The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 23, 1931, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1931 Bismare WIN FIRST GAMES IN SECOND SECTION OF. ‘KITTENBALL LEAGUE Dairymen Wallop G. P. Eat Shop, 17-13, and Linesmen Trim Wills, 10-7 CHEFS GUILTY OF 11 ERRORS| Telephone Men Bunch Three Hits in Last Inning to Break 7-7 Deadlock STANDIN Won Lost Pct. 1 0 1.000 1.000 .090 | Bismarck Dairy Northwestern Bell G. P. Eat Shop. Oo. H. Will 1 0 0 1 0 1 Wichita Falls, Tex. finished | dren, all livin; the 2, left field; Lon, 25, second base; strong in h 2 schedule, and Northwestern Bell,/ base; Clarence, 34, catcher; Horas | Nine brothers make up the Coombs family baseball .009|team, above, which prepared for the 1931 season at They are of a family of 15 chil- Left to right, above, are Keith Coombs, Coombs Up—Coombs on Deck—Coombs in Hole Bryan, 20. right fi twins. In fr Herbert, 27, third 29, first base; forward to t ner, and Archie, 35, and play with the team. fel le, 34, center field; Erfest, 31, jortstop. Clarence and Clyde ‘ont are two younger Coombs, Welner, and Lloyd 9, who serve as bat boys and who eagerly he day when they can don a uniform Which started strong in the earlis>! bracket, Monday night got oif to a} ing start in the second section 0!) he Bismarck Diamondball league. | Junior Pitcher Holds Foes to Two Hits The Dairymen defeated the G. P. Fat Shop, winners of the first section, 17 to 13 in a slugfest, and the Lin men bunched hits in the last inning to defeat the O. H. Will company 10 to 7 in a thrilling contest. The Chefs lost to the Dairymen in spite of their five home runs. M ~ Hummel, on the mound for the Milk-} With Pitcher Ow ‘men, allowed the Chefs 12 hits, strik-| opponents to two s ing out four batsmen. M. Goetz. Chef|inuings, the Cubs Monday di twirler, allowed but 10 hits and also! the Giants 8 to 1 to increase their lead struck out four Milkmen, but 11 Chef/in the Big Four junior baseball errors brought about the Dairy win. | league. The Telephone men bunched three} The defeat pushed hits in the last half of the seventh} deeper into the cel . to score three runs and break a 7 to} While Owens wa turning in his 7 tie. Dale Brow: Northwestern classy performance, his team-mates hurler, started poorly and allowed the | were connecting safely with the offer- Seedmen three runs before the third | 5 of Montgomery. Giant hurler, man in the first inning was retired, )six bingles. Six C t errors aided ut the Linesmen found Adam Brown | the Cubs in scoring, ‘ jn the second to score five times. The| The game was one of the fastest game then progressed as a pitcher S| played this battle. The Linesmen garnered 19) Van Wyk, who is hits while the Seedmen were credited | junior Icops spon: with only seven. | marck board of recrez ‘The Co. A-Capital Laundry game im S will be played after the National| The cont Guards return from Camp Grafton. | morning between the Athletics and Summaries for Monday night's) Robins. other teams of the circuit. games follo' use of wet grounds. the league Tuesday formance and Cubs Beat Giants to Increase Lead the Giants B| s in ABH R ro H Won Lost Pet cu B57 Rob _ ae 667 Athletics ....... Giant. The box scor restricting his afe hits in seven; vo Columbus .... BID FOR AS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W Lost Pet ‘Louisville : ot \st. Paul . | Minneapolis Milwaukee .. Indianay Toledo .. | Kansas City : AMERIC 1 | Philadelphia | Washington . jew Yor | Cleveland . | Bost o | Detroit owens Turns in cissy Per MINNEAPOLIS MAKES GREAT SOCIATION LEAD Saints and Two Games Be- hind Louisville Chicago, June —(?)—Minneap- otis Tuesday was the latest patch on the American Associations crazy- quilt, leadership situation The Millers Monday outpointed 'To- Iedo, 6 to 4, whiles the other Tw: City entrant, St. Paul, was ab:orbin; 19 to 7 slamming from Columbus ‘ith the result. that b was just one-ha mes behind the ce the season started, Louisville. Paul, Columbus, Milwaukee and edo have been in the whip seat ly Kansas City, Indianapolis, au he Millers have not been in the lead. -d the latter o nization, piloted Chicago ... }St. Louis | Boston ' Brooklyn : Public Links Title ' Over Wet Course : 1 : Almost Three Score Contest for GIANTS, SOX MAKE HISTORY The first night baseball game layed in artificial light by two ma- jor league baseball teams was enacted |by the New York Giants and the Chi- cago White Sox in Houston, Tes. | March 21, 1931. One Year Ago Today — Burleigh Grimes climbed into a Cardinals’ uni- jform for the first time and. after a jrather shaky start, pitched St. Louis %\to a 9 to 3 victory over the hard- A. Brown, Fin hits off D. Brow. off A. Brown 11 in out by D, Brown on balls off I umpire: “ 4 corer: B, Hummel. YESTMRDAY'S S-T Ss (By The Associated Press) Vie Frazier, White Sox—Held Ath- Jetics to six hits, doubled with bases filled in fourth, and won, 8-2. Earl Webb, Red Sox—Hit his 28th double and three singles, drove in three runs as Red Sox tripped Tig- ers. Rick Ferrell, Browns—Collected double and three singles off Yankee pitching, drove in four runs and scor- ed two. Chuck Klein, Phillies—Hit 18th homer and two singles to aid in de- feat of Cardinals. Bill Clark, Robins—won fourth straight victory, beating Pirates in 10 innings, 3-2. French Hopes Rest on ‘Bounding Basque’ ‘Wimbledon, Eng., June 23.—(7)— of the men’s French hopes singles title of the British tennis championships for the seventh time in the last eight years, today rested on the shoulders of 33-year-old Jean Borotra, famed “hounding basque.” ‘The elimination in the first round yy of Henri Cochet by the little-known British player, Nigel Barve, 6-1, 6-3, 6-2, left the whole burden to Borotra. ‘The easy manner in which Frank New York youngster, upset veteran South African Davis cup » Dr. B. D. B. Spence, 6-1, 6-1, ‘was a feature of yesterday's play. » {hitting Phillies. Honors Won Last Year by Ade Fordham Minneapolis, June skies threatening rain and water- soaked fairways and greens greeted almost three-score golfers Tuesd: they started their quest for the Mir nesota Public Links Goif champion- ship. Officials predicted one of the clos- est battles in years despite the com- parative small size of the field seeck- ing Ade Fordham’s title. Thirty-six holes of qualifying play was to be held Tuesday, one rour Tuesday morning and one in the aft- ernoon over Westwood Hills’ long course, which requires long and ac- curate shooting. The course is in —i4)—Leaden dean of association managers, nq 2 big bid. Columbus came out of its hitting slump to batter four Saint hurlers for 19 hits. le retained its two game Paul atid drove M | Millers Only Half Game Behind | Mike Kelley's| game behind | SLUGGING PHILS AND AMBITIOUS CUBS ARE “VICTORIOUS IN TILTS Frasier’s Six-Hit Pitching and Double Bring Chisox Win Over Macks DETROIT BEATEN BY BOSOX | | Five-Run Attack Gives Browns Win Over Yanks; Senators’ Game Postponed Philadelphia, June 23.—(4)—A six- run attack in the sixth and seventh innings gave the Phils a 7 to 3 tri- umph over the St. Louis Cardinals. St. Louis.........000 003 000—3 10 3 Philadelphia ....010 003 30x—1 13 2 | Johnson and Wilson; J. Elliott and Davis. CUBS WRECK GIANTS New York — The Chicago Cubs donned their slugging clothes ard {made a wreck of the Giants, 11 to 4, {in the opening game of their series. iChicago .. -000 130 016—11 13 1 New York -000 011 002— 4+ 8 1 Bush and Hemsley; Berly, Chaplin, Schumacher and Hogan, O'Farrell. LOSES MOUND DUEL Brooklyn — Charley Wood went down after a sterling ten inning mound duel with Watson Clark of the Robins, under a score of 3 to 2. | i Other games not scheduled. American League Detroit—Boston defeated Detroit 7 to 2 in the series final and regained its position at the head of the second division as a result. Boston . 100 201 102-7 13 0 Detroit. +000 001 O01—2 12 1 MacFayden, and Berry; Bridges, Sullivan and Schang, Hayworth. WALLOPS ATHLETICS Chicago — Vic FPrasier’s six-hit Pitching and double in the fourth vith the bases loaded paved the | White Sox’s way to an 8 to 2 victory ever the champion Philadelphia Ath- i | leti 3. 000 100 100-2 6 2 000 500 30x—8 9 6 Mahaffey, Rommel and Talmisano; Frasier and ! Philadelphia Chicago | Shores, 'Heving, Grube. 0 line by trim , janar won a long drawn out Monday night from Kansis The Indians scored the winning run in the 10th. tition and will provide : andidates aspiring to the championship. Howard Pousctte. of St. Paul, rded as one of the main threats ‘ordham’s crown but other ‘players, notably Al Priebe and Ed Axtel, have the ability and experiense to give Fordham a close fi Lester Kolstad, Duluth; Eau Univ of Minnesota; Ker, Westwood, also must bi reckoned with. Match play will start Wednesday with two 18-hole matches. The rest of the matches after that will be 36 holes. Ten Years Ago Today—After hon-| oring their former manager, Hugh Jennings, assistant manager of the New York Giants, the Detroit Tigers turned around and Giants 8 to 6 in an exhibition in the automobile city. Five Years Ago Teday —The Chi- cago Cubs asked the waiver price of $4,000 for Grover Cleveland Alexan- der and the St. Louis Cards accepted him after every other club in both! jleagues had refused to consider him| ie an investment. BEAT PROFESS 4 Z Za NAS -~IF I CAN GET SOMEBODY “Ta FINANCE A BALLOOA, AND -THE SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS: FoR ME, I WILL “TRY FoR AN ASCENSION OF TWENTY FIVE MILES UP IN “THE STRATHA-~ UM AH -- INTHE ER- STRATOSPHERE , 10 PICCARDS RECORD OF “TEN MILES! PDD ‘| OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | MRS. HOOPLE SAID f SHE'D DONATE $50 A -To THE FUND ,\F SHE FELT SURE You"D STAY UP THERE INDEFINITELY ! SHE “TOLD ME (T WOULD TAKE TWo Ail BALLOGNS “To HOIST oR & BED, OR Sy TH’ DINING* ROOM 0 C a ‘ 4 ah FINANCING A A BALLOON WOULD MAKE AGREAT INVESTMENT! AT LEAST PEOPLE COULD SEE “THEIR INVESTMENTy Go UP HIGHER, “THRU INFLATION "PR ANE NSE REO USTED humbled the! ROLLICKING VICTORY St. Louis—A five-run attack in the seventh brought the Browns from be- hind to defeat the New York Yan- {kees, 14 to 10, in a three-hour strug- igle. 'New York +102 403 000—10 15 0 St. Louis. -102 303 50x—14 20 1 , Pennock, Weaver, Weinert, Ruffing. Gomez and Dickey, Jorgens; Gray, | Coffman, Stiles, Kimsey and Ferrel ; Washington—Cleveland game pest- | poned, rain, ‘PENNER CHALKS UP | WIN FOR COLONELS j Scores Eighth Victory of Sea- son in Defeating Mil- waukee, § to 2 Louisville—Ken Penner chalked up his eighth victory of the season when Louisville defeated Milwaukee, 5 to 2. Milwaukee +. 020 000 000-291 Louisville ..... 000 103 10x—5 8 2 Jonnard and Manion; Penner and | | | k Dairy and Northwestern Bell Teams Get Off to Flying Start ° CARDINALS AND GIANTS ARE WALLOPED IN MONDAY’S GAMES Don’t Try This on Your Aquaplane With just one girl between them, Martin Keally, left, and Harold Care, right, like to go joyriding in this fashion at Virginia Beach, Va. But they found it so difficult to keep the.party together that they had to practice for a week before they were ready for this picture. one perched so precariously between her partners. Miss Jo Lamberti is the A. NEIBAUER IS LEADING HITTER IN D-BALL LEAGUE Capital Laundry Star Hits at -469 Clip; Mike Goetz Has Hurling Honors Hitting safely 15 times in 32 trips to the platter, A. Neibauer, member of the Capital Laudry aggregation, has a batting average of .469, which puts him comfortably in the lead of those batters who have played enough in the Bismarck Diamondball league so far this season to be classed as regulars. P. Parsnick, J. Schwartz, 8S. Mc- Donnell, and Dutt all have higher av- erages but they cannot be classed as regulars as they have not played enough. Other batting leaders in the league are L. Cleveland, E. Hendricks, F. Hauser, J. Hackett, and S. Goetz, all with marks of .400 or better. Mike Goetz, who hurled the G. P. Eat Shop to victory in the first half of the schedule, continues the lead- ing hurler, having won eight of Ms |10 contests. Dale Brown, Northwest- jern Bell red-head, is second with six victories in 10 starts. | The telephone men are the league's fielding leaders, wtih a mark of .865. | Lague statistics, compiled Monday ‘by Balzer Hummel, official scorer of the league, follow: ‘Team Records WE AB, HOOD 07 1 \o. 44 56 63 iBi Capital Laundry. Company A Pi 3 2 3 4 Mike Goetz D, Brown M. Hummel A. Brown ....6 P. Neibauer .. P. Hedstrom Potter . Papacel Bai senate pip csnerere was coumncaag Parsnick P. J. Schwartz 0{Would net on the fairway. Thompson. McDonnell Schoppo Putnam Swenson A. Olsen . Brown Too, ‘000 Zo00 tooo to00 Sooo. 2000, tho0, 2000 OON'T ATTEMPT TO MAKE THE GREEN ON EVERY SHOT OUT OF THE ROUGH. AT TIMES IT IS BY FAR SAFER fo sHooT F2 What is the surest way of getting out of the rough? sk * | Time after time you probably have seen a golfer in the rough trying to; get the same distance as the shot If you have watched this, you probably have | “;seen him fizzle the shot and then, itrying to make up this new lost dis-| jtanee, bang away at the bail, all the Mime adding strokes to the score of| {| the hole. There are three things to remem- ber when you get into the rough. One| ‘00 | Kels Wallop Hens ‘Toledo—Minneapolis defeated Tol- edo 6 to 4 behind the six-hit pitching of Hensick. Toledo ... Hensick and Griffin; Rabb, Cooney and Devormer. On Batting Spree batting spree to defeat St. Paul 19 to 7. St. Paul .... 002 050 000-5111 Columbus .. 300 0100 42x—19 19 3 Prudhomme, Murphy, Vanatta, Bream and Fenner; Parmalee, Rose and Desautels. Blues Nosed Out ‘Indianapolis—Indianapolis out the Kansas City Blues night game by a score of 4 to 3. Kansas City... 000 021 000 0—3 12 4 Indianapolis. 200 100 000 1—4 10 3 ‘Thomas and Peters; Horne, Smith, Hall and Riddle. nosed. STICKERS Minneapolis .. 401 100 000—6 12 0/§; ++ 300 000 100-4 61 Ferguson, | 0. Columbus—Columbus went on a// ina A of them is to keep cool and relax a) 7 | little more than usual. Another is to try to bring the clubhead down sharply on the ball., making no at-| 0; tempt to hit with a sweeping stroke | Si which will be stopped py the thick | grass, And thirdly, if the lie is very| heavy, it is far safer to shoot straight! out on the fairway where you can get} under way again than it is to waste) all that useless effort in the rough. | 8. Dui A. leveland Hendricks . Hauser kett L. E. F. J, priggs Hindemith . KE. Hoffman . A. McPhee . Wetch . 3. Gray . . Hermann Hultberg Agre . A, Lonberg . Cc. Berger . M. Hellwig &. Kelley ' One Year Ago Today—Before 21,000) Paden fans packed into Chicago Stadium, | W. L. (Young) Stribling, Jr., knocked | out Ctto Van Porat, Norwegian) heavyweight title contender, in the | first round of a 10-round bout. | | Five Years Ago Today — Walter Leverenz, former star pitcher for the Chicago White Sox, hurled a no-hit, no-run game for Buffalo ogainss) (| Reading in the International League. | Schlickenmeyer . Ashmore Farnum . Hicenbise Rott . F ja 1B. ROOKIE PITCHER LETS MACKS DOWN WITH SIX BINGLES Frazier Also Thumps Horse- hide to Aid White Sox in Defeating Athletics (By The Associated Press) A year ago Vic Frasier was spend- ing most of his waking hours follow- ing a brace of mules down the cot- ton rows on his farm in east Texas. He had jumped the Chicago White Sox some months previously for the simple reason that he had found him- self lonesome in the midwest metro- Polis. Yesterday the husky young right- hander turned the Philadelphia Ath- letics back with six hits and helped his teammates bat out an 8 to 2 vic- tory over the world champions. The White Sox, it appears, are about to be rewarded for their pa- tience with Frasier. Rookie pitchers, incidentally, have handed the A's two of their four de- feats this month. Wallace Hebert, the Browns’ southpaw “find,” stopped them 10 days ago. Yesterday's defeat cut a half game from the champions’ lead as_ rain held the Washington Senators idle at Cleveland. The third place New York Yankees fell further back, the result of a 14 to 10 drubbing from the St. ; Louis Browns. Lou Gehrig’s two jhomers went for naught as the | Browns Pounded five Yankees hurlers for 20 hits. Danny MacFayden pitched steady ball in the pinches to give the Boston Red Sox their second straight over Detroit, 7 to 2. The St. Louis Cardinals continued to encounter grief in the east. The Phils handed the National League leaders their fourth defeat in their last five games. Homers by Chuck »| Klein and Pinky Whitney featured the 7 to 3 triumph. |. Rogers Hornsby hit his eleventh |homer of the year with two on to |help his Chicago Cubs plaster the |Giants, 11 to 4, and climb within a |game and a half of second place. | Hack Wilson also did his specialty, and Hemsley hit one in the ninth, when the Cubs scored six runs. For the second time this year, fancy base running by Fresco Thomp- son enabled the Brooklyn Robins to pull out with.a tight one. He stole third base in the tenth inning and scored on Babe Herman's roller to Grantham to give the flatbush flock a 3 to 2 decision over Pittsburgh. Boys Developing At New England Ray Whiting, N. D. A. C. Hurler, Brings New Life to Junior Baseball System New England, N. D., June 23—An interesting experiment which is work- ing with apparent success is being tried out in New England this sea- son, where interest in baseball sur- basses even the days before the World war. When the managers of the New |England baseball team hired Ray Whiting, former first string pitcher \for the University of Minnesota, to hurl for the team they also includea {a clause in his contract that he {should coach all the youngsters in town in the great national sport. Whiting, who now is a senior at the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege, is majoring in education and he likes the position as coach. Young America in New England likes Whit- ing and every day there are from 30 to 50 small boys at the ball park, where there have been many exciting games. Right now there are more than @ half dozen ball teams in New ; England, with players ranging in age ‘from eight to 40 years. New England is proud of the Fire- men, the fast first team, for which Whiting pitches. Still many of the fans feel the most important work he is doing is training the young OP LEAGUE (By The Associated Press) (neluding games of June 22). National League Batting—Hendrick, Reds, .380; Ter- ry, Giants, 364, Runs—Klein, Phillies, 58; Terry, Giants, 47. Hits—Terry, 84; Klein, Phillies, 80. Home runs—Klein, Phillies, 18; Ar- lett, Phillies; Hornsby, Cubs, 11. Stolen bases—Comorosky, Pirates, 9; Culyer, Cubs, 8. Pitching—Bush, Cubs, won 5, lost. 1; Grimes, Cardinals, Brant, Braves, won 6, lost 3. American League Batting—Ruth, Yankees, 398; Coch- rance, Athletics, .385. Runs—Myer, Senators; _ Bishop, Athletics; Gehrig, Yankees, 53. Hits—Cronin, Senators, 88;; Sim- mons, Athletics 87. Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 16; Giants, Cowan Cervinskl Potter . Papacek Holta Fortune . Warner Beer . i, Cass) . Burkhai . Benser E. Beaudoin P. Neibauer , Finlayson Can you start at one of the large dots and strike out all the dots in 12 straight strokes, ending at the other large dot? The diagram shows how to do it in 15 strokes, but the problem is to do it in three less than that. Every turning must be on a dot. Fox. Slonicker . Agre .. . Mosseth . Dohn .. Youngsio . Simonson H, Falconer . entiessnnsaanse . Doyle Paulson | t2 do in 20 rounds. Pitt of Reading, who walked twice, | was the only man to reach first base. | Ruth, Yankees; Foxx, Athletics, 13, | Stolen bases—Chapman, Yankees, Ten Years Ago Today—Tommy | 23; Johnson, Tigers, 17. Gibbons, St. Paul 1%5-pounder,| Pitching—Fischer, Senators, won 8, knocked out Willie Mechan, Frisco|lost 1; Grove and Earnshaw, Ath- fat boy, in the first round at Cleve-|letics, won 12, lost 2. —————————————— Smart Litewate Clothes FOR “ y Summer Wear Tailored to Measure by M. BORN & CO, Chicago, Ill. (OHN HENLEIN Tailor and Cleaner Local Representative Patterson Hotel Basement land, accomplishing in one minute 54 seconds what Jack Dempsey failed | Sam Breadon, president of the Car- dinals, spent $100,000 for ficod-lights on farm clubs in two years before he ever saw a night game.

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