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Soe SOSMeayr mrt ORe Trem MASGHANY, HAL HALEY TAKE STAR ROLES DESPITE SETBACK) Capital Citians Outhit Eastern Rivals But Fail to Deliver in Pinches ‘RED’ BELTS TWO HOMERS Two-Run Rallies in Third and Fifth Innings Pave Way for Triumph Bismarck outhit Valley City 10-8 but failed to deliver in the pinches, and the absence of timely hits, coupled with some costly bobbles, lost the national semi-pro champions a 5-4 decision in the current most exciting ball! game, played be- fore approximately 800 booster day fans. The Capital Citians bowed only after putting up a stubborn battle and two of the local performers, Red Haley and Harold Massman, stole most of the individual glory from their conquerors. Haley found two of Lefty Foster's|::° balls exactly to his liking and slam- med both of them over the field fence, scoring two runs himself and driving in a third. He got a walk in one of his other two trips to the plate and had a big day in center- field with three putouts on high flies. Massman had six putouts and three assists at the keystone sack and raced way over behind first base to pick off two high flies to top off an otherwise brilliant fielding perform-} ance and nip a two-run rally by the visitors in the third inning. Barney Morris took the first five innings to get warmed up but was in- vincible from that point, allowing only one safe blow in the last four frames. He fanned eight and gave up only two walks. Draws First Blood Valley City drew first blood when Bill Morlan got on through a field- er’s choice in the first inning and scored on Steel Arm Davis’ two-bag- ger. They added two more runs in the third on singles by Catcher Wil- son and Davis and a double by Jus- tice but “Massmann’s great catch halted the rally with two Valley City men on the paths. They counted another pair in the fifth inning when Davis got on through a fielder’s choice and went to second on a passed ball. Justice flied out to Massmann but Schauer lined a hard drive to Steve Slefka and the}: - shortstop juggled it while Davis raced for home. Slefka rifled the ball to Troupe a8 Davis came sliding into the base and the impact knocked the ball out of ‘Troupe’s hands. Davis dislocated his right shoulder in the play and was removed from the game. Alfson fol- lowed with a two-bagger which scored Schauer with the visitor's last run. Tally in Second Bismarck got an unearned run in the second inning when Haley drew @ base on balls, advanced to second on Shortstop O'Rourke's fumble of Smith's roller, went to third as Leary was thrown out at first and came home on a fielder’s choice. After Troupe had walked in the fourth, Haley laced out the first of of his circuit clouts to count two runs and duplicated that performance in the eighth when he cracked out 2 first ball pitched to him by Fos- “imme never-say-die spirit was evident in the fifth, sixth and ninth innings with Bismarck getting a man to second each time. In the final frame Mike Goetz singled and went to second as Justice, who replaced Davis at first base, raced up to take Morris’ bunt while it was in the air but overthrew first base trying to catch Goetz. The strong wind car- ried Massmann’'s fly into deep left field way over to the centerfielder and he relayed the ball to second for a double putout to end the game. While he was nicked for 10 safe hits, two of them home runs, Foster pitched a good game and bore down hard in the tight spots. His easy left- arm delivery was deceptive through ut and he was particularly effective going got tough. ler won the $100 booster prize given away to the the lucky number in the the end of the Enon oeDy Bivcncossney spinced ‘Davia bs lace avis in sep yes Maarnann. 2b Desiderato, 3b Troupe, c - Haley, of - wlocooommsequal se2ononHvogy Fa Loner conm | scooter ent sl Sonmoo tay S| pomnnaaawedg S 102 920 010 «200 eft on base—Valley Blamarck 5; stolen bases-— hits—Davis, Jui me runs—Haley ages? to Mass- Schauer to O'Rourke: Spite off Foster 10 in 9 in- in, Morris 8 in 9 inning: strus Peg by Foster 5, by Morris 8; bases on pas off Foster 2, off Morris passed ball: ‘roupe. Umpires: Cayou, Louis Leniburg. Biumarck City 9, Troupe; two base tise, Alfson; hom: adabie mors ' ' | Record didn't put out an extra, we) season's}. + + right); THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1936 Dickinson’s Well-Balanced Squad Annexes State Track Championship Vaughan Hits Safely in 19th Straight Game As Pirates Down Phillies, 6-2) Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ, Win, 6-3; Yanks Beat Tribe ! in 16th Inning New York, June 8.—(#)—Was that | Tony Manero hot, or was he Just | torrid? . . . If the Greensboro (N. C.) | (By the Associated Press) Take it direct from Arky Vaughan, don’t know Mr. jthe National League batting Houston Lawing, . }won't be given up without a fight. its energetic sports Sree i editor ... what a finish! . for a time it looked like they'd have to call for one of those camera-eye pic- tures, so popular at the race tracks, to decide the open It's an Italian k-work these days. Slow to start, four’ weeks, has piled up 38 percent- | age points in less than 21 days, and is ‘now batting just a shade under the 300 mark. Of course, that’s still far off the 385 Dizzy Humbles Giants in 11th crown Vaughan has come} along fast at the plate in the last ‘Robinson Nine, 11-4 5 Up Victory for Peniten- tiary Club The heavy-hitter of the Pittsburgh “ is making that much clear by | : hind the seven-hit pitching of Moore. Robinson led off with two runs in the initial inning but the Giants counted four in the second to go ‘ahead. Again in the fifth Robinson \scored a pair of runs to knot the ‘Grove Giants Trim! SPEAR, CYSEWSKI Louisville Playing Grimes’ Grew Takes Bo Takes Both Ends SCORING LAURELS of Doubleheader From Leading Brewers Walery and Trosseth Split TIEFOR INDIVIDUAL ‘Giant Killer’ Role | Chicago, June 8.—(P)—If there's a Five-Run Rally in Eighth Sews' Grove Giants, penitentiary baseball | team, won an easy 11-4 victory over; 2 the Robinson nine here Sunday be-! Dash Honors; Burns Wins Distance Events North Dakota high school league. | Bill Spear with firsts in the discus; he set a new state record of 177 feet; high jump and Donald Duck with a Scoring heavily in the field events, Coach Charles Denton’s well-balanced Dickinson Midgets won the state track championship here Saturday, counting ‘29% points in the fourth annual track and field meet, sanctioned by the and javelin, the latter event in which/ Lawrence Tanberg with first in the! jmark he posted last year to win the| But eee his steady, unin- INDAY’S STARS George Selkirk, Yanks: Hit homer in 16th inning to defeat In- dians 5-4. year, all right... first Mussolini, then Crosetti, Lazzeri and Di- Maggio and now { Manero ... too bad the wrasslin’; Garibaldi boys can’t get going ... Tony Manero ? up count at four-all. After pushing across single runs in the sixth and seventh, rallied for five in the eighth to sew! Wick, Robinson! moundsman, was nine safe blows and issued six walks, the same number the decision. the Giants surprise victory in the 440 provided! point margin. Jamestown placed second with 151% Bismarck was fourth with 14. Fargo, winner of the other recognized state the team champions with the wi ‘inning | points, Minot was third with 15 and| “giant killer's” role to be filled in the American Association this season Bur- leigh Grimes and his Louisville Col- aan already have some claim to the job. Grimes, serving his first year as an Association pilot, is fulfilling a pre- season prediction that he’d have a club that would be no team’s setup. Sunday the Colonels took both ends of a double bill from the circuit lead- ‘ing Milwaukee Brewers, 7-6 and 4-0, to win the series three games to one. Close on the Brewers’ heels, Kan- sas City split with Indianapolis, the Blues winning the second game, 8-2, after the dropping the first to the! Indians, 5-3. St. Paul beat Columbus 5-1 in the {opener of a doubleheader and then jlost the night cap, 6-5. Ira Hutchin- ison held the Birds to seven hits to! win for the Saints, while Ed Morgan’s homer with one on, tying the score Primo Carnera is about the oriy;| Dizzy Dean, Cardinals: With Roman who isn’t hitting on all six|| Cy two days’ rest, he pitched but as Primo wired Tl Duce after || ‘lght-hit ball to defeat Giants 6-3. ihe Max Baer fight, “you can't win|| Harland Clift, Browns: His hom- championships on one leg.” . . . Primo! | €" Pul, Browns ahead in 9-5 victory is in Columbus hospital here with aj} Over Athletics. . paralyzed left prop. || Hal Lee, Bees: Had two doubles }| and a triple, batting in five runs in 8-3 to win over Reds. Bill Swift, Pirates: Limited Phil- lies to seven hits for 6+2 triumph. Mike Kreevich, White Sox: Hit homer with bases loaded as Red Sox's five-game winning streak ended in 13-5 defeat. Curt Davis, Cubs: Shut out | Dodgers in seven of nine innings | to chalk up 4-3 win. Roxie Lawson, Tigers: His ninth | inning relief pitching quelled Sen- ators’ rally as Tigers won 10-8. And while you're giving three lusty | ones for Manero, you might add a couple for Harry Cooper . . . now you! know why they call him the greatest ; runner-up in golf ... more times than you can count he's been in the} anteroom to fame only to have some- | one beat him to the rap on the big! door ... but what are you going to! do when a guy comes along with a 67? ; You can’t meet competition like that. . the 284 “light horse Harry” turn- granted by Moore. Stoller, center fielder, with a double and two singles in four times at bat and Smith with two for three led the winners at the plate. The box score: Grove Giants AB H PO A Hubbard, If .. 5 Johnson, aiuto Smith,'e ... Moore, p .. puwenssHS | sooshonostl Totals .... Robinson seth, cf , Dobbart, Wayne, Cameron, Ww sosuane ed in shaved by two strokes a 20- year record—for :econd money! .. .j one of these days this grand Chicago golfer is going to get that long-over- due break. terrupted rise since mid-May, while off sharply, now that the heat is on. jConsider, also, that he has been hit- vt rts: 1 Other week-end sports: Joe Di-iting better than 385. since Toe went hitless for the first time! June 1 n 19 games the coast papers| vaug} ighan hit in his 19th straight which follow Joe’s big league progress}! i with eight-column banne~s must have] in tive times up Peet neste sing te been draped in mourning Sunday. . .! Bucs collected 18 hits and clubbed the Brevity muffed another chance in the | autiilea: 6-2, $29,600 Belmont stakes and must bel” “The victory left the Pirates just written off as the most over-rated} * jone percentage point off third place eee eee lin the National League standings, Jimmy Braddock wasn’t kidding | isince the Chicago Cubs nosed out the when he said he had started training | Dodgers, 4-3, behind Curt Davis’ tight for Louis or Schmeling in September pitching to maintain their advant- . Manager Joe Gould is i jase. ada Monday looking over training Cards Hold Lead camp sites .. . probably will close for| The Cardinals continued to lead either Alexandria Bay, Ont., or Clay-'the pack, downing the second place: ton, N. Y., in the Thousand Island’ New oYrk Giants, 6-3, as Dizzy Dean,j district ... Jack Bell, Miami News; |the top big-league pitcher, chalked Tom Laird, San Francisco News, and! {uP his 11th win, taking the mound} “Sec” Taylor, Des Moines Register,' with only 48 hours rest. are the latest out-of-town sports-! The New York Yankees, meantime, writing arrivais for the Schmeling-' pulled their American League lead out Louis affair. jof the fire and stretched it to 2% :games by outlasting the Cleveland | |Indians 5-4 in a 16-inning struggle, | Iwhile the second place Boston Red | |Sox were losing their jinx hold on | the Chicago White Sox and were get- |. jting snowed under a 16-hit attack, Major League Leaders (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Terry, Giants, 400 8, Mar-;Stteak. tin, Cardinals, | The Detroit Tigers Runs—J. | | e Martin, Vaughan, Pirates, 43. the Senators’ closing rally, through Hits—Jordan, Bees, 75; Moore, Giants, |the able relief pitching of Roxie Law- 73. A son in the ninth, to win, 10-8. Home tome Giants, 11; J. Moore, The Bosten Bees threw off the as- Phillies, sault of the Cincinnati Reds on the aan Sa Dean Carina’, 11-2; |National League's fifth place by com- Hollingsworth, Reds, 7-2. “Cardinals, 45; | [while the St. Louis Browns downea AMERICAN LEAGUE 9-5, to move within & Batting—Sullivan, Indians 492; same of sending Connie Mack's crew Radcliff, White Sox, .371 ‘into the American League cellar. Runs--Gehrig, Yankees, 59; Gehrin-} NATIONAL LEAGUE ger, Tigers, 49. Dean Bests Giants Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, Yankees, 68. Home runs—Foxx, Red Sox, 13; Tros-; ky, Indians, 12. Pitching—Grove, Red Sox, 8-1; mez, 6-1. { TA; Gebriss ew York « ‘St. Louis ... Schumacher, Fitzsimmons and Dan- Go- {ning; J, Dean and Ogrodowski, ! Cubs Win 4th Straight +++ 600 210 000-3 8 1 |Brooklyn .. Chicago ... Baker O'Dea. + 000 012 000-3 9 LEGION TILT POSTPONED Rain forced the postponement Sun-| day of the game between the Amer- ican Legion junior teams of Bi: | marck and Minot to have been play’ ed! j at the Magic City. |Boston dod Gott and Berres; Davis and Bees Trounce Reds most of the leaders have been falling; | before : |13-5, to end their five game winning replaced the Indians in third place by staving off ‘ling through with an 8-3 triumph, RHE! . 100 101 30x—6 12 1 RHE 2 “160 002 001-4 9 11 > Sl mosnacnasy El esses 35 \Gi j . 040 001 rt, V Hubbard, Joh son, LeMa struck out by 3 by Wick 93 n balls off Moore 6, off Wick ere pitches—Moore 1; hit by cher—Davidson by Wick.’ Umpires “Bell and Arnold, ve Cincinnati 001 002 000—3 14 1 McFayden and Lopez; Hallahan, Frey and Lombardi. Bucs Trim Phillies Philadelphia . Pittsburgh E. Moore, Sy. Johnson, Passeau and ,Grace; Swift and Todd. AMERICAN LEAGUE Yanks Win in 16th | Cleveland 000 310 000 000 000 ot 0 ee York 002 600 200 000 000 1-5 12 1 (16 innings) Hildebrand and Sullivan; Ruffing and Jorgens, Glenn. Browns Triumph 000 001 001-2 7 1 Philadelphia ; Tietje and Hemsley; Hayes, Rhodes and Tigers Defeat Nats Detroit Washington Crowder, Reiber; Bolton. Pale Hose Victors Sullivan, Lawson and Newsom, Weaver, Linke and Chicago . Boston .. i Lyon and Sewell; W. Ferrell, Cas- ‘carella and R. Ferrell, Dickey. YANKTON GETS RELICS - Oakes, N. D., June 8.—(#)—The have been removed to Yankton, 8. D. jubilee which opened Sunday. Women have neglected to learn the {scores of 47-41—88 to win the 18- RHE 402 000 OOx—6 18 3 RHE 001 030 104-9 8 2 . 000 040 001-5 8 2 RHE . 303 020 020—10 14 0 000 110 303— 8 13 3! RHE . 320 004 130-13 16 0 . 302 000 000— 5 12 2 Dakota Central Telephone company’s display of relics shipped tq Oakes by |the New Jersey Bell Telephone Co., *|yards from the finish. for the Dakota Territory diamona t 5 aa : feat: Cee ee ee ag aay eT aReTES eighth, was a feature of the Other schools winning points were: ; Columbus victory. Buffalo Springs 10; Wimbledon 9; Minneapolis, defending champion, Hazen 8'5; Hannaford and Glad-; | took both ends of a double bill with stone 8 each; Ellendale 715; Wilton | the lowly Toledo Mudhens. The Kels 5: Williston 4; Sanborn, Kenmare,|Won the opener 10-3, with Walter St. Mary's of Bismarck and Napoleon,| Tauscher allowing the Hens 10 hits 3 apiece; Langdon 2; and Upham and | but pitching ffectively in the! Minot College high, 1 each. Fort! | pinches, The Hens outhit the Millers Yates, Zceland, Mohall, Sykeston and , ine to eight in the second game but Turtle Lake failed to place. jwere beaten 3-2. Records Withstand Assault | Steel Kels Win Two All slate records, including the new si tandards in the 100-yard dash and|Minneapolis .. 035 100 001—10 14 0 javelin set in Friday’s preliminar-; Toledo ........ 000 010 020— 3 10 0; ies, withstood assault during the finals! Tauscher and George; Flowers, Ul- Saturday afternoon. Trophies and/tich, Thomas, Fritz and Linton. individual medals were presented dur-| Second RHE; ing a banquet in the evening. Minneapolis ... 000 002 100-3 8 i Jamestown’s doubles team of Nash-| Toledo .... 100 000 010-2 9 0 {vold and Joyce won the title in the! McKain and George; Sullivan, tennis tournament, conquering Bob | Hare, A. Cohen and Garbark, | Kling and Bob Brandenburg of Bis- | Blues, Indians Split marck, 6-4, 7-5, 4-6 and 6-4, in the| First | finals, but the singles championship | Kansas City ...+020 000 010—3 10 0 'between Kling and Nashvold was /| Indianapolis 200 110 Olx—5 9 1 halted by rain with the sets standing | Wyatt and Madjeski; Tinning and at two-ail. | Riddle. Art Perkner of Valley City posted; Second RHE sss 111 030 20-8 14 0 Kansas City Indianapolis .... 010 000 01—2 7 3 RH E| RHE hole medal play golf tournament held in conjunction with the track meet. (Called end 8th; 6 o’clock law). | Spear’s performance in winning the! Niggeling and_ Madjeski; Trout,/ javelin with a record-breaking toss|Sharp, Gallivan, Payne and Crandall. and then annexing first in the discus Colonels Win Twin Bill and fourth in the shot put enabled] First P RH E| him to tie Gerald Cysewski of James- | Milwaukee 000 012 030—6 10 0 town for individual scoring honors. | Louisville 110 301 10x—7 14 2 ;Each garnered 11 points. Cysewski; Hamlin, , Braxton and Brenzel; ‘took first in the shot with a toss of|Lamaster, Tising and Thompson. 48 ft, 11 in. and seconds in the discus | Second RHE and the javelin. Milwaukee ..... 000 000 000—0 5 0 Burns Wins Distance Events | Louisville 002 000 02x—4 7 1 Allen Burns of Buffalo Springs con-| Johnson and ‘Detore; Shaffer and tributed two of the meet’s sensational | Thompson. | {performances when he outran Clif- Saints, Red Birds Divide | jton Knable of Sanborn in the final) First RH E! pee to win the mile run in 4 min.|St. Paul .. 000 310 100—5 10 0 (49.4 sec, and later nosed out John | Columbus 000 100 000-1 7 2 | Five-Under-Par i : rounds played during the three-day, | | Cincinnat | Brooklyn Be | Philadelphia. [TWO RECORD HOLDERS WATCH — STATE MEET WITH INTEREST Feiler, Distance Champion, ana | Landgren, Pole Vaulter, View Events Two former record holders were in- terested spectators during the fourth annual running of the North Dakota | high school track and field meet here Friday and Saturday. Landgren of Underwood, who holds the state record in the pole vault, watched ‘closely while his McLean | county contemporary, Herbert Paul of; Wilton, made three unsuccessful at- tempts to beat Landgren’s record of 12 ft, 3% in. The other record-holder was dim- inutive and modest Bill Feiler, former Dickinson and Gladstone track star, who holds both the half mile and! mile marks. Feiler stopped off here Friday on, jhis way home after completing his | tirst year at Drake university where he made an enviable record in track | aoa and scholastic activities, and took in! thon at Sioux City, Ia., last fall, run- both the preliminaries and the finals| ning the course in 25:13.2. Acting of the state event. | on the advice of his coach, Feiler gave Running in seven major events dur-| up, for the time being, his aspira- ing the Drake track season, Feiler | tions to compete in the Olympic try- set six new records in the Drake in-/ outs at Milwaukee. door freshman two-mile; outdoor! His performances as a freshman freshman two-mile; one mile; Has-|stamp him as one of the outstand- tings relay, two miles; Simpson col-| ing Drake university track athletes lege one-mile and the Simpson col-| in recent years and he will undoubt- lege two mile. | edly be one of the strongest members He wound up a brilliant season by|of the varsity squad when school collecting a double victory and two| opens next fall. new marks in the Simpson college| Feiler not only broke records on meet, running the mile in 4:31 min.| the cinder path but he “cracked” the to clip seven seconds fromthe former! books as attested to by his marks. He and half an hour later returned to| wrote his final examinations with the track to take the two-mile event| every mark above 90. Next year he in 10:03.4. | will be a sophomore in the college of By beating two of Drake's varsity] commerce and finance. He is the son performers, Bill won the AAU mara-! of Mrs. Mary Feiler of Gladstone. William Feiler |’Peggers Take League Manero’s 282 shaved four strokes! Lead From Jamestown from the previous American record of| gt. Paul, June 8—(#)—Winnipeg's 286 set by Chick Evans in 1916 and | 3.1 victory over Crookston gave the. matched 16 years later by Sarazen. | Maroons the Northern League leader- Clarence Clark, Bloomfield, N. J..| ship Monday by a half game margin took third with an aggregate of 287 | over Jamestown. while MacDonald Smith, the auld’ frrors gave the Canadian team its Scot, matched par of 288 for the four victory as it got only three hits off rounds to win fourth money. the pitching of Penner and Knoll. Jamesiown split a twin bill with The Standings |ning the first 11-7 and the Twins ‘taking the night cap, 5 to 2. (By the Associated P: NORTHERN nose 72-hole medal test, par was equalled | or broken 62 times. Eau Claire scored two runs in the {11th to nose out Wausau, 10-9, and |go into third place ahead of Fargo- , Moorhead. |. Duluth took both ends of a twin , bill from its nearest rival, Superior, |9-4 and 6-4. Pet. | au Relief and WPA checks have put the vagrant ‘out of business.—William McNair, mayor of Pittsburgh. Winnipeg Jamestown Eau Claire .... Fargo-Moorhead Duluth . Wausau Superior . Crookston po ___? Don’t Pick Out a Printer Blindfolded th} - + Get the One Who Can Help You SELL Your Goods We have the ability to help you sell your goods and we can do this at a reasonable cost to you. Economy and standard- ization are the watchwords i 17 18 Rol i 13 1 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis . New York Chicago Pittsburg! Boston New York Boston Detroit . Cleveland oe Washington .. Chicago .. | Philadelphia * St. Louls .. AMERI Milwaukee ... Kansas City Minneapolis St. Paul . Columbus Indianapoli: Louisville Grenz of Napoleon in a spectacular! Hutchinson and Fenner; Fisher, | duel at the finish of the half mile.| Pitter, Ryba and Chervinko, Clark. |Grenz made a great bid to win the| Secend RHE shorter distance event and was/St. Paul ... 210 000 011-5 9 1! scarcely an inch behind the Buffalo|Columbus . 000 100 122-6 8 2) Springs lad at the finish. Rigney, Lisenbee and Pasek; Cooper, Burns was third in the individual! Macon and Chervinko, Clark. scoring column with 10 points; Evans pa ae eisene of Wimbledon had 9; Fandrick of} Hazen and Tanberg of Dickinson, each | Manero Cops U. S. 812, and Walery ‘of Gladstone and| Trosseth of Hannaford, 8 each. i "Joe Walery, wito Friday had set a| Open Tournament! new state record of 10 sec. flat in the | i 100-yard dash, nosed out Lloyd Tros- —oeintceneenieesiariice i seth of Hannaford in the century, but Final Round | jbowed to the smooth-running eas- ; terner in the finals of 220. Walery’s| Nips Luckless Harry Coop- time in the century was 10.1 and * Trosseth was clocked at 23.1 in the! er in Stretch other dash. | Falters in Stretch | New York, June 8—(#)—It’s only Duck’s victory in the 440 came as/ fitting there should be something somewhat of a surprise. Bob Pete! | unique about Tony Manero, winner son of Bismarck, who with a tea - | of the most unusual open champion- mate, Clayton Welch, had won the;ship in the history of the United two trial heats, took the lead at the! States Golf association. outset of the race but faltered in the; Tony was the first player with a: sprint for the tape and was overhaul- | mustache to cop the crown, ed by the speeding Duck about 20; In the stirring stretch finish Welch fin-! roared down the final 18 holes in 67, | |five under par for the Baltusrol club | After winning first in the pole vault links, for a grand total of 282 and! {by clearing the bar at 11 ft. 6 in., | nipped luckless Harry Cooper at the | ished third. \Toledo ... here. We use Hammermill Bond, the standard, econom- ical, business paper and we turn out a grade of printing that brings results for our customers. +340 We'll chase every crook who comes here from out of town, and I invite the mayor of every other city to chase | jout the New York crooks. We'll han- |dle them when they come | That's reciprocity.—Fiorello La RHE rudiments of economics, even though they acquire 65 per cent of all in- herited wealth—Miss Barbara Soper, addressing National Congress of attempts to crack the 12 ft. 31% in.| record held by Landgren of Under: each occasion. Herbert Paul of Wilton made three | wire by two strokes. |Guardia, Mayor of New York. Manero's glittering 67, coming after | previous rounds of 73, 69, 73, was one; People are fed up with moving pic- wood but knocked off the pole on! of 38 par-cracking performances over ture kissing. . . Audiences dislike the LET US SHOW YOU i « 031 020 020-8 12 0 Women Investors in America. Our Boarding House With Major Hoople EGAD, WOMAN, CEASE YOUR BLITHERING CHATTER ~-O0~MY HEAD 1's THROBBING LIKE A WAR DRUM IL MUST HAVE CAUGHT A CHILL, SAUNTERING AROUND AT MCCLAUSEN'S POINT! EGAD, THAT BARRELED Uf YOU GOT THAT THUNDER STORM UNDER YOUR WIG,RUNNING "RAMPANT IN A FIELD OF BEER BUBBLES —~1'M WEAVING A WEB AROLIND PART OF THATS500 REWARD ROLL, BEFORE YOU GO ON ANOTHER OWLS CLUB ORGY AND ENDOW SOME AFRICAN— GOLF SHARPS WITH THE The summarie Pole Vault—V at all, Paul of Wi ‘All ranberg, Dic told, in approximately 480 | ja course which had virtually no rough |long clinches and kisses that formerly were filmed to the timing of a stop- Bis i watch.—Clark Gable. marck Tribune Co. JOB DEPT. Sizer, not; wird, Seaman, Jamestown Shot Pu SOMETHIN! . Dash—Won by Gladstone; second, Trosse ford; third, fourth, Duck, Dickinson. sec. High bledon; Tim Jump—Won__ by F Tanberg, Dickinson; second, , Hazen; j tled for third, Baker, Jamestown, and | Sizer, Ellendale. Height! ft. 8 in, Won by Spear, Dickinson; Jamestow hird, | fourth, Tanberg, | nee: 117 ft. 5 in. n by Burns, Buffalo Springs; second, Knable, Sanborn; third, Baim, Langdon; tid Allen, Dickinson. ‘Time: 4 min, ey 440-Yard Dash—Won by Dickinson; second, Peterson, marck; third, Welch, Bismare fourth, Jackson, Ellendale. 53.3 sec. 200—Low Hurdles—Won by Haium, Minot; second, Christensen, Kenmare; third, McCory, Williston; fourth, Sto- well, Valley City. Broad Jump—Won by Evans, Wim- bledon; second, Helbling, St. Mary’s; third, Frank, Minot; fourth, Benson, Upham. Distance: 19 ft. 8% in. Javelin—Won by Spear, Dickinson; second, Cysewski, Jamestown; third,! Bowers, Bismarck; fourth, Newman, Minot College High. Distance: 177 ft. (New state record made in pre-. liminartes). 220-Yd, Dash—Won by Trosseth, second, Walery, Glad- third, Eyans, Wimbledon; Peterson, Bismarck. Time: x ean Dickinson, Uys ll ford; stone; fourth, 23.1 sec. Half-Mile—Won by ‘Burns, Buffalo second, Grenz, Bismarck; Fritch, Valley City. Time: 2 min, 7.5 *Falf-Mile Relay, — Won by Minot (Bischke, Frank, Parson and Haium); second, Dickinson; third, Bismarck} fourth, Valley City. 1 36.3 woo. Time: min, HIDDEN TREASURE, MAYBE — SOME . By Williams Weep OF WEARIN, | BE GOLD N THESE IES CLOTHES ‘ee {F-HE WENT IN, CUZ HIS OL! MAN IS RICH — FL WENT IN Tess Uf eo \ eee TLL BET THERE'S IN THERE-