The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 2, 1917, 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)

_ Speedy Aggregation From Wern- .two more wins to their long list Sat- THE CUB REPORTER / Sen-THaT’s QUITE SOME’ GWE TH PROCEEDS To TH RED CRoss — HERE'S MY SONG! A Gtand Way to Raise Money for the Red Cross . B0sS-TM GONNA SING AND. ey : A MILLIONS OF DOLLARS-THEYLL ALL Pay YoU oO STOP: BISMARCK ADDS TWO MORE WINS TITS CREDIT er Twice Goes Down in De- feat Before Capitalites GOLDIE AND CHRISTIE PITCH SPLENDID BALL added The Bismarck Invincibles urday and Sunday, when they defeat- ed in snappy, interesting games the speedy aggregation from Werner. The crowds attending both of these con- tests were the best of the season. The Champs were favored with ideal base- ball weather and everyone was happy. Goldie in Form. s Goldie was on the mound’ for the locals Saturday evening, holding the visitors down to six scattered hits, which netted them but one run. The Champs found Smith, delivery boy for the Wernerites, for eight hits, which wore placed where they did the most good, winning five, circuits of the bases. Jones Proved Easy. Sunday the much-touted “Smokey” Jones, former ‘Northern league artigt,/ pitched for Werner, and the Cham| connected with him for 12 safeties, from which they garnered seven rung. Christianson, pitching for Bismarck, allowed six insignificant hits, and the Champs in an errorless game held the; visitors to two runs. * Pike's Fielding. Pike’s fielding was a sensational feature of both contests. The entire team was upon its toes all of the time, playing big league ball that should win a big turnout for the two games with Stanton the morning and after- noon of the Fourth. Stanton probably will bring down its famous ‘band, which accompanied the team for the two games last Fourth, together with several hundred fans, who will back their team to win. The games prob-' SOLDIER Boston, Mass., July 2.—Four sons of; Mrs. William J. Brickley are in gov- ernment service and Mrs. Brickley, true to ‘New England traditions, has told Uncle Sam that the fifth one will be sent:as soon as he is a littlé older. All of the four sons are’ athletes, but the best known, of ‘course, is Charley)‘one of the greatest ‘football stars Harvard ever produced. The others are: William J. Jr., yeoman in the Unt- ted States navy. 1 George, a member of the medical}: Yeserve corps. i” eertiny Joseph, with the army: unit-at Nor- wich-university. “William Brickley;“Big Bill,” ‘as he jis known, has been a football and baseball player and is an amateur boxer of some note in Boston. On joining-“*the haval unit he «won jthe amateur championship of the faval Brickley Brothers, Athletes All; Join Service;, Another. Will Go When He's Old Enough. S FOUR- STANTON HERE FO “TWO GAMES JULY 4 Only Slope Team Which Has Yet to Defeat Bismarck to Offer Chance for Revenge ‘Stanton, the only team which has humbled Bismarck ‘this season, comes July 4 for two games in'which the Capital City boys promise to obtain rich and - plentiful. revenge. ‘Stanton always has ad the name for fast baseball. a territory away withjeverything in its teritory, and it ‘has. felt particularly chesty: since it romped j ‘round the partially-organized Lismarck bunch Since that, time both Bismarck and Stanton have strengthened their line- ups, and Wednesday’s, double-header is expected to prove by far the best{ of the season. : Inasmuch as no charge may be made for Sunday games, tlie Athletic association, in order to. provide for the. support of the expensive team Top, left to right, George, Charley. and William Brickley. Below, Joseph Brickley. reserves :by, knocking out, the sailor vilio ni) ‘bia thd BA | George Brickley is a jall player of no little ability. A couple of years ago he tried out with Mack’s athletics, Lut was released for inore seasoning. jcoaching at Manchester, N. H,, high school.. aN . Joseph is a baseball and football player and _it.hag./been said that: he would. rival the great Charley-at the latter game. ° * i 3 Charley Brickley has risen to the rank of # non-commissioned officer in the reserve :corps, .of which he is a member. . He is; said.;to be one of the most promising reeruits in camp. ¢ — mp son to ‘Tobin. Stolén. bases, Peacock, Pike; struck out, by Jones, 10; by Christy, 6. Bases on balls; off Jones, 5; off Christy, 1. Time of game, two hours, 45 minutes. eee ably wil be the bestvof the entire season, Saturday’s Game. ‘Werner— AB. H. PO. A.E. Robinson, ss. 50440 Jones, cf. 31002 Handschu, c. 31-7 -1.0 4 1-3 0.1 370, 2,5 0 Christen, cf. 4° 1°00 Lee, rf. 10 0:00 Tobin, 1b. . 4A L751 0 Smith, p. . 4103 0 Totals G24 38 Bismarck— AB. H, PO.A.E. Roth, 2b. 40124 Peacock, c. 4-213 0 0 Pike, ss... 1230 Frankenhoff, 1b. . O 8 tod Williams, cf. .. 020.0 Christianson, If. . 2001 Thompson, rf. . Posley, 3b. . joldrich, p. . Totals.............34 8:24(9 4 Werner + 000 001 000—1 Bismarck + 000 031 O1x—5 Bases on balls, off Smith, 1; off Goldrich, 3. Struck out, by Smith, 6; by Goldrich, 12. Double plays, Roth to Pike to Frankenhoff. Hit by pitch- er, Posley. Time of game, two, hours, 30 minutes. Sunday's Game. Werner— . H. PO. A.B. Robinson, 22.21 Smith, cf. . 1.0) .0 Handschu, c. Lace. 0 Berg, 2b. 102 0 Tobin, 1b. 290 3 Chichosky. i 2100 Christen, If. . 2000 Lee, rf. .. 00-01 Jones, p. .. 1: 4e0: Totals............. 37 12 24:10 6 Bismarck— AB. H. PO.A.E. Roth, 2b. .. 40 120 Peacock, c. Ble TO Pike, ss. ... 40238 150: Frankenhoff, 1b. 2212 4 0 Goldrich, if. . 400900 Wilkins, cf. . 30200 Christiansen, p. 41-253 0 Houser, 3b. 40040 Pinecker, rf. . 21000 0 Werner - 001 000 001—2 Bisinarck + 200 302 00x—7 Two da Pike, Robinson; BASEBALL SCORES COOSCOOO @ AMERICAN CHOOT OO Club— Indianapolis St. Paul . Louisville Kansas City . Columbus .n Milwaukee . ‘Minneapolis 42,4 Toledo ....... 43.894 GAMES SATURDAY. At Kansas City, 11; Toledo, 7. At Milwaukee, 1; Indianapolis, 5. i Club— At St. Paul, 2; Columbus, 3. First ane SESE Louie: Pittsburgh ... « At Minneapolis, 3; Louisville, 4. Club— R.H.B.| Cincinnati ... e Detroit . - OAL a qi GAMES SUNDAY. 5 Cincinnati at. Pittsburgh. Kansas City, 8-13; Toledo, Bt sLoills. 1518), Second game— Mgmeapoli: Louisville, i f i Club— Milwaukee, 2-4; Indianapoli g ccedeeee Ot peuls: Pittsburgh St. Paul, 2-6; Columbus, 1-0. Chub— - R.H.8,| Cincinnati ... GAMES TUESDAY. SCL ie Brooklyn @t Philadelphia. Columbus at Louisville. 5 : -Club— . Toledo at Indianapolis. A Philadelphia . Milwaukee at Kansas City. Perea ii hg L sec 5 Minneapolis at St. Paul. Ghiloneb 412 2 Pees Cleveland. 5 6 2 Chicago at St. Louis, E E. TAME: JESDAY. St. Louis . CO SOO ESE EFOSC OOO! Cringe at Detroit, Chicago . Club— W. I. Pet.| Cleveland at St. Louis, GoM Boston 24.631! Washington at New York. GAMES, TUESDAY. New York . 28.556! philadelphia at Boston. Boston at Philadelphia. Chicago 34 3 ‘New York at Brooklyn. Detroit 32 8 0946060006000, Cincinnati at Chicago. Cleveland 34 507 os AONE Aare @| . St Louis at Pittsburgh. St. Louis .. 41 388 . a Philadelphia 3 38 377], PO OSOSCOSCOES OOOO Some. Echo. Washington .. -24 40.375) Club— . Ww. L. It is said there is a cavern in Fin- — New York ... 12.98 23 land where the echo ts So strong that GAMES SATURDAY. Philadelphia . 687 25 if n person shouts at the top of his Detroit at St. Louis. Chicago .. .39 32 lungs thé sound will be repeated with First game— St. Louis 35.3 sitch horrible moanings and rumblings Club— R-H. E | Cincinnati +36 37 it will almost deafen the listener. Detroit ... ++-3° 9 2} Brooklyn 28 3) Se SG St. Louis . ++ 4.9 1) Boston ... 24° 35 ON Batteries—Mitchell, jones, Dauss{ Pittsburgh . “o1 42 STRAYED ON PREMISES. 6) One sorrel mare about séven years and Spencer, Stanaeg; Plank and Sev- _— old, foretop clipped, weight about 900 ereid. et uals a gauss SATURDAY. pounds. Owner can have same by Detroit at St, Louis. Club— RHE. beeen ot int a pasee faaoes game— R.H.E| pan sepeiaelon! at Brooklyn: ie (Signed) IRA J. ea ree ar » H. ladelphia . oo a - N.. D. Detroit... 10 1] Brooklyn ... ee 6 TERE ees eee Baldwin, ND St. Louis . y 8 2| Batteries—Alexander and_ Killifer: BIDS WANTED. 5 Batteries—James, Dauss and See | age; Groom, Davenport, Rogers and} Severeid. Washington at Philadelphia. First game— three base hits, Frankenhoff, 2;. dou- ble plays, Handschu to Tobin; Robin-; \Vashington — | | Club— R.H BE. a i SREB esses Oats al =9,| Schalk; Bagby and O'Neill. Club— RHE cg York at Boston. Ri. St. Louis eae "|New York . 6 0| Chicago. . .60 1 Burns; Cade re, Cheney" ‘ind Meyers, Miller, ; eae anid Boston at New York. 7 Philddelphis Batteries—1 » Aye ry; Seibold and Haley. Washington at Philadelphia. Club— $ R.H. EB. Second game— Boston 2-8 1 Club— , R.H.B.| New York . Sil 2 Washington 512 3) Batteries ehf and Tragessor, Philadelphia . 8 12 01 Jacklitsch; Sallee and Gibson. Batteries—Shaw, Gillen ‘and Ain- smith; Bush and Meyer. ¢ Cincinnati at Pittaburgh. + . Chicago at Cleveland, cine Be E. b— RHE, 410 2 SCL Hy *s | pittsbureh 372 Govelnaa” Batteries — Schneider, Ring and Batteries— Williams, Scott, Benz and Clarke; Cooper and Fischer. Chicago at St. Louis. which it has brought together, placed on sale today, tickets which will cov- er al games. for the remainder-of the season. The tickets are selling for $5 and may be had at Harris & Co.’s at Nelson's cigar store in the or Grand. Pacific: hotels prep ait kets |: will; cover, the two Miwiyid, and & good demand is anticipated : for. them. Bismarck will provide. no-other at- tractions for the Fourth, and every- During the last. year he has been; one 1s expected to turn out to see the home team retrieve itself. The boys have been playing big league ball all season, and, while the support j they have been given is of. the, tirst class, the costs haye been piling up, and a big turn-out Wednesday will help in footing the. bills. PRAISE FOR TILLIE WALKER Manager Jack: Barry Expects Outfield. | erto Have Great:Season— ‘Oyercomes Handicap. ' eg Jack Barry expects to see Tillie Walker have a great season, and he advances a very logical argument to support his belief. Last spring Walker worked ‘under the handicap of being a stranger who was filling the-place.of a Boston idol, Tris Speaker, and. he knew that his work would -be:.com: pared, perhaps. quite unfavorably; with 1|_ Batteries—Ames, Mays and Gonza- Boston, 2.1 les; Vaughn, Wilson and Llliott. \Batteries—Cullop, Love, Monroe and | Nunamaker; Mays and Thomas, Ag- new. ’ GAMES) SUNDAY. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. First game— GAMES SUNDAY. Coombs, Dell, Smith and Miller. pe. 2S Sealed bids wiil be received up to noon July 10, 1917, for the erection of a one-story brick bank building by Second game— Philadelphia at Brooklyn. Club— R.H.E.| the Farmers State bank of Richard. Philadelphia ... +. 810 2) ton, ND. Brooklyn . : 916 2) Specifications to be had upon re. Batteries mder and ‘quest. 6-27-28-29-30:7-2-2 Tillie Walker. that of the game’s greatest outfielder, f great slugger. Now Walker does not have to think about Speaker. He is solid with the Boston fans and realizes it, so he should play a much better game. Tall Buildings. Oh, see the clevator slide, Along its pathway shooting So far that when you take a ride You think that you're commuting. |; Prudent Man. “Had any luck in the stock market lately?” “The best ever.” “Mow much did you clean up?” “Not a cent.’ I listened to a still small voice and stayed out.” 1 ‘Their Case. “Doctors in one way are a very exceptional class.” “What way is that?” “Wi , When they treat a man, they ‘im pay for it.” ~ This season: it: has been |! beat the Giants as ‘regularly as he worked against’ them. This year he seems to be even better and is start- | day against the Boston Red Sox, al- | ways a hard team to b Fs rolled along just 24 faring sare She | Frank Bancroft, 3 é 24 Innings before the | “roft, aged seventy-one; will Athletics broke a 1 to 1 tie and won | 7 be lost to Garry Hermann; the game 4 and 1. hits, all well scattered, and sent 18 | Reds back to the bench after cach | 'Y Haig, Wagner's failure to show up: fhis spring and the continued absence of-his name from the box scores is only one of many similar absences, Fa- mous athletes who have played the game. for wany long years are out now, and-others of the veterans’ brig- ade are slowly slipping back to. pri-} yate life. Wagner, however, could not resist the fever, and is now back in ithe game. ,§am.Crawford is about the only other | of the old-time school of ball players | left in-the big-leagues, © 2p IREK COOMBS. 1S. COME-BACK Athletic Castoff Gives Promise of Be- ing Better Pitcher Than’ Ever Example fo Prowess. H There is one comeback that seems to be real. The owner is none other than the hero of many battles, Jack Coombs, now a member of Uncle Wil- bur Robinson’s hurling staff. Coombs went wrong while with the Athletics and was turned adrift by that wise old sage, Connie Mack. At that time Mack was turning them all loose and it cannot be said that he figured Coombs through. Coombs was a great pitcher, last year and could | H | Jack Coombs, FAMOUS ATHLETES WHO ARE SLOWLY SLIPPING. of the baseball se: in double-headers, Ce ee @ first div | no dissentipg voices, joie, grand old man of the second rs, is not. a major leaguer this year. He is managing a club in the International league—out of the fight in the big circuits for the first time in more years than many baseball players have lived. “John” Evers “is “of the same “general usefulness, and probably has another year of baseball left. He never.was ag good as Lajoie as a batsman, however, but his nimble brain and energy car- ried him to inspired heights not at+ Napoleon La | tained by the younger ones. DIAMOND ‘NOTES - Looks like Haus Wagner's baseball career has been nipped in the bud. tae Conscription officers may stp in and lift the burden of worry from the mag- nates, se 8 Hank O'Day says this is the worst Scagon he ever had. And he once mans aged Cincinnati, \ Be * a @ 2 i The real pessimist is, the fan who turns to the sporting page to see which team lost the game, 2 6 .e They say Walter Johnson is having hard luck. Other teams may consider { dt their good tuck, soe ) At the present writing, the last half son will be played Connie Mack admits that he hasn't ion ball club, There are. eee | Let the war department take heed, not to get Ty Cobb and Charley Hers zog in the same military regiment. ee You can’t get away from the biinad Ing sensationalism of a home run. It makes the blood run hot or cold, acd cording to ilk. ; Just because Cobb bas only been hité ting .315 hasn't caused American } league pitchers to pass Burns to get a chance at him. ‘ eee i Someone has suggested Garry Herr« mann as a candidate for mayor of Cins cinnati. {ng for trouble. Some guys are always looke 7 e @ | Exempting baseball players from ime 1 Mediate draft isn’t Boing to help the ; Magnates’ bank rolls if all of the fang are sent to the front. 2 @ ng lie doing it as he once did in the | mee Phillies have something on the 1 American league. ubs ever since they took seven Here is a little example of what , *t™#isht games from them in the wilds letics. Connie Mack started him one | Coombs allowed 15 | had taken three swings, | Starte from twenty. | Coombs could do while with the ath. °! Florida in March, 1916, see Limit in the years of conscription one to thirty means that 2.6 Carlson, t he Pirate hurler, is certain- doing his part to get the’ Pirates -d on a winning streak, The, | Youngster promises to be a real sensa- | Uon,

Other pages from this issue: