The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 27, 1929, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1929 iat iii all Might Develop in Central Section SHARKEY JOLTS BOXING WORLD BY KAYOING LOUGHRAN IN 3RD BOSTON GOB FIGHTS OR SCMELNG NEXT Two Lefts and Smashing Right Put Handsome Philadelphi- an Out on His Feet LOUGHRAN OUTBOXED, TOO New Powers in Prep Footb EW ROCKFORD AND IARVEY ESPECALLY PROMISE STRENTH pach ‘Jug’ Newgard Optimistic Over Outlook With Big Squad at Hiilsboro Zachary, ‘Nothing Pitcher,’ Is Yank Mainstay AMERICAN LEAGUE Standings JIMMY DYKES Jimmy Dykes, the jack of all trades of the Athletics, is a most important cog in Con- nie Macks machine, although you seldom see his name in the head- lines.... Dykes has played but little during the last two months of the season due to a strained ten- don.... In base- ball parlance it is known as Char- leyhorse.” . . . Every effort is be- ing made to get him in shape for NORMAN McMILLAN Norman McMillan, who is favored to play third for the Cubs, has had a j unique career in baseball . . Cae; - Just an ordinary player, he has been fortunate to {Detroit . get into two world ; Chicago ries . . . . .|Boston Broke in with the New York Yan- kees and shared in a series with |New York .. that club . . «| Washington | 9 Got into one game|_ Wells, Moore and Dickey; Hadley, for one inning as | Brown, Braxton and Rucl, Sp2ncer. @ substitute .... Also played with Boston and St.|Philadelphia . § oe of the | Boston Ld at merican League.| Earnshaw, Walberg and Cochrane: « . Like Hack Wilson, he took a | Perkins, Russell, Durham and Asby. trip to the minors and was lucky enough to come back to the big show asa Cub. . . . Got the call over] others not Beck at third, despite the known aperttig fielding ability of that player. . . Has been below the .300 mark all sea Won Lost i - 10 45 Philadelphia . New York Cleveland St. Louis . Washington HOPE COACH IS PESSIMISTIC | { loach Kotchian Working Hard With Seven Lettermen on Fessenden Machine : Games Yesterday Bostonian Put Up Most Con- vincing Exhibition of Power and Speed in Two Years 10 LCAN READ BARKARDS SIGNATURE, By ALAN GOULD : 7 BALL New York, Sept. 27.—(—The Jekyil and Hyde of the heavyweights, Jack { Sharkey, has put the big punch back the series..... in the picture, just as it seemed that He is a far more}. there wasn’t a man-sized wallop leit] valuable man at third than Sammy in the ranks. The big Boston sailor|Hale. . . . Dykes is the fighter, exploded it last night, without the | Hale the pacifist . . .. With Dykes slightest warning, to accomplish the} in the lineup, the Athletics are far downfall of Tommy Loughran, aston-|peppier. . . . He has a voice that ish a crowd of 45.000 spectators, and | carries all over the field, keeps up a restore himself to the top of the} constant chatter and means every- heavyweight brigade that has been|thing he says . . . . The rest of | son, but has been carried along by the battling so listiessly for the title left|the club invariably absorb his en- | rest of the power in the Cub lineup |Chicago .. by Gene Tunney. thusiasm, making it a tougher team|. . . . Hits a long ball when he /Pittsburgh . Sharkey, in the most convincing ex-|to beat. . . . Dykes has played |connects. . . . Is of the nonchal- |New York hibition of speed and punching skill| every position on the Philadelphia | ant type, a la Bob Meucel of the Yan- !St. Louis . he has shown in more than two years,| club except pitch and catch. . . ./kees. . . . Bats right-handed and |Philedclphia . knocked out the handsome Philadei- | He hopes to do both before he passes | has a great arm, but is inclined to be !Brooklyn ... phia boxing master in the third round | out of the majors . *. . Likes | erratic and may prove a weak spot in |Cincinnati of a 15-round match at the Yankee | to third base best. . . . Will|the Cub defense... . Has hit |Boston stadium. be at that position in the series if his | better in the National than American, Fought Seven Minutes leg has mended . . . . Is also a| despite the fact he is in a curve ball In less than seven minutes of actual | great golfer, usually shoots in the | league, and curves ure his admitted fighting—after 27 seconds of the third | seventies. weakness. Eesha ee PAGE AND THISTLETHWAITE Chicago-Cleveland, rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE tandii Poor a1 om! “HE AINT GOT Brooklyn ..... Philadelphia . - 12 18 Vance, A. Moore, Blethen and berry; Sweetiand and Davis. H pectedly vicious attack crushed the) heavyweight hopes of the retired ruler of the 175-pound division. Forcing the fight from the outset, De- Sharkey rushed Loughran to the ropes at the start of the third round, doubled him up HOPING FOR STRONG STARTERS Pittsburg .. 1 9 St. Louis .. » 2 7 Petty and Hemsley; Mitchell, Ha achary Wins J | Slim Sallee. Slim had wonderful con- jtrol. Sallee’s ferocious windup had |; many batters scared stiff. He would ‘get a wicked gleam in his eye and go into a cat-fit before delivering | | the ball. And when it came over it| was usually a cripple. But it was ; Where the batter wasn't expecting it jand it made Slim a great pitcher. UNDEFEATED THIS SEASON Devore Takes It i" ae Christy Mathewson once told of | A - then Sallee was pitching for the St.) dim Bagby and Slim Sallee Were | Louis Sealant = the Smorng " Josh Devore pla: in the outfield. Two Other Great Pitch- | Josh was scared silly by Slim's sinus ers With ‘Nothing’ with a left to the body, another left to the head, and dropped the star- ted, wilted Phila- delphian with a smashing right uppercut to the jaw. Loughran arose at the count of five, more from instinct than any- thing else, stag- gering toward a ‘Nothi Bail’ But Z othing on Ba u ahi : Burgstahler, Jo2 St. Jacque, Ralph é =| Miller and Herbert Mohr. Promisinz, Yank Heads Could Find imper- d | Norte. ch are James Parsons, Robert | “Oth irants for positions are|Norlie, Clyde Pepple. Herman Rap-| pul Hogans, Horton. Morris, ward ) Pulm, Arthur Zuber, Ralph Dunham, | Jievre, Merle Stone. Robert Mar-|Dick Engbrecht, Donald Price, Rus-| James Wakeland, Milton|sell Fahey, Charles Hemrich and Tom berg, Arthur Solga. Stanley Bae- Thornton. Foxx Is Baby of Series but May | Prove Lusty One Two Big Ten Coaches Are Wait- ing for Injury and Exam- ination Results BOTH PLAY DOUBLEHEADERS Michigan Also Plays Double- header, While lowa Faces Carroll Machine Others not scheduled. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Standi B tt Les! ar ir, Clarence Vote and Meryln E' tant Place on Squad for More Like Him Kansas City jSt. Paul .. Minneapolis Indianapolis . Columbus .. Louisville Milwaukee . e i] Winifeld! While there are no heavy men on the squad, the team will not be too| light, as most of the playe: eigh | Douglas Olson, Ke between 140 and 160 pounds. Fessen-/| Rupert, and LeRoy Stromberg.!den will play New Rockford, Harvey, | ew Rockford has scheduled games|Carrington. Minnewaukan, Coopet ith Carrington, Coo' wn, Har-|town, Maddock and Drake. Fessen- fey, Fessenden and Minnewaukan. {den showed promise when it romped With only four lettermen returning, | over McClusky 55 to 0 last week-end. 2 football outlook is not so pro Lettermen returning at Carrington Ing at Minnewa n. Captain Or-|are Clarence Baker, Herbert Bohn, file Mahony and Ernest Olson, two! Lester Gwynn, Ralph Jones and Ed- =pound backs; Orville Rac, 160-| sar Adams. As new men. Coach Gar- ound center, and Stanley Canc, 163-/ field Sorenson will have Borderud. ound end, are the veterans Coach! Brazell, Caylor, Cuaach, Fielda, E. H. Holmstrom will have. Other/and H. Guenther, Hewitt. Kunkel, Connie Mack Can Use Him Any Place, Catcher, Third, First, | or in the Outfield Note.—This is another of a se- ries of stories dealing with per- sonalities of the Athletics and Cubs, soon to meet in the world’s series. cus windup. He was duck soup for the big pitcher until one day John Mc-! Unhesitati Magnolia stopped Graw called young Devore aside and eae the fight, for hran, h on his ordered him to let himself be hit by feet, was in Speiairin daze his arms one of Slim's pitches. (hanging and helpless. It was a tech- “That guy can’t break @ pane of | nical knockout, but if ever a man was * glass at 60 paces.” whispered McGraw. | thoroughly “out on his feet” it ‘Step in there and let him plunk you | Tommy, too dazed to know what in the ribs or it will cost you $100.”: happened; that his dreams Chicago, Sept. 27.—(#)— Coaches Pat Page, of Indiana, and Glenn ‘Thistlethwaite, of Wisconsin, today awaited reports from the injury and By BRIAN BELL ‘was eligibility fronts before naming line-| Philadelphia, Sept. 27.7)—Jimmy {Columbus ups for their 1929 football season in-| Foxx will be the baby of the 1929/Kansas City Py WERNER LAUFER y call Tom Zachary, veteran; ndidates for the team are Steve lard, Kenneth Tollefson, Har:y Ma- oney ug. Kermit ¢ played with Fessenden, Carr ock, New Rockford and La’ ddock will be played twice. Hore Is Pessimistic Pessimism prevails at Hope, where ts are said to look anything ut bright due to the loss of several terans through graduation. The jad is exceptionally light, including ly one letterman and one new pros- weighing over 150 pounds. Men Coach Rupert Edwards, former ordia player, will have to ih are Tom Newe!l. igar Anderson, Arthur ton Fuller, Randall Cui Kirkow, y, Auston bel, Bruise Kotte, Leslie John- | Robert Curtis, Leo Colbert, and John Burchill, Wayne orgenson, Vivian Visby, Robert Mc- wghlin. Delmar Thorsland and niey Hanks. Among the teams epe will meet are Hillsboro, Ender. Cooperstown and Casselton. Dther games are sought. | | A. fairly heavy squad greeted eo; Newgard, former Bison star, the opening practice at Hillsboro. e team will be lighter than last ’s but more experienced as eight termen are returning. The back- d will be heavy, being made up of n Stanley Lillieberg, Milford on, William Herka, three vet- who average 165 pounds, and other members will be chosen Edmund Vinje, Lloyd Kaldor Charles Meyers, all of whom th over 150 Newgard Anderson is a triple threat man, berg is a good line-plunger and @ good ball-lugger. e candidates are Sidney John- N, Ordean Johnson, George Lillie- ; Harvey Gordon, William Rei- Raymond Live, Walter Kritch- , Frank Sayer, Joe Best, Ed- Webster Rowan, Mil- | Prendberg, Millard Borke and Bagstad. Hillsvoro has a Sehedule than usual. engag- ‘Hope, Devils Leke, Mayville, ara Casselton, Michigan City, f Harvey Has 11 Vets _A complcte team of lettermen, all yeig) over 15€ pounds, have re- Sam ‘William /Smith. Trullinger, Winters, Wiseman te- | and Adam: j Lawlor, Melgard, Niels Nordeen. Odland, Schultz, Scheaffer, | cat f Curves. a eal on his infield and Cooperstown, Michigan City and Lakota have teat sota,| Which are expected to give good ac-| moi counts of themselves before the sea- son ends. Tribute to ‘Mite’ Paid by Followers. 3 build | Funeral Services for 2 P. M. To- | (Tirz Dan Waish,! day Arranged for ‘Church Around Corner’ New York, Sept. 27.—(?\—Metropol- | itan baseballmen paid their last trib- | i=: ute to Miller J. Huggins. “Mit ager” of the New York Yan! day. Funeral services for the Yankee | chieftain who died Wednesday, were | arranged for 2 p. m. in the Church of | the Transfiguration, the Church Around the Corner.” Hundreds of close friends, acquaint- ances and just “plain fai passed by the mighty little baseball veteran's ; bier in the mortuary chapel of the | church. Arthur Fletcher and Charles O'Leary, coaches, and Babe Ruth, Lou Gehvig, Tony Lazzeri and Earle Combs were selected as pallbearers. The Yankees’ American League game with Washingten was postponed allow the players to attend the fun- eral. Huggins will rest beside his father and mother in Cincinnati. Final services are to be held in the first Precbyterian church, Cincinnati, Sun- day afterncon. Members of the im- mediate family will accompany the body by train to Cincinnati as will Caarles McManus, repreceyting the Yaniee club, Bob , an inti- mate of long standing, and a commit- te: Baseball Writers’ Association of ‘/Glénna Collett, Helen Hicks, Edith Quier and Mrs. Stew- art Hanley Survive “Little | th had two or three hers” on their staff like Tom Zachary they would beyond ni. Saehary is the only @ tacre or less ne bex to remein un- To date he has ww that this is ke shelled off xt time he goes on the mound. out for Tom Zachary and all his admirers to knock on wood.) “fil Washed Up" Just cbout a year ago Zachary was ‘itten he will the Senators. Clark Griffith wanted ediate delivery cn young Ad Liska of Minneapolis, and intend wached up cs for conecrned. Griff asked the customary Waivers, figuring nobody would claim ‘t-handed relic. But Hvggins him up by refusing to waive. #05 sore £5 a boil. The “Old Fox" couldn't understand why Evggins thought there was any major leegue pitching left in the 31- year-cld “nothing pitcher.” He burned up telephone wires trying to argue Eug out of claiming him, But Miller Was adamont, end finally secured Tom for the weiver price of $7,560. Ruggins hed the idea Zachary would be just the mea to tate the elting Herb Pen- noci:'s piece. Huggins wes right, and it wes a cass of the “Cld Tox” being outfoxed. Tom won seven games for the Yenks the balance of thet scason ead beat the &t. Lou's Cardinals in the third gcme of the world series. | This year Huggins had been picking jfcl not to put too ma aging aria by working Tom too ofien. That is ore reason Zach- from the New York chapter of the | ¢ry has been the tovgheci guy to beat. | Dut enocher reason is Tor is a “noth. ing p-tehe When they call a guy a “ncthing Piteher” he is usually a winning pitch- er. A who gets knocked out regularly has the players’ sympathy and never dros such a sarcastic ap- peilaticn, “Nothing pitchers,” as a Mostly pop up lazy na the “Big Bill” route. } Josh thought a lot of his ribs, bu: }more of the money. With knees; knocking he closed his eyes and, ducked into the ball. McGraw was right. Josh hardly felt the impact, jana from that day on Devore was no’ lenger a sucker for the “Missouri / sheriff.” ‘Spears Shuffling Candidates Often’ gurski Shifted to Tackles; Oja May Be Center { | i | | avout to be shipped tg the minors by | Minneapolis, Sept. 27.—If any sweeter battle for a position on a con- ference eleven develops this year than that which rages over the Minnesota center job, let it now be told. Things started off with Wayne Kekela, the veteran senior, passing the oval, and Lloyd Johnson as his obvious runner up. Both. are letter- men. Then, one evening, remember- ing that he had practically no tackles, Dr. Spears cent Kakela to the right tackle position and kept him there. make as a heavyweight last night, but 1 did not do him any good. He was out: classed and outpunched by the ring a slight favorite, was outboxed during the brief period of battle and in the same ring where the light heavyweight king had last defended his 175-pound title in a masterful ex- hibition just a few weeks ago. ‘That filled a tackle gap, but my! what it did to the ambitions of the would-be centers! Now there are no less than four, possibly five, strug- glers for that position. Lloyd Johnson, Bert Ojs, who was a guerd until Saturday, Lloyd Stein, Two Harbors, ERF pots for Zachary. He had been care- | been sota, Johnson classmen, Oja foctiall they play lyear. ‘The latter took Yankees Win After Entering Battle First Time Since 1917 Without Huggins u ul it z bg | H fi 3 8 Hi | i il mall : : & E : i : world series, but he may prove a lusty Kemner and Devine; Nelson, infant. The Maryland boy who led! Thomas Peters, Ai . . the American league in batting for} a ee ee months before being displaced by his! ef : f i fait g g : i [ i i i 5 i Ihe rite E EFET ERE at Ait ai B oe : ‘3 PEeeEREL SS age i caf HT ing star, Ticketed as; Paul Revere Wins Yesterday to Toledo .. 1 Milwaukee . Rabo and Devormer; Gearin and Net Total of $2,611.80 for John Heelan Chicago, Sept. 27—(P)\—Paul_Re- flashed around the Lincoln fields j CITIES SERVICE OIL ahd GREASE “ONCE—ALWAYS” a kc SERVICE DRUG . + Geo. B, Shank

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