The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 2, 1936, Page 6

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‘PIGKED STARS WILL BATTLE FOR HONORS HERE THIS WEEK-END Outstanding Duels Expected to Develop in Running -and Field Events SEXTON IS INELIGIBLE THE BISMARCK TRIBU i, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1936 State Track Meet Attracts Outstanding Prep Athletes America’ s Davis Cup Team Bows. to Australians Bismarck Nine Crosses Bats With Detroit’s Colored Giants Tonight K. C.’s, WILL’S HOLD ONE, TWO PLACES IN DIAMONDBALL LOOP Gladstone Speedster to Test! Prowess Against Tros- seth, Neuenschwander North Dakota's outstanding prep cinder path athletes will converge on Bismarck this week-end to compete Friday and Saturday in the second annual state track and field meet, sanctioned by the high school league. Only winners of first and second places in qualified meets are eligible | to enter in the state event which will be run off at Hughes field with the preliminaries Friday afternoon and the finals Saturday. Fargo high school, without the serv- ices of Morrell Sexton, stellar hurdler and winner of at least two firsts in every meet he has entered this year, will be hard-pressed to retain the team title won at Grand Forks two weeks ago. Dickinson, Jamestown, Valley City and Bismarck are expected to provide the greatest competition for the Mid- gets with several outstanding duels developing in the running and field events, Sexton Ineligible Sexton became ineligible under the eight semester rule this week leaving the hurdles a wide open affair with; Pepple of Fessenden, Haium of Minot. | | Sizer of Ellendale and Ulland of Far- go favored in the highs and Pep- ple, Haium and Welch of Bismarck |} the ranking timber toppers in the lows. The high jump seems to be pretty much of a toss-up with Peterson of Bismarck, Sizer of Ellendale, Baker of Jamestown, Boe of Hannaford and Boyum of Harvey, all of whom have cleared the bar at 5 ft. 6 in. or bet- ter, as the ranking competitors. In the broad jump Miller of Mc- Kenry, Evans of Wimbledon, Neuen- schwander of Fessenden, Fuller of Fargo and Helbling of St. Mary's are figured to battle it out for the state honors. Walery of Gladstone will get his Capital Chevrolet Increases Third Place Margin by Downing Company A Knights of Columbus and O. H. Will teams held their relative positions in the City League and the Capital Chevrolet bettered its third-place margin over Company A in diamond- ball games played Monday night. | Adam Brown, although he was) nicked for nine safe hits, managed to keep the bingles well scattered and the K. C.'s belted out a 16-5 decision over the Copelin Motors with Joe; Meyers, Urban Hagen, William Ken- nedy and Doc Priske leading the 20- hit attack on Orrie Baldwin. | Pushing across five runs in the sev- | ff enth inning, the Nursery crew broke { a five-all deadlock and chalked up a} 10-7 triumph over the Paramount | Theatre team. Joe Zahn limited the, Paramount stickers to five safe blows | while his mates combined seven hits | off Charlie Berger with six Para-, mount errors to hang up the victory. Paced by Duane Davis, Emil Mar-! tin and Ollie Sorsdahl, the Capital | Chevrolet downed Company A, 11-3. The soldiers outhit the Chevrolet out- | fit, 10-8, but failed to deliver runs in the clutches. The box scores: AR Ro H FO A Flto build up Schmeling . . . Louis will + 3 3 2 0 ofbe there at 10 p. m. (E. D. T.) June ae 1 1 6118 with the usual dynamite in both re ae | 30 Ol fists, eae ee 6 9 1] Inhis playing di eel o © {manager of the Reds, was known as Bint 9 § ( (the best signal snatcher in the majors ps: Eee —- . -|..+. mow he is well on his way to be- Totals .... 38 18 19 21 1 1)Coming one of the smartest managers Copelin Motor AB R H PO A under the big tent... he has estab-) Baldwin, p.... 3 1 2 0 1 ©/lished a system of prizes and forfeits | Ma Penn shes ff | 2 $j fealculated to keep the Reds hustling | chneider. 2b-. 4 9 2 3 4 0}even more than they are wont to do} B. McCorrie,c 4 9 O98 “1 0 0 . for instance, if a pitcher sacrifices R. See Acc. laws ea , tla runner to second he collects an Engen ri----7 3 1 2 9 2 J lextra $2... but if the hurler fails to z -_ — -—}advance his man he is fined $2... Totals 30 18 11 6/if there is a runner on third base, be sore by innings By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, June 2.—(#)—Now that Lawson Little has turned pro, who is the longest driver in amateur golf? .+. Down at Durham, N. some he can ence. Please don't let those reports of ihow poorly Joe Louis is showing in! game of the current season’s series. his Lakewood workouts worry you There is definite fore two are out, and the hitter drives | Sports Round-Up c., they you'll have to go to beat Henry Clay Poe of the Duke univer- sity golf team... average around 240 yards when he gets down to business. ... Walter Hagen played with him and was amazed . . the kid is just 20 and getting better every day .. might mark | down his name for future refer- suspicion around W. 49th Street that Michael Strauss Jacobs has ordered his bally- hooers to “lie low” on Louis and try Twilight Game Called for 6:30 P. M. at Capital City Ball Park Victors in four of five starts this season, Bismarck’s national semi-pro champions will make their fourth home appearance of the current sea- son tonight when they clash with the Detroit Colored Giants. The game has been called for 6:30 Pp. m. at the Capital City ball park. Hilton Smith, who has recovered from the mild sun-stroke he suffered in Saturday's opening game, and Barney Morris, whose pair of two-hit week-end’s three triumphs over the All-Nations team, will probably divide the mound duties in tonight’s game. One of the most gratifying features of the opening home series was the errorless infielding of Al Leary, Harold Massmann, Steve Slefka and Joe Desiderato. Whether or not they can continue this remarkable perfor- mance against the hard-hitting Negro team remains to be seen. Mike Goetz, Red Haley and Jake ; Haggart will probably patrol the outer garden in tonight's game with Quincy Troupe doing the receiving. Sunday the Capital Citians appear again at home, opposing the highly- \regarded Valley City club in a rubber AA Sluggers Rap Out 94 Base Hits Brewers Retain Half Game Mar- gin Over Blues With 5-1 Win Over Kels Chicago, June 2—()—It may have | |been due to the brisk night air or; jsome other cause. but there were a lot Jof improved batting averages in the American Association Tuesday. In four games, three of them at night, Association sluggers hammered out 94 hits, good for 139 bases. The biggest showing was made at Indian- \apolis where the Toledo Hens whipped the Indians, 14-9. Toledo slammed pitching performances featured last! DEREAT VIRTUALLY FINISHES ALLISON'S | COMPETITIVE STAND Don Budge Achieves Meaning- less Three-Set Triumph Over Adrian Quist Philadelphia, June 2.—(4)—Another American Davis cup campaign was in the discard Tuesday with the prospect it will be many a moon before Uncle Sam's men in white recapture it. Everything turned black as far as 1936 is concerned Monday when Jack Crawford hung-a five-set defeat on Wilmer Allison, 4-6, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2, giving Australia the decisive third point in her American zone final against the United States. Australia’s margin of victory finally was 3 to 2 as Donald Budge achieved @ meaningless 6-2, 6-2, 6-4 victory ‘over Adrian Quist in the fifth and final encounter. The hot and cold performance Alli- son exhibited in both singles assign- ments, with Quist his ppponent the first day, virtually spelled his finish as an international cupster. Allison’s two defeats in the series revived the controversy in connection with his selection over Bryan (Bitsy) |Grant. Walter Merrill Hall, president of the U. S. Lawn Tennis association, and “Big Bill’ Tilden, who went through many a cup war, rushed to the defense of Captain Walter Pate’s selections. The closeness of the scores—all but one of the four important matches went five sets—‘justified Pate'’s selec- | tions,” said Hall. “It turned out as I figured it would,” Tilden said crisply. “We played the best men available. We'll never win the cup again unless we take young players and develop them, just as France did with Cochet and LaCoste; England with Perry and Austin, and Germany is doing with Von Cramm, Lund and Henkel. Germany will win the cup in the next couple of years.” Old Timer Will Win Open, Opines Smith Springfield, N. J., June 2—(®}— The old man from Carnoustie, 46- in Zone F inals, 3-2 Grove Giants Win, Lose Over Sunday Donnybrook Hands Penitentiary Nine Season's First De- feat, 3-2 Grove Giants, state penitentiary baseball team, split even in two games played over the week-end, defeating the LaMoure nine, 6-5, on Memorial Day and bowing to Donnybrook, 3-2, Sunday. Behind the effective hurling of In- man, visiting moundsman who gave up only nine hits and struck out 15, the Donnybrook team handed the prison nine its first defeat of the season. The score was deadlocked at one- all until the eighth inning when two hits by the visitors and three Grove Giant errors paved the way for the victory. Flanders limited the Donny- brook batters to five safe hits. Trailing 3-4 at the end of the fifth inning, the Giants rallied for three runs in the Memorial Day feature to edge out LaMoure, although the visitors almost tied the count in the eighth as they filled the bases on an error and two hits, that resulted in one run. L, Paulson, who relieved Frisby, al- lowed the Giants only one hit in the last three innings. Moore was hard hit but struck out 14 for the Giants. The box scores: Grove Giants Hubbard, 2b Slater, rf. Jerome, 3b Stoller, cf .. LeMay, Davidson Smith, ¢ Flanders, Brooks, it Moore, p .. ) z sonewssae leew 2| saacsssusuy 2esses+o00% a! csosHHusonmt Totals .... 3 3% LaMoure 4 Jackson, If Townsend, c Olatson, ss ... C, Paulson, 3b. Schmid, 2b ... L. Paulson, rf-p 3 Mitchell, rf Sowsone H. Smith, 3b | pa sscuseusy Oe lineeeon coer (a lisessoawaudi Pisasatsucunk «losscotwcnn 10 4 00x—6 010—5 Totals .... 41 Score by innings: Grove Giants ... LaMoure . ts . 109 001 yi Left on base—Giants 3, LaMoure 12; stolen bases—Hubbard, Jerome, Jackson, Townsend, C, Paul- son, Stoller 2, F. Johnson 2; sacrifices —Jerome; hits off Moore 11 in 9 inne 203 120 The Standings (By the Ansociated Presn) NORTHERN LEAGUE Bet Jamestown . 5 Fargo-Moorhead Eau Claire .. Basar berrrreier Tela 1 Winnipeg « 1 Wausau . eae] 480 Crookston eae 1409 Superior 9 1. 409 Duluth Cranes 1316 Results Mo Jamestown 15; Winnipes 3. Eau Claire 3; Duluth 2 Superior 13; Wausau 12. Fargo-Moorhead-Crookston, poned. NATIONAL PRAGUE St. Louis ... New York Pittsburgh Chicago . Boston Cincinnati . Brooklyn Philadelphia R Open date. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww L ot. New York ......0++ 13 8 Boston . ‘ 18 1 Cleveland . 17 5 Detroit .. 21 3 Washingto! 22 10 Chicago... 21 475 Philadelphia 27 325 St. Louis .. 5 30 286 Results Monday Open date. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww LP Milwaukee .. 15 Kansas City 15 Minneapolis . 19 St. Paul . 21 Columbus 26 Louisville 28 Indianapol 24 Toledo . 30 Results Monday Milwaukee 5; Minneapolis 1. Toledo 14; Indianapolis 9. Columbus ‘13; Louisville 1. Kansas City 14; St. Paul 1. Ohio, Notre Dame Favored in Track Team Championship in Central Intercollegiate May Be Four-Way Battle Scant Notice Paid Bucs One of 1936 Season Surprises Pirates Open Home Stand After Day of Idleness in Major League Parks (By the Associated Press) In a baseball season that already has proved rather remarkable in many ways—including the number of fans who have been drawn through the turnstiles by the uncertainties and general goofiness of the early sea- .|son contests—one of the minor sur- prises is the scant notice that gen- > lerally has been paid to the perform- ances of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Buccaneers, who open their second home stand against the Na- tional League's eastern clubs Tuesday following an afternoon on which no major league games were scheduled, are one of three clubs in their circuit with averages above the .500 mark. Against a seemingly mediocre aver- age of 21 wins and 20 losses must be checked the facts that: 1. Darrell (Cy) Blanton, the league’s most effective pitcher in his freshman year last sea- son, has been cuffed around with almost monotonous regularity; 2. Lloyd Waner suffered a serious illness just before the season opened and made an unusually quick recovery to get back into harness; 3. Floyd (Arky) ct. | Vaughan, the 1935 batting champion, 3 |has been hitting only about .270 thus far and Lloyd Waner, Woody Jensen and Bud Hafey are even further down 7 Jon the batting list. A large part of the Pirates’ success can be attributed to the fact that Big Jim Weaver, third man in the Bucco staff last year, has become the mound mainstay by recording six victories against two defeats this spring while Blanton has failed to pitch a complete game in 13 appearances on the mound and Bill Swift has finished only twice in 11 times out. With the aid of de- pendable relief flinging by Waite Hoyt and Guy Bush, Swift and Ralph Birkhover have managed to hold up their end, however. The first major league night game of the season scheduled tonight as the new east-west series opens. The Reds turn on their floodlights—brighter than ever—for a contest with the Phillies. The faltering Giants take on the Cubs; the Bees visit Pittsburgh first test against such stellar dash Mele posieas year-old Macdonald Smith, thinks an] ings, off Frisbey 5 in 6 innings, off] Milwaukee, June 2—(P)—A hot fight men as Trosseth of Hannaford, Neu- | ‘ Popelin qo tore ap er She Better dallas 8 in cash | Bolen, Traut and Logan for 16 hits,'old timer will win the national open) Paulson 1 in? innings; eis between Ohio State's brilliant in- |@d Brooklyn opens at St. Louis. In enschwander of Fesseden and Kjel-|copelin Motors’ i ins eae ee there are other | “hile Cohen, who coasted in behind|golf championship at Baltusrol this| Moore 14. by Frisbey 3. by Paulson 33 | dividuals and Notre Dame's balance|the American League the Yankees myr of Leeds, all of whom appear | win, Benzon, Mastel, Diebert vlangles of the bonus plan which {is batting support, gave the Indians | week and admits that when you talk|per's: wild pitcnes Moore 1, passed |for the team championship in the |test their bats against Chicago pitch- capable of breaking the existing rec- | Me¥ three hase hits i | Ghafliecee {see 40 alciles /13. about old timers in this game you|balls—Townsend 1. Umpires: Bond, | central intercollegiate track and field|ing. the Boston “Gold” Sox encounter ords in the 100 and 220 under favor-| "ie "nts Mevers: double or triple | . Milwaukee protected its half-gamejcan’t forget Macdonald Smith. Bell and Arnold. meet here Friday was predicted Tues- | Cleveland, winner of five straight at able conditions while in the 440 Welch| Rrcwn ® inf innings, sf Baldwin 20| Al Smith of the Giants, who used |™@rgin over Kansas City in the battle) He thinks an old man will win be- 3 _|day by Conrad M. Jennings, director | home; the Athletics, still experiment- “\. and Peterson of Bismarck, Fuller of|in 7 innings; struck out by Brown |to be a swell relief pitcher. but not | £0 first place by ee 12 ee ae the greens here are hard and/fToxe Giants AB R H FO A E lof the meet. ing beng ae Doi. face ind Tig- Fargo, Duck of Dickinson and Thorn-|*, bY Baldwin 0: bases on balls off | uch of a starter, sudd has begun | 5-1 victory over Minneapolis while | undulating. later. If-ss 1. ¢ 0 09 © o oj Rating his Marquette team no bet-|€rs while the mators meet the ton of Fessenden have all negotiavea| (2ii"'" % off Brown 3. Umpire: N. joe See ball games. ae Mancuso, |'2¢, Blues were trouncing St. Paul,| Mac is a little ashamed to admit it,|Jerome, a> . fe 9a o 9 {ter than fifth on its own track, Jen- | Browns. the distance in something under 55 |Giant catcher, explains the about- | 4-1. : jbut he says he’s playing better now ee inings said the championships may| |, ; i | Kansas City made nine of its 13 i ye Po Distance: mse Stren tes 7 ee -as follows: “He is learning to| 115" one inning. the third, to score Nitro" ares “han he did with Lg fd 2 ee andlane aie: BlGi een enna: Jimmies Lengthen : . . to s ickory. ee ee 1, 5 . ° In the gruelling half mile Welch. Fee nase ett tor the cighen sna (22 Tuns in its rout of the Saints. Wher he epeaks of the: oldstimers So, fa FP eena vavistonate wien Gann CAE First Place Lead Knable of Sanborn and Jamerson of | : 2 0 © O ninth. .. he isn't wearing himself out| Phil Page kept eight St. Paul hits’ he mentions Bobby Cruickshank first | P&*'4°° $ 1 1 31 1 11 pittsburgh is the dark horse. mee Fort Yates have broken the tape at eee es |in the ‘early innings |apart and missed a shutout when hisiand then Gene Sarazen, Walter Sion Pp * oo » § o|. The Marquette coach believes Ohio} st, Paul June 2—(P)—Jamestow: times under 2:10 min. while in the! ae ete a jown error helped the Saints to their| Hagen, and finally Tommy Armour.| | | 2 2 *) state can retain the championship it| siugged out 19 hits for a 15-3 win over longer distance Jamerson, Knable and| Heaney only, run in the ninth. | He doubts if any youngster will come 9 27 11 5jwon here last year by entering Jesse! winnipeg to increase its first- sae Bale of Langdon have made the best 200 0 | ena and CCC to With every member of the cast get-| through. R H PO A BlOwens in four events. The Buckeyes’ jicad Leiba Pons vege records. 0 oO 0: 8) Clash Here Toni ht. ting at least one hit, and Johnny Win-; | ® © 1 2 Ojrevised entry list showed the Negro| rut game Tuesda ern League bad Fandrick of Hazen, Baker of James- Re eh e BNW sett accounting for four. Columbus | ‘The largest pine mill in the world, | } 3} § 2 Q)star out of the low hurdies which Every Jamestown batter got at least town, Paul of Wilton, Carter of Valley | 7 ot | crashed out 19 hits in blistering Louis- jiocated at Lewiston, Idaho, cuts 400. 1 ¢ § § § would give Don Elser of Notre Dame! one hit, with Hellxon alanimin City, Murphy of Fargo, Pepple of| 4 PO AE! The Bismarck Junior Legion and ville, 13-1. in the only afternoon game.! 099 feet of lumber each eight-hour | 1 1 17 ® 0\a chance for first in that event. = “sg Hag cut Fessenden and Tangberg of Dickinson | 1 3 2 9 €CC teams will clash tonight in an | Brewers Take Lead | shift. c ® 2 1 1 |Jennings thinks Ohio State should sare ane ona ae aug three each. are the outstanding qualified men in 0 2 9 o|intra-city baseball league game at the’ Milwaukee—The Brewers held the) i 0 % 6 1 win the 100, 220, 880 and broad jump| ono wight hurling duel, Ted Frank Pie pois vault i 1 3 © 0| Twenty-first street diamond, Heague lead by defeating Minneapolis, |” ae ape Kinet Ff 8 $f land score heavily in the high jump. bested -Mike Sadan as Eau Claire: ds- Cysewski of Jamestown is the out- { 1 9 4), On the hill for the Legion will be |5- 1, in a night game. ean hits to easily uta over Louis-|5/ Johnson; ss 3 0 «9 «1 3 0| Wisconsin, like Notre Dame, has rae reaper ee held the javelin and shot put but will be|Flais, 1» 3 0 25 8 0 ox inneapolis .... 000 010 1 1 RHE) Totals «2... 38 7 \strong in the pole vault. Indiana's i hard-pressed to win the discus where| Y°!: 5* if f ff fithe CCC club has not been an- | Milwaukee 200 002 O1x—5 12 0, Columbus 421 020 302-18 19 6) SCFCGHY AIMS: 4 45 992 {power will depend on the number of Wausau rallied ioe five rans in tbe Spear of Dickinson, Herringer of| Bennet: eee oo eat ay | nounced. F Grabowski, Kolp and George; Hev-| Louisville 000 000 100— 1 7 0] Donnybrook 010 000 o20—3|men Coach E. C. Hayes can tear |e 3-19, th, but finally dropped Anamoose, Anderson of Devils Lake, tig aes es mon ot Punctlce tentative | ing and Brenzel. Fisher and Owen; Bass, Terry and| Summary: ‘Left on base—Giants 10;laway from final examinations at | nin hd ae decision to Superior in 10 in- Baker of Jamestown and Fandrick of} .Totals .... 2 ee ee Ce oe) | ¢ gion place Hens Wallop Tribe Rirghofer. i pee stolen sare EDDA | Bloominy mn. Don Lash, in the mile Se et cttn camer a Seer Hin BAe) Schneider behind the bat with Beall,! tndianapolis—Toledo walloped In- Blues Trounce Saints tom Busey, St King 2, Inmany Wenzel, |and ees ee ee vaich winds prevented playing of Anderson of Devils Lake, McGuiness! paramount Be * p00 302 4 pee Sinninghe, second base Gianapolis, 14-9, in a night game. aes City—Scoring 12 runs in c. King; ’s erifices—0. Felaner, M:|meyer, in the high hurdles, should earn 'go-Moorhead at Crookston and Be; f Bis: k, Val-|_s ary: base—O. vers, > 3 is R H Ejthe third inning, ‘ King, Bussy; two base its—Hub- | ‘ % ee re or ace ed Wile E Paramount % So stolen bases |stop; Dablen, left field; M. Entringer,'Toiedo ........ 005 112 113-14 16 2| night contest Hide ine aye tana bard, Bussy: ite off Flanders 5 in 8 5p. enAmApinan Ips Fare, - sennings ri Ss) ° i - ¢ Ings, of Inman 3. strucl yu! - Spear of Dickinson have all hurled| 7: S0rises. a: oes Paget ely Brownawell, or Mc- | Indianapolis 013 010 sae 9 13 5| RHE Flanders 10, by Inman 15, by Moore 2 Thirty-two schools have entered the |Chicago, Purdue, Minnesota, South- the discus out more than 110 feet) Junat; home 1 . Henn: hits off , . Cohen and Garbark; Bolen, Logan 'St. Paul ..... 00 0 000 001— 1 8 2] bases on balls off Moore 2, off Inman |meet. Among others expected to fig-|east Missouri Teachers, Nebraska while Bowers and Shafer of Bismarck| Berxer 7 in 7 s, off Zahn 5 in and Riddle. Kansas City 1012 000 10x—14 13 1)1:, wild pitches—Inman h ure in the scoring are Illinois, Drake |Teachers, Illinois Normal, TMlinois and Spear have propelled the javelin] 7,innin struck out’ by Berger, by | Eleven Brazilian states are active- | Red Birds Triumph Trow, Rigney, Weinert and Pasek; | Pitcher—Inman, by Flan 4 | with tional chi 7 ey a Te 4 Zahn; bases on balls off Berger 3, off} | as a * y. + | balls—Wenzel 2. Umpir with a national champion high jump- | Wesleyan, Iowa Teachers and several c upwards from 145 feet during early| Zann is ‘impine Sehunen ly engaged in production of natural} —CO’ us pounded out | Page and Madjeski. Arnold. cr; Ohio University, Iowa, Marquette, | others. meets. ‘ 5 : silk. fe 3 ' iy The relay event looms as another AB R H PO A E/—— ——— ——| wide open affair with Fargo, Bis-| }. ee Hae ee Oa mm marck, Valley City, Minot, Fessenden | {° ues Velde ee AE One and Dickinson as the strongest en- p Ta 4 \ i 3 2 4 STORIES IN e e 5 Beer, ss . 2 2 - — liei ef ia] STAMPS His pipe got a new lease ‘4 Koch, If-cf 3 uy 1 1 a 1 Baldwin Club Downs =| Seatley. ter 39 on ton ; 4 Swenson, cf... 1 9 0 09 9 By I. S. Klein Capitols, Turtle Lake|_,,,,,, gc ala OE e ‘otals ... SSO 4 win, N, Dy June 2—Baldwin's| Sy chevrolet AB ROH PO A E on joy! Baldwin, N. D., —] . Lee, Ups i lea strong baseball aggregation scored two | Kiesel, ss aes Oey Neer ea a) triumphs over the week-end, defeat-|F- lee, 3b Os OS ae ee Oe ing the Capitol club of Bismarck, 7-4|jmriin, sb’. a hoo es ee on Saturday and trouncing Turtle Davis, re 2) aly Fo" aa LUTHER BOESLIKESa straight-stem Lake, 22-8, Sunday. A. Dutt let the | Meinhover, p (ah nn ae Su ‘The one he’s loading up (left) is his fa Capitols down with four scattered hits | Ma"tin, of, Heap a Bud describes tone ae it to smoke ma in the Saturday game while L. Klein | Croonquist, 19 69 9 6 comforting: “After a few pipeloads of good set the Turtle Lake club down with —-—-—-—- — = old P. A., a pipe just gets a new lease on eight safe blows in the Sunday fea- TOUR = 3 20, AL 8.21 8 ie Prince Albert is the finest Dre whe box cores: Score by innings: joy. Prince is quality to- tea Be on po a a entice 2 ant 2-3 bacco I’ve ever run into.’’ P. A. smokes cool : BOM a cr 3 3s 0 | aucamsies bate on trees commany and sweet. Yet packs a world of flavor! i G. Becker, 2b-c 6 4 2 8 3 114A 7, Capital Chevrolet 5; stolen bases j MeCullougl, 3 § 2 3 1 3 2) —Beer, 2 bases in 4, Koch in 4, Bride F Beane Tb ban ota cig Beate Sedbtate int | [UATE in 1998, Charles, Darwin REE! 3 Longmuir, if-ss 6 1 3 1 2 11/6; home runs——Davis in 1; hits off} arrived at a group of islands e : B. Winmill, cf 5 1 2 1 9 0} Neibauer 8 in 6 innings, off Mein-; lying on the equator in the Pa- 20 PIPEFULS FREE IF NOT COM- S abn, B. . 4 H i - : hover 39 in 7; struck out by Neibauer| cific, where he found strange oe ee ea eae eae 6 by Meinhover 4: bases on fallatott birds and animals that helped PLETELY SATISFIED WITH P. A. Totals .... 54.19 22 31 in 5) "88e™ "| Riss forroulate hus. reveluleasty HE'S TELLING HIS FRIEND (above) a 9 22 2 5 eory of evolution, Here, amid to vantage of the Prince Albert ‘Turtl AB H R PO A E Smok pernetake | oe se ee ~ hundreds of craters and cold lava money-back offer. Budexplains: “The Hosaigg fo iraerant pipefals of t Wieble Sb-if-1b5 1 1 2 0 3 Fights Last Night | | 'ck.,he, found the huge tortoises fact that P. A. doesn’tbite the tongue AE yeu don’t find j 3 Mee 2 2 Rok flee | shila. “galapagos,” from which is a boon to a man like me who’ it the mellowest, tastiest pipe to- %/ f. 2 e islands got their name. bacco you ever smoked, return 4 ee (By the Associated Press) Today, these Galapagos Islands the y ipagos pocket tin with the rest of the he 00 oF a 0 Pittsburgh—Al Gainer, 172, New are the “world’s end” for scien- tobacco in it to us at time Bete pas 4 ; 4 , Hi Haven, Conn., outpointed Joe tists and adventurers. Arrivals within © month fi ei Mchaeur, p>. 1 20 0 1 6 (O it, 171, Cairo, Ga., (16). find there a fascination which a from this date, : a Sagilio, 142, led the Spaniards, who discov- we will refund full purchase arorelk i 8 8 24 6 9| Cicero, TL, outpointed Toots ered the group centuries ago, to peer plus ries Peunee. (Signed) ee a ae goog ng? Nace, (i), au en ape Enchanted eng Baldwin . 008 722 12x—22 tica, N. Y.—Bushy Graham, y, hardly a tortoise exists Ee Berneite ame 7 N fpsael sare - 120, Utica, stopped Orville Drouil- there, but many of these strange Be idwin ie AB u R Po A x lard, 132, Detroit, (7). old flayed may be found in . Stolz, i . zoos throughout the world. Owned e,. Weioken,: thi i 2 8 0 8]. Warren William ‘first attracted at-| by Ecuador, the islands originally Geet bts Tf P*Early in, hae, Boundoresved me er, 9 1 ly met kt 7 4 Seehn Rarzimeee, a ‘set of stampe’ for the, lalends. Lie eo igo ve it down since. Ths samme shawn: Bere pictures » Wi 38 8 8 8 Benen gh 6 18 1 8 A rec eel | ga a ce gi dpe de 8 che French, 20" 45 1 Oe 8 5 Cee ae eee eae THE NATIONAL JOY Bky, © 4 Morian, p :... 4 1 0 0 5 0 omenE x rai ae 3 = © 1908, @. J, Revaciée Teb. Coy oft m +» O81 fed oo 013 100

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