The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 14, 1929, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE_WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1929 ‘Umpire Suffers Brain Concussion During Riot at Milwaukee Game ee ce sro i) STRUCK ON HEAD BY || OLD PETE, 42, IS STILL GOOD; Lee Cavanagh Will’ GIBBONS PICKS SULLIVAN ATHLETICS TRIUMPH : CM , Face Watson Again WINS AS MANY AS MATTY DID 8 AS COMING WELTER CHAMP || AS INDIANS TROUNCE POP BOTTLE HURLED In Dawson Stadium: | | CHAMPION YANKEES = | , BY WOLF OF STANDS \ Changes Mind About Canadian j a | Invasion to Clash With : ef 4 Fans Swoop Down on Field ry, fe? Old Foe Saturday Old John Picus Quinn Shades | £ ¥ 5 i ALAN g-QOULD eae Victor Sorrell 4 to 3 in After Columbus Bench Is i t Lee Cavanagh is a changeable 4 cuss. i or Somewhat less than two i ; 1 . P Ordered Cleared ; jago, the three dominating figures |, Rebates sient bonerstighten | Htohing ‘Duel a ‘ jin Boxing, or, to be more specific, “tt was just 10 days ago that Lec, z bites athena h haba hee de the big |SMmounced he was on his way to; BRUINS NOSE OUT BRAVES PLAYERS RAZZED ARBITER Were: two men who made the big Canada. However, he changed his ey a Pie oreniegs Gir Wie ieee: plans long enough to mect he Fo ; eins y ene y; one wl a . Tex. cum i . s ‘ ited through his skill as the big| ar eer ated Ae Wilkeerd lake | Reds Trim Giants 3to1inLase © Milwaukee Wins Under Cops promoter and ballyhoo man, Tex! we Lée bas changed his minal ot Five Oawiee'dt Polo y Clubs; Kansas City In- ickard. and is going to fight Scarface Al! ‘ . Tunney has retired permanently,! Watson of Dawson over the 10-round | Grounds fe creases Margin aes ie? biel notes Lat Prob: j route at Dawson this coming Sat-| ee ee ably also inite retirement andj urd; ight. } sf President Rickard is dead. Without a cham- | lee Tigures if a woman has the (By the Associated Press) Chicago, Aug. 14¢—‘AP)—President Pion, without the old Man Mauler privilege to change her mind a man, The Athletics are skipping merriy ‘Thomas Hickey of the American as- and without the master mind of the | has the privilege to change his plans. along again as eastern American ¥ privilege sociation will go to Columbus, O.. to- old. Klondike gambler, the heavy-i And so, Bismarck’s premier welter league clubs prepare for the second night to conduct a personal investi- weight division is in the same pre-| is tuning up for his clash with the series of their final invasion. Old tion of the free-for-all fist fight dicament as the small town reporter, | Dawson Wildcat. John Pi Vf , | itty ilwaukee igned to cover the big fire andi Lee Markham, Dawson's livewire toeme Ficus Quinn turned in a neat during the Columbus-Milwaul jo wired back: “All chaos, can'square circle battle promoter, has \st yesterday to shade Victor Sor- ( game yesterday which resulted in the | jing.” lined up an excellent card of bouts | rell 4 to 3 in the Mackmen’s last ap- een a etmueted | All is chaos in the heavyweight|for the boys who love to watch the| | 21h eitiiiee Gee an Unie Lary Goce arter | || MATTY WON 372 class. Even “Big Bill” Carey, Rick- i fists fly and the blood flow Clevemnd Wy 3 tof Pree Bete ! when Umpire Larry tr to lard’s successor as titular head of Markham has two semi-windups turned 1 ; the at the plate, ordered the Columbus 1900 Ins Madison Square Garden, has found billed. ‘urned in high class ball against the Sean ined “gl raring iti that the ‘boxing “racket” can be! Howard Dodds slugging Dawson ween igh ‘a4 M4 jumbus players w " 1 jonah by a Fs a e fea’ ther Columbus player from the field roads in | 5 s ‘ bs ‘e 'y ei ions in four games at Cleve- Becalive he peitedlewe a decision. | from 1901) to 1929 The big aim since Tunney’s retire- | kins of Mandan, and Kid Watson |land, and ran the Indians’ string coh Rue was struck on the head with} ment has been to set up a_ new of Liberty will meet Slim Johnston the Hugmen for the season to 12 out @ pop bottle thrown by a fan andj — AND HE 1S ichampion but it has missed fire jot Dawson ina three round set-to of 17. { within a minute scores of fans swoop- | |together. The Muldoon-Tunney ‘at the junior welterweight limit. The Red Sox escaped from Chi- q ed on the playing field. Joe Carr, | STILL GOING | Trophy, unveiled with all due so- Billy Meek, clever Bismarck ban- cago with the last game of the series. y Columbus baseball magnate, was | yey / |lemnity, has no claimant. The so-!tamweight, is looking for til 80 2. The Brown turned on the struck on the jaw and oniy the STRONG, jealled “eliminations” usually have | vietory to add to his string. He will Senators, 14 to 2, in the get-away Prompt assistance of Milwaukee play- either added to the confusion or re-/ face Battling Engle, ambitious Daw- | game at St. Louis. ers ee ion se from geet ree in bi = era of capo Sheet, eal tis ic ae ae Bh ee Th pars of the Poor va league | | Goetz, President Hickey was advised. ‘ighters involved. |. In addition to these high class | 4 ” : clul le because o} e advance- Hickey plans to determine why only Jack Sharkey, the big Boston sail-|features, Markham has billed eight | TMs “Paantom Mike” Gibbons’ choice as the next king of welterweights. | ment of games in whe ween ee one police officer was in the baseball or, has foozled more good chances other rounds of preliminary boxing. St. Paul, Aug. 14—(P)—Mike Gib-; Sullivan was barking for a bout|Brooklyn and Philadelphia, the | park at the time and what assistance | jto step up the ladder than anyonc! The fight is called for 9:30 p. ™+'bons, leading member of that once With Fields almost before the new | Bruins nosed out the Braves 4 to 2 the Columbus club offered. |__ When Christy Mathewson was » veteran and Grover Cleveland Alex- ‘else, For cvery good fight he has and the doors will open at 8:30. "| famous team of boxing brothers, be- Champ had ripped the tape off his in the last game of the series at Bos- Fist fights and riots have been all | suger was a r they pitched against each other. Matty is gone bet (out on Sharkey has tossed in’ at! Hut Blackmore will be the third a hands after snatching the crown from ton, and increased the Chicago lead ’ ¥ ie a youngate Pp y : ey ean for “gelle yroretirre | Ola Pete, now in his forties, remains te shoot at some of the pitching marks |ieast’ one other bad one. Max|man under the calcium. eves one of his proteges is destined he will henceforth do more than level fines and suspensions against the guilty players. At Columbus, how- | ever, he is of the opinion that the fans were to blame. Chicago, Aug. 14—(—The climax- | riot of the American association's turbulent season in years, today finds an umpire in a Columbus. O.. hospital with concussion of the brain and several persons, including Presi- dent Joe Carr of the Columbus club, Dursing bruises. Umpire Joseph Rue was believed to Ihave been struck on the head by a agg aad tossed by a spectator after ‘Umpire Larry Goetz ordered | the Columbus bench cleared in the ninth inning of yesterday's game with Milwaukee. Goetz ordered the Columbus dug- Out cleared of everyone except players actually in the game, charging that some of the Senator players were rid- irs him for having chased one of th mates from the field. Fans » svooped cnio the field, and President > Carr was struck in the face while trying to quel! the disturbance. The ame was finished under police su- “em with Milwaukee winning 8 to The riot followed two uprisings be- tween Minneapolis and St. Paul fans and players recently, as well as inci- dents in other cities in the circuit, in which players were fired from games for verbal attacks on umpires. Milwaukee pounded Harlan Wysong for 17 hits during the encounter, while John Buvid held the Senators to cight safeties and fanned 11 batsmen. While the Columbus trouble was going on Kansas City added another half-lap to its lead over St. Paul by | scoring a 9 to 1 victory over Toledo! in six innings. The game was the only other one of the day. The Blues massed 10 hits off Bud Parmalee and Lucas in the short contest, while George Warmouth held the Mudhens |. to six. The victory was Kansas City's | .fifth straight over Toledo, and brought hung up by the greatest of them all. | Schmeling, the German puncher,} St. Louis, Aug. 14—1)—This, as it !seven years with the Phillies, eight |Scemed a potential “big shot” until has been widely predicted. may bejand one-half with the Cubs and Grover Cleveland Alexander's last three and one-half with the Cardi- year in the majors, but when Old Pete nals. has to quit he will have much in the! books to show for his presence in the ‘up to this year in part: Here is Alex's major league record big time. Year awh Seoet notable of performances ; 1911 48 2 O13 credited the 42-year-old pitcher will | 1912 46 19 17 be that of beating the remarkable ; 1913 a 22 8) total of victories credited to Christy | 1914 6 27 15) Mathewson. 1915 49 31 10 Old Pete drew up on even terms /1916 @ 33) «12 with Matty’s record of 372 victories | 1917 6 30 late in July and then had the rest of '1918 3 2 i| the season to surpass it. 1919 30001611 The Cardinal veteran had a trying |1920 6 2 “4 time of it this season, which has been | 1921 3101513 one of his worst. He was out of the | 1922 33 «1618 game six weeks because of illness, | 1923 38 22 12 and for a time it appeared that he | 1924 21 12 5} was through for good. | 1925 320015: Oo Alexander is serving his nineteenth | 1926 2000 12~—O10 season in the majors. All of this time | 1927 if 1 10) was spent in the National anes eae ONLY THREE VETERANS LEFT; GRAND FORKS GRID HOPES HIGH! {J @ capable ground-gainer. It will be Ed Bohnhoff Expects to Form hard to make up for the loss of Al-| High-Calibre Eleven From the Nucleus Trio well-built youth who played some last fall. and Blanchard, a big man ; Who can punt well, may come close to taking his place in their bids for Grand Forks. N. Dak. Aug. 14.— the position. Sid Iverson. fast Another football season is just trackman who was stationed at around the corner. It will be but a guard when he got into the lineup a little over three weeks before Ed sear ago to give him experience. and Bohnhoff will lead @ pack of Central Wentz, a small but promising play- high candidates out to Riverside park er, appear to be the leading candi- for the initial drill of the machine dates for the halfback jobs. Gordon 13 little, if any real dynam’ ; would make it extremely interesting | jplete mastery, Loughran may get! Pees type. He isn’t as sharp a hit-/ len at fullback. but either Jegium, a | Eddie Plank and Lefty Grove. Plank, he tied himself up with a flock of} contracts and managers. Max is so tangled up now that it may take; months to straighten out his legal) battles, let alone get him into the ring. { Before anyone establishes an_un-! disputed claim to the heavyweight | scepter he must dispose of Tommy} Loughran, the eminent Philadelphia | jab and dance man. Tommy packs ‘ite in #ther fist, unfortunately, but it is at least: an even-moncy proposition that he/| for Sharkey, Schmeling or any oth-} er heavyweight. Now that he has forsaken the light heavyweight div sion over which he established com- the big chance he has been seeking. , Tommy is a good deal of the Tun- | ter as Gene but he is perhaps a bet- ter natural boxer and considerably more elusive. He has beaten the like Jimmy Braddock, Leo} and Mickey Walker and he has outboxed clever men like Jimmy Slattery and Mike McTigue. “Two great left-handers, but not much alike,” says Connie Mack of a member of all my old champion- ship teams, was one of the smartest! southpaws of all time. He had aj great cross-fire but he pitched with his head as much as his arm. Grove has a world of stuff but for the first years he pitched with his arm. Now he is pitching to the batters’ weak- nesses instead of relying entirely on speed.” that will represent Grand Forks in Giilis, substitute quarterback in 1928, its grid campaign this autumn. is another small. fast youngster who Considering the few veteran husk- may land a regular berth. ies there will be on the squad to an- Tre in Old swer Bohnhoff's call for material, the Central mentor is unusually optimis- \tic over the prospects for producing la high caliber team. If the untried {athletes the coach had his eyes on |last season come through as he ex- ‘pects, Grand Forks will have an , eleven that should be fully as strong las the 1928 aggregation which went through the fall grind without a de- } their winning streak to six. Positions Carley and Hooch are the only two men back who will be playing in their last year's . With Booth steadying’ the center of the jline, Carley at his tackle post, and! Twelve United States Stars| Pinky Mullen, backfield substitute last year who will probably be sta- tioned at the end ite Christian- feat. The nucleus of this year's team Phere is little chance of replacing men like Murney, tackle, and Clin- iton and Whittman, whom Bohnhoff Toledo .............. r 6 4 Scott and Hogan. | fil cos end 6th, rain, darkness) ad farmouth and > Parmalec, x *% i B | Lueas and Hayworth sid Others not scheduled. Others not scheduled. 1 Rye, N. last | Against these the Three Foreigners Left in Net Meet Are Fighting for Grass Court Titles Y., Aug. 14.—(AP)—! Twelve players from the United | States and three from other lands | }remained in the running today for jsingles honors of the annual eastern | grass court tennis championships. '"" The foreign threats were B. W.! {(Bunny) Austin and J. 8. Oliff of | ‘England, and Gilbert Nunns, of Tor-| onto, Canadian Davis cup player. United States could show Big Bill Tilden, Frank Hunter, John Doeg, Berkeley Bell, Frank Shields, Gregory ay a Bruce Barnes, Arold MacGuffin, Ed- die Jacobs, Julius Seligson and Mel- vin Partridge. Tilden and Bell were a jump ahead of the field and will meet in the | femeanel Sones aa today’s | feature matches Shields, who put out Wilbur F. Coen, Jr., of Kansas City, yesterday, was matched with Austin; i | to win the welterweight championship. |__Mike’s choice to win the title re- Heeney avored CO [cent capturea by Jackie Ficlds -is ‘My Sullivan, whom Mike trained as imateur. : “All My has to do to win the crown | Joe Dundee. He is ready to back up| to eight and one-half games. Car!- his challenge with whatever forfeit | 50N was in trouble only in the fifth. | Money is necessary. The Reds trimmed the Giants 3 to In his last fight here Sullivan|! in the last of five games at the | Stopped Andy Divodi of New York in | Polo grounds. | three rounds. | Sullivan, who is 21, has been a pro- | Wallop Argentine i" |is to make up his mind,” says Gib- | fessional three years. He has fought | 8 , bons. “He's better than I cver was./ 40 money bouts, winning 16 with a} Giant South American Towers | He's game, can punch, and has nat-! K, 0. and losing only four by desision | ix Feet Se I {ural ability. All he needs to become|. He has not lost a fight since early | Six Feet Seven Inches a champion is a realization of the op-|in 1928, when Jack McCarthy out: | ell f in Ring | ROrtcnlty facing Tin. pointed him in Chicago. (INCLUDING GAMES OF AUG. 13; in | ; | (By the ae Press) | e, e je rae ‘ eM National New York, Aug. 14.—(AP)—Fi ‘- Calif F; h junior singles championship, at Cul-| patting ‘ ait: ic observers expect to discover with- | ornia ig! ts jvor military academy. | Rite emuyricen 106: ce in the next 24 hours just where | /. | capt the cight survivors three were! Homers—Klein, Phillies, 33 veer tates Nation at Culver stirs. tci ashi Sins | sae ne" Com among the current heavyweight con- | BER sew ines, Pasadena, | —} wetiods coe | mits ime jand Hugh McArthur, young Los An=| jo. op tS pacha el al _ The giant Argentine, who towers | feet seven inches, is to meet Tom | Of Eight Survivors in Junior Sin- Heeney, the “honest blackemith” | from New Zealand, in the 10 round gles Tourney, Three Are feature bout at Ebbets Field, Brook-| lyn, tonight. : From West Heeney has been established a fe. Bees vorite for to ght’s bout. Fistic ob. | Culver, Ind, Aug. 14.—(AP)— servers apparently have figured that | (,, ‘i vas " a “Honest Tom” knows too much Hag | Corona was arrayed against the lore for the green and inexperienced |Te8t of the country today in the South American. oe |auarterfinal round of the national geles star. Against the coast stars ‘were two middle-westerners Junior Boehmer of St. Louis, and Earl Bos- ‘song of Cincinna’ one easterner,! jone from the southwest and one from ;the south. | Fred Roll of Philadelphia, was the lone easterner, iwhile Robert jBryan of Atlanta, Ga., represented the south. Karl Kamrath of Aus- tin, Tex., was the other hope to break into the California lineup. |Hunter and Barnes; Mangin with Oliff and MacGuffin with Barnes. The other pairings pitted Jacobs jwith Seligson and Doeg with Part- In the women’s division four a ers had reached the fourth final Mrs. May Sutton Bundy, Sarah Pal- frey of Boston, Mrs. L. A. Harper of San and Mrs. Charlotte Francisco, Hosmer Chapin of Springfield, Mass’ A it 6] AMERICAN ASsocTATION For Legion Battle : ‘ ° ‘ Fights Lust Night - Won Yost Pet.| Sioux Falls, 8.°D.. Aug. 14) | ® $ : BBB! | with the regional tiite as their goal, Le gag i 6 4” ‘sn pale H ‘ A Of four states will compete here| Yerk. knecked out Gaston 58 s us August 16 and 17. The winner will} Chartes, Framee, (2). 42) enter the western sectionsl| | Cineimmatt—BMidget Mike O'- $2 AIT play at Colorado Springs, Colo, Aug. Coleman, O- outpetated “a 7 ...in a cigarette “PROMISES FILL no sack”... it is but taste, that makes you enjoy a cigarette. i But you're entitled to <i! the : flavor that fine tobaccos can give; don’t be concent with less. You ces expect better taste, richer aroma, from Chesterfields — making them, we put taste first— ... off the tee it’s sy lost 2; Grimes, Pirates, won 16, lost 2. American Batting—Foxx, Athletics, .383. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 101. Homers—Ruth, Yanks, 31. Stolen bases—Gebringer, Tigers, 17. ; 0 ttle Athletics, won 17, lost 2. Jane Cannon, University of Wis- consin student, has won the Wiscon- sin women's state golf title two suc- cessive years, “TASTE above everything” As not words, and because in y ISTANCE/ —

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