The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 19, 1929, Page 8

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S.. PASE EIGHT TEAMS CLASH AGAIN TONIGHT; COLORFUL ‘DAVIDITES 10 COME Visitors Take Advantage of Deluge of Errors by Grays Last Night GRAYS USE THREE HURLERS Bridegroom Opposes Chiroprac- tor in Tonight’s Game, It Is Announced By WILLIAM S. MOELLER Hettinger's baseball nine last night took advantage of a deluge of Bis- marck errors and scampered off with a 13 to 3 verdict in the first of a two- game series staged as an entertain- ing feature for North Dakota's firc- men, in convention here. The game was called at the end of the cighth because of darkness. The two teams will renew their warfare at the city athletic field at 6:30 o'clock tonight. At 6:30 tomor- row night the capital city clan crosscs bats with the famed colored Cuban House of David whiskered club. Used Three Pitchers Absence of the Gray's slated hurl- er, Charlie Boardman, who was une: pectedly called from the city yester- day, raised havoc shortly before the game in Manager Neil O. Churchill's Pitching circles. As a result he mus- tered three pitchers and made sacri- fices.of them before the altar of Het- tinger’s heavy clouting. Hettinger last night presented a well-rounded outfit, one that played good baseball at all stages of the game, hit and fielded well, and one, above all, which was capable of turn- ing breaks to its own advantage. Among the nicest of Hettinger’s performers were Ed Manydeeds, In- Gian catcher; Elmer Fitzgerald, sec-| yyigmelsth 2° - strong Strool, S. Dak. aggregation Sanaa, ‘s ond baseman who played with the last season; Bill Manley, first sacker; and Alf Kittleson, right gardener. Manydeeds, particularly, turned in a nice performance. Besides getting & double, two singles, and a base on balls in five trips to score two runs and drive in another pair, he did well his job of holding the pitches of Left Mauser, Lemmon, S. Dak. hurler, throwing to second, and fielding. Strong on Defense Fitzgerald played a nice defensive * game and secured a two-baser and single in five jaunts to the platter. Manley and Kittleson each swatted safely twice in five chances and | © played errorless baseball. ‘y Art Enneberg, son-in-law of Man- ager O. M. Tripp for less than two days, will hurl for the visitors tonight, the father-in-law manager announced afier last night's game. Enneberg was married to Miss Dorothy Tripp yesterday morning before coming to Bismarck for the doubleheader. Doc Love is Manager Churchill's selection for the contest. Last night’s encounter began peace- ‘fully, and though Hettinger had a 5 to 0 lead at the end of the fifth, the visitors had not clinched the contest ‘until their half of the eighth inning, when they counted eight times. -. Wristen started on the mound for Bismarck and held the winners scoreless the first frame. In the sec- ond inning, however, after one man was out, Wristen allowed two singles by Fitzgerald and Manydeeds. Alf Kittleson then flied out to Larry Kinn for the second out. Kinn made a per- fect throw to Catcher Schmaedecke in an attempt to catch Fitzgerald at the plate but the catcher muffed the , Fitzgerald scored, and Many- ‘advanced to third. With two away and a runner on third, Allard laid an easy one down to Wristen, ‘who “blew up” and attempted to catch Manydeeds at the plate. Be- sides his error in judgment, he threw wild, Manydeeds scoring and Marty Allard reaching first. Mauser then went out. Heidt Relieves Wristen ‘Three consecutive singles and er- rors by Fuller and Johnson gave Het- one more in the third. With ettinger Scampers off JACKIE GRAY AND BOOMER Defends Title eee Swan Peterson Back to Defend Record Racing Honors Grabbed Here Last Year Last July 4, before 10,000 automobile racing fans, Swan Peterson set a record of 2:55 1-5 for five laps on the Bismarck Fair race track. His time was established in a three-cornered race. He will be back Saturday afternoon to defend his honors at the Bismarck Fair automobile race program. BASEBALI. NAPOLEON Herr, c > ow Doschle, is Bl enmecwemme E. Mindt, 53 . D. Herr, 3b Glasier, cf ... I a eonsercrcresces aloocnonmucomt wlosonnccoom > o mlaesscucesse aleccecucucd ol Cromnonann® Se] CH rammed Score by innings: Napoleon 220121 x-8 ‘Wishek 000000 0-0 Two base hits—W. Meier, Solien, Burnstad. Double plays—Burnstad to Meier to Mitzel. Hits off Doschle 3 in 7 innings; off Heimbusch 8 in 7 inn- ings. Struck out by Doschle 8; by Heimbusch 7. Bases on balls off oe Umpires—Swalve and reitl, (INCLUDING GAMES (By the Associated Press) National ‘ Batting—Terry, Giants, .400. Runs—Douthit, Cards, 57. Homers—Hafey, Cards, 18. Stolen bases—Cuyler, Cubs, 16. Pitching—Grimes, Pirates, 10 won, 1 lost. American Batting—Foxx, Athletics, .406. Runs—Gel . Homers—Gehrig, Yanks, 18. Stolen Bases—Miller, Athletics, Cis- sel, White Sox, Fonseca, Indians, 8. - Enea, Athletics, 10 won, 18) who is out of the city, and Coserift, who has s broken finges, OF THE || CLUBS. 4 AMERICAN LEAGUE Standings Pet. 155, 604 582 517 491 385, 362 321 Philadelphia New York St. Louis Detroit . Cleveland ‘Washington Chicago Boston . First Game: Boston ... 2 New York .. 9 Morris and Berry; Heimach Dickey. Second Game: H Boston ... 12 New York 4 Bayne ani on, Berry; gras, Zachary, and R H E Philadelphia .. vo” 14 0 Washington .. o- 4 2 Grove, Walberg and Cochrane; ge Braxton, Brown, Liska and uel, Others not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE \ chicago rrr St. Louis . Pittsburgh New York Philadelphia Brooklyn . Boston y . Cincinnati Games Yesterday First Game: R Ez New York . 1 Brooklyn . - 8 15 1 Mays, Benton, Henry and Hogan, O'Farrell; Vance, Morrison and De- berry, Picinich. Second Game R H E New York 6 13 1 Brooklyn . 7 13 1 Walker, Scott and O'Farrell; Mc- Weeny and Picinich. E ee eee ae te emscccie ata ptonces’ 4 verett and Spohrer; Sweetland and Davis. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TONY BROWN, DENNY WELLS ARE VICTORS | BY KNOCKOUT ROUTE Lee Cavanagh and Herb Ship- man Refuse to Fight as Gate Receipts Disappoint BILLY MEEK SHOWS CLASS Frankie Eckroth and Mickey McGuire Assured of Re- match After Good Bout -Wuaneia Senanueaee 1. ' Tribune Decisions | » AT Jackie Grey, Bismarck, and Boomer Brooker, Mandan, drew, (6). Tony Brown, Bismarck, knocked out Fritz Kowalski, Fargo, (1). Denny Wells, Bismarck, knocked 0 Pip-| Sherid and Grabowski.'or cash. Eighteen lukewarm sports ch Harry Ulrich, Fort Lincoln, he ‘ Billy Meek, Bismarck, beat Kid O'Day, Britton, S. D., (4). Frankie Eckroth, Mandan, and Mickey McGuire, Mandan, drew, (4). Sonny Schlosser, Mandan, beat Joe Oller, Bismarck, (4). By J. G. MacGREGOR Caesar had his Brutus— Don Quixote had his windmills— The Democrats have their Soluble South— Dame Fickle Fortune is still capri- cious. Isham Hall, Bismarck’s fight pro- moter, is the latest victim of the in- constancies of life. Presenting a fight card in the city auditorium last night that surpassed in action anything that has been staged in the Capital City these many moons, faithless fate gave Isham and his co-partner, Bill God- win, Mandan, a tough break at the turnstiles. Lee Cavanagh, Bismarck, and Herb Shipman, Ellendale, make a business of the manly art of self defense. They were to settle old scores on a per- centage basis last nisht. Had they fought, their share of the gate would have been less than nothing so slim was the pack of fans that left its; change at the boxoffice. Some of the ringworms were disap- | pointed when Barney Sullivan, an- nouncer, shortly after the Grey- Brooker joust, broke the sad news that Cavanagh and Shipman refused to batter themselves without benefit strode up the aisles and had their |money refunded. The small coterie left, however, who had their money's worth in the slam-bang preliminaries, stayed to see the classiest feather- weights in North Dakota maul their way to a draw. Hall and Godwin presented a card that the late Tex Rickard would have enjoyed from the pure love of the sport. Gladiators Were Furious Hammer and tongs, ding-dong, slam-bang, choose your own super- latives, from blindfold battle royal to final bell, each and every bout wore out a set of the leather mittens so furious were the gladiators. Of course Gray and Brooker, fur- nished the most spectacular tMump- ! ing. For six solid rounds, Jackie rushed the Boomer with his stingling lefts while the Mandan pride flailed away with his terrific left hooks. Toe-to- toe, in the clinches, at short range. they stabbed and jabbed with honors even. As usual, Brooker made the most noise. The echoes of his wallops on Jackie’s gloves, elbows, arms, shoul- ders and back sounded like a rivet hammer. As usual, Jackie shot the greatest number of clean-landing blows, left pitches to Brooker’s chin and midriff. The Boomer socked plenty himself but he couldn't penetrate the Bis- mas. boy’s defense to pile up any point Leo McDonald, pilot of the Man- BROOKER DRAW knows when he is licked. He stayed there for the fatal count of 10. Brown Is Fighter Kowalski was no dub or setup. He has been fighting for six or seven years while Big Boy Brown laced on his first pair of ring weapons about the same number of months ago. Brown has a fighting heart and the innate ability to make a champion. “Tl send him against anybody,” Hall said after the quick curtain. “Where can I find a heavyweight who will give my youngster a workout?” Where can he in North Dakota? Denny Wells and Harry Ulrich staged a slugging bee with honors even up until Ulrich walked intoa left hook whose recoil skyrocketed “Gal- loping Harry” throught the hemp, al- most into the first row spectators’ struck him five minutes after taps had sounded. Meek Shows Class Billy Meek and Kid O'Day set out to kill each other in their 4-stansa war. . Both boys jumped out of their cor- ners at the first bell and whaled away with might and mair.. They batter- ed and smashed around the ring for two minutes while the crowd groaned as sickening crashes followed cach other in rapid-fire succession. There was no let-up during the eight minutes. The first round was fairly even. In the second Billy broke his right hand with a sizzling hook that would have spelled dream- land had it landed on the Kid’s chin rather* than his cast-iron head. The laps. Ulrich had to be told what]; a PES Np third was Billy's a clean margin, the Kid pong he have lost his steam. In the final, the Soum wa- kotan staged a comeback that had Billy backtracking under an fusillade him the decision.” bend aed Frankie Eckroth returned to the squared circle after a long absence, a eo ep MeGuire sui to many overcome advantage that McGuire had in ag. Gressiveness and slugging. The | asters put on a milling seteto thet Promises @ re-match if Eckroth doesn’t grow away from his stockier opponent. Sonny _ichlosiee and Joe Oler Dempseys we hacking of Olier’s head and with 1 ma ey well-aimed straight Victor Sorsdahl, mite of a tad, won & blindfold battle royal. Eight boys, bit were put in the ring. For four rounds, they chased and slashed at phantoms. They were aoe ore fe: baad than to a“ meee were landed. Young Victor, pint-size midget without a bilnder, won when his last opponent hit the ‘deck on a stumble. O. W. Roberts, Bismarck, and Al Brady, Mandan, were referees, Cremo’s superiority starts with the choicest and tenderest Fights Last Night Cube, stopped Teddy Roth, New York, sutpeltted ‘Pete Meyers, “San Francisco, (10). Allentown, Pa.—Tommy Gro- gan, Omaha, Neb. outpointed Cincinnati—Maxle Rosen! New York, euipolated Sow Ander: son, Ky. (10); Ltd Babe New York, N. J. Cody, Wye, knocked out Steve Lon With 13 to 3 Victory Over Bismarck - IN FIGHT FEATURE {| Tonight's Cub lineup may look like the following: Iota catcher; thi Fuji-Yama, the famous J: aa” is’ more than twor miles may enter your mouth through unsanitary “Don’t run the risk, ‘smoke Cremo—it’s certified germ-free’’ Says Mt Tan, Marr. D. Litt, A.B. LL.D. famous pure food expert, long sctive in erusades for pure foods and sanitary factories. “Don't bring denen germs into your mouth through unsanitary cigars... they may result in many serious diseases. ~ Avoid this risk by smoking Cremos... then you know that every single leaf used in Cremo Cigars has been,scientifically steril- ized by U.S. Government approved methods. “Cremo’s purity is safeguarded every step of the way ... with every known scientific pre- caution, H Pittsburgh .. . 4 Cincinnati .. - 2 6 Brame and Hargreaves; Lucas ai jooch. **Cremos are made in air-flooded . . . sun- bathed factories... wrapped, folded and tipped by amazing inventions. “Every Cremo Cigar is quickly sealed in sanitary foil wrappers, giving you the scien- tific health protection that comes with cer- tified milk and certified canned goods.” Distributed by: WINSTO) IN & NEW ELL CO., Minneapolis, Minn. E 1 1 ind leaves, ripe and mellow, and continues in goodness through a slow, expensive maturing and mellowing process . .. . topped off with the finest imported Sumatra wrapper! Cremo calmly fi his heaviest cannon at the little de- stroyer. But you can’t sink ships . with torpedoes that miss vital spots. | contains no ecrap—no floor sweepings — all long filler —all junit, Ball: : ari ee eee fresh, tender leaves. Over $7,000,000 was spent in perf ounard; Blake. ish ane Geeanies, the certified “Cremo-method” of manufacture that AMERICAN ASSOCIATION uniformly fine, sanitary cigars. Foil-wrapped ... germ-free < the kind of cigar thatthe late Vice. President Marshall must have had in mind when he said: “What this country needs most is a good 5 cent cigar.” eooocooKrce 3= DC cess obec e i l g pi liencoe seen f g i j E : i F J i i F I Re EEE E H ri : : BE Hi z L f if ga! H i z itt wlieees seule. Bel omcccconwowms fee i iF fl } i iH Hy i

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