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SS SSS SESE SE RONEN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1935 Locals Trounce Valley City Behind Paige’s Three-Hit Pitching DISKY MOND STAR [FOUR TOP WRESTLERS TO APPEAR ON SHRINERS’ CARD TONIGHT CAPITAL CITY, STATE COLLEGE, KIWANIS MEETS TOP WEEK-END RAPS TRIPLE, THREE SINGLES IN 5-1 WIN Desiderato, Drengberg, Haley Lead Capital City in At- tack on Cooper SECOND GAME IS TONIGHT Vincent for Bismarck, Gaines for Hi-Liners Slated for Hurling Duty a If Lefty Vincent can carry on to- fhight where lanky Satchel Paige left off Thursday, the Bismarck ball club) will have little difficulty making it two in a row over Valley City, led by the fence-busting Hancock duo. Pitching a three-hit game and | striking out 10 Hi-Liner batters, as the locals rapped out a convincing 6-1 victory here Thursday was not enough for the dusky fireball artist. dust to make matters certain, Paige elammed Cooper's offerings for four hits, including a three-bagger in the sixth inning that scored Leroy Dren- ‘berg and turned the tide of battle in ‘Bismarck’s favor. Playing errorless ball behind Paige's three-hit elbowing, the local nine rapped Cooper for four extra base hits, including a home run by Haley; Paige’s three bagger and doubles by Mike Goetz and Wessel. Johnson Scores Desiderato Bismarck’s first run came in the opening frame after Paige had struck out Dermit, Allen and Art Hancock to retire Valley City. Joe Desiderato cracked out a nice single and was sacrificed to second when Carl Wessel laid a bunt down the first base line. Leary grounded out to Cooper but “Moose” Johnson mak- ing his first appearance in a local uniform singled sharply to bring Desiderato home. The visitors threatened in the sec- ond inning when Cleve hit safely and went to third on Charley Hancock's single. But the rally died there when Kuppich and Cooper struck out and Cleve was thrown out At hhome on an attempted squeeze play. Bismarck also had a man on third $n the second inning after Paige had) singled, went to second on Morlan’s hit and stole third when Cooper was caught napping but the inning end- ed when Goetz and Desiderato struck put. Art Hancock evened the score in the fourth when he blasted a fast one far over the left field wall for the third and last hit Paige allowed dur- ing the nine innings. Attempted Rally Faits Bismarck missed a chance to go ahead in the last half of that inning when singles by Drengberg and Paige and a walk for Mike Goetz loaded the bases with only one out. Eesiderato flied out to the left fielder and Wessel rolled on down to Erick- son who touched third for the final putout. Only nine men came to bat in the| fifth and the first half of the sixth innnings and Paige decided to take the game into his own hands at that point. A single by Drengberg and the dusky star busted one clear out to the right field fence for three bases and the important run. Failing to get a man on base in the last five innings, the invaders mever were in position to score but Red Haley made doubly sure of the victory in the seventh by driving one of Cooper's deliveries over the right field wall scoring Johnson ahead of Goetz, Wessel Hit Doubles Bismarck's final tally came in the Yast half of the eighth when Mike Goetz doubled and Wessel duplicat- ed with a long two-bagger of 23 own. In addition to Paige's perfect day ft bat, Drengberg and Desiderato gach with a pair of singles, Haley With his homerun and Wessel with a @ouble aided the locals’ cause with timely heavy hitting as they touched Cooper for 14 safe hits and two ‘bases on balls. Tonight's game has been called for 8:30 p.m. Manager Neil Churchill's choice for the mound assignment will be “Behoven” Vincent, who arrived fhere Thursday from Pittsburgh, While Gaines is expected to get the starting call for the Valley City club. ‘Whe box score: “valley City— AB RH POA Hea wwwone Pecc00oHKCS Soccer Hoo CoNHuuwenc CoMHoncome coooce soos S= ecoooooco ss rucoltonwan +. 87 5 14 27 Betting in ninth. BS: 009 100 000— 1 “Lett on base—valley City 2; ‘Mmarck 14. Pificee—Wessel. innings. Struck out on 2 natck . +. 109 001 2ix— 5 Summary: Winning piicner—Paige. Bis- Stolen bases—Paige. Sac- Two-base hits, Wes- , Goetz. Three-base hits—Paige. Tuns—Haley, A. Hancock. Hits , 3 in 9 innings; ot Core, Paige 10; by Cooper 2. Bases on ball Up Fifth Victory; Cubs | Outlast Giants (By the Associated Press) { The strange situation which finds! the two 1934 pennant clubs strug-/ gling to hold first division berths in! their respective leagues seems due for |! @ sudden overhauling if the spurt of! the Detroit Tigers continues. Micky Cochrane's crew, playing a steady, consistent brand of ball, un- marked by fireworks, finally has cli- maxed a climb from the American League cellar by breaking into fourth place. ! Since they struck bottom April 27 at the end of a six-game losing streak, they have hung up 14 vic- tories against four defeats and finally moved past Boston into the first divi- sion with a 5 to 3 triumph over the Red Sox Thursday. Rowe Wins Third Game The triumph. was their fifth. straight, the second string of that length since they began winning and| was accomplished in just as unspec- tacular a manner as the others.) Schoolboy Rowe, winning his third game of the season, pitched three- hit ball for six innings, then weak- ened just enough to let the Sox get into the running. The rest of the American League program yielded to cold and rainy weather as did Cincinnati's effort to stage the first major league night game in history with the Phillies as their opponents. A steady overnight rain and chilly breezes forced the postponement of the spectacle with its elaborate side features until Fri- day night. The Cardinals, meanwhile, did their | share toward the program of getting the world series out of fourth place by taking a weird 8 to 7 10-inning decision from Brooklyn and gaining a full game on all the other first divi- sion clubs except Chicago. Cubs Move Into Second ‘The Cubs, outlasted the league leading Giants to win 6 to 4 when Charley Root proved a better relief pitcher than Leon Chagnon and moved into second place a few points ahead of Brooklyn, which had con-} position. ‘The Pittsburgh fans put on a spe- ville, former Pirate player, and the Bucs put the usual finish on the af- fair by beating the Braves and Mar- anville 7 to 1 with the aid of Arky Vaughan’'s eighth circuit swat of the year and plunked the losers back in} the National League cellar behind the) Phillies. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pirates Swamp Braves Pittsburgh—The Pittsburgh Pirates swamped the Boston Braves 7 to 1. | RHE; Boston .........000 000 100-- 1 9 0| Pittsburgh -100 301 20x— 7 0 Benton, Cantiwell Swift and Grace. Cubs Trim Giants Chicago—The Chicago Cubs deteat-! ed the New York Giants 6 to 4. and Spohier; New York. Chicago .. Chagnon, Fitzsimmons and Man-; cuso; Root and French. | Cards Defeat Dodgers | St. Louis—Pepper Martin's double! in the ninth ‘nning gave the St. Louis Cardinals an & to 7 victory over Brooklyn. RHE! Brooklyn .....192 000 4090-715 1) St. Louis......112 200 100 1— 8 18 0; (10 innings) i Leonard, Zachary and Lopez; Hal- Jahan, Herrell, Walker and Davis (Philadelphia aid Cincinnati post- Poned), | OUT OUR WAY WHEN f DON'T PRACTICE , YOU WANT ME To lee 2. Umpires—Louis Lena- ‘i , Gus Becker. restling Tongh solation only in a virtual tie for thei} cial show to honor Rabbit Maran-| 70! ‘St. Paul.....000 000 010 001— 2 5 3} GEE, YouU'RE FUNNY! TO PRACTICE, You INSIST ON IT— AND WHEN I DO WANT To Tigers Break Into First Division, Cards Nip Dodgers in Ten Innings' Bengals, Betind Rowe, chak LAWSON LITTLE GAINS FINAL ROUND IN BRITISH AMATEUR St. Paul Bounces Up Into Lead by Beating Colcnels' Indians Nulify Millers’ Six-Run Rally Scoring Winning Counter in Ninth Chicago, May 24.—()—Friday t} was St. Paul at the head of the Amer- ican Association parade. Taking advantage of a beating for Minneapolis from the Indianapolis Indians, Marty McManus’ crew bounced back into the lead by bat~ tling through 12 innings to defeat Louisville, 2 vo 1 Thursday aight. The Indians also profited, moving in- to third place ahead of Milwaukee, which lost to Columbus, 8 to 3, in the only afternoon game. Minneapolis’ aefeat was a rough one for Donie Bush and his men to swallow. After trailing for seven in- nings, they broke out with a six-run drive in the eighth to tie the score. The Indians, however, got under the wire first by scoring one in the ninth, to win 7 to 6. Lena Stiles and Wilcy Moore held Toledo to five hit: as Kansas City de- feated Toledo, 2 to 1, besting Myles Thomas, who gave only seven hits, in a pitching battle. Garland Braxton, Milwaukee's prize southpaw, who had won five straight games, suffered his first defeat of the season at Colum- bus, Red Birds Triumph Columbus -- The Columbus Red Birds defeated the Milwaukee Brew- ers 8 to 3 RHE Milwaukee .....101 001 000— 3 9 2 Colymbus ......123 (11 00x— 8 14 1 Braxton, Wingard and Rensa; Klinger and Ogrodowski. Blues Down Hens Toledo — Kansas City scored two runs in the fifth frame to defeat To- ledo 2 to 1, in a game under the RHE .000 020 000— 2 7 1 -000 001 000— 1 5 2} Moore and Madjeski, Thomas and Susce. Indians Nose Out Millers i Indianapolis — Indianapolis nosed» out Minneapoils 7 to 6 in a game played under the lights. RHE Minneapolis 000 000 060— 6 11 4; Indianapolis ....010 201 201— 7 15 1 Kolp, Ryan and George; Logan.! Page and Riddie. j Saints Defeat Colonels Louisville—St. Paul defeated Louis- ville 2 to 1 in a game which went twelve innings. when Marty Mc- Manus hit a nome run. RUE Louisville ..001 000 000 000— 1 9 1 12 innings) Stien, Hunter, Claset, Fette and Guiliani; Tising and Thompson. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Win Fifth Boston—The <allying Detroit Tigers won their fifth straight victory by defeating the Boston Red Sox 5 to 3.; RHE Detroit . -000 220 100-5 8 2 Boston . -000 000 120-3 9 1 Rowe and Cochrane; Welch, Wal- berg, H. Johnson, Hockette, Rhodes and Berg. Others postponed rain and cold. Ice patrol vessels of the U. 8. Coast Guard cover a radius of from 5000 to 6000 miles in their search for ice- bergs. Defending Champion Crushes Tourney ‘Dark Horse’, Six Up and Four to Go St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, Eng., May 24.—(P)—William_ Lawson Little Jr., the husky San Francisco shotmaker, | Friday gained the semi-final round of the British amateur gojf cham- pionship in defense of the crown he won George L. Q. Henriques, “dark horse” of the previous rounds, 6 and 4, in a; quarter final contest. The semi- finals will be played this afternoon. Little closed out his opponent with a burst of phenomenal sub-par golt on the back nine and became the first player to gain the penultimate round. He played the last five holes in two under fours and the match would have ended on the 13th green had not Henriques rammed down a 30 foot putt for a great half in bir- die 3's. All told he was only one over fours for the 14 holes the match lasted. Despite his 39—five over par—on the outgoing holes Little shot mar- velous golf all the way, hitting per- fect tee shots and approaching crisply and accurately. He had absolutely no assistance from lady luck on the greens. One expert said after the match “if he starts dropping those putts it'll be murder from here on just like it was at Prestwick in the final.” Dr, William Tweddell, champion in 1927, elirainated his bosom friend, Eric Fiddian, a former runner up, one up to gain the semi-final round. Tony Torrance, 44-year-old veteran and member of the last five British Walker cup teams won an extra hole battle from young J. Morton Dykes to qualify for the round before the final. Torrance will meet Tweddell this afternoon. Softball Meeting Is Slated Tonight Schedules to Be Drafted Pre- paratory to Opening of Season Next Week Schedules will be drafted and. all other arrangements necessary before the opening season next Monday or Wednesday will be completed to- |night at the meeting of the Bismarck Diamondball Association, according to Clement Kelley, president. The meeting has been called for 8 p. m. at the World War Memor- ial building and will be dismissed in time for the softball enthusiasts to attend the wrestling card. Nine teams have already been or- ganized, Kelley said Friday. The tenth is under consideration. Wheth- er the opening of the seaon will be set next Monday or Wednesday de- pends on whether an eight or a ten- team league is formed, Kelley advised. Complete double-round robin schedules will be drawn up in either event at tonight’s meeting. All man- agers, players, umpires and score- keepers have been urged to be pres- ent. ° i Fights Last Night ! (By the Associated Press) Buffalo, N. Y.—Jacob (Buddy) Baer, 236%2, Livermore, Calif. knocked out George . (Big Boy) Brackey, 212, Buffalo, (1). By Williams WANT YOU GET YOUR TRYING To SLE DON'T OW UM NOT FUNNY— YOU Are !. at Prestwick. Little crushed | NAGURSKT HEADLINES GRAPPLERS 10 MAKE MAT DEBUT IN WEST Mike Nazarian Will Meet ‘Rube’ : Harben in Main Event at Memorial Building /"BRONC’ TACKLES JOHNSON | \Gramling and Larson Will Bat- tle in Four-Round Boxing Preliminary Missouri Slope sport fans will wit- iness tonight four of the Northwest's ‘leading exponents of the art of mod- jern wrestling in two matches sched- uled to start promptly at 8:15 p. m., jat the World War Memorial building ‘under the sponsorship of the North \Dakota Shriners, | Headlining the card is “Bronko” Nagurski, All-American fullback with Minnesota, still later a leading line plunger of the Chicago Bears and during the winter seasons a promis- ing young matman challenging the older champions. Nagurski will be pitted against Al- ford Johnson, Minnesota giant, in the semi-windup of the program which will feature Mike Nazarian against Rube Harben. Drew With ‘Strangler’ Lewis Nazarian, known nationally as wrestling’s “Little Gamecock”, recent- i ly was tested in a bout with Jim Lon- dos, recognized in many states as champion, and the little wrestler stood up for over an hour before succumb- ‘ing to one of Londos’ holds. Besides Londos, Nazarian has met Ed “Strangler” Lewis, former world’s champion, and boasts a two hour draw with the once great grappler. Harben hails from Chamblee, Ga., and tips the beam at 215 pounds. With a recent victory over Chief Chewacki, Harben is rated as one of the most powerful of the game's well- known strongmen. Nagurski’s chief stock in trade ts the flying tackle, a hand-me-down from his exploits on the gridiron and a smashing method of attack. The “Bronc” is no amateur when it comes to the scientific part of the game, however, and recently pinned Nazar- jan in the headline bout at Grand Forks. Card Boxing Preliminary Rusty Gramling, Bismarck’s hard- hitting welterweight, will oppose Bud Larson of Jamestown in the four- round preliminary to the wrestling card. Gramling recently decisioned Larson over the same route but not untii he had taken a lot of punish- ment from the clever Stutsman coun- ty fighter. Stanley Myslajek, Minneapolis, will referee the wrestling matches and Freddy Batcher will be the third man in the ring during the boxing pre- liminary. D. E, Shipley will do the announcing for all events. YEST@MRDAY’S sT Ss (By the Associated Press) Pepper Martin, Cardinals — Pounded Brooklyn pitching for three hits and three runs, includ- ing winning tally. Bill Swift, Pirates — Scattered nine Boston ‘its effectively to win 7-1, Hank Greenberg, Tigers—Field- ed sensationally in game with Red Sox and knocked in three runs, hitting eighth homer. Charley Root, Cubs — Held Giants to three hits in five in- nings of relief pitching. Colts Beat Brainerd; F-M Twins Defeated St. Paul, May 24.—(P)—Grand Forks jumped two notches in the Northern League standings by win- ning its fifth straight geme, and rest- Fargo, Dickinson and Fargo Prep Squads Headline En- tries Here Saturday Two major track and field meets for North Dakota high school ath- letes and the annual state intercol- legiate conference carnival are on this week’s cinder schedule. Prep school competitions which wind up the big track events, except for the general state meet at Bis- marck June 7 and 8, are the twelfth annual Capital City at Bismarck Saturday and the thirteenth annual Kiwanis invitational at Valley City Friday and Saturday. Thirty schools including Jamestown and Valley City are entered in the Missouri Mentor Scores Subsidies Faurot Accuses Large Schools of Taking Schoolboy Tal- ent From Tigers New York, May 24—(7)—Don Fau- rot, Missouri's aggressive new athle- tic director, has blown the whistle on the highly explosive topic of college athletic recruiting and subsidizing. “So what?” I can hear his asso- Kiwanis affair while more than a dozen entries in the Capital City event include Fargo, Dickinson and Bismarck. Seven Colleges Entered Seven colleges expected to be rep- resented with squads in the climax- ing conference contest at Valley City Friday and Saturday are Ellendale, Jamestown, Dickinson, Valley City, Minot, Wahpeton and Mayville. Valley City’s Vikings, defending college champions, stamped their school a favorite to repeat by a bril- Mant performance in the State col- lege event at Grand Forks last week when they placed second by one ee to the University of North Da- 2. Lyle Haines, who cracked three university records in carrying off high scoring honors, will lead the Vikings in the assault on conference records at Valley City. On the basis of previous perform- ances this season, ability to pile up points in second, third and fourth places on each, event will be a de- termining factor in winning the meet, Valley City and Minot having the leading positions in five events. Jamestown and Ellendale stand out in two each, with one for Wahpeton, Dickinson and Mayville. Gronlie Strong In Pole Vault Valley City is figured to win the pole vault and 120-high hurdles with Gronlie, and 110 and 220 yard dashes and broad jump, three events in which Haines shattered university marks, As first place contenders, Minot of- fers Waster who placed ahead of Val- ley City’s Shannon in the university shot put, Sweet, 220 low hurdles; Johnson, discus; Aune, two mile run, and the relay team. Jamestown defends on Sundahl, whose distance has improved through the season to 179 feet 8 inches, for a first in the javelin and Dittmer for ea possible win in the half imile, Ellendale’s first place gossibilities are Summerfield in the 880 and Kirschner in the two-mile run, Other possible firsts are Robinson of Dick- inson in the mile, Major of Wahpe- ton in the high jump, and Aasen of Mayville, 220 low hurdles. Braddock in Splendid Shape for Baer Bout Ferndale, N. Y. May 24.—(7)— James J. Braddock, if he lives, is go- ing to be as fine conditioned a chal- lenger as ever stepped into the ring when he meets Max Baer for the heavyweight championship out on Long Island the night of June 13. The training camp of this Jersey Irishman, a few miles down the river from where Jimmy McLarnin and Barney Ross are preparing for their welterweight title battle Tuesday {night at the Polo grounds !s more of a fistic abattoir than a condition- ing ground. It’s the closest thing to the old slug-’em-silly school of preparation Jack Dempsey used to revel in than anything the heavyweights have seen since the old man mauler’s training days. “If he lives,” says little Joe Gould, Braddock’s manager, “he’s going to be in great shape.” i i ciates saying after Faurot had ac- cused Texas, Centenary, George Washington and Northwestern, among others, of taking star schoolboy tal- ent from the home precincts of his Tigers. The truth is he has not even scratched the surface of college con- ditions as they have developed since the Carnegie foundation published its famous finger-pointing bulletin, No, 23, in the fall of 1929. A short period of de-emphasis has been fol- lowed by more and better subsidizing and recruiting. It’s impossible to apply a “zoning system” to the business of acquiring or hiring college athletes, anyway. The policy of “Missouri for Missouri boys” dr “Ohio State for Ohio boys” is all right, patriotically, but it is by no means entirely effective. It may be just a coincidence but it is at least noteworthy that a shake-up or change in the athletic organization or policy of any of our bigger uni- versities or the smaller ones, for that | 71 matter, generally is followed by an influx of sturdy ‘new material, espec- fally football material. It was, for example, a happy coin- cidence at Princeton that a stalwart class of freshman football players greeted Fritz Crisler on his arrival to revive the fortunes of old Nassau @ few years ago. THREE SCHOOLS DENY SUBSIDIZING CHARGES Columbia, Mo., May 24.—(4)—Coach Don Faurot’s charge that the Uni- versity of Missouri is losing athletic talent to schools offering induce- [Elgin Track Squad Wins South Slope Conference Meet Banning of Mott Captures Indi- vidual Honors With Firsts in Three Events Elgin, N. D., May 24.—Elgin high school won the South Slope confer- ence track and field meet here with @ total of 55% points, edging Mott which scored 54, into second position. New Leipzig was third with 12, New England fourth with four and Car- son fifth with three and one-half. High scoring honors went to Ban- ning of Mott. Winning the 100, 220 and 440-yard dashes he amassed 15 Points, one more than Garland of Elgin. Bach and Stilson of Elgin each had 10 points while Ed Reiger of New Leipzig and Vasey of Mott tied for fifth and sixth places with eight points. apiece. The summary: 100-yard dash—Time 10.9 sec.: Ban- ning, Mott; Garland, Elgin; Bach, El- gin; Cuskelly, Mott. g 220-yard dash—Time 24 sc.: Ban- ning, Mott; Garland, Elgin; Bach Elgin, Cuskelly, Mott. 440-yard dash—Time 58.1 sec.: Ban- ning, Mott; Bohn, M ott; England; Jacober, New Leipz 880-yard dash—Time 2 min. 25.1 sec.; Bohn, Mott; Lipelt, Elgin; Stein- jmach, New England; J. 'Sellner, Elgin Mile run—Time 5 min. 28.8 sec.: R. Sellner, Elgin; Bohn, Mott; J.- Seliner Elgin; ‘Grosz, Mott. : Shot put—Distance 37 (ft. 5 in: Stilson, Higin; W. Roesler, Mott; Lutz, Mott; Soli, Mott. # Pole vault—Height 10 ft.: El. Rel. ger, New Leipzig; Bender, Elgin; La Marre, Elgin; Ed. Reiger, New Leip- zig. Broad Jjump—Distance 19 ft, 10 in.: Garland, Elgin; Cuskelly, Mott; EB Haisch, Carson; Bach, Elgin. eight 5 ft. in.: EA eae) ome — gin, an ndgrebe, Carson, tied for third, " iscus—Distance 195 ft. 8 in.: Stil- son, Elgin: Vasey, Mott; El. Reiger, New Leipzig; Sayler, Elgin. Javelin—Distance 135 ft. 4 In.: Vasey, Mott; Garland, Elgin; Hard- meyer, Mott; E. Roeler, Mott. 880-yard relay—Time 1 min. 46 3 Mott, first; Elgin, second. ‘STANDINGS (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE ments in the way of scholarships’ jobs, 4 — ete., Priday drew denials from North~| Nev,,%o"* ee western and Texas universities and 13 rh Centenary college. Athletic auth-| ¢; 13 = orities or those three schools declar- pe ed they have no Missourians on thelr ee athletic rosters. 2 = M320 | 18 308 MAJOR LEAGUE | aumicarizscus LEADERS "eS . |Chicago ........ 9 66 New York 12 (583 (By the Associated Press) Cleveland 120 583 AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit . 120 571 Batting—Johnson, Athletics, 4173! Boston ||| 12 56 Foxx, Athletics, .389. Washington 14 500 Runs—Bonura, White Sox, 28; John-| pnijadelphia 17.329 son, Athletics and Radcliffe, White|s_ Louis ... 17 320 Sox, 24. jena} Hits—Johnson, Athletics, and Geh- AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ringer, Tigers, 43. w L Pet. a pas tee and Johnson,/ st, Paul .. 19-11 633 Athletics, 9. Mineapolis . 16 #13) Pitching—Whitehead, White Sox, 6-0; Indianapolis 16 11 ‘es Allen, Yankees, 4-0. Milwaukee .. mb MBIT NATIONAL LEAGUE bis 4a Batting—Vaughan, Pirates, 400; Mar- 13 20 304 tin, Cardinals, 381. « 7 2% 233 Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 31; Med- wick, Ci , 26. NORTHERN 1 Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 31; Med- ates s Pet. wick, Cardinals, 26. 12 1 923 Hits—Vaughan, Pirates, 52; L. Waner, 7 5 583 Pirates, 50. si 6 6 500 Home Runs—Ott, Giants and 6 7 462 Vaughan, Pirates, 8. Brainerd 5 7 <AlT Pitching—Castleman, Giants, 4-0;/Fargo-Moorhead ... 5 7 417 Parmelee, Giants, 5-1. a ee 3 8 273 Hemlock represents about 14 per cent of the soft woods exported from the United States, about twice the amount shipped to other coun- MIXED UP! YOUR BROTHER HAS A_ SPLITTING HEADACHE, AND He's THE NEXT ROOM! OF COURSE You DON'T KNOW THAT— BUT, ANYWAY, YOU'RE NOT GOING TO THAT PIANO, NOW 8:15 o'clock Memorial Bldg. Do's AND DON'TS ed in the first division Friday behind | Superior, which took undisputed pos-} session of third place. i The Colts defeated Brainerd, 4 to; 1, to push the latter team from third | to fifth place while Superior won, from Crookston, 12 to 11, to advance ‘to within one game of the Pirates, in second place. | The lzague leading Winnipeg, Maroons ran their winning streak to four games by defeating Duluth, 9 to 2, to increase their lead over the Pi- rates to 4% games. Eau Claire crept out of the cellar by its 4 to 2 victory over Fargo-Moor- head, the loss dropping the Twins from fourth to sixth position. Gophers, Buckeyes Still in Title Race Chicago, May | 24.—(}—Ohio State and Minnesota, both nursing western conference baseball championship hopes, sought to improve their chances Friday in the opening of oeyne series with Iowa and Pur- jue. The Buckeyes, who can grab at Jeast a share of the title by winning their remaining four games—provid- ed Minnesota loses at least one of its six coming tests, were at Iowa for a two-day stand. Minnesota was host to Purdue, the team which tipped over the League-leading Illinois club Tuesday, for Friday and Saturday battles. ‘ 1 | It is sald that there are 11,896,780 | different hands possible in the game of bridge. EP IT OFF, RIGHT IN prume orld War — THAT BATTY OLD HOOPLE! SUST AS 1 GET MY GARDEN SET , OUT IN NIKE SHAPE HE BRINGS HOME A COUPLE OF CHICKENS TO PRAISE !—I TELL YOU,ACNES, IF T SEE A FEATHER OF EM IN MY YARD , T'LL—~~<E ~You SEE \F 1 DONT !I--<THERE HE IS, NOW— —~WADDLING OUT TO TH GARAGE WITH A SACK-——PROBABLY FULL OF EMPTY BOTTLES ! NOW HE Bronko Nagurski vs. Alford Johnson Mike Nazarian vs. Rube Harben tries 10 years ago. OUR BOARDING HOUSE Ze} OH, NOW, HARVEY DEAR,HES ALL RIGHT! HE ASSURED ME THE HENS WOULDNT JUMP THE FENCE,INTO YOUR GARDEN-~SAID THEY WERE ROVAL BURMA HENS+SO USED TO BEING ATTENDED BY SERVANTS, THEY HAVE TO BE LIFTED UP TO THE ROOSTS Admission If the engine is equipped with fuel pump, it is not necessary to prime the carburetor if the car should Tun out of gas. Zig AW AT NIGHT | Ringside - $1 by Reserved - 75c North General - 50c Dakota (Plus Tax) Shriners