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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1986 Surprising Yankees Riding 2! Games Ahead in American REVIVED MURDERERS ROW HUMBLES BOSOX ND TIME IN SERIES) p Doubleheader Triumph \ Bees’ Ousts Giants From Tie in National Lead WEAVER CHECKS CARDINALS) Indians Gain Third Place When Tigers Bow to White Sox in Ninth (By the Associated Press) For a club that’s supposed to be} fimping with injuries, packed with doddering old men and due to blow sky-high before long, the revival of “murderers’ row” somehow doesn’t fit into the rest of the New York Yan- kee picture this season. The power they've shown since the start of the campaign, which has them riding two-and-a-half games in front of the American League pack as a result of their just-concluded “crucial” series with the Boston Red Sox, has the experts guessing—and wondering how long it can last. The series with the Sox, which they took two games to one by capturing Thursday's dizzy finale, 10-6, not only marked a continuance of the return of the batting heyday of Ruth and| company, but uncovered definite traces of brass on the Boston roster—particularly around the pitching department. For, of seven pitchers tossed in against the Yan- kee bats, only Wes Ferrell in the opening game was able to check the bombardment THURSDAY'S STARS 1 Joe Di Maggio and Pat Malone, Yankees — Joe's two singles and gold-plated |is reached the top of the backswing for) GREAT GOLF FULL HIP TURN GIVES GOLFER DISTANCE IN DRIVING By ART KRENZ 5 oe L£0 DIEGEL'S SWING IS \ SAID To BE ' UNORTHODOX, =~ HE EMPLOYS’ FUNDAMEN Tus NOTICE TE \ FINE ) HIP TORN, WITH THE x “) ONEA NEA Service Golf Writer Bobby Jones is a firm believer in a full hip turn. In this motion there a world of power. When Jones has the drive, his hips have turned until his back is presented to the hole. This is accomplished by a straight- ening of the right leg and a bend of the left knee, which has pulled the jleft heel from the ground. This hip turn is the secret to long driving, for no matter how supple the wrists are, without a full pivot only triple headed the attack as Ma- |{# limited amount of distance is ob- Jone pitched a 10-6 victory over Red Sox. Jim Weaver, Pirates — Limited Cardinals to four hits in Pitts- burgh’s 7-2 win Odel Hale, Indians—Hit homer with bases loaded in 6-5 triumph over Browns. Gabby Hartnett and Stan Hack, Cubs—Homer-hitters in big second inning outburst against Reds. | Ray Radcliff, White Sox — Had |! four hits out of five times up and i sent in two runs as Chicago won over Tigers. Danny MacFayden and Wally Berger, Bees — Former held New York helpless in opener, and Wally got four hits, including ninth- inning homer, in nightcap of dou- bleheader. Wally Moses, Athletics, and Jimmy DeShong, Senators — For- mer’s two extra base blows scored winning runs and gave A’s even break in doublheader as DeShong Pitched five-hit ball to win night- cap. Frenchy Bordagaray, Dodgers — His homer and two doubles and pair of great catches helped Dod- gers defeat Phills. While the Yanks their American New York neighbors, the Giants, lost their one-day option on the National League first place by bowing out to the Boston Bees in a doubleheader, ; 4-3 and 5-4. The Cardinals, although were stretching League lead, their losing out, 7-2, to Jim Weaver's tight pitching for the third-place Pitts- burgh Pirates, retained the lead ex-| clusively. Behind the leaders, the Cubs held fourth place by an 11-5 win over the Cincinnati Reds in a battle featured by two fist-throwing episodes at home plate, while the Dodgers climbed out! of the League cellar with a slugging 13-10 conquest in the Phillies’ ball park In the American League, meantime, the world’s champion Detroit Tigers sank into fourth place when the Chi- cago White Sox bunched four hits in the ninth for a 6-5 triumph; Cleve- land _took third with a 6-5 win over; the St, Louis Browns, chiefly on Odell | Hale's homer with the bases loaded, and the Athletics gained an even break with the Senators by taking the opener of a doubleheader, 4-3, before Cropping the nightcap, 5-0. NATIONAL LEAGUE Bees Cop Twin Bill New York — Boston jolted the) Giants into second place by taking both ends of a doubleheader, 4-3 and 5-4. First Game— RHE Boston .. 000 002 200— 412 1) New York 100 001 010— 3 9 1 MacFayden and Lopez; Schumach- er, Coffman and Mancuso, Second Game— RHE Boston ... -000 100 031-5 14 4 New York +102 000 001-4 7 0 Cantwell, Chaplin and Lewis; Lo- pez; Castleman, Gabler and Man- cuso. Cubs Trounce Reds Chicago—Four players and coaches were banished after a free - for - all brawl as Chicago defeated Cincin- nati, 11-5. Ordered from the field were Capt. Woody English and Coach Roy Johnson of the Cubs and Coach George Kelly and Pitcher Lee Stine of the Reds. RHE Cincinnati .....040 001 000— 5 6 1 Chicago . -073 010 00x—11 10 0 Hollings: , Hilcher, Stine, Frey and Lombardi; Warneke and Hart- nett. ‘Weaver Beats Cards 8t. Louis — Jim Weaver held the Cardinals to four hits as Pittsburgh RHE +400 110 100— 715 1 -000 100 001— 2 4 1 ‘Weaver and Padden; Walker, Hal- Jahan, Haines and Davis. jNew York tained. | Major League Leaders (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Terry, Giants, 431; Med- wick, Cardinals, .380. Runs — J. Martin, Cardinals, 37; Moore, Giants, and Cuyler, Reds, 34. Hits — Jordan, Bees, 61; Medwick, Cardinals, 15 Home runs—J Moore, Phillies; 9; Ott, Giants, 7. Pitching — Gumbert. Johnson, Phillies, 4-1. Giants, 5-0; AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Sullivan, Indians, .422; Rad- cliff, White Sox, .405. Runs — Gehrig, Yankees, ringer, Tigers, 41. | Hits — Gehringer, Tigers, 62; Lewis, Senators, 61. 50; Geh- Home runs — Foxx, Red Sox, 13; Trosky, Indians, 10. Pitching — Grove. Red Sox, Pearson, Yankees, 7-1. ning the first 4-3 in 10 innings only to be shut out 5-0 in the nightcap. First Game— RHE Philadelphia ..000 000 030 1— 4 6 3 Washington ..000 010 0110—3 7 0 (10 innings) Kelley and Hayes, Moss; Newsom, Russell and Bolton. Second Game— RH £E} Philadelphia ...000 000 000— 0 5 0 Washington 101 100 20x— 5 7 1 Wilshere, Turbeville and Hayes; DeShong and Millies. Yanks Trim Red Sox Boston—New York piled nine runs across in the seventh and eighth in- nings to win from Boston, 10-6. RHE 000 100 630—10 8 0 Boston . - 100 201 020— 6 13 2 Malone and Glenn; Ostermueller, Henry, Wilson and Berg. Tribe Takes Third Cleveland—The Indians vaulted in- to third place on a 6-5 victory over Pale Hose Triumph rell out of the box in the ninth in-| and “ jand an eight-run outburst in the ex- cee AB R OH E A. Myhre, Ib 4 0 0 3y L. Strand, ce .. 4 1 2 o| E. Busche, Boel st 2] «. Krause, Sue tat 0 . Quine, 3 0 9 0 Nara 250.3 0 | M. Fett ee cee 2 S$. Hettman, ss 3 0 4 F. Owin, rf... 30 20 1 ol V. Johnson, ef 3 1 1 0 fotels.... 31 7 8 7 Bank of N. D. AB OR H E Kwako, tb 3 0 1 1 Kinzer, a ny 2 A. Quast, 3 0 i) 0 & startin Peg 8 od 0 E. Fisher, 8, gloss: 1 L. Ryan, ¢ Boe one 1 J. Fekder, p 3 0 1 1 H. Lobach, ef.. 3 9 4 2 G. Smith, If 3 0 0 1 H. Anderson, rf 2. 0 1 9} aS =| Totals Doggone 9 Score by innings GOS: sax. O12 21 7 Bank of North Dakota 000 010 Left on base—CCC 2, CCC Team Pulls Up With Lead-; ers by Conquering Bank of North Dakota Nash-Finch, Schlitz Beer and CCC! softball teams were locked in a three- jway tie for the Commercial League leadership Friday as the result of softball games Thursday night. The Wholesalers, after absorbing a setback at the hands of the CCC Tuesday, recovered their winning stride and handed the Schlitz Beer its first defeat of the season, a 14-6 trouncing in eight innings. Behind the six-hit hurling of Quine, the CCC's kept pace by taking a 7-2 decision from the Bank of North Da- kota. Each of the three leaders have won three and lost one game in the two-week-old campaign. In the third Thursday game, the Three-Way Inn, although outhit 13-) 18, turned in a 14-10 victory over the Shell Gas crew. Timely hitting by Nelson, Benzer, Jordan, Morlan and Beaudoin paved the way for the Three-Way Inn triumph. Johnny Yeasley went the route for the win- ners although he was belted for 18 safe blows, including a homer by Wedge. R. Thomas led the 13-hit Nash- Finch attack which coupled with Berg’s seven-hit mound performance tra inning provided the victory in a nip-and-tuck struggle. Schlitz Beer knotted the score in the seventh but Paul Raduns weakened in the over- time period and before the onslaught was stopped eight runs crossed the plate. Scoring two runs each in the third and fifth innings and single tallies in the second, sixth and seventh, the CCC team set down the Bank club without trouble. Busche for the win- ners and Larry Ryan for the bank team belted home runs. Nash-Finch AB R H PO A E Hindemuth, ¢ 5 2 1 6 0 0 J. Schlosser, Sb 5 2 1 2 a 2 . Bradle: Ge 2 1 1 9 0 W. Bolsta Ib 5 2 2 4 0 0 R. Thomas, ss 4 2 3 2 0, 3 V. Bennett, r 4 1 0 2 0 Oo} J. dackwitz, If 4 9 1 5 0 0 A, Oman, rf 3 eh a 0 0 0 J. Doyle, rf t & & i ree Colvile, ie 1 2 1 1 2 Berg, p 4 2 1 1 0 or Totals .... 44 14 13 24 2 7 Schlitz Beer AB R H PO A E L, Cleveland, rf 1 ° e® 8 0 0 Het LO 00 AO) a 0 eB OU b4 1 0 2 4 0 © 0: O&O 8S 0 4 1 1 4 0 1 4 T © 3 0 1 R. Spangler, 4 1 2 3 0 0 Christopher, r 2 1 0 0 0 rf D. Jensen, r... 2 2 a 0 9 © Milter in... 3 8 1 A AR 2 J, Ashmore, ss 3 1 1 1 1 1 Totals .. 38 6 2 24 7 5 Score by innings: { 300 003 O8—14 + 000 122 10— 6] on 4, Schlitz 8; stolen bases—¥ . Raduns, Hindemuth, Bradl two base h M. Balzer, M three base _hits—Spangler, Thomas;.hits off Raduns 13 gs, off Berg 7 in § innings; struck out hy Raduns 5, by Berg 5; hases on balls off Raduns 1. Umpire Ted Moe. St. Louis. RHE St. Lous 000 004 O10— 5 9 1 Cleveland 010 100 40x— 6 8 3 Knott and Hemsley; Allen and. Sullivan. Detroit—Chicago pounded Vic Sor- | $ North Dakota 5; two base | M. Fettig, Anderson; three base Ryan, Ferder; home runs— Busche, Ryan; double or triple plays —Kinzer to Quast to Kwako; hits off 7 innings, off Ferder 8 in truck out by Quine 3, by bases on balls off Quine 0,| ning to win a 6-5 victory over the off Ferder 1. Umpire: Hummel. | Tigers. RHE | Chicago .. 900 002 004— 6 13 0 | Three-Way Inn AB RH PO AB! jDetroit ..... -100 000 040— 5 7 0) | Dhorberg. If. je ee eee Kennedy, Evans and Sewell; Sor-| N¢!som 2b -- Heroes 1 \rell, Kimsey, Sullivan and Cochrane.|Laverson, cf. 5 9 1 1 0 01 ‘Nash-Finch Trounces Schlitz, 14-6; Commerical Lead in Three-Way Tie [AA Leaders Face | ‘Crucial’ Series Brewers Cut Blues’ Lead to Half Game by Walloping Saints, 11-2 Chicago, May 29.—(®)—Two “also! rans” of the American Association’s 1935 season open a four-game series in Kansas City Friday which should ;Produce some of the most hotly-con- tested baseball of the circuit's cur- rent campaign. Kansas City, leading the Association parade, clashes with Milwaukee's Scrappy, improved Brewers, only a half-game behind the Blues. Last sea- son Kansas City finished third and Milwaukee sixth as Minneapolis won the flag, but the way the two clubs have been performing thus far this season indicates each has an excel- lent chance of taking the title. The Brewers Thursday unleashed an extra base hit barrage to whip St, Paul, 11-2, taking the series three games out of four. Thé Blues took a 6-2 beating from Minneapolis, enabling the Millers to break even in the four-game series. Nick Cullop and Jack Winsett, col- lected seven hits between them as Columbus defeated Indianapolis, 10-4. It was the Red Birds’ sixth win in their last eight games. Toledo salvaged one game out of four from Louisville, beating the Col- onels, 7-4. Brewers Wallop Saints Milwaukee—Milwaukee drew within half a game of the league-leading Kansas City Blues by beating St. Paul, 11-2, RHE St. Paul ....... 000 001 010— 2 9 1 Milwaukee « 413 101 10x—11 18 1 Rigney, Hutchinson and Pasek; Heving and Brenzel. Millers Halt Blues Kansas City—Minneapolis won the last game of its series with the Blues, 6-2, RHE Minneapolis .... 003 011 010—6 12 1 Kansas City .... 110 000 000—2 10° 1 Grabowski and George; Page, Vance and Madjeski. Red Birds Victors Columbus—Nick Cullop and Jack Winsett went on a slugging spree 28} Columbus defeated Indianapolis, 10-4. RHE Indianapolis .. 030 001 000— 5 5 1 Columbus ..... 002 010 34x—10 13 3 Page, Sharp, Trout and Riddle; Mc- Gee and Owen. Hens Down Colonels Louisville—Toledo ended the Col- onels’ winning streak at four games, with a 7-4 victory. RHE | Toledo ++ 006 010 000—7 11 0 Louisville . - 001 110 010—4 11 0 Cohen and Garbark; Holley, Bass, : | Terry, Southard and Thompson. = | Fights Last Night pce es sree cere | (By the Associated Press) Peoria, Ill.—Dave Barry, 129, Chicago, outpointed Armanda Sicilia, 128, Springfield, Ill., (10). Spokane, Wash.—Joe August, 135,, Idaho, knocked out Al Greco, 132, Hollywood, (2). Yeasley, p Benson, c .... Jordan, ss Morlan, 3b Beaudoin, Fox, rf oHwes 1b. mol Totals .... Shell Gas Cillen, 1b . Binlaeg te Watts, Carlisie, 2b Krankkala, Wedge, cf . Wenaas, ss Johnson, 3b Nachtrieb, If Byrne, ¢ ... aa per rf Leeuwen ek ob a | onumumvowes: a] noowoconent al oso-Hs al conneoseces © Totals 40 Score by innings Three-Way Inn : Shell Gas Summa .eft on base—Three- Way Inn 10, Shell Gas 11; two base hits—Beaudoin 2, Morlan, Yeasley, Benzer 2, Nelson, Watts, Nachtrieb; three base hits—Nelson; home runs— Wedge; double or triple plays—Mor- lan to Nelson, Nelson to Beaudoin; | hits off Yeasley 18 in 7 innings; off Watts 8 in 2 innings, off Finlayson 5 in 5 innings: struck out by Yeasley 2, by Watts 4, by Finlayson 1; bases on balls off Yeasley 1, off Watts 3, off | Finlayson 2. Umpire: T. KE. Paulson, Uf ms, MATTER? I Uc CAN'T TAG MASOR HOOPLE WANTS TO SEE Our Boarding House With Major Hoople LIKE THE CHAUFFEUR OF A ONE HORSE-POWER,IG96 MODEL~ STRUTS IN HIGH HAT AND CANE AND HAS AN ACRE OF SOUP SPOTS DOWN HIS VEST —~ INDICATES HE'S CLOSER TO YOU THAN TWO MISERS SCRAMBLING FOR A LOOSE DIME, AND SAYS HE GAVE YOU THE POUTIKAL NUDGE THAT HOISTED YOU UP THE POLE, LIKE A FLAGS Y Y Municipal Links Mashie Wielders to Have Hard Task Breaking Par in Invitational Event Mashie wielders will find many Furnishes Tough [DAVIS CUP ATTACK ON MAKO Tournament Test ,..., le Philadelphia, . Duluth . a ‘ably will find himself the most im-| nual 500-Mile Memorial | Superior’. 33 portant figure on the scene when the Day Chava datientewn Bema United States and Australian Davis y BaNth a, Paseo wnerieal LE: new and difficult holes to test their Cup tennis teams open their three- golf wizardry when they compete here | day series at the Germantown Cricket Saturday and Sunday in the match | Club Saturday. a AUSTRALIANS TO CONCENTRATE The Standings (By the Associated Press) NORTHERN feck Jamestown Fargo-Moo' Winnipes Kau Claire Spe ed Disciples tim Indianapolis |2¥>+Mile Oval Groomed for An- California Blond Expect- ed to Team With Don Budge in Doubles Wausau .. Crookston May 29.—(/)—Gene Mako, cocky California blond, prob- BOnS seat" by Winnipeg 9; Wausau 3. Eau Claire 11; Crookston 10. NATIONAL LEAGUE wb Indianapolis, 29.—(7)—Fast talk about race drivers, high speeds May play tournament, formally opening ie i aga Ad Le opeelae |ad “thrill wagons” flooded conversa- Pet. a » tions here Thursday as thousands of| St. Louis . 649 the new 18 holes at the Bismarck] this American zone final. y New York 632 Municipal course. Mako and his fellow Californian, |SPeedway disciples gathered at this) pittsburgh 543 Particularly hard pars are the|red-headed Don Budge, undoubtedly, Hatton’s race mecca for the 500-mile| Chicago ‘300 third, fifth, twelfth and fourteenth | will oppose Jack Crawford and Adrian |88soline Derby Saturday. Ciigiaisit Bi holes. The third and fourteenth are | Quist on Sunday, the scheduled date], Fans from every nook of the coun-| p06 iivn RH long par threes, each being well over|of the tandem battle. The lineups|'tyY Jammed every inch of space in| phitadelphia 1375 200 yards, while the fifth and twelfth | for the rival teams will be announced |the hotels, apartments and rooming} | Res are long par fives. officially late Friday. houses. Chicago ii A special merchandise prize will be} Knowing Budge’s proficiency with] Out at the 2% mile brick-asphalt! pittepurgh 7 awarded to any out-of-town entry in| the stringed weapon, Crawford and|0val, where a mob of 150,000 will yell] Brooklyn 13; ‘Philadelphia 10. the tournament who shoots par or| Quist naturally are expected to con-|Saturday, the serious work of brush- amikiGAN ERAGUR better over the new layout, members| centrate on Mako. ing, scrubbing and inspecting the = " ei: of the tournament committee an-|_ Indications were that Budge and track was in progress, New York 1875 nounced Friday. Hlmer Allison will be assigned the| The starting bomb will explode at| Boston . ‘610 Nine-hole qualifying rounds may} 80l0 roles. CUAL OL acts PN B® ‘s be shot any time Saturday or until|, The series will open Saturday with jroaring chase will continue until ap-| Gnicago |. ‘3e8 10:30 a. m., Sunday on either nine. \two singles. The doubles is down for | proximately 3 p. m. Washington . 512 Match play will start promptly at Sunday with the concluding singles} They will compete for $100,000 in eae . 1324 12:30 p. m., Sunday Monday. prize money. boerireduas or Merchandise prizes, valued at $150, " Paes nee A TEL DASE EE ee Philadelphia yn 3. will be awarded to the winners, run-| Alamo’s Strong Quint Ch N M " nd toy eae j Pitladetphia e hers-up and consolation winners in} A. ded M rams amp, New Mama; || Siveend osc retss, each flight of eight at the conclusion wari onog | ‘Can’t Play Golf’ | Chicago 6; Detroit 5. of the matches Sunday. Y Through the courtesy of several] Alamo, N. D., May 20.—(#)—Seven o ° AMERICAN —_— hie Bismarck firms, a Dutch lunch will; members of Alamo’s high schoo! green Oklahoma City, May 29—(P)}— | Kansas City . 13.658 be served to all participants at 6:30|wave basketball squad were awarded) Officials of the southern women’s | {inwaukes | 18 ($90 Pp. m,, in the new clubhouse. monograms at a celebration here for! golf tournament were wondering |§t. Paul 1 Among the state's leading cham- iseat work during the last basketball ess ee George Brantley, Loulsvilte 24 1415 ionship contenders who hav - (Season. jacksonville, Fla., was going to ‘columbus 24.429 Thed thls intentions Mt cuter! ihe Membes honored were Harold Bol-| defend her 1935 championship at Reet pO uu au i event are Billy Sundahl, present |8°, all-conference and all-district} the tournament here next week, . roan” 308 North Dakota champion; C. 8. Buck, |Center who claims the highest individ-| so they wired her. Milwaukee 11; Paul 2. Sundahy’s chief Jamestown rival; Dr. |Stangeby of New England; George Steinbruck, Mandan city champion; Neil Croonquist, Missouri Slope tit- list; Tom Lawless of Bismarck; John Rule of New Salem, and James Slat- tery of Bismarck. Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, May 29.—()—This cor- ner's four-star tip to Leroy Haynes’ managers is to keep the Philadelphia colored boy away from Joe Louis just as long as possible. . When Big Chief Sanooke, 340-pound Indian wrestler from North Carolina, is on the mat he looks like the Normandie flattened out. . . Dinty Dennis, Miami sports ed, is the first out-of-town arrival for the Schmeling-Louis shin- dig. . . Dinty was at the Carnera- Haynes thing the other night and camé out on top in an oral battle with one of the Greenpernt lads. Joe Louis, hoping to escape the auto- graph hounds, showed up at Ebbets Field wearing dark glasses, haw! The Indians again are bidding for Rollie Hemsley, star catcher of the Browns. Mike Jacobs is in the Hippo- drome and is the Garden wor- ried? . . . Mike celebrated by or- dering champagne for the boys and eight quarts went down the hatches, just like that, John Henry Lewis, who goes to the Post with Bob Godwin tonight, has agreed to meet Al Delaney of Buffalo here, June 8... If Carnera’s man- agers let him fight again they should be arrested. . . The old boy is as game as they come, but his heart is all he {lost through graduation. Coach Leon- Minneapolis 6; ‘eaneee City 2. Columbus 10; Indianapolis 5. Toledo 7; Louisville 4. ual scoring record in the state with a total of 292 points in 23 games; Clarence Sateren, all-star forward, with a total of 228 points; Lester Lohse, Herman Sogard, all-star guard; Or- ville Sateren, Douglas Arnold, and Kenneth Wecker. Bolgen, Sogard and Lohse will be Came the reply: “New mama. Can't play golf.” ard Bolgen who developed Alamo’s strong quint which scored an out- standing record of 25 consecutive vic- tories through the season, also leaves, to accept a similar position at Des ‘Lacs. Jamestown Assumes Northern Leadership St. Paul, May 29.—(?)}—Held to sev- en hits, Jamestown bunched its blows in the fifth and sixth innings to de- feat Superior, 5-4, and take the Northern League leadership. Fargo-Moorhead dropped a 14-4 decision to Duluth, and Friday was a half-game behind the other North Dakota entry in the league. Winnipeg pounded out seven rurs in the first inning in defeating Wau- ‘sau, 9-3, and was virtually tied with the Twins for second place. The Ma- roons have won one more and lost one more than Fargo-Moorhead. Eau Claire rallied for three runs to tie the score in the ninth on Majeski’s homer and then got another in the tenth to nose out Crookston, 11-10, in a night game. Cyril Tolley Beaten; Favorites Triumph 8t. Andrews, Scotland, May 29.—() —The two favorites, James Ferrier of Australia and Hector Thomson of Scotland, moved into the semi-final has left. . . Reynolds Smith, one of the best of the amateurs, tuned up for the National Open by winning the Dallas City championship. . . He shot four sensational birdies to win the last four holes and beat out Harry Todd, state champion. . . And talking about golf, Ralph Hoffman turned in five birdies and an eagle to burn up the Sequoyah course at Oakland, Calif., with a blistering 63, seven under par. While all this was going on, Johnny Fischer, American Walker cupper, was delivering a better- than-neat 67 over the Western Hills course at Cincinnati. Boston fans think the Bees are im- proved because Bill McKechnie has followed the old baseball rule of get- ting a strong line from catcher to centerfield. . . Al Lopez, behind the ‘bat; Tony Cuccinello at second and Wally Berger in center have had a lot to do with the good showing of the Bostons. . . Ray Bolger, the dancer, and other stage celebrities daily perch in the upper left field stands at the Polo Grounds and shower expensive perfectos on Jo Jo Moore. . . Jo Jo hasn’t errored on one of them, —_——__ Nationally-Known STETSON HATS for men, acid exclusively by Alex Rosen & Bro. —_—_—_—_—___—_—= HAY FEVER We Guarantee Relief Take treatment now before your hay fever starts. The John F. Class Vapo-Path 206 Main Avense PHONE 606 round of the British amateur golf championship Friday, but Cyril Tol- ley, long-hitting veteran, suffered’ elimination at the hands of G. Alec Hill. Thomson ousted Gordon Peters, 2 and 1, while Ferrier, who put out the last American survivor, Robert Sweeny, Thursday, eliminated Morton Dykes, 3 and 2. Tolley, former holder of the crown, lost a heart-! match to Hill at the 19th. The fourth semi-final berth went to Cecil Ewing, Irish star, who defeated D. H. R. Martin, 2 and 1. FRICK FINES FOUR New York, May 29.—(#)—Ford Frick, president of the National League, Fri- day fined Capt. Woody English of the “The neighbors have been too snooty to call on us, but “ their children are over here constantly.”- HORIZONTAL 1.4 Who ts the actress pictured here? (VE IAIM] ISIS| LIAM! S P 11 Insensibility. 13 Eagle's nest. 13 Rowan tree. 16 Constellation. 16 Expands. 18 Sailor. 19 Musical note. '20 Biscuit. 21 Measures of cloth. 23 Grief. 24 Wagers. 25 Valuable properties. 27 Hata. 29 Fear. 31 Above. 83 Auditory. SPECIAL | i=: Today - Friday - Saturday 36 Beant of burden. We Will 37 Auction. : 38 Every Z q \ ‘99 Exixts, Canada. 41 Gibbon, spectively, $50 each for their fight in Thursday's game at Chicago. The first of the Rockefellers, John Ptter, immigrated to America from Germany in 1723, 42 Postscript. , 43 Street. 44To help.. * 46 Roofs of mouths. a Dower — 32 Repeati: ; eA ak “35 To strike Don’t drive a dirty car. _ wt make it look new. on EL Come here for Sinclair H.C. Gas and Oils GRAND SERVICE GARAGE Across From Bank ef N. D. Phone 217 George Grasl, Mgr. 7. oe +