Philadelphia burg ended a Giants’ seventh inning St. Louis .... rally with a nicely executed double, play. i} | Klein, Strasburg backstop, let : AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w down the Giants without a single St. Paul .. stolen base and collected one hit in Milwaukee three times at bat. Woodward John-! Minneapolis son, Davidson and McMullen were/ Indianapolis Columbus Kansas City Toledo... Louisville the leading hitters for the winners. The box score: Strasburg— Baumgartner, ss .. Lipp, 2b L. Kraft, 2b . Flegal, 1b P. Mastel, cf . & 2 = 3 > Klein, c Bossart, rf C. Kraft, 3b ... WU Ro monn eoooooHoor COSHH EH OMS Cr eocmonworm rroeseoocHOoS Seigel, 3b. ... He wenonmnm lm o oFmoraccog Score by innings: Strasburg . Giants ++ 030 020 10x— 6. Errors: Strasburg 3, Giants 1. Home run, Woodward. Two base hit, Stolen bases: J. Baumgart- ner 2. Strike outs: Wold 8, Moore 8. Bossart hit by pitched ball by Moore. Bases on balls off Wold 1; off Moore 3. Double plays: C. Kraft to L. Kraft to Flegal;, (Davidson unassist- ed), LeMay to Johnson to Davidson completed two doubles. Left on bases: Strasburg 3, Giants 5. Earned runs: Strasburg 1, Giants 3. Umpires: 19 hits and a 16-6 victory over the RHE . 411 001 612-16 19 0 - 000 000 051— 6 10 3 Sullivan and Hayworth; Burke, Deab, Weaver, Coppola and Bolton, Redmond. A’s Wins Over Browns Philadelphia—Roger Cramer's hom- er over the right field fence in the seventh gave the Athletics a 6-5 win over the St. Louis Browns. RHE 112 001 000— 5 12 1 +. 101 111 10x— 613 1 Knott, Bloholder and Heath; Ben- ton, Mahaffey, Cascarella and Foxx. Stewart. Bests Ruffing New York—Walter Stewart and Red Ruffing -hooked up in a 11-inning pitchers battle. The former got a 1-0 verdict for Cleveland. ag R Cleveland .. 000 000 000 0I— 1 6 3 New York .. 000 000 000 00— 0 8 0 (11 innings). Stewart, Brown and Brenzel, Pyt- lak; Ruffing and Dickey. Detroit Most of the famous Chislehurst caves of Kent, England, are being used in mushroom cultivation. The famed caves consist of 22 miles of underground passages, are 90 feet deep and capable of accommodating Philadelphia Chicago 200 Prim, Johnson and Wilson; Warn- eke and it. Pirates Outhit Dodgers Pittsburgh—The Pittsburgh Pirates took a free hitting contest from 80,000 people. YEST purpose NORTHERN LEAGUE w L Winnipeg .. 1 Brainerd 2 Superior . 3 Crookston . 4 Eau Claire .. 5 Grand Forks 7 Fargo-Moorhead . 8 Duluth .. 7 Results Saturday NORTHERN LEAGUE Duluth 16; Fargo-Moorhead 10. Brainerd 10; Crookston 4. Eau Claire 7-6; Winnipeg 8-5. Grand Forks 7; Superior 0. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 1; Chicago 0 (10 inn- ings). Pittsburgh 8; Brooklyn 2. New York 4; Cincinnati 0. St. Louis 6; Boston 2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 6; Washington 4. Philadelphia 3; St, Louis 0. New York 3; Cleveland 0. Chicago 3; Boston 2. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 4; St. Paul 3. Toledo 8; Minneapolis 1. Kansas City 4; Indianapolis 2. ST Ss (By the Associated Press) Willie Kamm, Indians—made three of team’s six hits off Ruffing and scored only run in 1-0 victory over Yankees. Sylvester Johnson, Phillies— held Cubs to four hits in 8 1-3 innings and fanned ten as relief pitcher. Roger Cramer, Athletics—Rap- ped St. Louis pitching for three hits including game-winning home run. Hal Schumacher, Giants— helped win own game against Reds by driving in three runs with homer, double and fly. Billy Rogell, Tigers—collected four hits and knapked in three runs in slugfest against Senators. Arky Vaughan, Pirates—pound- ed out triple, double and single against Dodgers. John Whitehead, White Sox— Held Red Sox to one run in first eight innings for sixth consecu- tive mound triumph. Dizzy Dean, Cardinals—pitched seven hit game against Braves and batted in two runs . Ships were not painted in curious | designs during the World War for the of making thent less visible, but to make it more difficult for tor- pedo boats to estimate their course about one-sixth of an average drop and speed. OUR BOARDING HOUSE DAY'S Little’s Chief Title Threat in England Two Americans Survive First Round of British Amateur Tournament Play St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, Eng., May 20 —(?)—One of Champion Lawson Lit- tle’s chief sources of worry, the Scot- tish Jock McLean, was removed from the British amateur golf champion- ship Monday in the first round. Mc- Lean was defeated by J. H. Bryant of Blackwell in the first major upset of the tournament. Bryant stuck his approach at the ;|349-yard 18th hole close to the pin and holed out for a birdie three to {eliminate McLean as a small, early morning gallery groaned upon seeing the second favorite pass out. Shoots Poor Forty The Scottish and Irish champion, McLean, shot a poor 40—six over par —on the outgoing nine to stand one down to Bryant. He caught ap with Bryant at the 16th but failed to get 67 down a necessary long putt at the 18th hole after Bryant planted his 7» {approach stiff. The American contingent, topped by defending champion William Law- son Little, Jr., of San Francisco, was reduced to 11 with the last minute withdrawal. of Robert W. Barour of Paterson, N. J. The man who had been picked by his admirers to defeat Little com- pletely lacked his usually brilliant short game, shanking several easy short pitches into bunkers or rough land three-putting four greens. Forsman Advances The first American triumph was registered by John Forsman of New York, who won an extra hole battle with W. Pharay, of Letchworth. Fors- man was one up at the end of nine holes and the match was squared at the end of 18. Forsman won on the first extra hole. Robert W. Knowles, Jr. of the Country club, Brookline, Mass., gained the second round at the expense of D. O'Donnell Higgins of Montreal, Canada. Knowles won, five up and aoe to play. uglas Grant, the transplante Californian now living in London, Leer side-tracked by R. de Lloyd of Abery- strwyth after two extra holes, de Lloyd winning on the 20th. One of the most lop-sided results of the first round was turned in by Sam Leaver of Fairhaven who defeat- ed P. de Gooreynd of Stoke Poges 9 and 7 after leading eight up at the end of nine holes. Nodaks Take College Track Championship Grand Forks, N. D., May 20. University of North Dakota an ta state intercollegiate track champion- ship in a battle with Valley City Teachers here Saturday which saw our Bea smashed. The Sioux made Points to 331 ce s by Valley Minot Teachers was third with 29, Jamestown college had 24, Mayville 171%, North Dakota Agricultural col- lege 9, Wahpeton Science 6 and El- lendale 3, The shining star of the meet was Doc Haines of the Vikings, who won the individual championship with 15 points, winning firsts in the 100 and. {220-yard dashes and the broad jump ‘and breaking a state record in all three events. He ran the century in 9.7, the 220 in 21.7, and he broad jumped 23 feet, 8 inches. The other record went to Louis Chumich of the university, who heaved the shot 47 a) ns inches. * laines had a brilliant running mate in Gronlie, who with toe eaeare breaker accounted for 27 of Valley City’s points, The Sioux won the meet by finish- ing second in the mile relay race. | University led Valley City by half a point as the. final event was called. The Nodaks netd to finish ahead of .|the Vikings to win, and they landed second hehind Minot, with Valley City third, The malarial parasite is so small that it easily inhabits the interior of @ human red blood corpuscle, of which 5,000,000 are normally contained in of blood. LP ACH+SO!-BLAYING DER KA-KNOCK BALL, LY FEN You SHOULD BE 7 PRACTICING DER HOUSE IN, FOR LESGON I GIFF NOW! —4.HA I--FEN COMES SUNE, FOR MY PUPILS RECITAL, IL SAY,NEXT ON DER PROGRAM \SS FAT HET ALFUN HOOBLE,WHO VILL BLAY STRIKE-OUT ON DER BALL TBAT ! YAH } WEN |XPERFESSoR KeLoTZ! 5 GWAN OUTAN PLAX SECOND BASE, AN You FOLLOW UP PINKY FOSTER AT BATS !—~AW,CMON ~ SOONS WE ALL GET A WHACK AROUND, TLL: GO IN FOR MY LESSON, S-S-SHE'S WENT AND MARRIED A FELLOW WHO HASN'T Sor A JOB, AND THEY'VE DECIDED To LIVE WITH US— G-HOo~ YOU POOR THING! SHES ONLY KNOWN HIM A WEEK. Brooklyn 9-6, both teams using three Pitchers. RHE 000 220 200— 313 1 ++ 000 211 14x— 917 2 Clark, Vance, Fisenstat and Lopez; Bush, Swift, Hoyt and Padden. Dizzy Dean Wins Fifth St. Louis—Dizzy Dean won his fifth victory over the season with a 7-3 count over the Braves. RHE Boston .. - 200 000 100-3 7 2 St. Louis . 200 010 O4x— 711 0 Betts, Benton gnd Spohrer; J. Dean and Davis. Giants Turn Back Reds Cincinnati—The Giants and Reds batted ten innings before the Giants won out, 6-5. | 8 Summary: gon; left on base—Williston 5, Bis- 10; stolen bases—Le Dosquet, » McCarney 2; two base hits— 4Goar, Becker, Wessel; three base hits \ Wessel; home — runs—Desiderato, weary, Haley; Double or triple plays— to Haley to McCarney; hits off in 4 1-3 innings; off Fol- 2-3 innings; off Anderson innings; off Paige 4 in 4 inn- ‘struck out by Schupe 4; by p 5; by Anderson 7; by Peige 3; off Schupe 1; off Fol- AN wT7 IWGZ4| ‘ RHE “a New York .. 031 001 0001— 610 0 Cincinnati .. 000005 0000-5 9 3 (10 innings) Schumacher, Smith and Mancuso; Check Tourney Frey, Brennan, Derringer and Camp- ill Be Held May 30 N. D, May 20—An- ment that the Missourl slope fournament will be held at AMERICAN LEAGUE jton—Rookie won his sixth straight victory of the hall here on Memorial Day, geagon and the White Sox their first las been made by L, H. Li eyteso Rinse br eisoore ste ! ( ” Ml hicago . 002 001 012— 6 13 1 Boston .. 000 001 0044— 5 11 0 Whitehead, and Sewell; J. Johnson, Walberg, Pipgras and R. Ferrell. ‘Tigers Humble Senaters Washington—The Detroit Tigers blasted four Washington pitchers for the home of Tom Min- ar » The sun shone B flaw in the window glass, h and set the home

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