The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 8, 1929, Page 8

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ETICDIRECTOR REPORTS JEALOUSY DISHEARTENED HIM 3 gsignation Followed by Two : Weeks That of Justin M. Barry, Cage Mentor GE TEESE titer Rea aOR NATIONAL LEAGUE mae, Grace; McWeeny, al, Pattison and Picinich. > €RVED CLOSE TO 5 YEARS E} 2 Cincinnati ‘ 4 ry itati lumii Over Poor | Philadelphia 6 3 gitation of Alumni Ov be Le £ Athletic Results Lately Ber: Davis. Lerian. Is Responsible ee ie ae St. Louis ~ 5 13 4towa City, Iowa. 8.—.P—A Boston -reaching shakeup in the athletic May an. H. Bell and Smith, W Greenfield Hearn, Cunning! Le Cay ey Sr eee! | Yesterday’s Games | WHITE SOX MACHINE ‘CONNIE MACK'S MEN DOWNED BY STRONG Homers to Score, but ;Annual May Festival Will Be M’LEOD WILL TAKE ONLY cn Bob B Byrne Bests Saturday at Fargo as a _WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1929 awkeye Athletic Department Shakeup ‘Looms As Belting Quits New York Yankees Are Back in First Place After Shading Browns 6 to 5 Minot’s Iron Man /KANSAS CITY MUST BATTLE Wins Applause in Beating Fuhrman Herman Ratzlaff Fights With FessendenTeam’s Giants Again Have to Clout) high school athletes will compete in Conducted Friday and | | James Morris i In Aid of Only One Eye After | 1) Alphonse Thomas wee tae Best of 1 <i TEAM NOT veT seLecteo|! Pitching Battle spoealetlnncte i Lefty Grove in Hard Pitch- —_ Minnespolls, “May &—Ue)—Rosy , i ‘ iggs,| Jim Morris, North Dakota's attor- | Rosales, Cleveland Indian, and Dick ers’ Battie lee dbdica eal ney general, loday stalks through the Daniels, sbADBARO, pabes a 18 pe Schwartz, Walz, Jacob- corridors of the state capitol building | ound draw in the main event of the | son May Be Chosen with head bowed in shame. fight program last night. BRAVES SHELLAC CARDS son May Morris’ athletic hono. was be-|' “Rosales si hits expertition in smirched last nighi when is diamond ball team was vanquished, 16 to 8, by the fast-traveling club captained by Robert Byrne, secretary of state. Morris, however, gloats in satisfac- tion that it was not his pitching en- the early rounds and piled up a mar- gin which Daniels succeeded in over- coming by a smashing finish. Rosales weighed 170 pounds while Daniels weighed 171. In the six-round semi-windup, Tim That only cight or nine Bismarck the annual May conference track and field meet at the North Dakota Ag- ricultural college at Fargo Friday and Hurler Boasts No- Hit,No-Run Game (Special To The Tribune) Fessendtn,'N. Dak., May 8.—Harve Cook, Fessenden Lions baseball hurler, claims the distinction of be- ing the first North Dakotan this year to turn in a no-hit, no-run game. The Lions trimmed Kensal 3 to 0. Cooke struck out 10 men, and his teammates made but one error. Clarence Jensen, Kensal hurler, al- lowed only six hits, including a home MINUS GERKIN, SWATSMITH - —_— American Association Batting Leader, Spiked by Spur- geon Yesteray MILLERS TRIM MUDHENS St. Paul Batsmen Thump Out. 18 Safeties and Trim Co- lumbus 14 to 4 Chicago, May 8.—()—-The Kansas City Blues must battle for the rest of the week without the services of their chief offensive star. s i q tot 7 i Gerkin, association batting leader, 8 ‘partment of the University of Iowa i Pittsburgh Wins Saturday is probable. i ee ie Ain ines wave har ond Derry, 196-pound giant from Dublin, |€¥8 A ected and a triple by | collided with Spurgeon, the Blues’ sec- 2 as predicted on the campus today 1 emohion This was announced this morning | rrrort. The third and fourth in-|2relend, gave Tommy Havel of St.|Henmiler | ond baseman, in trying for a fly ball 2 lowing the announcement that ‘ : eae | By WILLIAM J. CHIPMAN — by Roy D. McLeod, Demon athletic | TinmOrl. MS crticularly disastrous, | Paul ® severe beating. see, Games scheduled by the Fes-lin yesterday's game with Louisville, : vied h- | whieh sh deh i) | (Associated Press Sports Writer) | director. = ‘scuifi, scoring five runs in|, Other results were: Herman Ratz- : and was so badly spiked that he will : aul E. Belting had resigned as ath Ron Re) Just who the cight men will be, Mc- | Byrne's outfit scoring laff, Minot, N. D., hing 148 de H, W. H. Stars, May 12. be out ‘A i j . 3 | ‘The Yankees are back homie again. |) oh 2s not decided. each frame. The attorney general * weighing e- | Kensal, May 19 out of action for several days. ¥ te director. jPhiladelpma ......... 2 5. Al put only by the skin of their teeth. | Mend Das no Geet owever, that {Showed power with the bat. feated Joe’ Fuhrman, St. Paul, 152 Gilkerson’s Union Giants, May 21, |, Blues retained their fingernail y Im accepting Belting’s resignation. | Chic ae sey Neer | The champions yesterday shaded the t is slit set ain, Frias iets Byrne pitched a.steady game for) Pounds, in six rounds. Jack Palm, Janneaterh, MAS 38. » May 21. | grip on first place by trouncing the r we university athletic council an-| and Cochrane; ‘Thomas and Broxns by 6 to 5. at Sportsman's | Captain Wally et ie? je a the vietors. Minneapolis, 185, and Honeyboy Con- New Ri tend. hey 30. Colonels 12 to 16 while Minneapolis r auneed he would remain in charge ' Berg. park while the White Sox were tum- hover, wae ee id it 5 eeilt ‘The two teams will practice at 6:30 roy, St. Paul, 162, fought toa draw in oc! . . was whipping Casey Stengel’s Toledo b Physical training classes, but will Saree i bling the Athieties by 4to2in a sur- | Frank Walz, and Ben Jacobson p. m, each Tuesday and Thursday at |f0ur rounds; Bud Glover, Minneap- club 8 to 1. Louisville used five hurl- ave ho part in the control of ath- RoW OE g battle on the Chicago front, |be members of the group. | the william Moore schou! diamond, | Hs. 129, shaded Johnny Early, Min- Leader De b ers in an attempt to halt the Blues, tie teams. Together with a direc- Iw ton ae 6 ©} this combination of events left the i bey Leo Boner Fay Brown, Les. | it Was announced after the game. A neapolis. 130, in four rounds; Zip In rr ly while Tom Sheehan, Kansas City vet- fi of intercollegiate athletics. to be 'D ia 3 on uel | Macks and the Browns in a virtual | love ie ee ee er Klip. {city league will be formed if two or | Zitver, St. Paul, 166, and Billy Murray, eran, was forced to give way to Fette Et spointed, he will serve under a new| | Jones. Marberry. Brown and Ruel;! Me but for second place rather than | ter nn, Earl Hoffman, Elmer Klip- | tore other veams are organized, Minneapolis, 168, fought four rounds Str tch Lead after being rapped for five hits in 1 | aairman of the department of ath- | Whitehill ond shea | fire. stein, John Sg KRPOI alt ‘The lincups follow: to a draw, and Eddie Flynn beat his e es less than six innings. ties and physical education. "| ‘The Ruppert rifles fired a dozen | Johnny Spriggs, and Haro 3 Byrne's team —Harry Herschleb,|oca! rival, Eddie Hayes on points. John Brillhart pitched steady ball t Belting’s resignation followed RH — EF ‘volleys at young Alvin Crowder. The es Archie McPhee, Frank Roberts, Dale | Zach weighed 130 pounds. Coalgate, Okla. May 8—()—Atter |0F, Minneapolis, holding Toledo to 4 v0 weeks that of Justin M. B Boston 5 10 Of hardest. was Babe Ruth's home run G t Kill Brown, Robert Byrne, Carvel Johne| Ratelaff was forced to battle with running on rough dir) roads for cev. | Sever hits. Both Lucas and Parmalee, ° tad basketball coach. wio announced |Cleveland .. 4-9 1! with two aboard in the fourth, but lan ers son, Adolph “Pete” Rheault, John|the use of only one eye, Fuhrman | 700 days, C. ©. Pyles bunion boys |W80 Worked for the Mudhens, were & would go next season to the Uni-! Russell and Berry, A. Gaston; Fer-|tnhe most effective was Bob Mcusel’s “ | totthouse, ‘Bob Boelter, and Earl] closing the Dakotan’s left optic in here Sak on improved highways to- hit hard, especially by Bagwell, who ° sity of Southern California. 'reil, Miljus, Harder and L. Sewell. pinch double in the ninth after the F 1] Wi In| 22", the second round. Fuhrman followed day on their mile jaunt to Durant, ;cr@cked out @ homer, a triple and a t —_Belting's snd Barry's resignations Babe had walked and Gehrig had el TSCOM SH | srorris: team —3. G. MacGregor. | this opening by @ series of left jabs | “42 on ches mille Jeunt to Durant. tsingie in four times at bat. ame after two years of agil y R H FE! singled. Both scored, carrying the | tenry Potter, Ike Iverson, Frank Pot- | aimed to close the other but Ratzlaff land, jogged into Coalgate from Hol- Four Columbus pitchers failed to rq fumni. following the football ee York ..... + 6 10 3} runs which drove Crowder to cover | .,. hi a With Its One Victory, | ‘et Vernon Hill. Jim Morris, William | took the aggressive and gradually denville yesterday well ahead of the | PU22le St. Paul batsmen, who thumped 1 s € 1926 and 1927 when the Hawkeyes |St. Louis .. 5 10 _ Oland decided the game. Ruth’s hom- | Michigan, Wi s One Victory, | 5’ ‘Moeller, “Burleigh” Grimes, Bill] forced his opponent to the de-|Foiy ‘and added a substantial in | OUt 18 safeties for a 14 to 4 victory. % on only one conference football] Pennock. Zachary and Dickey;/er was his fifth, which placed him Now on Top of Big Ten Davis, and Arthur “Bruno” Haas. fensive. to hie ead Over Denny BaD tal Indianapolis grabbed an. early le pi © ame. Crowder, Collins and Schang. only one behind his pal, Gehrig. Bill Ratziaft made good use of a short |/1’ "5" Soticeman, second in’ elapsed |OV’r Milwaukee in the series opener, \" *} Bert Ingwersen, head _ football Dickey also combed Mr. Crowder for Baseball Heap 100 Golfers Compete left to Fuhrman’s chin throughout |i...” ‘Galo finished second. Philip | Dut nelther Fred Schupp nor Bili . % 2ach, for a time was included in the aeeesoenens all thé bases, in the fifth. : the last four rounds. He climaxed Granville, Hamilton, Ont., and Paul | Burwell was able to defend it, and the { Imuni attacks, but the agitation AMERICAN ssh TON ‘The defeat of the Athletics at Chi- Serconcumanne| Me Fessenden Tourney the encounter with a savage two- Simpson, Burlington, N. ©., tied for | Brewers scored a 6 to 5 victory. Fon- ‘S\ gainst him subsided last season. % 7d Bfeago was brought about largely by | , Chicago, May 8.— i ine beh pile fisted attack, winning the cheers of | iTh"Divce. seca. got into trouble after five and a « Belting came to the University of | Columbus 5 2 Alphonse Thomas, the _hard-luck day rested eat Sie he tha rm i (Special ‘Te The ‘Telbene) the crowd while oa ineffec- fraction innings of work, and Denny owa from the University of Mlinois|St. Paul . : 14 — champion of the Ainerican League. | Big Ten baseha ' sli anks i peci tive clinching was booed. ONLY GOLFER FROM SCRATCH Gearin was inserted in time to get { nd is nearing the completion of five| Winters, Maxton, Proffitt, Miller aiphonse was some better than Bob | Northwestern's “giant killers.” | 1] | Fessenden. N. Dak. May 8—One George Voight 's the oni erifer | credit for the victory. 4 ears of service, during which time {and Shinault, Pankrantz; Betts and | Grove in a pitchers’ battle which fin-| The purple yesterday put in hundred golfers from nine clubs in BEDS AT PREMIUM Piet dpe led ety ges ca ‘ new stadium and field house have | Hargrave. ished with the Athletics in possession | innings in handing Wisconsin ead central North Dakota are expected} Reservations at Louisville hotels|the New Yor! rated in SHIP HIM TO RUTGERS! @ cen erected and a course in physical as of only five small hits. first conference defeat of the season, | to compete in the annual “Ham and/are as scarce as bad pickers will be bonghinele creme a Sweetser has a ‘Although ‘Henry ‘THorsatilen, now * — ducation established | R KF! Boston nosed out Cleveland by 5 to | by @ score of 8 to 3. Bacon” tournament, which will be|two days after the derby is run, The{0N¢ st Pp. pitching in ‘the Basten “Caroline ‘egistration. Belt- | Toledo 1 7% 1/4 and Detroit shaded Washington by| The defeat dropped the Badgers to} conducted here Sunday by the local|mammoth crowd has overflowed into eee ‘ Erpenied with pride” to his work | Minneapolis |B 12 0/$to'2 in minor aide alone the Amen |& tie with Indiana for second place | club. neighboring towns and benches in| Suzanne Lucas, Charlestown (8. C.) | League, broke his hand in the fourth ‘4 ‘t the university and added: j_ Lucas, Parmelee and Heyworth; | ican League front. with three victories and one defeat.| Prizes are offered to winners and|the parks are hotly contested after/high school student, recently ran 75 aaa, mish poh pole econset ised: Je a ié “Naturally continued opposition. |Brillheart and McMullen. ‘The Giants once more had to hit | Michigan has playcd and won one H runners-up in each flight. nightfall. bce in 8 4-5 seconds. It is a new i: ie ahah ae oon: 4 | fissension, and jealousy have oe for four bases to score, and as a con game. seca : : i ‘eloped over a ram that not only sequence the Pirates rushed off wit! ; 18s fhoved rapidly, but also has had | Indianapolis the decision by 3 to 2 in their first en- fy wily educational aims in view. These | Milwaukee gagement of the season at the Polo 4 lssensions have been embarrassing Schupp, Bi grounds. The Bucs tied in the eighth 4 © the university and disheartening Fons and McMenemy. and won in the tenth when Lioyd 1 o me.” x FE Waner doubled and Pie Traynor " H | singled. a a |Louisville . 5 2!" The Braves remained at the top by ¥ Jamestown a ie cit 2 AF ame | Suellacking the Cardinais, & to o. in i | ys an eighth inning rally. Billy South- in Set for Track ee renee a ‘Thompson; Sheehan, | worth tried to slip past the Bostonese ay Jamestown, N. gad May 8. a a } 5 ss et | aise a sateen ial ) sangements are now being complet Ou SEBALL | ; “tie ean Be ca een. Be Cloud ‘Teachers 10; Concordia Roving ee bye Soa nraimigicg b | Cee eeege eee eey a ate: (2 (7 innings). [on within striking distance of Judge -Lbou can an on t e ' ; zs 2 Fuchs’ amazing team. Charlie Grimm eee nosstsl school. Aber backed up Art Nehf’s fine pitchin ee ee ee a MAJOR | ith two home. runs, and” Rigge ‘. rs : ple Valley City ‘Grate ‘Teachers’ seal ‘ Stephenson hit one. l t f tt ! ; lege, and Jamestown college. The LEAGUE | Frank O'Deul, the reformed pitch- qua 1 y re} a Ci g are e new cinder track is being put in final | er. hit his fifth home run at Philadel- + shape for the event. Pu LEADERS | phia, enabling the home team to de- | feat the Reds by 6 to 4. Two were ; on base in the eighth when Frankie's idrive against Rixey scaled the right field wall. INCLUDING GAMES OF MAY 7 (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE | Batting—Stephenson (Cubs). ° Fights Last Night that continues to be : Se | { (By The Associated Press) | ABD. Runs—Stephenson (Cubs), 21 | IMMATERIAL TO SHARKEY 7 Cleveland —Emmet Rocco. El- jackson §=(Giants!, O'Doul It's all the same to Jack Sharkey, t t | wood City, Pa.. outpointed John- a1 |the Boston gob, whether be fights e 1 g g es success ny Risko, Cleveland. (12). | Stolen bases—Flo™ 8). 7. | Paulino or Schmeling next. “To be- Bethiehem, Pa. Baltimore, and Joey City, draw, (10). : Wilke-Barre, Pa.— Kid Choco- | late, Havana, outpointed Steve Smith, Bridgeport, (19). Minneapolis — Rosy Kosales, id Lampe, | ritching—Malone (C1 ata detec. | st | come champion. you got to beat them. | both.” he says, “so why be particular | Which one you beat firs none AMERICAN LEAGUE | Batting—Foxx (Athletics), .407 | Runs—Gehringer ‘ Tigers). 23. Homers—Gehrig (Yanks), 6. in smoking history Cleveland, and Dick Daniels, | Stolen Bases—Averill, Fonseca oe Bea and now an umpire in the Minneapolis, drew (19). Tim ans), 4 Southern League, spends his winter q Derry, Dublin, Ircland, outpoint- ; Pitching— (Tigers), won 4 lost | months working in a Hollywood stu- ed Tommy Havel, St. Paul, (6). | dio as a carpenter. “A cigar fit for your mouth!” says Alfred W. McCann D. Litt, A. B., LLD. Famous Pure Food Expert (CAMEL CIGARETTES WHY CAMELS ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE Camels contain the choicest tobaccos grown... ex- pertly blended for matchless taste and fragrance. They have a welcome mellowness and mildness that you will find in no other cigarette. Smoke them as often as you like, Camels never tire your taste. The quality of Camels is never permitted to vary. Only a superior cigarette could have won and held world leadership for all these years as Camel has +. and thrilling to your taste! ... for Cremo is pure and good throughout... every leaf is sterilized!

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