The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 18, 1937, Page 8

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)

i g i j | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1937 cali: Yankees Beat Senators Twice; Cubs Lose as Lefty Gomez Pitches Shutout e Just After Being Told of : Mother’s Death Is 14TH WIN OF YEAR Murderer's Row Stretches Lead to 101/, Games: Chicago's Trimmed to 3 By BILL BONI (Associated Press Sports Writer) ‘There’s a well-known motto, often abused, but backed up by solid tradi- tion, in the canons of the theatre and, to a less-publicized extent, the professional sports field: “The show must go on.” ‘Those words, hackneyed petnaps, joked about frequently, must have flitted through the mind of a slim young Californian as, before 3 mid- week crowd of some 30,000, he warmed up early Tuesday afternoon at Yan- kee Stadium. For Lefty Gomez, southpaw star of the champion Yankees, had just been told that, in Rodeo, Calif., his mother had died. Less than a week ago Lefty had returned from her bedside in the belief that she was recovering. Turned in 3-Hitter It was his turn to pitch in the opener of a doubleheader agai:s: the Washington Senators, riding nigt an eight-game winning streak. Man- ager Joe McCarthy, hard-pressed for pitchers, gladly would have excused Gomez from duty. But Lefty trudged to the mound, turned in a three-hit, 8-0 shutout, helped himself to two singles—sen- sational batting for the reedy south- paw—and hung up his 14th victory of the year. Only once before had he bettered that performance, when he pitched a one-hit game against the Athletics on June 30. Once before, too, he had equalled it, against the Tigers on May 4. But neither of those games turned in under the circumstances that surrounded him Tuesday. After Lefty had subdued the Sena- tors, the Yanks came back to win the nightcap, 6-4, on the strength of a five-run scoring spree in the eighth. Thus, as the Tigers kept sec- ond place safe by battering the White Sox into 11-7 submission, the cham- pions ran their American League lead to 10%4 games. Lead Cut to 3 Less fortunate were the Chicago Cubs. Held in check, 4-2, by Ed . Brandt and Mace Brown of the Pi- rates, they saw their margin over the Giants shrink to three games as Cliff Melton pitched a five-hitter that took the sting out of the Boston Bees by a 4-1 count. Melton, second only to Hubbell on the Giant staff, t.us gain- ed his and the team’s victory over the Bees in Boston. Philadelphia retained one and lost, another cellar occupant. .The Athle- tics, with son Earl Mack replacing Father Connie at the helm for a day, remained in the American League Maids scored in each of the first four y ! All-Stars Gather for Game With én invited members of the 1937 and Baugh will be in the starting lineup. TUESDAY’S STARS Triangle Beats Dakota Maidens Longmuir Turns in No-Hit Per- formance as Champs An- nex 9-5 Victory Rudy York, Tigers—Hit home run, triple and two singles to lead 14-hit attack that routed White Sox, 11-7. Lloyd Waner, Pirates—His 7th inning single drove in deciding run and his fine 9th inning catch saved 4-2 victory over Cubs. Johnny Moore and Claude Pas- seau, Phillies—Moore hit two homers and a single, batted in four runs; latter held Dodgers to seven hits, fanned eight and gave no bases on balls in 11-1 triumph. Jack Wilson, Red Sox—Set Ath- letics down with eight hits in’6-1 victory. Lefty Gomez and Bill Dickey, Yankees—Former hurled 3-hit 8-0 shutout in opener against Sena- tors; latter hit homer in opener as well as in 6-4 triumph in night- cap. Cliff Melton, Giants—Pitched Longmuir, hurler for the champion Triangle team, set down the Dakota Maids without a hit as her team took a tight pitchers’ duel from the Maids 9-5 Tuesday night. Walks and loose fielding accounted |’ for the Maids’ runs. McDonald, Dakota Maid hurler, gave the Triangles only 3 hits. Tri- angle bunched their 9 runs in the second and third innings, while the frames. five-hit ball and drove in run to ‘The defeat Bees, 4-1. Dakota Triangle Stan Bordagaray, Cards—Col- Perea es Shop. st PHPO|| lected four hits in five times at MDon'd p 3 0 0 Nelsow of 3 3 0|| Bat and drove in four runs as St. Nickol 1b 3 0 7 Long'ir 2 0 11} Louis conquered Reds in night Volk, 2b 3 6 2 Willn 2b 3 0 0 game. Kaiser 3b 1 0 0 Eggen, 3b3 0 0 Bevold ss 2 0 © Clem's rf 3 1 0|4/————_____ rec! ‘ampa’a r Nickol, r 2 0 1 Nelson 1b 0 0 6 All St: Suff Kosit’'y rf 1 0 0 Walter, c 2 1 6 “Stars er 15 Totals 20 0 Totals 23 3 15 Loosened Teeth 9 ———— Longmulr,,- Will Alfonse, Cardwell Hurt in Scrim- Schneider 1, Volk 2 mage; Coaches Meet in Conference Chicago, Aug. 18—(#)—The college all star board of strategy and Coach Curley Lambeau of the Green Bay Walter 1; three base . 1; left_on -base—Da- kota Maid 6, Triangle Shop 4; stolen hits—E. Nelsoi bases—Fearing, V. Nickol,” Cam- pagna 1; hits off McDonald 3 in 5 in- nings, off Longmuir 0 in 5 innings; struck out by McDonald 3, by Long muir 6; bases on balls off McDonald rumble seat by absorbing a 6-1 d2- feat from the Red Sox, while the Phils moved out of ‘he National League cellar for the first time since | Aug. July 11 with an 11-1 trimming of the Dodgers, who replaced them. In a night game at Cincinnati, the Cardinals shaded the Reds, 8 to 6, before 20,302 fans. ‘Ine clubs played the last two innings in the rain. The victory kept the Cards in third place, half a game ahead of Pittsburgh. NATIONAL LEAGUE Phils Whip Dodgers RHE Philadelphia .. 440 200 001—11 15 1 Brooklyn ...... 010 000 000—1 7 1 Passeau and Atwood; Cantwell, Lindsey, Butcher, Hamlin and Spencer and Chervinko. Giants Beat Bees New York inson and Lopez. Pirates Down Cubs RHE Chicago ...... 010 000 010— 210 1 Pittsburgh .... 010 000 2ix— 412 0 French and Hartnett; Brandt, Brown and Todd. Cards Nose Out Reds R HE St. Louis ..... 022 020 200— 813 1 Cincinnati 13 +++ 025 000 Olx— Appleton, Chase and R. Ferrell Millies; Gomez and Dickey and gens. Second Game— RHE Washington ... 111 000 01I— 4 9 0 New York .... 100 000 05x— 611 3 Deshong, Cohen and R. Ferrell; Hadley, Murphy and Dickey. White Sox Down Tigers RHE Detroit . ++ 610 100 201-11 14 0 015 100 000— 711 3 Chicago ..... Lawson, Coffman and York; White- | and John head, Rigney, Brown and Sewell. Red Sox Down A’s : RHE Boston ........ 240 000 000— 6 14 1 Philadelphia .. 000 000 00I—-1 8 4 (By the Associated Press) New York — Johnny Rinaldi, 136%, New York, outpointed Breese, 138, Manhattan, (8). Milwaukee — George Black, 4, off Longmuir 6; winning pitcher— Longmuir; losing pitcher—-MeDonald; | Packers, whose teams will clash at where played—High School; date—| Soldier Field, Sept. 1, will get together: 5. ON 937. Umpire: Carlisle.| tonight for a three-horned argument. Bebrar- - Atbuase, First, they will thresh out questions of rules, there being differences be- Glendive to Hold Golf | tween the college and professional codes. Then they will settle the Meet Sept. 5 and 6 question of whether George Henry Sauer, the Packers’ 1936 fullback who} Glendive, Mont. Aug. 18.—The/ will not be with the pro club this sea- Glendive Golf club's 15th annual) son because of a college coaching tournament will be held Sept. 5th and 6th, Labor Day week-end. Wally Taft, captain of the University of Minnesota golf team, is defending champion. connection should play in the fourth annual contest, and will wind up by naming officials for the battle. Head Coach Gus Dorais of the col- lege squad planned the first formal scrimmage session for Wednesday. A sudden drop in temperature Tuesday afternoon made possible an infgrmal scrimmage, during which two minor casualties were listed. Julis Alfonse, Budweiser took 6 straight games| Minnesota halfback, and Lloyd Card- from Molly's Service station in Tues-! well of Nebraska, suffered loosened day night’s city horseshoe league | teeth, the former colliding with Eddie play. Fisher was high man for Bud- | Jankowski of Wisconsin, and Cardwell weiser with 31 ringers, followed by | bumping into Bud Wilkinson, another Barbie of Molly’s with 27. Gopher star. Budweiser Tossers Beat Molly’s 6 Games Packers collegiate all-star footbail squad gathered in Chicago for two weeks of training for their Sept. 1 battle with the Green Bay Packers, National Professional league cham- pions last season. Shown here at the opening drill, line, left to rignt: Gaynell Tinsley, Louisiana State; Ed Widseth, Minnesota; Steve Reid, Northwestern; Earl Svendsen, Minnesota; Max Starcevich, Washing- ton; Charles Hamrick, Ohio State; Merle Wendt, Ohio State. Backfield, left to right: Indiana; John Drake, Purdue; Sam Francis, Nebraska; Sam Baugh, Texas Christian. All but Hamrich Vernon Huffman, Raleigh Takes — Pitchers’ Duel Tally in Last of Ninth Brings 1-0 Victory Over Flasher Sunday Raleigh, N. D., Aug. 18—A tight Pitchers’ duel was broken in the last of the ninth inning when McCane singled, stole second, and came in on an error to gave Raleigh a 1-0 victory over Flasher here Sunday. Ole Nesja, star Raleigh hurler, set the Flasher aggregation down with 3 hits, while his mates were able to get only 5 off Peterson, Flasher mound ace. Nesja fanned ten and walked none, while Peterson retired fully 15 batters via the strikeout route and issued one fre trip to first. F The summary: Kleinsmidt . | ea Totals Flasher McFall .. Moorhead Weinreich . Thompson Reynolds Meyers .. Anderson . Hancock Peterson Totals Wichita Beats Champs In Semi-Pro Tourney Wichita, Kan., Aug. 18.—()}—Two teams were eliminated, the 1936 champions were defeated, and the only Negro entrant won in the na- tional semi-pro baseball tournament here Tuesday and early Wednesday. Mount Pleasant, Tex., eliminated Concord, Mass., 5 to 2; and Baltimore, res gad away with Leyden, Colo., Wichita, Kan., runnerup in the Kansas state tournament and an in- vited competitor in the tournament, upset the Duncan, Okla., squad, last year’s national champions, 4 to 2. The Waverly, Iowa, Black Spiders, Negro team, wiggled through to a 6 to 5 victory over Elgin, Ill., in the midnight fracas which went 12 in- nings. Other results: Enid, Okla. ce > a cl coccossscge| cosnoscooy « a] coronmocotte| Hoocooscot ml aseseconde| Gude ocnaes 8 | socrereseroreserm 4, Giants Take Bees; Kels Nose Out Red Birds 6-5 Win at Columbus Boosts Millers’ Lead to Three Full Games SAINTS BEAT MUDHENS Indians Nose Out Blues, 5-4; Colonels, Brewers, Split Twin Bill (By the Associated Press) Donie Bush’s Minneapolis Millers were past the hardest part of the task of protecting their hold on first place in the American Association the Columbus Red Birds Wednesday. The Millers stepped out with a 13- hit attack in the first number of the crucial three-game series Tuesday night and whipped the challenging Birds, 6 to 5, to increase their tw three full games. Led by Red Kress whose double and two singles drove in aa three runs, Minneapolis built up an early lead at the expense of Morton | Bo! Cooper, and got enough good relief pitching from Walter Tauscher to Will’s Win Close Mound Duel From Shark’s in Sixth & E e z. ghee 18-7. Darkness halted play in latter contest at the end of the six BE > CJ pavorsrstsorsnececetrt fd hates re os a TkOSh, men mmmrreees| 5 a no n Keller, Hublouw C rreorrescosesee ty os ” r Squeeze out the victory. Four-hit pitching by Babe Phelps and 14-hit socking by his mates gave St. Paul a 5 to 1 decision over Toledo's | K. C. third place Mud Hens:in another night game. Excellent relief hurling by Jimmy Crandall featured a 5 to 4 ten-in- ning victory for Indianapolis Kansas City in what was scheduled phar Pena Say ane, night double- jeader, second game was poste poned because of rain. Louisville and Milwaukee split a doubleheader, the Brewers taking the ae cae 5 eis the Colonels second, ), in seven innings, Indians Beat Blues First Game— Indianapolis ..100 000 300 1— 5 13 3, (10 innings) Vance, Moore and Breese; Johnson, I Crandall and Lewis. Second Game—Kansas City at In- £ dianapolis, postponed—rain. Millers Nose Out Birds R Minneapolis ....210 020 100— 6 Columbus ~om H 13 10 Bean, Tauscher and Dickey; Coo- pe ae, Potter and Crouch and ube, Phelps, Cox and Fenner; Marberry, Birkhofer and Linton. Brewers, Colonels Split First Game— 3 RHE Milwaukee .....100 001 3044— 917 3 Louisville .......202 000 000— 410 4 Blaeholder and Helf; Eisenstate, $I Bass and Ringhofer. Second Game— (7 innings by agreement Kimball and Helf; Terry and Berres. >——____________» | Satchel’s Speed | Awed DiMaggio Joe DiMaggio, sensational .out- fielder for the New York Yankees, thinks Satchel Paige, former pitcher for Bismarck’s fast semi- pro baseball team, has more speed than any hurler DiMaggio has faced in his major league career, according to George Barton, sports editor of the Minneapolis Tribune. “Joe DiMaggio, who” batted against him in an exhibition game, avers that Satchel Paige, the great Negro pitcher, has more speed than any hurler he has faced in his two years in the Amreican League,” wrote Barton over | Cowan RH E/kiei: Kansas City...112 000 0000—4 9 0/R wets 4 in his daily column this week. Paige helped pitch Bismarck to @ national championship in the semi-pro tournament at Wichita, Kan., two years ago. Martin J. Cleary, a state senator Charleston, Ark., 0; Buford, Ga., 17, of Indiana, umpires in the New York- Fort Crook, Neb., 3 (7 innings). Pennsylvania league. Jacobs Showed Rickard What to Do With Choice Tickets---Comes by Pre-Eminent Post Naturally By HARRY GRAYSON (Sports Editor, NEA Service) New York.—Mike Jacobs, the new Tex Rickard, has saved more Broad- way productions than he could count, but rarely attends a theatre for the purpose of seeing one. ‘He prefers a movie, where he can catch a nap and snore all over the Jacobs made a fortune in ticket speculating because he always has been @ good judge of what the public wants. When Arnold Rothstein refused Ann Nichols a $20,000 advance without security for a half interest in “Abie’s Irish Rose,” Jacobs came to the rescue by buying up the choicest seats for nights to come, and the memorable play was on its way. Jacobs came by his pre-eminent position in pugilism naturally. He was closely associated with Tex Rickard from the time of the Jess Willard- Frank Moran fight at the old Garden in 1916 until the master promoter’s death. Before guaranteeing Jack Dempsey $300,000 and Georges Carpentier $200,000, Rickard had Charles E. Cochran of London, William A. Brady, as rs. They backed out, Brady recalling that Jim Jeffries and Jim Corbett established a record by drawing $63,000 in the greatest home-grown natural the history of California. It was then that Jacobs showed Rickard what to do with tickets. He most of the better ones, and Old Tedge operated on the advance * * Jacobs the Hustler When Jacobs openly entered the New York fistic promotional field th the Barney Ross-Billy Petrolle scrap in the winter of 1933-4, it was table t he eventually would take over Madison Square Garden and bow] in Queens. been outworking and outsmarting other people all his life. @ product of the sidewalks of New York and the School of 56 years ago on Washington street, adjacent to the Bat- tery, one of three sons and seven daughters of Isaac and Rachel Jacobs. His is Strauss, which was his mother’s maiden name. enough, it didn’t take the young Jewish boy long to Trish gang. newspapers and worked in the circulation department ly. He peddled excursion boat tickets along the waterfront, leased catering privileges aboard them, and then ran boats of his own. in the ticket scalping racket was spurred by a favorable Metropolitan Opera House. He once sold two season to show a $4700 profit. Walk Business Barometer bundle of nerves and occasional crabby spells are due to 9 E E Fi Joe Louis calls him, can’t sit still at the most important ‘ll ankle out, walk down the hall or around the block, but He goes far out of his way to apologize after snapping at ti The two-year battle waged by Mike Jacobs, inset, with Joe Louis as his chief weapon, against the Madison Square Garden Corpora- tion’s control of the heavyweight championship, has ended in a knockout victory for him. Hence- forth, when fight crowds like that below jam the building, they will be there under his auspices, He took a two-year lease on the Garden and its outdoor bowl. é ll pick up the conversation just as though he had been ewemnmnwndy | orrsre ces csrorsesttt Const ct Pay baal % Thomas Blower, despite his name, as ‘breathing easily when he stepped ashore on the English coast, after swimming the channel from Cap Griz Nez. The 22-year-old Briton made the crossing in 13 hours and 29 minutes, failing by 2 hours and 24 minutes to beat the record established in 1926 by Georges Michel of Paris. His was the 21st successful swim across the channel, Totals 33 16 15 Totals 3¢ Score by inaieee = rere “ Nash-Finch” Roosevelt Ba: Volk, 1f 2 ‘Tarbox rss 3 ct 5 | coesesrspersnorsoanepet D-lb-r Allen, 3b Potter [ nsrorsrserrsrsorenid © 3 3 Keisel Iss 3 2 3 r. Engen c! T Kono’y rf 1 lone con oott S i S , Keisel; Burckardt, Fro- hite—Pr 3 hits off Martin 6 in 6 innings, off Cowan 2 in 2 innings, T. Potter 8 in 2 innings, off Olander 5 in 2 innings; struck out by Martin 3, by Cowan 1, by T. Potter 2, We Olander 3; bases on balls off Mar- tin 8 off Cowan 3, off T. Potter 3; winning _ pitcher—Martin; losing itcher—T. Potter; where played— amond No. 1; date—Aug. 17, 1937. Umpire: Hummel. Scorer: 5 Burckardt. Sharks B Poe rss 3 Balzer If 2 Will's AB Schw’n cf 3 M'Cabe Iss M’Cro’e Raduns r Span'r cf 1 Totals 19 3 2 cer by innings: s ecccowoonost eoHH200000 HornecsosHolm Mmonoooonnyd Totals 343 5 000 0202 001 (0138 ‘Fast Field to Play in Women’s Western |} St. Paul, Aug. 18—(%)—It will be Dorothy Traung of San Francisco, the defending champion, against as fest a field as ever assembled for the Women’s Western golf tourna- ment at the Town and Country club next Monday through Saturday. The 37th annual repetition of the event is expected to attract approxi- mately 150 entries, among them the top six scorers in the recent wo- men’s Western | cos ortstot! Wilton Captures Legion Tourney Juniors Down Garrison 14-9; Garrison Puts Out Wash- burn 10-5 Wilton, N. D., Aug. 18.—Wilton’s junior American Legion baseball team won the McLean county junior cham- pionship at Wilton Sunday by defeat- ing Garrison 14-9. Clifford Ulrich, pitching his last game as a Wilton junior Legion play- er, fanned 17 in the 7 innings he was on the mound. Wolf, Garrison sec- ond baseman, got 3 hits in 4 tries, including a double, to lead both teams at the plate. Garrison eliminated Washburn 10-5 in the first’game. Each team got 11_hits. Wilton drew the bye. Louis Tapering Off For Fight With Farr Pompton Lakes, N. J., Aug. 18.— (®)—Joe Louis has reached the stage in his training for his title defense against Tommy Farr a week from Thursday where he isn’t allowed a hard workout every day. SWIMS CHANNEL [Bison Schedule Opens Sept. 17, ‘U’ Week Later Training Grind at Two North Dakota Camps to Begin In Early September (By the Associated Press) Final preparations for an early to the gridiron are being completed by rival football coaches of the Nort! Dakota Agricultural college and the state university prior to opening ths annual training grind at the two camps in early September. The state college Bison line up for their first encounter Sept. 17 when the club meets Omaha University a: Fargo for a night game. A week later the University Sioux open their sea- son at Grand Forks against &:, Thomas of St. Paul on Sept. 24. ‘The two traditional rivals will bat. tle for honors at Grand Forks on Oc- tober 30, a game which annually draws hundreds of North Dakota alumni of both schools. ‘The NDAC club winds up its season Nov. 13 at George Washington Uni- versity, Washington, D. C., while the university closes its schedule at Mis- soula, Mont., Nov. 25 where the Sioux clash with the University of Montana Grizzlies, The Agricultural college schedule: Sept. 17—Omaha University at Fargo (night). Sept. 25— Minnesota University et Minneapolis. Oct.’ 1 — Morningside a Fares (night). Oct, 16—Carleton college at North- field, Minn. Oct, 22—Moorhead Teachers colleze at Fargo (night). Oct. 30—University of North Dakots at Grand Forks. Nov. 6—Greeley State college at Greeley, Colo. Nov. 13—George Washington Uni- versity at W: » D.C. The University schedule: Sept. 24—St. Thomas of St. Paul at Grand Forks. Oct. 1—South Dakota University at Grand Forks. Oct, 9—Iowa State Teachers collezs at Cedar Falls, Iowa. Oct. 15 — Depaul University 24 Grand Forks.: Oct. 22—NDAC freshmen and UND freshmen at Grand Forks. Oct. 23—Winnipeg Rough Riders at Winnipeg. Oct, 30— NDAC at Grand Forks. Nov. 13—Detroit University at De- troit, Mich, Nov. 25 — Montana University at Missoula, Mont. Babe Phelps, Brooklyn catcher, never has been chased by an umpire until this season. He got the oid heavo-ho five times before the ‘37 baseball race reached its advanced stages, New York, Aug. 18—(7}—Don Budge, the tennis star, likes swing music but only soft stuff... Loy Hanning, 18-year-old right-handed ace of the Fayetteville club of the Arkansas- Missouri league has allowed only one earned run in his last 36 innings. . . His average for the season hovers kid belongs to the Cardina 15)... George Comellas and Joseph Kohl- man, pitchers for downtown, he’ takes everybody in happiest when pitching a beef- ” (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE ’ wie Pet oe 41 B1T 62 43 590 57 OAT 548 5748 543 2 36 481 “a 80 427 43 «63-398 41 63 304 AMERI( LEAGUE w Ls Pet New York. + 12 33 688 Detroit 61 430587 Chicago 62 «47 569 Boston . 87 45 «S67 Ww oe 5 AT Cleveland 8 53 (415 &t. Louis 33°«-70—S 320 Philadelphia . 320 708 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w Ls Pet - 2 © 590) 6 8653 566 68 Ot 5ST 62 58 517 58 60 492 56 HT SD 6 420 6 73 387 NORTHERN LEAGUE w iL Bet Duluth or 663 Pargo-Moor! Cr 620 Eau Claire.. “a 47 535 Crookston ... 3 $20 Jamestown . 4 55439 Winnipeg 43 855 | (430 Superior . 0 588 408 Wausau 30 63882 Chuck Woods, welterweight boxer, scored a hole-in-one on the 225- No. 13 hole at Beverly Hills Golf club. H STREET is air - condit: Salisbury (Md.) have tied Rube Marquard’s quarter- century record of 19 consecutive vic- tories... Camellas is undefeated. .. Kohlman hasn’t been beaten since his Name of Best Football Team In Country Will Start With ‘MW’ —Says Eddie Brietz. five hits shy of busting into the swanky 2,500-hit circle... Only 27 and gives the night clubs a play—}major leaguers are members... Ths four best football teams in Dixie this year will be Duke, Tennessee, Ala- bama and Louisiana State... When Duke of the Southern conference bat- tles Tennessee of the Southeastern it will be for the unofficial cham- Pionship of the South... You can have three guesses as to who'll be the best team in the country. . . It starts with an “M”—if that’s any help. Bucky Harris has forgiven New York baseball writers for those stories (which didn’t do Bucky any good in Washington) that he was all fed up with the capital and would quit after this year. . . Mike Jacobs, always the gambler, will bet you any amourt Don Budge turns pro within a year and under the Jacobs banner... For the first time in two years, the boxing writers didn’t flock down the in the Eastern Shore league each) bay to meet Max Schmeling Wednes- day. . . Only Manager Joe Jacobs and @ few pals greeted the independent Mein Herr... Two improved ball players, in the American League are Red Rolfe and Frank Crosetti of the Yankees, . . Joe Medwick has hit one a more pomers in every National ague par ear except Crosley Field, Cincinnati. » a opening game. Congratulations to Jimmy Dykes on that nice new two-year contract... If ever a guy had one coming to him, it’s Jimmy... Lou Gehrig is only You'll Say Its SPECIAL At The Bottoms Up KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY “s” BROWN-FORMAN DISTILLERY CO. Makers of Fine Whishies BISMARCK You will enjoy the food Distributed by NORTHWEST BEVERAGES, INC.

Other pages from this issue: