Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIB ~ BNDBAVORS 10 BRING HIS TEAM A VICTORY Bill Shores or George Walberg Looms as Pitcher as Mack Is Silent STREET NOT DOWNHEARTED Jimmy Wilson, Injured Sept. 12, Will Replace Mancuso Behind Plate St. Louis, Oct. 4—(7)—As the St. Louis Cardinals win their pennants in the even years and world’s series play opens in National league cities in the odd years, the Red Birds came back to St. Louis today for the third time in five seasons after they had opened the battle for baseball su- premacy away from home. Gabby Street brought his players to Sportsman’s park with nothing to show for their efforts at Shibe park, against the Philadelphia Athletics, world’s champions. In this he was in exactly the desperate situation faced by Bill McKechnie two years ago when he arrived from the Yankee deficit. On the other hand in 1626 Rogers Hornsby, after two games in New York, had an even break. ‘The home grounds have not been good to the Cardinals in World’s series play. 1926 Last Victory No National league champion has won a series from the American standard bearer since that seven- game battle in 1926 when Grover Cleveland Alexander, in the role of relief pitcher, protected the thin margin of the team when by the Rajah. The present day Cardinals admit- tedly faced a stern assignment in the games at home. With two losses be- hind them they knew that unless they could take the third game of the series, they would have only a slight chance to overtake the flying Ath- letics, If the Cardinals should fail to break into the win column today they would have to win four straight games, possible but not probable in @ world’s series. To capture the important game today, Manager Charles Street named “Wild Bill” Hallahan, his sensational young lefthander, to do the pitching for the Cardinals. 4 St. Louis players insist that Halla- han is as fast as Vance and faster than Robert Moses Grove, the Ath- letics lefthanded ace, and a meeting between the two southpaws has been hailed as a baseball “natural.” There was a possibility that it might ma- terlalize today, but men close to Connie Mack were inclined to think the veteran manager of the Athletics would give Grove another day of rest and send either Bill Shores, young righthander, or George Walberg, a big lefthander, to the mound. Connie maintained his character- ‘The lineup: 8t. Louls Philadelphia Adams, 3° Dykes > Frisch, Cochrane, ¢ Simmons, Umpires, Harry Geisel (American Teague), at plate; Jack Reardon (Na- (American) ler (National), at third. Chisox Trounced By Chicago Cubs "American Leaguers Find Them- selves on Short End of 12 to 1 Score stadium, boasting nothing but aj ouis Cards Home for World .Series WILD BLL ALLAKNINODAKS RALLY IN SECOND HALF T WS A BREEZE// By Laufer JARRETT RESULT IN Td. MEGRATH, ACCOUNTANT OF COUNTE eee | AND D DIT PLA A WAND ALL Davis‘Elkins Made Threat in Second Quarter, but Flick- wait A oRoeReseile GAME, ter, eet ng er Line Held ae $ Sol 1H BD aD ae FIELD GOAL IS SCORED OW eo! oar ND. ett rein University Captain Makes Runs ma i of 60 and 45 Yarde in Second Half ° a) | Suh eee A Ri West Virginia, ite aesobd defeat be tic’ Agee thls state in week ae night, 1¢ 100. feoo. Pea ee southerners. - down’ inthe ‘third period, snd a touchdown and field goal SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1930 last week. The two teams battled through the first quarter without @ score. Play was in the visitors territory through- out the period, The a aiaietalls bran gluggishly, and three ‘The half ended with neither team Mi T G h Se Veet Vitginiate threctaned midway in innesota Teams [EF QOTBALL|(Cophers Set for [scenec nanos e North Dakota's line for Bs 4 first In 6 Games Today =| Vanderbilt Game sor 24,2, ots nts ee HIGH SCHOOL and took the ball to the Flickertall Mott 41; New Leipaig 0. five yard line but lost the ball on a St. John's Meets Hamline; Wi-) Farge is Abentine GD. 0. Clint Rlebeth, Halfback, and) North Daxote went out in front 2° early je third quarter w! nm nona Teachers Trounce cy ial BY din Ue) Harold Anderson, End, Jarrett broke away for s 60-yard run Fort Snelling on Sidelines that took the bail to Davis-Sikins’ Pe Fa terranes four-yard line. On the. pag iniversity 16; —=— burst center Bt. Paul, Oct, 4—()—Minnesote | mikins 0, versity 16; Davis! csneanbil, Ook 4—(er-With| pocorn” Ristinend Splage-tioked college football teams today com-| Eau Claire Teachers 7; Northland |only one practice game behind it, the| the goal and the score was North Da- eted in slx games, only one of which | College 6. ‘ University of Minnesota football | Kota 7, Davis and Hiking 0. counted in the standings of the state), - ae Teachers 68; Fort Stiell-iteam today entered into stiff. mid- t br ged i arg fo sarees ppt | association. That game found S8t.! La Crosse, Wis, Teachers 7: Col- bess poreaegrirg 2 Frome three points to their total when. Rich- John’s meeting Hamline at Norton|umbia College 6. the Vanderbilt University Commo-|Mond booted a field goal from the 15 Field. Aberdeen Northern Normal 9;|dores of Nashville, Tenn, ; yard line, making the score 10 to 0. St, Thomas left early today tor) Stn Datta Uniomey 36; Aue |, rhe, Gophers. scored a 15 to 6 vic- Fargo to meet the North Dakota Ag-|suctana (Sioux Falls) 0. P tory over Vanderbilt last year, bu gies in @ night game; 8t. Olaf met they were not so certain of South Dakota State, the opponent of ue today. Dan McGugin of the the University of Minnesota last New Lei | visitors has a strong team with week, ant Carleton plays at the Uni- pzig is tare youre renuiass in his fee cet hie C shed M ‘Two of Minnesota's stars were ma- Pid ean gre oo isin ru at Mott Jor casualties today, with Clint Ris- Paul Lather, and Hibhing dunior ool-| H Red to his bed wt seach al eel Dern ae ee lor ool-}Home Team Wins by 41 to Ol nent, and Harold Anderson, left. end Winons Teachers college footbat Score as Banning Makes _|aid up with a knee team went on a scoring spree last night, and ewamped the Fort Snelling Sensational Runs Beil mesa Uneups: Soldiers §3 to 0 in a game in that — Kresowaki le Eee Kern, Teacher's quarterback, Mott N. De One ce Annee rushed | ooo it a pre ee, put-|New Leipeig 41 to 0 here Friday aft- ery 5 ote, ing’ 2 i ois times for his mates to take it over. | It was the second win of the season Ee Pigeon Mr gen Barratt Poli Ase gee The Army men held the powerful|for the home team, Mott having Ohlsen re J. Scheffer (c) mond (isle gon e 4 Purple team to ® 13 to 0 soore in the|beaten Hettinger 2 to 0 last week-|srockmeyer (c) qb Parker er Cae: eretiaony head linestene, first “half, but in the second half end. Swarts Th ‘Thomas BSS Thompsons no NOAA Uineumen, when they could not stop the passes) Banning, of the Mott club, madelw. fess th Leonard bane Ke and line bucks of the Teachers. five sensational runs of over 35 yards| asa fb Fortune Four of the winners’, touchdowns |each while Roemmick was the shin- ’ Wolverton Br came as the result of forward passes.|ing light in the line for the victors.) Officiale—Referee, EK. 8. Macphail, Opem and Kern in the backfield,|He is a tackle. Michigan; umpire, F. A. Lambert, ; Rice at center, and Mullen and Kra-| Wruck played best for the visitors,| Ohio Btate; field judge, M. P. Ona, ton Go mer at ends played stellar football Russa Osborne used two full| Notre Damé; head lineaman, - 2 for the winners. teams for Mott. 4 Mucks, Fi Nine in 38, € Makes First Nine in 35, Even and Has 73 at End OUR BOARDING HOUSE ’ By Ahern of 18 Holes WELL — ALL You TURTLES CAN Bi wilh HAVING A ~% “HE “UB “THIS WEEK wwe BATH-RooM D FARE-WELL SHOWER PUT IAS! AND OKAY WITH Met we ABUT ITS GOING “TAKE DUST AS MUCH WATER AS’ Time AS TH’ “UB, ww You CANT SMakeE ~READ ~ To WASH “TH” BALLOON OR STAY UNDER A SHOWER For 4( SURFACE AN’ EQUATOR AS HOUR AT A SaAK I ae ~~ “THE SHOWER WILL SAVE, ME PLEATY oN WATER, GAS+ . LIGHT, Time, i : §o58 i i E ¥ i : H i i By a3F z i z g Score is 13 to13; North Da- kotans Have Strong Pass- ing Attack hird Time in Five O BEAT DA Rival for Helene and Jo danger, and its offense had the punch to score when the opportunity | Miss Grace presented it as the plunging, Covtiog, Guard was, & guard pulled into baokfield to play quarterback after the game at’ Fargo! also, DIAMONDBALL ENTHUSIASTS . TO STAGE BANQUET TUESDAY Plans for 1931 Will Be Made and New Set of Officers to Be Elected Bismarck diamondbail fans will jae Tangeet meeting in the season at a Den at the Grand Pacific ho- was o! y- and all others in- in advancement of the sport in the Capital City are invited to at- Robert. Byrne, president of the Bis- Jeague, will at the ban- | (Central ee Censor Ut wl be ed Estimated attendanoe, at the session. be made with Don Tracy, e Monday at St. Louis, Wi nemo? eph one fag ny office before Philadelphia, if ae is Tuesday morning, it is announced. Sponsors of the banquet are the agar ct ie, Mat aes Record Crowd Is Seareny, Bismarck , Grand Pa- Expected to See and Light company, Northwestern . ot Merete mnses| U-Bison Contest qompat. Capital Laundry, and Gam- 2,500 Tickets for Game at Fargo October 25 Put on Sale Through State Ray Miller Loses - To Justo Suarez Argentine Still Has Perfect] Stved to" ‘Fargo for the homecoming Record in Hts Campaign + | Ports Dakota and Nerihy Pekote have been in America poole ons ire Poets nggd New York, Wiay tint 4500 tickets have’ hess apie Ot the -aramtine bes bandied | piled < at central points march toward a lightweight cham-|"tt is expected that the University- plonship battle with Al Singer. Bison game will settle the conference Tugged South American iis | title. Never before have the two pba ag eaten cage teums (seme to be as evenly ing out a decision on points over Ray | ¢, Wok for the to le fans Aggies to topp! , Chicago hook star, at | West's machine. While Dacotah field Madison Square tine = stiff has never been “sold out” for a foot- argument; but Quares gained his | Mu Semta'te fe pune before 8 oe triumph fairly Q ord crowd. ay e Remainder of schedule: Sunday and peer Notre Dame Irishmen Will Try Luck Against Southern Methodist t South Bend, Ind. Oct. 4—@— Notre Dame, once the nomad of the football world, was at home today in its beautiful new $7,000,000 sta- dium, to test its 1930 strength against the aerial circus from South- ern Methodist university. Although bedridden most of last season, Cgach Knute Rockne tutored his team this year, his health re- covered. The football sage will at tempt to pilot his huge squed un- def through 1° opponents, among wilctl here deco 00 appear %0 bs ’ soft one. ‘The probable ips: So. Methodist Pos. Notre Dame Koontz le Kosky Butler It Culver Terrance Ig Kassis Powell c Yarr od TE eeters rt Donoghue Long re Conley Gill qb Carideo Ih Schwartz Kattman rh Brill Hopper fb Mullins Officials referee, Don Laurie (Princeton); umpire, John Schommer (Chicago); field judge, Jay Wyatt (Missouri); head linesman, John Garrity (Texas). GEHRIG NOSED OUT BY SIMMONS, LATE. FIGURES NDIGATE, Al Batted .381 to .379 for Lou; Figures Are Semi-Offi- ‘ cial Only » Chicago, Oct. 4—(#)—Semi-officia) returns from the hard fought Ameri- Lou Gehrig, of the New York Yan- ‘The averages, official up to and in- cluding games of September 21 and unofficial for the last week of the they were: Babe Ruth, New York, and Carl Reynolds, 359; Mickey Cochrane, » B57; EB team average Years .| VIS- ELKINS 16-0 IILONG RUNS BY RE) Rockne Eleven Begins Another Drive | ) «