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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAR, SEPTEMBER 21, 1982 “TRPLE BY CUYLER | WITH BAGS FILLED | PROVIDES CLIMAX Veteran Regulars Start Taking Hard-Earned Rest Before | Series VEECK AND GRIMM PLEASED Victory Gives Youngsters Ex- pression of Awe, Vets Satisfaction 21.—..?)}—Chica in,” with tle in the way of serious business to worry them until next Wednesday, when they oppose the New York Yankees in the opening game of the | world series—and they intended to | get a little fun out of their baseball. | As soon as Kiki Cuyler smashed , one of Steve Swetonic’s curves for a triple with the bases loaded in the seventh inning of the first game of | Cubs’ Stock Took | Big Jump Tuesday Chicago. Sept. 21.—(4-—Chicago National League baseball club stock | would make a great investment for a quick profit—if it could be ob- tained. ! A Chicago brokerage firm, which occasionally deals in club stock, r ported a sensational rise Tu afternoon. Its usual range 195 to 210, but opened Tue: 255. One run in the first inning and it went to 275 bid. At the end of the game it was 300 bids, with || the only offering five shares at | 350. s from ‘Tuesday's “crucial” doubleheader, the | veteran regulars had earned a rest. | They started taking it in the second game, and they don’t have to go back | to work until they have Neither do they have to rest if they don’t want to. rested. | N: Chicago Cubs Win National Loop Pennant by Beating Pittsburgh ‘| ° TWO JUNIOR CLASSES ELIMINATED BY RING COMMISSION YANKS PREPARED TO GIVE CUBS SMASHING WELCOME OUR BOARDING HOUSE I DON'T KNOW JUST HOW Oo FIGURE THAT FELLOW HOOPLE, boc! HE SEEMS LIKE SUCH A BLUFF AND FOURFLUSH “—BUT THEN, HE'S A WISE OLD, CODGER/ THERE ISN'T A THING HE DOESN'T KNOW -. AT LEAST HE GIVES THAT BUNNY, ERIC, Fore ELEVEN THEY SAID HE WITH CARDS WELL , HE KNOWS HOW To PIAY PoKER HE TOOK DOWN AND THE JUDGE ? HUNDRED DOLLARS!) COULD DO MORE THAN THURSTON! BEEN AN UNSOLVED “wl oR MYSTERY = By Ahern | ‘ , T'LL NEVER Be A GOLFER ,VAN/ Nou see, PLAYING POLO IN INDIA $0 LONG HAS CRAMPED MY STYLE/ ALWAYS HAS 9-21- a GREAT FIGHT FOR THIRD | “8 BURT SHOTTON’S PHILLI IN Lost Ground Tuesday But Have | Howly te Through | With Cincinnati Cincinnati, O. Sept. 21.—()}—The Enquirer said Wednesday it is known Dan Howley will not remain as man- a et (ea Se ee | ager ot the Cincinnati Reds another Made Remarkable Rise | R H_ &E| Season. This Si St. Louis... 000 200 000-2 8 1! ‘The pilot of the National League 's Season Cleveland. 311 204 00x—11 19 2 cellar club, the paper says, is nego- ‘gough; Hudlin and Myatt. looked in the excite- | — Weaver Wins N | Hadley, Hebert, Cooney and Ben- tiating for an interest in the Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League, which he once managed. If “|pions and the rating of the challen- (OFFICIAL TITLES OF | ;Proved champion in the junior wel-| Manager Charlie Grimm almo: went right back to work in the s ond game "‘uesda: Ithough he long in the first division. | Sixth when the curtain went down | the winning of the . 22 the deal is consummated, he will ational League pennant by Chicago | i ._% H £ hold an executive position, but will has been the surprising fight put up; Washington 200 000 002-4 9 1) not be manager. by Burt Shottons’ Phillies for a berth | Boon ---. 000 000 100— 1 4 3! Weil intends to take his time se- Weaver, and Spencer; Welch, An- drews and Jolley. | Tecting a successor. The paper says rumors have named Donnie Bush, of had planned to give Marvin. Gudat a| chance as soon as the National) League title was won. 1 “Now that this battle is over.” he| said, “I could get a lot of fun out of | this game. I won't rest long.” | He has definitely announced only one item of his world series plans— jand right now are giving the Brook- ! | little Tuesday, increasing their lead | that Guy Bush will pitch the opening game at New York. i} The clubhouse celebration after! the pennant-winning triumph r quired a little time to develop. Billy Herman was the first player to reach the dressing room. He wore an awed) sort of smile. The rest of the young- sters, with the exception of Lonnie Warneke, the sensational young righthander, matched Herman's ex pression. The older players just, beamed—until Grimm, last to come| in, appeared. Then they yelled at Grimm, at each other, and finally demanded a speech from the manager. He obliged | with one word, “Great,” repeated many times. Pr Veeck, who on Aug. 2, deposed Rogers Hornsby as manager and appointed Grimm, congratulated each man, finishing up with Grimm. | J NATIONAL LEAGUE Ww a Pet. | Chicago ........ 89 61 593 Pittsburgh ...... 82 66 5 Brooklyn . 79 72 3 3 7 3 80 St. Louis 80 Cincinnati a1 393 AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww L Pet New York 104 45 698 Philadelphia 92 37 17 Washington .... 83 60 Cleveland 85 63 2 72 500 87 A12! 100 B15 106 284 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww L Pet. Minneapolis .... 96 85 93 Columbus . 87 Milwaukee . 385 Indianapolis .... 83 Toledo . 82 99 Kansas Ci 78 484 St. Paul 422! Louisville . 341 | TU RESULTS tional League New York 13; Boston 3. Brooklyn 3; Philadelphia 1 Chicago 5, 0; Pittsburgh 2, 5. | St. Louis 3; Cincinnati 1. | 3 American League | Cleveland 5, 11; St. Louis 2, 2. | Washington 4; Boston 1. | Chicago-Detroit, postponed, rain. No other games. American Association Milwaukee 7, 8; Minneapolis 6, 4. St. Paul 8, 1; Kansas City 4, 5. Other games postponed, rain. American Contingent Remains in Tourney Montreal, Que., Sept. 21—(7)—The contingent it of five was in- a year ago. Shotton's sluggers have | pounded their way into fourth place} Strong Defense Is Objective Of Harvard Mentor lyn Dodgers the battle of their lives for third. The Dodgers pulled away to a game and a half by downing the | Phillies 3 to 1. | If the Phils do turn the trick, it| will be the first time the club has fin- | ished that high since 1917, ol The Giants, seeking sixth place, ; plastered the Braves 13 to 3. Mel Ott led the assault on four Boston hurl- ers with four hits. including his 37th | nd 38th home runs. tying him with | Chuck Klein for the league leader- Simple Offense Should Be Sufficient ship ae { St. Louis, with Tex Carleton piteh-| Cambridge, Mass. Sept. 21.—(P)}— | ing five. ball, beat Cincinnati, 3 te; The old-fashioned ideals that pulled 1, and the Cubs proper with a 5 to xed the race | Harvard out of the football mire last win over Pitts- | year still are in yogue at the stadium, burgh in the first game of a double- | where Eddie Casey expounds the doc- header. The Corsairs took the sec- ond, 5 to 0. Washington beat the Red Sox 4 to 2 ' defense. Casey, starting his second year as dent William L.;1. Cleveland completed the day's ac- | head coach, has a veteran squad. Such } tivities in the American League by | good fortune would tempt the average beating St. Louis twice, 5 to 2 and 11 / coach into experimenting with a most to 2. Joe Vosmik cracked two triples, complicated attack. But not Casey. a double and three singles during the He works on the theory you must afternoon. Scores by innings: stop the other team from carrying the NATIONAL LEAGUE ball to win football games, and to do Giants Club Braves that you need deadly tacklers, He R H E/ also is convinced expert blocking Basten 5-000 O00: Caer 17 | | makes @ simple offense just as effec- Betts, Pruett, Seibold, Prankhouse | t1ve,35 the most intricate shift forma and Spohrer, Shulte; Fitzsimmons,’ “go 'while the rest of the football | Rona ae turning to Warner and * Rockne ideas, Harvard remains Har- Dedgess Stave OM-Phily | vari. tb. willccontinue with its bane Brooklyn.. 002 000 100—3 9 0 Structures, the short kick formation Philadelphia 100 000 000—1 8 0 and the single wingback with the un- Clark and__ Lope: Holley, Rhem, balanced line and split short side. Collins and V. Davis. Many of these plays date back to | the early days of Percy Haughton but all have been modified by the decep- | tions that Casey used during his three Cubs, Pirates Split, Pittsburgh. 000 200 000— 2 2! years as freshman mentor. There is Hartnett . ™ “"\overburdens players with extra as- ; R HE ‘ignments at the expense of the fun- Pittsburgh. 202 001 000—5 10 0 damentals. Chicago ... 000 000 000—0 3 0 Although the crimson has 26 mem- Tinning, Yerkes bers of last year's varsity squad, in- j cluding 13 lettermen and five of the Meine and Finney; and Taylor, Hemsle: —— | Yale game starters, it lacks high- Cards Beat Cincy | grade reserve material. R H E, Casey regards this need as vitally Cincinnati. 009 000 010-1 5 1! important to its 1932 success for, un- St.Louis .. 201 000 00x—3 7 1) der the new Hberal substitute rule, he Frey, Kolp and Lombardi; Carleton | plans to use from 30 to 40 men in each and J. Wilson, game instead of the 15 or 16 as was ERIC. the case last season. evel: Ww Pais staff are concentrating on the third NERA ectearty gir uae x anil ces taave St. Louis.. 000 000— 2 11 2 a perfectly balanced squad in time for Cleveland. . 1 the major clashes. 002 200° 120 OOx— 5 12 SANITARY @ Protected from rust —the Gillette BLUE BLADE is sanitary —easy to clean. This exclusive advantage — plus glass-hard edges, slotted flexing center and other important features—make the Gillette Blue Blade a marvelous shaving instrument. Try it and lear for yourself, | Eddie Casey's Theory Is That trine of a simple offense and a tight | He and his| 1 | the Minneapolis club Of the Ameri- can Association, as a pissible choice. | JADICK, CHOCOLATE. STRIPPED BY ACTION 'Carnera and Stribling Are Not! yew york, sept. Listed Among Leading | Heavyweights. | MARCEL THIL NEW CHAMP, Sharkey, Fields, Canzoneri, Paul, Brown and Perez Are Honored Baltimore, Sept. 21.—()—With the selection of the United States cham- gers completed, the national* boxing commission Wednesday advanced to its final session of the 13th annual convention for the election of of- ficers. General John V. Clinnin of Mlinois, retiring president, bas announced he would not seek reelection. James M.| Brown of Michigan was slated as his successor. Two junior classifications were abolished Tuesday. This was done after Johnny Jadick had been ap- terweight class and Kid Chocolate in| the junior lightweight class. Jack Sharkey, who won the world heavyweight title from Max Schmel- ing. was recognized as national cham- pion. with Schmeling first of the con- tenders. Max Baer was given second! place and Ernie Schaaf dropped from} fourth to seventh position. Primo Carnera, the ambling Alp, and William L, (Young) Stribling failed to gain recognition in the first 10 of the heavyweight division. The newest champion was Marcel Thil of France in the middleweight} class, with Vince Dundee as the first! contender and Grollia Jones second George Nichol was given the light- heavyweight title over Maxie Rosen- bloom, recognized as titleholder ini some states. | Champions in the other classes; were: Welterweight, Jackie Fields lightweight, Tony Canzoneri; feath-j erweight, Tommy Paul; bantam- weight, Al Brown; flyweight, Young Peres. | Look Forward to New Records | in Attendance and Gate Receipts 21.—(#)—The New York Yankees are preparing to wel- come the Chicago Cubs in the open- ing game of the world series next | Wednesday with a barrage of base-| hits and perhaps the greatest crowd | in the 29-year-old history of base- | ball’s fall classic. i They may fail of both their objec- | tives but they'll be in there trying. | Advance sales have been lighter so/ far than in many previous years but | the Yankee management is counting | upon a capacity turn-out for the} opening game. Should every one of | the 69,000-odd seats be filled, a ser- | jes record for attendance at a single | game automatically would be shat- tered, Ed Barrow, secretary of the Yan- kees, reveals although there has been a tremendous run on the boxes, there still are plenty of reserved seats to be had. Should the series go the full limit of seven games, all records for at- tendance and receipts almost cer- tainly would go by the boards. With the Yankee stadium seating almost 70,000 and Wrigley Field accommod- ating more than 50,000, an aggregate ; attendance of close to 400,000 would | not be out of reach, far beyond the record of 328,051 established by the Yankees and the St. Louis Cardinals | in 1926. And receipts, under those | circumstances, should be materially greater than the record $1,207,864/ the Yankees and Cardinals drew the same year. Both teams approach the series | with “key men” on the injured list. The Yankees are more than a little worried over the condition of Babe Ruth although the big slugger main- tains he will be in first-rate shape | ® for his 10th world series. Tony Laz- | zeri, second baseman, is bothered with a sore shoulder. The Cubs’ principal casualty is Mark Koenig. veteran shortstop who used to wear a Yankee uniform. Koenig. however, is report- ed completely recovered from his hurts and certain to be ready for the series. The first two games of the series will be played here next Wednesday and Thursday. After a day of rest the clubs will resume at Chicago with games Oct. 1, 2 and 3. The last two games, if necessary, will be played here Oct. 5 and 6. ' | Thompson, MAJOR LEAGUE RS (By The Associated Press) (Including Tuesdays’ Games) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — O’Doul, Dodgers, .368; Klein, Phillies, .352. Runs—Klein, Phillies, 153; O’Doul, Dodgers, 118. Home runs—Klein, Ott, Giants, 38. Stolen bases — Klein, Phillies, 20; Frisch, Cardinals, and Piet, Pirates, 18. Pitching — Warneke, Brown, Braves, 14-7. Phillies, and Cubs, 22-6; AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Foxx, Athletics, 359; Al- exander, Red Sox, .358. Runs—Foxx, Athletics, 143; Combs, Yankees, 140. Home runs — Foxx, Athletics, 53; Ruth, Yankees, 40. Stolen bases—Chapman, Yankees, 37; Walker, Tigers, 27. Pitching—Allen, Yankees, Gomez, Yankees, 24-7. 17-3; Waltonites Planning Sheyenne River Dam Devils Lake, N. D.. Sept. 21.--(?)— At a meeting of ihe Devils Lake chap- | ter of the Izaak Walton-League, S. chapter president, out- lined plans for the construction of a proposed dam on the Sheyenne river. A concrete dam which would back , up the water for about three miles and provide a reservoir for fish stock- ing is being considered. Thompson said it is planned to have the site surveyed soon. Plans already are being made to get the project under way. Yesterday’s Stars ° $+ (By The Associated Press) Hazen Cuyler, Cubs—His triple with | bases filled in seventh beat Pirates and clinched pennant for Cubs. George Puccinelli, Cardinals — His homer with one on beat Reds. John Burnett and Joe Vosmik, In- BREWERS GAIN IN THIRD PLACE RACE Take Fall Out of Indifferent | Minneapolis Millers in Doubleheader Chicago, Sept. 21.—()}—Milwau- kee’s Brewers Wednesday had a lead of one and one-half games over In- dianapolis in the American Associa- tion struggle for third place, and a good chance of hanging on. Taking advantage of Minneapolis’ apparent indifference to what hap- pens until the little world series opens, the Brewers Tuesday gave the champions a pair of beatings, 7 to 6, and 8 to 4. The victories ran the Brewers’ string to five, and left the Millers with as many defeats in a row. Indianapolis and Louisville were rained out, helping Milwaukee to in- crease its lead. In the only other ac- tivity Tuesday, St. Paul and Kansas City divided a dotbleheader. Phil Todt’s hitting helped the Saints to an 8 to 4 victory in the first game, and Pete Fowler's four-hit pitching enabled the Blues to even it up for the day, 5 to 1. “ Scores by innings: Millers Socked Twice ! RHE Minneapolis 600 000 000—6 8 0 Milwaukee. 000 001 105—7 13 1 Hill and Richards; Knott, Kessen ich and Young. R H E Minneapolis 000 001 300-4 8 0 Milwaukee. 401 000 30x—8 7 1 Vandenberg and Griffin; Polli and Young, Crouch. Saints and Blues Split RH | St. Paul.... 000 242 000—8 13 Kansas City 000 021 001— 4 Van Atta and Guiliani; | Blackwell and Collins, 14 Gabler, R HE St. Paul.... 100 000 000-1 4 2 Kansas City 310 000 10x—-5 8 1 |. Trow, Adkins and F. Snyder; Fow- | ler and M. Snyder. i {against Braves with two home runs, | double and single. | Joe Stripp and Glenn Wright, | Dodgers—Their homers beat Phillies.’ dians—Contributed six hits apiece as | Indians won two from Browns. New York—Phil Stark, New York, Monte Weaver, Senators — Allowed | outpointed Steve Smith, Bridgepor', Red Sox four hits and won 22nd vic- | Con., (6); Cowboy Jack Willis, Texas, tory of year. Mel Ott, Giants—Drove in six runs 20 WORDS We. are very happy to make this im- portant announcement to the millions of smokers who want a fine, long- filler cigar of modest price. Certified Cremo at 5¢ has for years been America’s greatest cigar value. Now at 5¢ STRAIGHT—3 for 10¢, Certified Cremo ushers in a new and still greater cigar value. This is made possible by our tremendous reserve of fine. long-filler tobacco, our modern up-to-the-minute NO MORE...NO LESS! America’s biggest Cigar Value ...Certified Cremo now 5 cents straight...3 for 10 cents...same quality...same size...same shape methods of manufacture and our large volume sales. 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