The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 23, 1925, 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)

PAGE SIX 7 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Sports| ge PIRATES HIT" EIGHT HOMERS Feature Victory Over Cards Heavy Swatting St. Louis, dune featured by heav ing 8 home tt Piiates defeated dina im the were itors got home runs neluding 6 | Grantham vice reuit. Ro) Horns run h of the errors. R 3100 24 21 Pittsburg first gam Jacobs was bh hard in the Ist i und. Bush went to the mound in the 2nd, pitching effectively for the re-| majnder of the game | Cincinnati 2o1 100 002-6 124 Chicago 102 Oo 912 May and Krueger; Jacobs, Bush | and Gonzales SOLONS GAIN. ON MACKMEN ngton Within One-half |; Game of Lead | | NATE RIPON | | GUNNER SMITH ngton, June jngten cut Philadelp! American leagne race w half by defeating Cle as the Athletics lost to s = — ~ BASEBALL | American) League pennant ns I 601 OF ‘LIVER PUNCH SENT TOMMY TAKE SERIES us ae 3. P) The De pitcher Started Gibbons on Way Detro ' a0 914 ‘Toward Knockout Boston 0 000 2 Whitehill and Bass! niser and Picinich BY JOE WILd York, dune punel y Gib ATHLETICS Philadelphia halted the Athletic at 6 straight games PAIL IN taking the! Bo here by a} of their Polo Ground drop the round inning. te ; Lon hase i : Minneapoli 0 } St. Loui 009 502 12 10 column eet Philadelphia. .0 1 Milwauk jo a Rush and Dixon; 4 WHIT New York t ‘ feate an Lyons tx AMERICAN LEAGUE 1 York Ww ington, | ear | oe See Game Laurels hits. i ONAL LEAGUE RW. Pittsburgh at St. Louw 000 G00 4 see fae jadelphi Schalk; Shawkey, Pen chang | AMERICAN | == NAPOLEON GRABS | Tad BITTER LEAD IN | i RACE FOR FLAG: , Napoleon tightened their grip on|| first place in the Emmons-Logan | @—— rue vic Cineinna In the | Pittebu other loop contest Linton defeated) Others 1 Rraddock, 3 to 2, in an eleven inning, i AMERICAN LEAGUE hits and an error in the first} St. Louis 9; Philadelphia 2 netted the | Cleveland 2; Washington 7. Boston 4. w York 1 enough to win. din the seventh, push one runner a r | Steve Mcie lwiler far the| Naps, allowed but two hits and whif- | fed cleven. Both teams did stellar) work in the field | Harvey We pitched for’ Brad-| dock, and Volk and Hymiller for Lin- | ton. | The score b innings: ‘ Napoleon 200 600 000-2 Hazelton 090-090 100-1 League Standing Games next i t Napoleon Braddock Hazelton Strasburg Linton He-wns iz Sunday: Hazelton at! Braddock; Strasburg at Linton, Is { | by MORRIS ACKERMAN cksack. The sin and number The Referee Who was the runnerup in the n ional Nvoman's golf tournanient 9e47—F. R. W ck so it will ride as {high as porsi Bud Evans! A flat pack it will you out, k when chigat ; In 1912-13-14-16. in small cotton sacks, — not in paper. FAW WEST HURDLER ‘ STARS AT CHICAGO aes WINNING ON Stanford ‘Unive uncovered GARR ; aepilar hurdler in. Leistner at atl Of late . |ABOVE, AND ERWIN C. MAGEE. IN FINISHES » Chicago. the other day. Leistner| rallies, snatching some out of the| Daubert and Sherwood Magee, fam on the 120:yard sticks and|fire in the ninth and others in over-|ous baseball players of other day ‘tame in a close second in the low bar-|time.- Fact is, they have been pu’ tein dod, and riers. Oe ital p pin nmrk of 14/35 exeep- | IMDS with Webroit ahd sta ie Ca api as was Sherwood, nally, fast i Oe that, matter, i cs | Waciastine: Tunney’s Blow in 6th Round! These two Penn State. freshmen the Yankees have been| hope to follow-in the footsteps of ional College track and field mcet| winning quite a few games by great | their illustrious fathers, the late Jake Each is reputed to be a star, young In the shorter event he hung|ting on finishes that used to be a|Daubert being a se aroniriclicn the, first big leaguer, to; .rench, then}... | tour [writer asked Tunney to name and describe his favorite punch. | Tunney replied it | was a short i} | | ears blow to the liver and pointed out that it landed at a t not far from the he wanted th jwriter to call it a liver punch, idistinguished from a solar plexus | punch. He seemed to think it was and that the Neate ht with him was original. Slow Paralysis ned the effect was A well-driven blow to the plexus, he said, would drop a mmons’ famous git had Corbett in the old days out in Carson City. But the liver punch produced a last at practical- ly amounted to slow paraly: It was interesting to observe that Tunney's liver punch had the effect he predicted on Few people at the ringsi ized Gibbons had been hit in the sixth round, let alone severely wounded. After the fight Gibbons told writ- ers in his dressing room that he was ot hit once solidly until the sixth nd. don't remember much whether T is hit after that or not,” said Gib- statement rather bears ou! theory of the bgnumbing Some months ago this| of the liver punch, as he He's Plugger, Plodder Type Tunney is easily the most studious boxer the game has known in years. Hé is a student after the plugger, plodder type, as distinguished from the craftiness of Leonard, Attell and Britton. Convinced of the logic of any propesition, Tunney will work on it By N! until perfection has been attained dhe will not allow any amount of ilure or adverse criticism to swerve him to new courses He hurt Carpentier with this same punch a year ago and he will hurt a lot of other fighters with it in y bouts to come. {Iz is without debate the most dam- aging blow he has i large. and i ting bag of fistic tricks. NAVY OARSMEN CAPTURE BIG — COLLEGE RACE Close Second and Wisconsin Third in Annual Regatta Poughkee sie, N.Y. dune 23.—(P) As a gi twilight settled acros the Hudson river yesterday, a nav crew won a thrilling triumph over six other college crews in the four- mile varsity of the twenty- eighth annual regatta of the Inter- te Rowing association. A id of huskies from the Uni- ngton trailed the oss the finish line by quartars of length, with {the University’ of Wisconsin ‘third, even lengths behind the flying j leaders. | But Washington's defeat in the (pe i nt was partially vindieat-! a crack junior i otis swept its w -|vietory in the * {Cornell's crew aer y three-quarters of a length of open water. Pent nia finished third in this event, two lengths behind, Cornell. The east triumphed man event when yearling crew from versity won by a length and one-half. Penn finished second, three lengths ahead of Columbia. Rac Two Boat Affair ington shells jockeying for on right to the wire in. as cling a test as has been. seen on| the Atlantic seaboard this year.| Pennsylvania was up in the running Sons of Ex-Diamond Stars! for a brief period of the half mile! | mark, but found the terrific pace set! by the leaders too tiring. The Wis-| consin crew, last away from the wire, crawled along in last place un- til the crews passed the railroad bridge, one le from the finish, when a terri urt carried them by the second division field and they finished ahead of Pennsylvania, which had held third place for more than three-quarters of the race. A slight drizzle of rain fell just after the crews got to the starting line and continued during most of j the race. At the half mile mark Pennsyl- vania, rowing a 42 stroke, led by a with the Navy dogging the Raceevet thes @uakers anil Weenie: ton almost on a par with the Mid- dies. Columbia was fourth and cuse fifth. Cornell, pulled in sixth place with Wisconsin a poor seventh. Washington Takes Lead | The Huskies jumped into a half |boat length lead as the field tore |past the mile mark, with the navy | 1and Pennsylvania third. The nder of the field had settled far a The position remained relatively the same as the crews passed the mile and a half mark, and remained ume as the Huskies led the par- st the two mile mark. The Jrew up to the lead but only . Washington in- its stroke and as the boats flew under the lofty railrond bridge, they appeared on even terms, with Penn still third, eight lengths be- hind the leaders. At this point Syra- cuse moved up into fourth place with Wisconsin fifth and Columbia half length aead of Cornell. That last long mile will lone be remembered in the annals of inter- rollegiate rowing. From the shore |the navy appeared to be weakening jbut its shell continued e |ahead with | snurt started {the bridge. are anal ieee into the lead a quarter ofia length then a half length water showed. Too late the Pacific lcoust eipht started its spurt, hut on it did come the thousands who lined the banks of the picturesque {course held their breath as the pow- erful Husky eight crawled up wit! amazing rapi tiring Navy shell. distance was waning accident, the Navy shell could not he overtaken. The two boats crossed the fidish line showine open water, GEORGE JACOB DAUBERT,|the Navy crew being three-quarters of a boat length ahead. 7 Se a | Billy Evans Says | ie ee er ai SISLER’S COMEBACK George Sisler seems certain to he % 3. century mark in hase hits. and it was evident that. barring an’ ague: president;, DODGERS IN NEED OF PITCHERS, AT Washington Can Raise a.Pennant Flag i in Style. When it comes to raising a World's Champion Baseball Flag Washington, D. C., can put on a lot of a calling on congressmen, and, such like to aid in the job. taken when the flag was raised. 1 4 Ty Coby, Ci Left to right: k; Griffith, Bucky FE LEAST ACCORDING TO LATEST DOPE A Serviece New York, June ager Robinson of the Brooklyn Dod- gers needs mostly is pitchers. The hurling corps as made up now hasn't been delivering in the manner that had been anticipated. The great Dazzy Vance, voted the forts, plus the retirement of Bill _—From present| Doak, has put quite « crimp in the OY cert Appears that what Man- | Brooklyn advarve. ; indications it appears that Wat atl Te one bright spot of. the Robin- son mound forces has been Rube Ehrhardt, who has hurled a pretty start. of the campaign borne has done only so-so. Several of the rookies that looked most valuable player:in the Nation-| good in spring training have failed al League last season, has been hav-| to deliver. ing a tough time to date. shown when he blazed sensationally. Grimes, the other outstandi has fared about the same paign Vance. poor another. flashes of his He’s been good through ace,| the Dodgers up in the race th has| But if the gunners wer day,| better advantage the team’s stand- The failure of these| ing woujd be considerably higher And the Brooklyn ivory He’s only! hunters are now out seeking new form, | talent. the cam- Good hititng and defensive play have been the big factors ing keeping far. showing to two to come up to last season’s ef-! than it is at the present time. marka points h season le. At the opening of the sea- games in whic son he predicted he would hit at least hi 40 points better than last year. After a year’s lay-off due to eye trouble he managed to hit just 305 last season, a drop of more than 100 him last year, and| wh' from his mark in 1922 when sidered. his weakness considered the most valuable League pitcher: player in the American League. Starting with the opening of the Sisler went 34 consecutive he made one or more its. It looks as if it- would he a cinch for him to make good on his pring prophecy. Low ball pitching, which bothered was con- any trouble thi If you don’t ibelieve it just look at the pi Gillette, John Heydle tis, and Judge Landis, baseball’ Representative, F. H. ball to all fields this yea conclusive proof ‘that he has recovered his gre which Jones pla fect golf. jori with ‘his gloved hand, Bill Tilden seems able to make the tennis ball behave as he would have it, without going through prel club before eve many players, ha mystery to me. It seems wasted [| ning, effort. in I noticed that Bobby Jones didn't | Three more singles followed by regu- indulge in several minutes of club | lars, shimmy, his | game. club back of the ball and then his backswing. golfer, it strikes many play with the v fore every champion's system, ational Ty almost at batting eye. CHAMPIONSHIP GOLF an exhibition match recently. 1 s impressed with the ease with ed practically per- Of course, stars in all sports— Walter Johnson, pitehes d of the offerings of his pitcher y minary motions. The constant waggling of 2 golf y shot h alw: ered, He would simply tart Since Jones is cling of their club be- shot could profit hy the LUCK OF THE GAME The insertion of pinch-hitters When the Athle masters of their art—do their work] gage on last place, Connie M with little or no effort. h his a great | sixth been a] evening the count. suci oe ways ir-to-middiing | the ability posse me as if 1 great |makes the brea ete who slow -upithe came pon'the eutlace tobe pine luck. Chances.” ROI-TAN c4 cigar you'll like “A ROLTAN BUNDLE EMPR7s3 queen among smokes.” ure (10c each, or '50c for a bun- dle of five, foil wrapped) n ball game is merely a gamble on the ntirely | hart of the If the sub: it is labeled strategy. the manager I watched the great Bobby Jones | trying. i It seems that when a team ts ing, the manager alw with his pinch-hitting selec dom got a break with ease } strategy. grace, Ray Schalk handles a ma- | of talent. Now that he is winner, Dame Fortune is once more smiling on him, against Chitago he at number of | pinch-hitters and all of them deliv- winning the bail One of the timely hit: driving inning, sending up netting three runs, winning tae True, the winner in ems to get the breal You'll never ston laughing A at Buster Keaton in. “Seven Capitol Theatre, Wednesday and Thursday. Actor, Producer, George M. Cohan’ laywright, and Compostr Such popularity must be deserved f Sisler’s added cineback is, most re-/ Copysigut ins, Liaacte & Myccd Tobacco Ue N one great success after an- other, George M. Cohan has wor nation-wide distinction as cactor, playwright and producer. None. may.challenge his record for clean ess must be deserved. To be pen by millions, even a cigarette rfiust have “made good.” Chesterfield’s record : gaing, for .example, are ,no, accident, but. rather the result of ‘sheer merit — greater fragrance and a more e pleasing tastes ager. itutes come through, is credited with at least The real reason was lack again piloting a recent fray ion, both

Other pages from this issue: