The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 19, 1936, Page 6

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sas senna THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MAY 19, 1936 | Grove Wins Seventh, Blanking Chisox for Fourth Shutout ap PALE HOSE ONLY 4 LOUIS’ GREAT DRAWING POWER (Minneapolis Routs "HITS IN 2-0 GAME) HIKES UP BOX OFFICE ACTIVITY Blues With Heavy * Half aQuaff | Cannonading, 24-10 CAPITAL CHEVROLET, PARAMOUNT, COPELIN LOSE FIRST START Promoters Laying No Stress on Competitive Side of Schmeling Bout General Crowder Checks Sena- tors as Bengals Pound Out 7-1 Decision Kels Equal American Associa- tion Record of 15 Runs in One Inning New York, May 19.—(P)—Even 1f Brown Bests Meinhover in Duel; Max Schmeling has so much as a long-shot chance to tag Joe Louis in __ Three Homers Feature 3 their forthcoming fistic party, there} Chicago, May 19.—(?)—The Minne- Soldiers’ Win has been no concerted attempt to in-japolis Millers, who won the Ameri- Cards Hold Half-Game Lead by : sist upon it in the preliminary baliy-|can Association batitig title last GIANTS WIN 8TH STRAIGHT an , ‘ hoo for the year's biggest heavywetgh: | year with a team average of 295, ap-| ©. H. Will, Knights of Columbus Trouncing Phillies With offering. . = hiitin’ patently Sate. Wtee power at the and Company A teams held first dia- Late Rall : 4 | What's more important, it does not|plate than ever this season. +;mondball victories In the City League lif appear necessary, from the box-utfice|’ The Millers made life miserable) Tuesday as the result of the three ee se | |standpoint. The stage already hasjfor three Kansas City pitchers Mon-|°Pening games of the season, piayed (By the Associated Press) fk {been reached in the phenomenal ring|day, whipping the Blues, 24-10. The Monday night. a é Robert Moses Grove is throwing E ;career of Louis where no particular) Kels collected 25 hits, six of CHER sie oir Noa bociee eng ge bigger and better surprise parties stress needs to be put on the com-/home runs. In one inning, the sev- o! ina every time he takes the mound for Mm | petitive side of the buildup. enth, the Millers scored 15 runs to|ecision over Copelin Motors; the Boston Red Sox. : ; anes ia aonanie dnelne ane Njequal the Association record for runs Two years ago, the lanky southpaw, : v1 veFlin one inning, set by St. Paul against’ . pitching his first season for Boston, : e as a fistic soloist, no matter what the | milwaukee in. 1930. eran Savers 6-5; oe Ste Pane was considered through when he just : | party of the second part produces. Minneapolis was trailing by three | anda o-? victory Aso ie PANARDURT managed to break even in 16 games. ae - The fact of vital interest to Promo: !runs when the “blowoff” seventh in-| theatre Last year, however, he set at rest 4 ter Mike Jacobs is that the advance ning began. ‘The Millers batted Geeks, tek ei ana Sat sale already is close to the half-mul. around twice. Then in the eighth is itcher, each garnered three hits to ; When Glenna Collett Vare, 10" foliar Mark: nat the gate receipts| they got two more runs. Buzz Arlett pace the Will team to its initial tri- average of 2.70 in the American} above, captain of the U. S. | Qin aggregate $1,250,000 when Max {had two home runs, while Spencer|umph, Zahn limited the Copelin reports that his arm had gone dead by turning in the best earned-run SOUTHPAW ALLOWS |O. H. Will, K. C.’s, Company A Win City League Softball Openers Veteran Britisher Eliminates Patty Three Americans Advance to Third Round of Women’s Championship Southport, Eng., May 19.— (%) — Three Americans advanced to the third round in the British women’s golf championship here Tuesday, ‘Charlotte Glutting, South Orange, N. J., Marion Miley, Lexington, Ky., and Mrs. Maureen Orcutt Crews, Coral Gables, Fla. Miss Glutting won on the 21st hole from Miss Dorothy Pearson, former English closed champion, after being four down and four to go. Miss Miley had no trouble in beat ing Stella Franklin, 7 and 6; whil Patty Berg, the gallery favorite, the youngster from Minneapolis, was eliminated by the veteran Molly Gourlay, one up, when she went bold- ly for a long putt on the 18th and missed a four footer coming back. Mrs. Leona Cheney, the favorite of the American team after the defeat Kocsis Sets Hot seantiiien Pace in Big Ten vomrunnn LEAGUE. J ade by 33 Strokes Over w oseLtSsSOPkt. Fargo-Moorhead ... 6 3 667 Northwestern are Jamestown ........ 7 5 «583 : Eau Claire .. 7 5 583] Chicago, May 19.—()—Michigan’s Wausau ... 6 5 .545| sharp-shooting quartet of Charles Winnipeg .. 5 5 800! Kocsis, Woodly Malloy, Allen Sunders Duluth .. 3 3 .500/and Bill Barclay, set out over the Kil- Superior 4 7 300) deer Country club layout Tuesday to ' Crookston . +2 7 — 222/ completa the Job of winning the Big Results Monday ‘Ten’s individual and team golf cham- Open date. pionships for the fifth year in a ror. WAR. ti The boys got away to a brilliant NATIONAL LEAGUE start Monday, with Kocsis leading the W tL _ Pet.\individual title race by four strokes 18 9 887 over Malloy, and the Wolverines 643 | heading the team parade by 33 strokes 14 13 519) over Northwestern. 14 13-518) Kocsis broke out with a dazzling 66, ' knocking four strokes from par, in his morning round. A gusty wind cooled him out in the afternoon, but & 3 Boston .. Philadelphia . PEE Brooklyn .. w M18 he nevertheless finished with 73 for Results Monday a 36 hole total of 139, one under par. New York 4; Pittsburgh 2. Malloy put together rounds of 70 and Chicago 7; Boston 2. 72 to take over second place with 142. Cincinnati 9; Brooklyn 6. ‘The Michigan team total, 579 St. Louis 11; Philadelphia 6. strokes for 36 holes, was 33 under ‘ ra Northwestern's second place aggre- ¢ League. Curtis Cup squad, drank from; x fe : Harris and Earle Brown each had|stickers to five safe bingles. Thir-|Of Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare Monday, AMERICAN LEAGUE . oj Ge ad Sd Sete a Ieee tT amd |r the ‘yankee. stadium June 18." | Ur nits ae teen errors contributed to the Cope-|was defeated by Jean Hamilton, slso] y & 4 S22, and Minnesota had @27. he'll not only Heli ie Het a Gleneagles, Scotlan ‘ wees Far from discouraging cash ora - won ; ace a eal lin's defeat. on _the last hole, one up. Boston “g5¢|_ Wisconsin had 630, one less than come close to topping his grea' half-and-half quaff; for the | customers, the 40 price for ringside; With the league-leading z ul! Ted Meinhover and Adam Brown] Bridget Newell, the young bar- Clevelana g07|Ohio State, which was followed by performance when he won 31 and Yankees halved their clashes | * ¢/Saints, 11 to 3. Clyde Hatter allowed locked up in a pitching duel in the/rister eliminated Diana Fishwick, the . Indi 638, I . ait 3 seats appears to have stimulated thi 5 Detroit '517| Indiana 638, Iowa 639, Purdue 650 and lost only four for the Athletics. with the British women in the | tiow of certified checks into the of-|the Saints but six hits. Lin Stortt/K. C.-Capital Chevrolet game with|1930 British women’s champion, two/ Ort “490 | Chicago 671. cup matches, 4¥2 to 4%. The tices of the Twentieth Century Sport-|of the Brewers had a perfect day at/ Brown allowing six hits and Mein-/up. Washington Bd The remaining 36 holes were sched- MONDAY’S STARS |! American women, winners in | ing club. bat with five hits. hover seven. Getting five runs in] The biggest upset of the second Philadelphia ‘an | uled for Tuesday. Carl Hubbell, Giants—His effec- 1934, retained possesion of the Remembering so recent a case in| The Louisville-Columbus and In-|the first two innings, the Chevrolet/round was the defeat of Mrs. J. B. lp! 370 on bases cup. int as Jimmy Braddock, the 12 to|/dianapolis-Toledo games were post-!club held that lead until the fifth beat piniiee, ee cs = Pe shot who lifted the heavyweight|poned because of the weather. when the K. C.’s pushed across two Babe Herman, Reds — Found | . crown from the curly head of Max Brewers Overwhelm Saints runs to knot the count and added Brooklyn hurlers for triple, double | oie-In- ne iu Baer a year ago, there will be a seri-| St. Paul—Milwaukee’s 16-hit attack | the winning counter in the last of the and single. us argument in favor of Schmeling’s | overwhelmed the Saints, 11-3, as the) sixth. Bob Grove, Red Sox — Held | - chances of springing a surprise. The) two teams opened their series. | ‘Three home runs featured Company White Sox scorless and allowed |; em ers: ip German's entourage insists he will RH EjA’s triumph over the Paramount. profit from the mistakes of outers | Mlleennee .313 000 040—11 16 1/Brown and Swenson each hit one in ul only four hits in outpointing Ver- | Bon. Kennedy in pitching duel. | ees eae |who faced Louis. The mistake most | St. -100 100 001— 3 6 3/the second inning for the soldiers Augie Galan, Cubs—Cracked out f r a ‘of them made, however, was in get-! Hatter and Dickey; Spencer,)and Winslow drove in two runs in a pair of doubles and a single and || Fexa8 Leading Nation With 50/t) Minto "the same ring with the| Hutchinson and Pasek. seventh-inning Paramount rally with pass i ‘ i. 4 Millers Wallop Blues the third circuit drive. Paul Nel- one mgaiee ‘aie gets poole Geet, Gall anes | Minneapolis — Minneapolis equalled eres ae, psertrtera? Neots bes d i i {an American Association record when | five safe blows while amma Se ance sito on Teeny | Major League | {they counted 15 runs in the seventh|were nicking D. Bennett for seven. Cardinals — Led 14-hit attack on | j they illies’ ’ its | Mgr Ee | Leaders inning to win 24-10 from Kansas| The box scores: Phillies’ hurlers with three hits New York. M: 19. A fresh im ee each, one being home run by Mize. | ew SOR ey Be banet @|City. The Millers got 25 hits. Eight) K. of C. A Z, d outburst of aces increased Texas’ lead (By the ted 5 homers, six by Millers, marked the aeeen ne o 4 : 4 fod 4 Alvin Crowder, Tigers—Checked | |in the Associated Press National Hole- Bor Kirrenieet cn poosncen ing jects, 2b... 8 2 2 & O Ff Senators with five hits. in-One club Tuesday as the total for! NATIONAL LEAU Minneapolis ...100 240 152x—24 25 2 a = pees the nation reached 346. get a, ee oe 463; Med- Kansas’ city "111 008 010-10 15 3 4 0 0 9 0 0 He turned in one of his best per-| Nine aces were scored on the Texas |» OCR ea ™MG Are on; cuyler,| Page, Moore Stiles and. Madjeskl wh b pid formances of the year Monday in |golfing ranges last week to give the |p ag nee | Breese; Grabowski, Baker, Ryan and| Bobzein, rf o 6 1 60 0 blanking the White Sox 2-0 with four | State 50 of the nation’s total. Cali- ‘Medwick, Cardinals, 48; Moore, | George. Priske, 3b 3 2 8 ae hits, for his seventh victory and|fornia ranked second with 25 andjHits—Medwick, Cardinals, 48; i” (Odiers “post popend).irain: Se) 2s ee fourth shutout of the season. His| Tennessee next with 21. San Diego|__Glants, 45. z ini se akon ep « LcgsTOtals «05 30, 7 6 18 8S only defeat came at Washington, | led in the intercity field with 13 as|Mome runs —Ott, Giants, and Ca-| ra = copuaie volt ks ieee ae there he has been beaten 13 times. |eainst 12 for Nashville, Fort Worth | | milli, Phillies. 6. Baldwin Nine Trims Kiesel, ss t a Mo aean i A Look at the Records "| produced three during the week to'Pitching—Gumbert, Giants, 4-0; Wal- Wilt Pick: d ill Magon, 1b o 1 5 0 1 Here's how Grove's record looked {TUN its total to 10, or one behind its| ker, Cardinals, 3-0. Uton, Fickaravile Brown, ir iy et Me . | natural rival, Dallas. All told, 51 new Dusleprt.. + aha ones oem atte S pele ee ee ne aces wate reparted, one bya preetnt AMERICAN LEAGUE =—_|_- Baldwin, N. D. May 19.—Baldwin's| Meinnover, p eevee ar ya! ine member who repeated. | Batting—Sullivan, Indians, .431; Dijundefeated baseball team defeated|Sorsdaul, o 14 0 0 pitched 65; opponents runs, 8; earn-|"" O40 ‘Hackbarth, Cincinnati profes-; Maggio, Yankees, .390. | Pickardville, 15-1, and Wilton, 10-3,| Martin, cf gel Me ae a 1 ed runs, 6; hits, 42; strikeouts, 34.) sonal, not only score Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 37; Gehring-|in a doubleheader played here Sim-|Croonquist, r.. 3 2 0 1 9 0 eee all vg [longest aces of the week—a 219 y er, Tigers, 33. \day. Baldwin scored three runs in Kennedy limited Tom Yawkey’s|,+ the Cincinnati Coun! " |Hits — Gehringer, Tigers, 46; Lewis,!each of the first, fifth and sixtn in- “Millfonaires” to five hits and held/ pyopably fired the proudest shot. Otto! Senators, 43. 'nings and added one more in the them away from the plate after the| Was accompanying a pupil while giv-|Home runs — Trosky, Indians, and! ninth to conquer the Wilton nine in first inning. ing him a lesson. On the 12th hole,| Foxx, Red Sox, 8. {the opening game and then sent 111 ¢, D. Brown, Alvin Crowder, appearing in his/ne gave a perfect demonstvation by, Pitching—Blaeholder, Cleveland, 3-0; runs across the plate in the second 5 ; home_runs—D, Brown, second game of the season and his! sinking an ace with a pretty spoon| Grove, Red Sox, 7-1. inning of the Pickardville game to] 4. ; 6 in 7 inn- The “Old Men's club” rece:ved an-|| Fights Last Night to five hits while the Tigers pounded jend of the sixth. Box score of the}3; bases on balls off’ Brown 1; off 4 ; ; ij } i : out a 7-1 decision, other member when the Rev. J. H.}g——__-__ 5, | Baldwin-Wilton game: Meinhover 2. } Carl Hubbell was hit hard as the/ MacDonald, retired Methodist minis- (By the Associated Press) Baldwin PO A Umpire—N, Agre. Giants took a 4-2 decision from the/ter from Plainfield, N. J., scored an} New York — Aldo Spoldi, 135, ig oo Paramount AB H R PO A KE Pirates for their eighth successive | ace on the 16-yard third hole at! qtaly, stopped Lou Camps, 129%, 5 OO H. Allen, Iss... 301 2 1 2 0 1 triumph but the screw-ball artist was} the Plainfield Country clu. urate New York, (7). 4 ie 0 Anderson, ara, argh: o 3 i effective with men on bases, ‘ing 72, Rev. MacDonald, who has, Chicago — Charley Belanger. H 2 [iene 2 a eg 7 { Cards Hold Lead been playing golf and playing it well} 1821; Winnipeg, outpointed Jack feet Be ae eee eee 6 | The Cardinals managed to hold| for 40 years, has a novel way of toting; Kranz, 18714, Gary, Ind., (10). o 9 to 6 0 a Pi their half-game lead over the Giants | his eight clubs around the course. He Newark, N. J. — Roscoe Man- 1 0 409 0 0 © 0 4 but it took a great finish against the|has built a small two-wheeled car-| ning, 161%, Mutley, N. J.. stopped { A 3 v ® 3 1 H 4 Phillies to get home in front by the |riage which contains clips to hold his} Joe “Bagzone, 162';, Pittsburgh 2 Klein, rt een So KG) ae doo oe ee Serra a aabeniorinemateanelll te el a ctesisi ate "Oe Le na G ‘Tex Carleton continued his success} Other new members of the nationa’ Butte, t. — Hubert De: _ Totals . 27 7 Totals .... 2 5 | over the Bees as the Cubs took a 7-2/ hole-in-one club to be reported are: 1, eoenens Monte pesto ee mf eee cede, ee | decision to go into a tie with the|C. E. Jorde. Mandan. N. D., 3rd hole.) Charley Gomer, 126, France, (10). | F. ' 200 Doerner, isi 3 2 2 3 0 0 | Pirates for third place. 210 yards, Mandan cour: Sioux City, Iowa—Jimmy Le- : 3 a Brews) 3rd : H ; 4 . 2 4 The Cincinnati Reds made the eee grone, 137, Des Moines, lowa, out- 1 0 | Beer dre ist 1 1 2 2 4 {| most of ther eleven blows off five|/‘Aherdeen Assassin pointed Scotty McLean, 137, Pe- 8 0 1/8 Bride sf...3 0 0 0 0 0 i hurlers to defeat the Brooklyn Dod- k oria, TIL, (10), Sammy Musco, a8 P, Hedstrom, If 2 9 1 0 0 O || gers, 0-5, after getting away tos Launches Comeback) 12:*;, omaha. outpointed Jackie 2 9 18: Ot ot ' three-run lead in the first inning on Rogers, 124, Bismarck, N. D., (5); resig ac * ) 0 % 8 i} Gilly Campbell's homer. Chicago, May 19.—(#)—Leo Lomski,| Al Pahl, 140, Sioux City, out- 5 Swenson, cf1 1 1 1 © 0 0 The Yankee-Indians and Athletic-| who holds two decisions over Heavy-| pointed Jimmy Knight, 138, Bis- Kean Papacek, cf .. 2 0 0 2 o 0 Browns games were postponed because ; weight Champion James J. Braddock} marek, (6). ay Totals ceuna canis a al of rain. and once was the terror of the na- Milwaukee — Max Chowaniec, S on base—Baldwin| Score by ng! fj tion's light heavyweights, was success-| 16944, Milwaukee, knocked out Ed home runs 1 by C.{| Paramount. 002 002 3—7 H NATIONAL LEAGUE fully launched on his coineback at-| Wills, 17712, Chicago, (6). : pete fea aiiy Company A Pare 620 0 x. Giants Trim Pirates tempt Tuesday ———————— al Dutt in 5 innings: 9, ny A 7; stol | New York—The New York Giants} Lomski was’ the “Aberdeen As- aAteording to the Dictionary ot onnson any Casper 8: Winslow In dna, Altea eleaay : i fwon their eighth straight, defeating} sassin” of o londay nigat as he} American s, American "y | by i s off Johnso: auer, 2 base In 3rd, v9 i the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-2 R H E|outpointed George Vallas ot Birming-| goes back to 450 A. D., when a Bud- aper 1; off Dutt 1; Mit by, [bane hite-—Winslow, an 99d, /theee ty Pittsburgh . 000 100 00: 212 2\|ham, Ala., out he forced the fighting|dhist monk was supposed to have : Art Lenihan. New York 201 010 00x— 4 7 O/all the way and gave his upponent 4| visited the American continent. ‘ising, Blanton and Padden; Hub-|beating throughout the five-round —_———_ In olden times, slaves warmed their} none: h f Welbauer. ane 7 innit: 4 bell and Mancuso. event. Lomski weighed 185 and Vailas) France and Mexico now have pro-| masters’ beds, on cold nights, by lying| of, a aca 13, by Bonmelee as Cubs Tie With Bucs 10 pounds less. fessional women jockeys. in them first. bases on balls off ‘Nelbauer 9, off Boston—Chicago went into a third- = Barnett. cs sigan place tie with Pittsburgh by winning 5 °, . ag i from Boston, 7-2. RHE Our Boarding House With Major Hoople Copelin Motos ABH R FO A B Chicago . ’ Pe 1 3 0 0 0 Boston = = VEEL. Cee treme aes Sow} zZ ttt ze ee Hi, BEWARE A HOOPLE THERES ff aE: o 0 2 0 0 ease Barnsl RR WHEN HIS IRE IS aie a esis I EY gee Ta La Jacobson, . Brooklyn—The Reds drove George YY AROUSED/ UMF-F w PRODDING HIS — — He Yeastey, nd ¢ 9 9 1 1 3 Earnshaw from the mound in the lj cs 1 2 A Ii B. Be 3 first inning as they defeated Brook- A SPUT-T~~ TILL SHOW 7 GARDEN AGAIN / = Po eemetates as Ot 8 ee lyn, 9-6. RHE ® THAT OAF, BAXTER, y J = ot BE EB TB Gitcinnat e e ol ieee a] 6 THAT THERE IS MORE )W panting SoAP- TES Satine PP RP eG Schott, Stine and Campbell; Earn- Ds THAN ONE TRICK IN y BUBBLES To se Wetch, rt 6 0 1 0 60 06 shaw, Leonard, Baker, Jeffcoat, My / THE —__ 55-— rece Aad Butcher and Berres, Phelps. BAG J NEXT TA RAISE A CROP a 1 a ain ee eal, ugg] (TIME HE INTERRUPTS I om, OF TOY (eee | PPboG in the seventh and ninth innings to & MY TALK WITH HIS LL = v: Werre, cf. 5 2 3 0 0 0 score seven runs an their second g . n Yo : i Cat an eye straight from the Phillies, 11-6. q SILLY FADDLE, TLL Ping OP ast : a a . RHE >. BE READY FOR “_\ Mie 4 (VY ee ee 102 001 403—11 14 1 tll, ‘Total 45 14 21 21 2 WMD y ‘ i We Score by’ innings: WMA Seem FE, Sas a ie WMD Wy, \ : y 3, Wills 14; stolen ‘bases QA y eo d terson 2, Werre LIU“Mzz QUA Bite Werre, dundt, Zahn, Jac home runs—Potter, Dohn, G ‘t joets: hil off Zahn 6 in 7 innings: off Potter 9 In 6 innings; off Baldwin 6 in 1 inn- first since April 22, held the Senators/ shot. It was his third ace as a pro. | *—-_"~__ ~___.__-_-# | insure victory in the tilt halted at the} sthick out by Brown 4; by Meinhover |- Walker, of the British Curtis cup team, by Mrs. Temple Dobell, one up. In the third round, which got un- der way after a short interval, Miss Miley faced Miss Corlett, who elim- inated Miss Berg; Mrs. Crews met ‘Mrs. Edith Rhodes, who beat Paul- ine Doran, 5 and 4, this morning; jand Miss Glutting drew Pam Barton, runner-up the last two years, who defeated Jane Firth, 5 and 4, this morning. Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, May 19—(#)—Js the Dizzy Dean-Virgil Davis feud still raging? ... Davis caught Dean in the : first game of t the season— which the great one lost — but hasn’t teamed with him since. ... Brusie Ogrodowski is making it tough on the printers by appearing regularly behind the plate when Dean works, Last winte Dean swore he'd never again toss a ball to Davis. +. Later there was a reconciliation. - But apparently it didn’t take... They may bring Art Lasky in from the coast to meet Jack Trammell, the socking colored lad from Youngs- town. .. President Ford Frick is get- ting ready to order his umpires into their summer uniforms. . . If Mrs. Helen Wills Moody likes to keep the tennis moguls up in the air, she ought to be having a whale of a good time. . . They don’t know one bit more about her plans than they did six months ago. . . Carl Snavely has St. Louis 172 Boston 2; Chicago 0. Marginal Lands Are ; aaa | Seeded for Wildlife \ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Mohall, N. D., May 19.—(#)—Be- : y WwW CL Pet, tween 200 and 300 acres of marginal St. Paul.. ome 9 .719| lands in the Mouse river bottoms are w Minneapolis 19 10 .655| being seeded with approximately 500 ™? Milwaukee . 18 11 = .621| bushels of barley to provide feed for Kansas City. 17 i .607| ducks this fall, Alfred E. Dale, super- * Louisville 406|intendent of the biological survey Columbus .367| Project in this area, said Monday. Indianapolis .333} Dale said the entire game refuge is Toledo .. .250| to be fenced with barb wire fencing and iron posts. Milwaukee 11; St. Paul 3. He said the present river level will Minneapolis 24; Kansas City 10, be raised about 10 feet, and that Others postponed. water is now being released through -—- the gates at Foxholm, filling two Freedom of the Will.” ... When does | Units of marshland below the dam. the guy have time to train? Boston must be tough for | Deadlocked Teams on the fob 2 Beton eats Bat Clash in Northern huskies tackled Gil mistake St. Paul, May 19.—(?)—Jamestown and broke his collar bone. . . {and Eau Claire, tied for second place Just the other day the baseball {in the Northern League with seven at Boston university got in | wins and five losses, open an import- the way of a liner and received j|ant series Tuesday in the Wisconsin a broken Iag... city. Should either team sweep the The latest word from Berlin on the series, it would be in good position ‘Olympic basketball tournament is to challenge the leadership of Fargo- that 20 nations will compete. . . One |Moorhead, which moves over to Wau- of the first to enter the annual &t. |sau. Johnsbury, Vt., ten-mile run was 54-| Superior and Duluth start road year-old Ray Hudson. . . H. G. Sal-|trips, with the Blues meeting Crooks- singer of the Detroit News swears|ton and the Dukes traveling to Win- this happened in North Carolina: An | nipeg. autograph hunter entered the Tigers’| Monday was an open date. “Who you?” he asked. .. .”|__ Nationally-Known STETSON came the answer... “Who him?” ...| HATS for men, sold exclusively Bill looked . . . the guy was pointing Rosen o to Mickey Cochrane. ieats a The Bismarck Tribune Bible Distribution town to defend a suit for $17,500 brought by a firm of attorneys which represented Max before and after his fight with Primo Carnera. Sara Guth, a co-ed, is one of the mainstays of the Washington univer- sity, St. Louis, golf team... In a meet with Drury college the other day she trimmed her male opponent, two up. ... Just ten years ago today School- boy Rowe pitched the El Dorado, Ark., highs to a 6-5 victory over Newton high. . . John Law has re- signed as football and baseball coach lat Sing Sing to become director of physical education at the new state turned down an offer to turn pro and begun training for the Berlin Olym- pics... Between drills he works on & thesis, “A Critical Analysis of Jona- than Edwards and His Treatise of ing; struck out by Zah: by Potter}. 3; by Baldwin s on balls off 3 off Baldwin 1. SSS WN (© 1098, B, J. Revneide Ted. Co. P.A. MUST PLEASE YOU =OR YOU PAY NOTHING! Sencke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. Bf you don'tfind it the mellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the pocket ta with the rest of the tebacce in it to us at fivte A—Red Letter Bible, r Style B—Piain Print Bible, Di- oping Hep. black leather cov- | vinity Circuit limp black seal » gilt ges. round grain textile leather cover, red 1a” lettering, lary edges, medium large ty, int, three coupo! $1 98 strong end durable, th and ony nee o coupons and only ... jus’ 40 aaies tax Plus 3c sales tax Mail Ord Send amount for Style A or Style B, with CPSs three of these coupons, and include 18 cents additional for postage, packing and insurance. A Chance for Every Reader to Get a New Bible BERT NICHOLS tools pipes out "re Mn tre d up with Prince Albert. Bert . te et it

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