The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 31, 1921, Page 6

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‘PAGE SIX ‘MINOT TAKES. DO FROM BISMARCK BY SLUGGING soo, Minot cater, Ges | MILTON DRIVES Home Runs off Higgins in the First Fray COBLE, (Special to The Trinune.) Minot, N. D. May 31 hoth games of a doub! Bismarck here yesterday afternoon, the teams coming here from Bismarck when rainy weather prevented xi in the Capital City. The weather was good and the crowd numbered about 1,000, although the games were itt- ranged here on short notice. The scores were 6 to 5 und 7 to 3. The Bismarck, club started out well in the first game, pounding Shirley in the first innings for three runs. Minot came back with two runs and the game was close from then on until the eigth inning when Minot scored two runs. Moore, Minot’s “Babe Ruth,” who is said to be an ex-coast leaguer, was the star at bat for the Minot bunch. He got two home runs off “lefty” Hig- gins, of Bismarck, in the firsc game; ani is batting drove in five of the six runs made by Minot, Higgins pitched a good game, but Minot’s hits were bunched and Moore's powerful drives put the game on ice for tie Magic City team. Hightower, Minot player, also said to be an ex-coast leaguer, also played star ball forMinot. Bismarck had a nice chance to win the first game, but a ninth inning rally fell short. The Capital City club got three men on bases in the ninth ip- ning, with but one ‘man’ out,‘iand Shirley was jerked amd Moore sent in the box for Minot. He forced one Bismarck man to ground out ani an- other to go out on a fy. ball, ending Bismarck’'s chance’ to carry home the bacon, Morris. Minot pitcher, a right-laifd- er, was the star of the second game. He had the Capital City batters on his hip most of the timé.: Al Anderson, pitching for Bismarck, did well except for one bad inning when a combina- tion of hits rolled’ up the score for Minot. The game was called in the eighth inning because of darkness Miller Anderson, Bismarck catcher, started sligging early in the season, getting a home run. | The two teams play again this after noon. The Bismarck, club plays Man- dan at Bismarck - Friday afternoon, plays Mandan at Mandan Saturday af- ternoon and goes to Wilton Sunday. Minot plays at Bismarck June 10, 11 and 12. The visiting club presented its strongest lineup of the season. Mil- ler Anderson, last year’s cateher, was behind the bat. Swartz, new second baseman, played and handled himself well, Secretary Keller expressing pleasure at his showing.. Flanagan played left, field, Collins center and Ellis right. Flanagan, Bismarck, left fielder, was given a hand near the close of the second game when he made a div- ing, shoe?string catch of a line drive in left field, rolling over and coming up with the ball in his hand. Coble, Bismarck third baseman. sprained a hand while sliding into a base, and it was doubtful if he would be able to play today. Miller Ander- son was spiked and a doctor dressed his injuries. He was expected ta he *in the game, however. -The score by innings: Bismarck ...3 2000000 0—5 8i Minot ......200200022-660 Batteri Higgins and Anderson; Shirley, Marris and Moore; Second game: 1 Bismarck ....10000200—3 64 Minot ........1 200013 x7 10% Game called end of eighth, darkness. Batteries—A. Anderson, and M. An- derson; Morris and Moore. BASEBALL ‘MONDAY GAMES, Cleveland, 6: St. Louis, 14-5; New York, 2-0; Washington, 1-1, Boston, 1-1; Philadelphia, 8-2, NATIONAL LEAG Brooklyn, 3-5; Boston, Philadelphia, 1-7; New York, 5-13. Chicago, 0-3; Pittsburgh, 13-6. St. Louis, 9-7; Cincinnati, 4-4. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, Minneapolis, 3-4; St. Paul, 4-9. Kansas City, 5-6; Milwaukee, 17-9. Columbus, 5-9; Toledo, 6-3. Louisville, 3-0; Indianapolid, 0-10. WILTON BEATS MANDAN 4102 Mandan went down to defeat before the fast Wilton team ‘Monday after noon by a score of 4-2. Warold Love did the sharpshooting for Mandan and Flaherty for Wilton. Mandan lost the game in the first In- nifg through Love's wildness and a Outfield error on Flinn’s drive. The’ ‘Mandan-infield was strengthened by a new” op and second base- man, who errorless ball. In- ability to hit in tir. -binches come Man/ dan the game. “VALLEY CITY BEATS BOARDMAN May 31.—Pitcher Fargo, N. ardman of the Fargo Athletics | pitched a hard luck battle against. Val- ley City, losing the game by. a scare}. _of 3 to 1, after he had struck out 1 Valley City batsmen. Only two heavy hits were gleaned off the Fargoan’s delivery, one going for a single and the other for two bags. A heavy field matte the play extremely difficult, , ‘ANDERSON HURT Minot“‘won reader with | Roscoe Sarles Pushes Winner in UBLE-HEADER: ~ an RA | BROKEN CAR T0 | RAGE VICTORY olis Speedway | Indianapolis, Mii 21.Tommy Mil.) ton, winner of the 9th 500-mile auto-| mobile race at the Speedway. yester-| day in record-breaking ,time over a! field of internatiqnally, known driverg Fenresentiag four. countries, brought! ‘s Amortean gar throneh to victory) by a very, narrqw margin on Roscue Sarles, who placed second, it became known today. Milton drove the last few miles of his race with only 7 cylinders of his os car hitting and was on the verge of going out several times, Near the vend of the race Milton! repeatedly kept sighalling to his pit mechanic but refused to stop. ‘With only a> few miles to go hé rushed in for gas, ‘but’ refused to wait for engine repairs for Sarles then was only half a lap behind, When he brought his car over the line first it was found that ‘one’ cylinder: was foul- ed.and, that the winner had been driv- ing on 7 cylinders, for several miles. been a sire winner. driven in the Speedway race and the second time he had gone the route. ‘His time was 5 hours and 34 minutes, In 1916 he drove only 20: miles;,in 1917 he drove 125 miles and went. the route for third place in 1920. No driy- er has won the tace twice. Milton is a St. Paul, Minn., boy. : D Sets Track Record. Milton established a new track rec- ord for cars of not more than 183 cubié inches piston displacement. by completing the 500 miles in five hours, 34 minutes and 44.65 seconds for au average of 89.6: fastest time eve? made in the speed- way races was but twenty-hundredths of a mile faster per hour, this mark being made by De Palma in 1915. The victory broughi Milton nearly $36,000 in prize money, $20,000 for first place,’$6,200 in lap prizes and the balance in special prizes given by accessory companies. - Less than four minutes behind Milton came Roscoe Sarles who had fought a bittle race with DePalma in the early hours and who held‘ second po- sition most of the way. DePalma Takes Lead. The race began with DePalma ‘al the pole and he soon jumped into & lead. His ruthless speed kept him well to the frgnt, although Sarles and Joe Boyer forced hii‘ into a terrific pace during the early laps. Boyer soon dropped behind through loss of time at the pits, but Tom 4lley. a last minute entry, jumped to the fore and helped Sarles rush DePaima. Gradually Italy's representative’ in- half way point he was more than two laps to the good. Boyer, who had raced alongside De { Palma, although actually six laps be- hind from the fiftieth lap on, had started a series of sprints which tax- ed DePalma’'s car to keep infront and at the 101st lap DePalma swung into ‘the spits. After a, quick change of plugs he rushed back, still ahead of Milton, who forged up to second. Another trip to the pits lost more ground, a third visit left him almost on even terms with ‘Milton, ana finally the leader swung to the side. of the track with a characteristic smile, ordered his car.to the garage, where it was found a conrecting rod was|; broken. DePalma won $10,600 in lap prizes previous to being forced ‘out. Milton to Front. Milton quickly swutig to the front and never lost his lead. He previous- | ly had made one trip to the pits for a change of tires and a second stop for gas was timed so nicely that he was off the speedway only 25 seconds and-did not lose the lead. TEN-CENT POSTAGE Louisville, Ky., May ~31. ~—House-| holders held their noses as a post- man passed by. An inquisitive crowd followed him to an office building. There he delivered -a first-lass patk- limburger cheese, AND 1" IT’S RIGHT, TOO 4 ‘Lexington, Ky., May 31,—“Name two canals well known in transporta- tion,’ ’was one of the questions at an eighth-grade examination here. “The Suez and the alimentary” was the reply. Had he, stopped Sarles would: have) gotta be SOME rider and a crack shot | _ to ever climb into a Texas Ranger’? | It was the fourth time Milton had| saddle.” miles per hour. The | creaged his lead, however, and at the | age from Germany. It held first-class i i A i i | _ RIP;COLLINS CAN SHOOT A LEAD | | BULLET OVER THE STATE. OF! |,TEXAS AS WELL AS HE CA | SHOOT A LEATHER BASEBAL | OVER THE HOME PLATE. THESE! | PITURFS SHOW HIM.IN HIS SUM-! MER ...AN! NTER‘GOSTUMES. | (LEFT) THB FINISH: OF A HE: Le | THY -HURL. © (RIGHT) TOGG! | OUT IN HIS TEXAS RANGER our : | FIT. © iS | | Rad Aast 3 winter Warren “Rip” Collins could be: found, any day astride a; | lanky nag, patrolling the shore of the | | Rio Grande, down along the Mexican | | border. 1 Just tow he’s a pit on Mitjer! | Huggins’ New York Yuwkee outfit. As, | soon as he's served hiss6ason in the | pitche 's box, Rip. will hie him bak | | $22 rena ‘Cause, as Collins will tell iy a's whar I belong. tight’ Yin | Ly ddlé, and’ rarin’ ta go,” ' p’s only been in the seléct base- | nati vCOtapany for a couple ry year Last seasonmhe busted in With the; Yanks. He took part in 36 games | and wound up the season with a r ord of 14 wjns and 8 Idses, for hurling percentage of .636. Has a: ‘Geoa Gun Eye. | He.admits he:.doesn’t feel quite asi | much at home ip a baseball suit as | he does in a western hat, chaps and| | bullet belt. Aad. his ‘gun eye is‘ | heap better, wna: batting optic. ° :: Being a full-fie iged member of the: Texas Rangers, in off-baseball season, ' Rip totes a revolver-and a rifle. > | And, can Rip’ Collins shoot, and| ride? < | Lissen, kid,” Rip Pik tel you, “you | And then he’ll-be too modest to tak | about his saddle .and rifle work. But speaks for Rip. In the summer season it’s Collins’ job to keep runners off the baseball! sacks, In the wintertime he turns to: keeping bandits off his territory. He! has had much experlence with Mexi-| cans, His station is at Ysleta, Tex., which is about as near to the border’ as yoy can get without stepping oves} the line, H Texas is his home state, he being | born in Weatherford back in ‘1897, Hig , first crack at‘ bail piaying Was wou Dallas in 1915. Five yeags later he made his entrance into major com: ; pany, going to the Yanks in a trade. |+ Likes Saddle Best. Rip throws right-handed and bats from either side of the pan. Hé pulls a gun trigger with his right-hand. , There is more money: a aan ‘ta for Collins;but if tt: ror ones or the other je year around, you'd find him astride 1 horse with a gun in his hand. |. QUIT TOBACCO - So easy to drop Cigarette, Cigar, | er Chewing habit No To-Bac has helped thousands to break thé costly, nerve-shattering: to- bacco habit. Whenever you have a longing for a smoke or chew, just place a: haymless ‘No-To-Bac tablet in your mouth instead. All desire stops. Shortly the habit is completely broken and you are better off mentally, physi- cally, financially, It’s so gas , 80 sim- ple. Get a-box of No-To-Bac and # it doesn't release you from all craving} for tobacco’in any form, your. drug | gist will refund your money without, question. X 621 Broadway ‘Phone 18 in . 4 Heavy Hauling SAND and GRAVEL flouse Moving” Piang, and Furniture Moving \ \ Excavating and Grading ‘ COAL and WOOD ||: All Work Guaranteed he’s a ranger sure enough, and thai} Keeping ’Em Off, His Job. 6 : Light and De THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | ores Tr ee ‘BASEBALLS, OR BULLETS ~ SHOOTS. ’EM BOTH WITH bid ha “RIP” COLLINS AAU Lo GIBBONS BROS.” ‘| scored: his: ninth straight knockout ; | spatriag’ partner of Jack Dempsey, ‘Brooklyn boxer. 1129 1-2, TUESDAY, MAY $1, 1921. The First National Bank : Wishes to Announce ARE VICTORS New York, May 31—Tom and Mike Gibbons: of St. Paul, were victors in outdoo: oxing. contests at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn yesterday. Tom aa hen h@ puts Jack Clifford, a former The Organization Of down for the full count in the third round of a 12-round ma‘ Mike \re- ceived the judge's Pani after he outhoxed Dave Rosenberg of Brooh- lyn, ina .12-roynd bout, ‘landing thré> blows to his.oponent:s one. “Tom, who weighed 168 pqunds to Clifford’s 180, |\ scored three knockdowns in the sec: ond round in'which tke bell, saved the The third session The Burleigh County Boys’ and Girls Purebred Pig Club. Conforming’ toa general movement in our great ‘ Northwest to promote the raising of Purebred Livestock, the First National Bank of Bismarck has procured at weaning time twenty purebred sow-pigs which it: will place in the hands of twenty Burleigh County Boys and Girls,. | : y : ‘lasted 588 seconds, — . ~ Rosenberg had difficulty in, hitting Mike, but “sueceeded in\ placing’ sev- eral blows which marked the western boxer. Mike weighed 155 and Rosen- berg 153. Andy Chaney, of New York, received the judge's decision over Dutch Brandt of Brooklyn, after’ a 12-round bout. Chaney weighed ere and Brandt The pigs will be allotted by an impartial drawing to boys and girls not under ten years of age nor over eigh- ~ teen, subject to the usual rules governing the formation of such clubs. A copy of these rules and suggestions for the conduct of the club may be had on application to the Firat National Bank. Applications for pigs will be reg- istered at the First National Bank and Rocky Kansas ' of Buttalo, who mets Benny Leonard, world’s: light- weight champion, next Monday, won the judge’s decision: over Gene De!- mont of Memphis, in a 12-round bout at Glendale, N: Y. Kansas weighed 1343-4 pounds and Delmont 133, HEBRON wing DRAWING WILL BE HELD oN JUNE 2iat. Nebren defeated Almo: “Ann Arbor, Mich,, May’ 31. gan defeated "Wiseansin, 9 to 8, in 18 innings baseball. oN E- penn DS BRING RESULTS The. game old-fashioned ideals of integrity fix : | the: standard of manufacture. Every care is exercised to secure only the A st materials.’ at , _» Every invention known to science is em- eet Played to insure Ayes ‘Washed and filtered air fils the ions rooms. “'Schiitz is filtered through white wood pulp. , ~ The same ld Schlitz with the alcoholic’ con-> ~ tent reduced ‘to the: limit pesecribed by the ' Federal Goreron / Bisrnarck a Giotery. Co. 621 Main St. Hiss ‘3 *Bisathrck, N. D.

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