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, 8: _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1929 au illing and Johnston Each Enter Amateur Finals for First Time - () SH 0 MET LAST HOPES OF STOPPING KANSAS CITY BLUE RUSH VANISHES y ANDEGANRESULT IN aaa Sau Ian ‘ONLY PECORD clip 'PITCHER SINGLES IN TENTH; [Stout Left Jab ee NTEMEST | et Re Doles ee ee VILAED ons __DAVIDSBEAT COBARS 1700) Frm Sem re woah | PE) rome race cam lc] Rao fr Lai ’ Beat the Man Who Beat Man Who Beat the Man Stanislaus Loayza and doey \ Medi Who Beat Jones Saints, Closest Rivals, Beaten | acta ra or —" i PAUL MAN IS FAVORED] | in First Half of Important | WHITE TEAM IS ERRORLESS idea aia snes tis ans, Louis Vincentini and Stanisiau: ae 1 » Champion of 1904, Thrills Doubleheader | wows Outhit Victors; com Loayza, put up two very different , tS) H | : i arge Gallery With Sen- |MINNEAPOLIS FAR BEHIND: One of Season's Finest that topped Paty Harasers ecu! sational Rally jee ne for Capital City : cord tog 4 Both were willing, bu: | Nightcap of Second Game Yes-| i Vincent Sova bend bo td to ix . terday Called With Score A, pitcher's sharp single in the in lightweight and fett apber, any ing of Portland and Harrison s r RICHMOND Tied After Ninth | a oer F cisive . oeidhlgopibes nston of St. Pau! Y Bt, ‘ 3 : —— ; : 3 Loayea fought Joey Medill of Chi- iy" to the galleries—came today | By PAUL R. MICKELSON | cago, and it was 10 vigorous rounds tc final 36-hole round of play of | : Chicago, Sept. %w—(—The last | & well-earned draw. Loayza was no Beach to decide which was to! . hope of stopping the march of the lente 4 “ : { mote eager than his countryman, but nee the thrill of being ama- : ‘ . ‘ : | Kansas City Blues to their first | Giants bowed to the original ‘Medill was not the competition that Sehampion of the United States : ; | American Association pennant since ‘House of David club at the city ath- Mandell was. first. time. ; 1924 has vanished. etic field. rontandell, in a way, was on trial be- idered so lightly as contenders & : By whipping their closest rival. St. ; fore the crowd of 15,000, johnston nked sixth and ie 3 y 5 Paul, yesterday in the first half of a | it disappoint seventh on national list doubleheader and tying in the sec- | for match play “seeding,” they jond. “Dutch” Zwilling and his mates | out nevertheless as the survi- 4 stretched their margin to 10‘ games, f a tournament notable for its - *! {a lead that cannot be wiped out ex- stern hazards and upsets. ‘ DN, cept for the most startling series of fact that in their paths to the | {upsets in the history of the Hickey round neither “Doc” nor “Jim- i j . | loop. ia was called upon to play the de- : 2 ne Today. the Blues have a record of | iced ied champion, Bobby Jones, may sad 7 95 won and 48 lost as compared to St. source of disappointment to ‘; , Paul's 84 victories and 58 defeats, | of the critics, but this much ; . | while Minneapolis, in third place, ts | Whe sald for Johnston—he “beat straggling 17 full games behind. So! an that beat the man that beat ‘ . 2 wide is the Kansas City lead that it in that defeated Bobby Jones. . can lose 16 of its remaining 25 games sunt! Refrain Has Grown ae es {while the Saints win 19 out of their eg Ms refrain has grown with the ) . | wr. : 26 and still finish in front. { mt’s progress, to a musical - , $ ae ste q Warmouth outpitched Campbell to | pseanimes that appealed to the : 3 ae a Ls | give the Blues a 6 to 3 victory in the t sever since Johnny Goodman of first game against St. Paul yesterday a ousted Jones in the first | . PA 5 | while the nightcap was called be- and took the main actor off js | cause of darkness at the end of the, glittering California peninsula. ninth with the score knotted at 7-all.; in Was removed in turn bj Tn the only other game allowed by wm Lawson Little. Jr. San Fran- = 3 2 ie . the weather yesterday, Minneapolis f who bowed to Francis Ouimet. cil - ge made it three out of four in its series Sith in the third round. In the - with pcg voting the tod yesterday Johnston com- , game, . heart pitched for 4 the route to the final by hand- cnaaeeeien N. D.. Sept. 7.—Sophomores! Sophomores! Sophomores! ‘That's the cry now in North Da- | the Millers and hung up his 18th vic- There, Either; Big Bill Til- ae , the 1914 champion, a de. | Kota 's ll camp as Coach Jack (Last Minute) West prepares to bolster many places in his varsity lineup with {tory of the season. | setback 6 and 5 while Dr. Will- | \_ ely lige Here we have some of the young ‘uns. Bill Lowe, the rubber-ball man from Eau Claire, Wis. | —_—_—_—_————_ den ts Favorite Gisposing of H. Chandler | ‘4 crack end. He played regular fullback on the Wisconsin freshmen a few years back, tired of the big school. J u F 0 Is bof Medford, Ore., 1904-05 title | 824 came to North Dakota, No byighter prospect has showed up on this campus for sometime. John Burma, the bombastic buster from Fairmont. Minn., is a fullback and has a hometown running mate in Fred Felber, lanky Pressing Foxx 'Tom Zachary Still to Be Beaten; | 4 ‘gt ie Sears: tnigeemve end. Milo Willson is another fullback, and Lloyd Richmond. Watertown, 8. D., is a 175-pound halfback. Lowe, j during the day than he Fi H R Rorpenmee Finnegan Hopes Rest on Newcomers cos tex 19 agty it He elf ul fr | Fey #4 | Forest Hills, N. Y.. Sept. 7.—(>)— | With French stars out of tlre lists, only foreign player seems to stand in gs two finalists yesterday. He Burma, Felber and Richmond are conceded more than an even chance to land regular positions on the Univer- closest match was in the! Won and 2 Lost sity eleven. found, where he beat Danny| PUN SEEPS (feos | he mat ut two Englishmen, «|\Cubs, Athletics Only Eight Veterans From 1928 Fargo High Coach | ieee amine Givin" Tane3's| EachRequire]] | swastwectetatuoth Seeks Sional Man sti" tat te ses . A. Bourn by 3 and 2 gy third round. still heads the field seeking the fetnnatcroces vee Games Qutof 23 sl Ste And Caliber Ends “sve "=" in the semifinals were packed |e Unofficial averages, including Wed- the outgoing nine of the second COD ORDAHL LEADS HERD nesday’s games. give the slugging | they were furnished exclusively | Curleigh Grimes Gets Fifth De- — Harold Miller, Guard, and Bill mark of 379, one less than sweck| MIZE ae-yosr-cid | Egan. aes feat; Babe Herman De- Frank Cleve's Veteran and Welsh, Fullback, Haven't Kerbs hat png te cto Pye oes | ang conceded to him. He fends Small Lead Powerful Cobbers Face Bi- Reported Yet land. who dropped two points during Bolaridge, 3b to have the champion of 25 son Gang Sept. 28 | | ena ee ciate gained during! Sone ar.” ; Others not scheduled. ago etosey. Egan, however, By WILLIAM A. CHIPMAN ag Spo ster Fargo, N. D.. Sept. 7.—Glenn Whit- {the week. A! Simmons of the A'S) C, Honsock, 1b may have been helped by pAnniated Press Sports Writer) | | pargo, N.D.. Sept. 7.—With the ops lock, who’ takes over the football boosted his mark from 364 to 206:| streets, ef »| AMERICAN ASSOCIATION treatment to his weak oe _ aris dates limited major ening of the Bison football camp of. ‘coaching helm at Fargo high school Manush of St. Louis, gained three} williams,.c . 2 Standings the factor that has kept him) iO icourgh yesterday to two games | ficially set for tomorrow, and ad- this season, needs to find an end and |points for a .365 average and Laszeri! a, «, - ‘ 5 ry Most national competition for| Mo tr'ranery, out even this curtail-| vanee guard of veterans and soph- a quarterback from the host of mate- of the Yanks hoisted his one point to! a4. Young, if e Kansas City but at any rate he aroused a big) Hon, sei tO egies the Cubs from | omores already has started workouts rial which will be reporting to him {.355. Other leaders and their marks: | Freeman, i ‘8t. Pa to @ frenzied pitch of excite-| Sanne” incre. ceit pennant. The) at North Dakota State college. daily if he is to build a formidable |Combs, New York, 384; Hellmann, 7 the gamest rallies hi 1s sgl bi two games | Coach C. C. (Casey) Finnegan issued ‘gridiron unit at the Midget institu- , Detroit, 348; Ruth, New York, .343; * any course. brea > ae poor jes yinblaleny ia {the first uniform to Capt. “Cod” tion for the approaching campaign. | Alexander, Detroit, 341; Miller, Phil do against | Dirates to an even break held the | Ordah! Thursday. ‘The Bison grid! Seven lettermen were included jadelphia, 339; Gebringer, Detroit, events left the ies be i . This turn of | leader reported in from a summer of | among the 32 youngsters who as- | and E. Rice, Washington, .331. vile fret in nent ot only i hard duty with a bridge construction sembled at the Fargo college stadium | “Lefty” Grove increased his margin games—the same numben une zo) crew near his home at Grafton. Or- | Thursday for the first official prac- |in the pitching race with another vic- ilies sonuiee penners Ath- | dahl said that he felt fit to hold down ‘tice session. Whitlock sent the jtory during the week and now has @ zemre: | the center berth against all comers. youngsters through the prescribed | record of 19 won and 2 lost. Zechary went and ivi AMERICAN LEAGUE Standings i Won Lost Pet. 9 4 687 578 PEEL ES +3 Ey iF Ff = i ! : Fe Af Burleigh Grimes sought his cigh-| Among the early arrivals are Big | opening day exercises, handling the | of the Yankees also teenth victory in the opener at Pitts- | Pete Gergen, veteran halfback; Wal-: ball being predominant on the pro-|copped another game burgh, but received instead his fifth i ter Shamp, 230-pound sophomore gram. ‘has been in 22 games defeat. Babe Herman hit a homer | tackle; and Leo May, stellar backfield: Harold Miller, a guard or center. |be defeated, winning with one on in the third, and other) man from Aberdeen, 8. D. May told |and Bill Welsh, a fullback, were the | shaw of the Athletics Robins bunched blows for four more | Finnegan that he had trained down | only two lettermen who were absent jing the week, wi runs in the fifth, giving the flock just | to around the 190-pound mark dur- | from the.opening drill. Both are ex-! ping one for enough leeway to ease out ahead by | ing the summer and was feeling better pected out today. Abe Miller and | victories and 8 def ladelphia E £2 a 52 6 to 5 at the finish. Watson Clark | physically than at any previous sea- | Leo Gerteis, halfbac! won his fourth victory. son of his football career at North | center; Lyle Fisher, en Jess Petty was right in the second! Dakota State. Platt and Jimmy Thompson, clash, and Moss, MeWeeny and Moore| Others who have been working in|and Don Frederickson, guard, are the troit Tigers, who ere were not, so the Buccaneers had little | Fargo during the summer and tojlettermen who reported to Whitlock | with a .302 mark. trouble in winning by 8 to 1. The Pi-| whom uniforms were issued during | Yesterday. lence, however, Connie rates collected 12 hits. the week are “Chief” Pariseau, Joc} Among the candidsgos were Bob stand out, leading in Babe Herman defended his thin! Blakeslee and Johnnie Smith. All of | Deering, tackle. Bob Siegel, center or : 814 and having the f lead in the batting race by adding two | these early birds have started in with |uard, and Wendell Schollander, ‘against them—543. singles off Petty to the home run he light workouts. Monday Finnegan ex- | Halfback, all of whom saw service | the Athletics lead with a 977 made in the first clash. Games were | pects to issue equipment to most of |!ast season but were jus! short of the age. scheduled only at Pittsburgh and Bt. | the remaining 32 candidates who were |Fequired time necessary to earn a|” other ners: Louis in the National league. The In- | issued calls to report for early train- | letter. Double plays—Cleveland, 139. dian-Athletic encounter, rained out at | ing. J. R. Thompson and C. F. (Dutch)| individual runs — Shibe park, was the only American Schroeder. assistants last season, will | troit, 115. league fixture on the card. hi aid Whitlock, A. C. Brast. a new- | ts—S Welter Combat |s'neo''ouccu’ sou wien [Bure dackie Fields Considering Offer of $65,000; Opponent EE y all att 1 i TE wa g 55 #8 Hn d 3 H iH tH tH i i F 8 € t e é i i : i i : HI i i i i af a of ill i Hi if a it 7 g iit agen’ Che i Hy ue itis tal in the 200 i pies ae i a 3