The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1935, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1935 Bismarck | NADINE O'LEARY SUCCESSFULLY DEFENDS BIRCHMONT_ TITLE COOK BOWS TONEW [Rowe Shuts Out Yanks As Tigers MEN'S CHAMPION IN | Canter Toward American Pennant SEMI-FINAL MATCH)ciants pours ove 2-« win over|RORY TEAM TAKES {Baldwin Defeats LOCALS POUND OUT {4 HITS IN SECOND VICTORY OF EVENT Satchel Paige Relieves Chet Brewer in Seventh Inning, Strikes Out Seven DENVER TITLISTS ADVANCE Jap All-Stars, Monroe Mon- archs, California, New York Teams Eliminated Wichita, Kan., Aug. 19.—(AP)— Pounding out 11 hits, a great club of negro and white players from Bis- marck, trounced the Wichita Water- men, Kansas state champions, 8 to 4, here Sunday. The defeat was the Kansans’ first in the national semi- fo baseball tournament. Held scoreless early in the game as Chambers, Wichita hurler, sent the first 17 batters down in order, the North Dakota club came back to score in every remaining inning ex- cept the eighth. Wichita garnered 10 safeties. Yuma, Ariz, defeated the Denver All-Stars 9 to 4 to keep their record unmerred and the Denver United Puels won their first tournament game, 8 to 3, from Buffalo, N. Y. In other games Rossville, Ga., eliminat- ed the Circulators of New York, 10 to 3, and the San Antonio, Tex., team eliminated Byron, Neb., 15 to 4. Three other teams eliminated to date are the Japanese All-Stars of Stockton, Calif., the Monroe, La., Monarchs and Lompoc, Calif. Chet Brewer started on the mound ‘or Bismarck but was relieved with one man out in the seventh by Satchel Paige who finished out the game. The great Paige fanned sev- 2n opposing batsmen during the two and two-thirds innings he was on the mound, Score by 3 Wichita Water . 000 200 101-4 10 4 Bismarck ...... 001 122 20x—8 11 2 Chambers and Flynn; Brewer, Paige and Radcliffe. Millers Lengthen Association Lead' Bushmen Start Last Half of Eastern Jaunt 51. Games Ahead of Indians Chicago, Aug. 19.— (#) —Donie Bush's Minneapolis Millers started the last half of their final eastern jaunt Monday leading the America Associa- tion by @ comfortable five and one- half games. While the Millers were subduing Louisville in both games of Sunday's double-header, 11 to 8 and 3 to 1, Milwaukee helped out by administer- (ng a double beating to Columbus, 8 ‘o 4 and 4 to 3. Indianapolis, pre- vented by rain from playing a pair with St. Paul, also benefitted by the Brewer's victories over Columbus, slipping back into second place a half game ahead of the Red Birds. Toledo slowed Kansas City’s drive by -vinning both ends of their bargain offering, 9 to 2 and & to 4, leaving the Blues six and one-half games ‘back of the pace-setting Millers, Millers Cop Two Louisville—The Millers hammered ‘seven Louisville pitchers for a double win, 11 to 8 and 3 to 1. (First Game) RHE Minneapolis ... 301 034 000—11 15 1 Louisville ..... 200 122 OO1— 8 14 1 Bean, Perrin, Galehouse and Ho- gan; Sewell, Penner, Peterson, Le- comte and Ringhofer. (Second Game) RHE Minneapolis .... 110 000 001-3 10 1 Louisville ...... 000 000 010-1 8 1 McKain, Perrin and Hogan; Mar- vow, Lecomte, Tising and Thompson. Brewers Take Pair Columbus—Milwaukee took a dou- bleheader from Columbus, 8 to 4 and RHE 202 112 000—8 11 0 Braxton and Rensa; Tinning, Chambers, Copeland and Ogrodowski. (Second Game) - RHE Milwaukee . 000 O11 0024 9 1 Columbus 020 001 000-3 7 0 Polli, and Detore; Ryba tnd Ogrodowski. Hens Trip Blues Toledo—The Mud Hens handed the Kansas City Blues two reverses, 9 to 2 and 5 to 4, the second game going 10 innings. (First Game) RHE Kansas City .... 000 020 000-2 7 0 Page, Stiles, Morris and Madjeski; Walsh and Garbark, (Second Game) RHE Kansas City .. 200 020 000 0—4 12 1 Toledo ....... 000 000 202 1-5 12 0 Fullerton, Moore and Madjeski; Boone, Bowler, Stein, Sullivan and wigs Be, Lasers, Susce. ie at Indianapolis, both games Postponed, rain. 5 Sam Willaman’s Death Shocks Football World Cleveland, Aug. 19.—()}—The un- expected death of Sam Willaman, col- lege football coach who held that “the boy comes first, the school sec- ond, and the public third,” shocked the gridiron world Monday. Willaman, football mentor at West- ‘rn Reserve university here, and tormer coach at Ohio State univer- sity and Iowa State college, died in a Cleveland hospital Sunday a few hours after undergoing two emergency Operations for # chronic intestinal Willaman hed considerable success with the various football teams he de- veloped, but throughout his career. he always maintained that win or lose, the game was just a game and al atin ? : Han OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD, BONS, THI: HE'S IN HAWAII, AND HE TOLD ME sO WAIT TO GOUP ANY OL’ TIME THERES 3 UNTIL WE PLENTY OF ROOM~3uST ).WRAP A cm , rm rr MYSELF AND THE CARETAKER | iS MANAGING CARETAKER WHO HAPPENS To BE A PAL OF THE MASOR = PA HOUSE HAS GOT ME |.MY NERVES ARE RAGGED,AND TM GOING AWAY, TO REST FOR A FORTNIGHT,UPAT ~ OLD PINE LAKE !-BY THE WAY, IF YOU LADS WOULD LIKE To Come UR? (TWO-WEEK ON YOUR VACATION, TLL BE AT SOE SEFTONS SUMMER LODGE! ON A PAROLE, Now, TOOTHBRUSH IN A SHIRT, HALF HOUR, AN’ WELL ALL GO UP IN MY HAND cAR! THIS IS ON TH’ LEVEL, AINT IT P-YOURE NOT PUFFIN’ State Woman Champion Trounces Redwood Falls Girl in Title Match, 7 and 5 HILLER DEFEATS TAFT Bismarck Girl Expected to Com- pete in Novelty Match at Breezy Point Bemidji, Minn., Aug. 19—(#)—Ernott Hiller of Crookston defeated Wally ‘Taft of Minneapolis two up to annex Giants Turn Back M’Clusky Club, 9-5 Moore Allows Eight Hits, Fans 14 in Penitentiary Team Victory Coming from behind to score four runs in the fifth inning, the Grove Giants defeated McClusky, 9-5, Sun- day at the penitentiary park. Moore, mound ace for the Giants, was reached for eight scattered hits, four of which came in the last two innings. Utilizing a good chance of pace, he fanned 14 opposing batters. Mayer for McClusky struck out eight Giant stickers and was nicked for 10 safe bingles. In the ninth,, Mayer was replaced by Gehring, af- ter the Giants had loaded the bases. The Giants bunched their hits to score twice in the fourth, four in the fifth, once in the seventh and twice in the eighth. McClusky counted single runs in each of the first, third and fourth innings and added a pair in the eighth on three safe hits. The box score: McClusky Plaff, ss . Ovre, c Sprout, 2b L. Klein, 3b Mayer, p, 1b . Gehring, 1b, p . Helb, If ..;. Saueressig, cf A. Klein, rf Britton, rf ... > bo me en or en cn co enc On By ronrcoooonegy CONMENOKORG a cocoS onward SoooomamHHD, ecooorcooors 6% iS Grove Giants Schneider, rf Johnson, 2b LeMay, 88 .. Gregory, 1b Combs, c .. Woodward, cf McMullen, If Hecker, 3b Oven Noonm o OMnomence CHOnHEHonD a Score by innings: McClusky .. +» 101 100 020—5 Giants .. +e» 000 240 12x—9 Summary: Errors, McClusky 2, Giants 3. Two base hits—Saueressig, McMullen; stolen bases—Plaff, L. Klien, Britton, Schneider, Johnson, LeMay, Gregory, Combs, Woodward and Becker; struck out by Mayer 8, Moore 14; hits off Mayer 10, Moore 8; bases on balls off Mayer 4, Moore 4; hit by pitched ball; Britton by Moore, balk, Moore 1; left on bases— McClusky 10, Giants 6. Umpires: H. Smith and Arnold. MAJOR LEAGUE (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Vaughan, Pirates, 407; Med- wick, Cardinals, 368, Runs—Medwick, Cardinals, and Ga- lan, Cubs, 95. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 165; Her- man, Cubs, 161. Home runs—Berger, Braves, 26; Ott, Giants, 24. Pitching—Castleman, Giants, 11-3; J. Dean, Cardinals, 20-7. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Myer, Senators, 345; Cram- er, Athletics, 344, Runs—Greenberg, Tigers, 93; ringer, Tigers, 91. x Hits—Cramer, Athletics, 158; Green- berg, Tigers, and Vosmik, Indians, 157. Geh- Home runs—Greenberg, Tigers, 31; Foxx, Athletics, 22. Pitching— Allen, Yankees, Bridges, Tigers, 18-7. Jersey Youth Takes National Boat Title Red Bank, N. J., Aug. 19.—(?\—Two days of racing on the North Shrews- bury not only brought Betty V., Mel- vin Crook’s speedy motorboat, her second straight national sweepstakes title but stamped her as one of Amer- ica’s fastest single engined boats. Crook, upper Montclair, N, J., youth and Princeton graduate, satisfied with his performance Saturday when 11-3; STANDINGS (By the Associated Press) ea cada sa ‘i 7 Pet.|J. Kolpacoff Pitches Three-Hit Detroit .. New York Boston .. Chicago . Cleveland New York . St. Louis Chicago . Pittsburgh . Brooklyn Philadelphia Cincinnati . Boston .... NORTHERN LEAGUE L 12 15 Fargo-Moorhead NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 6; Cincinnati 1. St. Louis 7; New York 3, Chicago 7; Brooklyn 1. Pittsburgh 2-5; Philadelphia 0-1. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 3-2; Chicago 2-8. St. Louis 11-7; Boston 7-0. Detroit 3; New York 2 (10 innings). Cleveland 8-5; Washington 7-0. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville 1; Minneapolis 0. Kansas City 4; Toledo 2. Other games postponed, rain. NORTHERN LEAGUE Winnipeg 7; Eau Claire 2. Crookston 5; Duluth 1. Brainerd 5;'G. Grand Forks 2. Fargo-Moorhead at Superior, rain. | OUT OUR WAY Capitols Trounce Hazelton, 20 to 2 Game, Strikes Out 16 in One-Sided Win Blasting out 28 safe hits behind the three-hit finging of J. Kolpacoff, the Capitol Club of Bismarck wallop- ed the Hazelton nine, 20-2, Sunday. Kolpacoff scattered the three safe blows effectively but errors paved the way for Hazelton runs in the second and fourth innings. The Capitol pitcher fanned 16 and issued only one base on balls. Every member of the Capitol squad participated in the attack on three Hazelton pitchers. Ketterling start- ed out and gave up 11 hits in the first five innings which were good for six runs. Gongy replaced him and allowed 12 more hits in two frames and was relieved by Scheir- meister who was nicked for five more. Masseth with six for six, LaRue with four for six; McGuiness, Kol- pacoff and P. Monahan with three for six and Green with three for five the Birchmont international golf championship here Sunday. Paul Cook of Bismarck bowed to Hiller, two up in the semi-final while Taft entered the finals with a 3 to 1 decision over J. M. Winters of Tulsa, Okla. Nadine O'Leary of Bismarck trounced Jane Kyles of Redwood Falls, Minn., 7 and 5 to win women’s division title, while Mrs. J. M. Nobles of St. Paul won the consolation title by default. ‘ In the quarter-final matches Sat- urday afternoon, Hiller won from Kenneth Rolf of Grand Forks, 2 and 1; Cook beat G. I. Long of Minneap- olis, 5 and 4; Winters eliminated Ralph Cheeseman of Glenwood, 1 up, and Taft cut out the last St. Paul player in the championship round, R. ‘W. Gammon, 5 and 4. In the women’s division, Miss Na- dine O'Leary of Bismarck, the de- fending champion, won from Mrs. J. P. Nobles of St. Paul, 5 and 3; Mrs. Claude Siems of St. Paul defeated Mrs, R. BE. Richardson of Bemidji, 6 and 5; Mrs. Horace D. Klein of 8t. Paul eliminated Mrs. C. E. Betcher of Rochester, 3 and 2, and Miss Jane Skiles, St. Paul, defeated Mrs. W. R. Sandison, Minneapolis, 3 and 2, THREE WOMEN STARS EXPECTED TO COMPETE Breezy Point, Minn., Aug. 16.— Women golf champions of three states ‘re expected to compete in a most unusual 18-hole match on the Breezy Point golf course Aug. 22. The three champions are Edith Estabrooks of Dubuque, Iowa; Nadine O'Leary of Bismarck, N. D., and prob- ably Patty Berg of Minneapolis, the new 17-year-old Minnesota state champion. Edith Estabrooks is only 14 years old, Miss O'Leary is 21 and Patty Berg is 17, so the proposed match will bring together three of the youngest star attractions of feminine golfdom. collected the big share of the hit- ting laurels. The box score: Hazelton >|M. Mastel, 3b .. Schiermeister, ¢ Scmling, 2b .. 8S. Mastel, ss . Bi coonccosoy Ketterling, p . Monteith, If .. | ane enenae locononnoom TOTALS Capitol— P. Monahan, If .. LaRue, 1b .... McGuinness, 2b J. Monahan, 3b .. J. Kolpacoff, p .- Koleman, c .. Masseth, cf . Green, ss Carroll, rf .. ais 2 aanaraaaps co we no H+ 09 09 09 may 89 Lemwrecconmn tal mrawnenvot usGemue ote Io pacoff. Losing pitcher — Semling. Left on base—Hazelton 6, Capitols, 10. Three base hits—P. Monahan 2; Kol- pacoff. Hits—off Kolpacoff, 3 in 9 R\by Gongy 4; 30-Foot Putt Gives Dudley $3,500 First Cleveland, Aug, 19—(#)—A long, curling, 30-foot putt for a birdie three on the final hole gave Ed Dudley of Philadelphia victory in the $3,500 prize open golf tournament at the Acacia Country club here, Dudley scored 285 for the 72-hole tournament which ended Sunday. Clarence Clark of Bloomfield, N. J., and Terl Johnson, of Decatur, Ill., tied for second with 286’s. Babe Ruth one of the many tour- nament contestants, kept an “infor- mal” account of his scores, with friendly score-keeping, understood to have been a factor in his 84 on the final round, plang off Gongy 12 in 2 innings; off Scheirmeister 5 in 2 innings. Struck out—by Kolpacoff 16; by Ketterling 7; by Scheirmeister 4. Bases on balls—off Kolpacoff 1; off Ketterling 3. Wild pitches—Kolpac- off, none. Hit by pitcher—M. Mas- tel, by Kolpacoff; McGuiness by Scheirmeister. Passed balls—Koleman ; Scheirmeister 2. Time of game— innings; off Ketterling 11 in 5 in- 2 hours, 45 minutes. Umpires—Ray Lenihan, Pete Fisher. By Williams | WHAT'S HE WANT IN_HERE, ANYWAY? THERE ARE OTH ROOMS AND C he set a new lap record of 61.813 miles an hour and an average speed record of 57.636 in the first six lay 15-mile heat, loafed through the two final beats yester DON'T PAY ANY ATTENTION 7O HIM—= “THATS WHAT HE WANTS— HES JUST TRYING 70 BE SMART! ER IRS NOT JUST TRYIN’ TO BE~I AM BEIN! SMARTS TVE SAT ON SCISSORS PINS AN! NEEDLES, Before! NO MAN'S _ HIDE IS SAFE, INA SEWIN! CIRCLE. ds Wichita Water First Tournament Defeat, 8-4 § Reds; Cards Split Twin Bill With Braves (By the Associated Press) Unlike the Giants, who are still having troubles, although they es- caped from their struggle with St. Louis with the greater portion of their slender lead untouched, Detroit’s Tigers are having just a gentle canter toward the pennant so far as their series with the second place New York Yankees is concerned. The Tigers have won the first two games of the clash with their lead- ing contenders, rollicking through to an easy 6 to 0 triumph behind School- boy Rowe Sunday after pulling out a 10-inning decision Saturday. That gave them an eight-game lead with just six weeks to go before the season closes. The Giants aren’t that far ahead of the fourth-place Pittsburgh Pirates in their league. Cards Break Even The Cards Sunday afternoon could get no better than an even break in a twin bill with the Boston Braves while New York pounded out an 8 to 4 triumph over the Reds. The third-place Chicago Cubs split even with the Phillies. As a result the Giants led St. Louis by 2% games and Chicago by three. Hank Leiber, who made four extra- base blows, paced the Giants to Sun- day’s victory while Carl Hubbell rang up his 17th mound triumph. Fred Frankhouse limited the Cards to six hits and poled in two runs to beat the Cards 2-1 in the opener. St. Louis had to go 10 innings to win the after- piece 9-4 when Leo Durocher belted a@ homer with the bases full. The Cubs bowled over the Phils 8 to 3 in the opener but lost 6 to 5 in the second. Detroit's Schoolboy Rowe white- washed the Yankees with three hits in their second clash and topped off @ big day for the overflow crowd of 39,000 by belting a home run, after being painfully hurt when he got in front of Earl Combs’ liner in the sec- ond inning. Dodgers Provide Fireworks The Brooklyn Dodgers provided the day’s sensation among the lower ranking clubs. They trimmed the Pirates twice, 3 to 0 and 9 to 3, Wat- son Clark hurled a three-hit shutout in the opener, and his mates smacked out 16 hits in the afterpiece. Jimmy Jordan handled 11 assists at second base to tie the major league record. Arky Vaughan, league leading clouter, bettered his 400 average with four hits in six times up. The Athletics-White Sox bargain bill was rained out. The Red Sox and Browns broke even, Boston the opener 5 to 2 and St. Louis the after- piece 4 to 3. Ws turned back Cleveland 4 to 2 in a 10-inning first clash but the Indians opened up in the second and belted out a 13 to 4 gave the cards an even break with Boston. The Braves won the Hea rigs 1 and the Cards the second (Pirst Game) RHE St. Louis .. 000 000 OO1I-1 6 0 Boston .... 010 100 O0x—2 12 0 P. Dean, P. Collins and Davis; Frankhouse and Mueller. (Second Game) RHE St. Louis.. 000 003 0105—9 11 1 Boston .... 010 000 0210—4 11 4 (10 innings) Hallahan and DeLancey; MacFay- den, Cantwell, Betts and Spohrer. Cubs, Phillies Split Philadelphia—The Cubs and Phil- lies split a twin bill, the Cubs taking the first 8 to 3 and the Phillies the second 6 to 5. (First Game) Chicago .. 104 000 102-8 12 1 Philadelphia 000 101 010-3 11 2 Henshaw, Warneke and Hartnett; C. Davis, Biven and Todd. (Second Game) RHE Chicago .. 002 200 10—5 14 2 Philadelphia 000 020 40x—6 12 1 French, Warneke, Root and O'Dea; ohne, Jorgens, Bivin, Pazzullo and RHE Benge, Reis and Taylor. Giants Beat Reds New York—Leiber got four hits as the Giants won easily from Cincin- nati 8 to 4. RHE Cincinnati. 000 000 040-4 11 2 New York. 011 220 lix—8 15 0 Herrmann, Johnson and Lombardi; ‘Hubbell and Mancuso, AMERICAN LEAGUE Indians Win, Lose Cleveland—After taking a 4 to 2, ten innings defeat, the Cleveland In- dians won the second game from the (First Game) RHE Washington 000 10100024 8 0 Cleveland. 000 1000100—2 11 2 (10 innings) Linke and Holbrook; Harder and Brenzel. (Second Game) RHE Washington 300 010 000—4 10 0 DIAMONDBALL TITLE Earn Way to Championship Game With Victory Over Klein’s Kleaners Jamestown, N. D. Aug. 19.—(P}— After wading through a field of 18 Class A and six Class B district cham- pions in the first official state soft- ball tourney here Sunday, the Havig team of Grand Forks became the first official North Dakota softball champions, They won over their fellowtowns- men, the Texaco Ten, 4-3, In the final Class A tile, and then turned back the Maple River Sped Demons, who had annexed the Class B title earlier in the afternoon, 13-4, Havigs earned their way to the championship tilt by victories over Klein’s Kleaners of Bismarck and the Hamburger Ten of Minot, while Texaco beat Shuttles of Devils Lake and Fisher Motor of Minot to reach the finals. Sports Round-Up (By the Associated Press) New York, Aug. 19.—(?)—Mrs, Helen Wills Moody's decision not to parti- cipate in the women’s national has the tennis moguls furious. . . Her Presence assured a lush day gate... Also, Helen Jacobs is a bit piqued be- cause she won't have a chance to avenge that Wimbledon beating. . . Jimmy Johnston, who is talking himself hoarse trying to build up Jack Derl—beg pardon, Doyle—says the Irish thrush won 51 out of 52 fights, all of them by knockouts. . . But as they'd say down in No. 7 town- ship in Cabarrus county, “wa’l now, that mowt be so, but who has he ever fowt?”. . . When Dizzy Dean blanked the Giants in the last two innings Saturday it made 11 straight heats in which he has turned back the New Yorkers without a run. ‘This is the open season for base- ball rumors. . Right on the heels of the story that Stan Harris is going out at Washington, comes another| that Walter Johnson will succeed Billy Evans as general manager at Cleveland. . .Also that Connie Mack is sure to part with Jimmy Foxx dur- ing the winter and that Al Simmons is playing his last season with the White Sox. . P. 8, the Johnson- Evans story was denied. U.S. Women Net Stars Retain Wightman Cup New York, Aug. 19—(#)—Mrs. Ethel Burkhardt Arnold of Los Angeles, four feet, 11 inches of fighting feminity and took home with her Monday the top laurels of Manchester, Seabright and the Maidstone, besides the that goes with wiping out a bitter defeat and retaining the Wightman cup for America. She suffered dismal defeat at the hands of the English girl, Dorothy round on the first day as England went into a 2-1 lead. On Saturday however, Mrs. Fabyan disposed of Phyllis Mudford King, 6-0, 6-3 and then Miss Jacobs defea- ed Miss Round 6-3, 6-2 to send the American forces into the lead. Mrs. Arnold went out to defeat Katherine Stammers in a three set duel 6-2, 1-6, 6-3 and clinch the cup for United States. The English dou- Brainerd Wins Pair From Colts, 9-5, 4-3 Cleveland. 041 124 O1x—13 20 3 /ley. Hensiek, 4 , Russell and Holbrook; Hildebrand, Brown and vai Detroit—Rowe let the Yankees down with three hits, Detroit winning 6-0. FERA Nine, 5 to 4 Two Late Inning Rallies Enable Visitors to Overcome Four-Run Lead Cen Rallying in the last three innings to overcome a four-run lead, the Baldwin nine defeated the FERA club from Bismarck, 5-4, Sunday. Erickson started on the mound fot the FERA and allowed only two hits during the first seven innings. He was taken out in favor of Letz who finished out the game. The FERA team scored one run in the second frame, added two more in the third and one in the fifth but succumbed to two late rallies, one for three runs in the seventh and one for another pair in the ninth. Clare David led the six-hit attack on Dutt, Baldwin pitcher with two safe blows, including a double, in four trips to the plate while Lenni- han, McCullough, Fricke and Balzer got safe blows for Baldwin. 8 CHNODDOWORYD HORm nme ety COCTOH OME MY COMMON OOnE HrHoomoOOmE ecrroaosccooos & McCullough, cf Fricke, rf ....00. Balzer, 2b .....000 Meronooooola coocaBonong ~ 8 Da FERA -012 010 000— + Baldwin . -000 000 302— 5 Summary: Winning pitcher—Dutt. Losing pitcher—Letz. Left on base— 7 ninnings; off Dutt, 7 in 9 innings; off Letz, 2 in 2 innings. Struck out by Erickson 8, by Dutt 18, by Letz 4. Bases on balls—off Dutt 0, off Erick- son 2, off Letz 1. Umpires—Gehrke, Baldwin; Lambert, FERA. YEST s'T (By the Associated Press) Watson Clark, Ralph Boyle and Jimmy Jordan, Dodgers—Clark blankekd Pirates with three hits in opener; Boyle hit four times and Jordan tied record with eleven assists in second game. Lynwood Rowe, Tigers—White- washed Yankees with three hits and helped win game with home DAY'S Ss inning of first game; Galatzer rapped out six hits in two con- tests. Chuck Klein, Cubs—Smacked homer, triple, double and single in double-header against Phillies, Fritz Ostermueller, Red Sox, and lie Hemsley, ‘Former 12 Grid Lettermen Available at NDAC - Both | extensive grounds have been set asid especially for that sort of exercise.

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