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Ss OS HANNA REGISTERS £5 DEMONS IN YEARLY KIWANIS CONTESTS Between 30 and 40 Schools Expected to Enter Slope Conference Meet Qualified Entrants Invited to Compete in League-Sanc- tioned Finale Coach Glenn Hanna and a squad of 15 Bismarck high school athletes were to leave here Friday afternoon for Valley City where Saturday the prep stars will be entered in the an- nual Kiwanis invitational track and field meet. At the same time scores of other North Dakota prep athletes were con- verging on Grand Forks where the preliminaries in the University of North Dakota fixture were to be run off Friday with the finals Saturday afternoon. Dickinson will also be a track host Saturday when between 30 and 40 western state schools begin competi- tion in the annual Slope track and field meet. Squad Is Chosen Hanna's entries in the Valley City meet included Charles Murray in the dashes and relay; Haroid Smith in the broad jump; James McGuiness in the dashes, discus and relay; Buddy Beall in the hurdles and discus; Bob Tavis in the high sticks and the high jump; Bob Peterson in the 440, high jump and relay; Clayton Welch in the low hurdles, 440 and relay; Boel- ter in the shot, discus and javelin: Dick Shafer in the javelin and broad jump; Alwyn Potter in the distance events: Charles Conners in the mile and Ray Yeasley in the javelin and broad jump. The Demons two Bobs—Branden- burg and Kling—will be entered in the singles and team up in the doubles matches of the tennis tournament. Meanwhile A. C. Van Wyk went ahead with plans for the second an- nual state meet which will be held here June 5 and 6, sanctioned by the state high school league. Invitations Mailed Invitations were mailed out earlier in the week to all eligible contestants, those who have placed first or second in an open meet at which at least six league s: Is competed, and May 30 was sect as the deadline for entries. Preliminaries in all events, includ- ing the half-mile relay, will be run off Friday afternoon, June 5. with the finals slated for Saturday after- neon. i Gold, silver and bronze medals for | the first, second and third place win- | ners in each event and trophies for | the three highest schools in the team | competition will be awarded at a ban- + quet to be held following the meet. } Under an innovation tried for the first time this year, the Bismarck Association of Commerce will allow $1 for expenses for each man who Is gualified to compete. Regan Hangs Up 27-16 Decision Over Tuttle Tuttle, N. D. May Regan spotted Tuttle 12 runs in the firs' tnning and then pounded out a 26-1 decision over the local nine here Sunday. Seven pitchers were used by the two teams in an effort to stop the parade of runs. Harry Worden Jed the winners’ attack, getting six hits, four of which were doubles. The ‘box score: The box score Sonnet lgettenroornr= 22.— 0 1 Mickelsen, 2 H Schilling. 1b Walker, cf .. Cox, If ‘Tosseth Manning. rf... 0 Totais Tuttle Batterburry, Hinkle, E 6 Mf Ripley, c-p Danielson. Kramer, ~ Sackma FPairchi rf Whitmer, p-2b Lybeck, p-1b Preszler, rf . 1 ° 1 i 4 0) Totals 46 17 Summary: Two base hits 4, Cox, Hinkle, Danielson three ‘base hits—Mickelsen, hits off Wold 1 i innings Mickelsen 9 in 4 innings, off Worden 4 in 5 innings, off Whitmer 14 in 3 innings, off Lybe innings, off 7 in sd ‘amer 0 K out by Mickelsen mer 4, by Ly- Kramer 4; 1510 Worden K winning pitcher—Mick Chicago Leads Tennis Foes in Big Ten Play Chicago, May 22,—(4)—Chicago's met squad was favored to retain the western conference tennis title as the Ten meet entered the final found Friday on the Midway school's ourse. The Maroons, as the result of victories in all matches Thursday straight sets, had six points to ‘their credit. Northwestern was in #econd place with five GIBBONS SCORES KAYO _ Omaha, May 22.—(F)—Jack Gib- ons, 155, of St. Paul, scored a four * gound technical knockout over Joe Souesay 157, of San Diego, here Is Cheered by With His Kinfolk ie STATE EVENT IS PLANNED| Forx, Dickinson, Va THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE lley City Wee FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1936 Cardinals, Bengals Again Showing Some_of 193 Berg Humbles Shell Gas With 5-Hit Mound Feat; 20 Errors Feature Game Nash-Finch and Schlitz Beer teams were tied on top of the Commercial League standings with two victories each as the result of diamondball games played Thursday night. Paced by Joe Schlosser, J. Doyle ‘and W. Bolstad, the Nash-Finch team routed the Shell Gas, 20-5, in a ragged game while the Schlitz Beer aggrega- tion was edging out the Bank of North Dakota, 10-9. In the third game the CCC scored its first victory by nosing out the Three-Way Inn in seven innings, 10-9, Busche and Johnson limited the Three-Way Inn stickers to eight safe bingles while their teammates were bunching 10 hits off Yeasley and Morlan to score two runs in the first frame and four each in the second and fourth, Strand with three hits in four trips to the plate and Busche and Quine, each with two, led the attack for the winners. Nelson, Jordan and Benzer were best at the plate for the losers. Twenty errors were evenly divided GREAT GOLF CLAMPING RIGHT ELBOW AGAINST RIBS RESULTS IN TOO FLAT A SWING By ART KRENZ NEA Service Golf Writer Many golfers have the wrong idea about the right elbow. It never should be clamped tightly against the ribs ercial; CCC Triumphs: DECISION ON GIANTS | TIGERS TRIM YANKS Whitehead Wins 14-Inning Duel With A’s Rookie; Ferrell Bests Browns (By the Associated Press) Faint echoes of the thunderous 1934 jworld series have begun to rumble through the major leagues as the Tigers and Cardinals are showing something like their championship form of two years ago. The Cards have been running along in front for a couple of weeks but it took a day in second place to make them buckle down to work in dead earnest and wallop the Giants, 4-2, Thursday to regain the lead. Mean- while the injury-riddled Detroit team has started the same sort of come- back it made after a poor start last year, turning back the Yankees, 10- 9, and moving into third place with their sixth consecutive victory. THURSDAY'S STARS Charley Gehringer and Goose (Nash - Finch, Schlitz Teams Assume Sf. [(US REVERSES |Brewers Sweep ‘Lead in Comm Apostles’ Series Blues Hand Millers Third Straight Setback; Tribe Cops Doubleheader waukee .Brewers, whose last American Association championship was achieved jin “pre-war” days, are showing & [Ree these days which may put and keep them at the top of the circuit standings. The Brewers Thursday beat the league-leading St. Paul club, 4-3, leaving the Saints with only a half- game lead over Milwaukee and giving the Brewers a clean sweep of a four- game series. Kansas City, apparently unwilling to forget a 24-10 beating at the hands 01 Minneapolis early in the week, trimmed the Millers for the third straight day to take the series three be games to one. The score was 10 to 6. In a twilight game, Indianapolis bunched hits in two innings to beat Columbus, 9-0, Bud Tinning holding the Birds to seven hits, In @ second game, played Thursday night, the In- dians made it two straight by whip- ping the Birds 6-3, winning on a four-run burst in the sixth. Toledo's Mudhens toiled until early Friday to win a 17-inning night game Chicago, May 22.—(7)—The Mil-| yw, RCRA - The Standings (By the Associated Press) NORTHERN eee L 4 5 5 7 7 8 5 8 273 eer r3-3-30 0 Results Thi Fargo-Moorhead 10; Wausau Jamestown 9; Eau Claire 5. Others postponed. as 16 Brooklyn . 19 Philadelphia 4 a1 Results Thursday Pittsburgh 7; Philadelphia 4. St. Louis 4; New York 2. Chicago 4; Brooklyn 0. Boston 3; Cincinnati 2. AMERICAN LEAGUE wu Sports Round-Up New York, May 22—(4)—While on pleasure bent in Philly a few nights back, our plug-chewing Cardinals visited a carnival . . . They found one of those six- on for-a-dime throw- 643 ing galleries and 583 the fun began... 500 But not for long i. .. . Paul Dean’s 375 first hook had wrecked only one set-up when the management got 2 wise ... “Scram, youse guys,” he ordered, recogniz- s ing Dizzy, who Pet. E awaited his turn 855 “This ain't 633 Andy Kerr no jernt for pros.” ‘522: - «When Wes Ferrell quit the ‘300 | mound in Boston recently of his own ‘46g | accord, he was roundly booed by some 1467|0f the bean eaters in the bleachers ‘387. - . Wes thumbed his nose at them ‘364|. . . Now the dope is the fans are going to get even when the Red Sox get back to Boston. . . Ed Bang, sports ed of the Cleve- land ‘News, ordered $9,000 worth | of ringside seats for Louis and | Schmeling . . . So Mike Jacobs ! i 4 < Goslin, Tigers—Pounded out four || trom the Louisville Colonels, 5-4, The Pet. | between the two teams as Nash-Finch j°% ® flat swing will result; neither hits. each in 17-hit. attack on|Imarathon contest tled the senneni's (Ew PoE nce 2 i" "667 stuffed the pasteboards into a humbl : should it be allowed to wander too ies trunk and shipped them west. umbled the Shell Gas “behind the|*I' Cine sidé, for this error shuts|| Yankee hurlers, with latter driv- |/record for extra innings, set when the | Bos - a> 12 687 |five-hit hurling of Berg. Schlosser the tebe o8: the club and swi ng_in winning run. Mudhens recently lost to the Blues at - 18 14 (563 with a home run and a triple, Doyle |» se IRIE fe ART inging John Stone and Cecil Travis, || Kansas City over the same route. 217 14 548], Tt looks like a Syracuse year . . . [with s triple and W. Bolstad led the [oon ee aes ae ripe relaxed in the || SeRators—Drove in five of team’s ii 14 14 500|At @ Colgate alumni dinner the other eight-hit attack on Watts, Shell Gas]. et (ie HEN ate sire 1] seven runs, each getting a homer. Blues Whip Kels Washi [17 18 © 4g6|Night, Andy Kerr, Red Raider coach, |chucker. The winners scored six runs |S¥/78 oat Just d probed sea hh he Jimmy Foxx, Red Sox — His Minneapolis — Kansas City beat! phijadelphia 2 10 20 333 | advised one and all to bet on Syracuse jin each of the first, second and fifth it stralghtens and gives power to the|} tentn home run accounted for bere raed rae third straight lg, Louis........... 7 25 ‘219 against BoE a sti a 1, » a , Snake h aL one each in the third Lioaditas Sox's six runs against Kansas City.....208 001 400-10 13 11 ala ee Gating a: jan bana se ah | Paced by i. Balzer and Neibauer,| FM Twins, Jimmi John Whitehead, White Sox—| {Minneapolis ....201 100 110— 6 15 2) DarelO.ot Now vork 9. {talking about a comeback again .. . Pointing for his big bout with Joe | the Schlitz Beer team scored two runs |<” ins, Jimmies Held Athletics to ten hits and no || ,,.Vance, Moore and Madiesk!; Me-| washington 7; Cleveland 4. |Ho, hum . . . The Cubs-Philly deal A earaaoe tb Max Schmeling set- jin the last of the seventh to over- Keep Winning Form) eed runs in 14 innings. gn Usd eserd alti aia Boston 6; St. Louis 2. jshould help both clubs . . . Jimmy Seeing to oO ee ican ee {come a one-run lead the bank club eae | Paul Dean, Cardinals—Checked i Fe — Wienee redund & Ses Wilson held out for Roy Henshaw training cain in Napanech " y, {had gained with a four-run outburst] g+ paul, May 22. — (®) — Fargo-|| Giants, with eight hits as Cards |/ paut's lead to half a game by handing| rege leds ohh! ET OS ee eee (Associated Press Photo) | tat inning. Fisher for the bank | xsoorhead and ‘Jamestown won free-|| ‘OK league lead from New York. || the gaints their fifth straight set-| Ww L,_‘ Pet.| tucking that $75,000 roll back in his oe i <'____| team allowed seven hits and Raduns | hitting games Thursday to remain in|| Rey Henshaw, Cubs—Blanked |/1.04, 4.3 Wee B rieniens iB: ae TRS Caeeea st SrpttaItce mie | Save up three in four innings and was /q virtual tle for the Northern League || Dodgers with seven hits. Milwaukee .....100 110 010— 413 3! qeqwautee Seger ee eee eee G S § relleved by Netbauer who allowed the | jeadership. John Lanning and Bill Ur- ||: ‘Paul.........200 000 010— 3 11 2/Namsas City........ 20 11 645)... Till take Kowalik.” eNe Sarazen Jets jsame number in the remaining three | Mee TP as got 11 hits, including|| banskl, Beee—Former held Reds |/*istmi and’ Dickey; Peite ang | Minneapolis +; 19 18 5041 From Hugh Bradley in the N. Y. Post jframes. The box scores: homers by Cichosz and Connell, to|| % four hits and latter drove in || renner. : jLouisville + 14 21 .400/ you learn that Stanton Griffis, one he ‘shell G AB RH PO A Fleasily defeat Wausau, 10 to 3 winning run with ninth-inning “dribe Wins Twin Bill [sicfeerct ag + 11 17 303/of the directors of Madison Square etropo! itan ACEiv ret) ws 0 1 2 TF 2] Jamestown got two doubles and al] double. Siidianispolls —tagianaphis took eee + 12 22 .353| Garden, has written Mike Jacobs he ihc dinpeay 22: 4 48 8 8 Fltriple in its 10 hits to down Eauj| Forest Jensen, Pirates — Hit || noth ends of a twilight-night double. arcs - 9 22 200 /hopes Mike makes enough on the ! iH > 0 1 + § /Claire, 9 to 5. Kosy's three-bagger|| ninth-inning homer with two on ||neader from Columbus 9-0 and 6-3. rercrpret cana Louis-Schmeling fight to buy the Veteran Shotmaker One Stroke 2 0 © 1 © Olwith the bases loaded was the big|| to beat Phillies. E emer i ee ae 6. Garden . . . Primo Carnera has i a 1 So bo coe a ef war ; St. Paul 3. book Euro} Hin- Ahead of Henry Picard, apres ah ay. oa : Cems 288) gee bone 9 12 1! Indianapolis 9-6; Columbus 0-3. Lpeegeuagnte Hye chal eter Defending Cham ; ) 3 2 $ o| Wet grounds caused postponement| Johnny Whitehead, the White S0x|"“Nocon, Cox and Clark; Tinning! , Toledo 5; Louisville 4. |... Hell tour the other side under e . 3 0 © 3 1 Olof the Duluth at Winnipeg game Pyarred ree haat cae br and Riddle, ; ' “waeniceene the auspices of Gerald Egan, Dublin i Se = SM 7 yn) While high winds at Crookston pre- _—s 2 ‘*| Second Game— RHE ‘ajor Le Promoter . . . Mel Ott was the Hi Po 4 ‘R|vented the Pirates’ game with Su- pe cannery ee to sive} columbus ......100 000 110— 3 9 5 | J ague | |mainspring in that nine-game win- 2 1 5 1 0 perior, : -2 win and the Pirates|rndianapolis ...000 004 02x— 6 7 1! | Leaders ning streak of the jints. ‘ : cht 30203 4 3| wound up a six-run ninth inning Klinger and Owen; Turner and! ® o me itan | 2: 3 eee y a . When he entered the Metropolitan | {i Taal oe Ge r PER ie Rosner by. Woody. Ser Ruane: | (By the Associated Press) One Boston paper has it all on come ee ee ee lt tt RATIONAL LEAGUE | figured out =. If Lay Grove v t 01 ee ae oe tet ere pe =4, pis es national open at Baltusrol, June 4-6.|\- Bennett US ee ee | ‘Wes Ferrell knocked out in two eee et pts the saat ett game |Batting—Terry, Giants, .455; Med-| pitches the rest of the season as | But there was one thing, he told him- |" ‘p, ia pa eee a (By the Associated Press) innings Wednesday, went right back!_17 innings—Toledo beat Louisville} wick, Cardinals, 408. 3 he did the first fifth, he'll win 35 self, he must not do; he mustn't win, | J. Be ss Sitar rable Tacoma, Wash.—Gordon Wal- at the Browns and hurled seven-hit|5.4. Tne game lasted until early Runs—J. Martin, Cardinals, and| games and lose five . . . He'll for the odds are too great against a 4. 1 1 9 0 | Mace, 148, Vancouver, B. C., out- |ball to win 6-2. John Lanning, up|morning. Hare went the route for|,,CUvier, Reds, 29. set a new earned-run record . .. man winning two big ones inside a’ * © 0 © © 0; pointed Mike Payan, 150, San (from Knoxville, pitched a four-hitter/Toledo, The Colonels used four |#'ts—Medwick, Cardinals, 51; Jor- [ment | 5 io| Diese, Calif., (10). for the other Boston team and came] hurlers. | dan, Bees, 49. < He'll be the first pitcher to win 35 | But when he went off the tee in the} Dallas, Tex.—Tom Beaupre, 193, jout ahead of the Reds and Lee Stine. | Louisville— RH £ Home runs—Ott, Giants, 7; Camillil games since Walter Johnson turned second round of the Metropolitan Dallas, knocked out Eddie O'Day, |3-2, when Al Lopez walked and Bill 002 000 011 000 000 00— 418 3|_8Nd J. Moore, Phillies, 6. the trick back in 1913 and tournament Friday, he was one shot | * 200, New York, (2). ‘Urbanski doubled him home in the} Toledo— ; Pitching — Gumbert, Giants, 4-0;/ ne) equal the record of 16 shutouts {ahead of a fine field. He tied the! Stolen” bases. | ————— pe ninth, Roy Henshaw, the Cub mid- 001 030 000 000 000 O1— 5 16 3) Walker, Cardinals, 3-0. made by Grover Cleveland Alexander jeompelitive recond fon stie sdittenly inde Thomas, Ben-| struck out by Fisher 4, by Raduns 4,/8ét, curved the Dodgers into submis- (17 innings) in 1916 Speed is getting to be | Quaker Ridge course with a 69, jnett 2. Carlisle 2. Lipp, Mancher: two| py Neibauer 5; bases on balls off|sion with seven hits, winning, 4-0] Schaefer, Marrow, Southard, Bass | AMERICAN LEAGUE a habit with Ralph Metcalfe, Mar- | In his long carecr. Sarazen prob- 4} Ai pat etty, Wedge:! Fisher . off Raduns 0, off Neibauer |with the aid of Gabby Hartnett’s cir-!and Thompson; Hare and Linton. Batting—Sullivan, Indians, 433; Di- a | a is ‘ losser, Doyle: | 9, u ipson ; quette sprinter He was fined jably thas never played @ more uner-|iome rune—schingser mite off Heng |” Umpire-—Hummel cuit drive. 5 posal rear pinesio., Yankees, 411. for roaring through a Milwaukee i x round of golf than this, He! 5 in 7 inni nae Das Se @ ts uns—Gehrig, Yankees, 43; Geh- jas in the trees, in the sand, inthe mgs siruck aruba encase ne eeu mua ae ment of aiiftng Cell ‘Travis ton| Jesse Owens Heads nies oe ee eee eee ages rough, ywhere except where he} © : aneeeert : $2 * \ 4 Wis EP OMMeNe een CAI te oetrence [Busehe, p-Sb .. 4 9 2 1 2yshort to right field a successful one Cast in Track Meet! #s—Gehringer, Tigers, 52; Lewis,| warded a $25 prize to Bobby Gray- I Wereaao cneminrkeniseanclaieaputined Cac H PO A Kiquine, ss 1.5. 5 1 2 2 3 o{When the youngster contributed a Senators, 47. son, Stanford star, for showing the paged berg rhema ee pete pr Gakauigaad eee Fee the ty G ulay ob $ 1 i 1 2 2}home run to a 7-4 triumph over) Columbus, O, May 22—(/)—Jesse none Gere Picnics ae “most commendable mental attitude champion was one shot back of! jara- oe i Hi 9 \ Johnson, 3 4 0 1 ippers' ay as on ie els ‘s a eal {zen with a 70, and one shot further | f te Peo rt Platern, RGr Sey at als : Meine ae spiked shoes for the preliminaries a ene, ep ioral a Watch Jesse onens in the western away were three dangerous players, ; F Ae, a? ot 0 ‘ SOA gy ce tees tas ee oe the Western Conference track meet. Fi id "| conference track meet this week . .. Craig Wood, New York. Byron Nelson, | 7 B20) Uh SO OL oa Ca ee i Teeter rae jPhllasenae A six-run rally in!” a year ago, after Jesse set three A year ago Jesse fell down the stairs |Ridgewood, ‘N. J. and Paul Runyan, -3 2 9 1 0 Olivas inn ABH R Po a m{the Minth, climaxed by Jensen's home| world records and tied another at Week-End Games May jana hurt his knee. . . The fol- White Plains, | ABO Oh tl) et ranaan eh 4 1 2 0 2 gifun with two on, gave Pittsburgh @! Ann Arbor, his shoes were gilded and Clarify Big Ten Race)" Ssurdey he set three new ss ae eS ea ls ‘ 38 6 18 2 gj Benser. a8 pale ik aa Ae triumph over Baulagelahie. i [Placed in Ohio State's hall of fame. arity big ien world records and tied another . .. / . Sch’ AB RH PO A _ #} Benson, ae : Although 233 other atheltes from Well, Jesse in shay for this Berwanger Decides mw Se Were eee 4 weceream rs 8G 8 $6 of Pittsburgh .... 000 010 006— 7 11° 1/the Big Ten schools were on hand for} Chicago, May 22.—(#)-Michigan, | week’s meet fe hcne ‘his back the Against Pro Football: $49 18 9 Sipeaudoin, 2). 3 0 0 3 0 o|Philadelphia .. 200 000 200— 4 12 1/the 36th annual track and field fix-|current leader of the western confer-| other day. ! 4 5 1 0 1 ofYeasley, p-If..4 1 0 1 0 2 Blanton, Birkofer and Todd; John-|ture, they were regarded as only thejence baseball race, and Minnesota, ee eee = 4 2 2 3 9 4|Morlan, If-p .. 4 1 1 0 2 O1son, Jorgens, E. Moore and Grace. supporting cast. the defending champions, apparently! The American government spent | Chicago, May 22.—(P)—Jay Ber-/|1 4 1 4 0 0. 4) Neleon, it BO A Re Ae ae in f k-end of diamond Gane Gaver cnoriae oc mecli eee labs eay: 20) ole ae Cards Regain Lead are in for a week-en mond a¢- | $00,000,000 for machine guns in 1917- lfoothallcstar said friday he hes ace|2) Sh OY Ss Soo) = ee Fale New, York—St. Louis snapped the Mocha coffee comes from Arabia, |tivity which may clarify the Big Ten | 1918, leepted a position with a Chicago in-| 9 1 2 6 oF Totals .... 25 8 9 21 7 8\Giants’ winning streak at nine games|and is known by its small greenish- |title picture. | ee See idustrial concern and definitely will| 2 To tn 8 el cde BY IRMIMBS: | gop o—10] aNd regained the National League) stay beans. Michigan, with seven wins and one ‘ Sine f | sre by innings: “ " “tphree’ Way Inn’... 003. 510 9— {lead with a 4-2 victory. en Me Joss, is expected to have no trouble |ond with six wins and one loss, play [Boe abeptessional: footballs | Bank of . 4—9| Summary: Left on. base—CCU RHE downing Northwestern Friday, but on |Friday and again Saturday in games | cotee ene ene: ae ee caret ety a 2—10| Three Way Inn 11; stolen bases—|gt, Louis ..... 010 000 003-4 7 0 Ferrell Checks Browns Saturday the Wolverines face Wis-|which may eliminate one of the clubs Raine ; 2 | bases—Kwako, Be t: t bi ite]/in 2 innings, off Bi ° 3 in ang . Wis; BOE! a slast fall, disclosed his decision against) “Quast. Martin, Tiliees ipear bagel new ee Meratdate o nainge eee Manet | iene ! RH Elteam to upset lows. The Wolves joining the pros when queried about] hits—Neibauer; ‘home runs—Balzer: | Johnson 7 in 5 innings: struck out by Boston ‘ ....... 003 000 003-6 8 Olniay Northwestern at Evanston and ein la rumor he had desided to with-| double or je plays—Raduns hit to| Yeasley 4, by Morlan 0, by Busche 0, Henshaw Humbles Dodgers . Louis ..... 000 001 010— 2 7 2i wisconsin at Madison. STETSON HATS for Men at ‘draw from the Olympic Decathlon tin; hits off Fisher 7|by Johnson 1; bases on balls off| Brooklyn—Southpaw Row Henshaw s be W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell; Hogsett, innings, off Raduns 3 in 4 inn- » off ¥ i : jcompetition. Neibauer 3 in 3_ innings; off Johnson 3, ‘easley 2, off Morlan 2, off Busche 0, Umpire—Ted Moe. | Our Boarding House With Major Gf MHOY, MATES / | LOOKS LIKE CLEAR WEATHER AHEAD, WITH A SPANKING } TEN-KNOT BREEZE OFF THE PORT BOW~A GREAT DAY FOR A SAIL~ YES/ p, ALL DECKED OUT 2 WITH FULL FLAGS FLYING, LEAVE~AN’ TRYING TO PEDDLE TH’ THERE HE GOES, STAGGERING LIKE A SAILOR ON SHORE Cubs won, 4-0. RHE Hoople Chicago ...... 100001 101— 413 1 Brooklyn . 000 000.000 0 7 0 Henshaw d Hartnett; Frank- house, Earnshaw and Berres. Boston—Bill Urbanski’s ninth-in- ning double gave the Bees a 3-2 vic- tory over Cincinnati. EVER WAS IN ON WAS AT A | 100 000 010-2 41 oo + 000 001 011-3 9 3 Stine and Campbell; Lanning and Lopez. AMERICAN LEAGUE Whitehead Bests Kelley Chicago—Johnny Whitehead won & 14-inning pitching duel from Harry Kelley to give the White Sox a 3-2 victory over Philadelphia. Appling’s single drove in the winning run. RHE Philadelphia 001 10000000000-2 10 2 Chicago ... 101 06000000001-3 13 5 . (14 innings) Kelley and Hayes; Whitehead and Tigers Rally to Win Detroit—Detroit came from behind with four runs in the last two in- nings to beat New York, 10-9. RHE New York .... 104 040 000— 9 12 1 Detroit ....... 032 O11 031-10 17 1 Cincinnati Boston SOMETHING YOU TOSS ONA hits, including two home runs, off two Cleveland pitchers to win, es held Brooklyn to seven hits as the|Teitje and Hemsley. | Minnesota and Iowa, tied for sec- Alex Rosen & Bro. OUT OUR WAY YOU DON'T GIVE WHEN T PULL/ ENOUGH TM GITTIN! MY, LONG ENOUGH, EITHER- NOW PULL, AND TLL GIVES KN SETI Yorn R\ \\ sat nN Lee \N \ By Williams WELL BEIN \ TH DITCH INA \ MINUTE, IF YOU FELLERS DONT GIT THAT WIND- SHIELD. WIPER FIXED WHILE nich \\ N\ : a