The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 18, 1932, Page 8

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THE BISMARC TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1982 SEEK POSITIONS ON | SIOUX DELEGATION Earl Hoffman, Duane Davis, and Harold Tait Candidates For Forward Wall MEINHOVER TO RETURN | | | | | Will Have Only Week of Prac-| tice Before Taking Field Against Dragons | Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 18.—\.P)— Football practice at the Univer of North Dakota will start September 12, according to C. A. West, head foottall coach, who has sen a call for candi: ort Septem- ber 10 and draw eq nt OUR BOARDING HOUSE —— HERE'S A LETTER, MR.HOODLE, WHAT TWO MEN IN A BROWN AUTO GAVE ME TO DELIVER TO VOU! THEY WERE AROUND TH* BLOCK, AN’ \N T TOLD THEM WHETE You LIVED, BUT-THEY SAID. FoR ME To TAKE TH’ (\ LETTER To You ~~AN* THEY GAVE ME A DIME / )%5%, AN, By Ahern EW DUNCAN? WHAT SAY You,LAD~A LETrerR 4 FOR ME Qu Um Ma ~ THIS ‘SEEMS SoRT OF STRANGE J 22 ~ ~Hm = WONDER WHAT IT CAN BE EGAD! — ULP. COULD !T BE BLACKMALL © -OR-AH- THANKS, MW LAD ~ LET'S ¢ WAVE 1T 7 ee ey vA, | Green Nodak Eleven Will Start Gridiron Practice September 12 FOUR BISMARCKERS CHICAGO FINALLY WINS BITTER 19-INNING BATTLE WITH BRAVES | NATIONAL LEAGUE CLUBS STILL WAGE RELENTLESS WAR’ Pittsburgh Pirates and Charg-} ing Dodgers Hot on Heels | of Circuit Leaders MACKMEN PASS INDIANS} {Yanks Increase Lead in Junior Division By Setting Down Tigers, 8 to 3 (By The Associated Press) It is hard to imagine a pennant jrace any warmer than the current National League affair in which the jot Jersey City a victory over Primo Poreda Decision Arouses Tempest In Ring Circles; Referee Says Carnera Had Points Scored Against Him For Foul Tactics Newark, N. J., Aug. 18—(4)—The decision which gave Stanley Poreda Carnera in their fight here Tuesday night has aroused a tempest of no mean proportions in New Jersey box- ing circles. It seems so few spectators saw eye to eye with Referee Joe Mangold of | jAtlantic City, who awarded the de- cision to Poreda, that George E. Kee-| nen, New Jersey's boxing commission- er ordered the suspension of the of- ficial until all the whys and where- fores could be investigated. | Keenen turned the investigation | over to John Flood, administrative | j Program of events. championship ‘and handicap trap- | shove them off their high perch it- shooting tournament. the American Association flag fight. During the next nine days, 29 to| Toledo was the first eastern inva- 900 of the nation’s best shotgun|der to tackle the Bushmen in their marksmen will participate in a long|own baseball dugout, the others try jing to gain ground at other western homme -naympmrearent sectors, Louisville invading Milwau- H Md kee, Indianapolis meeting the fourth ers xpecting ‘place Blues at Kansas City and Co- n jlumbus ‘opening fire at St. Paul. In L d Fortified with a four and one-half 0 crease ea ‘game lead over the second place Red |Birds from Columbus, the Millers ex- |pected to stretch their margin during thei American Association Leaders! their long home stay. Lay Back and Wait For In- vasion of Easterners | | Ralph Gardner, son of North Car- |olina’s governor, will get a chance to jplay center on the state university's | football team this year. Tribune Want Ad Tribune Want Ads Chicago, Aug. 18.—()—Donie Bush; and his Minneapolis Millers settled! back in Nicollet Park Thursday andi waited for the final eastern rush to NO GAMBLE iu Pall practice thi . will pee a last place team is only 15 games be-|agent for the athletic commission. | ‘ full week later than it has for the hind the first and three teams are| Mangold had been suspended, Flood ¢ matter of eco- battling for the lead within a space |explained, until an investigation was 1 A training table of 2 1-2 games, but there, are various|made with a view to clearing up any * must be estab for the squad oe sign and portents that it will become | suspicion the referee had been intim- Fy 6 43 til fraternity houses even more heated before the season | idated. e You don’t risk a cent 2 begin opera ay es ends. — The referee gave an explanation : sate ts oo s ¢ Sacer exe Despite a record of 15 defeats injof his scoring of the re which in- e has bee ey | their last 17 games, many of them/dicated he had deprived the Italian . | This leaves es Just two | chargeable to left-handed pitching, |of a good many points because of the when you try the Gillette 4 Med prea h Me As ay beaten the ee Ear Mage two|New Jersey foul law. it ame. A ile: ce games behin e league-leading Chi-| “Poreda,” he said, “was the win- a state teachers tea comes to arate cago Cubs Thursday with the charg-iner because he was the aggressor, BLUE-SUPER BLADE. Z If 1 rial ca se Le ing Brooklyn Dodgers another half|landed the most and cleanest punches Eg are aes Lec rea ae bSifaseh any and was in better shape at the finish. ° f h ii » and "= ; at hreatening to stage & comeback any/On the other hand, Carnera was con- find North Dakota oniy well started | Thonient SAille ties, UAAGeETFRIgMkls | Gersalty eRtfey eroteail Lantsee ATEN SR not satisfactory return the i" pete to repo te ay - “ ieoee a ras dia ss yheeling, pushing and shoving. For k d ers for earl: just about everything the |this reason Carnera had points scored Over half are inexperienced s dq mores. The list follows pac wide eat get VAM ESL A Trojans and Seedmen Win D-Ball Tilts |" 2 io ee | Backs—Duane Neuenschwander. vow i i place. They waged the longest battle | prs: A * 3 Mi Fessenden; Bobby Babcock, Minct:; 9s bf the major league campaign—io| Firing Is Begun in We predict: you: won't! | Ralph Pierce, La Moure; Larry ! innings before Chicago finally won . SS y ¥ | Knauf, Moorhead, Minn.:’ Gene g, p, Eat Shop and Company Aj B oe h W. A d ae T : lente tota. Hid ring ie Cae National Gun Meet} Bevel aires ic Gur tacon | P. Eat Shop and Company “| British Women Advancing in Lemmis | rvsinous wane the ior Mat | vasa, 0. ng. i8-——Prelm . Minn: Lewis MeCorr ' the struggle and the latter finally|, Vandelia, O., Aug. 18—(P)—1 - Marshfield, W Homer Stephens, | i ae M B f § 4 S < lost out when a single, a hit batsman | inary firing was begun Thursday in| eta eecce ion, chit! City Circuit Play eet Because 0} uperior AMINA | sri Gn intentional pass crowded the|‘he 33rd annua) grand American corners and young Frank Demaree River Falls, Minn.; Richard Dablow, connected with one of the first of- } Thief River Falls; Bob Bell, Roseau, E STANDINGS = ss ‘ r : Minn.; John Thorson, Minot; Einar its Seen wenvtaed Pet. eenieais Sarai Training Methods Give English Frinthouses force Doug tip abet re see eae | So race Shop ... : 2 fiend Stolen bases: L. Cleveland. Edge Over U. S. Stylists Pee ae in Bill Herman with the win- dt, Chippow vis.; | Se. A ; ning run. Clyde Huddleson, Hudson, Wis.) 0, H. Will .........6 4.600 cunts: M. Wier, Pie, = in Longer Matches Although Brooklyn closed the gap Knute Belgum, Fibow Lake, Minn. | Northwestern Bell ..5 4 555 | Manney. between second and third to half A Ends = __.| Bismarck Dairy 3 6 «333 Home runs: F. Dunn, M. Hummel, game with a 4-1 victory, the Bucs H Gnds—Gay Drangstad, Minot, Earl; Company A 6 9 000 | M. Goetz. F. Lee, Forest Hills, N. ¥., Aug. 18.—()—|showed plenty of fight. Purcell, East 5 Two base hits: Diehl, Falconer. In the thi: Frederick, Wat Three base hits: Kiesel, S, Goetz, | America’s stars, for all their mastery]. 1) ine third National League game, Schwartz, Chippewa Falls. W O. H. Will took an 11 to 7 fall out | PF. Wetch lof stroke, might Iearn a valuable les- | Bill Torry of the New York Giants Leonard Bjork! Minneapolis. of the league-leading G. P. Eat Shop| ‘Hits of Hummel 1 in 4 innings: off |son from a pair of British girls com- cl (ted a homer, two doubles and two Hanwel Monda rand orks: |entry and the Trojans set down Com- | M. Goetz 7 in 3 innings; off Potter 9 ypeting in tho women’s national tour-|{08'C while Jim Mooney was hold- Sonia Tate Bernard pany A, 11 to 4, in games in the eity | in 6 innings. nament at West Side Tennis club. | ins Cincinnati to four hits and the! Giants won easily, 8 to 0. Rain halt- jed the Phillies and Cardinals, ! | Perhaps to emphasize the differ-: jence between the American League Struck out by Hummel 9; | Goetz 1; by Potter 4. Bases on balls off Hummel 2; off M. Goetz 0; off Potter 8. ommercial d-ball circuit here Wed- by M. | night. Their victory Mrs. Elsie Goldsack Pittman and her teammate Joan Ridley had |reached the quarter-fnals Thursday Smith, Grand Fo Tackles—Ted Meinhover Milton Wick, Grand For' Bismarc lifted the Seedmen ray, East Grand F of a deadlock with Northwestern i Sehli . .|largely because of their theory physi- | o1,5, H ke ensenden: We il for third place in the league | ,.UmPires: Schlickenmeyer, Schneld- | ¢ "condition is half of a tennis Bate | oe cecal ern ca New | Harold Winslow standings | eeorers a AER aRSiel: tle. They go in for condition in a bie | creat’ won thelr 10th stealeht woe | Cohen, Cambridge. The Scedinen got away to a six-run | Trojans (11) AB R HE | way, see to it that they are sound of | Gcreatine Detroit, 8 to 3. Babe math | thel, Eau Clair load in the first inning and led the | B, Fitzgerald, If © YG Olwind and limb and Jet the pure me. | crating Detralt, B to 3. Babe Ruth ties, Grosby Chefs all throuh the contest. Ral- | A. Brown, 2 4 0 0 Ilchanies of the game take care Of jomer while Lou Gehrig batted i Guards—Gordon Hes in the last two frames were not | E. Bigler. 1 4 2 1 1/themselves. thread counters ae ver Falls: Ar 20 sh g aders out | E. Spriggs, 43 Ol : a | anters. 1 aed “ate ate poe enol 1 to brin' “ leaders out iz Sunre a ey 5 Dane doesn't mare : orate eee The triumph increased the Yanks’ | Forks: Art Bentz, The Trojan-c yA tilt was a) P. Hummel, rs eo ee tee ecnalahae sid Ge Aen en ores ee Trombly, Rock, Mich.. E¢ Sean standoff for five innings with the |B Boelter, ef a0: O20 5 een cai ice antl rael jdelphia Athletics regained second Rock, Mich.; Edwin Olson, | standoff for tive, iit noth |S. Goetz, 1s 3 0 1. 1{Miss Ridley, “but it will decide piace from Cleveland with a 11 to 0 } Moorhead; pee on the cineca Trojans | *. Rott, ¢ 3 0 1 0, three-settcr almost every time. We) triumph over the Indians. Lefty Genters—Barl Hoffman, Bismarck; |eame through with rallies in the sixth | E Benser, rf 218 oe peeves: plenty ote S. but |Grove's four-hit hurling brought him Leonard Sauer, Melrose, Minn.; Don |2Md seventh which netted them eight | ‘Totals Hh iheiake weet ne aed eis tide ccacoes Weal Sse Stablien, Aberdeen, S. D. Tune while the Soldiers counted ine do nog train for a long match and! Washington, in fourth place but far | | ene bak octen earn Sees . ” z “3 Flare tired by the time the third set! out of the picture, turned back the Gg ge eee ny |J. Ashmore, cree jeomes around.” Chicago White Sox, 4 to 2. A six- Yesterday’s Stars Gee Ae paras 1 1 01" As though to prove their point.| hit mound performance by Paul An= ———__ ee § b tte Papacak, ee 3 0 0 g| both went out Wednesday and won| drews netted the Boston Red Sox a (By The Associated Press) 00 Potter, 3rd. 2 1 © 1/{oVver the longer route in each instance | 7 to 3 triumph over the St. Louis; Bud T: ibs—Pitched 12 2-3 1 0/D. Register, 1st 2 1 © 1ifleaving their American opponents | Browns. innings of scor Ar Gh tenne 1 1:6. 81 3 0 0. 0;Virtually exhausted. Mrs. Pittman wai . seeaiig ince 2 0 0 B. Smith, If 3 0 0 O‘defeated Virginia Hilleary of Phila- AMERICAN LEAGUE Babe Rt ath homer: F. Dunn, 2nd . 2 Mossbruc! 3 0 1 1/delphia, 6-1, 3-6, 6-1, and Miss Rid- Yank Wallop Tigers ~ double : foie Lincs Gee 0 0) A. Beer, rf 3 0 0 2iley repulsed Alice Marble, the San! , New York—The Yankees walloped es four times up| B. Knol, f 1 | See Se es ao; 6a; ek. the Detroit Tigers & to 3 for thelr 10th Lioyd Retired |G, Groonquist, Hf O11 vecoreie ins “21 4 4 3) Pairings Thursday put Helen Ja; | STSEhE Wstory. RH E| 1 White last. three : ‘ | Cee R oH & 208s against Mrs. John Van Ryn and) netroit..... 110 100 000-3 9 2j inning | Totals 3 4) Trojans...... 030 003 5-11 8 3\Mrs. Lawrence Harper against Car-| New York. 000 410 30x—8 11 il Joe Strip. Dodgers—Drove in three | ‘Company A. 000 301 0-4 4 5 lym Babcock, Los Angeles. Sorrell, Uhle and Hayworth; Pip- | runs as Brooklyn defeated iPttsburgh O. H. Will dtp AB RH E Summary gras and Dickey. ge \H. Falconer, If . 3 1 1 0, Stolen bases: Hedstrom. | \ Bing = Miller F. Wetch, 2nd 3 1 1 0) Sacrifices: Rott. Pounce On Chisox { freiae) double : M. Hummel. p, 4 2 3 0 Home runs: E. Spriggs. | ; Washington—Washington pounced attack on C 4 2 1 0, Two base hits: S. Goetz, Moss-, on the pitching of Ted Lyons for a Hx Moo nubenads \J. Duffy.¢ .... 2 2 1° O} brucxer. three run rally in the seventh inning Scones. Gia wut Reds |F. Lee, ef, 3rd. >4 1 1 1) Three base hits: J. Ashmore. to beat Chicago, 4 to 2. oie. | a Fen J. Cowan, 3rd . 1 2 0 1) Hits off D. Brown 2 in 3 innings; | | RHE oS 1 Sox—Had per-|R. Mason, rss . 0 © © 1) off A. Brown 2 in 4 innings; off P.| | Chicago ... 100 100 000-2 9 0 fect day owns 1 3 0 1 0} Hedstrom 8 in 7 innings. | | Washington 000 001 30x—4 9 0 homer and two . batting in four L. Cleveland, rf .......2 0 0 0{ Struck out by D. Brown 5; by A.j | Lyons and Grube; Coffman, Brown e runs. A. Jundt, rf 0 0 0|Brown'7; by P. Hedstrom 6. | and Spencer, Maple. i oS oe | sae 7 — — — —! Bases on balls off D. Brown 2; off! Pet. + or using re | as =§ e in Cash in With a orotate ao BU 8 3 A, Brown 3; off P, Hedstrom 8. New York 79 % 693 _Grove Blanks Indians 4 J care 4 : 2 res: Van Wyk, E. Brown. 4 * 598, Philadelphia—Lefty Grove shutout Tribune Want Ad IG. P. Eat S. 000 014 2~7 8 41 Scorer: §. Tolchinsky. 47 .591 | the Cleveland Toalacs with four hits e e e 51 .553 as the A’s pounded out a 11 to 0 vic- | OUT OUR WAY By Williams | re ae RHE Dig city gaso ine . . le 15 -324|Cleveland.. 000 000 00—0 4 0 86 252 Philadelphia 02151 Ox 15 0 —_ rrell, onnally ant rytlak; WEEE ae ae NATIONAL LEAGUE | | Grove atid Cochrane. , Women, especially, will appreciate the _ you that instant surge of power you You BACK Come BACK Chicago 62 50 554 | Bosto i Reg in traffi rane 554 | n Beats Browns improved Sinclair Regular Gasoline—it need FER? OO |'/ +) GIT ANOTHER Pittsburgh St 53.35 oston—The Boston Red ‘Sox de- | P ‘ ” i. On the open highway, WO LEAGUES) aac rl "O CARRY re a ie re |feated the Browns, 7 to 3. Andrews | makes their cars so much easier to too, this big city gasoline puts a world TH 2 Ny THI OTHER | St. Louis . 57 496 j RH E! i H Am :7O tes | Boston. 69 492 | st outs +» 920 000 o10—'s 8 9 handle in traffic. For this gasoline is of quick, eager power at your toe- ‘4 OTHER Hi ie 4 joston . 030 0x7 9 2 : OF YOUR RAINCOAT | Cincinnati :: 6 425 arignee, Cray, Hebert and. Ferrell, refined to a formula developed by tip whenever you want to pass the Ne ki Dpcems apm ugh; ndrews an mnolly, 7 ON — WED £ } AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | ._ | Tate. d Sinclair engineers to help solve the traf- car ahead. Ask for Sinclair Regular, WOLO MY mM a : ste be . UP TH RAIN Minneapolis oo me | NATIONAL LEAGUE fic problem in America's biggest cities. the big city gasoline—IT COSTS YOU a GOES DOWN Indianapolis 3 588 | gPitgourehTne "Brooklyn Dodgers The improved Sinclair Regular is a NOTHING EXTRA! Toledo .. 63 504 | place e P a. pa Beane om conf Z| (aster: lighter gasoline containing mo NOTE: For best results, use Sinclal uisville . 411 | Brooklyn. . 5 st results, inclair | St. Paul .. 78 2371 | Pinebureh. 000 400 obo 1 7 0| heavy elements to cut down speed in Opali Sinclair P Ivania M |. WEDNESDAYS RESULTS —_| spencer and Grace Pe Swift.’ Bickeup. Every drop is a light, easil ee r al Me le seen ae Aimerean Langue | Spencer and Grace P. ates ie " Y Oil. Both have been dé-wexed, and also lew York, 8; roit, 3. rns Washington, '4: Chicago, 2, | |. Ginesanateanaeeee Man certs sea vaporizing fuel that swiftly,evenly — freed from petroleum jelly at as low as ladelphia, 11; Cleveland, 0. | the New York Giants to an 8 to 0 vic- com| in ur engine — i Boston, 7; St. Louis, 3. |tory over, Cincinnati. Mooney “held and completely in yo gine — giving 60° F, below zero. ' ‘ four . 4 /\\ \\3 National League | Zl yy VA,! mf Brooklyn, 4; Pittsburgh, 1. | New York.. 000 150 110-8 Fi q coal \ | New York, 8; Cincinnati, 0. |Cincinnati.. 000 000 000-0 4 2 A \ Chicago, 3; Boston, 2. i Lge oe Hogan; Benton, Frey ‘ \ an mil Le \ American Association | . we atten haath | No games scheduled. Cubs Win Classi Mie cull hs 2 | Chicago—Chicago defeated the Bos- @) ro yy, 4 cago Cul tet ul Csi WiWinse jlead in the National League i pennant | race to two full games over Pittsburgh. RHE F TS Boston— 000 002 000 000 000 0000—2 15 0 icago— 000 100 100 000 000 000 1— 3 13 0 Bi y peereue Pruett 4 Phohrer, Hargrave; Grimes, Tinning, Bush and Hartnet, Emsley.

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