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—_—_ DOWN NASH-FINGH, KLEINS IN SECOND GAMES OF SEASON Zahn Gives Up But 2 Hits as Seedstore Outfit Wins * Over Whole: HANDER GIVES UP ~-QWALKS IN GAME Win Puts Chisox in Second Place Ahead of Idle Bosox, Losing Tigers | INDIANS DUMP BENGALS > Giants Take Odd Game Brooklyn Series in Only National League Tilt Three Homers in’ 9th Win for Kels Reynolds, Kress, Cohen Smash Circuit Blows in Triumph Over Saints sles 2. ) — Toledaie for the American Chicago, June Mudhens, battling Association. leader Roosevelt Bar and Will's seedstore softball teams ‘kept their records clear with victories over Klein's Cleaners (By the Associated Press) White Sox haven't ; Won a pennant since 1019, their third " place in the American League last season was their high-water mark aince’1920, when they finished: second.: But the Windy City team Wednes- Gay has at least one claim to distinc- tion,—on its roster are three of the four active American League pitch- ers credited with no-hit, no-run games. They are 36-year-old Ted Lyons, who turned the trick in 1926; ‘Vernon Kennedy, who crashed the hurling hall of fame two seasons ago, and Bill Dietrich who joined the line- second game of the season for the four teams. . ie Roosevelt ten outscored Klein's t 8 to 4 as Benser clouted out the only ‘of the day, while Will’s team was shutting out Nash-Finch 7 to 0 behind the two-hit flinging of J. Volk connected for two hits in four trips to the plate for the Roosevelt Bar team and J. Allen chalked up two bingles out of three attempts for the seedstore team to lead the hitters. up Tuesday. Roosevelt Bar AOHR PO AE each with the bases empty. + : aera 4 TUESDAY'S STARS Until the big attack, Whitey Wil- Tp E eo Bill Dietrich, White Sox—Pitch- ——— = “i shere had pitched effectively for the 4 1 0 0 4 ed first no-hit, no-run game in Saints. Reg Grabowski, who replaced 5 +t ‘ d 4 majors since 1935, allowed only|| Triumphant but tired, Wilbur Shaw (right) and his mechanic, Jig- | Jim Henry in the fifth, was the win- Ov Ped ONL two bases on balls and faced 29 et Johnson, are shown immediately after finishing their record Olson, ses SAM are Sate) patters in 8-0 shutout of Browns. reaking 500-mile dash in the Indianapolis auto race. Shaw drove P.Nelbauer,p 3 0 1 1 3 0 al Schumacher’ and Burgess || the entire distance without relief and stopped only twice. He was Totals... 20 6 8 21 9 4 Whitehead, Giants—Pormer fan- || only ten seconds ahead of Ralph Hepburn at the finish. A ned eight Dodgers in 5-2 victory; crowd of approximately 170,000 persons saw the race. pisins ae SPH bi POAE and home run in- Litten, of ° 2 1 9 0 ensley, yas tates 117) GOLFERS QUALIFY FOR oe pei Meinhove: JO dy Odd J Potter, 1s o 69 09 1 0 st. Nelson, rsi o 9 2 1 0 + | Beaudoin, c die dane o 0 NATIONAL OPEN TOURNAMENT ceed ae — AGES SERIO SE ebay eae lh Tolan... 26 6 4 8 8 4 ) at Sam Snead Cards Best Score:// Baseball Standings ||Kyikstad Elected |< 7%" o o Roosevelt Bar 300 221 x8 6 4 Winning pitcher, P, Neibauer; los- Pat Sawyer, Hendry Win in Minneapolis (By The Associated Press) AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Milwaukee ... Minneapolis Toledo .... Columbus . To Athletic Board Kindred Man Succeeds Cole- man on Consolidated High ang pitoner, Meinhover. i ft on base—Kleins 2, Roosevelt Bar 8; two e hits—Anderson, Diehl; three basi hits off Meinhove: New York, June 2.—(#)—Old man par took one of the worst beatings in .| his career, but he managed to whittle ‘an entry list of 1,404 golfers—an all- , |time record for the United States open Pet. 590 548 537 512 ATL Meinhover on balls o bauer 2. Score keeper: 6, by P. ft’ Meinhover 5, off P, No Umpire: Paul Hedstrom. ob Burckardt, championship—down to a field of School League Board ae. hice will pat ay = week Sunes Mier, wi. 3 3 7 oi i Tom al ie lan Peterson,ib 2 09 1 6 0 0 uraday, ener E. M..Kvikstad, Kindred, took over b 4 Loi iia rane eset his duties as third member of the|S Goetz’ ims. 2 0 6 0 0 0 mueeday in 30 district qualifying tests board of “caritroi of. the, Corientidated| Soy hr ngo 88 were 36-hole counts of 136. recorded |high school league at the annuallY: wore rss, i 2 1 i 0 ‘Sam Snead of White Sulphur meeting’ hhere Tuesday. He succeeds |g smeland,¢:.4 2 1 12 9 § rOwn, FE, < Springs, W. Va. the winter-tourga- Zany ite 1 1 0 0 8 Harrison of Stuttgart, Arc, and tiie ch BA 8 i” rk., a 1S ecee x oe"|single round of Gt°by ‘Orville “White, potas ten pists ia thaw baw Carlichampion Tony Manero’s successor a5, ° J. Masset, 1b. 0° 0 & 0 0 Enmke,|pro at the Sedvefield club, Greens- | Philadelphia Plans for the determination of @/isrkin, ras iD othe i te Ss boro, N. C. 3 St. Louis *.. pai focal champion ie se cobs A, Neibauer g 5 1 9 Previously 20 names Had been Listed NATIONAL LEAGUE Favorable consideration was given to/i°iroun 68320 en|as starters, 31 by exemption for fin-|_- ‘ wou z beers ica trend fen apes 1 8 5 08 ishing among the low 30 and ‘ties at | Pittsburgh . 3 12 Playo! ween’ the oo 8 of Baltusrol last year and eight in sec- leading team of each to determine the ree oo ot dt tlonal tests at Los Angeles and ‘Tacoma state ttlist.. No ‘definite action was] 5. Neitaue o 9 2 0. 8 May 17. Another exempt player, Dick taken, Monahan, If ee ea art a Golberg reported. that over 100 of /R- Samuelson 3b1. 9 0 1 0 0 jas forced to withdraw because f injuries in an automobile accident and & 16th qualifying place was grant- ed_to the Chicago district. . Snead, heading five aspirants for best |Places on the Ryder Cup team Tues- Gay, carded a sensational round of 184 schools in the league would be playing the new grid game this fall as compared to:92 last year when it was first tested extensively in the state. es - co Totals .,. Score by innings: Wills 20 000 2 Vantine Cub pimgnning piteher, Zahn: ” toning .| Vantine Cubs Defeat 5. uote, on bage—Wille 14) Nasir Finch Baldwin Club 11 to6 r’8 in 4 innings, off Zahn 2 in RGETG Mebausr 0, by Zahn 122° Vantine’s Cubs put things all even! off Hauck’ 6, off Niebai with two games won to two lost by wo off Hauck ue! 1, Umpire: Ray Lenihan, Burckardt. | Fights Last Night | , off ¥ Scorer: J. dell, Tim tests, Craig Wood at New York and ” Bryon Nelson and Ed Dudley at Phila- Bey delphia, while Jimmy Hines shot 146. hse redbperrg sb rd a (eee eee ‘The Vantine ‘club knocked out 11 (By the Associated Press d x s {hits against two Baldwin hurlers New York—Enrico Venturi, 148, assed the ets with tying colors| Scott Named Captain [ville Cummings, on the mound for] (ttaly, eatpotnted Ar vhile veterans, Evans i bs Freddie MeLeod, 100 winnes wana| Of Underwood Cagers} ‘me tineupe:, Grob, 13354, Other prominent players who f —* stopped ettlow. ater |te quality inclunded Leo Diegel; Gatme| Underwood, N, D, June 2—Donaid| Vantin ABR H Baldwin ABR H 3 Tony Bruno, my Byrd; Renolds Smith, Al and Abe. Beall, 1b 5 1°09 Farnum c 4 0 outpointed Sonan Burch’t rf 6 1 1. Klela rfp i Q 155, ‘Saginaw, 5 0 ¢ Leninantbs 0 6 ‘Tony an ane, (Grashadowed ihe Tndians’ swe 3° 1 weutnue? 0 0 a, "m, Sed by @ four-hit, three-run eighth- Pat Sawyer and Jock Hendry won ‘ H ? ia re gee 0 q .|the two positions in the Minneapolis 0 0 Becker'ss 30 “Anning rally, as well as Hal Schu- 6 0 Becker ss 3/0 0 ‘macher’s 10-hit defeat of the Dodgers, district, Sawyer shot. a 71-72—143,| runner-up in the state class wateaead -— — ts the ond [tee Under Per, and Hendry shot s 'ney, are Busch, all-state forward, and | eee en ant tas! series. B } football captain-elect; JohNsOD, | cerison, Grossman, Kollman; Stelte, guard. David, Lenihan, Becker. @. Kels Beat Eau Claire In Exhibition, 6 to 2 Minneapolis, June 2—()—On!: fan Atta and Hemsley; |game Wednesday One luth Dukes and the leading Crooks- = Pirates in the Northern baseball jeague. Dietrich Hurls No-Hit, No-Run Victory SOxRGHT (Roosevelt Bar, Wills Softball Teams Turn in Second Tr Midday Sun Wins Downs Field to Win 158th Annual Running at odds of 100 to 7. i Sandsprite, given practically no chance in the wagering, was quoted at odds of 100 to 1. Le Grand Duc was held at 100 to 9. Lord Astor's bad luck in the classic true to form. The Indian potentate has won three of the last eight Der- bies. Sports. Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, June 2—(#)—That gent you see taking bows out in Cleveland is Joe DiMaggio of the Yankees... . He predicted before the 1936 world’s series that “Hubbell ain’t invisible” . « You were right, Joe—he ain't... They are sitting pretty out at South Dakota State where 33 of the 36 mem- bers of last year’s football squad will be back on the job... What's be- come of Tommy Bridges’ fast one? ... » Ralph Guldah! was the first pro shot to tune up at Oakland Hills for next week's U. 8. open. Says Madison Square Gardens pub- English Classic WOULD BE TEST FOR RICKARD Outsider Distances Epsom|Build-Up Department Would Be “Over Browns iumphs BRADDOCK-LOUIS PROMOTION MAJOR LEAGUE | Working Overtime If Tex LEADERS ‘ Were Running Show (OU IERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Cronin, Rea Sox, 3813 5 rs, . But nateabere, gers, 38; Walker, , 33, sie walker, Tere a Bell, ome" runs —Cireenbers, Tigers, 11; Selkirk, Yankees, 10. piening-Hudlin, Indians, 5-0; Pears son, Yankees, 4-0. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Medwick, Cardinals, if Rickard were around and] yaughan, Pirates, 379. peddle” the’ performance s0/Runs—Galan, Cubs, 34; Medwick, now be plenty of] Cardinals, 32. up department,| Hite—Bartell, Giants, 56; Medwick, off Ducky Medwick’s| tome runs—Bartell, Giants, 11; Med- « wick, Cardinals, 9. Rickard first would make the most| pitching—Hubbell, Giants, 8-1; Blan- of the racial stories expected to ac-| ton, Pirates, and Fette, Bees, 5-1. Prominence. ‘There would be at least ‘wo! two out of Washington, one to the 4 ington, one to the) Alabama Still Turns ettect that, the Out Good Performers ‘University, Ala., June 2—The Uni- ing it was to stage such a battle at| versity of Alabama is still the spawn- Comiskey Park, on Chicago's south|ing ground for good ball players. Referee Squabble Good ies eee Fintona ot ine Sox and Freddy of Old Tedge wouldn't let the Illinois) peli 410; re is FER petency tle of the Long Count between\Tun-/ They are Riggs Stephenson, Bir- ney and Dempsey. He'd hold out for] mingham’s playing manager; Legrant George Blake, which would be great|scott, Baron outfielder; Lee Rogers, copy in Los Angeles and attract the|rittle Rock pitcher; Dixie Howell, attention of the moving picture col- third baseman; and Jim ony, There finally would be a clamor | Tabor, Little Rock third baseman, for Rickard, the man who referred} Tabor, who quit school just this the last heavyweight titular engage-| spring, is the young man who belted ment featuring a Negro. out a home run with the bases loaded would charge that Sammy |off Bob Feiler, Cleveland's strike-out Woolf or some other speculator had/king, in an exhibition game. most of the choice ducats and that he was helpless to do anything about Badminton Players to Meet Again Thursday it on account of the best ones being dirt cheap at $27.50. Old Tedge would drop into each Badminton players will resume their weekly meetings Thursday evening at the Wachter school, Eddie camp at least three times with editors and a collection of his 600 mil- lonaires. Spriggs, WPA recreational worker, an- nounced Wednesday, inviting all per- Dempsey/would box with Braddock, and declare that idleness had nothing sons interested to attend the games. ‘Tennis raquets as well as bandmin- licity department: “Betting on the bout shows that Braddock is the fav- orite, but there is plenty of Schmeling money in evidence” ... Haw! ... Mickey Cochrane has received 500 tele- grams and averaged 250 letters per day since he was beaned a week ago Tuesday . . . Seventeen states and one Canadian province are represent- ed in the “we're all pulling for you” messages ... The Dodgers always were poison for Carl Hubbell, at that, with 23 decisions over the screwball king in their 39 meetings . . . Incidentally the Brooks have picked up @ good looking young catcher in this Paul Chervinko from Columbus. The boys down at Washington swear this one is true: Jack Elder, the former Notre Dame football and track star, now is doing some work for the Catholic Youth organization .. . He was in Washington the other day and someone took him down to A. F. of L, headquarters for a courtesy call . . Jack's escort introduced him as “J Elder of the C.Y.0."... The A. F. of L. reception committee tought the guy hands up right quick. The Browns have grabbed Albert Coxon, 17-year-old strikeout king of the Ohio Valley . .. The kid whiffed 17 batters in six innings his last time out... Ralph Metcalfe, former Mar- quette sprint star, now coaching at Xavier University in New Orleans, will Gertrude Pemberton in Dallas + Jack Warhop, the old Yankee pitcher, gen- erally supposed to have thrown Babe Ruth his first h Henrich Is Not Only Yank Softball Player New York, June 2—Tom (Free ouifisider who. ie tea meena out ler a it against the theory that soft ball The only contest played in the cir- cuit Tuesday found Duluth defeating its head of the Jakes rival, Superior, 4-1, behind the three-hit pitching of Fred Martin, rangy righthander. A walk, double and outfield fly Tobbed Martin of a shutout in the last of the ninth inning. In an exhibition game Tuesday night E|the Eau Claire Bears inaugurated right baseball in their new park ,be- 010 030 Olx— 510 1 fore 5,000 fans by losing to the slug- ‘Henshaw, Eisenstat and Spencer,|sing Minneapolis Millers of the me scheduled.) Se TY eC BRABANT 2 os Ree helps; erican Association, 6-2, “(Only games Graduation Hurts Wildcats STEFFEN'S MEMORY HONORED | Evanston, Ul. June 2—Graduation cuts deeply into Northwestern univer- their school- ing this month. Fifteen of the ath- Jetes are gridmen. 3 hurts baseball player's ability, isn’t the only Ruppert Rifle who spent much of his younger days on the smaller diamonds. Joe DiMaggio and George Selkirk, regular outfielders, both played the geme considerably and Manager Joe McCarthy confesses that he perform- ed in a league at Atlantic City back in 1909 when the game was known as indoor baseball. Grid Star Smears Minneapolis, June 2.—(@)—Julius Alfonse, a sparkplug last season on the University of said “C.L0.” and Jack had to get his| from the lake. to do with his defeat by Tunney. Tunney would inspect Braddock ton raquets may be used, Spriggs said, but each player must bring his own. and tell the writers that a fellow with Jersey Jim's left hand should be able Play will be'on two outdoor courts, with an indoor court ready for use condition of his legs, Fight to thelit necessary. Games will start at 6:30 p, m. ‘ ‘ regardless the » and the Irish- /man’s pins would look all Manly Marine. ‘Tex Would Give it Appeal Tony Galento or some other ham- donny would show up at Louis’ head- quarters, flaunting a challenge, and then Braddock would belt him out, Braddock would knock out 39 other. blokes. Louis would show unmistak- able signs of being utterly unable to take too good a whack on the whisk- crs. Three's Enough New York, June 2.—In the first six games played between the New York Giants and Boston Bees this season the winning team. scored three runs. The Giants won 3-0, 3-0, and 3-1. The Bees triumphed 3-1, 3-2, and 3-1, NS P) KING EDWARD . leads them all. 2 for 5e or 10 for 25¢ | | HE'S WISE THE FORMULA NEVER ANGFO OR CHEAPENED IN 66 YEARS BROWN-FORMAN Distillery COMPANY &t Louisville in Kentucky NORTHWEST BEVERAGES, INC. te