The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 10, 1936, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 1936 * ' Copelin Motors Defeats O. H. Wills for Slope Softball Title BANK OFND. DOWNS Israelite House of David to Test Bismarck’s Strength in Game Tonight JAMESTOWN TO TAKE'TJ, §, Scores Smashing Track Win, |LOCHLS’ WIN-STREAK|CUBS AGAIN IN NATIONAL LEAD; | Pexs seis Taint, THRD-PLACE HONORS) Ys Weak in Other Olyrssra®ier 23UN 10-21 STRAIGHT) CARDS BEATEN TWICE BY REDS.» 2° 2 conus ~ 9 division teams in the Northern der Outpitches J ountry club Monday morning. i Larry Schneider Outpitches Joe Zahn for 3-1 Victory in Wahpeton ‘Youth Hungarian Swimmer Hands Se samen, eet AMES DURING TOUR ral * meni Final Game The r pevipeery ty City Monarchs Coming Yanks Bowl Over A's Twice to Maintain 11-Game Margin in American League were bunched closer Monday Brewers Pull Out following the double defeat of the leading Eau Claire outfit Sunday by the seventh placé Crookston nine. Ahead of St Paul Only two games separated the first «, iy __ 2 and four place teams. The Pirates drubbed the Bears, 6-5 ,, By Ue ‘Associated Pres) .|and 17-8, with the first game going 4 the Cubs against the field) Sothoron’s Club Sweeps Twin |11 innings. boo . The second place Jamestown team Charley Grimm’s Sree chai Bill With Hens; Kels Down | gathed'a paine on the Bears by spilt have regained their collective batting i vith Si jor. The Blues won . ‘ eye. They've taken over the National Colonels Twice bi A tes Ee id League lead once more. pian Wine |the second, 6-3. SS ee ee “Moorhead also split a twitf again tely the clu a joron an wal , > breathed a little easier Monday in| the first, 11-4 and the Dukes the American Associa- |"!ghtcap, 8-4. ptrtiticed seas ” In a night game, Winnipeg svored hth to beat out Wau- ‘The Brewers, after weeks of nip-|three in the eig yehig- and: Monte and-tuck fighting for the circuit lead {S44 7-4 Japanese First Defeat in e 9 Wins Resorters |" aquatle Contests hs > rebels ar, ; I. tuesday for Concluding Bill Kostelecky, Jr., Beaten in! Bertin, Aug. 10.—( —America‘ ok is not Geletiding her ehiin- bas ¥ Home Contest Semi-Finals of Alexandria Olympians, with another men’s trac hip. and field title safely’ stowed away, scores of entrants fol-| navy ge moved hopefully along widely-scat- e the 80V¢cked by a 2i-game win-streak, \tered athletic fronts Monday, while'jike the veteran I ‘ . petit of which were marked up dur- the Japanese marathon victor, Kitel)Tom Thorpe will ee liege eran ayaciitelne wae i aero gy . Matirice Cain, Monday Son, was acclaimed for the greatest tlh ~ ata i tional semi-pro champions were en- Copelin Motors of Bismarck Mon-| held the championship of the 15th/ ‘Stance running finish the games bhatt malo bet trenched in their home park Monday Gay dominated the western North) nnual Resorters golf tournament, | have witnessed. Vee Risney eit ‘ ‘| | ready to defend that unbeaten string Dakota diamondball situation after)” Gain scored a 6 and 5 victory Sun-| Passing the half-way mark in the ; against two of the most formidable adding the Missouri Slope champion- day over Palmer Kise of Redwood | Most “colossal” Olympiad ever con-|T@ceway, can’t clubs to visit the Capital City this ‘ 7 ‘i | @ucted, Americans safely defended the|@rive an automo- P summer. free-style wrestling team honors as|bile . . . But he Tonight the slugging Capital Citians well as the track title and won an|can run a laundry & will cross bats with the Israelite House unexpected team victory in the gruel-;and work on a f of David in a twilight game called ling modern pentathlon with a trio of vane foryou.. . & : for 6:15 p. m. at the local ball park army officers. Weill, man- ae ‘and Tuesday they will engage the rae une Satan oe ee bs The Japanese, considered a sure/ager of Lou Am- JESSE OWENS | Kansas City Monarchs in their con- finals of the annual tournament) 0/7). Northwestern Univers! ity” golt| ting to retain the men's aquatic title, | bers, the lightweight, turned entirely | cluding home stand before departing sta belle Mer aa ba cae team, 3 and 2, after the Dickinson. tty ine ae praolael in pte grey during the six weeks he worried | for Wichita to defend the U. 8. cham- at the Twenty-first St. diamond. The , : ‘ ;|meter free style when Ferenc oe of the final amie was 3 j ne hae eae tas al felt) Hungary won in en caee ONG bout was on or off. a ie ite brought his marck made a clean sweep of i 2 lasanori Yusa an igeo Arai Sam Caplin, the Ne powerful clul ac] ome Sunday ac] tH on the Jamestown Independents, 7-6, emake EAE LN HABE, in the | egren of Los Angeles sixth a Sola. " phe - a America qualified two girls in the) pinia's on, i 200 Players Take Part peti an EA Sarna 100 meters free style event, Katherine 4 th . bees Sav Bi Pease ag and) Barney Morris, who hung up a new Over 200 players participated in the N D. 20th E A M ny, Fai +, Rawls, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Olive Cotumist i. strikeout record last Tuesday in the tournament and shared in the mer-|N. D. » E. A. Murphy, Fargo.) McKean, Seattle. olumbia and Fordham are start-|Regina ball park when he fanned 20 chandise prizes contributed by Capi-|N. D. , Rita Masterbroek of Holland and | ing their annual football rivalry earl-! batters, is slated to handle the pitch- tal City businessmen. In the women's lourney, Mrs. C. L.' Janet Campbell of the Argentine dom- ier than usual this fall . .-. Ford- ing assignment tonight with either Copelins advanced to the cham- Hiller of Crookston won the second|inated the event in the semi-finals|ham has Southern Methodist booked} Hilton Smith or Lefty Gaines slated pionship game by defeating Dickin- | flight. Sunday. Bernice Lapp of Newark was|for the Polo Grounds on Oct. 10,|to take the slab against the Monarchs son, 8-3, in the first round; elim- | fourth in her heat and was eliminated. | while just across the Harlem river | Tuesday. inating Goodrich, 11-5, in the quar- ter-finals and then downing the Bank of North Dakota, 6-2. 500 WITNESS TOURNAMENT rid, the Nursery Hurler’s No-Hit, No- Run Game Against Mandan Tops Mound Feats the opener, 12-3 and Jamestown took Tourney Alexandria, Minn., Aug. 10—()—! a 19-year-old linksman from Wahpe-| the stretch drive. Of course, the Giants and Card- Lou Gehrig and Monte Pearson, ‘s Yankees—Former hit homer and st SN dl cd el triple, driving in four runs in doule- || Half game margin over the Apostice Gopher Coach Virtually header, win over Athletics; latter |) bin Sunday with Toledo, 15-2 and 8-4.| Clinches All-Star Post aoe ects und BIN Lee Cube.— || The nightcap was called in the fifth ni wed 14 hits rictory | |Pecause of darkness. © Chicago, Aug. 10.—()—Bernie Bier- win-bill victo! 7 pra a sl "Y || Oscar Eckhardt’s home run in the|man, whose great Minnesota teams tenth gave Indianapolis a 5-4 win, ‘ith final- mame Yan cle, Browns Melt || over ‘st Paul attr Art Herring had period aries, had. demonstrated Jimmy Foxx, Red Sox—His||4.9° rou Fette, pitching his third PIRES ad of that double and triple drove in three runs against Sadatbes. game in a week for the Apostles, waS! Bierman apparently had clinched harged with his seventh defeat re Max Butcher and Fred Frank- || ° " the job of head coach of the College house, Dodgers.—Downed Bees in ||2#einst 21 wins. Gordon Slade hit}anstars who will battle the Detroit a home run for St. Paul in each vant igs of doubleheader, giving game and Jake Flowers hometed for paey a Soldier Field the night of the Indians in the second contest. i i $4 Roy Weatherly and Johnny Aller, | The champion Minneapolis Millers in the nation-wide poll will not per: Indians.—Former hit two homers, .. ;mit final announcement of the make- two doubles and a single, driving hited sine ae Ne up of the All-Star’s staff until Tues- in four runs in double victory over Lge a day, the Minnesota mentor had 4 White Sox; Allen pitched three- || Scores were 6:5 SUB jim Henry: jead of almost a million points over i hit ball in opener. in the nightcap, had three hits, one | his closest rival, Elmer Layden ot i ‘ ship Sunday to the northwest crown | mai. Minn | they captured at Minot two weeks) ‘The finialists reached the title| ago. Defending the honors won last year under the Nash-Finch banner, the Copelin ten conquered O. H. Will's also of Bismarck, in the thrilling match with a number of surprise) victories, the final ones being in the; semi-finals, when Cain eliminated ' about whether the Tony Canzoneri |Pionship won last year. two who could do as well as his boy,|(oues to the string compiled before Marty, a Phi Beta Kappa, who is Vir- | ‘Pe basa Tuk trip. in the battle for third place. Although last-minute votes Peaches Davis: and Gilly Camp- Notre Dame. bell, Reds—Former set Cards down || 2 Dome Tun with two on, Joe Heuser |’ Bierman had 3240474 points to Setter and Melifickerimeyer, Highest Honors Since 1912 Columbia will be tangling with Army| Leaving here last Sunday, the locals!| With nine-hits in doubleheader ||peowne had a double and three|2:308916 for the. Irish coach, In ise The United States emerged with|. . . no wonder Columbia is yelling | shut out the Mouse River Park team,|| OPener; latter drove in three runs || singies in the nightcap. third place was Bo McMillin of In- ai ganrectoun: the highest honors in the blue ribbon|the Fordham battle cry of one-dam, | 8-0, in a Sabbath Day bill and then|| {" nightcap with two doubles and In the day’s only single game Kan- | @#ana, with 2,274,001, while Lou Little Wills trounced the Northern States ©. H. Will ze 300 000 1-10 4 2 Olympic sport since the games at/|two-dam, three-dem Fordham. blanked Northgate, 3-0, Monday be- single. sas City defeated Columbus, 9-2 of Columbia had 1,982,448 points. The Power of Minot, 7-2, in the first|? py tieries—Norris and Eneminger:/Stockholm in 1912. Dave Tillinghast, sports ed of the|fore opening a three-day stand at|| Clyde Castleman, Giants—Fan- ||107. by the Birds in the opening in-|Jeader will be in command of the game; shut out Mandan’s Mid-City), 000 and Becker Ber) Negro competitors contributed six|Greenville (S. C.) Piedmont Broad- | Regina. ned nine men and allowed three || ning giving the Blues a commanding |Collegians, with the next three most a Ten, 7-0, when Joe Zahn hurled a : individual titles to America’s 12 track|way press agent, who built up Max| Morris set up the new strikeout|| hits in eight inning relief trick || ieaq. successfil candidates his assistants. stellar no-hit, no-1 : 1 firsts, besides helping to account for a| Schmeling, will try to do the same|record for the Regina park Tuesday || *88inst Phillies. PERT ER ATELY Saints, Tribe Split then slugged out a H Po A E|/seventh in the 400 meters relay. for the new American as Bismarck came off with a 6-3 Firs! istri Jamestown in the semi-final! . H . Jesse Owens, including his part in| football league . . . ee NESOaEEY verdict in the first of a three-game |inals can still do luis of damage, but THANE 16 District Softball harry Schneider, Copelin’s| No. 13 * 3 9 githe sprint relay, became the first/is giving Lefty Gomez plenty of buil| series. Previously the record there|the Giants collapsed once before|St. Paul ..».... Tournaments Slated Uc ee the Goetz, Hosa American to collect four gold medals pen work these days . . . George had been 17, after making a pass at the lead, and| Bolen and Riddle; i Nursery crew with four scattered hits | Farcone 1 2 0 8\Nurmi's 192¢achlevement, Caster of Portland, leading coast | eet rennet 17 Ohi hie roonze|t22 eas House gang still has Just a) Passk, Ee catib na ate \ aidateibing out three scattere Sl} Aller, c oo Mishter WIIG Anata alle league pitcher, is a deputy sheriff in|ight and fanned 17 while his mates|one-man pitching staff. (Second Game) R trict tournaments, eight each in 5 “ae Junat, ie 4 , ) | San Bernardino county, Calif, . . ,|Were pounding out a 14-2 victory and Pirates Shellacked Indianapolis . 010 000 210 1-5 Classes A and B, will be held August y yy Ernie Manney,| Becke > 9 5 6 John Woodruff, University of Pitts-!me athleti hi Gaines took his turn Thursday, Arnold Schneider, Mike Dohn and{ Zahn. p - it *& burgh freshman, and Cornelius Rohn- ee hiff he le | The Cubs wound up their week-end |St. Paul eee cae 33 to determine representatives to the i Frank Lee, bunched 12 hits in the| Be¢%. <f aie Waa son, Los Angeles rounded out the Sree wee eae toottall poaneiies 13-2 casein Cec ten im atabaneciomstJBlinday. with /ae hit) SaWe 6d renidall> Mbt e/ad En) Nock Dabo efttall ennainenat i third, fourth and sixth innings to F. Hummel, rf. a) 4 0 0 Negroes’ biggest Olympic session in would call a real triple-threater .. . i assault against the Pirates to take) ner. Devils Lake Aug. 30. It's a pity Jesse didn't take a few Add Two More Wins both ends of double header, 10-1 Winners and runnersup in Class A count one run in each. Manney’s| | Totals . 2. 17 ie eS, 3 | history. lessons in sh I Friday the club moved on to Broad- a a « t Gi double and Dohn's triple topped the| Si" BH HD} | Two reat souinern athletes For-|Saiching in weight iting <n |wew where they nung up an 8-3 triple they gave up iat week Beeause| TOGO =cscrn "28 Olchamplons will compete in the slate 5 3 | 1 i T » Ga. i y on those | Umph an at the Broadview team Zahn Hurls Effectively < * 1 % 0 0 {Hardin Greenwood,’ Miss. in the |Chances are hed have won those again at Indian Head the following scotia = en ete ‘ Se uae eae te Meseie Zahn, though he failed to achieve 1 1 1 0 ©|hurdles, three westerners, Glenn Mor- | °Y2 (00, ; ‘ day, 8-5. They wound up the tour e Cardinals were repomere Pee and 2 f Dinter matingers afe'J. P. Bclunoe~ ? the unbeatable form shown in the Bins H ® Iris, Fort Collins, Colo, Ken Carpen- ‘ear's biggest fish story: Rex Pat- Sunday with a 9-3 conquest of the the lead by a tremendous hitting at- 0 3 Linas ; ae der, Fargo, district - 1; Kenneth : no-hit game with Mandan, was effec- o 3 ¢ ? Qiter, Compton, Calif. and Earle Mead-|erson of Ashland. Ky., hooked | Northgate aggregation at Northgate. “song ergy ie shinai ay Toledo vee Pecos Soren ee wee) at daies Sana ] tive throughout, fanned four and did 0 © 19 © olows, of the University of Southern | Charles Redding of the Ashland In-|" Both the Benton Harbor col Reds, who fired 40 safe blows all over isd nery, Jamestown, 3; Clarence Tim- not issue a single free pass to first. 1 2 1 3 2|California, achieved the triumphs! dependent while casting near Green-|team and the colored Monarchs come|*h®, !ot to turn in a twin win, 10-2) Mi’waniee -..----.'- #08 Ox—-5 § O)boe, Devils. Lake, 4; Clement Kelly, ‘ Steve Goetz with two safe hits in| 9 9% 9 © \ which enabled the United States to| UP. Ky. the other day . . .The/nere with formidable records, com- 12-5. ert led acai darkness) ra iz Bismarck, 5; Clem Senechal, Minot, { three trips to the plate was the most 3 12 21 @ 2) t0ll up 203 points, only 15 short of the | hooks were so deeply imbedded a doc- | piled during the season and the two| With the lead at stake, the Cubs ora and Tresh; Mahaffey and|Chamber Commerce, Mandan, af 4 effective batter in the Will lineup. ‘ore || Los Angeles total. tor had to cut them out . . . ouch. games are expected to give Bismarck and Cards clash Monday in the start . ‘Warner Peterson, Williston, 8. ) j Matt Hummel shaded Deeds of |? : f=} f 9) The Americans figured in record fans a fair idea of what may be ex- res poset rains shiney re DOSEN, PHILLIPS WIN jamestown in the battle for third|~‘s a Y ite ae performances in eight of the . : pected of the local club in the Wich- ly Columbus , PHL Place honors, giving up five hits to pite cri |16 track and field events. steadily increased his pace and fin-|jta tournament, opening Priday night.|Chance. the fast-moving | Giants.) 2a No Detroit Lakes, Minn, Aug. 10.—(P)}— six his mates garnered off the James- {on base—Copelins 11, two! The broad jump standard which | ished like a sprinter. Following Tuesday night's game'a stretched their winning streak to paces, 2 Bud Dosen and Chuck Phillips, both 4 town moundsman. Taking a one-| base hite—Mann base hits | had stood since 1928 was bettered! Son ran the distance in two hours | banquet, feting the team, will be held |S¢ven Sunday by downing the Phi 2 Jeski of Fargo, N. D., and Harry Hite of 4 Tun lead in the first inning, the State Sc eight times, five by Owens. Five were |29 minutes 19.2 seconds, and Harper|in the Grand Pacific hotel. lies, 6-2, with Clyde Castleman sta: q Glenwood Monday had won their way Bank team piled up four more in the 4, by i under the former Olympic record both | in second place, in 2:31:23.2, both un- SESSA ring in @ three-hit eight-inning re- R H B|!O the semi-finals of the second an- third and then choked off a belated | 0” balls off ghana -|for the 1,500 meters and the 3,000!der the Olympic mark of 2:31:36 set lief pitching trick. ulsville 15 3 nual Detroit Lakes invitational ten- Jamestown rally for a 7-6 victory. | Limpires: “Are, Roehrick. ™ "4*** | meters steeplechase finals, while the|by Zabala in 1932. Yanks Retain Edge cores 7|2/8 tournament Monday, with the Summary of the tournament play: first six in the 50 kilometer walk were Americans Drop Out e Maintaining their 11-game Ameri- ipo! .|fourth contestant to be decided in a First Round : in Sem Finae .| under the former record. The American, Ellison (Tarzan) can League lead, the Yankees bowled) | (othr ‘4 match Monday morning. Arnold HR Eljamestown | AB RH PO A El The biggest shock from the Ameri-| Brown of Alton, R. I, ran well in % over the Athletics twice, 7-6 in ten|hofer: MeKain and Dickey. | |Rrisch of Breckenridge and Clift Minot .. 010 0001— 2 2 2 ‘oh, I-ss ... 1 96 1 0) can point of view included the failure | the first half of the race, then with- innings and 3-0, with Lou Gehrig ome 400 010 5 6 0 Johnson of Glenwood met Monday DO. H. Will ~ OL 131 x—10 7 2|Enzminger. p.. 1 1 1 ©) of Don Lash of Indiana university to; drew shortly before the end and col- at mgs hitting his 34th homer in the opener Louisville ...... 720 420 > a 517 0 morning in a match to determine the Batteries Thompson, Wildgrube} Fowsl!, fst . 4 o 4 gain a single point either in the dis-j lapsed. Bill McMahon of Worcester, and driving in all the runs in the yerenren 6 o'clock ry other semi-finalist. @ and Anderson; Brown and Becker. | peters + © 4 ot tance or the flat races, the inability |Mass., also dropped out before tack- nightcap with a triple with the bases De Pisege port w) ON Ee Ses HR E/Mi o © © {of Jack Torrance of Baton Rouge,|ling the hills the second time, leaving (By the Associated Press) loaded. Bass, nd ypaviets Righter; | —— 4 Bank of N. D. .. $03 206 0-11 16 3/8 1 3 2 1) La, to do better than fifth in thei Johnny Kelly of Arlington, Mass. to Henares AES ‘The Indians saved second place| Henry a ‘ee. = z 3 ccc .... 202 004 4—12 6 10] 4 ® 7 4 {Shot put, and the elimination of {carry the United States in the-event.| ray Claire ........ 50 38 Batteries — Hummel and Kelley; — . ~ |Henry Dreyer of Providence, R. 1, the! Kelly finished 18th. Jamestown 48 40 a ‘Hetman and Krause. Totals .... 2 Cig lea ‘team’s hammer-throwing ace, before; Sam Stoller, of Cincinnati, Ohio,| Winnipeg ... 5942 | : none te H Po A the finals of the event, who, with Marty Glickman of Brook- | £4180" Moorhead ao ae . Copelins .. 100 205 1-11 8 90} Diehl, Podge AO The No. 1 upset of the games, how- | lyn, lost his place on the sprint relay| Wausau . Dickinson . 000 200 1— 9 3 1/Bolstaa, rf 2 9° 2 ojever, was the failure of England’s| team, announced Sunday that he had | Crodkston Batteries — Neibauer, Schneider wantin, 1 : nay Se ?; Stan Wooderson to qualify for the! decided to give up running, despite|/Duluth .. ... * Who Wouldn’t! rp Schlickenmeyer; McKenzie and) srurp 1 Dod: jes < ot {Lovet aneree Pe ip rib: jack js fact that he has another year of ee : ny Press) who uldn't. lowe. Tait, 1 yO. ise coe ad velock of New Zealand en all|comeptition at the University of Mood: H R E| Walters, 2 9 i Ba 38 ‘doubt about who is the world’s great-| Michigan. He claimed he had not|Chicago . aaplial beity evils, y New Salem 000 000 3— 8 3 7| Kelley. « Oe a eees ¢ fest miler. ' been treated fairly in being dropped | St. Lous, “8 was give up her ten- 5 Zeeland 032 340 0-13 14 3 I ep calc age gil | The Argentine’s Juan Carlos Zabala | from the team. Pittsburgh | 8 3 nis career... Mrs. Moody is un- Batteries — Wolf, Burman; Peiffer Totals ; 10. Bias Ae | couaneed, in an attempt to repeat his}; America’s 400-meter relay team of; Cincinnati 53 der contract to design women’s and B. Wolf. Score by tnbinge }1932 marathon triumph when leg| Jesse Owens, Ralph Metcalfe, Foy Bester 5 u clothes for the tempting salary R iy $F) cramps crippled him after a dizzy|Draper and Frank Wykoff, lowered] Prihavinnia 3965 of $100,000! Napoleon . 010 0200— 8 3 6| Summary a tum. | Pace in the first half of the distance! the world’s record to 39.8 seconds in a en Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 34; 3 ante, 400 100 x— 8 5 1 il telier-Hoamingers ent oe aoe By tale Ben, and, by sinning the event, Italy was second AMERICAN LEAGUE eat Red Sox, and Trosky, Indians, jatteries — Kluppe, Green and], vier ‘ a reat Britain, Za- | an ermany ird. S Y A Oust; F. Miller and L, Klein. its—‘Deeds: hits ‘off tiunmel's | Pala virtually collapsed end’ was| Great Britain won the 1,600-meter| Strveing rh Pitching—Hadley, Yankees, 10-1; Ma- H R Elin 5 innings, off Enzminger 6 in 4) borne away from the course on aj relay, with the United States second.| Chicago . lone, 10-3. = Schlitz ......... 1101321 1-13 18 3} innings: en k out by Hummel 2, by | stretcher. The British won by 10 meters in 3:08.} Detroit . NATIONAL LEAGUE Turtle Lake .... 070 0010—6 8 6| Du7™ "Ber, o ;|_Son, a Korean college student,|Members of the American quartet| Boston Pek Batting—Mize, Cardinals, 371; Med- Batteries — Neibauer, McCorrie, J.| game—— nel moved steadily along through the|were Eddie O’Brien, Harold Cagle, it. wick, Cardinals, 361. ~ Neibauer and J. Cowan; Sackman,| strom an \aee half of the tough, hilly course,| Bob Young and Al Fitch. . Chapman and Seeger. ‘ , og HRE * ° Ellendale . 290.000:0-11 4 3 Our Boarding House With Major Hoople Milwauke | Mandan - 500 0000—9 5 3 : oe reais gee cine, Boonioed “tna 8. EGAD, WANK J UM MRUME—=~WHILE I wae Qe crit i Emelling. : CREALLING WILD STEER,IN THE FAR NORTH BZ HE! ; Columbuh HRE | TRY, A BG FELLOW BROKE FROM THE A TOUGH : i ae —! = ++ 001 000 000— 1 5 2 1 Sart: A888 a1) 10g = Pegg TAIL INTHE AIR, HEADED : Chicago ...... 161 001 1ix—10 13 0) Cleveland : Batteries—Carlson and Rugust; W. RAIGHT FOR ASMALL CHILD AT PLay/ Dietrich a ox and Johnson. as URGING MY PINTO TO TOP SPEED, 1 GOT i " i Bismarck Chev. 145 105 x—16 16 7 WITHIN 60 FEET OF THE ANIMAL'S HEAD, Mandan Giants ..0004002— 8 6 3 BY . | Batteries—Meinhover and Sorsdah!; | Paya MAP BOT SO FEET ‘ir Snyder, phia : \ Ay i Sinkula and Helbling. : D—~ LEANING OUT ' | -ZDY ; ay i Second READ OF MY STEED, I ROPED would turn professional i ‘and Dickey. ; NE! fe HRE S is ( i é q SP IN 033 a 3 BISMIARCK ND Batteries—P. Neibauer, Potter an BARE YARD ell, Schlickenmeyer; J. Devise and wets =e | FOR RENT Living Room - Bedroom - Two Clothes Closets Kitchen - Bath - Electric Refrigerator - Electric Stove - Laundry Privileges - Fireproof Building. 4) per moath. Inguleg | Bismarck Tribune i tat F oon ... 3 4 Som i i :

Other pages from this issue: