The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 6, 1936, Page 8

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pai, ‘wey Danny MacFayden Be: Bests Paul) Dean in Mound Duel as Bees Triumph, 1-0 }| | WEAVER BLANKS DODGERS! f I 1 i a | Cubs Turn Back Phillies, 5-4;/ Yanks Trounce Luckless Browns, 8-2 (By the Associated Press) The baseball soothsayers are hur- y tying to amend their choices as the Red Sox gain momentum and the Detroit Tigers find barriers heaped along the way. Many of the experts, including Broadway's noted picker. Jack Doyle, have leaped from the bandwagon of the Tigers to string along with the team Tom Yawkey built. They figure that with Hank Greenberg out of the Tiger lineup for more than a month with a broken wrist, and Lefty Grove, Wes Ferrell, Jimmie Foxx and the Be fest clicking in top form with the P& Sox, the odds are on the Boston team d te lead the way down the stretch in late September. p Another prospect is that the Yan-|— © kees, with a fine all-around pitching staff and Joe DiMaggio and Frank Crosetti playing sensationally, may take command of proceedings. TUESDAY'S STARS Gene Schott, Reds—Held Giants to five hits and drove in two of team’s five runs. Bud Hafey and Pau! Waner, Pi- |! rates—Drove in the runs that de- feated Dodgers, former hitting homer with one on and latter scoring two with double. |. Bill Lee, Cubs—Chalked up third Reo by holding Phillics to five Danny MacFayden, Bees—Limit- ed Cards to three hits to nose out || Paul Dean in pitching duel. Lou Gehrig, Yankees — Led at- tack on Browns’ hurlers with two doubles and a pair of singles. Bob Grove, Red Sox— Shut out Tigers with two hits for fifth vic- tory of season. Wally Moses, Athletics — His home run with two on in tenth beat White Sox. Billy Sullivan, Indians — Con- 5 nected with triple, double and k single against Senators. <<< i... Cochrane in Lineup Grove turned in his fifth straight f° victory and his third shutout of the /Saeason Tuesday as the Red Sox beat | the Tigers 2-0 with 16,100 of Boston's taithful in the stands. Lefty gave five hits. Mickey Cochrane, back in the «game despite his injured foot, hit a » double and a single. Eldon Auker, on the mound for Detroit, allowed only seven hits, The chaplet for the outstanding i; pitching exhibition goes to slender Danny MacFayden of the Boston Bees .) who beat the St. Louis Cards 1-0, allowing only three hits. He bested Paul Dean, who allowed only five leties. The run was made when Bill Orbanski smashed a triple and Gene Moore followed with a single. Schott Checks Giants Other fine pitching chores included ome by young Gene Schott of the who pitched five-hit ball in a tory over the Giants; Jim "6 six-hit pitching which gave ites & 4-0 shutout over the Bill Lee's five-hitter which Cubs to defeat the Phil- Pat Malone's feat of com- first game since 1934 to le Yankees an 8-2 decision over luckless Browns. In other games, the Athletics de- feated the White Sox 8-5, with Wally ending the game in dramatic with a home run smash with two on and two out in the tenth inn- Cleveland Indians { twought some timely hitting into play ‘9 Gefeat the Senators 6-4. NATIONAL LEAGUE MacFayden Blanks Cards Bt. Louis—Danny MacFayden held| ‘ine St. Louis Cardinals to three hits : ai Boston Bees were victorious fe é i Hi ERE wee Bi e RHE ee 000 100 000-1 6 1 2+ 000 000 000-0 3 1 den and Lopez; P. Dean, and Davis. Lee Wins Third ‘Ohicago—Pitcher Bill Lee turned in third straight victory as the Cubs the Phillies 5-4. RHE + 000 200 002—4 5 1 ++ 001 400 00x—5 7 0 ag ind Wilson; Lee and . Bucs Trounce Dodgers ‘~ Pittsburgh—Timely hitting gave the th Pirates a 4-0 victory over St. Louis RHE + 000.000 000-0 6 1 000 040 00x47 0 A ‘kk, Leonard and Phelps; Weaver nice. Reds Humble Giants Reds out a 5-2 decision over the York Giants. y RHE 001 000 100-2 5 2 210 000 1ix—5 11 1 » Coffman and Man- on fty Grove issued only y scattered hits as the Red Sox cree Teer 3-0. RHE 000° 000 000-0 5 0 + 020 000 00x—2 7 0 and Cochrane; Grove and R. pees Pe Defeat Browns Yankees handed ae ee ninth straight de- RHE 001 000 010-2 8 0 023.000 03x—8 16 Hi THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1936 1 Fills i in for Hank | i */Saints Take Over | Association Lead Whip Tribe for 10th Straight | Victory; Millers Wallop | Red Birds ! | Chicago, May 6.—(#)—St. Paul fans ;) were hoping Wednesday that the fast; {start the Saints made in this year’s | American Association race won't end; lup the same way as did the club's | getaway last season. | A year ago St. Paul played great) ball the first month and pennant) hopes ran high, Then injuries hit the team, a slump set in, and the ; Saints finished the season at the top; jf the second division. | The club won its 10th straight vic- ‘tory and the circuit leadership Tues- day, whipping Indianapolis 3-1 behind ‘the six-hit hurling of Art Herring. After the game, the Saints’ manage-) ment announced that their strong! mound staff had been further | strengthened by the addition of Carl! | Fischer, left-handed pitcher, obtained} | from the Chicago White Sox. 1 Minneapolis sent its big guns into action as the Millers beat Columbus 13-6. Buzz Arlett got two home runs} !and Browne, Holland and Gaffke one ‘Irving Burns (above), first base- man of the Browns, was obtained for cash and other players by the Detroit Tigers to replace Hank Greenberg, hard hitting star who GREAT GOLF KEEPING HEAD DOWN CAUSES REST OF BODY TO FALL INTO LINE By ART KRENZ (NEA Service Golf Writer) The chief fundamental of the golf swing is keeping the head down, or anchored. If this is done, other body jfunctions which influence the swing will come naturally; in fact, position ‘Red Sox Drive Toward Pennant Changes Odds on Tigers ‘GROVEHURISTHRD |U. U. S., British Teams All Square in First Round of Curtis Cup Matches BERC-VARE DUO TIES ENGLISH PAIR; TWO | OTHER TEANS SPLIT! lpatty Bracketed With Ex-Cham- pion in Concluding Singles Competition " ENTERED IN DeMOLAY EVENTS Sports Round-Up | | Billy Sundahl, State Champion; Expected to Defend Con- é clave Honors New York, May 6.— (#) — Baseball chatter: Big league managers say canny old Bill McKechnie of the Boston Bees is tops in both cir-| cults when it comes to chanting pitchers at the right moment. ... Frank —Crosetti’s Billy Sundahi of Jamestown, North Dakota golf champion and defending DeMolay titleholder, and stellar per- this year’s Class A cage event will ‘compete here Friday and Saturday is the golf and basketball tournament to be held in conjunction with the third International DeMolay con- clave, Sundahl will defend the. honors, won two years ago at Grand Forks, against outstanding shotmakers from each of the 12 North Dakota and one Manitoba chapters sending delegates to the conclave. To Be Medal Play Event The golf tournament will be an 18- hole medal play event in which par- ticipants may shoot their two rounds wleither Friday or Saturday. A gold {golf ball award will be presented to eed champion with a silver award to be made to the runner-up and me- Gleneagles, Scotland, May 6.—(>)— The United States and Great Britain finished their foursomes competition for the Curtis Cup all square here Wednesday, each side winning one match and the other being tied. After Wanda Morgan, the British champion and Mrs. Marjorie Ross Garon had won the last hole to tie Mrs, Glenna Collett Vare, Philadel- phia, and Patty Berg, Minneapolis, Mrs, Maureen Orcutt Crews, Coral McKechnic year he has been Gables, Fla., and Mrs. Leona Cheney, | pounding the ball . He is the first; Santa Monica, Calif., defeated Pam | Yankee Shortstop since Leo Barton and Mrs. J. 8. Walker, two er’s day to wind up the first month and one. of the season with an average of bet- But in the last match out, Miss|ter than .400. . . . Casey Stengel is usually hits eighth in the batting or- der—which is not formers from eight of the 12 teams in | Boston suffeved a broken wrist in a base- ball collision with Jake Powell, of the Senators at Washington. each. Milwaukee staged a late-inning at- of the head is the one big ‘secret of |Jessle Anderson and Mrs, Helen Holm, willing to swap any one of his start- good golf. former British women’s champion, The anchored head keeps the body |Scored a three and two victory over ing pitchers (Van Mungo excepted) |4@ls to winners of third and fourth for two outfielders, at least one of Place. The event will be played at whom must be of the Joe Medwick|the Bismarck Municipal course. | “Olympic hitch-hiking” bounced back | Fenner. {tack to beat Toledo 7-6, Ted Gullic The Louisville Colonels were re- ‘Phog’ Allen Ra og en ps sponsible for St. Paul going into the e ° | circuit lead at the expense of Kansas; Fund Manipulation : Louisville defeated the Blues 5 to 1. Saints Take Lead Mentor Charges AAU With Try-| St. Paul—The Saints moved to first . sees onary [place in the Association witth a 3-1 ing to ‘Hitch-Hike’ Ath- | triumph over Indianapolis. r ° i RHE letes to Olympics [Indianapolis ....000 000 100-1 6 3 —— (St. Paul... .030 000 0Ox— 3 6 0 Tinning and Riddle; Herring and Chicago, May 6.--(*)—Charges of and forth Wednesday between Dr.| Millers Belt Five Homers F. C. (Phog) Allen, athletic director} Minneapolis—Five home runs help- of Kansas university, and the ‘Amer- | ed the Millers defeat Columbus 13-6. ican Amateur Athletic union over the| RHE disposition of funds for sere |S : -000 114 000— 6 12 participation in Olympic basketball,| Minneapolis 03 502 OOx—13 11 1 but the real headache was still the} Martynik, Charvenko, Potter, Cox, American Olympic committee's. | Macon and Owen; Kolp and Har- The committee continued to won- | grave. der where the money would come! Colonels Topple Blues from to buy round-trip tickets toBer-| Kansas City — Louisville toppled lin for a proposed cage squad of 13] Kansas City from first place in “| players, two coaches and a manager. | Association by winning 5-1. President Avery Brundage of the} RHE A.A.U, replied in kind Tuesday when} Louisville . 002 002 010— 5 12 3 Dr. Allen, “withdrawing my name as| Kansas City -000 010 000— 1 8 director of Olympic basketball for the} Peterson and Thompson; Moncrief, | 11th Olympiad,” explained he did so| Niggeling and Madjeski. because of what he called “deceitful political bartering” by A.A.U. mem- Brewers Nose Out Hens Milwaukee—The Brewers rallied in bers of the Olympic basketball com-|the eighth with three runs to defeat} mittee. Toledo 7-6. Dr. Allen charged that the A.A.U.! RHE planned to “hitch-hike” to Berlin on| Toledo .... 000 000 330— 6 10 1 Milwaukee 000 022 03x— 710 0 Hamlin, Braxton and Brenzel; Gar-{ land, Stein and Tresch, Linton. such funds as the $8,000 he claimed his Kansas team and Utah netted inj) their district elimination, won | Utah. Brundage and his assistant, J. Ly-| I e: Ra man Bingham, retorted that Dr. Allen; — Foor “3 had not been appointed Olympic bas- ns oO our Fronts ketball director the Olympic com-; beta i) mittee but only recommended by the; —(P)—! National Association of Basketball) St Paul, May 6—(P)—Eau Claire, Coaches. ‘They added that the Kan-| Wausau, Suerior and Duluth were sas-Utah series actually cleared less)sites for opening games Wednesday than $6,000. They declared that Dr.| as all eight clubs of the Northern Allen was himself a “hitch-hiker” paseball league were scheduled to re- whom they described as “an extra! new the fight for the circuit cham-! and unnecessary official” on the pro- |pionship bunting, won last year by | posed squad. | Winnipeg. | SLE ETT \ The two new clubs in the league, aaa ee ran gn Football , Wausau and Jamestown, were to open | Oakes, N. D., May 6.—()— all against each other at the Wisconsin coaches from six high schools in the oity while Winnipeg was at Eau southeastern conference have at-' cyaire, Other contests brought | ranged schedules for the next season. Crookston to Superior, and Fargo-| | Moorhead to Duluth, | An open race for the championship | Thomas, Tietje, Andrews and Hems- | ley; Malone and Dickey. | Moses’ Homer Wins Philadelphia—Wally Moses’ circuit | ash paved the way for an 8-5 vic- | tory by the Athletics over the White Sox, lis believed in prospect with Winnipeg | |and Fargo-Moorhead, champion and | runnerup, respectively, last season, \having undergone almost complete | rebuilding processes as a result of RH E| Sale of star players. Chicago . . 020 300 000-5 10 3) Philadelphia 110 030 003—8 8 1 Kennedy and Sewell; Kelly, Dietrich | and Hayes. | Company L Wins 28-3 | Game in Post League) First game in the newly-organized Fort Lincoln baseball league resulted in a 28-3 victory for Company L over Indians Triumph Washington—Timely hitting gave | Cleveland a triumph over Wash- ington. 3 RHE the Company I nine. Companys K Cleveland 022 000 110-6 10 3 and M will play first games in the Washington .... 002 000 002—4 6 1 league Friday and two games will be) Lee and Sullivan; DeShong, Russel | played each week throughout the sea- and Milies. |son on Monday and Friday nights. | HELP WOLF YOUR PRIZE CATCH! | WANTED TO STAGE A TANGLE BETWEEN YOU TWO FIN-AND-GILL WRESTLERS, TO SEE WHO COULD Toss THE TALLEST AND THEN SNARED THEM WITH A 6 | Stanley, Our Boarding House With Major Hoople in position throughout the swing. It “{and Rudy York hitting successive) noids the body back and sends the|Charlotte Glutting, South Orange, | homers to lead the successful drive. jarms through straight; it also pro-|N. J. | motes leet ritints tel del ac, and foot action, N.D. Olympic Fund Deadline Extended 55 Communities Have Remitted Contributions, Says State Chairman Minot, N. D., May 6. — (®) — The North Dakota campaign for funds to assist in financing participation of American athletes in the Olympic games in Berlin next summer has been extended to May 22, it was an- nounced Wednesday by Irving “Bpeed” Wallace of Minot, state chairman. “Many local chairmen have asked that the time be extended,” said Col. Wallace, “and to oblige them the date has been set back. To date 55 chair- men from various communities have closed their campaigns and remitted their contributions, and we have every hope that North Dakota will be the first state. to complete the drive.” Col. Wallace was the first state chairman appointed by Avery Brun- dage of Chicago, president of the American Olympic committee, and Wallace later was named to serve as ;state chairman by Frank G. McCor- jmick of the University of Minnesota, chairman of the National Collegiate Athletic Association campaign. According to Wallace, many local chairmen are planning to hold track jmeets and outdoor athletic events to raise their quotas for the Olympic fund. Communities which already have made their remittances include: Ala- mo, Beulah, Bowman, Beach, Courte- nay, Carrington, Crary, Churchs Ferry, Carpio, Carson, Devils Lake, Dazey, Drayton, Elgin, Egeland, Far- go, Flasher, Glenburn, Glen Ullin, Grenora, Grand Forks, Hope, Hills- pose Hazen, Hamilton, Havana, Hun- r, Jamestown, Killdeer, Leeds, Milnor, Michigan City, McClusky, Mohall, New Rockford, New England, Ome- |mee, Petersburg, Powers Lake, Plaza, Page, Rolette, Rhame, Reeder, Ray, Sherwood, Sharon, Tioga, Taylor, Tolley, Valley City, Westhope, Woieon) Wilton, and Wildrose. —— | Fights Last Night ! (By the Associated Press) Portland, Ore—Carmen Barth, 168, Cleveland, outpointed Bobby Milsap, 164, Chicago, (10). Los Angelese—Baby Arizmendi, 128%, Mexico City outpointed Pablo Dano, 122%, Manila, (10). Grand Rapids, Mich.—Lou Am- bers, 136, Herkimer, N. Y., st Jackie Sharkey 135, Minneapolis, (6); Wesley Ramey, 135, Grand Rapids, and Eddie Zivic, 135, Pitts- burgh, drew (10). PTROUVERE FISH, ITS THE FELLOW WHO GAVE ME ‘Mrs. Opal Hill, Kansas City, and type ... Try and find em. Drawings for the basketball tour- nament, first rounds of which will be run off Saturday morning and after- |noon with the finals slated for 7:30 {p. m., that night, have been made. | Jamestown will play Dickinson and ! Minot will meet Grand Forks in the upper bracket at 9:45 a. m., while Fargo will engage Valley City and Bismarck will tackle Mandan in the lower bracket games at 10:45 a. m. The Yankees “bone” their bats daily with pop bottles or pieces of bone. . . None of them seems to know just why they go through the ceremony. The matches were played over 18 holes, each pair hitting alternate shots with one ball. The competition will be concluded j this afternoon with the six singles matches, the pairing for which are: Vare vs. Morgan, Berg vs. Holm,| back, or is he doing a real comeback? Glutting vs. Barton, Crews vs. Walker,|.. . Out in St. Looey they regard !Cheney vs. Anderson, and Hill vs.jJunior Frey of the Dodgers a better Winners Paired soccer player than a damond athlete. H Garon. . . It's @ good thing Connie Mack| Winners of the Jamestown-Dick- sshd edith kas ish’t givin to razzing the fans... His)inson and Minot-Grand Forks games Mrs, Vare and Patty Berg went out| Athletics are surrpising everybody.| Wl! play in the first semi-final game Is Chuck Klein doing a real come- in even par and were one up at‘the!. ,, The White Sox are unanimous in| &t 2:45 p. m., and the Fargo-Valley {turn, The British pair went out in|agreeing Al Simmons will not hurt|City and Bismarck-Mandan winners 40, to the American’s 39. the Tigers any, despite the jibes of| Will play at the conclusion of the Dropping the 10th to go two down | some Detroit scribes. .. The other day | first game. Games will be played at to Mrs. Vare and Patty Berg, Miss|Gabby Hartnett dropped his fourth|the junior and senior high school Morgan and Mrs. Garon won the next {foul fly in his 15 years as a major|symnasiums. three holes to stand one up at thejleaguer ... But he did it purposely! Miniature gold basketballs will be 13th, but the Americans won the 14th|in order to complete a double play. awarded the members of the win- and squared the match. «+. Maybe Joe McCarthy will have|ning team and miniature silver bas- It was even at the end of the 12th,| the last laugh yet ... His Yanks are | ketballs will go to the members of sie 14th, and 16th holes, and the Amer-{coming through — just as Joe pre-| other finalists. icans won the 17th to face the last | dicted they would, | Bismarck’s entry in the tourna-/| hole one up. ; ment will be picked from the follow- But on the final hole, Mrs. Vare’s|_ Odds and ends: The Schmeling-/|ing squad: Jim McGuiness, Buddy drive was bunkered, and Patty barely| Louis sale has passed the $350,000) Beall, Bob Peterson, Johnny Abbott, got the ball out. Then Mrs. Vare hit |mark....One Rolf Nuernberg cabled} Neil Croonquist, Harry Rishworth, the green and Patty hit the next|vations . . . Everyone is wondering|Enge and Charles Corwin. lone 15 feet short of the cup. Mrs. Vare barely mised this putt for a five. how they're going to keep Bitsy Grant out of the singles on the Davis Cup N. D. Is Still Without Hole-in-One Member New York, May 6.—()—A veritable jbombardment of aces, fired by stars and duffers over an age range of 12 {to 77, sky-rocketed membership of the jAssociated Press National hole-in-one club to 246 Wednesday with golfers from all but seven states represented on the rolls. Seventy-six aces were reported during the last week, giving every state except North and South Da- gets hungry. . . . This will give you'kota, Nevada, Idaho, Maine, Vermont an idea how they build up big fights.{and New Hampshire representation +. . Mike Jacobs has eight publicity !in the club. Texas “slipped” with only men. including two cartoonists shriek-|three new members but held the lead ing the merits of the Messrs. Schmel- | with a total of 38. California, boosted ing and Louis ... enough talent to|by 10 additions from San Diego, | put out a creditalbe metropolitan |ranked second with 22. sports section, As proof that there is no age limit in golf or the hole-in-one club, a 77- year old veteran from Chicago and a 12-year old from Baton Rouge, La., collected aces. After 39 years of trying, Barbour Brown, member of the Ex- moor club of Chicago, realized his dream by scoring an ace on the 136- yard sixth hole of the San Antonio, jTex., country club. A driver did the | # itrick. The 12-year old joiner was Billy Grisham, who used a brassie on the first hole, a 122-yarder, at the Westdale Country club, Baton Rouge, and drove his ball smack into the cup. Billie Caird of Spokane, Wash., the 11-year old Spokane high school boy who plays golf despite a crippled right arm, on April 27 smacked out a 205- yard drive that sailed his ball into the 16th hole of the Manito course for an team... . Johnny Bassler, old Detroit | catcher, is doing a fine comeback inj the Pacific Coast League. Meanwhile, Miss Morgan hit a per- fect third shot from 150 yards out. The ball stopped within three feet of the cup and the Britishers had two putts to win the hole and tie the match. Front office interference con- tinues to hobble Casey Stengel. . +. Ernie Dusek sports the classi- est tin ear of any wrassler. See eee Major League . Leaders | ee (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Terry, Giants, .556; Herman, Cubs, .411. Runs—Herman, Cubs; Cuyler, Reds; Moore, Giants, 17. Hits—Herman, Giants, 29. Runs—Klein, One of the bigger publishing houses is after Walter Stewart of the N. Y. World-Telegram to write a novel . but like many other swell writers 1 boring on newspapers, Walter prob- ably will not get around to it until he Cubs, 30; Moore, Home Cubs; Ott, Giants; Hafey, Pirates, 4. Pitching—Benge, Bees, 4-0; Gumbert, Giants; French, Cubs; rates, 2-0. — AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Sullivan, Indians, Chapman, Yankees, .432. { Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 23; Gehring- er, Tigers; Moses, Athletics, 20. Hits—Gehrig, Yankees, 30; Gehringer, Tigers, 29. Home Runs—Foxx, Red Sox, 6; Tros- ky, Indians, 5. Pitching—Grove, Red Sox, 5-0; Blae- holder, Indians, 3-0. Hoyt, Pi- Entringer Chosen St. Mary’s Captain Maynard Entringer, hard-work- ing guard, has been elected cap- tain of St. Mary's high school bas- ketball team for next year, it was announced here Wednesday. Entringer moved up to the first 1 517; string lineup from the Angels | squad along with Nicky Schneider after the season was well under way last winter. His stellar de- fensive work and follow-ins under the basket won him a regular berth before the season ended. Veteran performers who will be back to form a nucleus for next year’s parochial team are Entring- er, Schneider, Kenneth Hessinger, Clayton Crane, Tom Fox, Schmidt and Eddie Reff. Game Heads to Sein Carp at Spiritwood A Carp Seining program will be third shot to within » yard from|from Berlin Tuesday for four reser-!Bob Bowman, Lester Kelley, Glenn launched next Saturday at Spiritwood lake under the supervision of the game and fish department, Arthur W. Peterson, commissioner, announced STETSON HATS for Men at Alex Rosen & Bro. Wednesday. He said the program will be carried out to “rid Spiritwood Lake, near Jamestown, of carp and at the same time give the people of this state the benefit of the fish as food.” Game fish will not be taken, but returned to the water, according to Peterson who explained a representa- tive of the state will supervise the seining. ‘The department will furnish equip- | ment and all persons who wish to ob- tain fish will be expected to donate labor in operating the sein, he OUT OUR WAY SHERES HIS CARD = GOOD THING YOu FOUND IT, INSTIDDA SOME DISHONEST GUY~ THIRTY FOUR DOLLARS 1S ‘A LOTTA MONEY ‘TO LOSE! HONEST PEOPLE HAVE STRONG said, adding that fish will be distrib- uted to the workers for personal use Dap: bring the kiddies to pick out MOTHER'S DAY flowers and the cribuce will be swice treasured! Oscar H. Will & Oo, er The Standings (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL oe, L_sPect. Chicago eee % a 588 ai . 8 7 «563 . 9 7 563 » 2 8 429 . 10 J 526 - 8 BS ATL ca Jeaege | 450 Brooklyn ... os 6 12 333 Results Tuesday Boston 1; St. Louis 0. Chicago 5; Philadelphia 4. Pittsburgh 4; Brooklyn 0. Cincinnati 5; New York 2. AMERICAN. LEAGUE Ww L Pet. 14 6 700 13 6 684 Cleveland 12 7 «632 Detroit ... . 9 "8, 528 Washington .. iL il 500 Philadelphia Mal 389 Chicago .. 4 10375 St. Louis.. 16 158 Results ‘iueeday Boston 2; Detroit 0. New York 8; St. Louis 2. Philadelphia 8; Chicago 5. Cleveland 6; Washington 4. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w LsPet. St. Paul 15 4 189 Kansas City. 12 4 450 Minneapolis 10 6 625 Milwaukee 10 7 ~~ 588 12 400 9 357 12 -250 4 222 iy St. Paul 3; Indianapolis 1. Minneapolis 13; Columbus 6. Louisville 5; Kansas City 1. Milwaukee 7; Toledo 6. Rogers Decisions Billings Scrapper Negro Wins Every Round of Main Event; Canski Out- points Hanson (Special to the Tribune) Glendive, Mont. May 6. — Jackie Rogers, hard-punching Negro feath- erweight from Tuscon, Ariz., scored an easy eight-round decision over Cowboy Ray of Glendive im the main, event of a fight card here Tuesday night. It was Rogers’ first start since join- ing Isham Hall's fight stable at Bis- marck and was entirely convincing. Spotting Ray 12% pounds, Rogers used his superior boxing skill to win every round. In a six-round preliminary Mike Canski of Bismarck decisioned Carl Hanson of Miles City. Hanson is credited with being one of the best middleweights in Montana. —— | Query at Tee Box | | Is Followed by Ace Charleston, 8. C., May 6.—(?)— “Ever shoot @ hole in one?” asked Fred Wehman, Charleston ama- teur as he and Johnny Adams, pro, came to the sixth tee in a golf match, “Yes, back in 1926,” replied Adams. Adams’ tee shot on the 169- yard hole then trickled into the cup, Imports of porcelain and pottery “flea United States increased in Balloon spiders have been found as high as two miles above the earth's surface. Czechoslovakian cities and towns own their own forests, BUDWEISER Now lic No Charge for the Bottle By Williams eecnscnnmnrnencnen took RAGE IER

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