The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 29, 1929, Page 8

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. SEER SSS 82283 - weeSeSRee.. FQESRIAES SEE BROWNS REFUSE T0 BOW BEFORE YANKS UNTIL (2TH FRAME, Athletics Take Enforced Rest; | i Cleveland Takes Washing- ton After Big Rally INCREASE MARGIN Mel Ott Gets His 28th Home Run as McGraw’s Men Wol- lop Three Card Hurlers CUBS By HERBERT BARKER (Associated Press Sports Writer) Through the enforced idleness of | the athletics, th s found an opportunity to whittle away a lit- tle of the A’s lead yester and} just barely took advantage of it. It took a home run by the one and} mly George Herman Ruth to en-| FORM, "JAKE" NOW WEIGHS GOS Bee ae Yankees to down the St. POoNDs, AND BY INCREASING HIS wouis Browns, 7-6, in 12 innings " and cut the Athletics’ lead to 10 DIET NTENDS To STARTLE THE games, With | the score tied at 6-all| WORLD BY SITTING ON Two FRONT in the 11th, Ruth, the first n at = He bat, drove the ball into the bleachers | PORCHES AT SAME TIME « for his 24th homer of the s ‘on. | The Browns walloped Johnsen and} Heimach for eight hits and all their runs in the first five innings but Tom Zachary stopped them dead and got credit for his sixth straight win. A four-run rally in the ninth gave] Cleveland a 9 to 6 triumph over the Washington Senators. Aided by a home run and two singles by Marty McManus, De- troit’s rookie pitcher, Kyle Graham, won his first game in the American} League, beating the Boston Red! Sox, 5-3. In the National League, the Chi-! cago Cubs inercased their lead over Pittsburgh to two and a half games by trouncing the Phillies again, 7 to 2, for their seventh successive vic- tory. Guy Bush won his 14th game of the season, giving the Phils six hits. H The Cubs won the game in the third, bunching four hits with a base on balls and an error for six runs. John McGraw’s Gian’ pounded Alexander, Frankhouse and Halla- han for 19 hits and beat St. Louis, 10-5. Mel Ott got his 28th homer of the season. . Cincinnati beat Brooklyn in both ends of a double bill, 4-3, and 7-5. The Reds bunched their five hits off William Watson Clark to good ad- vantage in the first game. In the second Dazzy Vance was hit hard and retired in the seventh inning. Love, Boyd Pitch Well; Grays Trim Tortoises 14 to 0) Visitors Get but Four Scattered | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1929 . Babe Ruth Smacks No. 24 and Hugmen Gain Half Game on Macks UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA WILL PIONEER NIGHT FOOTBALL COCHET BEATS LOTT; FRENCH SOME MORE TITLES CHANGE HANDS ...... » «. BY KNICK OF PUYALLUP, WASHINGTON CHARTER MEMBER OF THE "FRONT PORCH SITTERS’ LEAGUE OF AMERICA", AND WINNER OF THIS YEAR'S NATIONAL FRONT PORCH SITTERS’ CONTEST. MR, STOOP NST ONY SHOWED ONRWALED ENDURANCE BUT RARE. DUGAN, WOHAT ARE. —— YouR CHANCES /A) THE NEXT PORCH SITTING MEET? Workmen Diamond Stars Go Hitting To Defeat Solen' Klein Gets Homers No. 5 and 6, as Bismarcx Club Beats Southerners 9 to 1 Indianapolis Will Be Foe for | Four Games Before Blues Start Long Jaunt | CAMPBELL BEATS COLUMBUS! After being held scoreless until the fifth inning, the Bismarck Workmen | launched a vicious attack and wal-| Milwaukee Goes on Rampage to | I Sol 9 to 1 at the southern 2 . eee YOReRdny: Beat Indians Twice; Saints Get Odd Game Prank Hummel, mite hurler, held, and pitcher, connected with two, ere both times before the ball had been; Chicago, July 29.— (AP) — The| securing two doubles and a single in|has cnabled them to gain a five and | tempts. | Kansas City was to open up a four- the southern crew to nine scattered | blows. Klein, Workman outfielder | home runs in the contest, making his! By WILLIAM A. WEEKES total six. He crossed the home plate) (Associated Press Sports Writer) retrieved by the outfielders. | Kansas City Blues were to open the S. Goetz led the Bismarck clouters, final series of the home stand which four trips while Thunder, Solen, also| one-half game grip on first place in hit safely three times in four at-) the American Association. The local club men gathered 12| game sct with Bruno Betzcl’s Indian- hits from the offerings of Belinski,| apolis Indians, before setting forth on Heney susen, RIGHT IS THE GAME, Avcustus Toss, wHo TORAED BEANBAS CIRCLES UPSIDE DOWA LAST WEEK BY WINNING THE FINAL HEAT OF THE TOURNAMENT HELD BN THE INTERSTATE BEANBAG Sociely. MR. TOSS IS HERE SHOWN EXECUT- ING THE DIFFICULT BACK FLIP. CAROM VAN FUNVER, WHO (s CN HIS WAY TO THE OUT-% = e DOOR POOL TITLEs POR THOSE AT ACQUAINTED WIT THREE TIME WINNER OF THE ANNUAL STATE MOUTH ORGAN SWEEPSTAKES OF ARKANSAS MR. SHARPS STULE 1S UNIQUE HE CAN PLAY EQUALLY AS WELL LEFT HANDED AS RIGHT-HANDEDe POOL COASISTS OF DOMPINGA PEDESTRIAN INTO A MANHOLE CUmTH AN) AUTOMOBILES ATHLETIC DIRECTOR ANTICIPATES LARGE dians, Coyotes and Bison on Home Program penne | THRONGS AT GAMES, St. Mary’s College, Haskell In-' BISON GAME IN DAYLIGHT, Big Bill Tilden Evens Series by Beating Jean Borotra | 4-6, 6-1, 6-4, 7-5 / CRITICS BLAME CHICAGOAN Lott Plays a Cautious Game Against Cochet; Critics Rec- ommended Meckless Style Nodaks Are Ninth in Country, and First State U to Adopt Lighting System Grand Forks, N. D., July 29.—(AP) —Following an example recently set by many other schools, the University | of North Dakota this fall is to throw its hat into the night football ring. C. A. West, athletic director, has an- nounced the purchase of 20 flood- lights which are to be installed at Me- purchase was made from a New York firm which has pioneered in the lighting of football fields for night play and which has sold similar i stallations at practically every un versity playing the night game, West , said. Ten floodlights are to be located on | cach side of the field, following ideas | worked out to best advantage at Drake University, Des Moines, first | middlewestern school to use lights | successfully. This amount of illumin- | ation is said to make the field “light | Paris, July 29.—()—Thanks chiefly to that little tennis machine, Henri Cochet, the Davis cup emblem of | world team supremacy, will remain in France for another year. The pick of United States talent, hopeful of recapturing the cup lost to the tri-color in 1927, stormed the French tennis ramparts when they appeared weakest, only to fall back defeated almost single-handed by Co- chet's mastery. In a challenge round decided by three matches to two Cochet accountde morial stadium late in August. The for two of the three French victories, | and walked off the courts of Rolland Garros stadium the undisputed hero of the series. With the score standing two matches to one against them, the Americans had no more than an out- side chance to pull the series out of the fire when the final day's play began yesterday. Bib Bill Tilden came through in gallant fashion, trouncing Jean Bo- rotra 4-6, 6-1, 6-4, 7-5. Series Was Squared | The tall Philadelphian’s victory KANSAS CITY FINISHES HOME as day,” and enables the customers | S@Wared the serics and left the issue it s with-|t0 be decided in the final singles se caeeererams in the stands with-) rrasch between Cochet and George STAND WHICH GAVE HER LEAD OF THE CLUBS_ AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS | Stolen Bases — Fonseca, Indians, | 1 5. Pitching — Grove, Athletics, won 17, lost 2. McLaughlin Club Given Trouncing | Boston 3 9 Graham and Phillips; Russell a Berry. ;|kota Aggies twice in recent years. # it . St. Mary’s was scheduled not as an ‘ra 14 0 feasy “opener” but as one of the hard- Crowder, Collins and Ferrell, |¢st conflicts of the coming campaign, Schang: Johnson, Heimach, Zachary and Dickey. (INCLUDING GAMES OF JULY 28) Standings (By The Asseciated Press) 5 Won Lost National Philadelphia 1 825 Batting—Herman. Robins, .388. New York ... 58 (33 Runs—Ott, Giants, 93. St. Louis 52. 43 Homers—Klein, Phillies. 31. Cleveland 9 846 Stolen Bases—Cuyler. Cubs, 26. Detroit a 48 Pitching — Bush, Cubs, won 14, Washingto1 3556 lost 1. |Chicago ... 35 (50 American | Boston 28 (66 Batting—Foxx, Athletics, .398. | de george pee teaite ‘Tigers, 89. Games eeneay s Homers—Gehrig. Yanks, 25. | eatin eee North Dakota’s main reason in} | switching to night football, according to West, is to boost attendance at the {stadium. Merchants in Grand Forks and in neighboring cities who have |found it impossible to leave Saturday , afternoon to ess football games, can now see Friday night exhibitions at 8 o'clock with ease, he thinks. Graveled roads now extend in all di- rections for 200 miles or more, and officials are banking on this to help boost the attendance also. The University of North Dakota, statistics show, is the ninth school in the United States to try the night; game and the first state university to take the step. It leads the pack in the northwest in this respect although | Gustavus Adolphus ‘at St. Peter, Minn., also will be ready with a night plant this fall. The ertails will play their first night Sept. 20 against St. Mary’s college, Winona, 1928 chai pions of the Minnesota state conf ente and victors over the North Da- and Coach West already is biting his fingernails as he figures his chances | Lott, 24-year-old star from the Uni- versity of Chicago, playing in his first Davis cup chalienge round. Cochet stormed his way through Lott's defense for a 6-1, 3-6, 6-0, 6-3 triumph. Lott fell before Borotra in his first singles match Friday. American supporters obtained their chief thrill, perhaps, on Saturday} when they saw the young Americans, | Wilmer Allison and John Van Ryn, j trounce Cochet and Borotra in the doubles in straight sets. New York, July 29.—()—Post- mortems here on the second failure of the United States to recover the Davis cup she lost to France in 1927 seemed to place a good portion of the responsibility for American de- feat on the shoulders of George Lott. RETAIN DAVIS TENNIS TROPHY ; them at least an even chance of win- ning. With LaCoste and Cochet in the ‘Davis cup harness, with Jacques Brugnon and Borotra for doubles | duty, and with such youngsters as | Christian Boussus improving year by year, it would appear that France will not come so close to defeat again for | some years to come. Poor Success of _ Champs Won't Bother Mandell | Lightweight Champion Confi- dent of Beating Tony Can- zoneri Friday Night New York, July 29. — () — Fistic champions have been having a tough time of it in recent weeks but Sam- my Mandell, king of the lightweights, | believes he can avoid the current jinx {when he steps into the ring against Tony Canzoneri at Chicago this Fri- day night. Fate had been unkind to champions recently. Joe Dundee dropped his welterweight crown to Jackie Fields at Detroit; Al Singer knocked out Andre Routis, featherweight champion, in an over-weight fight; Mushy Calla- han, junior welterweight title-holder, was beaten by Jack Berg in another non-titular battle; and A. Brown, New York state's nominee for the bantamweight title, was outpointed in @ non-championship bout by Bat Battalino. Mandell is not worrying, he believes he can take care of himself and those who saw him trounce Jimmy Mc- Larnin at New York last year are in- clined to agree with him. Canzoneri, former holder of the featherweight title, has been unbeat- able since he quit the featherweights to go a-gunning after bigger game. but Tony has not fought any man as shifty, clever and fast as Mandell. Ray Miller, Chicago lightweight and Luis Vicentini, of Chili, hook up in the semifinal of eight rounds and Basil Galiano, New Orleans, and Andy Callahan, Boston, are matched in another eight-rounder. Kid Chocolate, the Cuban feather- weight flash, is booked to make his first appearance in the midwest, meeting Steve Smith, of Bridgeport, }Conn., in a 10-round bout at Chicago j Tuesday night. W. L. (Young) Stribling, Macon heavyweight, meets Babe Hunt of There were few alibis advanced ort | Ponca City, Okla., at Tulsa tonight the score that Frank Hunter, had he |at about the same time Johnny Risko, not been replaced by Lott, would have |Cleveland rubber man, is striving for beaten Borotra and thus given the | vengeance in a 12-round return meet- United States the margin it needed jing with Emmett Rocco, pride of El- to win. Rather heavy criticism was |wood City, Pa., at Cleveland. leveled at Lott for the manner in| Humbert Fugazy’s weekly card at which he played against Borotra in | Ebbets field, Brooklyn, on Wednesday the opening singles match Friday.|will bring together Joe Glick and Some critics thought that had the | Billy Wallace, lightweights; and Ben- Chicagoan elected to take chances and ny Bass and Benny (Kid) Carter, use all the power and speed of which |featherweights, and Archie Bell and i of winning. Outstanding on the home | po j a Hits, Compared to 16 for Ironroad, and Bluclips. The box sah -eae ice ae the east- e | Ht B|schedule will be the pow-wow Friday | eee eee ie ,Johnny Erickson, bantamweights. eA. O. U. W. AB RH POAE| The Blues yesterday added a half B Grove Giants |cvaena 13 1 (night, Oct. 4, with Haskell’s Indians | servers thought that Lott, by adopt- | Bismarck Outfit Edhauraslp'..c al. 3006 Slatin 0 Mose maeattae ove et | Washington 13 _2|/from Lawrence, Kansas. Officials | ing a cautious game designed to me Grand F orks P lans iverson, If '...... 3 1 00. 0. 0| Paul, with two victories over Louis: Shaute, ‘Ferrel, Shatter and. hope for «sellout crowd of 10,000 fans vent errors. played into the Basque’ Wyciskala, ss 5 1 2 0 4 0, ville, while the Saints were trimming | . Sewell; Burke, Brown. and Spencer. | &t this mix. be game + ¥,_ | hands and thus cost the United States ° With Doc Love and Boyd holding | xiein, rf .. 5 2 2 0 1 O|Columbus once. Dixie Davis pitched | North Dakota Prisoners Refuse | Polimecice eyecare aon ay ite | golden opportunity to recapture the} J JAMON| leet fered cious, the Biemarck Grays nad [Eres 1B -v-s-- $8 8 8 1 0/Kansas City toa 6 toOshutout inthe| to Let Strong Record of Nolte ehonaee Oct. 26, completes the University’s | ” Cosmet Was Certainty Rete colle in trlmuning the visitors tr eae acr'¢ 4 0008 2 2) est garae, Rivdue the Calaneda tive Bother Th schedule at the stadium. ‘These critics reasoned that Cochet| Grand. Gorks, July 29—(%)—The {M. Hummell, 2b... 3 1 1 5 2 1/widely separated hits. The second Coyotes jer Them NATIONAL LEAGUE : : | cee tern i ag) Mute city athletic field yester- is. Goetz, ct . 4 1 3 0 0 0 tilt was a pitching battle in which! Standings a Sees eee peter a ein een Grands yebae eoupnabell meipe ay The local club started scoring early, ae sie ae ict! teks eb 5 (er eee aaa ces little to the Gi: Pet.| eo Diegel defends both his Canadi- United States’ sole hope of winning | Valley tournament which will be open counting twice in cach the first and) Totais......... 39 912 2711 4 St. Paul won the odd game of the an ne er epee > '$66| an open chimplonship and profession- lay in the defeat of Borotra by both |to teams from North Dakota and Min- second, four times in the third, and! solen— AB RH PO AE series from Columbus, 7to1. Anoth-| ‘They ed thisSaturday after: i 637| a1 golfer's championship this year. | Tilden and Lott. len succt nesota. twice more in the fourth. They |p. Helf, cf ....... 4 0 1 2 0 O/er excellent pitching demonstration| when’ they walloped the isthe: a Where Lott failed, evened the series) |The tournament, will open Ausuft topped off their attack with fourjc Heit 2b .... 2 0 0 1 1 1/by Archie Campbell, and the big bat|touted McLaughlin, 8. Dak., baseball an at tod viet dee ap! see ae iy aoe 2 o at leas Ae are expected aa canpiied cireuits in the sixth |Belinsky, p . 2010 2 Olof rege Cooke sate the big factors nine 9 to 6 at the penitentiary dia- “a Hargrave. | Cachet IPoiiggemnors ae ea represented. ‘ : ; Gatca 3b. 4 0 2 1 1 1/in the Saint triumph. Cooke peeled | mond. 4 ane | lecd the Terrapins. Pive Turtle Lake |2punder. ¢ $0 316 2 0 drove in four runs, while Campbell Lemmon, Aberdeen, Mobridge, and Minneapolis ......... 4 7 2, appointment that the Americans had jers are the best of any nationality in men were left on bases. seven tt wl 8 OL 1 Od ibeeinees with tee ree going much | Timber Lake, South Dakota's leading Games Yesterday and McCurdy; Brillheart,_| failed in their quest when it seemed |his opinion. He says they are su- pacting, safely three times in as! J. Welch, 1b 31 0 4 © 1! lected off him. iad tolled for the visitors for R 4H E) Buckeye and McMullen. | the illness of Rene LaCoste had given |preme when the battles get tough, many tries, Doc Love ted the Gray (Biuclips, ‘p 1 @ 1 0 0 0) | Milwaukee tumed on Indianapolis giz innings and then gave wey 0 ge ee : (rsa ~|Ironroad ... 1 0 0 © 1 Ojand smeared the Indians in both} sae? .. Before: suecumbing to ennui, Babe |7ONON" crerrms CS TS games of a double-header. Rosy Ryan Correll, on the mound for the|,,ClaN,, Ax, Moore and Picinich; ai “Floyd Fuller an es a Totals. 32197 9 4 [etatie gence and Reschont: of the Giants, held the South Dakotans to |-Udue ae conn eae 3 S . Score by Indians both were hit hard in the! Secon fa thies, end Tobin and Guidas, with | workmen 000 061 200-9 | opener, but Milwaukee got away with | Mrntscnne’’ yey me Dak ta eas 2 ; Mn ieae Wicy atticod and Bova cack \Solen. - 001 000 000—1 |an 8 to Gvictory. A five-run uprising |which has lost but two games this 1 x ‘ ita Sent bet tat Gee, cere |meoten . Hummel, Patera, {in the second inning gave Milwaukee season, will meet the Gian's here at nd oe Geese coins hitien’” C. Helf. Two base hits—S. Goetz 2,| material for a 6 to 4 decision in the |1:39 p,m. next Saturday. One of the a“ @ , ny ecg lrg 10 of the visit- | W¥ciskala, Ironroad. Home runs— second game. Bill Burwell gave the \two defeats was dealt Kenel by Mc- |°"? Suket ors. The Grays next Sunday mect |leim 2. Double or triple plays—Wy- | Brewers but seven hits, but they were \Laughlin in « 10-inning affair. eo | - Mitohiieee° che box some, ciskala to Patera to M. Goetz, Wy-| massed in the big inning, while Char-| “rhe box score: i Bismarck AB R H PO A E|ciskala to M. Hummel to Erickson. lie Robertson kept a like number! Grove ABRH POA B|Ebiladelphia Nagel, cf 4 2 1 0 0 0|Hits—off F. Hummel 9 in 9 innings; | spread around enough to keep out of Sigman, cf 423100 Chicago .... Mcleod, 1b ....1 6 0 4 0 0 off Belinsky 4 in 4 innings; off Iron-/ serious trouble. Holland, 2b- 431103 : Tobin, 1b ....5 0 2 5 0 0{foad 5 in 3 innings; off Bluelips 3 in| Toledo salvaged a game of its series | Garver. rf. 32310 0.0: Guidas,c 20.6 1 2 10 1 0/2 innings. Struck out—by F. Hum-| with Minneapolis, thumping out a) fvenson, as $12242 pans : t e trut a out : ls 1 1 1 5 {mel 7, by Belinsky 6; by Ironroad 5, )10 to 4 victory. Led by Warner, who | stopkins ea ie etl a eS [31 1 0 0 jy Bluelips 2, Bases on balls—off F. |connected safely in four times at bat, |seres, If 4011 6 o\em vow : ae 5 2 1 5 2 jHummel 1; off Ironroad 1. Hit by|the Mudhens batted Brillheart and|Pnetps, 1b’. 5017s Ole teM on. en, ; e ry a“ 33 3 1 1 © |Pitcher—M. Hummel by Bluelips. C.| Buckeye for 15 hits. Alex Fer, Hap 50.112 2 Ol peers and Hogan; Alexander, »: n ita ot | ars 1 0 0 0 0 ojHelf by F. Hummel. Passed balis—|let the Miller sluggers down with but jo-oreii, 4001.3 o[ rankhouse, Hallahan and Jonnard. ; 5 3 3 1 © o|{Thunder. Time of game—2:10. Um- | seven hits. 2 aginheage ations 3 2301 2 0 3) ojPires Belinsky, Derby. site Modhens today Weretoopenat) Totals 4 91327 12 5{ No others scheduled. . ee ee ee ag St. Paul, while Minneapolis was to! eee 416 7 12 2 D $ From Fiv. ibe host to Columbus for a four-game ae at ares —vays Alfred W. McCann 1 series. ouisville was down for an | 00321 0g: e invasion of Milwaukee. | eaneeys SF: 4 H : 4 : : D.Litt, 4B» LE De 0 0 0 0 2 | ee ea | Kiliscrow, 2b 502481 01232 States Compete Frank B kiN \W. McLaughlin, ¢. 410 8 2 0) 0 012 0 0 ro CW sacotson, rf... 502000 01 4 0 of : | °C. Mea , 400100 4 : x H ‘ Sisseton, S. D., Will Be Scene} Gopher Champion ‘Twogood, ‘ ® H A : % 0 0 0 0 0| ofAnnual Field Trialsof {| —- Ppa iad 00 / Seer Remi da & Dog Group | Harry L. Robinson, Minneapo- mts 4 ‘0 4°23 10 6 100 021 002-6 9 4 on infield fly in 4th. lis, Defeated Saturday 410 003 O1x—9 13 5 2 Five . by St. Paul Man runs, McLaugh- i = ul, July 29. — () — Frank | Paul, is the new champion Minnesota State Amateur Golf the championship in the of ‘the’ tournament at afternoon Robinson, is * g g a te ae

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