The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1928, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1928 asmarck Workmen Clout Mercer 8 to 3 to Win First Tourney Game BMEN GET |Carl Lind and Ralvh Kress Should Remain in Majors for Ten Seasons , rma TO WI TWO BEGINNING (PITTSBURGH AlDs RAIN AND COLD “ CARDS B | GE PMMA | | STARSPRESENT] NeW YORK Glins| Sex"ows nce | DBLAY GAMBS WIDE CONTR AST Cards Are Back in First Place : FP ge Neg Sept ge Don’t Say Yes All Together, Now—Let’s | Youthful Mandan Box ir, Hurls Workmen Club to Nice Victory F Now With Fraction of a Rmiccs” tiestetta’s” seeders RCE BLOWS UP Kress Started Out Like 2 Point Advantage — i ee ee eed t — Whirlwind While Lind Was oe Hickey classes himself as “Just eGames Scheduled for 11, oh ed ata ++s. (By the Associated Press) ..., about the happiest man in baseball.” Pirate met Giant in a doubleheader at Rid tt 2 yesterday, and the Hit FOUALLY WEDD Caen laries were the St. Louis inals. Q While John McGraw’s New York Pitaburgh’ Pirates “the Cardinal, . rg! ira inals, Both Displace Veterans on without going ear . Dall mark, re: urn lead in the Natio: Their Respective Teams, Pakwe ‘gechant campaign, which Showing Great Poise seems certain to make baseball his- gy’ teed it’s all over. he even break cost the Giants two precious penne Pe pct enough to give the idle Cardinals the lead by_a fraction of one point. “What diffe e do a few dollars make as long as the American asso- ciation can boast of eight managers who are thorough gee and of some of the -best ball players who ever trod a diamond.” Hickey asked on his return from the five game series between the two leaders in the pennant race, Minneapolis and Indianapolis. “It’s a season just like this one in 1928 that makes the American asso- ciation what it is. For myself I am sae about the happiest man in base- 1” Rain caused postponement of all %, and 4:30 Today in First Round ‘ s in the sixth inning gave rck A. O. U, W. baseball | b five-run margin over the | foutfit and a victory by a 8 . The game was called at of the seventh inning be- darkness. - i drives in the first in- t Be single in the second gave ‘men nine a margin which een te wild pitches and| BY BILLY EVANS Two of the outstanding recruits - ee vs 7 in the majors this year are Second today: i § | haintained throughout the 4 Baseman Car! Lind of the Cleveland ahi Mtette s on Lost Pet. Muhapatu cow bac ved cence ia :) cn Indians and Shortstop Ralph Kress | s¢, ; . 71 48 59664 at Milwaukee in four days } | te games are scheduled to be Po of the St. Louis Browns. Incident- | Néw York + 68 46 .59649 must make up another postponement ; at the park today. The most fg ally their major league debuts offer} McGraw started out the day-right caused by rain on its last Milwaukee }| ‘ant of the three, the contest : a striking contrast. at Pittsburgh when Larry Benton, invasion. t\ 1m the Jamestown Independ- : 4 } eal It is the exception of aided and abetted by one John Scott, Hi and the Bismarck Grays, is a infielders to make the a ; itched the Gi ‘in first year in the big show, but that/in the first pr seit the | ’ is just what Lind and Kress have | second the Corsairs, themselves af- tour games played this season, done at the all-important positions | flicted with a pennant mania, un- dependents beat the Grays in ° | of second and short. leashed a terrific batting offensive 4/ 78t two sessions, but in the : Last year these two players were | that swept the New Yorkers into a |, wo the Grays made a come- i A : the satis performers at shortstop in | dismal 18 to 3 defeat. \ and defeated their opponents, : the spi League, Lind with Den-| ‘The Cincinnati Reds, taking two yy 2 6 to 1 margin and the sec- - ' baa and Kress with Tul Forcing | from the Brooklyn Dodgers, 2 to 0 a three-run rally in the last ¢ ae Joe Sewell, of Cleveland, out of the | and 6 to 1, leaped over the idle Cubs .Vninth session. : ieee hardly seemed possible, 80 | into third place and served notice the other two games, the con- anager Peckinpaugh of the Indians | that they are not yet to be counted tween Tuttle and Steele started 5 = experimented with Lind at second as M out of the race. e Reds trail the ‘La. m. and the second, be- an understudy to Louie Fonseca. Al-|Jeaders by only three and a half H a ‘ 3 so, it hardly seemed in the books e Der ue Teo Lincols that Kress could displace the veteran geet el ite Abe be | led at 4:30 p. m., with a ca- ‘' crowd expected to attend. State Corn Show to Close Fair Season Four county fairs in North Da- kota will mark the close of the county fair season in this state early in September. Only one exposition, the State Corn Show, Inc., which will be staged ko enced November 7, 8, 9, and 10 will be held after September 14. A schedule of the fairs during ibs by only half a game, and the Mone Commie Fate Association, #, is scheduled to start at 2:30 = 4 ; . Walter Gerber at short for the/ fifth-place Pirates by two. Leith, September 3, 4 and 5; J. H. ee kaso : @ Gerae bein seek ee tee mrnenees inh, Philadelphia Athletics, bent. Emch, secretary. | pec eif Stands Out é ing Cleveland 3 to 1, slipped up to land f the entire Mercer nine, Leif 5 a Sox shortly CGE opened. | within four and a half games of the med ae Pst tl ohne fd the most impressive of any. American league leaders, the New o trios to the plate, he poled eA i Now for the peculiar part of the | York Yankees. Lefty Grove was in ‘fhree hits and brought in two| Seven of the British golfers who are to meet the American amateur team for the Walker Cup are shown | first year careers of these two clever | his very best form for the A’s, al- He was credited with three} above. Below, left to right, are Captain G. N. C. Morten, Edward F. Storey and John B. Beck. On top, left |rookies. From almost the very start lowing eight scattered hits and fan- ats and four assists. to right, are R. H. Hardman, Dr. A. R. MacCullum, Thomas P. Perkins, the present British amateur cham- |of the training season, Kress had the| ning eight imen. *- ‘the second’ he frcer’s first score was brought| Pion, and Dr. William Twedell, captain of the team and the 1927 British champion. upper hand a! short for the Browns, | fanned the side on nine pitched balls fe last half of the second] With a champion and a former champion leading British champion, was appointed captain of the |but Lind was simply a filler-in for without so mueh.as a foul interven. | .. ' when Nielson, centerfielder, | the invasion, England hopes to make up for some of team. Cleveland, being used at both short! in-. He continued this string in the Sra ncanaue 4-7; J. C, McMillan, sec- retary. Dunn County fair, Ellendale, Sep- tember 6, 7 and 8; F. W. Jones, sec- "Sargent County fate, F Se unty fair, Forman, Sep- ee 12-14; R. G. McCrory, secre- ry. rought home by a two bagger|her international reverses with a victory over the Dr. Twedell and Thomas P. Perkins, the current |#nd second. As a matter of fact, an | third by oe ing Miller, and then got aif, second baseman. Leif ad-| American team in the competition for the classic British champion, are rated as the two ranking | injury. that caused Joe Sewell to| two stri fief ‘a foul on Langford ed to third and came home on a| Walker Cup at the Chicago Country Club on August stars of the group which includes Edward F. Storey, | miss the last three weeks of spring] before he threw a ball wide a the Hooper to Speak at pitch, 30 and 31. R. H. Hardman, John B. Beck, Dr. A. R. MacCullum |training, enabled Lind to get plenty! plate. He then fanved Langford on Meeting of Editors i the first inning, Patera, cen-| The hopes of the British were materially reduced and Captain G. M. C. Morten. of work at shortstop. the next pitch, givine him a string ielder, got to first on an error| when Cyril Tolley and Roger Wethered, two of ‘the The American team which will oppose the British |, However. when the season opened | of five strikeouts on 17 pitched balls. 8 — adit inetie ‘was brought in by a long triple | world’s ranking golfers, were unable to take part in stars will be composed of Bob Jones, George Von |Joe Sewell was back at short for] For the fourth straight day the ‘They had a mid-ocoan beauty con- idney W. fee Ne it oes H sft field by Wacsiskola. Hummel, | the expedition. Wethered was unable to get a leave Elm, Jess Sweetser, Francis Ouimet, Chick Evans, | Cleveland, but Kress had supplanted | Detroit Tigers downed the Boston Leesl ataeate oll we 5 oh md baseman, poled out a double,| of absence from his employer but Tolley was said to Harrison Johnston, Watts Gunn and Roland Mac- |Gerber at St. Louis. In the first gticultural college, wi one oi orites to win. ' i in| have bec hen Dr. William Twedell, 1927 kenzie. They are the fa . Owen C: Nl, givi i Boat field, and brought in| have become peeved when Dr. William 5 enzi y e Horgan an ql “Fonseca “out of the ieee: ahaa. upkie ow tania, and here’s the winner—Miss ” el is wt George Held wf Wtandan ‘nigh UNITED STATES WALKER CUP TEAM EXPRESS BERG big chance in the second game of | ee [ice Chicago to| Jessie Johnson, brunet Mississippian.|Baton Rogue, La., Aug. 29 to Sep- Py lete, poled out a triple and 5 the bees a substitute for Fonseca | five hits, and. the Washington Sen- Any objections to the’ judges’ deci- tember 1. 7 iv at second. He gas played regularly | ators made it two out of three fi Mr. Hooper will discuss the agri. ba pete by ys IS BEST IN HISTORY, SAYS KEELER FIGHT TONIGHT ever since and if now a fixture as an| the White Sox, 4 to 8 in ten innings. | sion? All together—“No!” cultural development work in North ied ‘of the season, a collision put eet Sox by one run, this time by 21 test aboard the Cunard liner Aqdi- Penh avai at the meeting of the Ai aan Association of Agricul- tural College Editors, to be held at ea} Indian regular. Dakota which has been accom- ee teen ene Last season, in the Western lished the cooperation: of FATA EE EE QPLAPT EEE | through 4 League, Lind batted .331, while Ki , the daily and ft Fsiaet ante eal set | Robert 7. done, Je. Cap-/ WHT BRAN MERT teagan gam ewe GENE TUNNEY GIVEN ROYAL Tall ee ce emett | catcher. eg eee Chicago, Aug. 24—(AP)—If the|the bat and if there was an edge ee okaeon: ate Rigen tain, George Von Elm, Jess IN NET FIN ALS weather is favorable for an outdoor|most of the experts were willing to RECEPTION BY IRISH PEOPLE AL-HERB HAVE MET & ® soft grounder to first, leav-| Sweetser, Chick Evans, show at Mills Stadium tonight, | give it to Lind. ‘ New York, Aug. 24.—(P)—A Eecmen on baste. . fi - Billy Petrolle of Fargo, N. D., and| Yet, during the first two months truckman and an aakiness who once ‘ierce opened the fourth by strik-| Francis Ouimet, Harrison “yer Berg ma mili al crea try that Lind com- oth * Tsar. spoke at the same meeting are now in, ort. Lei " r. —(AP)—|*© decide which stall challenge Sam- ubiin, Aug. 24.— — Gene |was a triumphal’ procession, with the | Tivals an names are in the Sar Risin, Workman short Leit| Johnston, Watts Gunn, and et ND Aaa may Mandell for his lightweight box- sone reetk? | Tunney today was ingse land of his |gteatest of excitement ‘ manifest | Papers every day. ae ‘at ore threw him out) Roland Mackenzie Pionship in the open men’s singles ‘rhe bout, billed for ten rounds to| batting with oon ‘well over .400,|8ncestors, and he was accorded @ bas ated dCs cubeaanic Raa ideaert* Gercroe Beith aa idt Catches Runner class will, be decided today, "7! |a decision was postponed from yes-|When the season was nearly half | welcome greater than any king ever |when he received an invitation from | asked. aif singled in the Mercer half of BY 0. B. KEELER Henares at Grand fone... (terday until tonight because of rain, | over, he wasn't very far away from |has received at the hands of the |President Cosgrave to visit him at| “Yes, we spoke from the same fourth and was caught off first| Atlanta, Aug. 24—(AP)—The| J) koran 0h Gran “|Both fighters remained in light|that mark. Lind, on the other hand, | Irish. the government building. .Tunne: ear in the academy of music in pitcher Heidt who cornered him| American’ amateur golfing team|# BR fee ane ‘training. was many points below his minor] Notwithstanding a typical Irish promptly responded, and was re- during a Red Cross drive. ween first and second. Receiving| Which will attempt to twist the), °" L16 Ure comm Pe twing | Odds are even on the outcome as| league average, but just about where |downpour, thousands of persons {ceived cordially by Mr. Cosgrave and|I wasn't governor then. I was. just hrow from Day, Secondbaseman| Lion's tail for the fifth successive oo Meptgnaay the Nesting twit& Petrolle and Berg fought to a 10|the experts had tipired he would | waited on the streets to welcome and |his cabinet ministers. He then truckm: The governor was i r “y 4 +. | 12-¥@ar-old St. Paul girs, . be bat, in the ighborhood of .270. rat al i : i 3 time in the Walker Cup match, this| “75 ‘ 4 4 round draw here in July. » in the nei of .270. cheer the ex-champion boxer. sented to the council of the Tail-| chairman ,of the directors of a ere, ea, Ct, Belton lear played at the Chicago Galt] gitls| doubles title, defeating Liclen SE Kress Batting Sensation When the steamer from Holyhead |teann games teams, which gave. a| trucking corporation after his. one rk out, As Sa hit too| Club, Wheaton, Ill. August 30-31, is| crine Yocum of Farzo. : LAMBART MAY GO BACK lot! the year at the bat; while Lind [ervibad' io ngsrotn (BObedY, was Banquet in hie honat; “He will visit | defeat for governa ie Holton was put out at cia Neier Bae cals ama- "In addition to the men’s singles, There exists a possibility that| resembled the ordinary performer. eterey ‘which included John Met Pag gc ge a : ; 5 to the winners Saturday. SABIN CARR TO WED ji i titles are also scheduled to v4 ...-| Bric Lambart, who recently said he|Now, with four months of the sea- itz. Fitch, meiere. 28 paatukele. vee (gee cRlaM reapers. selected By | cided in the junior and girls’ singles, | wouldn't return to Columbia, will] son over, we find things considerably ee fell ore Mai er the betel’ Gene sald: aye aerial a vinnie areal eae ee chau ii? pacer, in the first half of the oT are veterans in the competition, |{ne,men’s and women’s doubles, the |change his mind in order to’ play| different. Kress began to slump as | Gonenat O'Duffy, chief of police, had|have had such a welcome. Look at| the spelling of her name at bit, but = at re puding ae ¢|in that not one lacks previous ex.| Junior and men’s doub! center in football and be on the crew | was expected, because it was beyond|gone aboard to wish the visitor|those thousands out there in the| will not alter the sound of it in the ee ye ape Elin went! oo ence in playing for the United |. ! the wom- | again this coming college year. _| rhyme and reason to figure he would | “gead mille failte”—e hundred thou- | rain!” , least. She is to marry Sabin W. iin order for Mercer, Heupel c tat “4 Bat Th en’s doubles, the Kesting gi ry pi cri eet a continue his .400 gait. Lind, on the|sand welcomes. President Cosrrave's ion. Carr, Yale’s pole vaulter, Olympic [ikine out. pope Calg Ba tae ; genie Bri ain; McCarthy, fecal to Play the Cancale ue ue hand, began to perk up and| Gene landed amidst the strains lighted him, Tee a racentier po : si ee Flinn } Foul rnates, nd McCarthy; |ters of Jamestown in a semi-fin RAE Se Boner Sa aee Re hve ona ee e was | champion. le wt ‘ar ‘fewebdmers of proven ability. R rig esterday’ jump rage. int or two|rendered by a band of rs, and | very kind to me and gave me a great [te amd throwing ‘him out at/ rt rewcomers of proven ability. | and the winner will meet Georgina | Y¥ 's Games | every now and then, In the first 110|entered one of a fleet ted Pea a a ) Rather ‘ welcome,” he said. “He is a perfect | Pout walked batters, three wild| team the United States has yet put | Pre’, and», Katherine Yocum, * ‘ ne-& mark ot motorcars sepiaria the Stars and aren we | ches.and two errors combined to| in the field. Of course it devolves| ‘The women’s singles final will be NATIONAL LEAGUE ~ s_unders| intends ¢ the Workmen five runs in the} of. the, captain to rank his team for |g purely family afta » Eleanor and First Game actly .292, Bad taller te cea. hi to eee ee Sunday, post- st of the sixth. the singles’ and to pair and rank|Fiizabeth Kesting surviving the R Lind throughout the year has been Poni visit to. Mayo, the birth- Leif, Mercer second sacker, made|the men for the foursomes; andjfield. Eleanor put Miss Brindle,|New York . 9 Cry] ont r i place of his parents, until his mother tent, been . Fargo, out in straight sets Thursday. | Pittsburgh ee pra be DER esay et the : arrives in September. 3 In the singles Eleanor will meet] ‘Benton, Scott and Hogan, O’Far- | sto; ii 4 Helen Gruchalla in a semi-final, the |rell; Hill and Hemsley. todie pd ey aon is thrown out at the home trying| _SoT am merely setting out a per- the final Poy zabeth Kesting in Recon ame | gates Soar alan imto ne. ot ie steal on a passed ball. sonal opinion, written in advance,! jg ene ene ee R 6 8 age . second sackers.with a Flinn, Mercer pitcher, put in in| 8 to the probable order in singles! New York . pe ae ae ig Feige a ‘emperience. re 1 ET a: # seventh inning, worked’ Riniself| mt foursomes, and the pairing for] WEIGRT FOR A HEAVYWEIGHT [Pittsburgh . Nico Ay see in thal flere eee te 4 AMON ALAA FE 7 | 4 of '@ close pinch when he tossed| the foursome: Dan Morgan, who manages Jack | , Hubbell, Faull mo Farnally i a Eros in Coals Sire: year Reve proved f Melee : B three men in consecutive order r the singles rating| Britton and other fighters, says .a|Tidge and Hogan, O'Farrell; Fusse Set tion to the rule. Cleveland P st_on # fielder’s choice that put| equally of course Mr. Jones not } t Nielson. Leif was brought in| @mnounce his ranking and pairings 8 long drive to-right field made|-wiil. the day before the competi- { Holton, who gained third and| tion. i heavyweight should igh 199/8nd Hemsley. and St. have profited much by alee, Pi ee eet } Robert a tones: Jr. pounds. "That's the best pal il Ppos- ee Pa st eee ae. Dera. 8 j ie bos stone - dese Bweetaer. OGEES GAN GamING Broa ‘E [10 years, which is a nice thought for! . Pyinseton, N. J, August 24.—Practically a veteran first BAOUW Ap be a Re - . Brancis Getta: New York, oa oun Rocket | Cincinnati . 1 | Setting the club owners. team, but shy, very shy of capable reserve material—that’s the - : 8 1'0°0'0 oO} Eariaen Johnston. cars are being bailt in Germany ior 3 and Ip and football outlook at Princeton for the coming year... : . 7 Watts Gunn. lemonstrati aytor % . , > ae 4 5 5 7 ‘4 : . Roland MacKenzie. Fla, next ine: and the. invents - Second Game The Tigers have one of the toughest schedules in years, in- . Hummel, 2b.. ; 1 2 4 3 0| As amateur champion, Bobby| hopes to get a of 400 miles an th bef cluding a jaunt to Ohio State’s home grounds, and expect to : Ks cown, rf .. 3 1 1 0 0 Ojcannot escape putting himself at} hour. Dr. Karl George Kueld, broth-| Brooklyn . . ° unced e develop its team around Lawler 9 ce 8 0 © 1 4 0|No.1. That is a convention, in the| er-in-law of the inventor, Fritz Von| Cincinnati . o. Sih) is levelop ?. dud 3 2 1 0 1 Ojinternational match. He will not set-| Opel, has arrived here to make ar-| Moss, Ehrhardt, Elliott a and Stinson, “ends; Whyte and ; 2 0 1 0 0 0|tle his ranking until he has seen allj rangements. He says when the;Ash and Hargrave. Barfield, tackles; Caldwell], 1... L 0 0 0 0 O|the boys and observed them in prac-| first rocket car killed its own only i— coll |. guard, and Howe, center; ‘ and you will be a m1 , 8b1 0 0 O 0 | tice, naturally. occupant a cat, more than 600 wom-| Others postponed. had the and No: ” nalfbacks, and pleased to see how ——_________|_ The pairing of partners is a tick-|en, principally Americans, wrote - py mer rman, By il ; veo 28 8 721 9 1/|lish problem. The idea is to put| protests. AMERICAN LEAGUE Miles, fullback, all veterans of quickly, easily men together who will work well to- te R ers do last year. and safely you ; -.4 0 0 0 1 Ojgether, playing alternate strokes FEELS FINE AT 80 it .. : Charles “Chuck” Howe, from can secure insur- -4 0 0 © O O|with the same ball. I fancy the York. Aug. 24.—()—Thomas | Zoston . J Beaver Falls, Pa., will captain ance protection ’ q H : 3 ‘ 3 e is-ap a cour. of ranking will be! A. Edison once informed August} Carroll and Har; aes Hy this s ele ven. He has 4 Peto without the neces- ; oe bout - me i lofmann. year Zi play- = 152 0.0 0 0 0| 1. Von Elm and Sweetser. man was physically fi ‘ , : ed center the past two years __ Bity of waiting for +621 1 1.0 0} 2. Jones and Evans. could pass either leg over the back : BH and was prominently mentioned an insurance see 8 2 2 8 4 1] 3. Johnston and Ouimet. of a high chair. Mr. Heckscher, who| Cleveland .. Pres oe | for All-American honors in salesman to call 1-0-1 7 0-1} 4-Gunn and MacKenzie. will be 80 years old next Sunday,| Philadelphia . . 3 6 it Fe 1927. He is 22 Id; weighs " around. © © O O © 0 Of course the plan of play is for) can do it. “He says he feels bettcr| Miller and Autry; Grove . years old, . es 10 4 ° 19 the British No. ¢ in singles or four- than he did at 60. Cochrane. 188 pounds, nd prepped at Hun School. aa Remember the i é 6 a8 a will. be ne tenth pseu ip his ‘atteeata pos in all down some : ls i ve as a 25° 3 6 a9 3 Waitin ‘ p coach at Princeton. ‘ where. Some 7 Wesciskole’ in sev. Blankenship, ' He played end for three years as an We will { ss pposidhipery = Morberry end Ruel quick, to serve : Speen meme: Heriotts, Ohie-"Yend ares, | St. Louls-New York-—W : i ‘ : f , you. i. ‘ork—Wet je ; jon in fifth. Cincinnati” and” Jack Ketiah, rea ey Adega ad pagel |W" i 5 2 : Pittsburgh, drew, (12). AMERICAN ASSOCIATION yy i pi MURPHY Brosdway Phowe 577 BISMARCK, N. D. ¢>ven from Herman Paugh, Park- 5. rehe W. Vi Qpine f 1 Others ea Russ Hels, Colambes, defeat- ——— 7. r

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