The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 21, 1932, Page 8

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i | | | MINNEAPOLIS SETS * UP NEW RECORDS IN ~ WALD SECOND GAME p Joe Hauser Collects Home Runs Nos. 31, 32 and 33 in Double Victory ¥ INDIANAPOLIS KEEPS PACE v Ww Hal Smith of Kansas City Blues Scores Third Straight Shutout Win Chicago, July 21—(?)}—Lou “Shan- @ty” McKenna, the big record book ®man for the American Association, Onvent to work on an overtime basis Drhursday all because of those rampag- Sing Minneapolis Millers. A Catching the innocent Louisville Molonels unawares on a bilstering hot tay with the mercury standing at 102 degrees, the Millers walloped them 15 to 11 in the first game of a double- “header and then loaded their bats with dynamite to blow them apart, 25 to 3, in the nightcap, which resulted off several new league ree ©f This is what the Millers wild second game Cracked out 32 hits, beating the old record established at by Louisville tolBainst Columbus in 1926. Equaled the scoring record of 25 Téuns set by the same Louisville Col- feels against St. Paul in 1924. w. Established a record for man-for- aman hitting with every Miller bagging ye¥0 oF more hits Broke the record for most runs in 10, double-header with 40, . in Made Deberry of the Colonels the jixnost miserable relief pitcher in 4 .can Association history by ni: " aim for 18 hits in 4 2/3 innings with- bdut_ help. re} The hitting splurge, which saw Joe Arlauser collect home runs Nos. 31, 32 linn 33 in two games, also established + record for team batting average id in that 8Titing. Before Wednesday's double- | @ageader, the Millers were collectively Stitting .290. But their 48 hits in 94 foimes at bat in the twin bill sent heir season’s average booming six thoints to 296. The .511 batting aver- Mige for the day also was a record. laHauser, Cohen and Harris each got ‘ive hits in the second game, Harris ving in eight runs or one short of record established last Sunday by SeSuntic of Milwaukee. pe Hit records are all the Millers did ticet for their heavy cannonading. In- danapolis stayed right in the flag} ace by defeating St. Paul twice, 6 to wand 6 to 4, remaining in second Stlace four games behind the pace feletters. Milwaukee and Columbus ntoke even on the hot day, the Brew- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1932 ; illers Get 48 Hits for 40 Runs in THREE FAVORITES ELIMINAT OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern IN tT PS SH H~ LISTEN, MORGAN ~aUR i AFFAIR AND DIFFERENCES ARE BETWEEN OURSELVES {~~ BUT THAT PRIVATE DETECTIVE NEEDS WATCHING !~~ HE STRIKES ME % AS BEING VERY DAFFY !~-THAT P8 STORY HE “TOLD You ABouT THE ROAM HAVING COBRA SNAKES SHOWS HE IS CRAZY! ~~ BETTER “TURN HIM OVER FOR OBSERVATION, ITHINK You'RE RIGHT THackmaRToN! «TIVE NowticeD 47 THAT NUTTY GUAT IW HIS EVES !~~NYEP, AS CRACKED AS FREEZER HM-M-~ WHAT ARE “THEY WHISPERING} ABOUT G. P. Eat Shop Is Taken by Trojans, 5 to 1 STANDINGS Won Lost Pet N. W. Bell . 2 0 1.000 Trojans ... . 1 0 1808 G. P. Eat Shop.. 1 1 500 Company A .. 4 .000 Bismarck Dairy ol .000 O. H. Will Co. ou 000 Wednesday's Results Trojans, 5; G. P. Eat Shop, 1. Northwestern Bell, 8; Co. A, 7. Inesday evening, the Jlead in the Bismarck Commerci | Diamondball league session of first place as the G. P. Ei |Nose Out Company A, 8 to 7, as Nosing out Company A 8 to 7 Wed- Northwestern Bell entrant jumped to an undisputed jal The telephone men gained sole pos- at |Shop, winner in the first bracket of| pigs winning the first game, 7 to 4 and| play, lost to the Trojans, 5 to 1. yolumbus taking the second, 9 to 6. | C. Johnson, R. Jundt, B. Larson and The pitching gem of the day was/J. Aller led the telephone men at grurned in by Hal Smith of the Kan-|bat with two hits each while the big Inas..City Blues. Smith scored his| hitters among the National Guards- triiird straight shut-out by blanking|men were J. Ashmore, Register, Hed- aucledo, 7 to 0. He allowed but three | strom and Papacek. Rae Scores by innings: The guards outhit the linemen but were guilty of three errors. he ‘Wins Another Shutout | Kansas City—Hal Smith turned in| jans restricted the chefs to four hits urs, third consecutive | shutout in/in the other game while his team- itching Kansas City to’a 7-to-0 vic-| mates were collecting seven from the copry over Toledo, offerings of Ted Meinhover. No man lea RH Elin this game secured more than one Hires Gis... -omcwseret 8 9 iit im the pitehers’ battle, Winegarner, nd Pytlak; | 1 box scores: commith and ee aneersre |_N. W. Bell (8)— AB RH E| Indians Make It Four |C. Johnson, cf 2 2 0 to St. Paul—Indianapolis made it four|E. Agre. p . -4 0 0 0 wh @ row over St. Paul by taking a/R. Jundt, rf Ae 3: By Oy tapuble-header, 6 tol and 6 to 4. | J, Schwahn. a1 0) First game ;D. Tracy, 1b . > 4) 8 ? RH E/B. Larson, rss a 2-3 0 ficidianapolis 214.002000—6 10 2) Dr. Priske. ¢ . sat es Oy t. Paul ... 001 000 000—1 4 4| Boepple, 3b . 73 0 0 © Campbell and Riddle; Van Atta and|J- Aller, 2b. a 2 2 ner. \ J. Spriggs, If = 1 2 et cle Second game | —---- ca | : RH Ej Totals +31 8 UO «011 000013—6 12 1| | Company A (7)— 100 010 020—4 11 1 J. Ashmore, c rt Same Seay ae! Ys Logan and Ang- | Register, 1b 42 2 4 y,¥> Strelecki, Giuliani and Fenner, | Svaren, 2b yt a 0 1 "" Millers on Hit Rampage Johnson, rf . 20: 2 0 st@Minneapolis—Minneapolis scored 40 | Hedstrom, p 371 2 «0 of ins in defeating Louisville in a dou-| Beer, 3b cae ae Rae e-header, 15 to 11 and 25 to 3. | Potter, Iss 2 1 F 2 on First game | Gorman, rss 78 4-8 ag ¥ R H E!Papacek, If .. ae Dae kage cea, | daauisville 102.000 440—11 15 3| Mosbrucker, cf war 0: a fnmeapolis .....031244 10x—15 16 2| Se aes @ Marcum, Deberry, Penner and) Totals .......- 33 7:13) 3 sehea; Petty, Ryan and Griffin. Score by innings— RHE } Second game jCo. A... .0300022—7 13 0 ;|N._W. Bell 0200033811 3 lle . 000 002 100. 2) A ari ae J. Ppeeee Inneapolis .... .006 732 25x—25 32 1/2, J. Ashmore 2, Hedstrom, Tracy: ba) kinson, Deberry pee | home runs, Gorman, B. Larson, Aller; hits, off Hedstrom 11 in 7 innings, off Agre 13 in 7 innings; struck out, -by : bases on balls, m: Benton and Richards, | Brewers, Birds Split Telephone Men Lead D-Ball League Charles Ferrara, Defending ; Champion, One of Three Tied for Right Louisville, Ky., July 21—()—Thir- ty-one survivors of qualifying play in the United States public links golf tournament. led by Joe Nichols, Long Beach, Calif., medalist, were ready for the beginning of match play Thurs- day after the 32nd place was decided by completion of a play-off halted by darkness Wednesday. ; Charles Ferrara, San Francisco, de- fending champion, was one of the three forced into the playoff at the end of the qualifying round. Others competing were Joe Coria, St. Paul, ‘and Al Priebe, St. Paul. PLAY-OFF FOR QUALIFICATION — s*isocs oy coat ct | IN GOLF TOURNEY NECESSARY (siti. Spwsite ow ‘tt cas Louisville won the Harding ~cup, symbolizing the team championship, with a total score of 606 for its four players in the qualifying round. Chi- cago placed second one stroke behind and Indianapolis third with 614. San Francisco was defending city. Nichols, 16-year-old high school student, won medalist honors with a 36-hole total of 145, one above par. One stroke behind were Roy Wiggins, Oakland, Calif.; Don O'Bryan, Louis- ville; William Jelliffee, Los Angeles, and Ralph Strafaci, Brooklyn. Thursday's program calied for com- pletion of the playoff and the first round of match play Thursday morn- ing, with the second round Thursday afternoon. All match play will be at 18 holes except the final match Sat- urday, which will be 36. New York, July 21—(P)—It was | late in the National League cam- | paign of 1912 and the Giants, led by a swashbuckling, fighting fury named John McGraw, were locked in a bitter stretch duel for the pennant with the Pittsburgh Pi- rates. | They warred through a final crucial series in Pittsburgh and ninth inning leading by a single run. Victory meant enough mar- gin to nurse through the, final dash to the flag. Then something went wrong. The Pirates rallied, filled the bases. Two were out. It was geting dark. Christy Mathewson fiddled in the pitcher's box and waited. ‘| The wind was whipping in across the outfield, and as Matty took one last look behind him he could scarcely see his outfielders AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. 689 the Giants came down to the { WGraw Says Murray’s Catch in 1912 | Most Spectacular He Has Ever Seen Pitcher Adam Brown of the Tro-/| against the storm clouds swooping down. He wound up. The batter lunged. He met the ball, it flash- ed toward the darkness of right center. “The runners on those bases poured for the plate.” said John McGraw as he sat back in his chair in the Giants’ usiness of- fice reminiscing. “Matty's head dropped. “Suddenly there came the terri- fic crash of a bolt of lightning. It lit up the field, and there, out- lined against the zig-zag flame, his face contorted, leaping high into the air, was our rightfielder, Red Murray, the ball just settling into his glove. And that, sighed John McGraw, was the greatest and most dra- matic play he ever saw on a base- ball diamond. Wandering back over the years with the most colorful leader in baseball history, you fecl nothing but wonder that the white- haired, gentlemanly, soft-spoken man of 60 who sits so contented- ly in the business offices now could have generated in his hey- day the truculence and lust of battle for which he was famous. When a decision was close, and the umpire hesitated or ruled against him, there would come that human bolt from the bench, McGraw. Out of the dugout would pour the bench-warmers, a phalanx about him, while his warriors stormed in from the field® to shout at his side, But he knew how to avoid ban- ishment, and the threat of sus- pension, while creating the im- pression that murder was about to be done. | INTERCOLLEGIATE, — A.A.U. CHAMPIONS BEATEN DECISIVELY Dennis Flynn, Richard Carter and A. B. Wertheimer Vic- tims of Upsets | FAR WEST HAS 10 WINNERS East, Midwest, South and Southwest Follow in Order | in Qualifying San Francisco, July 21—(}—Out of a bombardment of leather gloves America’s prospective Olympic boxing team took on a more definite shape Thursday while on the/back trail of preliminaries Wednesday night were counted two National A. A. U. cham- pions and an intercollegiate titlehold- in the scattering of former con- nders. In six hours of steady battling, three such outstanding favorites as Dennis Flynn, of New Orleans, Rich- ard Carter of New York and A. B. Wertheimer of Buffalo, N. Y., were jtumbled into the discard. The upset of Flynn in the 160- pound division stood out. A. A. U. standard bearer in his class and rank- led far above the rest of the field, Flynn lost on a second round tech- nical knockout to Ray Bohannon of the U. S. Navy. Two Others Outclassed Carter, husky little negro who holds the 126-pound A. A. U. title, and Wertheimer, intercollegiate king in the same division, saw their team Holman Williams, another dusky per- boxing lesson. It was a “turn about” proposition as in the recent A. A. U.j tournament, Carter was the one who| had his hand raised. Wertheimer, a} Syracuse univers! student, was elim- inated by Fred Lynch of the Mult- nomah A. C., Portland. Ore. Lyn€i clearly outclassed the collegiate cham- pion and added to his lead wtih a \short knockdown. Other national titleholders, waded through their first round matches without difficulty. +Nat Bor-of Fall River, Mass., A. A. U. champion in the 135 pound ranks scored a two-round technical knock- out over Edward Whittle of Hawaii. Bob Goldstein. of Washington, D. C., University of Virginia’s ruler of the intercollegiate lightweights, decisioned Hoyt Jones of Burbank, Calif. in a Jones was dangerous with wild swings but Goldstein won a} clean cut verdict. Three Win By Knockout Fred Caserio of Chicago, in the 147- pound group:; Homer Brandis of San Francisco, 175-pound class and Fred Feary, Stockton, Calif., heavyweight, | all A. A. U. titleholders, won their) first bout wits knockouts. | The far west brought through the | largest delegation, with 10 winners in} the 28-bout program. Eight eastern | representatives punched their way) through the first barricade while six! mid-westerners successfully passed opening tests. The south graduated ; three into Thursday night's bouts and | the southwest claimed one winner. | While upefiding of the three cham- |pions overshadowed all other bouts, | (another unexpected reversal saw Fen- to Gentry of Chattanooga, a Univer- | sity of Virgina 175-pounder, defeated {by W. R. Hechler of Salt Lake City. tough fight. Iowa Horses Victors At Grand Forks Fair Grand Forks, N. D., July 21.—(P)— Tommy Law, big rangy gelding owned | by Dr. F. B. Fenton of Des Moines, Ta., won first money in the $800 stake race for 2:18 trotters at the state fair here Wednesday. ! Tommy Law did no better than seventh place in the first heat, won by Peter L. Guy, owned and driven by R. F. Mills of Alma, Wis., and which gave the Iowa horse two hot races to finish second in the other two. The first section of the 2:14 pace; saw the money divided three eways as Peter Royal, owned by Fred Cannon of Burlington, Ia., won the first heat; George E. Plummer, owned by W. W. Fleming of Carman, Man.. the second and Sisman, owned by P. H. Kerby of | Algona, Ia., third. The second division of the pace was; a walkaway for Directmar, owned by JA. L. Blackwell of Des Moines, Ia., which captured all three heats. Slow time Was made in all races, because of a heavy track from a mid: \day rain. WRITE US @ We can help you if you find it hard to shave. Write us about mauikee—Milwaukee and Colum- | Hedstrom 6, by Agre i ae split up a double-header, Milwau- !off Agre none, off Hedstrom 2. Um-} Serena : ee 2 oe ie taking the first, 7 to 4, and Co- pire, Schneider. Scorer, T. Paulson. | ova . SB & te peered, 9 to 6. PE: ion ate Daa 4839 «552 pepe ceame RHE By rer bunt eS Oo 1 o| Washington 50 41 «549 000001030—4 8 1\M. Winner, 3b 28 0 000 Bilas Es 2 “ 203 00002x—7 9 3/G. Hayes, 2b..........2 1 1 1) Boston 2 et 239 ccotgraarg ‘Wysong and Sprinz; | T- enV ES p. . 4 o A BI e : acl Baten has Pann, ¢ ape NATIONAL LEAGUE ee a zl. Coleg Nera nent 9 | Pittsburgh 40° 38 36 ..012 030120—9 18 3/G. Croonquist, If 22 10-0 0 heeee . Eig 100 000140—6 10 2) L. Dunn. es +2 0 0 0 Shiladelphia 46 46 Weinert and | B. Knoll, rf . fs Oa a are . Sf moments, 2% 1 4 2) Brooklyn”. a 47 ; | New York’. 39 45 E. Bigler, lss aa! 52 jCineinnatt ose 40 55 i canine a Ries 4 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION F. Hummel, rss 0 1. 0, Minneapolis 58. 37~—«611 A. Brown, p 1 1 ol Indianapolis . 56 43566 E. Spriggs, 1b 1 1 1) Milwaukee . 50 44 53 aad hoes 6 0 1; Columbus 52 47 25 F. Rott, ¢ ay 0 1 0| Kansas City . 48 48 Si Protests Decision of|8. Fitzgerald, cf . 0 1. 0,Toledo 48 52 480 D. Schneider, rf 0 0 0} Louisville . 39 «54419 pire in Night Game ‘ Bere Be SO Bhai 35 61 365 ee ere 5 2 at Beulah Beore "ak WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS i eeerioen ea lew York, 7; icago, 2. ba da ey -| Cleveland, 8; Boston, 1. Benser; home run, E. Spriggs; hits,| Washington, 4; Detroit, 0. off Beinhover a i a og oft if Philadelphia, 8; St. Louis, 5. Brown 8; struck out, Meinhover 8, by A. Brown 7; bases on enuisaal Matiens) Loagee ae balls, off Meinhover 2, off A. Brown 1. Liat ip i. Chas tsburgh, 2. argument began. St. Louis, 16; Brooklyn, 5. The Bismarck team left the dia- ‘Aaiatca’ ‘A few minutes later the umpire! Tritenapols, 626; Bt, Paul, 1-4 hip decision Dus several of ; 15-25; Louisville, 11-8. Mik , 1-6; Columbus, 4-6, because of The daughter of William E. Hoy, once a noted baseball player, was at the University of Cincinnati this year. delay. Re as the ‘best all-around coed” it. Your case will receive individ- ual attention. Gillette Safety Razor Company, Boston, Massachusetts. ED IN OLYMPIC BOXING TRIALS Cleveland Might Go Somewhere Yet : | york Giants and remained two games| the Cubs. He allowed seven hits and Tribe at Least Has Set Up New Win Record; Yanks, Macks Keep Winning (By The Associated Press) It is rather late in the season for the Cleveland Indians to start going somewhere in the American League —what with their being 9 1-2 games out of first place and a full game! |behind the second place Philadelphia Athletics—but the results of their recent tour of the eastern sector in- dicate that they still may make some | White Sox to five hits. progress. . The Indians, playing the road, out-; Chicago .. shone all rivals in both circuits in| New York . the intersectional series which was to) wind up Thursday and with a few) Allen and Jorgens. good breaks at home in the next week or two they stand a good chance of getting into the fight. Three intersectional games Thurs- day remained before the final rec- ords for the series can be compiled, but Cleveland's record of 14 victories to four defeats can’t be beaten. The best other records so far are the New York Yankees’ 12 victories and | five defeats, the 12-7 records of the Philadelphia Athletics and Pittsburgh Pirates, both of which could be im- proved Thursday, and the Chicago Cubs’ 11-7 mark, And all these teams played on their home grounds. The Red Men topped their tour Wednesday by trouncing the Boston | Red Sox, 8 to 1. The two teams still ahead of Cleve- land, the New York Yankees and the Athletics, didn’t yield an inch Wed- nesday. Johnny Allen gave the Yanks some more first-class flinging | and they made it five straight over the Chicago White Sox, 7 to 2. i The Athletics pounded out an 8 to! 5 victory over the St. Louis Browns for their sixth consecutive victory | and the Browns’ 11th defeat. Wash- | the Pirates, 6 to 2. ington salvaged a game out of the Detroit series in a 4-1 triumph. Chuck Klein was the leading fig- | ure in the National League program. | His bat led the way to a 6 to 2 vic- tory over Pittsburgh, The second place Chicago Cubs took a 9-1 beating from the New) jbehind Pittsburgh and as far ahead | made three and a sacrifice himself. of Boston, which was idle. 5 | The Brooklyn Dodgers tried five net York 1 | pitchers and didn't find one who Hubbell 1 {could throw past the St., Louis bats | 4 {with any regularity. The Cards | pounded all five impartially for 22| hits and a 16 to 5 victory. Scores by innings: lay, Smith and Hartnett. Crush Cards Brooklyn . St. Louis—The St. Louis linalg {overpowered the oa | taking the game, Brook; Dodgers, 16 to . RHE 020001011 5 10 4 | iu! | Brooklyn AMERICAN LEAGUE i Yanks Make Clean Sweep hee 313 100 80x—16 22 New York—The Yanks made a/ yore ana ped _Mungo, Phelps, clean sweep of the series by taking} and, Wilson pez; Carleton, Lindsey |the final game, 7 to 2. Allen held the Only games, RHE 20000002 5 1 Daglia, Faber | Mel Harder Is Stingy Boston—Mcl Harder held Boston to} seven hits as Cleveland beat the Red} | Sox, 8 to 1. | RH Ej“ |Cleveland ........030000500—8 12 1) Boston 000000 001I—1_-7 2; | Harder and Sewell; Kline, Jablon- ‘owski, Gallagher and Tate. Senators Blank Tigers Washington—The Washington, |Senators defeated the Detroit Tigers, {4 to 0. . RHE, Detroit ....... 0000100001 9 1 | Washington 00000400x—4 9 2 Sorrell and Hayworth; Brown and Berg. ‘ Athletics Pound Gray | Philadelphia—-The Athletics pound- ed Gray for 16 hits to defeat St./ Louis, 8 to 5. St. Louis | RH E| 100010012—5 11 1 rane, i . Philadelphia . 002 200 32x—8 16 1) Gray and Ferrell; Grove and ot NATIONAL LEAGUE | Phils Trim Pirates | Pittsburgh — The Phillies downed Klein smashed | out two homers and a iriple. } RHE} 001 003 101—6 13 0; 100000100—2 5 1! vis; Meine, Spen- | Philadelphia . Pittsburgh Holley and V. cer and Grace. Hubbell Tames Cubs Chicago—Hubbell pitched and bat- | ted the Giants to a 9-to-1 win over! Extra Power Rusty Gill, star California fullback 100 23010x—7 12 0| Whose pugilistic career ended with » and Grube, Berry; knockout, has signed to make mi | football pictures. . Stickler Solution LLL) FILL HILL HET © The dotted lines indicate where the horizontal lines were added to form three four-letter words and one three-letter word. HERE TOMORROW “WINNER * TAKE ALL” It’s 2 Soch Hit! Paramount Big City Power-No Extra Cost That's the story on Sinclair's famous “fast-steppin’ gas"’... now here The battle for your patronage goes on—and Sinclair is in the thick of it with its famous “fast-steppin’ gas,” refined originally for America’s biggest cities— now it is here — and yours at no extra price! The improved Sinclair Regular Gasoline is a faster, lighter motor fuel, refined to a formula that clears it of the heavy elements which make sluggish pick-up. Use it in your own traffic. Try it on the open highway. You'll find it there with the pep and the punch when you step on it to pass the car ahead. Extra power—big city power—at no extra cost! That's the story. Ask for Sinclair Regular, the fast-stepping, “big city gasoline.” Copsrighted 1932 by Sinclair fining Company (Inc) & Stations—SINCLAIR MINSTRELS NOTE: For best results, use Sinclair Opaline or Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oil. Both have been de-waxed, and also freed from petroleum jelly at as low as 60° F, below zero. ° Doubleheader With Louisville - as 1 ; \

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