The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1929, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1929 A ' 4 FOUR GAMES NEEDED BY CUBS, ATHLETICS ‘Chicago Trims Philadelphia as Giants Are Winning Pair 1 From Pirates © Athletics Beat White Sox as Browns Take 5 Straight From Yankees Another cd the fast - crum! fronts resulted ail to the t front runners in need i victories to c In the Amer feties clipped the V 9s the Browns whitewashed the Yan- “tees by 5 to 0. ‘The National League dattling saw the Cubs come home in front of the Phillies by 5 to 2, with he Giants defeating the Pirates by 2 to 1 and 10 to & Of even more interest than the ‘brogress of the leaders was the open- ng of John McGraw's hand-to-hand peeen tht with the Dreyfuss Dragoons for fou possession of second place, which Mc- Bffataw usually has occupied when he hel salle to win the pennant way, , The contest at Wrigley field was ind falivened by home runs, which were ate¢ fhe onty successful scoring means the pyeteran Arthur Nehf. Klein and Peuit in the fourth, nding the Philadelphia scoring. Red Lucas r ‘ered his eighteenth ietory as the Reds shaded the Robins he 4 to 2 at Cincinnati. The Cardi- ls whaled the Braves twice 11 to 4} nd 7 to}. Mose Grove attempted his twenty- rst victory as the White Sox opened heir rew Ted Lyons f itchers’ battle. wa: 5 me developed, but not until the fe fessrs. Grove and Lyons had been ‘d away mumbling incoherently to hemselves. The A's won 7 to 4. mn opponent. A Seating the Yanks, the ambitions of 4, 2e Browns know no limits. The St. * ouisians made it five straight over .e Hugmen yesterday, and Alvin > rowder hurled his second successive it-out against the: Boston rallied to shade Detroit 8 to +in 10 innings, scoring six of its runs 4) the last three rounds, and Wash- dhgton stopped the Indians by 5 to 2. i =~ Charlie Kimball Quits as Fargo’s Sports Director -asketball and Track Coach for Last Ten Years Hung Up Enviable Record a sition as athletic director of Fargo _=gh school to accept a position with fe Northern School Supply company, F ¢has been announced. 4 ring his 10 years at Fargo high , Kimball built up a record as basketball and track coach which + °8 made him a well known figure in . @tional interscholastic circles. Four Pe nes he handled Midget teams in + a “e national interscholastic tourna- Sete mt and in 1926 his North Dakota Syer Pte championship team succeeded reaching the fin being elimi- in the contest for the cham- of the United States by the » Mass., team. 1 of his track athletes have in national high school and while none succeeded in a championship, all have & credit to their mentor. ball came to Fargo near the of the basketball season in 1920, ge. His first Midget track ition won the state cham- at the university, and then and won six more titles in Grand Forks broke RED LUCAS REGISTERS 18TH! hils were able to operate against the ! Re: Murst reached Li'l Arthur for the cir- | beginning and} final series in Philadelphia. and | in prospect, and ; BIG BILL TILDEN ADVANCES | weight champion, firing F rope PENNANTS. 3 - New York's indoor boxing season opens at Madison Square Garden tonight with “Tuffy” Griffiths (right) and Dr. Ludwig Haymann. German heavy- | list; Johnny Doeg, Santa away in the main event. SKILL AGAINST |Champion of Germany Since Schmeling Left Is Seek- ing Greater Honors \BOTH ARE HARD PUNCHERS jlowa Youth Has Been Going ; Great Guns in the Heavy- weight Ranks Recently i St. Lon 7 Having learned at last the trick of; New York, Sept. 12.—()—Madison Detroit .. | Square Garden reopens for the indooi | boxing season tonight. At the top of the list comes the | meeting between Dr. Ludwig Hayman, who holds the heavyweight champion- ship of Germany since the abdication of Max Schmeling in search of greater {honors, and Tuffy Griffith, Sioux | City, Ia. « |. Hayman has been campaigning in ; the smaller clubs in the United States | with enough success to earn himself the Garden shot. Both principals go on the theory that the man who | punches the hardest wins, ‘Cubs Lock Office | To Get Ready for World Series Set Chicago Games; Scalping | Precaution Taken | { Chicago, Sept. 12.——One of the busiest club offices of organized base- {ball locked the door from the inside | today, it was so busy. The Chicago Cubs were getting ready for the world's series. Telephones were dead, so far as series conversation The mail man was the only interme- diary between the Cubs and their ticket-eager public. The only things that talked were certified and cash- ier's cheques and money orders. Even the green and golden currency of the republic was being turned down. This is how it is to be done: Prices for the Wrigley field games will be $6.60 for boxes, $5.50 for ‘was concerned. | ‘DR. LUDWIG HAYMANN WILL TRY TUFFY GRIFFITH | FRANCIS 7, HUNTER ALSO MOVES AHEAD | IN SECOND BRACKET Henry Austin, England, Is Lone Foreign Survivor in Na- tional Net Meet |JOHN VAN RYN IS MENACE} ! igveregd { Doeg, Allison, Mercur and Wil. | liams Are the Only Other | Contestants Left Forest Hills, N. If Big Bill Tilden’s drive for his se enth national tennis singles cham- | Pionship is to be stopped the stopping | will have to be done by one of seven | players. In addition to Big Bill himself the |quarterfinal round bracket today com- | prised Johnny Van Yyn, East Orange, | |N. J., No. 6 in the national ranking ; Monica, |Calif., rated No. 8; Henry Austin, |England, the lone surviving foreign | contender: Wilmer Allison, ranked No. | 5. the Texan who put George Lott | jout of the running; Fritz Mercur, | Bethlehem, Pa., No. 7; Frank Hunter, Tilden’s old friend and comrade. No, | |2: and Richard N. Williams, Phila- | \delphia, champion 13 years ago. | Van Ryn. bracketed with Tilden in | the quarterfinals today, defeated him last winter in an indoor match, but jon the basis of his recent play in | Singles has only an outside chance to Sept. 12.—(a)— | ‘Zwilling Returns Two Clubbings to Minneapolis Club Victories, Milwaukee Be- ing the Victim By WILLIAM A. WEEKES Chicago, Sept. 12—()—Dutch Zwilling kept the Kansas City Blues in Minneapolis an extra day and col- lected revenge for what the Millers did to them Tuesday. The Millers spanked the Blues twice Tuesday, winning both games by shutout scores, but yesterday they took a pair of beatings. Kansas City slugged five hurlers for 13 hits in the first game and won by 8 to 6, Clyde “Pea Ridge” Day, the Blues’ shouting hurler, fashioned a three-hit pitching performance in the clash for a 4 to 2 victory. St. Paul also picked up a pair of victories, whipping Milwaukee, 5 to 2, and 11 to 7. Archie Campbell was a little wobbly in the first inning of the opener, but steadied and held the Brewers scoreless thereafter, while his mates got to Herbert Cobb in the seventh for three runs to win. The Saints hammered out 16 hits, includ- ing Ben Chapman's 28th homer of the Chi Indianapolis bounded back into fourth place by winning over Toledo | while Columbus was defeating Louis- | ville. The Indians were stopped cold | by Ray Lucas in the first seven inn- fate ings, but scored four runs in the | eighth to squeeze out a 5 to 2 decision | over the Mudhens. Malcolm Moss pitched good enough baseball to win most games, but his supporting cast made five misplays and Columbus edged out Louisville by 6 to 5. Moss gave only six hits, two less than Pete Jablonowski and | of 256, Chicago, Sept. 12.—()—Miss Helen | Hicks, 18-year-old golfer from Inwood, L. I, today apparently had only to go | bosses sent him to the country where through the motions of playing 18 | his principal chore was to drink half holes over the Flossmoor course be- fore receiving the winner's trophy for the Western Women's Golf associa- tion 72-hole derby. The slugging miss from the east owned a 54-hole score of 239, or 10 strokes better than Mrs. Lee Mida of be nl aeing second on Miss Hicks ‘ai out her par-wrecking game yesterday, carding an 83 to add to her first two rounds of 78, but Mrs. season to ake te second pame | Mh proced her third tralght 63 Maureen Orcutt of New York and Virginia Van Wie of Chicago finally found themselves and shot an 80 and 79, respectively. but got going too Miss Hicks. Miss Or- oa was van Warton total of 251, and Miss rtl a Creag TAIUE Lite Arathor can ine, | sclive’days of treparation tor alee Austin Pardue, Hibbing, Minn., were tied for the next position with scores | Season declared to overtake Boxing Unpopular AS FINAL 18-HOLE PLAY OPENS Slugging Golf Miss From Long Island Has a Ten-Stroke Lead After 54 Holes MRS. LEE MIDA IS SECOND Maureen Orcutt, Virginia Van Wie Play Well to Land in Third and Fourth Gomez Is San Francisco, Sept. 12—(7)}—Forty | dollars worth of milk, properly con- | centrated, turned into a stream of gold for the San Francisco Baseball club this year, The coast league club sold Vernon | “Lefty” Gomez, star young left | hander, to the New York Yankees in mid-season. Behind the deal is a story of how {the Seals officials fattened the 19- year old pitcher this spring. He re- Ported underweight. a spindly- legged “kid” with little stamina. His a dozen quarts of milk a day. When he returned his weight was | increased by 12 pounds and he had the strength that should go with the ; extra poundage. A brilliant record, including 12 successive victories, brought about his sale to the big league club in this, his first season in | class AA ball. The sale price was not announced but is believed to be around $50,000, plus two players. |Fight Game Takes Good Holdin Cuba Havana, Sept. 12—(}—These_ are and better fights in Cuba following a the best and van Profitable in Cuban fistic an- nals. | Havana's fight game has” been growing apace. With its rapid growth ‘Major League Front Walls Crumbling Rapidly As Favorites Win ANOTHER ROUND AFTER EASY WIN ms HICKS CONCEDED TITLE [Tony BrownFuts Out With Hard Right Milk-Fed Hurler| Ficht Had cone onty 20 sec onds; 300 Fans Cheer Be- hemoth After Win (Tribune Special Service) Wishek, N. D., Sept. 12.—It took Tony Brown, Bismarck hea t,, Just 30 seconds to kayo Monk Mont- gomery, St. Louis, here last night. The two boys danced about the ting sizing each other up as the round Opened and Brown let loose a vicious right he rele lifted his op- ponent e . Montgomery re- covered consciousness in three min- | utes. Only one blow was struck, j _ More than 300 fans in this district, | who have made Tony Brown their | favorite because of his former resi- pet here, came to see the behemoth swing one punch and apparently were satisfied with the exhibition. Brown. weighed 190, Montgomery 178. The card was @ feature of the Tri- County fair being held here. Eddie “Kid” Bauman, Edgeley, was an easy victor over Young Demry, Tappen, in the four-round semi- windup. Bauman used his greater phen to advantage. They are light- weights, |, Young Madison shaded Clifford | Hehr in a three-round curtainraiser. THE defeat the old master. Van Rsn\| winters dispensed. Jablonowsk! was the duties of the Cuban boxing d Cases ‘stenge! | o : s dis : com-| how Old Casey 1 broke OF ane aae of Japan's Davis cap teat | forced to retire in the elghth inning 4 mission have been increased, and the | ball games in the 1923, world sevice ' | yesterday, while Tilden ‘won’ an | after being struck by a ball thrown To Austrian Fans former small, dingy offices have been | with smashing home runs? | straight sets from Henry Culley. Har- by one of his own infielders. eign by a pretentious suite in| Well, the same Casey is still break- |vard, without oven the necessity of ALL LOSE SAME DAY eS wine gt rormie Gatto enlispee: ort amet < gens Tempoving is sweater Three big league pitchers, Haid,/ Vienna, Sept. 12—()—Among the | It is too small to Playing for the Toledo which | AMERICAN LEAGUE i Beeler s pachdene Rr oa ; Malone and Myles Thomas, hail trom | sports declared illegal in Austria box- | large crowds that are attracted to| he manages, in a recent come Sten- ' Star ne Lost Pet, Promising international duel inne ome ae On end 7 all lost their | ing was one, but the national sport-| it each Saturday night. Additional | gel hit one double to drive in the ty- ' Philadelphia 03, 42, .¢g9 Doce and the English stylist, Austin. | foe" Giants’ beat. Malone. end Cleves th ban au Widened.. Betier seating tnclitice Sit ae oe New York 7 st 85| , For the: rae so tiwaet eis land defeated Thomas. | ‘The first prise fight arranged in | come next. — : u | 2 - gin aibicecoinaten | Vienna’s sporting palace proved fatal Bt Louls 7 8 a2 cay, peeks stars eck tlie nae MULES FOR POLO | Undeterred by ‘this fatality, and | winter of cach fighters acme Sissy Sooceemn wes hasteeee any 2 7 | CAaUDyer: Gee Cee oe | earlalane are playing polo on mules ‘encouraged by heavy box office re-| Mandell, Brown, Young Corbett and | ing and following beseball since fo il : 2-459 from behind after losing the first set | HSte2d of ponies. ; e Leger cpmedyn ceipts, another ma' was staged. | Kid Chocolate, who hails from Cuba | was @ boy, is 86 now, but he works Chicago 53 79 402 +0 Julius Seligson, Lehigh university, with mules, is much longer af it | One of the fighters was disqualified | and is now fighting his way up the |every day at Shibe Park, Philadel- | Boston 50 87 365 “ih the lower half of the draw Til, | ‘8 Played with ponies. for hitting low. dl ip ladder. Phia. He is as active as a man of 50, H E |St. Louis ... 9 0 {New York . cesses 0 5 1 |. Crowder and Manion; Wells, Ne- kola and Dickey. R H E| Chicago . se 9 1 Philadelphia Pe 9 1 Lyons, McK ind Berg; Grove, Shores and Cochrane. | R H E | Cleveland 2 7 2 | Washington 5 10 2 and Tate. | Hudlin and’ L. Sewell; Marberry i | R H E Detroit serene 7 9 1 | Boston . . 8 17 1 | «10 innings) | Sorrell, Prudhomme, Page and ;Hayworth; Ruffing, Bayne, Carroll, 'M. Gaston and Heving. | EAR, | | NATIONAL LEAGUE i Standings Won Lost Pet. {Chicago .... 1 438s 78 5B STA 72 61 65 = 67 AD. 62 73 459 6 874 448 56 0C«STT:—s«CA 51 82383. Fs 1 Walker and O'Farrell; Hargreaves. Second Game: New York .. Pittsburgh Henry, Mays and Hogan, O'Farrell; Meine, Swetonic, Erickson and Hems- onm 2 Louis . 13 1 Seibold, Perry and Legett; Grabow- ski and Wilson. i E ‘Boston 1 St. Louis . ae 10 0 R. Smith and Legett, Cronin; John- . {son and E. Smith. z aon ‘Won Lost z Sssasess Fe Foam oon NBBEBEED! gan ean 179 | feat King Tut, of Minneapolis, in 1| den’s “man Friday,” Hunter, is still carrying on, having beaten off a se- | rlous challenge from the Kansas City youngster, Wilbur F. Coen, in four ; Sets yesterday. | Hunter's quarterfinal opponent is | Williams, a 37-year-old veteran two years his senior, who eliminated the |former Yale star, Arnold Jones, in a| | great five-set battle. ‘Petrolle Picked | To Beat King Tut | | Minneapolis Man Gave Fargoan| | Most Decisive Beating in | His Life, However co | Detroit, Sept. 12—(4)—-Although he jwill trade punches with the only jfighter who ever gave him a licking jover which there was no argument. jafterward, Billy Petrolle, the Fargo lightweight, will enter the ring at Navin field tonight a favorite to de- | their 10-round bout. Tut and Petrolle have fought three \times, twice to draws, Tut winning | the other by a decision. The winner tonight may be match- ed with Sammy Mandell, in Chicago next winter. Stephen J. Farrell Brought Wol- verines to Ten Big Ten Championships Ann Arbor, Mich. Sept. 12—(7)— Stephen J. Farrell, veteran coach of University of Michigan track teams, will retire next spring, terminating a career of 45 years as an athlete and would be through next June. Since Michigan reentered the Big | Ten in 1918, Farrell's teams have won |five indoor and five outdoor Western Conference championships. He de- veloped such track stars as Carl | Johnson, only athlete ever to win four {first places at a Big Ten meet, De- jhart Hubbart, probably the world’s ‘greatest broad jumper, and Eddie ‘To- lan, negro sprinter. Charles Hoyt, Farrell's assistant, ts slated to succeed him as head track coach. PITCHED ONE BALL In a game ‘with Baltimore, Pitcher Goldsmith of Newark pitched only one ball and was charged with defeat. Jablonowski, Winters and Shinault; Moss, Tincup and Thompson. With an O. K. That Counts een! LATE 1938 PONTIAC COACH Thoroughly reconditioned, looks and runs like new. Capital Chevrolet Company Shop Service That Satisfies Broadway at 2nd St. Bismarck, No. Dak. ~ Phone 483 Sgriaadioaiaoas

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