The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 26, 1932, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

atc mausBSkaq > a a7 te AO mg og 1E la. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1982 Trojans and Rismarck Dairy Win in City Diamondball League: LOOP LEADERS KEEP RECORD UNSULLED | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern IN SECOND BRACKET coon Linemen Lose First Contest to! Dairymen, Who Advance in Standings | | } NEIBAUER LIMITS BATTERS: George Allen Poles Out Two Circuit Clouts to Capture | Hitting Honors | THE STANDINGS | Won Lost Pet. Trejans ae 0 me Northwestern Bell 656 | Fat Shop.. 1 500 Bisma Dairy.. 1 oO. H. Will 1 Company A Rewee two men little difficulty getting away to ver was threat- un raliy in the sixtir game on ice for the Bl omweswss 10; by G Hummel 12 z: ses on b: wn 0; off C scorer—B. Hi RH 0 0 a 0 0 AB 4 1 2 Ot 22 0 0 0 P. Nei 4 o 1 0 Benser, If . 9 10 Miller, cf 0 0 06 Brown, rss ... 1 1 0 Hoffman, 2b . ae 1 Totals . Score by innin Bismarck Dairy -1040100-6 9 1 NW. Bell ... -0000220—-4 7 4 Summary: two-base hits—Spriggs; three-base hits—Spriggs, Larson: home runs—Allen 2: double plays— Schwahn to Beaudoin to Tracy; hits off Neibauer 7 in 7 innings; off Acre | 9 in 7 innings; struck out by Nei- bauer 7; by Agre 1; bases on balls! off Neibauer 3; off Agr ro “Doc” Thores . Paulson. | MAJOR LEAGUE | (By The Associated Press) | NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—P. Waner, Pirates, .362; Hurst, Phillies, .360. Runs—Klei Giants, 72. Home runs—Klein, Phillies, 28; Ott, Giants, 18. Stolen bases—Frisch, Cards, 14; Stripp, Dodgers, and P. Waner, Pi- rates, 13. Pitching—Swetonic, Pirates, Warneke, Cubs, 15-3. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Foxx, Athletics, .365; Manush, Senators, .340. Runs — Simmons, Athletics, 107; Foxx, Athletics, 101. Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 40; Ruth, Yankees, 26. Stolen bases—Chapman, Yankees, 26; Blue, White Sox, and Walxer, Ti- gers, 14. Pitching—Allen, Yankees, 8-2; Go- mez, Yankees, 17-5. Seven of the eight clubs in the | Phillies, 106; Terry, 11-2; ". Qoaches numbering 117 entered a Bummer school session at Indiana university this year. Pick All-Star. Team in ‘Sixth District {ber of U. S. C. and Bill Miller of |Minot, Portal, and Roseglen |; Maus CAN Go NoW!~—THIS INSTITUTION IS SATISFIED “THAT Nou ARE ALL RIGHT! Z BUT WE ARE HOLDING THAT MAAS HoaPLe Nou WERE WORKING FoR —~ WE WILL HOLD Yo" “THINKS HIM FOR INVESTIGATION ! ~~ OF CaURSE MASAH HoaPLe “S WE KMoW THackMoRTod WE HAD HIM \S_ BALMY Q HERE BEFORE HE IS VERY WEALTHY, MA GOONESS ~ bE AND EVERY So aFTEN HE GoES OFF HIS AH’LL HAVE NUT ~<THINKS HE IS THe CHIEF oF AN To GO-TELL INTERNATIONAL GANG OF CROOKS ! HiS WIFE t- ~~ IMAGINES HE HAS STOLEN FAMOUS PAINTINGS gy AKD ROYAL DEWELS ! mw 3 THE LAST Time We HAD HIM He WAS FIGURING A SCHEME To STEAL THE EIFFEL TOWER, W PARIS +3, ' é L ¥ | maar AN Xi Bus CLEARS uP |S -THOCKMORTON BUT WHAT ABOUT THE WI ‘ MABOR ® FEXBENS 7 © “ KREG. U.S. PAT. OFF. fm 7-26 © 1932 BY NEA SERVICE, i ? 1, Spute Place Men on Mythical Jun- | ior Legion Club | i | (Tribune Special Service) vuly —Minot | | ooo oor » o|New York . team is as follows: pitchers— | D. Rosegien, and Holm “| NATIONAL LEAGUE Minot; firs Pittsburgh . 53 37.580 Chicago 49 42 «538 Boston 48 45 «516 Philadelphia . 49 48 503, ; right field St. Louis 500 trict. champien- 17 to 10, in a con- 1 it 1 MONDAY'S RESULTS American League Philadelphia, 8; New York, 7. National League No games scheduled. 5; Indianapolis, 0. Toledo, 3. 1s Louisville, Kansas City, 8; Minneapolis, 3. en bases, nerifices, plays, Pitts inassisteds; ) 2, Minot double Le ee Expects U. S. to bases on mp 1, off Holmes Dil Tauer of Underwood, Gorder Washburn, Los Angeles, July 26.—(#)—The rest of the worid’s high hurdlers rf can expect to stand by and |] watch Uncle Sam's entries place one, two, three in the 110-meters event of the 10th Olympiad, bar- ring the unforeseen. This is the opinion of Bob Simpson, a former world’s record holder in both high and low bar- rier evenis, and members of the U.S, international team of 1920. Simpson, now coaching at Iowa State college, took a squint at Jack Keller, George Saling and Percy Beard Monday and pro- nounced them very good. (By The Associated Press) “Mule” Haas, Athletics—Hit a home ;/ run with one on in the last of the | ninth to beat the Yankees, 8-7. in i nnings, off Olson, Vic Sorrell, Detroit pitching ace, has faced Wesley Ferrell, Cleveland, , three times this year and been de- feated each time. i 1 0 By Williams o eee ny | f I Wi lat third base and the Waner boys in ‘Schaa S Inner jthe outfield, the Pirate lineup fairly sparkles with youth. Of Dull Battle One of the veterans of the’ Ath- | jletics’ championship machine, George ATT 462 418 Win Over Sticks | oe MES SUH, IVE Noticed THET! TO CONSERVE BEALTH, UVH GOT TO MAKE IT UG WTA A FENCE, ER PADLOCH, HES WHUT? He's ATRYIN' TO CONSERVE SOME O' TH BEAUTY O' TH'OLO WEST"? WELL, I DONT CALL THE Posts AN' BARBED WiRE VERY BEAUTIFUL NO- BLT A SIGN DONT MEAN NOTHIN’ TO SOME PEOPLE ~' \TS GOT TO BEA PADLOCK, SOME O' THESE. TOURISTS IS AWFOL FER SOOVENIRS, |The third American is Sol Furth of { 4 | Barber's jbroad jump are Ed Gordon ‘of Iowa ‘clearing over 25 feet. AMERICAN STARS CONCEDED ALMOST | GERTAIN VICTORY for Supremacy in Vault- ing Event JAPANESE ALSO ARE STRONG George Spitz of New York Is Fa- vored to Annex Olym- pic Title Los Angeles, July 26.—(#)—In the Olympic field sports calling for more agility than sheer brawn, tne United States still has a decided edge, al- though it is a curious development that now finds Japan and the little island of Haiti contributing two of the world’s foremost long-jumpers to the international athletic party. American coaches regard the pole vault and the running high jump as “cinches” for Uncle Samuel's entries Japan figures to capture the hop, jstep and jump again, with probably three star contenders. Southern Cai- ifornia’s Dick Barber alone seems to have much chance to stop either or both of the men who have exceeded 26 feet in the broad jump—Sylvio Cator of Haiti and Chuhei Nambu of Japan, The Olymjic pole vault seems mere- lly a vehicle for the renewal of the California rivalry between Bill Gra- | Stanford. Miller broke the world jrecord once and Graber twice in the {final U, S. trials before hoisting him- | Self over the bar at 14 feet, 4% inches. {It was the first time Graber has ‘beaten Miller since their school days jbut the Southern Californian is fa- [foes to repeat. Three Better Record All three of the American high |jumpers bettered the Olympic record Pet.!of 6 feet, 6 inches in the final trials. ons come | ir | 65 30 © .684/The favorite is New York's George fot tourna- | Wiekly 9 3) Cleveland . 55 39 .585 | Spitz. holder of the world indoor rec- Legion juntor | Philadelphia . 57 41.582 Jord of 6 feet 8's inches, but he will cee : Washington 53 42 564; have to beat the pair with whom he annexed two places on the fecal 50 42 543 tied at Palo Alto—Bob Van Osdel of nythical outfit while Portal placed | chisyo $3) $8? southern California and Cornelius Boston 22 70 239/Johnson, Los Angeles high school boy. | There is not a single foreign entry of note or conspicuous prowness in either the high jump or pole vault. Two Louisiana boys, Sidney (Snak- ey) Bowman and Rolland Romero, :youngest athlete on the American| track and field have good chances to| score in the hop, step and jump. ;Bowman is an experienced competi- or, capable of bettering 49 feet, but 0 8 1!Minneapolis . .604!the Jananese have an edge if they -2 ou 1 6 1 Indianapoli 558 cre up to form. | {0 ¢ 2 0 21 Columbus 56 47 544!” Besides the Olympic champion,! Bi ‘ 211 1 0 0|Milwa 52 46 531 / Mikio Oda, who has been out of com- the final ana 2 2 anode 4 50 510! petition for some time with a pulled ti | Louisviie 4, 23 42] tmusele, Javan relies on Nambu and St. Paul 37 63 379 |Cshima. Oda has cleared more than 51 feet, bettering the world record. iNew York, who replaced Levi Casey; ‘of Los Angeles, 1923 Olympic runner- | up, on the U. S. team. running mates in the and Lambert Redd of Bradley Tech,! Illinois, both consistently capable of All should get! into the scoring column, made up of the first six. Round Setto New lfight his part-owner and chief sec- ond, Jack Sharkey, for the heavy- weight title, has taken one short, faltering step in that direction. | By belting out a 15-round decision |cudun, in Madison Square Garden's ‘big bowl Monday night, the Boston {blonde survived the first round of the Garden's heralded elimination tour- nament. } But it was a subject of debate with ithe crowd of 6,000 whether Schaaf \had proved anything except. possibly, ‘that he is not a worse fighter than | Paulino. The audience voted, inform- | ally, to eliminate both of them. | Schaaf weighed 210, Paulino 198%. F i TS LAST IGHT (By The Associated Press) New York—Ernie Schaaf, Bos- ton, outpointed Paulino Uzcudun, Spain, (15); Arthur Huttick, New York, stopped Jack McCarthy, Boston, (3). Newark, N. J.—Mickey Walk- er, Rumson, N. J., knocked out Salvatore Ruggirello, New York, (1); Sylvan Bass, Baltimore, knocked out Scotty McDade, Harrison, N. J., (1). Milwaukee—Tait Littman, Cu- dahy, Wis., outpointed Roy Wil- . liams, Chicago, (8); Joe Feld- man, Chicago, defeated Angel Clivelle, Puerto Rico, foul (2), Port Richmond, N. Y.—Benny Bass, Philadelphia, outpointed Ernie Ratner, Newark, N. J., (10). Los Angeles—Steve Hamas, Passaic, [N. J., outpointed Lee Ramage, San Diego (10); Joe Glick, San Francisco, outpointed David Velasco, Mexico | City (10). Ralph Winegarner, third baseman, ;and Bill Knickerbocker, shortstop, are two Toledo players who are pros- pects for the Cleveland baseball team | next year. \Californians to Renew Rivalry| Bostonian Outpoints Paulino! Monday in either league. York, July 26.—()— Ernie, Schaaf, the man who would like to! ‘over the aging Basque, Paulino Uz-) 'U. S. SEEN AS CERTAIN WINNER IN HIGH JUMP AND POLE VAULT | ciated Press Photo) THIS IS U. S. BROAD-JUMPING TEAM This trio will represent Uncle Sam In the broad Jump at the Olympic games. Left to right: Lambert Redd, Bradley Tech; Ed Gor. | don, lowa, and Dick Barber, University of Southern California (Asso- | LEAGUE SEEN The Rupert Rifles Lack the Fire of Youth; Indians Threat- ! en Throne H (By The Associated Press) Even if they coast on through to the American League title, it is doubt- ful the Yankees will stay up there longer than one term. The Ruppert rifles are not th same type of club they were back in the haleyon days of Waite Hoyte, the “schoolboy wonder,” and the old “murderers? row.” True, many of that famous crowd are still around, and they are doing yeoman work in the Yanks’ curren: drive, but they no longer make up a team that is young and full of fire and just reaching its peak. Fellows like Ruth, Combs, Lazzeri and little Joe Sewell cannct be ex- {pected to star much longer, and Manager Joe McCarthy probably will {have to do plenty of revamping next season. He will have plenty to build from, a fine nucleus in Gomez, Allen. !Dickey, Gehrig, Crossetti, Chapman jand the rest. but history proves it takes more than one year to build a championship club. With the Philadelphia Athletics getting no better fast, the Cleveland (Indians, a young, courageous outfit that just are realizing their strength, look like the best bet at the moment. with Detroit a possibility. In the National League. where the Pittsburgh Pirates threaten to run away with the field, there is an en- tirely different situation. If George der the wire first, there is no good ‘reason why they should not stay up jthere a couple more years. With the exception of Pie Traynor (Mule) Haas, came back to grasp the headlines in the only game played His home run in the last of the ninth off Lefty an 8-7 victory over the Yankees. kien \ Uzcudun in Listless 15- | Gomez with one on gave the Athletics | ‘ NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE | A’s Beat Gomez | Philadelphia — Vernon Gomez {pitched to only two batters but lost jhis fifth game of the season and his Stole The Show | | { { 'f the vote of her audience had been taken, Mary Horger, 8 of Miami Beach, Fla., would probabiy have landed a place on the U, Ss. Olympic team. She thrilled crowcs with her dives at Oly-snic trials in AN York. (Associated Press Pho- Gibson does drive his youngsters un-;| RULE OF YANKEES IN AMERICAN AS SHORT-LIVED |first to the Athletics, to give the American League champions an 8-7 victory over the Yankees. RH New York ........000021 040—7 10 1 | Philadelphia -000 031 022—8 12 1 Pennock, Brown, Allen, Gomez and Jorgens; Mahaffey and Cochrane. Detroit-St. Louis, postponed, rain. No others scheduled. Grove Giants Win From Linton Club Emmons County Contingent Goes Down Before Attack of Prisoners, 15 to 2 | | i | | Winning their 13th start of the |season, the Grove Giants rode rough- shod over Linton, 15 to 2, at the prison park Sunday. Homme, on the hill for the Giants, | Pitched airtight baseball until the , ninth inning when an error cost him |@ shutout after two men were out. Snyder played brilliantly behind the bat for the prisoners. Sunday the Giants are scheduled to jeross bats with the Fargo Diamond Aces at Grove Park at 1:45 p. m. | Linton (2) ohn Lip} midt, ss 1a Lang, 1b 1 0 Sautter, If, oo 4 Joe Lipp, % 0 Lauin, 0 o} | Bjornson, ss Brunner, If .. taylor, 1b e 5 E Si otal s rore by nton. errors, Linton 4 4; stril ts, Volk 10, He hits off Volk 16, off Homme 10; bases ‘on balls of Volk 6, off Homme 5; {home y pitched halls, lor, twice), by Homui Lipp); stolen’ bases, ‘Linton 1 5; earned runs, Linton 2, Giants ‘lett on bases, Linton 6, Giants {Time of game, ». Umpires, - d Shell on bases. ‘Soldiers Defeat |chell at the plat Ft. Washburn-Mercer Club, 4 to 2, at Brush Lake Lincoln Club Wins From; i { Ft. Lincoln continued its winning | streak by setting down the powerful | | Washburn-Mercer Twins in a game jplayed before a holiday crowd at; Brush Lake. | | Lietz and Conrad did yeoman duty | for the Soldiers while Spout of the | Twins drove in three hits to star for his contingent. Ft. Lincoln outhit the opposition, 11 bingles to cight, while both clubs were guilty of five errors. The box score: ab r oh e 40 1a 4 0 1 0 4 1 1 0 oO: a 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 ah ee eS Vee ele | Col 3 o 0 2 Conrad ‘lame Cos ae, Lieta .. (Rt aie! Joa) : a6 4 tt OE heizer oaee a aaa Kusler a alee, aaa Johnson, {GBs Vale tama 9 | She ae a 8 ao 8 8. 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 o 0 a0. 08 Totals 36 i Twelve 18-inning games have been ‘played in both major baseball leagues ‘in the last 30 years. } ! Twenty letter amen will return for jthe 1932 football squad at Southern [Saber Teachers college. The box score: | og) at Red Birds Make Bid for Laurels In Pennant Race Columbus Club Wins 10th Start in 11 Games; Millers Bow to Blues Chicago, July, 26—(")—If Colum- bus plays as well at home as on its recent road trip, which is quite like- ly, and if Minneapolis does no better on the rest of its road trip than it did Monday night, the American As- sociation may have a new leader be- fore long. The Red Birds Monday won their 10th game in 11 starts, defeating In- dtanapolis, 5-0, behind a swell if slightly wild bit of pitching by Bud Parmalee. He held the Indians to five hits, but walked two, hit two batsmen and committed one wild Pitch. His opponent, Staurt Bolen, was clipped for 10 hits, including Nick Cullop's 24th home run of the season. The victory gave Columbus a gain of a full game on the Indians, and the same advance on Minneapolis. which emba7ed on the road trip by taking an 8-3 beating from Kansas City in a night game. Hi Vandenberg and Ad Liska gave up 12 hits, while Joe Dawson held the usually hard hitting Millers to seven blows. A fancy job of pitching by Johnny “Moose” Marcum in the ninth inning saved a 4-3 victory for Louisville over Toledo. With the tieing and winning runs aboard, Marcum fanned Ralph Winegarner and White to end the game. The winning run was pro- duced in the sixth by Dud Branom who drove a homer over the right field fence with a man on. Rain kept St. Paul and Milwaukee idle. Minneapolis, leading by 412 games, finishes its series with Kansas City Wednesday, goes back home for four E/with Milwaukee, then returns to the road for 16 games—while Columbus will be at home. Birds Blank Indians Columbus — Columbus won the opening game of the series from In- dianapolis when Bud Parmalee pitched shutout ball to win, 5-0. RHE Indianapolis 000000 000—0 5 1 Columbus ........10201001x—5 10 1 Bolen and Angley; Parmalee and Sprinz. Colonels Beat Hens | Toledo—Moose Marcum stopped a {dangerous Mudhen rally by fanning | Winegarner and White in the ninth and Louisville defeated Toledo, 4-3, jin the first game of the series. RHE Louisville 010 012 000—4 11 1 Toledo 000 101 001—3 10 1 Penner, and Pytlak. Milwaukee-St. Paul, postponed, rain. Blues Stop Millers Kansas City—Kansas City defeated | the league-leading Millers in a night game, 8-3. R | Minneapolis . | Kansas City . |_ Vandenberg, Liska and Griffin; |Dawson and Collins. Trainers Set Down New Salem Outfit New Salem went down before the | assault of the Mandan Trainers, 7 to |1, in a baseball game played in Man- ;dan Sunday. Heidt and Thornburg played stel- lar baseball for the winners, Heidt keeping the hits of the New Salem delegation well scattered while Thorn- burg did some heavy sticking. Schmidt was on the hill for New and Shea; Lawson 9 | Salem with Gus Schwartz on the re- ceiving end of the battery. Heidt helped to win his.own game 1 |by driving out a long liner which he | stretched into a home run. WHAT! NO DRINKS? Boston, Mass—This ought to make Bostonians hot under the collar. It will no longer be possible for them ;|to drop into the city hall to get a nice, cooling glass of ice water, since the mayor has banned the purchase of ice by the city this year. The resultant annual saving of $14,900, the mayor explained, will be devoted to poor relief. Hospitals and public drinking fountains are excepted from the ruling. NEVER TOO OLD Knoxville, Tenn.—Newton Martin, 90, of Crab Orchard, Ky., got tired of pulling weeds and decided to look ° . for b. So he hitch-hiked all the Twin D elegation ay ‘Knoxville, 150 miles away, and spent a whole Saturday looking for work, He couldn’t find any, though. {“Every time I asked for a job they asked me how old I was,” he said. “I’m a pretty good man yet, but I suppose I'll have to go back to the farm and pull some more weeds.” I Stickler Solution i TDEOAALE, AHELBIDD Dotted lines between the two lines of appt ine and THEOBALD intel 2b NOTICE TO COAL BIDDRRA Sealed bids (accompanied with cer- tified check of $250.00) are requested by the undersigned, for supplying 1000 tons (more or less) of the fol- lowing descriptions of Lignite Coal, delivered, as required, in the bins of the several public schools of the city of Bismarck, N. D., during season ending June’ 30th, 1933, viz: 4 to 6 inch, Slack, Crushed, Lump, and Nut. Bids to be opened at regular meet- ing of Board in High School, 8 P. M» Tues August 9th, 1932. Bid also contain State of | D. analysis of coal showing B. T. | content, |, Privilege reserved to reject any oF all offers, By Order of the Board of Education. Bismarck. N. D. RICHARD PENWARDE: Ic i 1/26-30; 8/3-6-8 U. rk Yr » m4 i F) = t q q " u - ~ mle ee * , a a Y 5

Other pages from this issue: