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_ MACK EXPECTS |: WINS IN SETS . | Ninth Yesterday Helps Ath- aa letics Raise Head MACK UNDISCOUR AGED Crowds of More Than 177,113 Witnessed the Four Battles of the Bronx Thanks to Max Bishop, the Phila- delphia Athletics have been saved from utter rout in the now famous battle of the Bronx. 7 After smashing the A’s into de- feat in the first three skirmishes of the crucial general engagement, Miller Huggins’ Yankee brigade ran afoul of Bishop’s ninth-inning home run in the fourth clash yesterday. That dramatic blow carried with it a 4 to 3 victory for the Mackmen and enabled them to beat a dignified if somewhat hasty retreat from the Yankee stadium. 5 The Yankees thus saw their Amer- ican league lead clipped to a game end a half, a margin the Athletics hope will prove not impossible to overcome when the two clubs invade the west on Saturday for the clos- ing games of the season. The Yanks have 15 games and the A’s 13 west of the Alleghenys. f Bishop’s game-winning punch into the right field bleachers was a fit- ting climax to a contest which saw the Yankees come within an ace of victory with another of the eighth- inning rallies that enabled them to win the second and third games of the series. Howard Ehmke, tall right-hander of the Mackmen, entered this inning with a 3 to 2 le He had pitched & magnificent g: but in this frame got into diffi . The champions loaded the bases with two out and Tony Lazzeri at bat. In delivering his first pitch to the “Wonderful Wop” Ehmke wrenched Jhis knee and was removed. Ossie Orwoll went to the box and lost no time in walking Lazzeri, forcing “home the tying run. With the bases ‘still full, Mike Gazella flied out to end the frame, and the Yankees’ chances were gone. Waite Hoyt had two men down ‘in the Athletics’ ninth and had two ‘balls and two strikes on Bishop ‘when the second baseman clouted the bball over Ruth’s head and into the tight field stands. Haas got a life on Lazerri’s fumble and Cochrane ‘ingled to put two men on base and loyt under the showers in the club- ~ Vhouse. Pipgras ended the rally by ) }fanning the dangerous Al Simmons. ‘Taking no chances, Mack sent Rube 4 ‘alberg to the mound to get rid of ie Yankees in their last turn at ; te -hander was quite | 7 >qual to the occasion. 3 el A crowd of 40,388 saw the end of = “the series, swelling the total attend- ince for the four games to 177,113. While the New York Giants and Chicago Cubs were idle, the St. is Cardit stretched their Na- ional leagu d to three games by feating Cincinnati 2 to 1 in the ast home game of the season at it. Louis. ional league e Brooklyn gers beat the Phillies 6 to 1. iliam Watson Clark, Dodger thpaw, scored his second victory the Phils in three days, giving only five hits. The box score: Philadelphia Ath Yanks Wi * | LEFT TO PLAY Max Bishop’s Home Run in Here Are Three Shots of the Hectic Eighth Inning of the Opening Game THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE HORWEEN SAYS BIG TRIO HURT BY LATE START Director Says Harvard Should Enjoy Best Football Season in Five Years PRACTICE UNDER WAY Predicts Dartmouth Will Make as Good a Record as It Did Last Season BY ARNOLD HORWEEN Coach, Harvard University The outstanding feature of the 1928 schedules of eastern football teams is the exceptional number of intersectional games. Almost every one of the hundred or more teams seems to have good prospects to start and, @ result, @ season replete with close contests is sure to eventuate. The intersec- tional aspect is most welcome be- cause this is one of the features of the game which make it thoroughly worthwhile. It is the type of sport that can be of actual national bene- fit because it brings young men into contact from different sections un- der conditions which bring out the best in them. Harvard, like Yale and Princeton, labors under the handicap of being unable to start practice until Sep- tember 15. Other teams get away earlier. The Crimson, however’, should have a better season than any in the last five years. Fewer men were lost by probation and acta from a strong freshman team will be given. Yale starts with a new coach but with an established system which Coach Stevens knows Three highlights of a hectic ei ighth inning in the opening game of the “crucial” Athletics-Yankees se . Pictured ries at New York are pictured here. who had doubled, scoring on a single by Lazzeri; center, riple and a fumble; Bottom, Foxx of g out with the bases full. ESAS RENN EE SST EESTI! Who’s Who Among Grid Leaders | —Mortimer E. Sprague, a tackle of All- will lead the West Point eleven this fall edules a team in this country ever faced. be played by the Cadets are against South- ern Methodist, Yale, Harvard. Notre Z Dame, Nebraska and Stanford. Sprague is a graduate of the Uni. He played footbs ing safely home on a ti the Athletics strikin; West Point, N. Y., Sept. America caliber from Texas, through one of the hardest sch Six of the ten games to versity of Texas. there but did not become known na- tionally until he arrived at West This is his last season at the The sturdy Texan also has earned three major sport “A’s” in track and now holds the academy shot put Captain “Biff” Jones, a graduate of 1917, is in charge of Army football again this season and has a very able group of former Army stars aid- As he did during his p! in handling men and this trait ing days, Captain Jones has unusual ability it is one of the reasons why he is expected through their tough schedule successfully to carry the West Pointers ti Replacing Born and Harbold, two great ends last season, Philadelphia A BRHOAE 512260 501200 5603810 Soi ie Sam: Ea Te, 411800 301100 4.01110 4124309 200010 100000 000000 eeeee 37 413 2713 0 York 40238301 513310 400710 3.02200 300200 301351 211010 100000 20312410 100009 oo0oo2r 09 oo0eno00 310010 000000 1rooooo0 s+eee 82 $1027 10 2/gor itted for Bengough in 7th. pee) lor Pipgtas in 9th. ore by innings: : 009 200 101 4 138 0 York— & 001 010 010 3 19 2 Wilson, nice-running back, will be a hard task for the At but an abundance of material is on hand. If the West Pointers manage to come thi h th det which is hardly likely, Seat prieersricsrosag tery a their claim at a national title would more than likely be given preference over the claim of ‘any other undefeated team. Genes] JIMMIES CHASE PIGSKIN TODAY Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 18—A week of intensive early season foot- ball training began at Jamestown college today when Coach “Red” Ericson gave his Jimmies their first workout. Coach Ericson is hopeful that he can develop a strong aggre- gation out of the material reporting t but he intends to drill them intensively twice a «day on the fundamentals of football from now until classes begin on September uad has a number ck, all of whom rience and sev- termen. Those * Yesterday's NATIONAL LEAGUE New York-Boston, rain. en 7 Alexander and Wilson; Donohu Kolp and Hargrave. McGraw and Lerian. Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE * a “8 of old linemen have had some ex; eral of whom are reporting are Aafedt, Adams, Pettibone; Coons, Bowbells; Revere; Reeck, Pa Reiste, Deering; Cochrane; Hoyt, Pipgra: and Ben- Others not scheduled. thoroughly. He has ample material for another great year. Princeton’s primary problem devolves about the of Bill Roper getting as much out of Princeton’s assets as possible. ili ing on lively, due largely to the The Ai hi f the: I st {ability to master a forward pass | £0! setiediulanvot: aay seaeaen eae ite defense of greater efficiency than |°°oPeration of the Grand Forks Ro- tional contests with Southern Methodist, Notre Dame and Stan- in 10 years. Coach Ingram has am- ple material. Hawley Prospects Good ny is quite aes ae Saas eee handicap ee been. a stadi will maintain as g a record as it|only prominent undefeat team in did a year ago, with prospects for the east in 1927. Coach, Sutherland | "ererved, for, the (three big home an exceptionally good line. The|will have to combat. that factor ingside vs. the varsity eleven ‘and principal uncertainty is whether |throughout or it may bring the bit- the ss Captain Black will be in physical|ter results Brown encountered last shape to play the great game he is|year. capable of as a fullback. Of the Catholic universities in the |tainties, so that any forecast prior Ellsworth Armstrong is proud of his record as a member of the Dart- mouth varsity football squad, but prizes still more the young lady he’s ee aap ane te pacino strong, four and a half feet and _; formerly Peggy Wheatley of New cae sp tegrettien: thas egg iy center, for all other departments |S00d but not quite up to the very|Season gets into full swing, accord- seem to have a quantity of tried and|high standards of previous Penn proven material. There is no doubt | State elevens. letics Entertain Hope of Regaining League Lead —— Intersectional Grid Games in East Exceptional, Says Harvard Mentor WET WEATHER BRINGS INDIAN GAININLEAGUE Millers and Betzel Men One Full Game Apart with 12 Games Left for Each (By The Associated Press) Chicago,’ Sept. 18.—()—Rainfalt in Minneapolis brought sunshine to Indianapolis and Bruno 1, the crafty’ little Dutchman who is fighting to bring the Indians their first American Association pennant since 1917. The rain came in. to cause. -post- ement of the third game between inneapolis and Milwaukee at Nicol- let park yesterday and as the In- dians again routed Columbus, 11 to 4, Betzel’s men climbed to within a f the leading Millers. 1 Proud Man! Ellsworth Armstrong Is Just as Proud of Peggy as of His Football Record Won Lost Games to play Minneapolis 91 65 12 Indianapolis 90 66 12 Louisville worked its-way out of a tie for cellar position with Colum- bus by splitting a twin dill with Ned Stengel’s Mudhens, winning the hp sd 1, and dropping the , Kansas City rallied in the ninth Mare | and scored four runs to take @ lead over St. Paul, but the Saints came back with two runs in their half of the inning and won, 7 to 6. NODAK TICKETS GOING QUICKLY Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 18—(>) ey] Haven, Conne sity of North Dakota this year had it reserve their tickets before the ing to a statement issued today by Jack Stewart, director of ticket sales at the institution. Cornell will stand or fall on its} Sale of season tickets has been Kiwanis and Lions clubs, which are schedul Don’t Forget Brown's Collapse Pittsburgh starts under the one|nave tickets for Aideectiestod will ie games, All seats in the ium will be freshman team vs. the state college freshman team, October 13; Syracuse has a number of uncer- pelts P caer Hoes ie Foard east, much attention will be given|to the Nebraska game on October sections: pay. fll be ‘rey for Boston College with its new coach,|20 would be pure speculation, Jco McKenny, the youngest man to assume a responsibility of such|be magnitude in years. Holy Cross is|have not suffered materially from again under Cleo O’Donnell and|graduation and the outstanding men seems not to lack any of the/of the team which brought so much strength which made it so formid-|success in 1927 are again on hand. Columbia has been steadily im- able a year ago. Fordham will have the Maintoba- and Jamestown New York University is sure to| Somes September 22 and September Besic up among the leaders. They wey, the reserve and season tickets, a few blocks of tickets will be put on sale at the North Dakota cities, Stewart umbi HIGH PRAISE FOR LOTT the advantage of a second year un-!proving since Charlie Crowley took George Lott, der Frank Cavanaugh and results|over the reins of the late Percy 22-year-old Chicago should be forthcpming. Georgetown | Haughton and is branching into a tar, has-impressed critics in is sure to be strong with Lou Little | more difficult schedule. She should | ‘8 ast. this mate! University will continue under Jack outstanding record this year. Brown is very likely to react from|a group of eleven: men capab! year his fine pla; at the helm and an abundance of |give Dartmouth a battle in’ mid-| saying he has a wal ial at his disposal. Catholic | season. West Virginia is ‘another team McAuliffe’s tutelage. It seems dif-|with a long schedule. Her inter- ficult to predict which of these sec- | sectional game is with Ok! tarian institutions will have the] A: the next few. year: SMITHY 53 YEARS lahoma| Cherokee, Ia.— Resto horse- ies on November 10. If Coach has been Ed .J ren ob rs has any luck in develo] by : ’ oping rial git In that time he has 5, e 4 000 shoes to 138,240 its disastrous season of a year ago|playing as he played as an under- horses. His blacksmith shop still av- when McLaughry’s “iron men”| graduate, they should be powerful. t r3 the rt Sis H erages 10 horses a day. _ failed to repeat their 1926 record. Any inclination to travel on past|and Jefferson also have several] NoTice weanentcacE FORE- - performances is certainly eliminat-|problems to solve, but the: are] iW ed now from the squad. usually rather strong and shobld be| ,.Notice is hereby given that that Pennsylvania and Penn State|again this season. should determine the records for the two teams when they meet on|or even a few teams in the order of October 20. Penn has suffered a|their probable standing is almost as few losses by raduation, but is not|reckless as going fishing without severely handicapped. The vitaljany bait. However, I am factors in the team of Jast year are to believe that Pitts! th, Dart- |) still present and not the least is|mouth, ein 4 and Pennsylvania will | Mort, Scull and his kicking ability. Penn|be four of ti certain mortgage executed and deliv- ed by Ji Picking a sectiovAl football eader| Ete inie tie e outstanding teams of State, under Bezdek, is sure to be|the east this year, and might finish Bis New With Nats see Cronin Is Giving Bobby Reeves a Needed Breath- ; ing Spell Jensen, Westhope; Lark and Marks of Regent ma: The old backfield men which are pee Ae + Cassidy, Dickinson; and Edgeley. Foutt it 0 Schupp, Swetonic and am 2 Runs batted in—Bis- 5 1 18 jeine, Sheshan’ and Peters; Polli| $ and Gaston, Tesmer. Pacn The first bh f the son is with Huron College at Home- a mean ae = @| duly” assign: an’ 4 Major Leaders ] Companys a cores ————_____. tomley, Cards, 18, in the order named if a definite| Pini of method of grading teams were in ie Feet vogue. 1938, “a: Assignment: i eed ie et (By The Associated Press) |Istor of deeds on” National Bat P. Wi ates, .388. or ie taneous Records at page 467, Bana anes Haigh [fern ihn merges and ges Russ batted in—Bottomley, Cards, oie Court tease at min ae ee 9 2 il fice of said reg- t day of ‘Ho 118, 2 he County of Burle: ‘and State of , tates, 201. | : Hits—P. Waner, wiretes, 31) ‘e forth De ote, jet the hour of two Doubles—P. Waner, » Triples—P. Waner, Pirates, .Bot- The promises’ dorerinea ay, Homers—Wilson, Cubs, 30, such mortgage and which will be sold Stolen ‘ayler,. 30, |te,sattaty the same are described a5 Pitching—Benton, its, won 28, is Nit rent » Giants, +) bets Ning and zen (9 and Townsite of Welcensih, ir ousane itt Hiunated 26/100ths Dollars Seton with 56 legal ated Auguot zon valley. The origin of these re-| li mains a mystery and tony support| American, but owing to a lack of the belief that European ancestry. times as hard to produce the same ae Fo explanation is that| mount of work. white fis! were lost in storms or carried by| frequent Anglo-American compari- ocean currents to the Brazilian| 50ns is that, though American coast. It is also thou, it the | earns Catalonian Pao of ght tat ies British colleague, the total cost of Islands, Canarios, proves that the| identical buil in England and South American Indians knew of their existence in ection with | f Tecete meres bustin] elds Ju ne America’s best in: Unitea e anick and Ethel /full disc! mortgagors, to |against ORDER District of North Dakota, Discharge of the above-named Bank- + |rup iY, fay hi or [sth day of Diese fore the said court, at Fargo, in’ said te : fod [lished th ‘The ‘Bismarcie’ in and that. ail know: uly, 1928, and recorded in Book 186 |0 ‘ Ly a t prayer of the. said’ petitioner ‘shouted not be gra . Pe And fr further orde: court, fhe the. Referee shall THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1928 YOUNG CORBETT "AND BAKER VIE IN FIST RIALTO. Baker Conceded to Be Among Welter Leaders; Corbett Has Impressive Record New York, Sept, 18——An- other young Lochinvar comes out of the west tonight with a crushing left hand as his calling card in New York's fistic Rialto. Young Corbett, the third, of Fresno, Cal., slugging southpaw welterweight, meets that hard punching soldier, my Bak- er, in.a 12 round encounter at Mad- ison Square Garden. Baker, acknowledged to be one of the three leading challengers for Joe eso dered title, can age unquestioned courage. He is a prime favorite among New York fans because he never knows when he is beaten. But the former Mitchell field sol- dier ‘uses need Sed sone i punch wer when he climbs the ring with Corbett if th er lives up to his advance notices and his reputation. His last start was eo ae . against Nick Testo, of Troy, N. Y., the east, snd Nick wes knocked out” = east ick was out teuse pines a Saami The Fresno southpaw also holds a amateur title this summer, and to Saar Dai chil sell prove that his play in that meet was | 7e8T0 mae who teh at Ohi od not just a streak of luck he went out| 2” 6, non-title match ai eago re- a few dave ago ond won the first an bach t} nui on! each amateur invi- tation ae Tasees played London Seeks U. S. on ie 10 gol mm $ year and plans to keep at. his game Building Secrets in the future. He is worth keeping See an eye on. London—(AP)—The eyes of the British building industry have turn- = . ed eagerly toward the elevated sky- White Ind Mi: lines of cities in the United States uy indians May in an effort to b: America: = Have Spanish Blood] straction « tods ts bear on seiur. _— event Lima, Pezu—(AP)—New theories | h ion on trans- Ohio Winner cee Columbus Golfer Wins First Amateur Meet at Mon- have been advanced to account for| atlantic architecture. the presence of white or semi-white| , One was the statement of an after- Indian tribes in several South|,dirner speaker in London that the American localities. There are regions in the Peru- vian Sierras where the inhabitants automobile assembly plants, found ¢ rn te tary, planation of this esrenetacte that | that it paid them to employ British cluding some outstanding intersec-|of the past two years. If Dobie is Stewart said, and 750-season tickets | th dants of labor. able to form a backfield with some = ree FoSepely Ges gerten ai be- ford. Ni hich I instinctive ability to diagnose |fore long. ticket includes a ee ee with regetennls passes, Cornell is likely to be again |T@served seat for the five games ought to have about its best team|in the forefront. ey are descen various groups of Spanish explorers who The other was the statement of ins | Alfred C. Bossom, for 23 years an Sees ee a) wen ccdiatic¢ aeons Gene. Settlements of white Indians are| nd now a candidate for Parliament, sed to exist in the Ama-| that in building operations the Eng- ish man works just as hard as the it they are of pure Indo-] Organization he has to toil thres ermen or expeditionaries| , The most ajay ae fact of the times as much as his America is exactly the same. This fact, too, is laid at the door of lack of organization. Berlin Bachelor Has New Wifeless Home Berlin, (AP)—“A bachelors’ paradise” is the description given to thi'a new block of a] ment buildings In-the ‘Matter of Mrs. A. 8. Nielsen, |in the west end of Berlin which has _ Bankrupt. No. 7881 In Anfrew Miller, District Court of the for the District of lor’ ene 8. A. Nielsen, of Bi County ‘of Burleigh, fix orth Dakota, in said Districts ree tele; d electric cooker. etfully represents that on the 19th can be obtained at moderats day of July, 1926, last past, she was | prices , duly adjudged ankrupe under. ‘the at a common refectory. acts of Congress relating to banke Se Fuptey: that she has duly surrendered A roperty and rig! of hts prop- erty, and has fully complied with all the requirements of said acts and of the orders of the court touching her bankrupt; 7 it such in the aw from, suc ‘locharge. umber of thoroughbred stallions 18th day of August,/and mares, and a hi " MRS. A. 8. NIELSEN, and harness . , Bankrupt. ies aces ear the Olympi yakotar tas British shows. On this 10th day of September, D, 1928, on reading the Petition for , it ts RDERED By the Court, that @ ring be had upon the same on th of November, be: the: f, at Parse, in sei in sal 6th day of September, gq ERrE J, A. MONTGOM} (Seal of the Sui, By JOAN pth ate ape ee