The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 27, 1936, Page 8

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su 50 an ro ag we BRS BSH BORE Seeuzer *! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1936 Mahmoud, Taj Akbar Run One, Two in Epsom Downs Derby KHANSENTRES WN Cards Push Full Game Ahead of Giants, Winning IRISH SWEEPSTAKES ‘Justice Limits Bismarck to Three _|pogay HAIR GAME Schlitz Team Gains Lead In Commercial Circuit Bid for Pennant SEUONDYEARINROW” “Hits, Valley City Wins 6-2 Verdict) QUT OPLEAD AFTER Winner, 100 to 8 Shot in Bet-| een ‘PREPARING FOR BIG ‘RACE ting, Finishes Three Lengths Ahead i THANKERTON PLACES THIRD | Score Pair of Runs | Valley City, N. D., May 27.—Charley . i Justice, Negro shutter, limited Bis-! Pale Hose; Cubs Gain marck’s national semi-pro champions | ji {to three hits Tuesday night and the Wis ate Valley City team scored a 6-2 victory over Gada City club, (By the Associated Press) Bunching their three hits in the} Manager Frankie Fr! seventh inning, the Bismarck team! . Lcd hid Five Ticket Holders in United | States Win $75,000 Each in Classic ia big grin over a pitching discovery scored its two runs. The game was: ee oan called at the end of the seventh, that may be just what the doctor New York, May 27.—(P}—When Barney Morris, stellar Bismarck jordered to round out his staff of St. Taj Akbar ran in the Derby at Epsom Downs Tuesday, five Irish sweepstakes ticket- holders in the United States won 75,000 each. = who held the Valley City team Louis Cardinals “varsity” i : for four innings last Sundays) “ince the season ect, te. has gave up seven hits during the Tues “ day night battle. He struck out 12 | depen a fod an eee ct and kept the Hi-Liner batters well Fits Se HBtaae eT eet Walker as his starting set, but double- in control after a bad first inning in head lin, which three runs crossed the plate. leaders are’ piling up just ahead. Three hits, a walk and an infield! Jim Winford, 26-year-old right- out paved the way for Valley City’s/hander imported late last year from three counters in the initial frame, |the Columbus Red Birds, may furnish Bismarck scored in te seventh when |help. Al Leary got a double, Steve Slefka| Winford started against the Pitts- singled to score Leary, and Mike Goetz|burgh Pirates in the nightcap of a drove Slefka in with another hard/twin bill, after Dizzy Dean had let two-bagger. the Bucs down, 6-2, in the opener, and The summaries: the newcomer came through with a Epsom Downs, May 27.—\4—Mah- moud and Taj Akbar, owned by the Aga Khan, ran one, tivo, in the running of the Derby before an esti-; mated crowd of 500.000 Monday. ‘Thankerton, owned by Mrs. J. & Hand; was at years in which the Aga Kha have been in front in Ei ane AB H PO A/two-hit performance, while his mates famous race. Bahram won last year| Moriah; eMY cc ‘22 1 3 | Weresbatting out a 6-2 win. and Blenheim in 1930. Mauri Rose (left) of Indianapolis, and Babe Stapp (right), of Loe Vilson, ¢ +2 1 4 ©] The double victory pushed the Cards Held at 100 to 8 in the betting.| Angeles, are among the drivers entered for the annual 500-mile automo. | Davis, Ib 3 ? 7 }Ja full game in front of the New York Mahmoud finished the one and one- | vile race at indianapotis May 30. (Associated Press Photos) Bence Ra 3 1 0 09|Giants, despite the triumph of the half miles three lengths in front of uh si {Foster, 1b . .» 3 0 © 06J|Terrymen over Brooklyn, 7-3, behind He crs only BL aa C. ° | C - oa +3 0 1 o|Harry Gumbert’s seven-hit twirling. It ree-quarters of a length separa’ a was the fifth str = Taj Akbar and Thankerton. Lord apito Ss onquer Sutin 6 21 6 \bert. eee ee cee Astor's Pay Up, the favorite at 6 to 1. 1 { Bismarck AB H po A! In the American League, the Red was fourth in the field of 22, which ton: lu | 1 0 2 1|Sox, aided by Jimmie Foxx’s 12th |b0x scores: included William Woodward's Amer-| ’ | 3 4 in ‘ homer of the year, pulled up to within! ican-owned Boswell i | Troupe, ¢ 13 2 ° Mahmoud ran the distance in 2.33| ' AOD e358 Ley vers tie Pane “OMID REE Ie eck POR erRise track: 166 ‘The ola | Kolpacoff, Monley, Kollman and| Smith, It 3 9 1 Ojvietory over the Yanks. Bill Dickey, |S. KCwako, mark of 2:34 was established by Hy-| Monaghan Lead 17-Hit | (By the Associated Prens) Slifka, es 3 1 © oyveteran Yankee catcher, collided with). Quant, perion in 1933 and equalled by Wind od | NORTHERN LEAGUE Goetz, rt 2 1 1 0/EBric McNair in a tight play at the Iie a8 an s i Pet. Morris, p . 3 0 1 1)plate, and an X-ray showed a kidney or Lad two years ago. | Barrage | Fargo. Sibgocuead oneeay 6 625 = - = ~|injury which will keep him in the eee by the Mahersis pe | Winnipeg. Sc FIL) Totals ....seeeeeee 22 2 18 4! hospital for 10 days. 1 aipipla, took the lead early in the ree uaa ae : Jamestow: ‘ , y face and held it for a halt mile with| Lacing out 17 hits off two opposing! Wausau 4 ieee], Score by innings: || | ,| ‘Trailing the Yanks and the Sox, the Midstream in second place as Jockey |Pitchers, the Capitol baseball club} Rau Cial 19-808 | Bismarck 000 000 2—2|Detroit Tigers managed only a split Charles Smirke and Gordon Richards |took a 10-8 decision from the Wilton! choose” ° 11 1353] Errors—Haley, Massmann, Morlan. {na double-bill with the White Sox, iding Mahmoud and Taj Akbar, r>- {nine here Sunday for its third victory} Duluth .. 8 1333|Three base hits—Morlan, Davis and|dropping the nightcap, 2-9 before Li 'y. Two base hits—Wilson, Leary tively, held their mounts off the {Of the scason. and Goetz, Left on bases—Valley pace: Kolpacoff and Monley with triples,| pay claire 16: Winnipes 4. City 1, Bismarck 2. Double plays— Thankerton moved up fast in the;Kollman with a double and Mon-) superior Fargo-Moorhead 6 Davis 2. Hits off Justice 3, off Mor- | Walker helped General Alvin Crowder next half mile, however, and held the |aghan with five hits in eight trips to) Wausau 7 5. ris 6. Walks off Justice 5, off Mor- | take the opener, 12-9. lead at Tattenham corner as the |the plate led the Capitols at the plate, Jamestown 11; Duluth 11, ris 2, ptruck out by Justice 4, bY} Roy Henshaw pitched the Chicago Sugar Cain’s tight pitching, after leaders swung into the final drive | Pitchers Cummins and Kollman! NATIONAL LEAGUE —_— 4, | Curbs from sixth to third place in the| 5 Bala Hissar, also owned by the Aga|limited the visitors to nine safe | W L Pet. M * Le National League with a 10-4 win over Khan, was second and Pay Up third.|bingles as their teammates gradually; St. Louis . i sane ajor ague the Reds. The Phils outslugged the Mahmoud and Taj Akbar moved up|cut down the lead Wijton had built w “49, {500 | Leaders Boston Bees 7-2, with Johnny Moore fast, however, and passed the tiring|in the early innings and then drov: collecting his eighth four-bagger. 1 ii = Icaders in the stretch with the former | four runs across the plate in the las AT 190 813 Prac *| ‘The St. Louis Browns came from winning well in hand. half of the ninth for the victory. Brpolien a tate (By the Associated Press) behind with a four-run rally in the} ,.5) Boswell, the only American-owned| A total of 28 errors were committed) pniladeiphia 14 3 "368 NATIONAL LEAGUE ninth to trounce the Cleveland In- hora in the race and highly fancied |during the game, 17 on the Capitols ‘ Batting — Terry, Giants/ 455; Med-jdians, 8 to 5, while the Senators had 7 to 1, was up with the leaders for|and 11 on Wilton. Vantin turned in a! ey ie erent re wick, Cardinals, 388. Uttle trouble with the Athletics and + St. Louis first half mile but fell back fast) sparkling performance at first base. | nae Runs—J. Martin, Cardinals, 35; Cuy-;won handily 8-2. trailed far to the rear at the fin-|The box score: ‘incinnati 4. ler, Reds, 32. is Capitol Club AB H FR Brooklyn 3. 8 Hits — Jordan, Bees, 58; Medwick,! NATIONAL LEAGUE Entering the straightaway, leading | J: ° 5 Cardinals, 57. Cards Cop Twin Bill to the judges, Thankerton held a 0 * Pet. |Home runs — J. Moore, Phillies; 8;| St. Louis—The Cardinals swept a three-length lead but weakened as| J 2 25 13 6581 Ott, Giants, 7. doubleheader with Pittsburgh by iden- Smirke shot Mahmoud to the front ah aaa }) Pitching — Gumbert, Giants, 5-0; |tical scores, 6-2. Dizzy Dean won the with Taj Akbar in close pursuit. Cet Schumacher, Giants, 5-1. opener for his seventh victory of the Sree eG ee 1) 19a ae season while Jim Winford held the He ! AMERICAN LEAGUE Pirates to two hits in the nightcap. te is 343 | Batting — Sullivan, Indians, 411; | First RHE hails Aound- t. Louis ... 3h, ee eee Se game— 5 Sp wis, Senators, 388. Pittsburgh ...... 002 000 000-2 7 0 Re is Tuesdar Runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 48; Geh-|s;, Louis 000 032 0lx—6 9 0 By EDDIE BRIETZ es Detroit 1 Ieago 9-9. ringer, Tigers, 40. E 3 ea Boston’ w Mork ds y ome, . Blanton, Bush and Paddon; J. Dean fa Washingion $; Philadelphia 2, Hits — Gehringer, Tigers, 61; Lewis, | and Ogrodowski. New York, May 27.—(P\—Lamming! #3 Mitenell, ¢ gud St. Louls 8; Cleveland 5, Senators, 59. Second game — RHE thing new for Tony}. Abbott, a ae oe Home runs—Foxx, Red Sox, 12; Tros-|pitichurgh ...... 000 000 200-2 2 2 "§ Hi AMERICAN Assoctarios ct,| “Ky. Indians, and Dickey, Yankees, (5; ‘ronis 010 000 50x—6 4 0 . Back in 1924 Tony ie halts y 12 i| each 9. Birkofer, Weaver, Brown and Todd; whanged out 60 to lead the Pacific! i . 4 13 Pitching—Grove, Red Sox. 7-1; Pear- ¥ s ‘ Dias tease. t ; Res 1 son, Yankees, 6-1. Winford and Davis, Ogrodowski. ag longest walk. (een ey Hoe | Loulsyitie. 22 6 d Phillies Triumph le one Johnny Torgerson, 1 1 1! Indianapoli 3 9 Twi Philadelphia—The Phillies inded Corridon, the Cub : = ae teuetnee i 2 Lea ers Suffer | Boston to a 7-2 defeat as Chuck E Klein coach, made from Pe oe acai? re Defeat in Northern got two hits to celebrate his return the coaching lines Py {Capitol Club 20 200 11 1-19 Renults Tuesday after three years with Chicago. to the dugout j Wilton 121 011 02 Diliwaliiee ity BG CE ARN t . &t. Paul, May 27.—(®)—Two second- | RHE}, after the Cards ; Nala er ep teeud division clubs rose up Tuesday to pol- {Boston ... 000 001 010-2 11 © had foiled him ‘ sas City 4. ish off the first and second place Philadelphia +++ 230 100 Olx—7 17 1 and Frankie De- ft -|*—____—__—_—; ——— | teams in the Northern League, and as} Benger, Smith and Lopez; Jorgens maree with the wid pitenes—cum-| | Kights Last Night | ‘/@ result the first three teams were in|and Grace. ancient hidden Kolpacott 2: hit DY | 4 _—_—__-———=—-- =e | Virtual tle for the leadership, RHE ball trick. . . In 5) 1eot i (By the Associated. Eau Claire walloped the Winnipeg Cubs Down Reds out of 54 rounds ae; if eae Press) Maroons, 16-4, and the last-place Su-/ Chicago—The Cubs bounced back of golf in various : ———— \ lew York—Mike Belloise, 127%, | perior club scored twice in the ninth |into the first division with a 10-4 vice tournaments last | FARMER TOBIN WINS | New York, and Dave Crowley, |to down Fargo-Moorhead, 7-6, tory over Cincinnati. winter, Henry Pi- Lazzeri | Minneapolis, May 6.—()—Farmer; 12734, England, drew (10); Nor- The Jamestown-Duluth contest) RHE card, favorite in the forthcoming Na- | Tobin, 255, Presque Isle, Maine, Mon-| ™an Snow, 137, England, out- | ended in a 11-11 ten-inning te when |Cincinnati .... 101 000 200-410 2 tional open, shot par or better. {day night tossed Karl Davis, 245,| Belnted Eddie McGeever, 137%, /darkness interfered, leaving James-|Chicago .. 007 020 O1x—10 15 0 A secretary works eight hours a|Columbus, O., in 22 minutes and 37| Scranton, Pa. (10). town and Winnipeg tied for second) tine, Brennan, Frey and Lombardi; day answering Joc Louis’ fan mail. . .|seconds of the main event on a wrest- Los Angeles—King Levinsky, | with 11 wins and 7 defeats, while the | wenshaw and Hartnett. i One guy wrote from Czechoslovakia |ling card. Caifson Johnson, 185, for-| 201, Chicago, stopped Pepe Del | Twins were in the lead with 10 wins asking Joe to send him transportation |mer University of Minnesota star,| Rio, 186, Mexico City (2). and six losses. Gumbert Checks D: to the Schmeling fight. . . Ray|won his second professional bout by| | Jersey City, N. J—Lou Lom- In a night game, the runiess relief| New York—Harry Gumbert held the Daughters, Washington A, C. swim-|pinning Bill Lutz, 195, Tulsa, Okla.,| bardl, 135, Jersey City, stopped | pitching of Rogalski enabled Wausau /Brooklyn Dodgers in check as the ming coach, in a current magazine |in four minutes, 12 seconds. ; Al Dunbar, 133, New York. to down Crookston 7-5. Giants won 7-3. RHE 000 000 012-3 7 1 article, details his campaigns with Helene Madison and Jack Medica, Brooklyn both of whom reached the top rung Om Boarding House With Major inane New York 103 200 Olx—7 14 3 of the championship ladder. . . Six Clark, Butcher, Baker and Phelps; Present and past ring champions will | C11 uma Ma Cf Jap YY Yy Wf. <r y Gumbert and Mancuso. see Primo Carnera and Leroy Haynes | y do tne stutt tonight at Ebbets Pleld. | YW 2 ITS JES AN OL’ SUST A MINUTE, aseball boys in Minnesota's ; / SON —~— — “Big House” haye gone modern. . .| Wi J [TIN BOX SOMEBODY sa ua WHY: double bill with Chicago, pounding They've given their club a trade name DONE THROWED OUT, Al sae out 12-9 win in the opener only to after reading about “Slim's Sluggers” y WHAT GOT BURIED ‘ be eneekes! by Merritt (Sugar) Cain, and “Burpee’s Bolognas” in the Com-/ ei -2, in the second. mercial league. . othe nine’s new BY DE UDDER TRASH- First game RHE wine is tbe main prison product. LAWSY, MISTAM MASAH JA Ke Detrolt....../ 298 500 Oox—12 16 1 Down in North Georgia they're YO PLANTS TATERS es EGAD!/ THESE aes Whitehead, Brown and Sewell, burned up because Easterners per- AN' YO DIGS UPA 5 ARE LEGAL Shea; Crowder, Kimsey and Coch- sist in pronouncing Johnny Mize's ou SUNK HEAP / Ay n rane. name “Mce-zayy.” That's all ‘ q DOCUMENTS! Second game— * RHE wrong. . . It’s Mize—just like pies. . . : cy CAESAR / Chicago . 000 005 103-9 15 0 Tommy Armour warmed up for the ' beyond e Detroit + 000 000 011-2 7 0 National open by shooting a 67, a new 4 » BE BURIED Cain and Sewell; Auker, Lawson and record, fOr the Bon-Air course at| . : f P TREASURE—~— * |Cochrane, Hayworth, Chicago... Lou Brix, manager of . —— = ~TeT Sixto Escobar, the bantamweight, is 4 $£206 SPUTT-T- if i jiaoad 1 Sosox Halt Yanks out of the hospital. : MY WORD, TLL Bonen ine oa Eps: poses out the Brooklyn fans are laughing off| ‘ S EXAMINE THEM league-leading New York Yankees, 5-4, alded by Jimmy Foxx’s .12th Chicago reports that “Lefty” O'Doul. folt FURTHER / homer of the year. the W. K. “man in the green suit,” now managing the San Francisco Seals, will manage the Dodgers next season. Harridge, Frick Say Pellet Is Unchanged New York, May 27.—(7)—Notwith- fengue ‘plot, shell-shocked ‘by the ell-shoc! yy the ee gccorded their pitchers, the in current use contains no sf Nene and no less—high . explosive ~ than it did last year. You can have this on the authority of the manufacturers as well as the big chiefs who autograph the horse- | hide , Will Harridge and Ford | Nats Are Victors Washington—The Senators banged out 13 hits to beat Philadelphia 8-2. phia .... 001 000 100-2 8 4 +++ 010 022 O3x—8 13 0 Turbeville and Moss; Whitehill and Bolton, Millies. Browns Trim Indians Cleveland—The St. Louis Browns jumped on three Indian pitchers for 1Y hits to win 8-5. RHE St. Louls + 200 000 114-8 11 1 Cleveland . Hogsett and Hemsley; Galehouse and Pytlak. win Bill From Bucs. Brewers Making Leaders Take Shellackings wl | Crack-Shot Officer Games Tuesday; Three- Way Inn Wins i__Is ‘Worst’ Golfer ——_—____—+ * Satomi, Fla.—Miamt’s policemen include one®of the best and one of the worst tournament golfers Shae’ sen | WINOVER YANKEES Tigers Split Doubleheader with! The COC team in the Commersial {League rose up to wallop Nash-Finch lin one of the three diamondball games played Tuesday night giving the Schlitz Beer crew, which trounced the; Shell Gas, the undisputed league lead. Scoring heavily in the late innings, the CCC aggregation handed the Nash-Finch crew a 31-18 shellacking. Schlitz batters paved the way for a 17-8 decision over Shell. third game the Three-Way Inn scored an 11-8 ver over the Bank of North Earl Christiansen won the an- nual police tourney with a 36-hole score of 146, four over par. P. H. Baldwin required 386 strokes—an average of nearly 11 a hole—to tour the same route. P, 8.—Baldwin is a crack shot on the police pistol team. Last Two Americans Lose at St. Andrews, 8t. Andrews, Scotland, beth 27.- ret CCC: \s) est with Krause|—-The British amateur golf cham- ye, See Weir Ok Ge pionship became a strictly domestic | “tr affair Wednesday as. the last two Bisbee survivors, Theodore Bassett f Rye, N. ¥., and Douglas Grant, a Sooner New Yorker living in England, passed from the tournament. Bassett was scratched from the list when he failed to appear on the tee for his third round match. Grant, who reached the semi-final: round of the championship 13 years ago, was eliminated by P. W. L. Ris- don, by the score of 6 and 5 in a thi A meeting of all players in the!round encounter. Bismarck Diamondball Association has been called in the World War| contenders, narrowly escaped down- Memorial building - tonight, immed-/ fall at the hands of 8. B. Roberts. iately at the conclusion of the games in the City League by Clement Kelley, chairman of the board of control. The Five pitchers were used during the for the CCC’s lacing out two home runs and Pistner, Busche, E, Strand and oe each hitting once for the Martin and Nelson each belted home runs to pace the Three-Way Inn team to victory over the Bank aggre- gation. Johnny Yeasley limited the losers to nine hits in the seven in- collected two doubles dur- ing the 11-hit bat attack. . Cyril Tolley, one of Britain's best | Roberts carried Tolley to the 19th hole before yielding. innings, Bradley struck out by Quine 0, be Pistner 0,) by Bradley 5, by Berg 0; bases on , off Pistner 1, off Bradley 6 off Berg 3. Umpire: Hum- mel, y ° | coonwootnoosy Bank of eee D. AB R . Sachedesncueladdusennnse balls off Quine g ° ; i bin pees 3 { Indianapolis cs 2m oom H. Anderson, rf 3 @l ospoauunwse a tt wl rwscsonmeanes Perea ered g ° | SwemHoonooy a Mosbrucker, c | mornin nme Three-Way Inn AB homers by Goose Goslin and Dixie Bs Christopher, rf 6 L. McCorrle, © 6 L. Cleveland, 1b 3 a] pnnowonccolt 2 eouowoconnel Hl srowenmons Ziowesseaee pumonensel’ . Spangler, if 5 net my eee tir nicer: emer S| es orntstsco mete: | mu monmmooom a! Hononnmontial coomnose e ns “Bank of North Dakota ° Kinzer, Quast; two base| Shell 16, Schlitz 12; stolen bases— , Schlitz 6; two base easley 2, Martin; three Quast; home runs—Martin, Nel- son; double or triple pla: to Froland to Benser; hits o! 9 in 7 innings; off Fisher 11 in 6 ee ings; struck out by Yeasley 1. Ted Moe and Henry Cook. Yeasley | base hits itadunes Yeasley | opher, McCorrie in 7 innings, off a ings; struck out by Watts 3, by Nel- ‘Umpires—-| bauer 4: bases on balls off ‘Watts 4, , oft aiheaer: 4. Umpire—H, E. Paul- Et The Bismarck Tribune Bible Distribution COUPON Two distinct styles of this wonderful Book of Books have been great newspaper Bible distribution. One ts the far-famed Red Letter Bible (Christ’s sayings printed in red for immediate {denttification), and the Plain Print Bible for those who can spare but a nominal sum. a Only Three Coupons Clip this coupon and two others and present or mail them to this paper with the sum set opposite either style, and come into pos- session of your Book of Books at once. faze a Arsioe Lattae Mibln. os- black leather cov- eds ee. tound corners, HE] opsescsco none ns eens a sot! ol coonsusomn J. Schlosser, 3b ima r aes aamanceoee errr. is Bihencnuuecen el nencucuceen, 5 5 B] wocceansnnll Bl enmandnamuny Sleeonsceress siScausnesnre we] pHnosce mall Left on base—CCC 7%, 3; two base hits—Myrhe, Lash 2, Geiss, Ouin, Bennett, Doyle 2, Busehe, home runs—Pistner, Busche, Strand, hits off Quine 10) in 6% innings, off Pistner 2 in % inn- Bradley 8 in 3 innings, Berg 4 in 1%,| Krause 2, Myrhe: . Send amount for Styl of these coupons, ing and insurance, additional for postage, STETSON HATS for Men at A Chanee for Every Reader to Get a New Bible Alex Rosen & Bro. OUT aT WAY MOSQUITOES, AND WORN, ir Mi apie AND UTOPIA 21996 BY WEA SERVICE, INC. AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit—The Tigers divided a Hand Saints 10th Straight Set- - back, 6-0; Kels Trounce Blues, 7-4 Chicago, May 27.—(?)—Manager Al Sothoron’s pre-season: prediction that. |the Milwaukee Brewers would be in {a tough assignment for every other club in the American Association is + {being borne out these days. | The Brewers handed St. Paul's {Saints their tenth straight defeat | Tuesday, 6-0, the shutout being the ‘ first the Saints have taken this sea- (son, Milwaukee produced an “un- known” on the mound, Allyn Johnson, {and the rookie won the first start he has made even though f, walked nine tand allowed as many hits. | In the first five innings 12 St. Paul jbatsmen died on the bases and the etd total was 15, a record for thar: Louisville beat Toledo a3 the secon’ time in as many days, 7: Columbus evened the aici with In- dianapolis by taking a 10-5 decision, Eddie Morgan’s homer driving ims. three runs for the Red Birds in a bie ‘seventh inning. | Minneapolis trounced Kansas city jin a night game, 7-4, although outhit. Kansas City collected 14 hits off Me~,, Kain and Tauscher, while the Millers got to Niggling and Moncriet for six { blows. Rookie Beats Saints | Milwaukee — Allyn Jopnson, rooé {southpaw making his first start, \hurled the Brewers to a 6-0 win over St. Paul. It was St. Paul's 10th straight loss. RHE St. Paul.. -.000 000 000— 0 8 2 innings; Milwaukee .....204 000 00x— 6 7 0 | Weinert, ‘Trow and Pasek; Johnset. and Brenzel. Red Birds Even Series Columbus— The Red Birds evenec. PE cd series with Indianapolis ‘ge at F/ 10-5 victory. RHE + 010 013 C00O— 5 11 1 Columbus ......200 001 34x—10 17 1 Tinnings, Gallivan, Sharp and Ria dle; Stout, Cox, Potter and Owen. , Colonels Win Louisville — The Colonels won from Toledo for the second time in 24 hours, 7-2, after a 14-2 decision Mon- day night. RHGS Toledo ...:.....100 000 010— 2 8 0 Louisville +200 022 10x— 716 2 Hare, Thomas and Garbark; Mar- {row and Thompson, Millers Thump Blues Kansas City — Minneapolis stopp:i the Blues’ winning streak in a night game 7-4, RHE Minneapolis ....000 120 301-7 6 3 Kansas City.....000 100 003— 414 3 McKain, Tauscher and George; Niggeling, Moncrief and Madjeski. MAREK MEETS ERJAVEC Chicago, May 27.—(?)—Max Marek, ;Chicago youth who beat Joe Louis in 5|the National A. A. U.- light heayy~ weight finals in 1932, opposes John’. Erjavec, Duluth heavyweight, in tie jp bout of a boxing show tonight. |The match is scheduled for 10 rounds. Style B—Piain Print Bible, Di- vinity Circuit Imp black’ seal grain textile leather cover, red edges, medium large ty strong and durable, thre coupons and only Plus 2c sal A or Style B, with nd include 13 cents By Williams BUTTERFLIES, Ue BEES/BIeDS AND FLOWERS- aig SUNLIT VALES é AND SHADY BOwERs! NATURE, HEED Not. fz], HUMAN SPECKS, y, WHOSE MINDS ARE | [ ALL BELOW THEIR i pi 4 ny fe : T.M_REG. U.S. Pat. OFF.

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