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PITTSBURGH PIRATES ~ ASEND APPROACHES Cubs Nose Out Boston 4 to 3, While Pirates Outslug Brooklyn 9 to 7 “GIANTS BEAT REDS TWICE EE — y.jPhils Bunch Hits and Beat Cards; Young Ed Walsh Gives Senators Beating, By HERBERT W. BARKER (Associated Press Sports Writer) Joe McCarthy's Chicago Cubs set Yorth today in quest of eight more vic- ‘Ea tories, all they need to clinch the 1929 National league pennant. Thirteen games ah pSond-place Pittsburgh Sfeeonly 19 more contests to play, the ew Cubs were hoping to clinch the pen- be giant within the next two weeks or é ess. / slugging Brooklyn 9 to 7. )je* The New York Giants took two “R® ttvom Cincinnati, 6 to 4, and 10 to 4 in vd fy The two leaders cach chalked up a victory yesterday, the Cubs nosing out Bpposton 4 to 3 and Pittsburgh out-/ five innings. The Giants concentrated their attack on Adolph Luque in the inning of the first game for four runs, and then added two more Kenn Ash in the ninth. Hubbell ld the Reds in check most of the ay. McGraw’s hopefuls slugged Kolp @ Rixey for 12 hits in the abbrevi- ted nightcap, and Fitzsimmons had Rwtittle trouble coasting in to victory. The Phils bunched hits to down St. jLouis 9 to 3. Swectland had only onc Sieoad inning. the second, when the eae scored all their runs. fa3_ Danny MacFayden outpitched Jack and the Boston Red Sox beat St. Louis Browns 6 to 3. The game Scheduled as the first part of a i asdoubleheader, but rain forced post- e yponement of the second game. [4 in the only other American league Emame of the day young Ed Walsh gave Washington only six hits and h 0 beat the Senators 6 to 4. ‘on Has One Letterman d Carney Only Veteran Re- turning; Coyotes Look For- ward to Demon Game EES! | Williston, N. D., Sept. 10.—Con- onted with the hardest early-season of football games that they ever had, Joe Cutting and Coulter have on their hands Job of making up a new football n to represent the Williston high with Bud Carney, the only re- man of last year's regulars, 1 @ nucleus. _ Other lettermen who have seen iChicago Cubs Need O ' i | { | \Genaro Teaches Sharkey Lesson Minneapolis Flyweight !s Out- classed in Ten Rounds; Moorhead Man Shaded Minneapolis, Sept. 10.—«) — Jack Sharkey, Minneapolis, knows today that he needs a bit more class to be recognized as one of the top-notchers of the boxing elite. Frankie Genaro, New York. taught him that last night «when the fighter whom all but the New York boxing commission recognizes as the fly- weight champ of the world, cuffed the Minneapolis boy about the ring for 10 rounds. Genaro easily was the victor. His title was not at stake as they both came in over the flyweight limit. In the supporting card, Britt Gorman. Minneapolis, shaded Babe Herman, Moorhead, and Al Linder, Hudson. Wis. earned a draw with Johnny O'Hara, Minneapolis. They fought at 148 pounds, Minot halfback, as the fourth n of considerable football experi- Others who were out for work last i and who will be called upon to their qualifications for this team are Bud Lukins, Herbert 0 roy Jorge! ce in the past and upon whom coaches will depend for classy i this season are Ed Petts and ane n Carney, with Zeno Levitt. for- Ke lsaae Leet Ht be made up as soon as possible, th the expectation that the first 4 game of the season will be Sept. 20. The first game that been scheduled is with the Bis- team. October 5, last year's its with Williston of the state Fred Hovde Plays With Satan Alums Big Ten Backfield Star of Last Year Will Give Devils Lake First Test Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 10.—With four complete elevens togged in foot- ball regalia and every candidate 1 boring hard in the first week of prac- tice, grid prospects are looking bright in the Devils Lake camp. although no test of strength has been put to on Doug Smith's 1929 Speed Dev- If the size of a football squad can be any criterion, it would look favor- able for the Satans. since the biggest turnout of candidates that has ever el : over 45 men re- Porting each night, and as soon as More equipment arrives indications are that the group of candidates will number 50. The reign of Big Bill Tilden as national tennis champion is threatened this year by sters as has been seen in several years. Here are four young men who are in the lists old master. Left to right are Berkeley Bell and Lewis White, the Texas collegians; and Johnny Doeg. At Newport this ycar Lott carried Can Any of These Beat Tilden? the contenders. ! ) ‘Old Masters’ Take the Court” | Today After Three Solid | Days of Rest | \OTHER FAVORITES REST | | ciaeeroe 3 George Lott and Fritz Mercur The “old masters” take the court | today for their third round matches | after three solid days of rest. While |Chicago such members of the younger genera- bees tion as George Lott and Fritz Mercur underwent hard tests of their cham- pionship mettle yesterday, Big Bill was among the spectators and Hunter also enjoyed temporarily a noncom- { batant's role. Having drawn a bye in the first ; Tound and won his second round match in straight sets on Saturday, Tilden ran up against harder oppo- sition today in the lanky person of Young Frank Shields, New York. Hunter, who has fared similarly to date, was bracketed with one Leroy M. Weir in a match that promised to be little more than a workout for the sturdy internationalist. Tate. A. Gaston. Others postpon: N. Williams and the Englishman, | Games John Oliff. All these were to see, action today for the first time since sf ee Pittsburgh "| Morrison, Sale of Catcher Hubbel! and O° Gooch. Philadelphia . |St_ Louls .. Sweetland and Haid and Wilson, . Mexico, Sept. 10—(/p) | Kansas City . richest horse race will be |St. Paul . Walsh and Berg; NATIONAL LEAGUE Standings AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Standings Won, Lost Pet. - 6% 48 087 as likely a crop of young- at Forest Hills against the George Lott. Jr., of Chicago. Tilden to five sets and ts regarded as the most likely of Lady Luck Kind to Tilden and Hunter — \erafty Keener Cagle, Dick O'Keefe OF THE ‘& CLUBS. AMERICAN LEAGUE Standings 4 re Won Lost | Yesterday Underwent Hard | Phitadetphia earn Tests of Mettle New York % 55 Cleveland . m of Forest. Hills, N. ¥.. Sept. 10—u— {8¢, touts ‘ a ot Luck has been kind to Big Bill Tilden | se 7 i2 and his “Man Friday,” Francis ‘T. | Washington on 4 Hunter, thus far in their pursuit of Chicago $5) 8 the national men’s singles tennis | Boston see id championship. | Games Yesterday R 6 nt rT) R Ww 2 7 6 10 edd Won ++ 90 Yesterday R 7 9 H “4 13 A." Moore, MeWeeny, og and Picinich; Brame and Hems- ley. R 3 lo ‘Farrell; Luque, As! Ssasessze SBSI28E Pet. Point that he will fail. He is a quali-; .684!fied machine gunner, pistol sharp- .580| shooter, rifle marksman, sings in the | .538 | chureh choir, teaches a Sunday school ou | class. and leads a troop of Boy Scouts. 362 | 35) swer to hints that the 1929 Ngee 4031s formidable. The current up .366 | Seems to fit the bill right down to the | but one game remaining in their final jacFayden andj E} ve E | GADETS WILL WEAR ' SCREAMING YELLOW _cBRSEYS AND 0GKS South Dakota University Will ; Represent North Central Loop in Contest {SOLDIER SCHEDULE HARD Crafty Keener Cagle, O'Keefe, | Murrell and Gibner Are Likely Backs By BRIAN BELL West Point, N. Y.. Sept. 10.-7)— Eleven football teams, distributed from the Atlantic to the Pacific through the east and middle west, will do well to provide themselves with the proper serum to ward off Jaun- | dice or yellow fever, or both. The army | football team is busily engaged in| , concocting a yellow peril to sweep | ;down upon its unsuspecting opponents. | ' Clad in vivid jerseys almost too! i golden to be true, the cadets are pre- | ;Paring for a season that will send | ; their shock troops against Boston uni- | | versity. Gettysburg, Davidson, Har- | ‘Yard, Yale, South Dakota, Illinois, | Dickinson, Ohio Wesleyan, Notre Dame, and Stanford, in order. | The army has discarded the sombre | | black jerseys, with a band of gold and i | gray, in favor of the most conspicu- Ihe garb an army eleven ever has | worn—bright gold shirts, with a band; . ,ef black and gray. i | To fill these impressive garments | {Head Coach Biff Jones and his| ‘brother officers are rapidly putting | | together a machine-like team. | The familiar faces include th ‘Hertz Murrell and Herbert Gibner. ‘looming as the probable starting: backfield, and other good prospects { from last season. i Ed Messinger and Carl Carimark | are certain to play the ends, and! ‘George Perry, Charlite Humber, Biil | {Partiham and Winston Maxwell wil! | ‘be available for the line. Among the linemen who have their spurs to win jare Paul Miller, Ed Saurez, Dan{ ; Spengler, Coughlin, Gordon, and! others. Murrell is such a versatile per- | former that there is no fear at the | “We like ‘em tough” is the army an- | 'mascot mule, an animal devoting hic! ‘weekdays to pulling a post garbage | FE! Wagon, with nothing to do on Satur- days by attend a football game. 8S Jones, Brown and | FY ‘Tony Brown Will 1 «| i Meet Montgomery, Gunner Smith, Denny Wells and Boomer Brooker Also Will Fight During Week After a long period of dlenees, | 7|Tony Brown, Bismarck heavyweight, will swing into action Wednesday night. The capital city 190-pounder will battle with Monk Montgomery, St. Louis behemoth, in a 10-round head-/} iliner featuring a card staged at Wishek. ilightweight, will meet Eddie Mack, , Lehr, 135-pounder, in an eight round |semi-windup on the Wishek card and jthere will be several preliminaries. Howard Dodds, Dawson, will do bat- tle with Gunner Smith, now of Bis- marck, in an eight-round main bout! | night. Dodds {weighs 145 while Smith tips the beam at 135. Other bouts, besides several pre- jlims, on the card are: Young Demry, 1; Tappen. 135. vs. Denny Wells, 1 0 0; Marck, 135, 4 rounds; and Otis Jack- vf I : ! ates z % ual z ‘during which find Hughey McQuillan i tite, The Indian southpaw pitched THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1929 nly Eight More Victories to Clinch Pennant : ARMY ELEVEN MIXES POISONOUS Gy TRAL {3 FULL TLS | eee ee Yep—Going Down! It isn’t always the thud of the thud of the football you hear in the fall. Often it's the football player as he falls. And in this remarkable picture you see John Conway looking like a human airplane as his teammate, John Healy, tackled him around the ankle and fiercely downed him during first gridiron practice at Fordham University, New York. LOUISVILLE, INDIANAPOLIS AND | COLUMBUS HOLD STAGE CENTER Senators Trounce the Colonels, | While Indians Lose; Three | Are Knotted Closely JAIN HALTS LEAD CLUBS, Harlan Wysong and Hugh Mc- Quillan Win as Schupp and Williams Are Wild By WILLIAM E. WEEKES Chicago, Sept. 10.—(}—With what little remains of the battle for first tence in the American association | the stage with their red-hot fourth- Place struggle. Kansas City and Minncapolis we: rained off again yesterday, as we ‘St. Paul and Milwaukee, leaving them | series of the season. The Blues today had a margin of 10': games over St. | Paul, and had but 24 more games on ; their schedule. «| Columbus popped into a tic with | Indianapolis for fourth place yester- | day, trimming Louisville 3 to 1, whie Fred Schupp had a bad first inning, Toledo scored all its runs, while his mates were able to for only six well during the of the con- Associated Press) National Batting—O'Doul, Phillies, .399. Runs—Hornsby, Cubs, 137. Homers— Wilson, Cubs; Klein, Stolen bases—Cuyler, Cubs, 34. Pitching—Bush, Cubs, won 18, lost 4. Americai " Batting—Foxx, Athletics, 371. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 118, Homers—Ruth, Scher 42. (By the ; Phillies, 37. HITCHCOCK STARTED YOUNG Tommy Hitchcock, national ace of jpolo, started in the game when 16 years old. helping the Meadowbrook club to win the championship. Soon ifter he went to join the French Air Corps. RUNS AROUND TWICE run-around in a recent game in Se- attle, Wash. He failed to touch sec- ond the first time around, but had time to circle the sacks again. ‘Show Me’ State; Sonnen- I | i Es i f t th i f Hi anf id if Fortunately for the man who likes Dutch Masters, this Popular brand moves 20 fast that it is most unusual to find a Dutch Masters in anything but fresh, first-class condition. We often hear POTION FOR ’29 OPPONENTS (Camp Perry Rifle Contests Closing Country's Greatest Rifle and Pistol Shots to Compete in Grand Finale | Camp Pérry, Ohio, Sept. 10.—(4~ | Preparations were under way here today for the finale of the country's greatest rifle and pistol matches, the {national individual rifle events at- fetes J @ field of 1,625 of the coun- | a premier marksmen opening Fri- iday. The event requires two days, ana during competition the ranges at Camp Perry will be given over entire- ly to the contest. The Uuited States marine corps team yesterday retained the national pistol team championship with a score of 1,286 out of possible 1.500. | The national individual pistol match was won by Lioyd E. Wilson, Cash- | mere, Wash., civilian, with 270 out of }@ possible 300. | Aggregate match winners \an- ;nounced yesterday were Sergeant J. |R. Tiete, United States marine corps, winner of the Palma trophy, an ag- |gregate of the Wright Memorial, ;Crowell and Scott matches, with a total of 222; and Sergeant J. B. Jen- {sen United States cavalry. winner of the “any rifle” championship with a ‘score compiled from the Wimbledon, 600 yard any rifle. Scott, Wright Me- morial and Crowell matches. The marines won the service rifls team match with a score of 1.843, de- feating the army which scored 2,833, i |Grimm Will Play Within 2 Weeks Has Mended Perfectly;* Cast Removed Chicago, Sept. 10.— (# — Charley Grimm, Cub first baseman and cap- tain, will be ready for duty again within two weeks. The cast has been removed from his left hand, a sma! jbone of which was fractured nearly three weeks ago. and his doctor re- | Ported the break has mended per- | fectly. ' Algeria to Stage | Auto Racing Meet Algiers, Algeria, Sept. 10.—(%)—The | first Automobile Grand Prix of Al- Geria will be disputed here ig July 1930 upon the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the conquest of Al- geria by the French, Babe Thompson gave the bases a} REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. Capitols Foil scornfully of “pipe Wedon’t know s0 much about ‘The distance will be 500 kilometers |-a@bout 312 miles—and invitations have been sent to all the leading automobile manufacturers in the: i world including three American firms. , 2 for 25 men speak dreams.” a> 1 i ‘ : | % * i » 7 \ , ae . &