The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1936, Page 8

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PAILED 70 LOSE IN HISTORY OF SERIES Green Bismarck Offense Lack- ed Drive Because of Poor Timing LINTON G AINE D ON ENDS Lion Blocking, Ball-toting of Dawson and Murray Fea- ture Contest By The Downtown Quarterback. While a green Bismarck team got some much-needed football under its belt, a snarling band of Linton Lions made gridiron history at Hughes} ield Friday night by battling the mons to a scoreless tie. It was the} first. game ever playéd between the! two schools that did not end in al Linton defeat. t It is customary to say of a team! which has come through in its open- ing game to the customers’ satisfac- @ tion, that it “shows potentialities.” This can be said with a good deal of confidence about Glenn Hanna's c Demons. Faced Veteran Team In the first place, without a |: 1 men in their starting lineu| were facing a team composed mo: of veterans. This difference showed itself mainly in the offensive play of the two teams. Linton presented one the smoothest early season att: seen on Hughes Field. The line outcharged its heavier opponents much of the} time and the entire squad blocked! well. The plays clicked | Bismarck tried too hard, and the tesults showed in its running attack The backs and linemen were tense, the plays for the most part lacked timing, and the Demon drive was not what it should have been. | After allowing for the above, this observer concludes that Bismarck had the better of the ball game. of Got 10 First Downs | The Demons counted 10 first downs! to Linton’s 7. Linton failed to get inside the Demons’ 21-yard line. In the second quarter Bismarck carried the ball to Linton’s 98-yard line, where they lost it on downs. Six Bismarck fumbles and four off- | side penalties were big factors in their failure to score. Once in the fourth quarter Linton fumbled on its own 16-yard line and Bismarck recovered the hall. The play was called back, however, and the Demons given one of their five- yard setbacks. Farlier in the quarter @ costly Bismarck fumble gave Linton the ball on its own 24-yard line. On another occasion Chuck Murray, playing in the safety position for the Demons took one of Walter Dobler’s Punts on his own 10-yard line and raced to the Linton 45-yard stripe be- fore he was spilled. Run Called Back ‘The 45-yard dash was called back, however, and Bismarck given another offside penalty. Linton presented a well-balanced, fighting eleven. If anyone can be singled out for individual praise it was the elusive Kremer and Dobler. Together they gained most of the Lions’ yardage. Thanks to Dobler's smart field generalship, most of that yardage was made on sweeping end runs. Early in the game he found the center of the Demon wall couldn't be pierced, but the ends could be turned Gained Around Ends So around the ends went the Lion backs for the remainder of the con- test, often for substantial gains. The trick of smearing a part of the inter- ference as they’re knocked out of the Play so the defensive backs have a j;second and fifth. Kansas Ci THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1986 Fighting Linton Squad Holds Demons to Scoreless ARST TIME LIONS }©'Cards Split Do Series; Brewers Take Third from Blues the scrappy St. Paul Saints saw Indianapolis Indians. The Brewers won their third straight game last night from the third place Tto4. ¥ took their first game in three starts against, Indianapolis 6 to 5, in 11 innings. Before a paid attendance of 3,750 the Brewers advanced to within one game of the playoff finals behind some effective relief pitching by Li Hamlin and three run bursts in the Hamlin replaced Joe Heving in the eighth, after the Blues had smashed out four hits and two runs, and held the Kansas City club hitless. The Saints won on the pitching and batting of young Ira Hutchinson, who took the mound in the ninth with the sacks loaded and two out. Hutchin- son fanned Berger and held the tribe scoreless the next two frames. In the eleventh, after singles hy Pasek and McWilliams, he drove a ground ball that scored the winning run Bob Boken, with a homer and three singles, led the apostle attack, driving in five runs Indianapolis to conclude the best four cut of seven series, the winner to meet the Milwaul insas City winner in a seven game series. Saints Win in 11 Innings St. Paul—With the score tied 5-all in the ninth, the bases loaded, and three balls and no strikes on the bat- ter, Ira Hutchinson took the mound for St. Paul and whiffed the batter on three pitches for the final out and St. Paul went on to win their first game of the play-off series from In- dianapolis 6 to 5 in 11 innings, * RHE Indianapolis ..060 002 102 00— 5 12 1 St. Paul......102 000 020 01— 6 12 1 Turner and Riddel; Rigney, Cox, Hutchinson and Pasek. Brewers ¥ Third Kansas City — Milwaukee won Its third straight game in the p'ay-off| series from Kansas City 7 to.4. Brewers need only one more to win} the right to meet the victor of the} St. Paul-Indianapolis series. The RHE Milwaukee 031 030 000— 7 9 1 Hamlin and Brenzel: Niggeling, Evans, Moore and Madjeski. ST. PAUL BOXER WINS 8an Francisco, Sept. 12—(P)—Lee Savoldi, 183, St. Paul, Minn., knocked | out Ford Smith, 221, Kalispell, Mont.. | with a stiff right to the stomach and a left to the chin in the fourth round of a ten-round bout here last night. a bad pass from center and running nearly 15 rds with it ght old-fashioned power the Demons had marched nearly half the length of the feild. Then with the ball in midfield and the timekeeper warning that only seconds remain to play, Murray tried | a the game ended. pass which Kramer intercepted a The lineup: clearer shot at the ball carrier is one| Bismarck Linten that Bismarck’s green flankmen will! Koch le Kramer undoubtedly acquire with additiona! | Munroe It Bosh experience. Jordan lg Hanson (W.) From tackle to tackle the Demon | McDonald c Fisher linemen were hard to single out for praise or blame. Line plays is hard to watch under artificial light—especial- ly if the watcher is not an expert. But like most of the stands, this ob- server managed to see the backs, and is pleased to report that Bismarck hhas two men this fall who can go to town with a football. | . Dawson Pounded Line From the time he entered the game in the second quarter until the final whistle blew Asa Dawson showed the | | fans an’ old-fashioned hard-hitting, @enter-smashing fullback. Whether the line opened a hole or not, Daw- gon could be counted on for yardage which was often made with a flock of | Linton tacklers on his back. i Speedy Chuck Murray, who seemed } to have that “relaxed drive” lacking im most of the Demon players, served Notice on future Bismarck opponents that they have s dengerous broken field runner to face. } ‘Three times he slipped off tackle for gains of 11, 14 and 17 yards, cov- ering much of the ground with his in- terference gone. When he gathered in Dobler’s punt in full stride on the 10-yard line and reversed his field twice in his 45-yard gallop, he was side-stepping tacklers almost every foot of the way. More than once he ‘was nearly in the clear. Closing Minutes Thrilling From the standpoint of good! straight football, the closing minutes of the. fourth quarter provided the best show. Standing on Bismarck’s 42-yard line, Walter Dobler caught the De- Mons’ corner with a beautifully Placed punt. The bal! went outside On the four-yerd line. ‘Then Bismarck, standing in what would normally be the shadow of wheir goal posts except for the plac- ing of the floodlights on Hughes Field, and with the timere’s watch saying two minutes play, started to fight. Dawson hit the center for five yards. He picked up five more through the same spot. Murray went off Bowman Rishworth Penner, | Bectal. B. Fisher | Showers, isch tter Clausnitzer re Daly Welch th Biechler | Kallenberger Plage) Bowers Dobler Murray fb Leuwer Substitutes: Bismarck — Dawson, Linton—Schumeister, Coon, Officials — McMahon, referee; umpire: Campagna, head inesman, Are Now One Behind in A. A.! Chicago, Sept. 12.—(/P)—The champ- ion Milwaukee Brewers had a strangle- (hold on a spot in the American Asso- | ciation playoff finals Saturday and al chance to get back into the running after being two games down to the Kkansas City club, whipping the Blues rday afternoon the Saints | || der, halfs; The teams now go to; 000 002 020— 4 10 1: FANS WILL SEE ST. MARY’S; __MANDAN OPEN SEASONS HERE ‘Saints Win Playoff Game from Indians; | Football fans will see two more local squads swing into action Mon- day night at Hughes field when St. Mary’s high school will clash with the Mandan Braves in the opening | for Monday Night Hughes Field Clash Unknown | game of the season for both squads. | Relative strength of the two teams j's unknown. Ted Campagna, start- ing his first year as the Saint’s men- tor, has been drilling his squad for nearly a month on football funda- | mentals. | He has a crew of medium i \ few of whom have much football be- hind them. The Brave coach, Leonard C, Mc~ Mahon, has a good share of his last year’s team back, who will probably neither give nor take a weight ad- vantage from St. Mary’s. | Saturday Campagna announced @ {lineup that will probably start the | game. It consists of Reff and M. En- | tringer, ends; Cavisino and G Garske, j} tackles; Hessinger and Litt, guards; | Ressler, center; Jundt and D. Schnet- | S. Schneider, quarter; and | Patzman, full. The game will begin at 8 p. m. ‘Big Ten Coaches | Look for Talent Northwestern, Opening Against lowa; Gets 7-Hour | for new talent to replace aces lost by graduation was on in earnest around | Big Ten football camps Saturday. Bob Zuppke, sending his 85 Illinois | candidates through a strenuous ses- | sion, which included a hard scrim- | mage, was impressed by the ball- | tend ne and running of three so- back, and Jack Broaday and Leo | Stasica, halfbacks. | At Chicago, Coach Clark Shaugh- nessy shifted players constantly as he sought a combination which would click and a halfback to fill the spot ; left vacant by the graduation of the | great Jay Berwanger, | Wildcats Get Workout | The Northwestern Wildcats, who | face a tough opener in Iowa Oct. 3, were lashed through a seven-hour | workout. The Minnesota camp, looking ahead | to @ curtain raiser against the strong Washington Huskies, saw Bernie ; Bierman try two halfbacks, Rudy Gmitro, 160 pounds, and Wilbur Moore, 175 pound sophomore, at full- L back, the spot Sheldon Beise filled js capably last season. Despite intermittent rains, Harry Stuhldreher drove his Wisconsin Bad- gers through a long drill, stressing speed in running and the aerial! attack. Howard Weiss, sophomore | back, looked good flipping the oval.) Hawkeyes Scrimmage | Relative Strength of Squads ‘weight { Workout | Chicago, Sept. 12—(P)—The search| phomore$, Ken Zimmerman, a full-! | Toronto, Sept. 12—(#)—The battle for |Second All-Star Wind Up 3-Game Series and Season Saturday the first all-star team 15 to 14 Thurs- day afternoon in the first of a three- game series that winds up junior league baseball activities in Bismarck. A final double-header was played Saturday morning. The losers outfielded and outhit the winners, but the second team’s margin ef victory came in the first three in- nings when Carley, on the mound for the first team, walked eight men and granted six hits. Three runs came in in the first inning, and eight in the third. The two teams, composed of players in the sixth grade or under, were chosen at the conclusion of the regu- lar playing season by Bismarck recre- ational workers. The box score: 1st All-Star Clausnitzer, ss McCabe, 2nd ...... Olson, c ..... Carley, 3rd Patzman, p, cf . Wenzel, p, 3rd .. Andrews, rf | Vettel, If ; Porter, 1st O08 COncoeoury, Bonooods Neveve ew Totals .......... 2nd All-Star Smith, If Werner, p, 2nd Schmidt. 3rd Geiger, 2nd, p . Kimley, 1st Simons, cf .. Coons, ss -. Porter, rf . Dahlen, c . ce COnmnwOwo, & Pe ronuaeane & BomoSrows Totals Score by innings— 1st Team ». 003 101 522—14 2nd Team . 308 021 100—15 Winning pitcher Geiger, losing pitcher Carley; left on base 1st team 9, 2nd team 7; two base hits Geiger 1; three base hits Wenzel, Schmidt, Geiger, P. Porter; home runs Geiger, Andrews; hits off Geiger, 6 in 5 in- nings, off Werner 4 in 4 innings, off Carley 6 in 3 innings, off Wen- zel 3 in 3 innings, Patzman 0 in 3 in- nings; struck cut by Geiger 9, by Werner 4, by Carley 3, by Patzman 3, by Wenzel 5; bases on balls off Gei- ger 0, off Werner 3, off Carley 8, off Patzman 2, off Wenzel 1. Umpires, Raymond Olson and John Walters. Little, 7 Under Par, Leads Canadian Field the Canadian open golf title looked like a two-man affair as the final 36-holes began Saturday, even though many of the “big time” club- bers of the United States and Canada remained in the field, Lawson Little of San Francisco, abdicated ruler of amateur golfdom, was so far ahead of most of his rivals after two par-smashing rounds that only Dapper Paul Runyan, former At Iowa the Hawkeyes participated | | in a light scrimmage and practiced] ‘Kick formations, while at Michigan! Harry Kipke announced that the! | Wolverines this season will have an}; | offense built primarily around punt formations, which he described as) “the most effective way of getting| touchdowns.” ! Indiana candidates donned track) ; clothes under the hot sun The | | Purdue camp took things easy be- | cause of the high temperatures. i | Coach Elmer Layden, shifting his} | 102 Notre Dame candidates frequent j ly, moved Joe Ruetz, star sophomor | fullback, to a right half back post. | | At Ohio State, Jim McDonald re-! | ceived approving nods from Francis! | Schmidt as he called signals. j LASKY FATHER OF GIRL Los Angeles, Sept, 12—\Pi—Art} Lasky, heavyweight boxer from Min-| neapolis, is the father of a new-born, | 5-pound girl. He heard the news in a hospital room where he is recover- ‘ing from an eye operation. Mrs.} Lasky, confined in another hospital,; is “doing nicely,” nurses said. | P. G. A. titleholder from White Plains, N. Y., appeared to have any chance to overhaul him. Little carded 67-66—133 for his first, two rounds, beating par for the St. Andrews public course by seven strokes. The sharpshooting Runyan Team Beats First; All-City Junior League Squads =| ocorsccooos ROPONHONEE HE | ‘FAILURE 10 CASH IN ON CHANCES IS COSTLY 70 CARDS ‘The second all-star team nosed out}New York's Four-Game Lead \ With 17 Left to Play Looks Big (By the Associated Press) For some people, opportunity knocks only once, For Frankie Frisch and his Cardinals, it’s been banging on the door for a week—but the Gas House gang won't let it in, As a result, they're still four games behind the league-leading Giants Sat- play, the job of catching up looks as tough as trying to hit one of Carl Hubbell’s screwball specials. In the past week, the Giants have taken only four of their nine starts. If the Cards had taken advantage of up as much as 215 games of vital ground, but instead, they barely man- aged to duplicate the New Yorkers’ performance, and missed the chance to close the gap. FRIDAY’S STARS Carl Hubbell, Giants — Stopped Cubs with four hits. Lou Gehrig, Yankees — Hit homer with two on base against Tigers. Don Gutteridge, Cardinals and Van Mungo, Dodgers — Former’s two homers and triple led way in doubleheader opener win; Mungo's pitching won nightcap. Earl Whitehill, Senators—Limit- ed Indians to six hits, Gus Suhr, Pirates— Hit double and two singles, driving in four Tuns against Bees. {| Wes Ferrell, Red Sox — Beat }| Browns with six hits. Dolph Camilli, Phillies — Drove in three runs with homer against Reds. Zeke Bonura. White Sox — Had five singles and drove in four runs against Athletics, The set-up was no different yester- day. The Giants won their one game against the Cubs, 5-1 with Hubbell pitching a four-hitter for his 13th siraight win and 23rd of the season. Cards Split Doubleheader The Cardinals, with a doubleheader against the Dodgers, could have gained a half-game by taking both. Instead, they won only the opener 12-8 as Rookie Don Gutteridge belted out two homers and a triple, and then dropped the nightcap 5-4, their bats helpless before Van Mungo's strikeout elbow- ing. That left the race in this condition: To Club W. L. Behind Play Giants ...... 83 54 ae Bus Cards ....... 79 58 4 ki Cubs ....... 78 61 6 15 The Pirates climbed aboard young Bill Weir’s pitching for five runs in the first inning to sew up a 10-3 vic- tory over the Bees. A surprise turned up for the Reds in Philadelphia as the Phillies, with Dolph Camilli's big bat setting the pace, landed on Wild Bill Hallahan and two other Cincinnati throwers for 12 hits and a 9-6 win. Sox Equal Hit Record The White Sox equalled the major league record for hits off one pitcher in one game, walloping Horace Lisen- was in second place with 72-65—137. Jack Littler of Ottawa, who equaled par twice, and Tony Manero of Greensboro, N. C., United States open titleholder, with 69-71, were tied for third with 140s, Wilmer Allison had 75 spills dur- ng a Wimbledon match with Bunny justin. o+— a ht | Fights Last Nig NE (By the Associated Press) New York — Ceferino Garcia, 146, Philippine Islands, outpoint- ed Cleto Locatellia, 143%, New York, (10). . Chicago—Leo Rodak, 125, Chi- cago, knocked out Frankie Wol- fran, 12912, Winnipeg, Man., (2). San Francisco — Lee Savoldi, 183, St. Paul, knocked out Ford Smith, 221, Kalispell, Mont., (4). Our Boarding House With Major Hoopie COMBINATION TIME STARTS THE CLOCK § AKINIG YY tackle for another five, and repeated the perfomance. Dawson cracked center for a yard. Murray got seven . BATHTUB STOPPER THERE'LL BE NO MORE LONG WAITS FOR MY BATH —UMP- RUMP -F —WHEN THE STOPPER IS PLT INTO THE TUB, IT END OF IS MINUTES, THE PLUG AUTOMATICALLY 1S PULLED, LETTING THE WATER OUT! THUS—YOU 4S-MINUTE BATHERS ARE UMITED TO AIS MINUTE EGAD —WHEN 1 PERFECT THIS \Yy*- ZZ ws Dont Rie -CLOCK AND PROBABLY Z Him! HE J DUETO %& MIGHT GO ¥ & THE RECENT ) INTO A TAN ZY, DAMP A SPIN, IF HEY B oni & SHIFTS HIS ¥ AND, AT THE ff WARPING TH! WOCD UNDER J CYLINDER, bee for 26 safeties and a 17-3 win over the Athletics, as Monty Stratton held the Mackmen to six hits. Lou Gehrig blasted his third homer in as many days—his 46th for the season—to lead the Yankees to a 14-4 conquest of the Tigers. That battle for third place in the American League shifted again, and the Senators broke a tie with the Tigers and took sole possession by t trouncing the badly slipping Cleveland Indians 7-2 behind Eart Whitehill’s six-hit hurling. The Red Sox topped the Browns 6-2, with Wes Ferrell pitching a six-hitter. AMERICAN LEAGUE Sox Win Chicago—Monty Stratton gave the A’s but six hits and the second place Chicago White Sox won easily 17 to 2, collecting 26 hits, a major league record. HE : R Philadelphia .. 000 010 001— 2 6 1 Chicago ...... 400 043 42x—17 26 0 Lisenbee and Hayes, Moss; Strat- ton and Sewell, Shea. Wi Defeats Cleveland Cleveland—Washington took an early lead, scoring five runs in the first to defeat Cleveland 7 to 2. RHE Washington .. 500 000 011— 711 2 Cleveland .... 000 100 010-2 6 1 Whitehill and Hogan, Millies; Gale- house, Lee Hildebrand and George. Yankees Swamp Tigers Detroit—New York swamped the Detroit Tigers 14 to 4 collecting nine Tuns in the eighth inning. ee New York .... 032 000 000-14 15 1 Detroit ....... 000 002 000— 411 0 Malone and Glenn; Sorrell, Sulli- van, Lawson and Hayworth. Red Sox Beat Browns St. Louis—The Boston Red Sox easily won over the St. Louis Browns 6 to 2. W. Ferrell Ferrell; Liebhert, Van Atta and Hemsley. NATIONAL LEAGUE Hubbell Gives Giants 5-1 Victory New York—Carl Hubbell hurled four-hit ball for the New York iphia—The lowly took the first game of the series from Cincinnati 9 to 6, { fense this let-down, they might have picked | = ee Tie uble Bill With Dodgers As Hubbell Sets Cubs Down, 5-1 MINOT AND VALLEY CITY SHOW _|Perry and Budge POWER IN OPENING VICTORIES} Meet in Net Finals Magicians Defeat Harvey, o401| | Hi-Liners Swamp Ender- | lin, 53-0 Minot, N. D., Sept. 12—()—The Minot high school football team showed flashes of offensive power in defeating Harvey last night, 24-0. ALL-STATE FULLBACK AIDS HI-LINER VICTORS Valley City, N. D., ; Valley City high Sept. 12.—)— school overwhelmed | 5 The Standing (Bz the Associated Prees) NATIONAL LEAGUE Club LA L Enderlin 53-0 in the opening grid| Brooklyn game of the season under floodlights here Friday night. The Hi-Liner of- featured the line-plunging of Kenneth Willey all-state fullback and urday, and, with only 17 games left to) Boh Carter, halfback who returned punts 80 and 50 yards for touch-| De downs. Strasburg Captures Dakotah League Title Strasburg.—Strasburg annexed the Dakotah League title here by sweep- ing both games of a best two-out-of- three series with Zeeland, runnerup squad. Strasburg won the first game 7-5 in 11 innings, and blanked Zee- land 3-0 for its second victory. Wald, Strasburg moundsman, set the losers down with six hits in the final contest. Strasburg ended the season with a record of 16 games won, seven lost, and one tied. Teams that played in the Dacotah league were Strasburg, Zeeland, Ash- ley, Linton, Hazelton, and Wishek. RHE Cincinnati .... 120 020010—-6 1 0 Philadelphia .. 400 014 OOx— 912 1 Hallahan, Stine, Mooty and Lom- bardi; Passeau, Johnson and At- wood. Pittsburg Beats Boston Boston—Scoring half their runs in the first inning enabled Pittsburgh j to take an easy victory over Boston 10 to 3. RHE Pittsburgh .... 531 000 010—10 13 2 Boston ........ 200 000 010— 311 3 Blanton and Todd; Weir, Smith and Lopez, Mueller. Cards Split Pair Brooklyn—St. Louis lost another half game in the final drive in the National League as they split a doubleheader with Brooklyn, winning the first 12 to 8 and dropping the second 5 to 3. RHE First game— St. Louis ...... 020 005 302—12 16 4 Brooklyn 000 201 005— 8 17 1 Walker, Rybe, Earnshaw and Ogro- dowski; Butcher, Baker and Phelps.! Second game— RHE St. Louis . 020 001 000— 3 9 1 Brooklyn 301 001 00x— 5 11 0 Parmelee, Heusser, McGee, Haines and -Ogrodowski Mungo and Berres, Phelps. Englishman and Helen Jacobs, Who Plays Alice Marble, Are Favorites Hills, N. Y., Sept. 12—)— ee ae with a 2 St. Lou! <1 Philadelphia 30) asa | eee eye aor vernal impres- NORTHERN LEAGUE sive in beating Helen Pedersen - a yh Tile sen mestown . : reached the final by gi eee: £1 B80 lan indifferent performance for three Wausau ... 57 —-.513 |sets and then in the fourth almost blew Fargo-Moorh co -487 | Bitsy Grant off the court. Perry won Superior UTR at 6-4, 3-6, 7-5, 6-2. Crookston 66 4451 Bt 6-4, 3-6, 7-5, 6-2, Duluth .. 1 .372| Budge closely approached Playoffs in Northern St. Paul, Sept. 12.—(?}—Jamestown, |Eau Claire, Winnipeg and Wausau Saturday appeared almost certain to jstart the Shaughnessy playoffs for the Northern Baseball League pen- nant next Monday. Should the standings remain un- changed Sunday, as it appears more than likely, Wausau would open one of the semi-final playoff series against Eau Claire, and in the other Winnipeg would tackle the league leading Jamestown club. : The series, according to the regular manner of conducting the playoff, would open at the first and second place cities, Jamestown and Eau Claire. Kenmare to Meet Canadian Gridders Kenmare, N. D., Sept, 12.—(7)— With seven lettermen returning, Coach W. F. Thompson has been sending his high school football club through an intensive training sched- ule preparatory to opening against a Canadian club. The Kenmare team will either meet the Regina Dales or Weyburn Junior Rugby club on Sept. 26. ‘There are seven games on the’ Ken- mare schedule which Coach Thomp- son has described as a “particularly tough” line up in view of-a lighter team this year than in 1935. The team this year will average about 150 pounds against 165 pounds last year. League Start Monday top form yesterday in beating Parker of Spring Lake, N. J. 6-4, 6-3, 6-3, Major League Leaders { o (By the Associated Press) cog —Averill, ATIB; - pling, White Sox, 3778. Sa Runs — Gehrig, Yankeas, 155; ringer, Tigers, 131. Hits — Averill, Indians, 212; Geh- ringer, Tigers, 206. 5 ~ Home runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 46; Trosky, Indians, and Foxx, Red |. Sox, 37, Pitching — Hadley,, Yankees, 13-4; Pearson, Yankees, 18-6. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — P. Waner, Pirates, 373; Rune Martin Cardinal, 112 aes macy Cardinals, 112; Ott, Hits — Medwick, Cardinals, 203; P. Waner, Pirates, 195, Home runs—Ott, Giants, 90; Berger, Bees, and Camilli, 24. Pitching — Hubbell, Giants, 28-6; French, Cubs, 18-6. Valley City Team In National Meet Chicago, Sept. 12.—(7)—First round pairings for the women’s section of the national softball championship tournament, opening Saturday at Soldier Field, found the Washington, 8. C., team pitted against Valley City, N. D. Twenty-two women’s teams are en- tered. OF YOUR IKE the tireless scientist laboring in his lboratory, seek- Uw ew cae Individual Dixies are also active guatdians of your health. These sanitary drinking cups safeguard you from the well- known dangers of common drinking vessels, recognized by public and medical profession alike, as active spreaders of colds, grippe and other more serious contegions. Dixies are used once, then thrown away. You can be sure, when you drink from Dixie, that your lips ate the first and lest to touch its dainty rolled brim. No stranger left upon it 2 threat to your health. : Dixies are being used'more and more widely by the better public locations. Many careful people also use Dixies in their bathrooms, kitchens and pantries to prevent the spread of colds and other contagions through the family, This company, wholesalers of Dixies in this district, is firmly convinced of the usefulness and value of sanitary Dixies. It urges you to patronize those fountains that pail drinks in Dixi beauty and convenience. The Bismarck Tribune Co. Stationery Dept. Phone 32 HEALTH and semi- and to use Dixies in your x | Bismarek Widely wed at SODA FOUNTAINS OFFICES PUBLIC BUILDINGS PICNICS PARTIES TABLES 6ATHROOMS: KITCHENS SCHOOLS

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