The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 3, 1932, Page 8

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THE BISMARCY” TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1932 Yanks Make Basebal | History, Sweeping World Series Third Time BROADWAY HITTERS [FOOTBALL DOPESTERS CHAGRINED BY RESULTS IN OPENERS BELT CHICAGO CUBS | OUR BOARDING HOUSE National League Champions Are! Humbled 13 to6 After | Good Start | LOSERS USED FIVE HURLERS | Ruth and Gehrig Were Siege Guns Throughout, Aided By Other Swatters Chicago, Oct. 3—(4)—The world series of 1932 trailed off Monday to- 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 Yan! Never before in all the past of the | “game hus arly 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 stre 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} Wie SECRET = ROLL OF $AQ00 “Wi By Ahern | GEORGIA, MARYLAND, 4 WHAT! weit, TLL BLooK AT THAT rod 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 | “wer, Dur WIDE 1T ~ AN’ LISTEN TO HIM SCREECH \NAVY AND TEXAS ARE: ‘VICTIMS OF UPSETS Mighty Yale Is Held to Score- | less Tie Saturday By ! Little Bates | | OREGON SINKS SANTA CLARA William and Mary’s 6 to 0 Con- quest of Middies Biggest Surprise (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 grid- iron observers without Yale suffering the ignominy of a tie with little Bates. Georgia, long one of the major Powers in the southern conference, BABE RUTH Newark Evens Series With Siege Guns of Yankee Attack 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. Millers Barrel-Chested Don Brennan * Wins 27th Game of Season For His Club 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 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 his ace for more work in the sixth VIRGINIA VAN WIE OVERWHELMS 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. ; Was forced to surrender to a plucky | 9 sae seen" RIVAL IN WOMEN’S TOURNAMENT | Maryland, another of the confer-| the final match of a series that for ; lack of real competition has been equaled in the past only by the \¥enk conquests of 1927 and 19: lie alaatia yas | = | Trouble Looms for ||Chicagoan Defeats Glenna Col-|" xansas U., 19. For one day the bats of Lou Geh- rig and Babe Ruth lapsed into com- Jackrabbits Prove Tough for Gophers, X#os Bi Teams avar rornatons RSs ptm an parative hate dain new, an Ae z | ea Ruth Has Series LEONARD AND M’LARNIN TO festa Eleven Ekes Out 12 Meanwhile Owen, third baseman, se- lected 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 the defense with another youngster from the Ruppert farm, Dixie Walker, providing the most sensational field- © 1892 GY WEA SERVICE, INC.RED. U. 8. PAT. OFF. | Missouri School of Mines, 20; Ar- New York, Oct. 3.—(7)—From here on, trouble and more trouble looms for the nation’s intercol- legiate football teams as the sea- son progresses into imporiant sec- Championship Centenary, 13; Texas U., 6. Baylor, 32; St. Edwards, 0. al | Texas Christian, 55; Daniel Baker, 0. Peabody. Mass. Uct. 3.—()—The | Texas Tech., 6; Southern Methodist, 0. || finest golf ever played in a women’s | Mississippi college, 32; Louisiana col- ‘ | Record of .305 | Mell Ouar South Da- || tonal ‘und intersections! tests || national competition Saturday gave! lege, 0. ing. — _ OPEN INDOOR RING SEASON) kota State i it ast woes ems aro be | gins Van, Wie of Cheago ee cag! ct. 3.—\P)—Babe Ruth, | y a ag taken as a criterion, the curreni || a i . G Peeanse ost 2 neato pape a5 a wantin H EEE {| campaign may break all records || het arch-rival, Glenna Collett Vare,! Wyoming, 28; Chardon, Neb, Nor-|(yFOVveMnen Ve: eat , has batted battling begins. McLarnin was Un-| yinneapolis, Oct. 3.—UP—A spirited || for upsets. The oldest inhabitant ||Who has been champion five times) mal, 6. i riod of 17 yea i i fon, : i : the pitching of National League | Former Lightweight Champion impressive in his last start here. tak-) souih Dakota State team, fighting}, hardly can remember when the || Since 1922. | Utah, 54; Colorado College, 6. , Milnor Ball Club Pian alictl nee : ing a second trouncing from Lou Keene aah nine || gridiron giants moved toward ||_ 1% crushing Mrs. Vare, who has Colorado, 32; Colorado Mines, 0. he Babe did not begin to figure Friday Night man figures to do much better} couad to a 12-0 victory Saturday be-}| With Navy, Southern Methodist, | abs l , Miss) Washington. 26; Montana, 13. Me eatnc tate, bascnall ene against Leonard. Hose 17000 persons in the Gopher's|| Georgia, ‘Texas, Maryland and |! Van Wie carded a brilliant morning] California U., 22; Olympic Club, 6 | Giants Wind Up S ae 4 classic until he joined the Yankees | — Tony Canzoneri, lightweight king.) opening game. || California all beaten, and Yale ||Tound of 73. four under per, and then | Oregon, 7; Santa Clara, 0. lp Season By Set- Sack in 1921, While a member of | New York, Oct. 3. — ) — Benny and Maxie Rosenbloom. recognized in| “t, was Bernie Bierman’s debut as || Hed. | SOE) ee ee wees || Btn oowniVvistihe Apere= And there's plenty of dynamite || Of #fternoon play. ; ; in next Saturday's schedule. ese eG ets ul In the midwest, the Big Ten |W8S the second largest in the 36 plunges into the midst of confer- || Yeats of women’s championship play. | ence competition with Michigan ||FOUr Years ago Mrs. Vare set the HIGH SCHOOLS | and Northwestern locking horns || Tecord by beating Miss Van Wie, 13) Hazen, 41; New Leipzig, 0. in the prime battle of the day. || 2nd 12. | Carson, 6; Flasher, 0. Wisconsin and Iowa, Minnesota || 577-43 7 5 * | Larimore, 20; Cavalier, 18. and Purdue and Ohio State and! Football Results {| #ast Grand’ Forks, 6; Thief River Indiana will be matched in other ee eee Big Ten frays. | NORTH DAKOTA CONFERENCE. | Aberdeen, 13; Mobridge, 0. : Notre Dame will open its sea- || Jamestown College, 13; Ellendale Nor- Mahnomen, 12; Casselton, 0. son against the Haskell Indians |; mal, 6. and the “Big Six” conference | canes schedule also will get under way |! MINNESOTA COLLEGES with Nebraska squaring off ||St. John. 19; Macalester, 0. against Iowa State and Kansas |;St. Mary's, 6; Luther, 0. le playing Oklahoma. Missouri will || Concordia, 20; Moorhead State Teach- } play Texas of the southwest con- || ers, 6. exchange of punts. ;/ ference. | ington State, 0. Stanford, 27; Oregon State, 0. ‘ Colorado, 31; Colorado Mines, 0. \ ly || the Boston Red Sox, he served on! as a pinch hitter or as a pitch In his three world series classics as a member of the Sox he garnered only one hit, but he par- ticipated in only five games, going to the plate 11 times. The one hit the Babe collected, ver, in the 1918 series ag: t the Cubs, was a smashing thre “a nd was the beginning of beshis career as batting champion. ~| Ruth's greatest year in the world serics was in 1928, when he wound up with an average of .625. Leonard faces the biggest test of his this state as liglttheavyweight cham-| ach at his alma mater, and , ||comeback campaign in his 10-round'pion. will appear on_the Thursday] tne game left him wing with deep | | match ins. Jimmy McLarnin in! night card at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn.| gisappointment. the ragged play of Madison Square Garden here Friday where Humbert Fugazy is promoting | nis squad, which next Saturday will || night, the opening shot in what pro- a boxing show for a Masonic charity.) piunge into the Big Ten race against | |moters hope will be a busy and pros- Canzoneri will meet Ray Miller. Chi-| pyrque, | perous indoor season. cago southpaw, in one 10-rounder "south Dakota State outclassed the :| Leonard, who returned to the ring and Rosenbloom will face Jack Red-' Gophers in every department except | | a little over a year ago after seven, mond in another but neither's title lay: Itawas recotiree to pure || of fistie inactivtiy, has won will be at stake. power, unadorned by any mastery of !| my than a score of bouts, mostly, In Det Tuesday night. Kid technique, which enabled the Gophers |, against minor opposition. In McLar-' Chocolate, junior lightweight cham-/ to score two touchdowns. | nin, however, will be tackling a pion, engages Johnny Farr of Cleve- ter a scoreless first period in| formidable r who propably will,land in a twice-postponed 10-round the Gopher offense contributed | be at least an 8 to 5 favorite when the ‘non-tille bout. priacipally fumbles, ragged interfer- |! - ence and weak punting, Minnesota || advanced the ball in the second to| | within seven yards of the goal after a || series of plunges and an advantage | gained in an gation, 4 to 3 Baseball made its final appearance ‘of the season at the prison park Sun- day when the Grove Giants set down Milnor, 4 to 3 in the last game of the 1932 campaign. It was the 20th victory in 28 starts {for the Grovemen. Homme worked the first five innings for the defend- ing club and was relieved in the sixth by Simle. Smith and Lozier were on the mound for the visitors. The Giants fell on the Milnor Pitching for 11 hits while Sargent county club connected for a total of eight safe blows. | | ‘skaictoiehiis Menorah ae f Grid Questions as Seen by Jack West | ——? Editor's Note: This is first of a series of articles on football rules and strategems written for The hitherto peaceful quarters, the firing always looked the runner-up in a@ 174.44 each while each fourth place proke out with sudden, terrific effect, | two-horse field. team in the two major leageus, Cleve-| ee Oe Watched Sluggers Slug ‘and and Philadelphia Nationals, were | Warneke, Jakie May, Bud Tinning| perhaps without realizing just what awarded $6,612.23 each for division! Tiund, a sophomore halfback who pro-!; 1" the east, Yale will have to || BIG TEN Tribune by Jack West, head foot- ‘The bo: 5 and even old Burleigh Grimes, went they were doing, they lined the front | among playe vided the best display of running in|| SRW considerable improvement if || Ohio State, 34; Ohio Wesleyan, 7. ball cosch at the University of |Box Score G) Aenea Barn under a stunning 19-hit bar-/ of their own dugout before each games the pees were pulled up Sunday, the game for the Gophers, swept! | a Ei nope, tosmhipionesct. the) |Tilusots 90) Matamat 10: North Dakota. | Milnor— » rage. = Ge an witak ;to gaze in silent awe as Ruth and’ night and the players packed their around his left end for a touchdown. | | ae hicago teams in years. || Mlinois, 13; Coe, 0. xe OK |Busching, rf 5120 phere Hopes Grew in First og Gehrig smashed ball after ball intoryags for hurried departure, one of The hard-tackling Dakotans kept)! ,Ceorsia finds Tulane’s mighty || Indiana, 7; Ohio U., 6. TACTICS AND STRATEGY | Ophem, ib U5020 ae . roe lide veneyal ace ihe anal the stand: batting practice just for the biggest topics of conversation] the offensive impotent through the | | speripionstip array next in its | Wisconsin, 7; Marquette, 2. Question Hicox, ss Bt 2 0 aac as the Cubs, hitting plmost (ek Penefit. They struggled fer centered about Ruth and reports that third period and once advaneed || Path: pase meeting at Newsor-\| | Euniiue a0; leariess /Biare, 18: i If the wind is blowing diagonally|Crites, ¢ 3001 Mee qhe vankees at the ied ed their base hits, seemed always to be’ he was going to Boston as manager| the ball in their behalf to within 18! | Ps iS ons tne Southern Confer- || Minnesota, 12; South Dakota State, 0.) down the field, how can you best Reed, cf ... aOR c0 ly belted young Johnny Allen, freshe | fetine from behind, even when they cr the Red Sox next season. Rumors yards of the goal, thelr most impor- || She? schedule, | eieniea: Ce ae State, 0. | utilize it? Oeder, 2b. 2014 ted young y » fresh- Jed by a run or 89. ae { ae te aes va, 31; om hoes : e os | ated about without substantiation.| tant threat. i . . Lozier, If; p . 4 Fe reeset ee Of) Certainly two more conscious or un-| aithough everyone knew a big move) The Gopher defense braced and jence’s more formidable machines,| No"thWestern, 27; Missouri, 0. A tmnact -quasterpeok Would so Brunton, 3b: Buea eka saint , conscious gesiures of superiority, two | was on to strengthen the weak spots,| Bierman then sent in for 10 minutes | bowed to Virginia by a similar score. - SUE es am so ing | Smith, p; rf . QPening inning that was elimaxed bY more demoralizing feats of showman | notably Boston and Chicago, in the| of playing during the final period, his| "Navy, drawing little ‘William and | rom, MIDWEST | down his kicker would be able to Plage into the left field bleachers with two SIP. Never have been displayed in| american League for a more even/ace. Jack Manders, the 200-pound | Mary for its opening opponent, wound | 1oWa Stale, 32: Morningside, 0. kick with the wind. Thus, if you; — Totals.............646 38 3 8 3 a hea of i ‘world series conflict than one en-| race, | fullback. Manders was to have been up on the short end of a 6-0 count | Woser Reserves, ¢: Denison, 0. | | have a wind blowing from the south-| Rox Score (4) ABRHE It was a hope that quickly faded #ineered by Ruth Saturday and ao: ‘he ‘box score: spared any play because of a recent|in what probably was the greatest ay 7. meee jeast end of the field, the quarter-| Grove Giants— into disillusionment for the 50,000 ther by Gehrig Sunday. | New York (3) ABR HOAE/ injury. He contributed punch to the | surprise of the day. Texas surrendered | yyanchester, 7: DePauw, 6. the kicker would Kick irom the east. | Sonne 20 - Ae han militant Chicago faithful who crowd-| Taking an unmerciful “riding from| Combs, cf .. 4 4 3 2 0 0|Gopher offensive, led a drive down | to Centenary, 13 to 6, in another mild] Wabash, 0: Franklin, 0. kicker would kick from the east-|redoux, ss 44.1 2 ed Wrigley Field. |the Cub dugout gang that chanted in! Sewell, 3b J.s....6 1 3 0 2 1/the field in a series of plunges, and| upset. Yale and Bates fought a| Patt a prinmne 0 cn ae re pres seid in a north-} Taylor, 1b . 211 Oo The Yanks slugged Bush from the| unison as the Babe saw Charlie Root! Ruth, If ‘30 1 2 0 Ojthen carved a big hole in the Dakota j scoreless tie. ONS a NING coc ly direction. ingen ce rary peak in less than'a round, although (sip over two strikes in the fifth in-| pyrd’ If ‘0 0 0 0 9 9 line to ease Sam Swarts, a halfback.) "In the midwest, Northwestern trim-|“iaue), 0 gd It the other’ tom has a. strong| Davidson, 4020 they counted but once, bashed War-/ning, the big hitter turned and mo-} Gehrig, lb . 4 3.212 0 1| rough. f . me uri, 27-0, Purdue won from 1 N ‘ 1 Brunner, lf . 2010 neke for a pair of runs in the third | tioned it was only two, and the third.| Lazzeri, 2b . ‘3 2 3 1 4 0, Once past the brilliant tacklers of | Kansas State, Wisconsin nipped Mar- | °Pearfish Normal, 7; Eastern Norma teat oa them what tactics would/simle, p .. 2000 and drove him out in the fourth,/and big one, still was left. He indi-| Dickey. ¢ . 16 2 3 4 0 Othe Dakota forward wall, Byars quette, 7-2, and Michigan showed un- | windlay, 0; Heldelberg, 0. pe McKay, 3b 4010 then. they nicked Jake May for a/cated they should wait just a mo-| Chapman, 1 ‘5 0 2 4 0 0| broke in to a wide swing past South | expected power in rolling over Michi-| River alis Teachers, 13; Northland| rf th wer. Snyder, ¢ 3110 Tin the sixth and piled full ment. Then he took a ioehold and|Crosetti, ss .......-.6 1 1 2 5 2)Dakotas seconday defense for @/gan State, 26-0. Minnesota, Towa,|” college, 0, bea find GER ee ee -fttong | Homme, p; 2102 ado fionto the unfortunate south-|and belted the pitch from the far-! Allen, p .. ‘0 0.0 0 0 O|touchdown and the Gophers’ final | Tilinois, Indiana and Ohio State also! yowa state Teachers, 14; Penn (Osh-| keep the bell in sinays wise 10 ee * A four runs in the seventh and/thest confines of the park in center| W. Moore, p 0 1 0 1 o/Scoring offering. ss sist downs) umed, me Victories. esincea Icwavl | poate (eee pre Totals..... 133 411 3 > 4 epreting, Grimer for another field, one of the inmost terrific drives! 3 -Ruffing 0 " a . oe Paget Bae ae een Salttoenie roe iis onan Monmouth, 21; Burlington Junior, 0. | from taking advantage of the wind. fey by inning: RHE Breseayiet tire came, trom a gun gailenias a Res ‘ ‘1 6 0 0 0 O|downs were scored by passes, with! trom Washington State, 20-0, and Monsier, 12; Asiand, 0. — Then, when the quarter ends, and| Grove ini AG eae 4 ee preticuly haa scuiered aa| ; Bunt ee Geuele ee Be the pERistestes stig Sule un mer tae Lund doing the most effective Unrow, | Oregon defeated Santa Clara, con- ee, ae Senn poem , 0. ae hws a Goh at its back, Wy though the fuse were wet, Tony Laz- | PO? serena aah lagi ag rcvaras Is ........45 13 19 2712 4] ing. In all, the Gophers gaine {querors last week of California, 7-0. ae hae uo zerl, and he belted two home rang ia nes, Waiting on base to be driven) . acted for’ Wi. Moore in til yards by rushes to 79 for South Da- |” Corneil and Carnegie Tech won by |“ugustana college, 6; School of 7 Two ti his anxiciy to get his licks in before Home he stopped the game momen-| .. "Ran for Ruffing in 7th. ota, but, the visitors averaged 36 lone touchdown from Niagara and Griehee, ¢: Haskell Sndiane, 6 What is iene gregations it was too late. tarily 1 pf ake pire i yards on 12 punts, while the ' Geneva, 7, nO: by Gehrig and uth, who shattered the Bll Klem move from a spot near se¢-| green ah 5 1 1 2 2 0|Gophers could do was an average of |t pattie to down Furman, 19° to-0,| ene 20: Western State preanmen, 0. ane Tied F L d i Cubs with a pair of homers apiece (M4 Where Lou thought he might be| English, ab. 31 1 1 0 0/26 yards on eight attempts. Pitt smacked down West Virginia, 40| NOH sine 26, Eaten, Bo | ott it, Catch can be made on Kick~ or Lead in Baturday were held to three hits be- | jcpeieny: Wonlan's - Budee | ciivlen at 1G) fh) ee / ee ae to 0, and Princeton, making its first saldaiis ‘ail the ball has been kicked beyond tre | A? . tween them, two of them by Larrup- Gehrig smashed a sinele| ctonhenson, if 51210 0 Series Leaders | |start under Fritz Crisler, looked fair- been kicked beyond the an G id L peaae SIE Ges that spot and missed the! ; uae : Hl a i ¢ EAST line of scrimmage, and any player rl 00) ing Lou, but Joie Sewell, Earle Combs |) F°" b + | Demaree. cf +3 121301 ~ {ly good in beating Amherst, 22 to 0.| western Maryland, 12; St. Thomas, 6./of the team which did not kick 1 and Bill Dickey, as well as Lazzeri, Bias dl Patcinualy ikea ‘Grimm, 1b -4 2 2 4 2 0) (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) (Harvard walloped Buffalo, 66 to 0. | partmouth, 32; Vermont, 0. * "| who has signaled his inte my fame away from their last chance | itp or ‘eee it was done with | Hartnett, © . 401 8 0 0; New York (American) |, The south made a good showing in! South Carolina, 7; Villanova, 6 taking A. fair catch ty peiian ane with three hits each. evitable, or it was done with! pack ‘0 0 0 0 0 0| Batting—Gehrig .529; Dickey .438; |intersectional combat with Centenary areat Vita O. } y raising one| Washburn and Max Deadlocked Tinning Did Well mirrors ' Surges, 401520 7 (beating Texas, William and Mary |} ittsbureh, 40: West Virginia, 0. hand only, clearly above his head, The ig re oneake One So'ace Remaining ie : Dickey 7; Combs 6.| oo ‘ Lafayette, 6; Muhlenberg, 0. catches the ball before it touches the For Key Position in Foot- Cubs might have done b ; 00000 ; Dickey 7; Co beating Navy, South Carolina trip- : in Foo! had they introduced earlier younz There «as only one solace left for 100 1 0 0! Hits—Dickey 7; Combs 6. | ping up Villanova, 7-6, and Tulane |Penmsyivania, 38; Franklin & Mar-| ground, and does not take more than ney Ben ‘oung Bud | ne Cubs Monday as they tried to for. : s—Dickey 7; 2 ;Ping up Villanova, 7-6, anc lane | shall, 0. two steps after making the catch. | ball Struggle Tinning, the only pitcher who troubl- the C y tried to for-| y ‘20 0 1 0 O\man, Ruth, 6, smashing the Texas Aggies, 26 to 14.| cornell, 7; Niagara, 0 ‘Gennan ed the Yanks during the seri get the week. Twenty-four of | 7; .0 0 0 0 1 0! Runs batted in—Gehrig 8; Chap-} But Louisiana State was beaten by , on: a i id of Allen, the Cu them were assured of receiving 2! Hems) 100 0 0 O/mané6 ' Rice, 10 to 8. Celeste, aT; Cae, 0. ‘What 3s the line of scrimmage? gran of phe check of approximatel” $4,000 from | Grimes. p” ae eee ar 9: -Combeibex lee Boston U., 13; New Hampshire, 6. pes (Tribune Special Service) eran of the | Grimes, p : 3 anes Harvard, 66; Buffalo, 0. The line of scrimmage for each|,,Siutout scores featured second 1e baseball commissioner's office! s their “cut” and that sum was only | about $1.000 than the indi under collected by the Yanki The bald Missouri mule-tamer held them in subjection, except for a brace of in- field errors that allowed a run in the sixth, until a pinch hitter brought Herb Pennock out to work the last! Seta Ente) ! well, Gehrig, Crosetti, 1 ae 6927 7 Home runs—Gehrig 3; Ruth andi tain Pug Rentner, Dick Fencl and dual! New York 102 002 404—13 | Lazzeri, 2; Combs 1. | George Potter, to quell Missouri's un- s_Al-| Chicago ‘1400 001 001— 6/ Pitching—Ruifing and Gomez, one rly Tigers Saturday, but did @ there re to~ oar) complete game each. | | | : ‘s —Gel iD) ough job aft win- | 1870.24 for t Summary: runs batted in—Gel a (National) ough Job after getting started, win- | Maine, 38; Connecticut Aggies, 0. Brown, 19; Rhode Island State, 0. William & Mary, 6; Navy, 0. Georgetown, 26; Mount St. Mary’s, 0. Catholic U., 47; City College, 0. round skirmishes in the stru; supremacy in the race for te Mee Lean county football championsip, The Max Cossacks and Washburn Were at the head of the pack, dead- team is an imaginary line of vertical plane parallel to the goal lines and passing through that point of the ball nearest the team’s own goal line. A player shall be considered to be Totals . to $i eee innings, ns Rot less individ- | 4 Bowell 2, Hin eben eeslee | Batting—Stephenson .444; Jurges| Meee bad been out with in- | Senne Bepktng, 31 Washington Col- both hands, Sic feat e ee ore ee ae ae Pennock, never beaten in five full Ually because they divided the purse|TV5 pase hits—Gehrig, Grimm, Se- | 364, | juries and were not to be used ex-|- lege, 0. mre “ Oe oe The Cossacks marked themselves and the opposite hand up to or with- in one foot of this line. He must stand with both feet outside the out- side of the outside foot of the player next to him, unless he be one of the two players standing on either side of the center, or snapper in which case he may lock legs with the center. Shares whereas the Cubs! well, Crosetti, Chapman. Home runs leaving their) _nemaree, Lazzeri 2, Combs. effective as he always has been in a cut| ble play—Herman, Jurges and championship battle. | giving Mark Koe-| crimm. Left on base—New York 13; || The | It seems now as though the Bruins| rig If sha s s filed Cnicaso 7. Bases on balls—off Bush} Doubles—Grimm, Hartnett, 2; Her-; nyt no tougher than Coach Frank themselves, though they waged the st his evelusion in the) 7 Warneke 1 (Combs); | 42, Cuyler, Stephenson, 1, \Carideo, Notre Dame's all-America age fight they knew, never at any division to Comtmissioner Kenesaw M | May 3 (Chapman, Combs and Ruf., Tfples—Cuyler, Koenig, 1. {quarterback. Carideo was on the field ad much belief in their own|Landis but there was little chance for| sing): Pennock 1 (Demaree): Grim Home runs—Cuyler, Demaree,! on several occasions to strenuous!; to conquer the human jugger-| it to be successful as no ineligibie: 1 (Gehrig). Struck out by—War- Hartnett, 1. object to penalties. y te at had been turned loose up-/ player for the ; rid Paid can be ent neke 1 (W. Moore); May 3 (Ruth Northwestern scored first in the lem. h” was dep: a Cub! + Vy 9 0] th Me igd cassiosioal teckor: 0 | W. Mcore); Tinning 2 (Dickey, | third period when Roy Auguston, who World series games, savior of Geovge |into 30%2 Runs—Herman 5; English, Cuyler.! cent in case of Fipgras Saturday, was as consistently | spli P i d. Missouri was | Stephenson, Grimm and Hartnett, 2.| peers. Hits—Siephenson 8; Cuyler,:° stubborn in the first half, how- ; ever, that they had to go to work. aint, Mar ensts B; e Tigers put up a grand battle, Holy Cross, 26; Providence, 6. Boston College, 20; Loyola (Balti- more), 0. Bates, 0; Yale, 0. Davis & Elkins, 7; West Leberty, 0. New York U., 33; Hobert, 0. Army 13; Furman, 0. Fordham, 69; Baltimore, 0. Rutgers, 20; Pennsylvania Military College, 6, Syracuse, 54; St. Lawrence, 0. as favorites in the race by ridi rough shod over Turtle Take, 59 too The Max entry won the title with an perplaceay of food Pipaxing, fast in- rence, accurate tacklin, ad defense. sei Cossacks scored 13 points 1 the first period, 12 in the anal 20 in the third and 14 in the fourth, Washburn remained in @ tie with Max by setting down Wilton, 12 to 0, Dou- * in ReDhen eo De- University of Illinois football teams under Coach Bob Zuppke have, in 19 Stolen’ bases—Jurges 1. lot on August 2 and was not named settiy; W. Moore 1 (Jurges); Pen- replaced Ollie Olson at fullback,| Cincinnati U., 22; town, 12. | seasons, gain The periority complex on one side, an|on the list of Cub players eligible for! nock ‘3 ¢ ey Gi ‘ ie »| Cincinnat! U., 22; Georgetown, 12. , gained a winning percentage Garrison Troopers bounded in- Eetrciarity complex of the other, per: | the big show. 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- _ Hits and runs off—Bush 2 hits, 1 run| ’ ’ y le vader the entire serles, just as it did] The player melon, $363,822.27. jn 1-3 inning; Warneke § hits, 2 runs Northwestern s BRRTAY Ga Coe TRE ad ean eee anaes 6; Tulneae allege, AuiCaIaan: Honal 25 to 0 victory over Under- Shortly after the start of the final q f fe , 20; West 5 the Ys conquest of 1927 and 1928,| wasn’t as large as the record breaker] in 2 2-3 innings (none out in 4th: e period, he finished another march, ie wyeachen 0. 5 There are four sets of brothers on football eer eee tenia (and in fact the entire world series! of 1928. but it wes surprising for this| auen § hits, 4 runs in 2-3 inninj C | N d d and before Missouri had recovered, poiscal the Wisconsin varsity: Nello and Mar-|ran the ends for twe tenes at | from 1927 through today. In the last | year before of business conditions | Grimes 4 hits, 4 runs in 1 inning; W. riop: @S IN@@GCG | rentner watted a beautitul eae ES 0 Bacon canes pete |r toe es ioe wo tallies in the six ail ge pears, (ge a peticnd By od Stadium and Wnig-| Mase 2 ren A Fun in ne nnn Ed Manske for another score. Just| Tulane, 26; Texas A. & M., 14. Pete and Rudolph Rotter and George |one in the fourth. MADD TAR eld Pions mes ! in -| off May , 6 runs in 3 1- before the game ended, Bennett, a| Kentucky, 18; Sewanee, 0. and Nick Deanovitch. e Bie er, Seerceniative, five ley Pleld and’ paid O79 291, “he high | nings: Pennock 2 hits, 1 run in 2 i0-!Rentner, Fenel and Potter) sub halfback, flipped a short pass to Alabama, 63; Mississippi State, 0. | set eae ee rane ee Gatrion ison ? i ? th Me ee ee e for the last one. Georgia Tech., 32; Clemson, 14. |_ Wabash college at Crawf 4 4n four straight games. ers of the second, third and fourth! Cae isnt Hit by pitcher—by, + Called in to Quell Stub- | Northwestern made 15 first downs Oklahoma, ‘Tulsa, 0. Ind, which thas produced some “Litt, ha ae ER Mae Underwood ine by May (Gehrig). Winning pitcher—Moore; to 1 for Missouri, and gained 259 losing; ~ Only the Cardinals of last fall|place teams of each league whica| wi : off the apparent instinctive ad- | were cut in generously. Philadel. | V. P. I, 7; Georgia, 6. | Giant” football teams in fact as well born Missouri Mercer, 21; Howard, 6. ; #8 Name, had only 30 candidates for yards from scrimmage to 88 for Mis- Ralston “Hobo” ot American League super-|phie’s Athletics and Pittsburgh. ruu-! pitcher—May. Umpires Magerkurt! sere jsouri, The Wildcats completed six out ; he grit Hemsley, young . Despite the fact that the Cubs{ners-up in the current races. each| (NL), plate; Dinneen’ (AL), fits PISRIGE TECHAEL DRSGEE Or 110 SA eee ett | te Ree ans Eas a Chicago Cubs catcher, practiced bat= Year hit briskly all along, aver-| received purses of $29,786.67; Wash-/Klem (NL), second: Van Graflan’ Evanston, Tll., Oct. 3.—Northwest-|qhile the ‘Tigers’ single pass was|Auburm ITs Frekine, 0 The 10s ene last few weeks almost five runs @ game, they |ingand and Brooklyn were given $1 al (AL) third. Time of game—2:27. 1932 season trying to become Hiram, 6; Kentucky State, 0. ‘an ambidextrous batter, State football team. jing in the backfield on i i ion had to call in three cripples, Cap- [aupipered: lee ‘| A Bs ani, ' ' ) } fi

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