The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 24, 1929, Page 14

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1929 ootball Riv alry on So South Mi issouri Slope | Expected t to Be Keen : STRONGER MACHINES MIT LLER HU GGINS NS_ FIGHTS GRIMMEST BA 3T BATTLE IN HOSPITAL BED | OUGHT AT BOWMAN, Y ANKERS WAN 1° MANAGER eines Club [BAT BATTALINO OUTCLASSES —_ McCarthy Trying ea ANDRE ROUTIS TO WIN TITLE) To Teach Malon pe a a : 3’ Form Tempe A Cha pions OFM | jartford, Conn., Youth, ts one! Ineligibility and emper’s Secret ? Yoach Charles Hood Lost Only ATT. ACK. INFECTION zi ae Pat fs Onb PGR , * ! ‘ it i Sonu’. | Pat Is On i i a Two 1928 Regulars at y Walter Johnson's Men Started of Youngest Titlehold Injuries Harass a arenrest Citasiets 4 : Badly, but Began Playing ers in History ° M When Cool, Very Poor Stark County City CLIFF HEATHCOTE Never in Robust Health, Hug- When Too Late aici Big Ten lentors When Angry a , Tag Homer Summa sbly play | To few major league players 1s i i irecti ell — E AARWARTH INEXPERIENCED)!" "sme" ind | ceatued the'experlence that has been | giMS.tnsisted on Directing | 5, wie x Fuuentox, se. |THE FRENCHMAN HAS FADED : oo ‘oeste Satay win see” } u |scries for the Athietics as will Heath- | an outstanding fealitgot Clift aa Yankee Play (Auociated Press Sports Writer) chic Harry Kipke Has Formidable| {%,,'ores coating, with personal — | a cote for the Cubs. | ote 8 For a large part of the current o 7 ii letics, MEA Carson, Flasher ar al SAGE oer caine conor ai {maior Ieaguc season, | Washington Referee Billy Conway Gives New| List, While Dr. Spears soon to mect in the World Series). ' \ : an Seem destine A id v f the leading enigmas 2 ott inne ci thusia a aa ie hake Kineton sot TION ‘STILL CRITICAL’ Ege ede eeerin| Featherweight King the Loses Three Backs cnn PAUL, B., MICKELSON ¢ as) than warm the being the only iia the pre-season dope as a club to be 0, Sept. 24.—(P)—A man who ’ ’ With the Outlook bench for thet player now under | After a Consultation With Spe-| feared and one which probably would Edge Throughout Chicago, Sept, _24.—(AP)—In-| Hever loses his temper is endeavoring share of either the big tent who ialist, Doct Ord ‘finish well up in the standing, the juries and ineligibility, football ae faetea hat rare art of human con- Be cacuiua P the eee or has one nee cialist, Doctor Orders Senators put their backers to shame By EDWARD J. NEIL poke toughest carly season foes, ie ie bid of the most temperamen- Be fo fsothenl honors among ie Hts | ear the sume aay: Blood Transfusion early in the year by starting badly} Hartford, Conn., Sept. 24.—()—The | ©! work in the Big Ten. tietias, be Coney: fimaeedls It he Se aasalier ech in southwestern | f Summa is the | . On the Seon Geto, litte better as the | temiiar figure of @ Connecticut "with two varsity Fan coe ak his! the new world’s pt igas ae | forth Dakota bids f2ir to be keen | ~ collegian type. morning of May! Now York, Sept. 24—(—Miller J.] ‘Their upward climb did not start |Youngster, the second in a span of Honenee vieey, Kipke hee a ret | ,, Manager Joe McCarthy of the Cubs | his year. | eg vetting his lq 30, 1922, he Was | Huggins, “mite manager” of the New | until the middle of August, too late | four years, perched upon the feather-|midable list of injured, which has fs the teacher. His pupil is Pat Ma- q It is only a few years ago that many | * toward the ma- a member of the | York Yankees, s fighting his great- | to do much good, but since then they | weight throne today and searched the seriously whittled Gown ins oeaserve’ lone, a fiery, husky Irishman who is § if the high schools in this area had} 4 4 jJors at the Uni- | St. Louis Cardi- {est fight today—a grim battle against |have been’ playing baseball of real |horizon for new worlds to conquer.| strength. Morriscn, 200-pound full: invincible when calm and ineffective $ 10 footba! 1 iS Pe versity of Mis- | nals playing /an infection that threatened to take | championship calibre. They still are} The new champion is Christopher back Who -wie'to statt itor of the | "nen, angry. , p hey mace a be Lanna Sour. 1 | against the Chi- | his life. below the .500 mark but have a firm | “Bat” Battalino, clever. stiff-punching | pumes with Albion and Me Uni ‘There is no secret about McCarthy's % asm for the grid like cago Cubs, The baseball veteran who Nas led | hold on fifth place and some hope of | Hartford youth of 21, one of the| Saturday, will b f action be. | World serles plans for Malone. He A q apidly. : fate played a big | During the lunch hour he was traded lthe Yankees to six American league {climbing higher. Yesterday's victory | youngest titleholders inthe history of | fcr cy’ wens out of action be-| wants him in the box for the first } Among teams in the district part in giving him a chance to do his | for Qutfielder Max Flack and in the] pennants and three world’s cham- | over the Chicago White Sox set their | fisticuffs. Battalino smothi cause of a wrenched knee. .Tom|geme and for another if he are | ered Andre | p, | comes » sill play full year are | with a pennant winner . . . «| afternoon wore a Chicago uniform, ..|Plonships since 1918 lay in St, Vin-| record at 69 victories and 77 defeats | Routis, the gallant little Frenchman, ‘oach, sophomore tackle, hus a' through. Seemingly it all depends on ; each, Bell Carson. | While he didn't change from one | He has b aahine 1 eoek a nt for an average of .473. in a 18-round duel in Hurley stadium sprained back, and Bill Hewett, end, | Pat. } Masher, Hettinger. arth and | team to the other on the same day. ) He has been wearing it ever since, a taken to the hospital tast | “it‘took two couragcous rallies and allast night and ‘dethroned’ the old | "7, Samucls, a prominent guard| ‘Temperament has been Malone's * hd Mott. For the most part ese teams | his big chance came at the fag end | matter of almost eight years... .. n he developed an infec- | lot of steady slugging to pull out yes- | champion about as he pleased. candidate, suffered injuries yester-| almost destructive ailment since he ‘ © urned out by these schools will be | of his career. . . . Cleveland asked for , This is his twelfth year as a big tion growing out of an attack of in- | terday’s game. Routis has faded considerably since | 22Y Which will keep them from show-! came into baseball. Years ago, he Be f= oth green and light but etic beta on him last fall and every | jeaguer, . .. . Flect of foot, back in | fuenza and crysipelas. So serious | Only one other game was on yester-|he whipped Tony Canzoneri, another ing their stuff in the inaugural| failed in a try out with the Giants ve Y 8 expected ied be keen since each | body passed Summa up but Mack. . «| the old days when one run meant 2. {did his condition become yesterday | day's brief schedule, The St. Louis | brilliant Ttalian, in New York last) «mcs. ‘and then slumped badly to start off A 4 ‘chool will play teams in its own) Cleveland then withdrew waivers, P eee Seb ‘i that Dr. Edward H. King, Yankce | Cardinals opened their series at home | summer to gather in the 126-pound|, Barnhart, Pharmer and Kirk, a|with the Cubs at the start of the Sa sronser [OMY 0 later profit to the extent of | lot, he was a leading base stealer. ..+/ club physician, after a consultation | against western opponents by batting | bauble, but it is doubtful if the chare- trio of Dr. Spears’ Minnesota back- | 1928 season until he managed to for- ‘ j Belfield's team will be stronger | $2500 by selling him to. the Athletics | since the Cubs acquired the slugging | with specialists, decided upon a blood | cut a 6 to 4 victory over the Cin- | ing Frenchman at his best could have field veterans, have not recovered | get about umpires’ decision and fans’ ; y lad “Ngee ‘sed ade men were | for $10,000. . . . . With Simmons. Guttield of Wilson, Stephenson and | transfusion, cinnati Reds. Chick Hafey decided | coped with the youth, speed, and all- | from injuries suffered last week and|tazzing. ‘This season, however, he i ugh graduatic ite 1 Haas and Miller fit most of the sea- Cuyler, he has played utility roles. . . Dr. King said his condition was|the game in the eighth inning by | round generalship and fighting ability; bave not becn able to do more than | has been successful, winning 22 games Nee ee eee lee aa ae ee cinees (Bressed into service at various tin “| still critical.” Never in robust health, | driving out his 26th home run of the {of the new ruler of the little men.| Watch practice sessions, Several |and losing nine. Be Seterkn bectticia but the line nave to Lena Broke into the majors Pressed into service at various UNS | Huggins insisted upon sitting on the | year with Bottomley on base. On the | Battalino outsmarted a smart old! others to whom uniforms were is-| Malone, who 1s just 27, possesses 2 SNe ee eee eae oe aera in the |e lias given a fine account of AHO.) Yankee. bench, directing his team’s | mound, Fred Prankhouse, was more | warrlor, cuffed him chout at his ease,| sued are still under iacligibiity | probably the fastest ball in the major Me ceomtrentiy in Betis psy |e ta Spent two years in the he hss given a fine account of him- | piay, when he should have been home effective than Cincinnati's recrutt, | overwhelmed him at long range, and| clouds and Spears has been forced jleagute ranks, including Dazzy Vance ee oe Te, Ey | mabrion@y this tite 0 Com ate clue (dettctianiied: <7 Hel gained ‘his/tivge | ates ot Under theieare of MINMiY: | Hat Frey. The vie Lie in| CREE GEO of Brooklyn. ee tinea Delis, Feanclin Back. | NUOTs £5 & Memes ot as fst gear | training in baseball as a collegian at | “!8"- ‘Cards back to their usual place in| best game, man-to-man slugging at| Northwestern must get along), He mingles a good curve with his ’ “nan, Garland Henry Sct 7 | Indians ung mark of 48, the best Penn State, ... The odds are against |RopenT y, CONNERY | the standing with-e pOQiarerese |S eaa ne without George “Shorty” Rojan, vet- | fast ball and his 154 strikeouts to his ! Aam Doering, Sanford Frank, William |e has ever’ enjoyed as a major his taking pari in the series, other | Capgep BY FRIEND csnenpeetcoe — wpb ew | exan reserve quarterback who was | credit, this year—36 more than the “Apt, Lloyd Handers, Roy Cittemann | ieaguer. than in a minor role. } St. Paul, Minn, Sept. 24—up—| crowd of 13. a| figured for a lot of action this fall.|@azler. Repeatedly, he has had a 4 4 ‘ind Earl Lindbe. Opponents sched- | lee ine : 7— piue loungsters 13806 that paid $50900, Bat | Rojan failed to conquer scholastic | game on ice walting for the frosting. “iled by Belfield are Dickinson, Beach, | ees Seay, eons ot Oe S| has lost only one decision in three | difficulties and yesterday was de-|owever. only to become so disturbed in, Reeder and Dickinson Nor- SHIFTY PHIL Sco I I |Paul club of the American Associ- | years of professional cam) clared ineligible, Rojan’ won his|0Ver 9 decision that he loses control. al high school. Dickinson and | pale at abe edible deepsea rop ontest to tee ates ee Routis letter in 1928 and captained the| With, the fall classic @ fortnight Reeder will be played twice. : i rounds, leree Wildcats’ team last ;8way, Malone is the one big ray of ally ill, left last je Hi Hart! spring. . Bowman Is Heavy | WINS OVER VICTORIO C AMPOLO the request Of Jonnard Indians scorn psecoiiocord po grad Contrasted to the setbacks in some | UAshine in the Cubs’ pitching staff. Bowmen is entering its second year RUDEAH akeodle| i. awarded Battalino the edge in boot ae) things have brightened at have tien: iluteady "geet a ae af football competition with a tairly | ¢ many years in Sasa session. his judgment on the | Chicago where A. A. Stagg is at- a ic ‘ Be ease! Rear 3 vq}, ;Catthy is not a ee dakar eta Well. Tree Bothers Player; and St. Paul With Pennant Tucked Away) British method of scoring, tempting to build a contender with | Crone’ their cenditin’ SPprehensive te cesea be ton ater who | Favored Argentine Starts We Gets B Levels It ° iMting Gi points are awarded each battler with | ® Squad of less than 50 men. Buck coed ee te ee wae a 4 ets Busy, Levels Safely, Dutch Zwilling Gives five as « maximum for a perfect ps iectie ihe huge reg! has Syne! 7 ra ; showing in each round, Conway |ffom injuries and Stagg has re- Sam Hildreth it | ee ions y Mule’s Ss Life he omtiae eee {sents 48 for Battalino and 96 for ceived word that Red Burgess, the s i only letterman from last year’s . ° tether wth promising new material. Clever Opponent Isn't Fl Bed «itr: Sweeney backticid and Dawson snideman, «| Dead in New York Syerland, Bernard Thiegs, Wood Jett. | sel sn ower ! peut ales or less means little to star back from the freshman team, 4 Kenneth Thunem, Wilham Melb: & the Kansas City Blues—now that! who had decided not to return to a Myron Pond, Ray Hale, Arthur Rea,, WINNING MARGIN IS CLOSE t ve cinched the American As- | school, will be back by the end of| Veteran Horse Trainer Devel- Satie ea, Georee Football Mascot ot Pulls | Garbage n pennant—so they sent in | the week, + “iverson, Ervin Kvaln Z When He Isn't Following yesterday and lost to! ' ge eyes a rj Social sone), Oe een jan, Sidney Melby, Jot lishman Mi B nsid- ‘ = napolis, 7 to 2. | jo ews, Paul Jasper, a star) ili 3arrett, John Woll, John Gorenz, Paul Sng ean Must ee os ‘ West Point Eleven Jonnard on the mound the OF THE tackle last. season, has recovered | cillian and Grey Lag Thielge, and Ed Hilton. Bowman has} ered by the Heavyweights . 2 route, Indianapolis started {from a serious foot injury and will, scheduled Baker, Mont. and Buffalo, tar Bishine Tick P il f W: with three runs in the first walk, ibe available for duty. | New York, Sept. 24—}—Sam Hil- 3. D,, in addition to Reeder. Hettinger. ter Beating Tiger upus of warner Je and an error doing the = dreth, trainer for Harry F. Sinclair's cooioaed and Marmarth. Reeder and for an Id hit and a e a ee s Pera Stable, died this morning in Hettinger will be played twice. In G D d i " lan \ venue hospital. He was 68 _ Pootball material is light and lim-; New Yor! reat Veman wed eight hits while| AMERICAN LEAGUE years old. ited at Carson but fight and enthus- | shuffling shi ‘orced to yield 14 to the | Standings yi 4 Hildreth had been ill for nearly a viasm are expected to make up for | British champio 3 me e ong rips year but his condition did not become ‘this deficit, Coach V. J. Cassidy © heavyweight contende Nine Athletes Coached by ‘Pop’ to honlauiienta | Philadelphia serious until last week. Yesterday he Among the stalwarts on the Carson | most of the experts had r: coring in all |New York Ba, = mom ‘underwent an abdominal operation leven are Duane Dettloff. Harry | the gallo in Last Three Years Sign the seegnd inning, Both Toledo Cleveland . 328' Long Grind Opens When In- but he failed to rally. The end came Butnisky, R. Bloomhart and Byron | tine, Victorio Mario Campolo. St. Paul garnered 10 hits in} is dians Meet U. N. D. at at 7:55 o'clock this morning. ? : ee Sam,” as the 68-year-old urf veteran is familiarly known Grand Forks Oct. 4 about the track, was connected with —- conditioning race horses of one kind % Lawrence, Kas., Sept. 24.—(4)—The | or another since his childhood days. Haskell Indians, always a great road | “Uncle Sam” became an owner and jteam, this year will travel east to; trainer with more the ordinary e e 83 Pittsburgh and south to New Orleans | penny, of success. going with of his regular core in a somewhat even hitting Sc pegenioe in quest of new gridiron laurels. he Rancocas stable he trained for sa Se a a ee | panes ; johnson alloyed the Mil-| \foxain, Adkins and Ber, OT tee Haskell visiting schedule starts Oct, the late August Belmont. , s ers 11 hits while Dumont was re-| Brown, * Marberry and Spencer. | 4. when the Indians meet North With the money of Harry F. = were con-} and drapes over his back a blanket | placed by Ferguson, Baste, | kota at Grand Forks. Later a clair he built up a stable Herpes i | Washington for Coaching Detroit ..... . Paul, but the home! for five runs and! fracas at used theit “ Littefield. ‘The opening game will) Qe played at Flasher, Sept. 27. The schedule has not been completed. 4 Hettinger Has Veterans At Hettinger, Coach Carl Lower: seven lettermen returning, in-{ cluding Harold Reyerson, captain and | quarterback. The new material is/ promising but none of the candidates | are heavy enough to bolster an al- ready light team. Hettinger will Scott won the 10-round decision from Campoio last night at Ebbe' field and, as a_ resul reckoned with in the hi derby, regardless of the outcome cf the 15-round elimination match Thursday night between Jack in Sharkey and Tommy Loughran at the 4), Yankee stadium. It was a great | come-back for Scott. The blond British perhaps not half a dozen times in a en he comes into his oyn Toledo had to be satisfied with two. | cipant in all the Weiland was the Toledo tosser while y for which such Betts grooved them for St. Paul. Th nators invaded Minneapolis the day of the nd took the long end of a 10 to 8/¢ ‘bai bey 3 are noted. | i 14 | \ | | i | giant had y Lemmon, S. D., Reeder, Bowman, | hardly time to ea few pre- & The Senators og ‘Pwo Games are | lances westures last night when he and junior | Army colors, An extra portion Of | scored 19 hits. | others not scheduled. play Butler at Indianapolis, Loyola at through the American turf, year scheduled with Reeder. was in full retreat, doubled and badly colleges ee aoe trips to far places with — | New Orleans, Duquesne in Pittsburgh | after year. Zev probably was the |, Coach Kenneth I. Dale, a former | punished by a crushing succession of | thiee accepted ad ee tare me" Ree hel NATIONAL LEAGUE and St. Xavier at Cincinnati. | best horse ever developed by Hildreth. Walley City Teachers player, has | short, pile driving rights to the body. | l@rge_unive aad. .08. Bb. nam en ae ogarty es Standin The Indian's new coach, William He also trained Mad Hatter, Priscil- the 1928 team is H. “Lone Star” Dietz, answers an lian, Stromboli, Grey Lag, Silver Fox, fair-sized squad at Marmarth but his , too, are light and inexperienced. fe members of last year's team were lost by graduation. Returning letter- “$men are James and George Morris, €dmund Dernback, Warren Childe Larson and Dayton Ham- mel, Two likely-looking new men are “Alvis Morse and Ben Childers. Mar- Amarth meets two out of state teams in ‘Wibaux, 2 Mont., and Lemmon, 8. D. oie teams to be played are Bel- ‘Wiad, Beach and Bowman. dare and Mott are ex- be in nue better sabe 8 ‘The shaggy-haired, towering Argen- | ‘Won Lost tine was on his foe like a tiger. de- |2t Northwestern 30 livering body blows that made shut- | Robe fling Phil wince and become a dis- remained at Stanford t tinct shade paler. |ner, while Fred Swan, It took all of Scott's defensive in- /eleven, is line coach stinet to survive that round, but | Unive from then on he gave an exhibition | of boxing skill and fine display of | ring courage to outgeneral and out- point his bigger, harder-hitting op- poner. 's margi. was so close that it took'a 2 to 1 declsion to give him the victory. He received the vote of the two judges but Referee Arthur gt van cast his ballot for Campolo. A crowd of 11,000 that paid $45.674 saw the two “leaning towers” put up & brisk battle. s held proudly higher. | Oftentimes | ihe leads a parade of the corps around | ithe gridiron before the _ starting (whistle. During the game he some- | times is permitted to stand on the sidelines a short while and later to head a parade of victory. Then, he is led back to his name- less existence with the garbage wagon, there probably to await in equine anticipation his next call to glory. The Army has no place for idlers, | such as a full-time football mascot would be, so the mule must earn his keep. Tupalo Excited Over Guy Bush Chicago Cub Pitcher Formerly Attended and Played at Tu- palo Military School Chicago, Sept. 24.— (>) — ‘There's | much excitement in Tupalo, Miss., for Tupalo Guy Bush is to be a world series figure. “The old Mississippi mudcat” as they sometimes refer to the Chicago Cub hurling ace went from the Tupalo Military Academy to a base- ball payroll. The payroll didn't last long, but @| long enough for a Cub scout to drop into Greenville of the Cotton State 453 alumni plea for an Indian coach.| Mad Play. and the famous McChes- 61 Dietz is a quarter-blood Sioux. ney owned by E. E. Smathers. Denied by Tumney |i Former “Heavyweight Boxing aia i Champion Uses Only 13 Cincinat : Words in Answer of the at Colgate Bridgeport, Conn., Sept. 24—(7)— REQ. U.S. PAT. OFF. In a 13-word answer James T. Tun- ney denies the truth of charges made |g by John S. Fogarty, of Fort Worth, Tex., in a $500,000 alienation of affec- tions suit. Coupled with his denial, the heavyweight boxing champion ffled's a counter claim for $100,000 damages charging blackmail. Fogarty, in his complains 1h filed last charged Tunney Mrs. | Katherine King Seats at Hot | Springs, Ark., in 1924 and carried on an affair with her at Lakewood, N. J., St. Paul, Chicago, and New York. Mrs. Fogarty also has a $500,000 damage suit on file against Tunney, charging breach of promise to marry. peg Scores 5th Kayo} Laurie Peppin Disposes of St. Paul Man; Donnybrook Fighter Is Winner Winnipeg, Man. Sept. 24—()— Scoring his seventh consecutive knockout, Laurie Peppin, local mid- dleweight, knocked out “Kid” Cul- bertson, St. Paul, in the fifth round of a scheduled 10-round contest Jast, night. A ‘terrific right hook to the jaw sent Culbertson to the floor for the count. Pat Duggan, Donnybrook. N. D., won from Billy O'Brien, Hamilton, Ontario, on a technical knockout in the fifth while Frankie Battaglia, former local amateur, was the victor in the third round over Dave Atler, Minneapolis. Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) Robert Neyland’s Assign- ment as R. O. T. C. Head Will Expire _ Snows Sept. 24.—(?)—The U1 of Tennessee stands to Rly a SMOKE TALKS by the DUTCH MASTERS How much is a good cigar worth? That depends on how much you value something like a half hour of supreme contentment. But we can tell you how much a good cigar costs. You can buy a Dutch Mas ters for as little as ten cents. eee “The hour's P. M. Work’s done for the day, My cigar's a D. M.— St. Paul . 1 ‘Welland and Devormer; Betts a! Hargrave. ‘ Cubs, Pitching, Bush, Cubs, won 18, lost 6. Batting, Simmons, Athletics, .370. Konneth Patrick, bor, N. Y., Plays Baseball, Football, Basketball oe New York, N. Y., Sept. 24.—A star in three sports is Recon Pat- rick of Sackett Harbor, N. Y., 21- year-old recruit signed to report to the training camp of the New York Yunkees next spring. sition he’ played on the, Menlis sition he played on ¢ Manlius 2 School nine for two seasons and Colunaiass $1,200. By the time the league blew up in| mid-s , Guy had won 17 games and lost two. Chicago was too big for the youth | so he the sale and went to under an- outpointed Victorio gentine (10); Ernie Schaaf, Bos- 16 From Canada and 16 From) Gas dpe. Rensett, United States Qualify for

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