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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 27, 1936 Yankees, Cubs Loom Stronger As World Series Foes POP BOTTLE SHOWER INJURES UMPIRE AS}y- WCARTHY CLAN WINS| Bruins Hold Three-Game Edge When Cards Divide With Bees DODGERS HUMBLE PIRATES Giants Split With Reds to Re- gain Third; Indians Win, Lose (By the Associated Press) Day by day as these dizzy pennant <hasers head for the stretch, it be- comes increasingly difficult to see anything but a New York-Chicago world series for this fall. The Yankees’ revived pitching to back up their batting dynamite and the Cubs’ continued great hurling mak2 thos? pace-setting outfits tougher and tougher, That fact stood out Sund: y ina Sunday's Stars Jimmy Foxx, Red Sox—Hit two homers in 10-3 win over Tigers. Leu Gehrig and Johnny Broaca, Yankees — Former's two homers aided in doubleheader win over White Sox; Broaca pitched eight- hit ball in opener. | Van Mungo, Ed Brandt and Eddie Wilson, Dodgers—Five-hit pitching of Mungo and Brandt and timely hitting of Wilson led way to twin win over Pirates. | Bucky Walter, Phillies, and Frank Demaree, Cubs—Former let Cubs down with two hits to win || opener; latter hit two homers in nightcap. Wally Berger, Bees, and Dizzy | Dean, Cardinals—Former's homer scored winning runs in first game; latter's effective pitching and two-run single took nightcap. Buck Rors, Athletics, and Hal | Trosky, Indians—Ross shut out | Indians with six hits in opener; latter's homer and two singles drove in three runs in nightcap. Oszie Bluege, Senators, and Al Thomas, Browns—Former's triple and single batted in four runs in first game victory; ‘Thomas hurled hitless ball for six innings of sec- ond. Hank Leiber, Giants and Al Hollingsworth, Reds — Former singled in winning run in opener; latter held Giants with tight | pitching in nightcap. | full Sunday schedule of 15 major league games, which saw sucn inci- dents as these: An umpire was knocked out of a game by a pop bottle thrown by a fan in the Yanks-White Sox meeting. Mickey Cochrane announced he was importing young blood to his limping | Tigers and benching at least one of | his veterans. The pop bottle-throwing climaxed a riotous doubleheader in which the Yanks, aided by Lou Gehrig's 29th and 30th homers, snapped definitely out of their hitting laxity and knocked off another challenger by taking the} White Sox 12-3 and 11-8, to stretch; their American league lead to 9'2 games. Fans in Uproar Fans, angered by a decision in the ninth inning of the nightcap, which went 11 frames, hurled more than 100 missles down on the field. The bottle hit Umpire Bill Summers in the groin and forced him out of action. Baseball's High Commissionég { Kenesaw M. Landis tmmediately of- fered a $5,000 reward for information concerning the thrower. The Cubs, at the same time, held onto their three-game edge in the ‘National league by splitting with the Phillies, while the second place Cara- inals were doing the same with the Bees. Held to two hits by Bucky Walter for a 4-0 setback in the opener, the Cubs took sweet revenge in the night- cap with six homers, 18 other assorted hits and an 18-5 triumph. The Card- inals nosed out 4-3 by the Bees in the Dizzy Dean's pitching in the night- cap for an 8-5 decision. Tigers on Short End On the short end s\rinst the Bos- ton Red Sox for the third straight day, as Jimmy Foxx belted two homers to set the pace for a 10-2 win, the Tigers heard Mickey Cochrane reveal he is to return to action Mon- day. The Brooklyn Dodgers staged two nith inning rallies to win a pair of pitchers’ duels with the Pirates ana club the Bues into fourth place. Vat Semi-Pro Champs Hand Mouse River Park All-Stars 8 Dive for Olympic Points eee four runs. The box scores: y AB R H PO A EB 4 0 0 2 2 2 1 ' 0 1 4 1 0 i 4 0 1 ay 1 1 1) Bou: ai? 0 Ae 0) eigand, 2b... 4 0 1 3 9 0 i Halsebus, If .. 4 a a 0 0 | Jones, c 8 1 1 1 o , |Sanerssig, cf ae 1720) Velma Dunn of Monrovia, Calif., top; Ruth Jump of Los Angeles, | Britton, rf... 00 o of left: and Mrs. Dorothy Poynton Hill, members of the American fist So Te egh oe al women's Olympic diving team, make a striking picture in this | Grove Gianis) AB OR OM POA exhibition of _ form at Astoria, Long Island. | Hubbard, : Ha bi eat eg ee elke treo. et) Het (estes Gry Brooklyn ...... 000 000 001-1 6 3 U. S. Ol 5 Stoller, 0 0 9 Or 7; LeM 88 0 oO 1 0 oO; Lucas and Padden; Mungo and ympic tars ies, ae Berres. ' Engles, cf T 70) Goo OO RHE, Bratton, cf... 2 0 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh + 000 001 002—3 5 1! it raining ALG smith, « feat) lonioiact Brooklyn - 000 200 0022—4 7 1; | Flanders Le ge Ua Weaver, Brown, Hoyt and Finney; Motale +. s0 4070978 Brandt and Gautreaux, Berres. Score by innings: Giants Win, Lose Don Lash in Top Form for Op-; acc por 900 o10—3 RH E! G + LOL 200 00x— HeCh Cincinnati . 000 003 100-4 10 0; ening Event of Track sigan New York ..... 000 002 003-5 12 1 Competition rss s — Hubbard; i ; double - p to Gehring to Derringer, Brennan and Lombardi; Weigan Weigand 7, off Hubbell, Castleman and Mancuso. RH Cincinnati + 002 200 001—5 10 New York - 000 000 002—2 10 Hollingsworth “and Cam=ell; ‘ler, Coffman, Schumacher and Man-'chortly after sunup Monday as their Thomberg, © . 4 9 9 13 1 EUROS Gees, charges entered the final week of Helbling: 2b -- ae ean AMERICAN LEAGUE hard practice before the start of the \p qi ees) As, Tribe Split deat 4 : ao can RH E, For the first two days after fescue) Kolpacoff, tL oa -F Philadelphia .. 030 322 012—13 20 0; ing Berlin all hands were permitted putaltsity, es . ‘ : Cleveland _ 000 000 C0O— 0 6 1|to exercise on a hit or miss basis,| Simpson, 5 Slee Ross and Hayes; Herder, Hilde-|make up lost sleep and sort of get the; Totals .... he create 18 ai brand, Feller and Sullivan. blare of orchestras out of their ears. jGrove Giants AB Ro H PO A , RH E| Providing Sunday's warm sunshine | Hubbard, 1 penile | Philadelphia .. 009 031 100— 5 10 2/holds out a few more days there will| j @ oOo 0 0 Cleveland . 402 000 02x— 8 18 | be a beautifully conditioned American | s Gia s 0 Rhodes and Hayes; Allen and| ‘tack squad ready for the starting ee eee ytlak. BUR on, ib eae Bin went Cop Pair Indiana Don Lash is the lone ex-; gayun ib fon hike at R H £ ception to the program. As his event,} Moore, p . oe 2 Bos o 00 the 10,000 meters, will be run on the re Prd a eeueae Zp a Hed cme 3 : first day of competition, next Sunday.) scene by’ Stee Broaca and Jorgens: Cain, Chelini,|M€ Practically will complete his} Mandan Evans and Sewell. RH New York . 101 321 000 03—11 15 Chicago . 301 030 001 00— 8 14 Hadley, Malene and Glenn, gens; Red Sox Triumph Boston 001 011 052-10 13 0|" ‘The men’s and women's swimming Detroit. ....... 001 000 002— 3 13 2 teams were anxious to have their first W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell; Auker,!try at the championship course next Lawson, Kimsey and Hayworth,|door to the Olympic stadium. Pre- Myatt. viously only the divers had sampled | Nats, Browns Divide the genuine Olympic water. RH E| ft has been pronounced by Mrs. Washington ... 110 240 010-9 14 O\geanor Holm Jarrett, the banished St. Louis ...... 000 001 010— 211 1) backstroke star, the “fastest water” Cascarella and Millies; Hogsett,| she ever saw. Liebhardt and Giuliana. RHE Washington ... 000 000 030— 3 7 2) POLLARD PULLS MUSCLE St, Louis ..... 112 031 10x— 916 1{ Olympic Village, Berlin, July 27— Newsom, Appleton and Bolton,|(#)—Fritz Pollard of the University Millies; Van Atta, Thomas and Glul-jof North Dakota, his chances of iani. Olympic competition jeopardize d,| Pe a ee Tee ory 'Monday nursed a pulled leg muscle MILL CITIAN WINS | Suffered as a result of shipboard Minneapolis, July 27W—‘(AP)—The | calesthenics. Pollard will be able to northwestern singles first game, slugged similarly behind) pionship Monday rested with Scott) Rexinger of Minneapolis, after his| defeat of Weston Painter, also of that city, RH 6-4, 6-2, 5-7, 6-1. Gab- Jor- Whitehead, C. Brown, Dietrich, |Evans and Sewell. tennis cham-; i Berlin, July 27.—(@)—The coaches 1,0f America’s Olympic teams began cracking their long whips in earnest strenuous preparation Monday and E| begin to taper off. He has worked | | arder than anyone in camp except, 2 Glenn Cunningham and is in splen- | did form. The only other one of their charges any real worry was Gene Venzke, who appeared definitely to have slip- E! ped past his peak. take only light exercise for the next two days until the extent of the in- jury is fully determined. He was un- able to make the hurdles in a work- out. giving the track and field coaches, Grove Giants Split Week-End Games: |Penitentiary Team Bows to Trainers, 6-3; Whips McClusky, 4-2 Beaten by the Mandan Trainers, 6-3, Saturday, the Grove Giants, state penitentiary nine, came back on Sunday to pound out a 4-2 decision lover the McClusky team behind the five-hit pitching of Flanders. With George Heidt and C. Moore on the mound the Mandan team took advantage of the “breaks” and Moore’s poor control to smash out the victory. Heidt in addition to ai creditable hurling performance hit a; home run in the fifth inning to tie | the score at two all. The Giants went ahead briefly in! the last half of the fifth but Mandan counted once each in the next four times at bat. Heidt fanned 13 bat-! ters and Moore whiffed 16. Hubbard for the Giants had two perfect days at bat over the week- end, getting nine safe blows in a row. He started out Sunday's game with al circuit drive. McClusky’ game with the Giants was one of the best seen at the peni- tentiary park this season. The Giants converted seven hits into the Flanders ruck out by Flande! by Weigand 7; bases on balls off it by piteher—s by Weigand. Wilson and Bell. Train'g School AB R Grove Giants. re 16; bases on 8; passed Desiderato bal dt balls—Smith 2. and Mossman. ——__________—_-+ | Major League — | i Leaders \ (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Gehrig, Yankees, and Rad- cliff, White Sox, .374. Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, ringer, Tigers, 97. | Hits—Averill, Indians, 140; Gehring- er, Tigers, and Trosky, Indians, 137. Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 30; Foxx, Red Sox, 29. Pitching—Hadley, Yankees, 8-1; Ma- lone, Yankees, 10-3, | NATIONAL LEAGUE ; Batting—Medwick, Cardinals, Demaree, Cubs, .355. Runs—J. Martin, Cardinals, 86; Suhr, | Pirates, 72. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 137; Jen- sen, Pirates, 132. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 19; Klein and Camilli, Phillies, 17. | Pitching—French, Cubs, 10-2; Gum- bert, Giants, 9-2. umpires: 114; Geh- 362; Mungo took the opener 1-0 and Ed Brandt the nightcap 4-3. ‘The Giants, who split with the Cin- cinnati Reds, winning 5-4 and losing 5-2, found themselves back in third place. A 20-hit attack gave the Athletics a 13-0 victory over the Indians but Cleveland came back to slug out an 8-5 decision. The Senators walloped the Browns 9-2 in the opener. They took’ a 9-3 licking in the second game. : NATIONAL LEAGUE Cubs, Phils Split Our Boarding House With Major Hoople EGAD, GENTLEMEN! FROM “HE TIME OF GALILEO, SCIENTISTS HAVE BEEN STRIVING TO IMPROVE THE LOT OF MAN, BY OF LIFE, AND IT REMAINED FOR ME—~UME-RUMF-F FIREFLY BEE NIGHT AND DAY! My WORD, WHEN I THINK OF THE HOURS I HAVE THAT WORKS WHOSE BRAIN GOT SO TANGLED UP WITH TH IDEA HANDLES ON SWEET CORN, HAD TO SEND HIM TOA NUT- HUT TO GET Jf ree 10 'F¥ START A Y 1 Park All-Stars here Sunday, 8-4, with ; Johnnie Lyles, dusky Capital City |the first inning when Quincy Troupe, ; home with the third successive bingle ; Siderato and Troupe, a hit by pitcher, jderato; sa 4/derato, Troupe; BISMARCK BIG BATS RING OUT AS SMITH SUBDUES VISITORS Beach Nine of Yellowstone! League Is Coming Here Wednesday Evening Bismarck’s national semi-pro cham- pions bowled over the Mouse River hurler, taking things easy as he lim- ited the visitors to nine safe blows and fanned seven. Bismarck: concentrated its heavy- hitting attack in the third and fourth innings, scoring seven runs in the two frames. Lyles held the All-Stars without a tally until the seventh when they put together two hits, a walk and an ‘error for three runs. The local club counted one run in who led the batting attack, drew a base on balls and was driven home by Red Haley with a long three-bag- ger. A home run by Troupe started an- other two-run outburst in the fourth with Hilton Smith bringing Haley of the inning. In the fifth Bismarck batted all the way around with doubles by Joe De- an error and a walk paving the way ‘or the locals’ five runs. Wednesday at 6:15 p. m. the Bis- marck team will appear at the local park with the Beach nine ‘of the! Lower Yellowstone league furnishing the opposition: The box score: R 0 ax } om 0 SaSense | sew ssssuon [ nwwssssosp soussse =] oe | ononsosHs™e, sacatel sewess nou w| c4ussssuey 8 27 900 900 301—4 + 102 500 00x—8 Left on base—All Stars stolen bases—Desi- Haley, Lyles, —C. King, Desi- three base ‘hits— home ‘run—Troupe; double vle to Leary; hits off Vest- n 8 innings, off Lyles 9 in 9 struck out by Vesting 3, bases on balls off Vest- les 3; hit by pitcher— Pi balls—Cranston, Um- ‘ayou and Shiple: Colonels Defeat Apostles Twice Brewers Strengthen Hold on Lead With Double Win Over Mudhens 3 10, Bismar: Slefka; two Haley pires: Chicago, July 27.—(7)—If games continue to go the way they have, this season's American Association championship may be determined by the lower standing teams of the cir- cuit. Sunday the fast-traveling Milwau- Kee Brewers took a firmer hold on first place by. taking a double bill from the Toledo Mudhens, while the second place St. Paul Saints were feeling the full power of the Louis- ville club and dropping @ double- header to the Colonels. The Colonels and Hens are “fighting” for the cir- cuit’s cellar position. Milwaukee tripped Toledo 10-6, and 6-3. At the same time, Louisville beat the Saints 13-7 and 17-2. Indianapolis took the first game of @ scheduled double bill with Minnea- polis, 12-8, the second being called at the end of the third because of the six o'clock law with.the tribe out in front 7-6. Kansas City shoved Columbus deep- er into the second division by beat- ing the Red Birds, 5-4, in 10 innings. and 7-6. Colonels Shell Saints E St. Paul ...... 000 100 411— 7 12 1 Louisville . 022 008 00x—13 20 0 Fette, rt and Fenner; La Master, Terry and Ringhofer. RHE St. Paul .. 000 001 1— 212 1 Louisville . 510 542 x—16 21 1 (Called 7th to catch train). Hutchinson and Fenner, Marrow and Thompson. Indians Victors RHE Minneapolis, .. 022 000 310-810 3 Indianapolis .. 109 000 02x—12 21 4 Milnar, Ryan, Olson, Baker, Gra- bowski, Bean and George; Page, Lo- gan and Crandall. Brewers Lengthen Lead 2 H R + 600 310 000—10 13 1 . - 100 401 000— 6 12 0 Heving and Brenzel; Garland, Co- hen and Tresh. ts RHE Milwaukee ..... 100 401 000-6 11 1 Toledo 300 000 000—3 9 0 Pressneli and Brenzel; Fritz and Linton. Blues Take Two % Ez Kansas City ... 310 101 100—7 12 1 Columbus ...... 100 021 100—6 12 4 Niggeling, Smith and Madjeski; Macon, Potter and Chervinko, Owen. Smith; Sullivan, ;to the manager and Kenneth W. Si- -4 Setback Capital ‘City Club to Club to saw Wednesday for State Tournament Bismarck’s American Legion jun- iors, red-hot on the eve of the state tournament opening Thursday at Grand Forks, walloped the Wilton men’s team in the mining city Sun- day afternoon. The score was 4 to 2, the juniors collecting nine hits off two Wilton|: hurlers while the miners were getting only three from Jackie Bowers, John Entringer and Anton Schneider, who took turns on the mound for the juniors as a final warm-up before going to Grand Forks for the state competition, Dick McCabe, playing shortstop for the juniors, shared honors with the three hurlers and Catcher Nicky Schneider who played a stellar game behind the bat and got three bases on balls and one hit in five trips to the plate. * McCabe banged out two hits in five trips, one of them a dou- ble. The Legion outfielders accepted all chances that came their way, dragging down several smashes which might easily have been hits. The juniors will leave at 7 a. m., Wednesday for Grand Forks, expect- ing to spend all day on the road. They will practice on the state; tournament diamond Thursday morn- ing and will meet Cando there in the evening in the single first-round game of the tournament. N. Schneider, regular catcher, is slated to take the mound against Cando in order to save the three regular hurlers for duty later in the tournament. Merlin Scott, reserve catcher, will be on the receiving end in this contest. Slated to make the trip to Grand Forks are Bowers, Entringer and Schneider, pitche: Schneider and Scott, catchers; Beall, first base; Schuck, second base; McCabe, short- stop; Bowers, third base as well as pitcher; Maynard Entringer, left field, Gregory Dahlen, center field; Bill Richardson, right field; John Cunningham, reserve infielder; Bob Brownawell and Leo Feist, reserve outfielders; Bob Burkardt, first base coach; Spencer Boise, Jr., assistant / mons, Jr., bat boy and mascot. The team will be in charge of Man- ager Kenneth W. Simons and Coach T. E. Simle. The box score of Sun- day's game follows: Wilton AB H R PO A E! P, Krush, c... 4 0 09 15 2 Of 3. Krush, rf... 401002 01 «0 Of Mitchell, cf ©. 4 1 9 0 0 0} Gilmore, 3h re. ae. lao eee | Manning, If .. 4 9 © 0 0 OF S. Krush, ss.. 4 1 0 1 2 0; Polonsky, 1b..3 0 9 7 09 of Siebel, 2b... 30 0 9 1 1 Of Johnson, p 190) 0 Oo Oe Mauley, 'p . Or sek ad Bo SDUATEE i918, 8, BIO Oe Legion Juniors AB Ho R PO A E{ Bowers, p-3b.. 5 1 9 0 1 0 A 40 112 0 06 24 8 8 0 10 -5 2 9 0 6 0 5 2 0 2 0 0 42 Ay OER e Oe Hy Richardson, rf 30 1 0 1 0 “Oy Shuck, 3b-2b.. 4 9 0 0 2 1 Cunningham, 262 0 1:0 9 0 A. Schneider, p 0 0 0 0 2 1! J. Entringer,p 2 1 0 0. 0 ' ‘Totals 256)) 9) 40-87-1058) Score by Bismarck Wilton .. *Peggers Take Over Northern Leadership St. Paul, July 27.—()—The Winni- peg Maroons straddled the crest of the Northern League race Monday after dethroning the Fargo-Moor- head Twins with a doubleheader vic- tory Sunday. The Maroons won 5-2, 6-2. In the rest of the day’s doubleheader bill, Jamestown won the first from Crook- ston, 7-4, and dropped the second, 7-0; and Superior took two games from Eau Claire, 11-7 and 4-2. ‘Wausau at Duluth was postponed because of rain. Red peppers, used in making salads and pickles, are thought to have been used by the American Indians more than 1,000 years ago. eee SS In Rome is it’ legal to arrest a person on suspicion, and the arrested + 201 see 100 100 100 [LEGION JUNIORS BELT OUT NINE HITS IN 42 WIN OVER WILTON Oech, Beach Grid Great, Is Certain Sports Round-Up) By EDDIE BRIETZ —_——$—$—$—— New York, July 27.—(#)—Is there any truth to the widespread Broad- way rumor that Gene Tunney may run for governor of Connecticut and ———__———__ that Jimmy Bron- son, the New York will Bronson was Tun- ney's chief ad- viser in the sec- ond Dempsey fight. Tunney characterized the report as a joke. Those Detroit Tigers are fine cousins, if you ask us ... no sooner had we advised the clients not to sell them short than the pesky Bengals went out and dropped three out of four ... Elmer Layden, Notre Dame coach, can’t enjoy his annual fishing trip to Canada for worrying about the Pitt game. Best-line-of-the-week honors go to the Bloomington, Ind., Evening World «+. it headlined the Eleanor Holm Jarrett sensation as follows: “Olym- pic committee sending Eleanor Holm to Jarrett.” Horace Renegar, Tu- lane’s demon publicity man, is doing the New York spots in a big way... Lou Kolls, American League umpire, is a dead ringer for Victor McLaglen | high of the movies—or vice versa. It must jolt Max Baer’s pride some- thing fierce to have to bowl over setups on one night stands. . . Ford- ham football teams used to startle the natives with their battle cry of one-dam, two-dam, three-dam Ford- ham ... most of the spectators had reached for their éar muffs long be- fore the lads got around to the fourth dam. Down at his country place at Red fight manager, help direct his campaign ... Starter on Team Final Determination of All-Star Eleven Awaits Counting of Ballots Chicago, July 27.—(®)—Six former college football stars apparently won starting positions Monday on the all-star grid team which will battle the Detroit Lions at Soldier's field the night of Sept. 1. With the thousands of votes still to be counted and the final vote not to be announced until Tuesday, the ballots of practically 3,000,000 fans have determined six of the 11 start- ing players. The poll was conducted by 182 newspapers and the 11 play- ers receiving the largest number of votes for their positions will take the field for the opening kickoff. Voting officially ended Saturday at mid- night. Wayne Millner of Notre Dame, with 628,493 votes, will start at one end. Dick Smith of Minnesota has a tackle berth clinched, while the guards apparently will be Tangora of Northwestern and Oech of Minne- sota. Jay Berwanger of Chicago and Bill Shakespeare of Notre Dame like- ly will start at the halfback posts. Fans now are voting to elect four coaches to direct the collegians. Each fan is invited to name three mentors, with first choice counting three points, second 2 and third 1. The point total will determine the head coach. About 52 players will constitute the collegiate squad and will begin train- He Aug. 13 at Northwestern univer- vy. The leaders include: Ends—Millner, Notre Dame, 628,- 493; Topping, Stanford, 564,672. Tackles—Smith, Minnesota, 618,. ane Spain, Southern Methodist, 524,- Bank, N. J., Mike Jacobs has a statue s*Guars Pane Levelt Hrd) of a barefoot Joe Louis, swinging a baseball bat, standing guard over his prize tulips... A rumor is going the rounds that Lefty Grove will retire after this year ... he wants to step down while the fans still have a high opinion of him. . . Granvilles’ victory jat Chicago Saturday stamps him as the year’s outstanding three-year-old now racing ... it might have been a different story if Bold Venture hadn’t been hurt... Jack Salveson, the pitcher, wears glasses on the mound ‘but doesn’t need them while reading. Correction: The name of Marty Berg’s new sports magazine is “Sports Week” instead of “Sports News,” as we reported last week. The Standings (By the Rasociated Press) NORTHERN LEAGUE Ww Winnipeg 3 Fargo-Moorhead 32 Eau Claire 33 Jamestown 33 Superior 3 Wausau . 39 Crookston . 43 Duluth . 42 NATIONAL LEAGLE wou Chicago 5783 St. Louis 3 87 New York 44 Pittsburgh . 4744 Cincinnati 450044 4449. pl 3556 Brooklyn ... 3358 AMERICAN LEAGUE w iu New York Cleveland . Boston Detroit Chicago. Washington Philadelphia St. Louis ... Milwaukee . St. Paul .... Minneapolis Kansas City Columbus man has to prove his innocence. Louisviile ‘angora, Northwestern, 612,764. Centers—Rennebohm, Minnesota, 529,387; Joneh, Ohio State, 526,748. Quarterbacks—Smith, Alabama, 625,793; Seidel, Minnesota, 617,214. Halfbacks — Berwanger, Chicago, 634,726; Shakespeare, Notre Dame, 628,537; Roscoe, Minnesota, 536,884; Wilson, Southern Methodist, 439,673; LeVoir, Minnesota, 434,992; Pilney, Notre Dame, 418,506. Fullbacks—Beise, Minnesota, 526,- 807; Crayne Iowa, 524,318. — No Parlor Boy! SPORTS FANS are coming to redlize what a fine champion Jim Braddock makes. Jim keeps in shape, boxes regularly, stays away from the night life, saves his money .. . and is willing to fight one and all contenders! WE'RE WILLING to stack our summer suits against ANY others —for quality and style. Come in and see ‘em ... We've got a whole host of cool tropical worst- eds, gabardines, flannels — suits you can wear with absolute com- fort and ease! Wy ROSEN. *HATTERS: Lo BATTERS 7 = BISMARCK ND OUT OUR WAY HOO~ HE COULD ME, AND YOU'D K_UP FOR HIM— & HOO; BEEN A it bine HAVE COINCIDENCE — apeneway ID SEE IT'S ONE OF His Te KS WITH THE HOSE ALL pe M o ” 4 as . ies