The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 30, 1932, Page 8

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Demons BRAVES WILLENTER | | | i | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1932 YANKEE GALAXY TILT AS FAVORITES OVER LOCAL OUT Expect Capacity Crowd to Wit- | ness First Contest of An- nual Two-Game Series COACH OF TRIBE Both Factions Expected to Start Lineups Used in Openers | Last Week { IS ILL wd was expected to | eld tonight A capacity flock to Hughes watch the gridiron hostilit Braves in the annual two-game se Mandan will go action a fa vorite on paper but the locals are pre- pared to ancient foeman | with every at their com- | mand. ' The go into action! without the : mentor, | L. C. McMa: en to the! ospital ‘Thurs acute appendiciti sistant coach, will dir contingent from the Coach Roy D. McLeod said Friday ting lineup of the De-| mons probably would be t which took the field agi last week. Captain Gus meyer was expected to get the s with the Mandan | rmish of their] | at 8:15 p,m our Warriors vik at guard, and Joslin at ¢ The Mandan coachi expected to announce until just before the refe but the same combination that start- ed against Linton last Friday prob- ably will be drafted for action. berth: wh This combination included Dahl- quist at quarter-back, Saunders at halfbac! Eckroth at proved exceptionally strong on th defense against Linton and a_ line, that is rugged and aggressive. Dahl- ! a ram. Schlickenmeyer and Green are veterans of the Bismarck | and are expected to carry the of the Demon attack. Bush to Rely on Left-Hander For the brunt Dutch Henry to Pitch For Min- neapolis in Third Game With Newark = Ww | Glenna Collett Vare Must Stop {shoulders of Glenna Collett Vare, one Was NO! of the world’s greatest women golfers and holder of the American title dur- ing half the last decade. kenzie of Toronto, in a championship semi-final at the Salem Country club and if she falters, as she threatened Priest and to do Thursday, Canada has an ex- cellent chance to not quist is the sparkplug of the backfield! 519, and big Joe Eckroth is the battering | Thursd Pressure. when she the match and jus ‘aised her game to its gr w lw | for this title event since her interna- ti star, hai lotte Glutting of Short Hills, N. J. saving Don Brennan, winner of the| | opener, for the first tilt in the mid- BLEACHER FANS CHEER IN FIRST SERIES GAME There was plenty of fun In the bleachers, as usual, for the openi: Yankees and Cubs in New York. This Associated Press telephoto shows part of the crowd cheering. ! (OPPONENTS MUST GET BISY'TO STOP SWEEP OF SERES ! New York Has Won 10 Straight | Series Games and Points | For 12 PIPGRAS WILL HURL FRIDAY Lou Gehrig and Riggs Stephen- son Have Been Hitting Stars ‘So Far En Route to Chicago Aboard Cubs’ Special, Sept. 30—(?)—The world se- ries of 1932 rolled westward Friday, bound for Chicago and the third Game between the Yankees and the Cubs there Saturday, and the sudden end of baseball's classic engagement ing world series game betweer. the Canada Bids for Another U. S. Title as well, unless the Bruins do some-/ thing drastic immediately about a, very serious situation, H As the battle scene shifted from Ada Mackenzie to Subdue Dominion YANKS CONFIDENT THEY | GRAB FOUR STRAIGHT GAMES 2,2 #22" wn This Associated Press Telephoto shows wou Gehrig, slugging first baseman of the New York Yankees, as he scored on his home run against the Chicago Cubs in the first game of the world series, He knecked Babe Ruth in ahead of him. ei or e to Resist Invasion of Mandan at Hughes Field Tonight LEAVES FOR CHICAGO 2 UP ON CUB RIVALS GEHRIG SCORES ON HOME RUN AGAINST CUBS the Yankee Stadium to Wrigley Field, the Yankees had stowed away their 10th straight world series victory, a record no other club in the history of WILL westward on separate trains, the quarterback, Sorsdaht and Agr Peabody, Ma halfback, Green at eee Li \{ | task Of Keeping the last of the nation- . Woodmansee at end, Burton and |! amateur golf championships in this p t rig t Boelter at tackle, Andrews and Dohn country Friday fell upon the capable rospects For Strong Bison She was slated to play Ada Macy Casey Finnegan's Gridiron only capture its fullback, Byerly and Syvrud at end. first "American women’s title but make| C@fges at State College Partridge and Berry at tackle, Ord-|4 clean sweep of the national ama- Look Good on Paper way and Dietrich at guard, and tour competition on this side of the Boehm at center. |border, for Ross “Sandy” Somerville Mandan will present a team which | atready has taken the men's cham- Fargo, N. D., Sept. 30.—(7)—Bison Iansiilp to Londen Orit, hopes of a North Central conference Beating Mrs. Vare, however, is a ifficult feat. Peggy Wattles, Buf-| football championship are better on 2 had a victory in her grasp} Paper this season than at any time jay until Glenna put on the The Buffalo girl was 3 up} finished the first half of when Mrs. Vare outclassed, she t peak to since Casey Finnegan took over the football reins at the North Dakota Agricultural college. Teams tutored by Finnegan and his assistant, Bob Lowe, have suffered only four defeats in a dozen confer- en ‘ts since 1929, three by the ity of North Dakota. South Dakota State scored the other con- ference victory over a Finnegan team. In the years Finnegan has been chief tutor, only one upset has been ppeared hopelessly in out by 2 and 1. Miss Mackenzie gained Friday's ch with an unexpected 2 and 1 ory over Maureen Orcutt, Ha- . N. J., who has been pointing onal team play in England last May * ; In the lower half semi-final, Vir-|Tecorded against his team. This was Ittle Serles GO nn Wie te steady Chicago | the 7-0 triumph which South Dakota | State's Jackrabbits registered in last year's homecoming game here. Bison records show Morningside never has scored a touchdown on a Finnegan team. South Dakota's Coy- otes have crossed the Bison goal twice, while South Dakota State’s lone touchdown in three years caused the 1931 upset victory. an engagement with Char- ‘ans to use Pete Jablonowski and | estern city Sunday Newark, J., Sept. 30.—(AP) Petty and Brennan are, thus far,|~ ph, Whether or not the Newark Bi the series’ heroes, each with a re: | tonenaanraes Gea Salsa _ can solve the curv a left-handed markable pitching performance be- three seasons, but each year the Bison hurler may be hg point in hind him. Brennan had things all] - ch W Stad Leag’ neapolis Mil to | hi the little world Re. resume Friday pe with neither the Internation: champions nor the Mi Jers a bit further ahead than when they started. Apparently arriving at the clusion southpaws are his the result of Jess Pr work Wedne: manager of Z tion titlehol definitely | w during Thursday's vacation to shoot another lefty into the mound breach Priday. Prank “Dutch” Henry wiil be Bush’s choice for the starting post in the third game and what he does may well mean or failure in the series which s to Minne- apolis after Friday's conflict. It cer- tainly will be an important factor, as the winner wi to capture the mi: Manager Al Ma again will depend ‘right-hander, sticking to ] 1 BURNS , FROM RIDING A FREE VACATION/ Je a Tuesday when he gave out only four its and received far more than | touchdowns. enough support to blank the Millers, F 11 to 0. almost as good in’ the evening se under lights Wednesday night when! two touchdowns, but the Nodaks he gave five hits, and fanned 11 bat | reache ‘a ie eee aes d the peak of their offensive for the first time, and with the teams! rests deadlocked. crowd of the week were good. ball pitchers of former times, hi record of 511 victories, an at more than 23 games won per year for 22 yars, earned $4,265 for his season on the race tracks, OUR BOARDING HOUSE I EXPECTED TO SEE YOU DRAG IN HERE WITH YOUR SUIT FULL OF CINDER: FREIGHT CARS ~~ BUT You LOOK NEAT AND CORN FED/~~ You MUST HAVE WAVED TH’ WAND OVER SOMEBODY For have narrowed the scoring margin. The first year the Bison failed to score while the Nodaks put over two The Bison tallied once in 1930 while North Dakota duplicated WaS | its 1929 performance, registering two | touchdowns. In 1931 the Bison tallied is own way in the initial meeting The gray-haired Petts performances, scoring three times. | While all North Central conference coaches look forward to teams as good assured | or better than last season, Finnegan his victory hopes on a factor Prospects for the best | which caused his charges to taste de- |feat three times in conference com- 5 | Petition, a getaway man. Glenn Jar- Cy Young, one of the great base-|rett for two seasons was the Bison lad aj} nemesis. Last year it was Ralph rage of | Pierce, both of whom were fast and accounted for a number of Nodak victories. | Fritz Hanson, Perham, Minn, a Pige ‘ar old | speed merchant who has been forced plug” bought for $150 last July, has! into idleness because of a broken fin- x owner, Mrs. L./ ger, is the Bison hope this year. He . Connor of Kentucks oe lil be ready. for his varsity debut against the Coyotes Friday, Oe nnn i a By Ahern Without opposition from the world! of the major leagues Friday, ith fair weather virtually so far WE GOT YOUR CARDS FROM TH RITZ-DORF SEA-VIEW HOTEL WM-M-INDEED? ~YOU MIGHT BUT WE KNOW You WRITE THE JUST CHECKED YouR’ RITZ-DORF CANE THERE, WHILE AND INQUIRE ‘OU DID Youre. \F THEITe SNATCH AN’ SNORE HOSTELRY IN SOME GOAT-HILL WAS GRACED WITH THE PATRONAGE OF Y SA) SRR SOON) NS: Football Machine ; Yankees had added the first two { “ games of the current warfare to the | Marse Joe’ M’Carthy, However, !cight straight victories battered out Not so Cocksure About over the Pirates of 1927 and the Car- Sweep jdinals of 1928, They belted Guy Bush, Burleigh ‘Grimes and Bob Smith when hits {meant runs to win | i | a. dreary opener En Route to Chicago with Yankee Wednesday, 12 to |Special, Sept. 30.—()—Rolling along 6. And Thursday, | the shores of Lake Erie Friday, mani-| still making a | testing no more concern than though; miinimam of effort jit was an early season swing into the do a maximum of i | west, the Yankees spun a tune of con- ae cen | fidence in their ability to make it four side ll ion ide it |Sstraight over the Cubs and a world AK le tall, {record of 12 straight victories in three | $Pare ansas | farmer boy, and| baseball championships. took brillinat, | “We're 2 up and 2 to go,” remarked a ~ Nee ge |the eminent golfer, Babe Ruth, vie ao figures he has shaken off most of the va leffects of his re- Desperate for a cent illness and is victory that could about due to in- have evened the crease his world series output of home runs. ly Chi Het En, Cu: # Der Lou G familiar surroundings might turn the contests. » Stephenson, If . ;Grimm, 1b . | Hartnett, c ithe struggle moved on to the home) Jurges, ss grounds, where an exhilarated fan-|Warneke, p dom and the natural inspiration of! x Hemsley . Friday named Charley Root his; starting pitcher Saturday. George | Pipgrass probably will work for the Yankees. Leading the hitters in the first two games were Riggs Stephenson of the Cubs, who secured five hits in nine| attempts, and Lou | Yankees, who has a perfect day at bat Thursday and who has hit safe Gehrig of the six times in eight trips in the two | Box Score of | Thursday Game icago ( rman, 2b slish, 3b . yler, rf .. | | + | E! t) r) oO! 0) 0: 0) maree, cf Conemmerend enwwoocoonp “Unl : el eae ae. bee ligune wee cthuahee tide, Charley Grimm and his warriors) otals Mai asaals on their home ,|threw every resource back of the) Batted for Warneke in 9th. | grounds than they lanky youngster who was ranked the | have been so far, best pitcher in the National League |New York (AL) ABR HOA E | we ought to clean this season. r | Combs, cf 1140¢c jup this series The Bruin manager lifted Mark) sewell, 3b 11010 | quick,” added the Koenig, veteran of past world series| Ruth, rf .. 11300 Yankee slugger. {triumphs with the Yankees, from his; Gehrig, 1b . 24500 | ‘The big Yankee 4 |newly-won post at shortstop becaus¢| Lazzeri, 2b 01310) | party, accompan- “Ben Chapman’ |‘2¢ former infield mate of Tony Laz- | pickey, O28 6 el ied by Baseball Commissioner Landis,,| 2°"! had damaged his left wrist. He| Chapman, If 01110 | numbered only one outstanding fellow |“TopPed Bill Jurges into Koenie’s | Crosetti, ss . 00331 who did not seem so confident the place and supplanted sohnny Moore! Gomez, p .. 00030 i a jin center field with Frank Demaree, American League champions would," ,ight-handed hitter who the laws continue t ve ; Gav, through thee chings thelr OWN of baseball say should have better generosity of the Cubs, He was/luck than a southpaw swinger against Chi “Marse Joe” McCarthy, the manager, | !¢ft-handed pitching. who admits he takes his baseball ser Strategy Has Worked fously and likes it that way. He did all these things. He started | “This hasn’t been so one-sided as a| the best pitcher he has, as far as rec- | Chi lot of you fellows think,” demurred|PdS go; and his strategy worked. McCarthy. “One long hit for the! Young Demaree knocked in one of Cubs in the early stages of the game the two Bruin runs. Jurges, brilliant might have changed the whole com- | field though he failed to hit safely, plexion of things. They are a good | figured in three double plays. War- ball club. ineke pitched a conerene studious, “We've looked good because Ruffing ;S0metimes sparkling ball game. and Gomez gave us the pitching and’ And still Manager Grimm and his we hit in the pinches. That's a tough | Cubs rolled through the outlands Fri- combination to beat. day, two games down in the battle for on “ the world championship, facing the! Ch; Ghinnee Gee an |task of winning four of the next five example for the | ames, considered one of baseball's way our team has |impossibilities. Never in the history been doing the of seven game world series has a team right thing in the | Come back to win the title after losing right spot. With |the first two engagements. * the bases full in} Only once, in fact, back in the days the first game,{0f nine-game series, did a team turn Chappie. raced first trick. The Giants of 1921 wal- over to make a/loped the Yanks in eight games after great running! Suffering shut-out defeats in the first catch of Herman's | tWo- drive that looked | pj like a double. That's the best Pipgras Piece of defense work so far in the series. | “At bat Chapman has had only one hit, but he delivered it with the bases full and the score tied yesterday in| ithe third inning.” t | McCarthy figures the Cubs will be tougher to beat in Wrigley Field. If so they will have to get steadier pitch- ing than their two ace right-handers, Always hanging over the Cubs, lay- ing in wait for every fleeting weakness of War- neke, was that figure of the all- powerful Yankee Goblin, the great- | est hitting club in baseball, the men- ace of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Bill! of | Guy Bush and Lon Warneke, have} Dickey, Earle shown so far. The Yankee manager | Combs, and the will start George Pipgras, veteran rest. Time and again the Cubs have Stephenson —_boasted the Yan- i kee wrecking crew’ meant nothing to them. righthander, in the third game Sat-} urday. | Two Johnny Stars “They're just a ball club,” said 1 Bee | Suffering Injuries | ycrieke “They're only human be- | ings, like the rest of us. They pull on their trousers one leg at a time, just like we do.” But when the time came to prove it, they failed. “Bases on balls,” said Grimm Fri- day, as he summed up the situation, “that’s the thing that has licked us so far. “We're trying too hard. We're too tense in the pinches.” Against the Cub background of re- gret there showed Friday even more brilliant by comparison the masterly pitching of another youngster, 21- year-old Vernon Gomez, the ‘left- handed Spaniard from California. As Loose As Whip He was as loose in Thursday's pinches, as pliable and cutting as a black snake whip. Carrying on the effectiveness of Charley Ruffing, who fanned 10 with St. Paul, Sept. 30.—(#)—Two stellar performers in the St. John’s Univer- sity backfield, bruised and limping | around for the last week, will do only part time duty when the Johnnies tackle Macalester college in their opening Minnesota college conference football game Saturday. {Gus Luckemeyer, fullback, and Cy Ryan, triple-threat halfback, have been on the sideliines most of the week and Coach Joe Benda said Fri- day it is doubtful whether either Will be able to hobble through 60 minutes or even half the game. The Johnnies never have defedted Macalester in St. Paul, but despite the injuries they are given a good chance to do so Saturday. Friday night another conference game will be played. Augsburg,’ with ® much-improved combination, will battle the Gustavus Adolphus squad at St. Peter, and despite the fact the Gusties are favored, a good early sea- Prospect. 4 ‘son tilt is in The squad left Northfield Friday morning for its tough encoun- ter with lor State Teachers By innings: Stephenson. Sacrifice—Jurges. Double plays—| Warneke, Hartnett and Hermaa. Her- | man, Jurges and Grimm 2, base—Chicago Warneke four (Combs, Sewell, Ruth, Dickey). (Warneke 3, Herman 2, Hartnett, Eng- lish, Hemsley) ; pires—Klem (N. L.) plate; Van Graf- lan (A. L,) first; Mi second; Dinneen (A. L.) third. Time Benny Richter, sional who won the first national southpaw golf tournament this year, holds course records on both midwest- ern and west coast links, | The Fairmount racetrack near St. Louis, representing a $400,000 invest-! ment, pays a $62,500 tax to the state he ae OE ~ 101 000 000—2 202 010 00x—5 Runs batted in—Steph- Gehrig, Dickey 2, Demaree, apman 2. Two-base hit—Herman, Three-base hit—Cuyler. Left on} New York 5. Bases balls off—Gomez 1 (Hartnett) Struck out by—Gomez 8 Warneke 7 (Ruth, apman 3, Gomez 2, Crosetti). Um- rth (N. L.) game—1:46, St. Louis profes- Illinois for a 25-day meeting. OUT OUR WAY @ | uled. eta, while Northwestern, which en- | Jims to Rely on THE WATER woRKS- NINE WESTERN CONFERENCE ELEVENS AWAITING OPENERS | | LAST Only Chicago in Big Ten Will Be| Idle Saturday; Teams Take It Easy Chicago, Sept. 30.—(P)— Western Conference football teams, which open their seasons Saturday, rested Friday or had light workouts sched- Satisfied his men are ready for Ohio Wesleyan, Coach Sam Willaman of Ohio State sent them to a country gages Missouri, had only a light work session coming up. Coach Hanley said neither Pug Rentner, all-America | halfback, nor Dick Fencl, veteran end, would start and would not be used unless necessary. Both are suffering | with “charlie-horses.” | finished drills against forward passes, which they sxpect to be used against them Saturday. The Badgers reopen their rivalry with Marquette, Iowa meets Bradley, and the Hoosiers tackle Ohio university of Athens. Michigan took it easy to save its strength for Michigan State's expect- 2d powerful opposition. and Illinois was prepared for plenty of trouble ‘rom Coe and Miami, its doubleheader opponents. Minnesota's starting line- Husar replacing Dutch Fehring at tackle against Kansas State. Both Fehring and Moore are on the injured list. Chicago has no game Saturday, which is fortunate, for most of the) of action because of ‘injuries. Running Attack Jamestown, N. —Relying chiefly on line play and a running attack, the Jamestown Jim- mies will play their opening game of the season against the Ellendale nor- legiate Athletic Conference here Sat- urday. 1 Ellendale’s Dusties will present | practically the same veteran lineup which carried them through the 1931 | schedule without a defeat. i Practice sessions have shcen the Jamestown outfit to be one of defen- sive strength while later in the sea- son Coach E. J. Cassel expects to} develop an aerial attack equal to his | running and line game which he has | been’ emphasizing. | Injuries will keep Captain McLain, | Fred Hall and Enge out of the Sat-} urday lineup. ' F TS IGuT (By The Associated Press) New York—Tony Canzoneri, world |lightweight champion, stopped Lew Kirsch, New York (3), non-title; Ed- Gie Kid Wolfe, Memphis, Tenn., out~ pointed Emil Rossi, New York (10). London — Larry Gains, Ont., outpointed Salvatore Ruggirello, Italy (12). Montreal — Maxie Rosenbloom, world lightheavyweight champion, outpointed Lou Scozza, Buffalo (10). Tacoma, Wash.—Fred Lenhart, Ta coma, outpointed Pietro Georgi, Italy (8); Alonso Gonzales, El Paso, an¢ Lee Page, New York, draw (6). Minot Teachers to lot. Of four positions on the starting eleven, Coleman is quite certain they are two halfbacks, a guard and the Howard Dunnell.and Melvin Johnson will start at the halves, with up against South Dakota State still; Glen Iverson at one guard and Wal. was uncertain and Purdue’s coaches|ter Borrud at center. had decided to use Keegan in Doxie| maining positions, players who hap- Moore's halfback position, with John | pen to catch the mentor’s eye just before starting time will probably get center. the call. \Edward F. Voltmer, one of two Uni- versity of Iowa athletes winning Ph- D. degrees in physical education, has arily out | been added to the faculty in that de- pi yore ing orvcnntent pie Poy s-npgigadlamaal| He won baseball and bas- partment. ketball letters a decade ago. U. S. ENGINEER ON JOB An American engineer is in charge of the construction of a 20-mile auto- mobile highway from Hodeida, on the » Sept. 30.—(AP) | Red sea, to Sansa, capital of the Ye~ men, i tet sh, (inre Ny vk \ CRWiLLaMs, Toronto, Take on Bottineau Minot, N. D., Sept. 30.- }evening, the Minot Teachers’ college Wisconsin, Iowa and Indiana, had/| Beavers are scheduled ‘to play their opening game of the season against the Bottineau school of forestry and Coach J. W. Coleman said Thursday he knew about as much concerning a starting lineup as he did last July. , Perhaps a little more, but not a whole (P)—Friday For the re- ——____________-_+__-e | Stickler Solution {| Me es al mal school eleven in the Inter-col- |“ Y Sas eat ces

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