The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 3, 1932, Page 7

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| 6 THE BISMARCY TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1932 -1Yanks Make Baseball History, Sweeping World Series Third Time BROADWAYHITTERS [FOOTBALL DOPESTERS CHAGRINED BY RESULTS IN OPENERS | _OUR BOARDING HOUSE GEORGIA, MARYLAND,|Newark Evens Series With Millers By Ahern | BELT CHICAGO CUBS | kool PAR FOUR STRAIGHT Za “lg WHAT! weit, TLL BZ Lo0OK a NAVY AND TEX AS ARE. Siege Guns of Yankee Attack [gwen ellve skinny AT THAT ROLLI-~ WHERE AN’ HOW DID HE COME INTO A LUMP OF SUGAR THAT SIZE'¢ —~AN' HE WOULDN'T GIVE US A TUMBLE THAT HE WAS CARRYING CARGO LIKE THIS | “weir, Tur wIDE 1T ~ AN’ LISTEN TO HIM For His Club National League Champions Are! Humbled 13 to 6 After Good Start VICTNS OF UPSETS Mighty Yale Is Held to Score-/ less Tie Saturday By Little Bates i i { } Minneapolis, Oct. 3—(4)—It is shall come to pass that Col. Jacob Ruppert feels help is needed for Messrs, Ruff- ing, Pennock, Pipgras, Allen et al, there's a burly-hander on his farm ready and willing to abet the colonel’s New York Yankees in tackling the job of winning another world’s title. He is barrel-chested Don Brennan, who throws curves and stirs his coffee with a big right hand which Sunday put Ruppert’s Newark farm club back in the running for the little world’s series title. For Brennan, it was victory No, 27 of the season. Besides 25 wins in the regular campaign when his club won i 1 It LOSERS USED FIVE HURLERS Ruth and Gehrig Were Siege ( Guns Throughout, Aided { By Other Swatters OREGON SINKS SANTA CLARA William and Mary's 6 to 0 Con- quest of Middies Biggest Surprise Chicago, Oct. 3—(P)}—The world Series of 1932 trailed off Monday to-| Ty een ———— ward its final resting place among| baseball's legends, leaving the realm of the national pastime once more under the absolute rule of the American League,,and one of the greatest champions in all sports his- tory—the New York Yankees. Never before in all the past of the Yam has any ball club approached the amazing record of the belting behemoths from Broadway, conquer- ors of the Chicago Cubs in four straight games, possessors of a streak of 12 successive world series triumphs. The Yankees leaped upon the punch-soggy National League cham- | pions to shatter them Sunday for, the fourth straight time, 13 to 6, in the final match of a series that for lack of real competition has been} equaled in the past only by the Yenk conquests of 1927 and 1923. For one day the bats of Lou Geh-| rig and Babe Ruth lapsed into com-; parative silence, but from new, andi | Ruth Has Series Record of .305 | } | | Chicago, Oct. 3—(}—Babe Ruth, | participating in 10 world’s series | | in a period of 17 years, has batted the pitching of National League champions for an all-time series average of .309. | The Babe did not begin to figure as a batting star in the baseball classic until he joined the Yankees | {| | | { © 1992 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. RED. U. 8. PAT. OFF. Z2 ml!) itl} UTTTLLiS FRCP ERT Ure SECRET ROLL OF $A00 (By The Associated Press) | Football's lambs donned wolves’ at- tire and dealt the “dopesheets” a smashing blow all along the line Sat- urday. The defeat of Georgia and Mary- land in the south; of Navy in the east, and Texas in the southwest was enough to shock the hardiest of g iron observers without Yale suffering the ignominy of a tie with little Bates. | Georgia, long one of the major Powers in the southern conference, | jWas forced to surrender to a plucky j outfit from Virginia Poly. 7-6, while | | Maryland, another of the confer-/ | BABE RUTH LOU GEHRIG Pitchers of the Chicago Cub staff are happy these two home run busters | have returned to New York. The Bambino and Columbia Lou made it uncomfortable for the Bruin hurlers during the world series which end- ed Sunday, in which the New Yorke rs won four stragiht games to win the world’s championship and extend their world series victories to 12 stra ight. VIRGINIA VAN WIE OVERWHELMS RIVAL IN WOMEN’S TOURNAMENT | Trouble Looms for Jackrabbits Prove Tough for Gophers LEONARD AND MLARNIN TO | OPEN I g ; tiling Former Lightweight Champion impressive in his last start here, tak- to Face Chicago Slugger Friday Night kota State NDOOR RING SEASON | McLarnin was un begins. South Dakota St the desperate b: held Minnesota's ing a second trouncing from Lou | Brouillard, but the Vancouver Irish- man figures to do much better jagainst Leonard. { | Tony Canzoneri, lightweight king. tle of { for lopening game. Minnesota Eleven Ekes Out 12)! to O Win Over South Da- Minneapolis, Oct. 3——A spirited |) e team, fighting | underdo; heavier and stroz -0 victory Saturday be-|/ rsons in the Gopher’s taken as a ctilcrion, the curren: ||1932 title and a 10-8 victory over FAR W campaign ‘may breek ‘al stray || Her archerival, Glenna Collett Vare.| Wyoming, 28; Chardon, for upsets. ‘The oldest inhabitant | WO has been champion five times mal, 6. hardly can remember when the | | Since 1922. Utah, 54; Colorado College, 6. gridiron giants moved toward In crushing Mrs. Vare, who has Colorado, 32; Colorado Mines, 0. their second October engagements | | TUined her championship hopes three | Utah Aggies, 26; Montana State, 0. i 1 | | with Navy, Se * si, || times in the last four years, Miss Washington. 26; Montana, 13. Georaia, Teane Murylied aad || Van Wie carded a brilliant morning | California U.. 22; Olympic Club, 6. a all beaten, and Yale || Tound of 73, four under par, and then | Oregon, 7; Santa Clara. 0. the International League pennant, the Potency of his pitching has accounted for both of Newark's victories in the series against Minneapolis, champions of the American Association, Sunday's win, 5 to 2, before 8,509 Persons who paid to see, squared the series at 2-all. Last week in the op- ener at Newark, he blanked the Mill- ers, 11 to 0 and Monday as both clubs in the “double A” tourney observed wash-day by resting, Newark’s man- ager, Al Mamaux, laid plans to call on jhis ace for more work in the sixth game Wednesday. His pitching selec- tion for Tuesday was unannounced. | The Millers hit Brennan 14 times Sunday, compared with four hits in the opener, but two runs was their limit as Brennan, with steady backing, 'made short work of every challenge. | Meanwhile Owen, third baseman, se- Jlected the longest route via center {field to send the ball out of Nicollet {park for a home run. Then Jack | Saltzgaver followed with another over [the left field fence. |. Both clubs played errorless ball on ithe defense with another youngster .| from the Ruppert farm, Dixie Walker, | ing. rey Missouri School of Mines, 20; Ar- N. |Chicagoan Defeats Glenna Col- “yancas U., 19. 1 ation’s Big Teams | i Rice Institute, 10; Louisiana State, 8. ij dacdd lett Vare For National Virginia, 7; Maryland, 6. | w YX —(P)— hampionshi Centenary, 13; Texas U., 6. {| ee tnecnibis ATAnore ae | ily e Baylor, 32: St. Edwards, 0. looms for the nation's intercol- || ee ai Texas Christian, 55; Daniel Baker, 0. legiate football teams as the sea- ||. Peabody, Mass.. Uct. 2.—(#\—The Texas Tech., 6: Southern Methodist, 0. 1 f 1 Son progresses into imporiant sec- || finest golf ever played in a women’s | Mississippi college, 32; Louisiana col-! Providing the most sensational field- tional and intersectional tests. jnational competition Saturday gave! lege, 0. If last week's results are to be || Virginia Van Wie of Chicago the | = xeo, xer-|Grovemen Defeat | ° _ Milnor Ball Club \ Giants Wind Up Season By Set- | topped it with a 44 for her 10 holes! U, of Southern California, j of afternoon play. | ington State, 0. Miss Van Wie’s winning margin| Stanford, 27; Oregon State, 0. was the sccond largest in the 36| Colorado, 31; Colorado Mines, 0. ars of women's championship play. | ‘our years ago Mrs. Vare set the! HIGH SCHOOLS | record by beating Miss Van Wie, 13) Hazen, 41; New Leipzig, 0. ‘of the season at the prison park Sun- j]and 12. Carson, 6; Flasher, 0. day when the Grove Giants set down je pees Larimore, 20; Cavalier, 18. | - = ° Thiet River | Milnor. 4 to 3 in the last game of the Football Results | East Grand Forks, 6; Thief River | 1939 campaisn 8 e ih " i | It was the 20th victory in 28 starts eee a8 paaurcees 0: 5 {for the Grovemen. Homme worked Mahnomen, 12; ver the first five innings for the defend- New York, Oct. 3. — (#) — Benny Leonard faces the biggest test of his comeback campaign in his 10-round match agains, Jimmy McLarnin in Madison Square Garden here Friday night, the opening shot in what pro- moters hope will be a busy and pros- and Maxie Rosenbloom, recognized in this state as ligittheavyweight cham ‘pion, will appear on the Thursda in 1921, While a member of the Boston Red Sox, he served only j as a pinch hitter or as a pitcher. | In his three world series classics as a member of the Red Sox he garnered only one hit, but he par- ticipated in only five games, going ;Perous indoor season. "to the plate 11 times, r to Tre plate it the Babe collected, || Leonard, who returned to the ring v a little over a year ago after seven It was Bernie Bierman’s debut as | head coach at his alma mater, and |} { the game left him viewing with deep! ht card at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn.| disappointment the ragged play of || where Humbert Fugazy is promoting} pis squad. which next Saturday will | a boxing show for a Masonic charity.| punge into the Big Ten race against || Canzoneri will meet Ray Miller. Chi-| Purdue. | : cago southpaw, in one 10-rounder; gouth Dakota State outclassed the; | im. the prime battle of the day. and Rosenbloom will face Jack Red-! Gophers in every department except || Wisconsin and Iowa, Minnesota however, in the 1918 series against | mond in another but neither’s title power play. It was recourse to pure || and Purdue and Ohio State and y "Sjthe Cubs, was a smashing three- ||Years of fistic inactiv has won will be at stake. i _, Power, unadorned by any mastery of | aon will be matched in other ' more than a score of bouts, mostly| In Detroit Tuesday night. Kid tecimique, which enabled the Gophers|| Big Ten frays. aly Tr, 4 fas the beginning of | tre y . vestiie career as tatting champion,” ||against minor opposition. Im’ MeLar. ‘chocolate, juntor lightweight cham-/|to ars tue touchoowre Notre Dame will open its sea- » 20; Wash- | ting Down Visiting Aggre- gation, 4 to 3 And there's plenty of dynamite in next Saturday's schedule. In the midwest, the Big Ten plunges into the midst of confer- ence competition with Michigan and Northwestern locking horns Baseball made its final appearance | NORTH DAKOTA CONFERENC | Jamestown College, 13; Ellendale Nor- e n i jects a ‘ leve- | 5 iti iod in|) 500 against the Haskell Indians |; mal, 6. PT Nee | ing club and was relieved in the sixth 's grea year in the world |;nin, however, he will be tackling a’ pion, engages Johnny Farr of C! After a scoreless first perio | i, iF : Seo Yee 5 acest rece dierolherepeltard jormidable rival who propably will|land in a twice-postponed 10-round : yhich the Gopher offense contributed| 28d the “Big Six” conference ene ven |. Grid Questions as _ by simie. series was in 1928, when he wound |; Atta Bite veriioumicn itiiel Monctitle BOUL | principally fumbles, ragged interfer-|| Schedule also will get under way MINNESOTA COLLEGES 7 Smith and Lozier were on the up with an average of .625. || be at jeast an mela Bee eu : a lice mud weak paniie minnesota || wth Nebraska squaring off | St. soit 12d Meecnlentes tty | Seen by Jack West || mound for the visitors. : ees ! ie a 2 ball ii 5 d to|; against Iowa State and Kansas t. Mary's, 6; er, 0. le ——*{ The Giants fell on the Milnor erto peaceful quarters, the firing| always looked the runner-up in #/ 174.44 each while each fourth piace aibanced ith ren i Aue Sage com a|j Playing Oklahoma. Missouri will || Concordia, 20; Moorhead State Teach- | Penne Editor's Note: This is first of a jpitching for 11 hits while Sargent series of articles on football rules | county club connected for a total of and strategems written for The eight safe blows. Tribune by Jack West, head foot- | The box score: broke out with sudden, terrific effect, ; two-horse field. | team in the two major leageus, Cleve | cia. of plunges and an advantage | | and five pitchers, Guy Bush, Lon Watched Sluggers Slug ‘land and Philadelphia Nationals, were! gained in an exchange of punts. | Warneke, Jakie May, Bud Tinning| perhaps without realizing just what; awarded $6,612.23 each for division! fund, a sophomore halfback who pro- and even old Burleigh Grimes, went) play Texas of the southwest con- ference. In the east, Yale will have to | BIG TEN show considerable improvement if || Ohio State, 34; Ohio Wesleyan, 7. ers, 6, 1 they were doing, they lined the front | among players. ‘vided the best. display of running in || Bu lSuane oan: ball coach at the University of | Box Score (3) ABRHE down under a stunning 19-hit bar-/ of their own dugout before each game | he pegs were pulled up Sunday, the game for the Gophers, swept!| the Elis hope to whip one of the || Illinois, 20; Miami, 0. North Dakota. | Milnor— As the peg: be i best : ml 13; Coe, 0. rage. to gaze in silent awe as Ruth and! i ve eked their! around his left end for a touchdown. || Pest Chicago teams in years. [a en | * Ok OK {Busching, rf, Ryobi) 4 night and 'the players pai eco Georgia finds Tulane’s mighty || Indiana, 7; Ohio U., 6. | STICS AND STRATEGY | z Hopes Grew in First Gehrig smashed ball after ball intoyyags for hurried departure, one of} The hard-tackling Dakotans kept} enna nse alts | eee are |; TACTICS AND STRAT jOphem, 1b . 5: 0 270 There was but one last flare of! the stands in batting practice just for!tne biggest topics of conversation] the offensive impotent through the|| Championship array next in its | is in, 7; ‘a sane Question 'Hicox, ss . -5:1 3 0 i hope for the vanquished in the final/their benefit. They struggled for | centered about Ruth and reports that! third period and once advaneed | path. Their meeting at New Or- || Purdue, 29; Kansas State, 13. { the wind is blowing diagonally |Crites, ¢ : (3001 1 “| episcde, as the Cubs, hitting almost) their base hits, seemed always to be haiee going to Boston as manager | the ball in their behalf to within 18!| Jeans tops the Southern Confer- |EFS ee eon ao Bates 0.) down the field, how can you best!Reed, cf | ‘Tass : like the Yankees at the start, sound | righting from behind, even when they| or the Red Sox next season. Rumors) yards of the goal, their most impor-|| @hee schedule. lltowa si Betdey Teng | blllze ate |Oeder, 2b ouB 018 B | Wy belted young Johnny Allen, fresh-|ted by @ run or 60. floated about without substantiation. | tant threat. | ars Sn Oe ele) Beeclevemestin: | Answer va oo ROMER Is Breer 7 man right-hander, and disposed of/ “Certainly two more conscious or un-| although everyone knew a big move | ‘The Gopher defense braced and ence’s more formidable machines, : jeg A smart quarterback would s0/ Brunton, 3b +3000 him with a four-run assault in the | conscious gestures of superiority, two! was on to strengthen the weak spots,| Bierman then sent in for 10 minutes | bowed to Virginia by a similar score. MIDWEST |maneuver his team that on kicking) Smith, p; rf .. -4000 $ opening inning that was climaxed bY | more demoralizing feats of showman-| notably Boston and Chicago, in the| of playing during the final period, his) Navy, drawing little William and|rowa state, 32: Morningside, 0 aes the ea ener io ae Fee the ee eld eee eienash | ship, never have been displayed in| American League for a more even|ace, Jac Manders, the 200-pound | Mary for its opening opponent, wound | Westerns Reserves @; Denison, pease Ra SER ere Pari ae 38 3 8 3 into the le ; a = : 3 was to have been _ # pe eo ; south-| Box Score eters on base ahead of him. pooeieres mani eats ahyrea pes : eaten of @ recent lin ee ee Ges Ae ee Oshkosh Normal, 13; Northern (Mich-| east end of the field, the quarter- Grova Giants— Ap nae) Tt was a hope that quickly faded ciner by Gehrig Sunday. The box sce, «=ABRHOAE injury. He contributed punch to the | surprise of the day. Texas surrendered Heats Geen back should so ditect his team that’ Johnson, 2b -4020 into disillusionment for the 50,000 Taki cancels “sedans totes New York ¢ 4 4 3 2 0 0{Gopher offensive, led a drive down! to Centenary, 13 to 6, in another mild WEES rane iy li . | the kicker would kick from the east- Ledoux, ss . 49 the yes ne ican Teneo edo Sta: the Cub dugout gang that chanted dn Hee os 6 1 3 0 2 1/the field in a series of plunges, and|upsct. Yale and Bates fought a| Wabash. DAbanie Pass sect tee in a north- | Taylor, 1b soe a) dog eer ein. | d = | then carved a big hole in the Dakota j scoreless tie. Shag? Ae | 3 |Bjornson, cf . -4020 The Yanks slugged Bush from the} unison as the Babe saw Charlie Root) Ruth, If . 501200 line to ease Sam Swartz, a halfback,|~ Tn the midwest, Northwestern trim- LaCrosse Teachers, 6; Columbia (Du-| Question IDavidson, rf... et ai peak in less than a round, although | slip over two strikes in the fifth in-| Byrd, lf . . .0 0000 | eeeugh ime] Misgoutl, 27:0) Purdie con fom buque), 0. " | If the other team has a strongj Brunner, If 2-0: bod they counted but once, bashed War-|ning, the big hitter turned and mo-| Gehrig, 1b ........4 2 212 0 1)"PODED o siniant tacklers of /MeaMisourh 27-0, Purdue won trom spearrish Normal, 7; Eastern Normal/ wind with them what tactics would|simle, p ....... [2000 Besos co ibe crate in tne pte | enon 8 ae ce See re tae Ct | Larsen ab 6 2.3 4 0 olthe Dakota forward wall, Swartz quette, 7-2, and Michigan showed un- | pj M28", 8: D0. j You use? |McKay, 3b. EU 0 aoe and drove him out in the fourth,jand big one, still was left. He in Dickey, ¢ 5 0 2 4 0 O/broke in to a wide swing past South | expected power in rolling over Michi- | ~!24lay, 0; Heidelberg, 0. | Answer ISnyder, c .. 2.3110 then they nicked Jake May for a|cated they should wait just a mo-|Chapman, rf . {Dakota’s seconday defense for alg ‘ River Falls Teachers, 13; Northland/ If the opponents have a strong j Fy, ae in Ifin the sixth and piled fullj|ment. Then he tcok a toehold and| Crosetti, ss . 614235 pee pie a Gener enn Aine eae ey iy ni college, 0. | wind with them, it 1s always wise te Omme, Pi if 100 8 a ou feronto the unfortunate south-ja.d belted the pitch Spat Hee far- Ales, Pp. . A . ° o scoring offering, learad (a eterien PSPMAUE. BIRO, noe poesia 14; Penn SOW: | een ne ball in Your possession as Totals ret + ¢-“~\\< ™ four runs in the seventh and|thest confines of the park in center} W. Moore, p . e 8 ns | i iz ‘aloosa, Iowa), 0. {much as possible to prevent them} tntno } LF Eee Grimes for another! field, one of the most terrific drives| x-Ruffing .. R 9 A o iS sae EEA Ca aes caufornie. won tts ae Monmouth, 21; Burlington Junior, 0. | from taking advantage of the win | eee Ps innings E = 5 ' dr in the ninth, lhe ever hit. xx-Hogag .. 2 rery ger downs were scored by passes, with! trom Washington State 20-0," ard Wooster, 12; Ashland, 0. Then, when the quarter ends, and Grove Gianis. 41 3 The heaviest fire came from a gun| sunday, when Gehrig stood at thc| Pennock, p ..-+-..--1 0 0 0 0 0 Lund doing the most effective throw- Oregon defeated Santa Clara, con-| yyparais® $3; Central Normal, 0. | your team has the wind at its back. | that previously had sputtered a8/ plate in the sixth inning when run notes 45 13 19 2712 4{ing. In all, the Gophers gained 287| querors last week of California, 7-0. | Otterbein, 18; Oberlin Hehool of ee nes mEme. { . though the fuse were wet, Tony Laz- | ners waiting on base to be driven). 2. itca for W. Moore in 7th. |Yards by rushes to 79 for South Da- |" Cornell and Carnegie Tech won by | “uustana college, 6; | ae RULES ‘Two Aggregations his ‘anxiety to get his Heke in’ before | DOME he stopped the game momen-| SPADE! ‘) Ruffing in 7th. kota, but the visitors averaged 86 lone touchdown from Niagara and|creighton, 6; Haskell Indians, 0. | What is a fa" catch? | anxiety to get his licks in before | tarjiy in an effort to make Umpire Chicago (6) yerds on 12 punts, while the best the! Geneva, respectively, and Army had| knox, 10: Western State Teachers, 6. yt ie ° He waste lac. ' Bill Klem move from a spot near sec-| srermane 2b 5 1 1 2 2 0|Gophers could do was an average oft battle to down Furman, 13 to 0. Notre’ Dage varsity, 91; Pretimen’ 6, ima ; Tied or Lead In Gehrig and Ruth, who shattered the | cng where Lou thought he might be| #@ : "75550101 1 0 0/26 yards on eight attempts. Pitt. smacked down West Virginia, 40 | Notre fe varsity, 91; 1» 0. ‘air catch can be made on Kick- Cubs with a pair of homers apiece in the way. Klem wouldn't budge, aera - samen po tn A iss ocatsb pt ~ ——4] {0 0, and Princeton, faking ie ‘irst Ball State, 26; Earlham, 6. ed Hip Paice agaeeeyo or when 9 e 2 ; é —_— B " , 5 e as been pee te ey eens ee Cee eae eet eet tee | Stephenson, if S120 | Series Leaders | start under Fritz Crisler, looked {air- arn line ot sulmitener arth eee M Lean Grid Loop t. ¢ e BA ft -- 2 ing erst, 0 0.) wy y] 2; | ¥ ing Lou, but Jole Sewell, Earle Combs | umpire by inches. Deraree of 4 2 2 4 2 0) “(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) | Harvard walloped Buffalo, 66 to 0. | jyeste™ Maryland, 12; St. Thomas, 6./of the team which did not kick it, Sane eWay heat ete as Lazzer!.| “Tt looked suspiciously like the in-j gtimm, 1B 40180 New York (American) | The south made a good showing in| soutn Carolina, 7; Villanova, 6, | muneint'y wgniled frist aoe Washbi d Max D with three hits each. eritanie) of eles St resydaee om ince Bo ee OC ere 329; Dickey 438; intersectional combat with Centensry| pittsburgh, 40; ‘West Virginia, 0. | hand only, clearly above his “head, Washburn and Max Deadlocked Tinning Did Well Re acaia Beeeinine Jurges, % .... 40152 yarn |pestine Nave South parent, Mary | Lafayette, 6; Muhlenberg, 0. | catches the ball before it touches the For Key Position in Foot- a they eared Rave done better) here was only one solace left for) Sm P. - T0010 J "ping up Villanova, 7-6, and ‘Tulane |Pn™sylvania, 38; Franklin & Mar- | ground, and does not take more than ball Struggle y i Ge farneke, p . | ae ens v Sond the ouly pusher who tear | He Cubs Monday as they tried to for-| May. p ..”.... 2.9 0 1 0 0/man, Ruth, 6, Smashing the Texas Aggies, 26 to 14. | comell, 7; Niagara, 0. wo Steps 8) pet massing the catch. ig ed the Yanks during the series. jget the past week. Twenty-four of| pinning, p . 0 0 0 0 1 0) Runs batted in—Gehrig 8; Chap-| But Louisiana State was beaten by Colgate, 27; Case, 0. What is the line of scrimmage? ‘Once rid of Allen, the Cubs bumped them were assured of receiving a) semsley, ¢ 10 0 0 0 0) man 6. | Rice, 10 to 8. Boston U..'13; New Hampshire, 6. Answer q (Tribune Special Service) into old Willey Moore, veteran of the check of apvroximatelv $4000 from| Grimes, p 0 0 0 0 0 0; Doubles—Chapman 2; Combs, Se-| | Harvard, 66; Buffalo, 0. | ‘The line of scrimmage for each|_Shutout scores featured second 1927 and 1928 conquests. The bald|the baseball commissioner's office) 7 © °°" j well, Gehrig, Crosetti, 1. ' Ge a Maine, 38; Connecticut Aggies, 0. | team is an imaginary line of vertical |"°U24 skirmishes in the struggle for Missouri mule-tamer held them in| #8 thelr “cut” and that sum was only Totals . |Home runs—Gehrig 3; Ruth and tain Pug Rentner, Dick Fencl and 18; Rhode Island State, 0. | plane parallel to the goal lines and (Supremacy in the race for the Mc- subjection, except for a brace of in-|#bout $1,000 less than the individual! New York . = Maa | Dasara Come one| Ge0r8e Potter, to quell Missouri's un- | William & Mary, 6; Navy, 0. |Passing through that point of the |U®42 county football championsip. field errors that allowed a run in the j Plunder collected by fy. Sankt. Al-| Chicago -400 001 001— 6/ Pitshing—Rutfing and Gomez, one ruly Tigers Saturday, but did a thor- | Georgetown, 26; Mount St. Mary’s, 0./ ball nearest the team’s Gwn goal line.|_ The Max Cossacks and Washburn sixth, until a pinch hitter brought TEES Warn aot ase to-| Summary: runs batted in—Gehrig | complete Neo {ough Job after getting started, win- | Catholic U.. 41; City College, 0. | A player shall be considered to be Soret ee hea of ie. peck, ands a 2,805. 870. = i | nin, 0 0. 41; 6, i i immage ership of y Se ney cere ae abe, the Shen ae oe 2 Bewell 2 Huth, Chapman, English | aT REPREDIRD | TEbr SUERS The three had been out with in- |Souns Hopkins, 21% Washington Gol) Both hands, Shot feet Aaa elms ee gy ve ual cause the; # | 364, Y if id marl ves Pipgras Saturday, was as consistently |sPlit their's 24 ways, leaving their| Demaree, Lazzeri 2, Combs. Dou-| Stephenson, Grimm nn A ale x,| 80 stubborn in the first half, how-| Boston College, 20; Loyola <Balti-| stand with both feet outside the out-|70Ugh shod over Turtle Lake, 59 to 0. effective as he always has been in a|former manager. Rogers Hornsby. out pie play—Herman, Jurges and Ge arserd op 8 Cuyler! ever, that they had to go to work. more), 0. side of the outside foot of the player| T€ Max entry won the title with an championship battle. j Nithout a cent and siving Mark Hoe -1 Grimm. Left on base—New York 13;|Gtimm. Hartnett, 5.) | ‘The Tigers put up a grand battle,| Bates, 0: Yale, 0. next to him, unless he be one of the|¢xhibition of good blocking, fast in- It seems now as though the Bruins|rig a half share. Hornsby has filed! Chicago 7. Bases on balls—off Bush} Doubles reared pias jbut no tougher than Coach Frank | Davis & Elkins, 7; West Leberty, 0. | two players standing on either side|terference, accurate tackling and a themselves. though they waged the|® Protest against his exclusion in the) (Laggerty; Warneke 1 (Combs) ;/™&n, Cuyler, eens |Carideo, Notre Dame's all-America|New York U., 33; Hobert, 0. of the center, or snapper back, in|Strong defense. Aamest fight they knew, never at ary) division to Commissioner Kenesaw M | way 3 (Chapman, Combs and Ruf-| Poy Pai Juyler, Demaree,|datterback. Carideo was on the field | Army 13; Furman, 0. which case he may lock legs with| The Cossacks scored 13 points in *"/'¢ pad much belief in their own|Landis but there was little chance for| fing): Pennock 1 (Demaree); aries | ee, a 5 */on several occasions to strenuously | Fordham, 69; Baltimore, 0. the center. the first period, 12 in the second, 20 yfixo ‘conquer the human jugger-|it to be successful as no ineligibie) 1 (Getirig), Struck out by—War- Runs batted in—Stephenson, De-| sect to penalties. |Rutgers, 20; Pennsylvania Military in the third and 14 in the fourth, that had been turned loose up-| Player for the world series can be cut] nexe 1 (W. Moore); May 3 (Ruth 2,! wee 4 pony 2 : Northwestern scored first in the| College, 6. University of Ilinois football teams} Washburn remained in a tie with (fchem, Ane The masa Was deposed ® Ci? |W. Moore); Tinning 4 (Dickey, Cro-| PEE At ere third Period when Roy Auguston, who / Syracuse, 54; St. Lawrence, 0. under Coach Bob Zuppke have, in 19|Max by setting down Wilton, 12 to 0 if ‘A peculiar psychological factor, a| pilot on August 2 an: ed) setti); W. Moore 1 (Jurges); Pen- replaced Ollie Olson at fullback,| Cincinnati U., 22: Georgetown, 12. Seasons, gained a winning percentage} ‘The Garrison Troopers bounded in- Superiority complex on one side, anjon the list of Cub players eligible for) nock '3 (Herman, Hemsley, Cuyler).| ’ crashed over from the 3-yard line to Pittsburgh, 40; West Virginia, 0. over all other Big Ten teams except |to the county spotlight with a sensa- Jf inferiority complex on the other, per- | the big show. Hits and runs off—-Bush 2 hits, 1 run N vith st finish a drive from the 22-yard mark.| Washington U., 6; Illinois college, 0. | Michigan. tional~25 to 0 victory over Under- vader the entire series, just as it did| ‘The player melon, $303,822.27.) in 1-3 inning: Warneke 5 hits, 2 runs| INOKCAWESLEEN S Shortly after the start of the final| Washington & Jefferson, 20; West wood, “The Troopers used straight the Yankee conquest of 1927 and 1928, | wasn’t as large as the record breaker in 2 2-3 innings (none out in 4th); . period, he finished another march,} Virginia Wesleyan, 0. There are four sets of brothers on| football as they bucked the line and and in fact the entire world series|of 1923. but it wes surprising for this} , 5 hits, 4 runs in 2-3 inning; Cr | N ded and before Missouri had recovered, the Wisconsin varsity: Nello and Mar-|ran the ends for two tallies in the from 1927 through today. In the last|year before of business conditions | Grimes 4 hits, 4 runs in 1 inning; W. ippies Nee Rentner wafted a beautiful pass to SOUTH \elo Pacetti, Greg and Francis opening quarter, one thiré end six series, American League cham- Durie, we os Fete ts ip ae Moore 2 hits, 1 run in 5 1-3 innings; Ed Manske for another score. Just | Tulane, 26; Texas A. & M., 14. Pete and Rudolph Rotter and George |one in the fourth. crowdet ‘ankee J pions have won 32 games to 7 for the National League representative, five times they won series, three of them off May 8 hits, 6 runs in 3 1-3 in- nings; Pennock 2 hits, 1 run in 3 in- nings; ‘Inning no hits, no runs in before the game ended, Bennett, a| Kentucky, 18; Sewanee, 0. will sub halfback, flipped a short pass to; Alabama, 53: ley Field and paid $713.377. The high clash with Turtle Lake, Max receipts also were surprising for play- Rentner, Fencl and Potter Mississippi State, 0. i , Manske for the last one. | Georgia Tech., 32; Clemson, 14. Wabash college at Crawfordsville,| with Washburn and Underwood in- in four straight games. ers of the second. third and fourth!1 2-3 innings. Hit by pitcher—by’ ~- Called in to Quell Stub- | Northwestern made 15 first downs! Oklahoma, 7; Tulsa, 0. Ind., which has produced some “Little | vade Wilton. Only the Cardinals of last fall|place teams of each league whic)| Bush (Ruth); by May (Gehrig). 4 . to 1 for Missouri, and gained 259) V. P. I. Georgia, 6. | Giant” football teams in fact as well shook off the apparent instinctive ad-|were cut in generously. Philadel-| Winning pitcher—Moore; losing born Missouri yards from scrimmage to 88 for Mis- | Mercer, 21; Howard, 6. as name, had only 30 candidates for) Ralston “Hobo” Hemsley, young ‘mission of American League super- | phiz’s Athletics and Pittsburgh, run-} pitcher—May. Umpires Magerkurth ;souri, The Wildcats completed six out | Vanderbilt. 39: Nort | Carolina, 7. n & Lee, 0, the grid squad this fall. Chicago Cubs catcher, practiced bat: —_— ting left-handed the last few weeks jing in the backfield on Louisiana’s! of the 1932 season trying to become State football team. an amt batter. ners-up in the current races. eachi (NL), plate; Dinneen (AL). first; received purses of $29,786.67; Wash- | Klem (NL), second; Van Graflan! ingand and Brooklyn were given $18.-/ (AL) third. Time of game—-2:27. lof nine forward passes for 112 yards, Evanston, [ll., Oct. 3.—Northwest-| while the Tigers’ single pass was jon had to call in three cripples, Cap- | smothered. 1 Davidson, Washing: Auburn, 77; Erskine, 0. Hiram, 6; Kentucky State, 9. tority. Despite the fact that the Cubs this year hit briskly all along, aver- aging almost five runs a game, they 4 ftom ry

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