The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1931, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1931 | A’s Stand With Backs to Wall As Cards Take Strategic Position | PHILADELPHIA PINS INOTRE DAME AND NORTHWESTER FAITH ON BARNSHAW Veteran Is 10 AVERT DISASTER First Time in Five Years Na-| tional League Has Had Series Advantage | MACK, SILENT AS EVER, q Burleigh Grimes Holds Down | 9 Opposition Hits in Mas- | { terful Exhibition | | | f Philadelphia, Oct. 5.—()—For the | f ‘first time in five years, the National : League, represented by the St. Louis Cardinals, held a world series advan- tage today over the champions of the American League. i In as many ways as the situation} ! could be diagnosed, these surprising | ; Red Birds of Missouri had the Phila-/ delphia Athletics, world champions for two straight years, on the run. ‘They lead in the series, two games to) one, the first time a National League club has done that since the Cards of 1926 took two of the first three games | from the New York Yankees and fi-| nally won the series four games to three. They have beaten Connic Mack's great pitching duo, Lefty Grove and George Earnshaw in suc- cessive games, they have all the better | of pitching strength, strategic posi- tion, psychology and greatest of all,j winning impetus. { Tuesday veteran, Connie Mack.! seeking his third straight world | championship and the fifth series) title in a row for the American League, faced a situation truly des- perate. ‘Against the chart of the Cardinals ' he had but one bulwark to throw up| against them—“Big Jarge” Earnshaw. | If the Red Birds can beat the great! righthander as they did in the second | game, then there is not a baseball onslaught of the Cardinals and went Lefty Grove, veteran Philadelphia twirler, was unable to withstand the] series game, 5 to 2. Beaten 4 i down in defeat in the third world man in this hive of series excitement and conjecture who will concede the | i A’s the slightest chance of catching | St. Louis in the final three games. Mack Is Silent j The ancient Mack, silent as ever,’ GRIMES HIS PITCHING START | FARGO MAN CLAIMS HEGAVE d showing more and more of his 68/ years as he watches the breakdown ‘of the machine the baseball world | hailed as invincible only a week 850, | was faced Tuesday with the problem | of making quick and drastic repairs| , done fine relief work over the past two series, are favored. The probable lineups: St. Louis (N) Philadelphia (A) t before it was all too late. Same Bishop, 2b ‘There also were reports rd Conte Frisch, 3b Hass a Y to replace regular | Depicts ec \ ene, Mule Haas, with Roger | Bottomley, 1b Simmons, It | Cramer, a young substitute. The oat ‘ xX, 1 Mule has not been hitting. But fi witson’ ¢ ee Bs | Connie were to yank the members of \Gelbert, as ee ee ie his club who had quit getting base-| Johnson, p fant o | hits he ‘would have to send nine sub- | stitutes against the Cardinals in the fourth game of the series here cass) day. | One again it was the same old) story yesterday. | Bewhiskered and vengeful, seeking | to balance the scale for the two five | hit defeats plastered on him last year! by the A’s Burleigh Grimes, snarling! 5 4 é his hatred added another pitching! Captain Charlie Grimm Shoves masterpiece to the three hit 2 to 0 shutout Wild Bild Hallahan doled out | in the second game of the opening contests in St. Louis. ' As if the presence of the president, who in five games never had seen) the Athletics defeated, were not; enough to insure victory, Connie sent! Lefty Grove, the long left hander with the tremendous speedball, to pull his | burning brands from the fire. And eight innings later a youngster named. Leroy Mahaffey was doing Mack’s| twirling, Grove was all but in tears in| his shower, and the A’s were stili feebly reaching for the offerings of the blasphemous Grimes. Get Two Hits They got to Burleigh for two hits, one of them Al Simmons towering home run with two out and one man on in the ninth innings, as the Cards belted Robert Moses for 11 hits and four runs before Mahaffey came in to win 5 to 2. For seven innings the veteran faked Spitballs at the helpless A’s and baf- fled them with his curve and control. ‘There were visions of a no-hit game | and gradually the crowd swung to the side of the gallant warrior. They wanted a no-hit game, something | never before accomplished in world | Series history. But the right hand master of the dead art, the spitball, passed Jimmie Foxx to start the eighth and was faced with the problem of sacrificing personal glory for the good of the team. Rather than take a chance on) @ rally, he pitched to Bing Miller to} make him hit, following the strategy | Tea ear that with one out, a ball to an in-/Outstanding Professionals Re- fielder might mean a double play.; : Burleigh gave Bing a pitch a trifle too! Spond to Lure of $5,000 Prize Money Walberg Cubs Win to Even Up Chicago Series Race With Double Chicago, Oct. 6—(#)—The sum of $7,421.62—the difference between the! winners’ and losers’ pools in the Chi- | cago baseball championship series—! was the objective of the Cubs and | White Sox in the final game ‘Tues- | lay. i Captain Charlie Grimm of the Cubs, shoved the National Leaguers| back into the race for the title Mon-| day and just in time. In the ninth, with the Sox leading by 2 to 1, and two men on, Grimm rammed out a jdouble to give the Cubs a 3 to 2 triumph and square the series at three victories each. The other thrill of the game in the second inning, when, after Vic Frazier, young Sox righthander, had walked Guy Bush, Cub hurler, Catcher Frank Grube attempted to slug Umpire George Hildebrand, to emphasize his disapproval over the decision. Grube was restrained by Manager Donic Bush and Coach Mike Kelley, and was. ordered from the field. Tommy Thomas for the Sox, and Pat Malone for the Cubs, were the pitching prospects. 220 Golfers Play good and the right fielder banged it for a clean single. The tension tightened. Grimes hac equalled the world series record of the! Salisbury Plains, N. Y., Oct. 6—(@) New York Yankee southpaw, Herb|—Inaugurated only three years ago, Pennock, who went seven innings|the J. J. Lannin memorial tourna-) without allowing the Pittsburgh Pi-|Ment rapidly is developing into one | rates a hit in 1926, and now had only |°f golf's outstanding competitions. | the record of one hit in @ full nine| A fleld of 220 players, including | inning game set by Ed Reulbach of |™0st of the leading professionals, was | the Chicago Cubs against the Chicago | €Btered in the 1931 renewal of the White Sox in the series of 1906 to classic, starting Tuesday over the No. ;4 course of the Salisbury Country snomteg” “He Got the next three men /cyub, “Tie chief lure for the profes. ionals was prize money of $5,000 of Grimes Was Ilt \ ‘ ‘which the winner will receive $2,000. | Genes: erreiaied been Th tate zon the | Heading the big field was Gene| panels tart the opening gene, | Satazen, 1930 winner; Tommy Armour faa te b Rage loadlliect a game, of Detroit, British dpen champion, gn ae ies pulls out of /Tom Creavy, National P. G. A. title- piteh the ninth. He oes come Out to holder, MacDonald Smith, Metropoli- 4 le le got two men on|tan and Long Island champion, and grounders and then passed Mickey) Pay) Runyan, winner over Sarazen Cochrane. A few seconds later A!/in the finals ‘of the Metropolitan P. Simmons reached for » high ball on/G, 4. tournament Sunday. Be isle and slugged it over the! Other leading contenders were Jim nels wall jBarnes, Johnny Farrell, Clarence leigh’s shutout went with that |Gamber, Ed Dudley, Al Watrous, Wild Soaring ball and so did his vision of | Bill Mehlhorn, Aubrey Boomer of @ one-hit game, but the two hits he France, Wiffy Cox, Joe Kirkwood, Leo did allow placed him in the choice | Diegel, Denny Shute and Harry Coop- company of six great hurlers who | er, | have performed that feat in @ world! ‘The tournament, consists of 72 holes | serles game, of medal play with 18 holes Tuesday | Gabby Street, recent convert to and 18 Wednesday. | Connie Mack's theory of silence! See would not name his starting Pitcher| Ice patrol vessels of-the U. S. Coast} today, but he can afford to gamble. Guard cover a radius of from 5,000 to’ ‘Either Sylvester Johnson or Jim 6,000 miles in their search for ice- Lindsey, both right handers who have | bergs, {Fred Cook claims he did. ~ asked by Grimes’ father to get the tion. From there, Cook claims, Burleigh |$° traversed the path to the vont | | | more ‘ Fred Cook Says He Arranged For Tryout for Famous Spi baller Back in 1911 St. Paul, Oct. 6—(#)—One can take one’s choice as to who discovered Burleigh Grimes who pitched the St. Louis Cardinals to a brilliant 5 to 2 triumph over’ Philadelphia's Athletics; in the third world series game. Russell C. Bailey at Eau Claire, Wis., says he did. In Fargo, N. D., Bailey sets forth he heard of a Clear B Lake, Wis., ycuth, with great promise as a hurler while the former manager of the Eau Claire club in the Wisconsin-Minnesota league in 1912. He signed him up. Burleigh, so Bailey says, won his |first start, lost his second then be- | j¥ came the mainstay of the club and; \ \ 4 | Went through the minors and into the} National Leaguers Back in ibig meet Z | But Cook claims as manager of the Red Wing, Minn., team in 1911 he was youngster a tryout with some club. Cook said he directed Burleigh to Bailey and when in 1913 the young- ster again requested him to get him B a job pitching he directed him to Ned | W Egan, then manager of the Ottumwa, Towa, team of the Central Associa- {piled by Hummel follow: | was | Dairymen Lead Batters in D-Ball Loopy :yENS PRACTICING Pitchers | Batting honors in the Bismarck | Commercial D-ball League were cap- ; tured by the Bismarck Dairymen | while the G. P. Eat Shop aggrega-/| tion walked off with fielding honors, according to averages released Tues- day” by Balzer Hummel, official league scorer. Tod Potter with a record of 10 wins! and one defeat heads the list of| pitchers. C. Eisenbisz hit at a .472 clip to lead batters who had been to the} plate more than 10 times. Other) regulars whose performances with the stick netted them averages of more than .400 were Adam I%own,| 445; M. Hummel, .440; M. Goetz,! 433; Robert Byrne, 426; J. Ashmore, ' 405; and A. Beer, .400. | Official league averages as com-/ TEAM HITTING W. LA Bismarck Dairy 16 G. P, Eat Shop.20 O. H. Will Capital Lary.!. 5 31 1253 | | Pet, | 873 3.870 | 8638, i344! i832 1787 | | P. Eat Shop W. Bell He Will?) smarck leagues and his sensational two-hit game of Monday? ROCHESTER WINGS FAVORED TO WIN ST. PAUL SBRIES Eastern Club Needs Only Two More Victories to Take Minor League Classic Rochester, N. Y., Oct. 6.—()-— Shortest “Little World Serles” since 928 was in prospect Tuesday as the; . T 1 IhnL Rochester Redwings, champions of! annin ourney the International League, Paul, American Association Associa-' tion pennant winners, prepared for} the fifth game of the seties, and St. The Redwings needed only two, victories to clinch the series and their chances looked particular- ly bright in view of the tremendous batting punch they showed in win- ning three of the first four games in St. Paul. Billy Southworth planned to send/ Carmen Hill, bespectacled veteran, to the mound for Rochester Tues- day while Lefty Leifield of St. Paul wavered between young Johnny Murphy and Russell Van Atta. Advance ticket sales indicated a | crowd of 15,000. Leonard to Make Comeback Debut New York, Oct. 6.—(?}—Benny Leonard will try to prove to the New York State athletic commission Tues- day night that he still is a good enough fighter to appear in Madison Square Garden. Ordered by tife commission to start his come-back in the smaller clubs, the retired’ ‘undefeated lightweight champion will meet Pal Silvers, Brooklyn middleweight, in a ten Fann bout at the Queensboro stad- jum, H Seventy-five miles an hour will be the average normal car speed in the next five or ten years, automobile engineers, predict. PITCHERS’ RECORDS WL HA SO W Pct. | Tod Potter 1 70 13 9 .900: Mike Goetz . 4131 69 43.733) Matt Hummei 9 208 157 86 1640 Adam Brown 10 211 140 43 ‘583 | Dale Brown . 12 220 129 61 1520! Paul Hedstrom.. 5 15 212 89 67 1250 Paul Neibaue 18 210 128 77 217 Hank Potter. 1 22 °° 2 6 1000; James Hackett:: 0 0 “3 1 4 ‘000 ‘Alex Neibaue 1 24 6 & 1000! George Papacel 2°17 3 3 .000 Dick Tracy .... 0 5 1 0 .00 G. Schlickenmeyer0 1 7 0 4 :000! Charles Berger... 0 0 9 3 1 000 BATTING AVERAGES B. H. Pet. T. Paulson 2° 1,00 D. Davis B 1750} R. O'Neil 2 1667 jA: Knoll: 2 1667} A. Schneider 2 1667) . Roehrick . 3 t500 © Littlerjela 1 1500 C. Eicenbise 23 1472 A a4 1445 M. 22 1440 M. 18 1443 0 3 429 R. 15 1426 a 17 1405 a 14 140 11 393 tH. 18 1391 16 {39 {6 21 1380| Ic: 18.875 iB. 21 [368 F 4 1363 Z, Spriggs 17 i361 R. Mason 15 857 A. Neibauer’: 17 64 |S Goetz . 18 J, Cowan 15 W. Burkhi Wz G. Allen 1% iJ, Schwahn . 14 UR. Finlayson 1 . Longberg 3 L. Diehl 7 A. 3 Le 11 1 10 16 or 13 19 19 12 10 14 fy 9 ry 11 11 dt 9 10 uy 1k 12 8 4 a P, Hedstrom Fy N. Agre .. 10 R. ‘Thorbers cH McCorrle ry J. Hackett i | i L. Farnum ‘Tracy . Mayer . D. Register F, Hummel * Jervinskl fohnson, Larson T. Hull . T. Hindemith Olson .. Iverson - EB, Hendrick: Schwartz . . Smith .. H. Hersehieb J, Neibauer Rott . Pe t at | i a 00, 00! IS | a 2 5 ‘g 4 2. Eeieences Thompson .:. . Harrigan . . Colman . . Gorman . . Hermann - 2: Slonicker Davis Potter ABAD, i900 | “ann 000 | maps euratestemsnen sees "Ram Barbie |. Weisenberger 0 ‘000; TOUGH ON STANFORD They are saying that The days of, the “Big Red Team” is past at Stan-, ford’ university. Pop Warner's 1931 line averages a mere 183 pounds while the backs, hardly more than midgets, | average 177 pounds. Oh, well! Honore: Pott teats | IN SECRET BY ORDER OF COACHING STAFF) ‘9 | their battle in Soldier Field Satur- jelevens failed to learn much from 0 Saturday's opening contests, beyond F fear S 3| LAST 1GHI 5 of 1914, 1918, 1923 and 1927 were! t Hanley Is Working on Methods to Stop Rambler’s Great Backfield Aces BOTH RESTED ON MONDAY Anderson Concentrates on De- fense Against Russell, Rentner and Meenan Chicago, Oct. 6.—(?)—Coach Hunk Anderson of Notre Dame, and Dick Hanley of Northwestern, are taking day, so seriously that each has taken his squad into seclusion to prepare for the struggle. Down at South Bend, Anderson has ordered secret practice for the re- mainder of the week, so that he can concentrate upon building up a defense against the plunging of Reb Russell, the running and passing of Pug Rentner, and the running of Ken Meenan. Out at Evanston, Hanley has ord- ered locked gates while he works on methods of trying to stop the Jask- which-Sheektski-Schwartz-C soni n- Murphy ineups of backs. Both camps gave up the customary Monday rest yesterday and gof* right down to business. Scouts for both the fact that each has plenty of power and reserves. Neither was forced to use more than a few plays in the opening tests, in which the eee defeated Nebraska, 19 (By The Associated Press) Pasadeiphia—Johnny — Jadick, phin, and Lew Massey, lelphin, drew (10); ‘Ton: Herrern, El Paso, Tex. hagernte ed Young Firpo, Pennagrove, Pa. 9, Lew Raymond, Philadelphia, Jersey eutpointed Ralph Lenny, City (0), eS O.—Coleman Johns, outpointed Johnny Buffalo, N.Y. (10)3 Al / and Mickey auton, Pa. drew (8). dd — Frankie Wallace, and Johnny — Dai drew (6); Frank rey 3, Joey veland, stopped Sam- my Paris, Pittsburgh (6). Pittsburgh — Frank Rojarski, ut Lou Palu- y Roederer, out Jack Angelex (8). nex, In—Hy mie Wine= Des Moines, " outpointed | (newspaper decision) Gle: 4 Waterloo, In. (6). mone Prov » R. L—Joxe Santa, Portugal, and Henney, ‘New Zealand, drew. (10), Muncie, Ind—Peewee Jarrell, Mishawaka, and Carl Ely, Muncie, drew, (10); Bud Jones, ‘Elkhart, Freres E le Smith, Munele, 1 teago—Baxter Calmes, Okin~ | y. knocked out Pete | (@): Buck | Everett, Gary, Ind. out 4 Friedman, Honton (eee t ZUP LIKES ’EM YOUNG The fact that Coach Bob Zuppke is depending upon sophomores in the line of his University of, linois| eleven this fall does not deter him. The famous Illini coach has a soft spot in his heart for sophomore play- ers because his championship teams} composed largely of new men. i THOSE LONGHORNS ARE HEAVY! Tackle material numbering 13! youths and weighing more than aj ton on the hoof reported for the Texas Longhorn varsity this fall. The lightest of these beeves weighed} 185 pounds; the heftiest was 260. | NO MATCH Chicagb.—Albert Glattfelder Tearn-; ed he is no match for penny-match-| ers. He saw two men matching pen- nies. He asked to participate, agree-| ing to wager $720 in travelers’ checks against $700 in money. “No, stranger, it wouldn't be fair to you, playing against experienced men,” said one of them, returning the envelope con-;* taining Glattfelder’s checks. The! would-be penny-matcher walked! away. Shortly after he opened the) envelope to find his checks gone. SMELLING TALK London.—Besides presenting inter- I passing from coaching at Yale. ALBIE GETS POINTERS FROM BENNY Captain Albie Booth (left) gets a few pointers on forward jenny Friedman, former Michigan star, who now is 7 EGAD, FOLKS, ZA ZI A SUN YouR KIND ONE OF MY | E : IN AFRICA- Yo esting sales arguments, future direct- mail promotion may exude pleasant odors calculated to place the pros-| pect in a receptive mood. Scented ink is being experimented with in| England with this view in mind, and| if experiments prove successful it) may be used extensively in the future for business and personal purposes. PAMPERED SNAILS Edible snails are taken from France| into London in numbers of more than| 2,000,000 each year. These French) snails are specially fed for restaur- ant trade on vine leaves and lettuce. NOTICE 0} ESTATE M GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby ‘given that that certain mortgage, executed and de- livered by Ira J. Falkenstein and Emma A, Falkenstein, his wife, mort- gagors, to Baldwin State Bank, mort- gagee, dated the 23rd day of January, A, D.,'1920, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 27th day of Jan- uary, A. D. i920, and duly “recorded therein ‘in Book 161 of Mortgages on Page 492, and assigned by said mort- gagee by an instrument in writing to Freechif Johnson, dated the 17th day of February, A. D. 1920, and filed for His IS MASOR A, HOOPLE SPEAKING» ~ HARR-R-RUME BY DOVE me wity INDULGENCE, Let ME RELATE -To You MAAY “THRILLING Hic ~~ PARDON ~ rife a RN CAMPS GO INTO SECLUSION .OUR BOARDING HOUSE : By Ahern | SHut THAT, OFF I~ AS IF YouR GAFFING (as PERSON (SArr ENouGH, A HEAR AAT, MDEAR 2 ~ Gr EGAD, THAT IS MY Voice! w+ T SPAKE “TODAY INTO ONE OF THOSE MACHINES THAT MAKES A RECORD OF ONE'S Voice ! LISTEN = BY wove, 7 f WitlouT WHAT A DIGNIFIED Vatce) (—G Yous BLAT T. HAVE =~ AND Such POWER “.EGAD, I WAS CUT out ‘ mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are situated in th County of Burleigh and State o! North Dakota, and are described 4s follows, to-wit: * South Half of South Half (8% of 8%) of Section Twenty-two (22) of Township One Hundred Forty-one (141) North, of Rani Seventy-eight (78) West of the Fifth Principal Meridian. There will be di You'll never know the difference, *til you hear and see the new Coronado One Thousand Three Hundred Dol-|§ Super-heterodyne. Then pT id Sixty-1 1,300.66), together with costs and expenses of | you'll know it—and you'll foreclosure, ier the 15th day of September, A. save money—8 tubes—with pentode—Hi-Mu and auto- matic volume control. $5.00 down. GAMBLE STORES . Fred Johnson, Assignee of Mortgagee. Zuger & Tillotson, Attorneys for said Assignee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 9-15-22-29 10-6-13-20. record in said office of said Register of Deeds on the 13th day of May, 1927, and recorded therein in Book i75 of Assignments on page 381, and there: after assigned by the sald Freechif Johnson, assignee, by an instrument in writing to Fred Johnson, dated the Sth day of May, 1927, and recorded in the office of said Register of Deeds in Book 175 of Assignments, on page 392, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- inafter described, at the front, door of the court house in the City of Bis- marck, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock P, M., on the 26th day of October, 1931, to” satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises described in such ow. For Farm Relief Friction is a thief of profits on every farm. Be it Could You Buy Them Tomorrow? If fire swept away your home and all its furnish- ings would your insurance enable you to replace them at once? Adequate insurance is sim- ply a matter of good busi- ness—the protection of your possessions against every disaster. You put time and money into acquiring. a home; take every precaution against losing it. : esa Photo MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 218 Broadway Phone 577 Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant Vacuum Cleaner, paint the castings, inspect the ites and smoke pipes, all for $3. All Repairs at Reasonable Prices Phone 141 French & Welch. Hdwe. Co. windmill, truck, tractor, incubator, electric light plant or cream separator, there’s always something that needs some petroleum product—or is ready to break down for lack of oil. Farm relief of this sort is a Sinclair specialty. Sinclais’s interest in the coun- try’s finest oil fields enables us to produce a line of petroleum products which has no superior for completeness and quality anywhere. Sinclair Opal- ine Motor Oil, Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oil, Sinclair Tractor Oils, Sinclair Gasolines, Sinclair Super-Flame Kerosene, Sinclair Cup and Axle Grease. Just call or write— SINCLAIR - OILS, GREASES, GASOLINES, KEROSENE J. ‘A. KOHLER Agent Sinclair Refining Co. Phone 73 or 1358 100 Third Street Bismarck, N. Dab At Reduced Rents Modern apartments in a fireproof building, electric refrigerators. electric stoves, city heat, laundry privileges, etc. Inquire at the Bismarck Tribune Office é a

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