The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 6, 1933, Page 8

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THE A ADAM BROWN HURLS SIX-HIT CONTEST IN 4-3 PITCHERS’ DUEL Home Run By Fortune With One on Base Beats Berger, Barber Pitcher fOMMY LEE HITTING STAR Home Runs and Triples Numer- ous As National Guard Wallops Wills 15-12 STANDINGS ‘Won Lost Pct. A. 0. U. W. +. 2 0 1,000 Sweet Shop 2 0 1,000 Company A. oo 2 i 666 ©. H. Will company 1 2 — .333 Highway Department 1 2 333 Classic Barbers .... 0 3 000 A pitchers’ duel and a slugfest marked the city diamondball league's Program Monday evening. Adam Brown pitched six-hit ball and the A. O. U. W. entrant nipped the Classic Barbers 4 to 3 and went into a tie for first place with the Sweet Shop. Company A won a 15-to-12 decision from the O. H. Will and company ten in_a wild affair. Berger, Classic Barber pitcher, al- lowed the Workmen only seven hits, but a home run blow by Fortune in the fifth inning with one man on base but the game on ice for the lodge- men. Each team committed three errors. Tommy Lee Swats The hitting star of the evening was young Tommy Lee, starting this sea- ‘son with the tonsorial artists. Lee secured three bingles off the effec- tive hurling of Brown, who was set- ting veteran hitters like Mason, Diehl and Herschleb down without a scratch Frankie Smith of the lodge- men had a perfect day at bat, getting ‘two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate and scoring two runs. Brown helped his own cause by get- ting two hits in three attempts. Twenty-seven hits were made in the slugfest, Matt Hummel of the seedmen granting 14 and Paul Hed- strom of the National Guardsmen giv- ing up 13. Hits included five home runs, two triples and six doubles. The two teams committed a dozen errors, the seedmen being guilty of eight of them. Lead Changes Often The lead changed hands several time and the Will outfit had a one- tun margin as the last chapter open- ed. However, a hit, three successive walks and three errors enabled the guardsmen to score five runs in the last: inning while the planters were re- tired with only one run in their half of the frame. The box scores: .0.U.W.and C 1 OUR BOARDING HOUSE AHOY, BARNACLE BILL/ HOWS COME YOU AREN'T SWAGGERING AROUND HERE IN YOUR SEA-GOING HAT AND BRASS BUTTONS 2 1 HEAR MRS, HOOPLE HAS SUNK YOUR BOAT-OWNING IDEA, AN’ PUT You INTO DRYDOCK 9 (im. \ y => 3 \ a in ee hy ee We ef Z GETTING YEH~SHE, SAYS SHE WON'T LET YOU HAVE - A BOAT BECAUSE YoU WOULDNT PROMISE TO SAIL AWAY AN GET SHIPWRECKED ON A DESERT ISLAND/, Yn (ewe HO, ME p HEARTIES/ A [833 BY WEA SERVICE, we. Toledo Mud Hens Win Five Straight Philadelphia, June 6.—(?)—Fal- len from the pedestal of a world series idol, big George Earnshaw, right-handed hurler of the Ath- letics, was plodding the come- back trail Tuesday with the ad- mission that, in suspending and fining him, “Connie Mack did exactly what he should have done.” With one exhibition of his de- termination to get back into con- dition to his credit, George says he is going to regain the favor of the fans “by actions and not with words.” He worked out with the team Monday by special permis- sion of Connie Mack. Hits off Hummel 14 in 7 innings; off Hedstrom 13 in 7 innings. Struck out by Hummel 6; by Hedestrom 5. Bases on balls off Hummell 4; off Hedstrom il. Umpire, George Hays. Company A (15) Register, cf .. Gh oh ous aae if E 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 o Toews, If O. H. Will (12) J. Spriggs, If ... H. Falconer, 3rd F. Wetch, 2nd E. Spriggs, 1st Hummel, p F Hummel, Iss . J. Zahn, cf ... G. Croonquist, ras . “Doc” Priske, c . D. Schneider, rf BS! POs ctw io aps tarssisegion | ais sa ua ioagnoto om ey 1 2 1 0 1 2 Zl svwsssmamnes HG lowe mrmrnowroMe | ovement i) Company A +205 021 5-15 14 oO. 5. Will +004 403 1-12 13 8 Summary: Stolen bases, Falconer. Zahn, Priske, Brown, Toews. tices, Masseth. Home runs, Wetch, M. Hummell, Zahn, Schneider, Brown, ‘Two base hits, Johnson, Potter, Fal. coner, Wetch, Zahn, Croonquist, Johnson, Ashmore, Potter, Svaren Three base hits, Potter, Hedstrom. | OUT OUR WAY OF ALL “Tr HOw o10 THE BLACK EYES ? Sacri- | AWS! ony! “THE COOK GET > ow loooccoroeng | AO.U.W. (4) {Smith, rss . \Fortune, Ist S. Goetz, 3rd . |M. Goetz, Iss - |Brown, p .. ; Hemmer, lf |Schriener, rf-cf \Kelly, ¢ ... | Rierson, rf ;Papacek, 2nd . | Sistecar WPOURIB Eee selie sees oe oA j_ Classic Barber (3) Sl] wonsnwoonmmn | Tracy, 2nd Davis, rf .. | Ashmore, rss Beaudoin, Ist Berger, p . Nelson, c .. Herschleb, rss atial cooronHoccowma! cocoH HOUR wtealomoconccoongm 3 8 if ‘a. 0. U. W. 100 030 x— 4.7 3 Summary: Three base hits, Hem- mer. Home runs, Fortune, Davis. Hits 'f Brown 6 in 7 innings; off Berger 7 in 6 innings. Struck out by Brown |6; by Berger 3. Bases on balls off {Brown 3; off Berger 2. Umpire, Dr. J. O. Thoreson. VA WHY - OH WELL~— AMM WELL .MA AM ~ I-tO REeTHER} wtiwe!l onoosooronotieal opvoOHOONCH THE GOAT HERDER ' Games in Brilliant Swatting Spree Earnshaw Says Connie Mack Right; Digs in For Efforts At Comeback Earnshaw was sent home from New York Saturday, suspended for 10 days and fined $500 for what Manager Mack termed “repeated breaking of training regulations.” ‘The sentence marked the second time the big pitcher was sent home this year, a similar order having been given him in Detroit. NATIONAL LEAGUE ALL-STAR SHAPING New York, Chicago and Phil- adelphia Will Have Two Men Each on Team Chicago, June 6—()—New York, | Chichgo and Philadelphia appear cer- tain of being represented by two men each in the National League All-Star team which will try to beat a cast of American League Aces at Comisky Park July 6. Bill Terry of the Giants, Tuesday had 50,006 votes for the first base Job to 17,069 for Jim Bottomley of Cincinnati. Carl Hubbell, New York's star southpaw, still was leading Lonnie Warneke of the Cubs, 50,003 to 56,662, but both probably will do a share of the pitching. Gabby Hartnett, Warneke's batterymate, led the catch- ers by a big margin, having piled up 63,629, to 21,716 for Jimmy Wilson of the Cardinals. Philadelphia's prospective pair are Dick Bartel and Chuck Klein, Bartell had the edge over Lloyd Vaughan of the Pirates, 38,688 to 50,079 for short- stop, while Klein led all the outfield- ers with 63,478. Paul Waner of Pitts- burgh and Frank O'Doul of Brooklyn, rated two and three among the out- fielders with 42,498 and 34,68 votes, respectively. Pie Traynor of the Pirates was a virtual cinch at third base, with 62,- 192 votes to 13,621 for Woody English of the Cubs. Red Lucas of Cincinnati, was the third ranking pitcher with 21,274 votes. By Williams | HE DIO. NOT DO 1T,MAAM! Ol FOSsIL—HimM— WHY HE COULDN'T ! I WAS CHOPPIN’ WOOD, AN’ A CHUN THET TRwituans, © 0m wy wes wemncE Ae b-b/ BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1938 By Ahern Zo \ WME IF ITS ANYTHING To You PUBLIC ENEMIES, L AM A BOAT FOR THE SUMMER AND TD LIKE ¢| ‘TO TAKE YOU BOTH FOR A CRUISE ——~IF YOU CAN'T SWIM f | ili it Hammer Out 18 Hits For Day’s Average of .500 and Wal- lop Millers 9-4 Chicago, June 6. — (#) — If Steve O'Neill could keep his Toledo Mud- hens hiting the way they have for the last week, he would have a real con- tender in the American Association championship race. In one of their sporadic hitting spells, the Hens have won their last five games, rousing work with the war clubs having more than offset some erratic pitching. ‘The batting streak reached its height Monday. The Hens went to bat 36 official times against three Minneapolis hurlers and hammered cut 18 hits—a day's average of .500— and defeated the sagging Millers 9 to 4 Bobby Reis, Frank Doljack,, George Detore and Tubby Reiber led the as- sault with three hits each. Columbus took the opening game of its series wig St. Paul, but had to come from behind to do it, 6 to 3. The Saints had a 2-to-0 lead going intu the last of the sixth, but the Birds clipped Lou Garland for three runs, Bost end batted him out during another three-run drive in the seventh. Indianapolis increased its second place margin by defeating Kansas City 6 to 3 in a night game. Louisville inagurated night baseball by dropping a hardfought contest to| stp; Milwaukee, 10 to 7. Scores by inn- ings: : Hens Scratch ve HE Minnea} 013 000 000-4 9 2 Toledo pets 110 003 22x—9 18 1 Benton, Vandenburg, Holsclaw and Glenn; Twogood, Lee and Relber. poco ey H St. Paul... 010 100 010—3 10 Columbus.. 000 003 30x—6 10 0 Garland, Trow Newkirk and Fen- ner; Judd, Dean and Delancey. Indians Defeat ies = Kansas City 100 000 011-3 9 1 Indianapolis 010 320 O0x—6 11 4 Blacl we . and Connelly; Bolen afid Riddle. ‘ cami ee Milwaukee. 001 320 202-10 13 0 i and Young; We! Hatter and Thompson. dia | Major Leaders » (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Unchanged from Monday add to home runs: Hartnett, Cubs, 10, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Simmons, White Sox, .374; Hodapp, Red Sox, .369. Runs—Gehrig and Combs, Yankees, and Swanson, White Sox, 39. Hits—Simmons, White Sox 67; Man- ush, Senators, 61. Home runs—Ruth and Gehrig, Yan- kees, 10. Pitching—Brennan and Allen, Yan- kees, 4-0, McAfee, Senators, 3-0, Louisville—Eddie Shea, Chicago, knocked out Joe Rivers, Tulsa, Okle., (3); Marshall Edwards, Louisville, outpointed Paul Lee, Indianapolis, (8). Use the Want Ads except HERBERT HOOVER served SIX YEARS as secretary of commerce in the cabinets of Presidents Harding and Coolidge. The poem, ‘Build ers of the Ship,” was written by LONGFELLOW. The sketch is of the CROW’S NEST. IS BUSIER THAN EVER ARRANGING DETAILS Employs Small Army of Men to Convert Yankee Stadium Into Arena $300,000 GATE EXPECTED Federal Weather Official Fore- casts That Thursday Will Be Fair New York, June 6.—(?)—Trained to the minute, Max Baer and Max Schmeling can afford to take things easy until they square off for their 15-round heavyweight duel in the Yankee stadium Thursday night— but there was no rest immediately in sight for promoter Jack Dempsey. Financially the bout seemed certain of success but there were a thousand and one details to be ironed out. The major task confronting him was the converting of the stadium into a fight arena. As soon as the New York Yankees completed their double-header with Boston Tuesday, Dempsey, planned to move in a small army of workmen to set up the ring and arrange the seats. Then, all he'll need to worry about is the weather. Tentatively, at least, Dempsey has been promised fine weather. James H. Scarr, head of the New York weather bureau, says Thursday “prob- ably will be fair.” If it is, indications were a crowd of close to 60,000 would pour into the stadium for the match. - Dempsey Monday had $100,000 cash in hand and another $50,000 in reservations. The last-minute rush for tickets was expected to send the receipts close to $300,000. Betting on the bout has been very light, with Schmeling a steady 2 to 1| De! choice, Che @ andings AMERICAN LEAGUE we Pet. New York 13 OC ‘Washini 20 574 Chica; 2054 Cleveland 2 Philadelphia 22 20 524 Detroit ... 20° (25 44 St. Louis . 17 (31 354 Boston . 28 333 NATIONAL LEAGUE = Pet. New York 17.605 it. Louis 18 = .600 on .. Philadelphia , AMERICAN Bee erlariON Columbus. L 18 138 2 8 5 1 Brainerd 9 Moorhead-Fargo 4°17 — | Yesterday’s Stars | aD (By The Associated Press) Fred Schulte, Senators—Solved Lefty Grove for double and home run, one in three runs against Ath- letics. Al Simmons, White Sox—Drove in ompany A Win Diamondball Games Monday Night TWO MAXES TAKING THINGS EASY UNTIL THURSDAY NIGHT ||PROMOTER DEWPSEY |Grove Carries Almost Whole Burden Of Keeping Philadelphia in Battle FOUR FORMER OPEN CHAMPS Monday Took Mound For 10th Time in 17 Days; Won Fifth in Succession By HERBERT W. BARKER (Associated Press Sports Writer) On Bob Grove's thin shoulders rest almost the entire burden of keeping the Philadelphia Athletics in the American League pennant race but the crack southpaw seems to be thriv- ing on work. ‘The lanky ace of Connie Mack's Pitching staff took the mound Mon- day for the 10th time in 17 days. scattered Washington’s 10 hits as the A’s won 7-4 and hung up his fifth suc- cessive victory in that short space of time. Grove had no worries after his teammates solved Al Crowder for five runs in the third inning. He contrib- uted a home run and single to the A’s 14-hit assault. Meanwhile the Chicago White Sox continued their terrific bombardment on St. Louis pitching, brushed aside the Browns, 14-7, and moved into third place, a game and a half behind the Senators and three percentage points ahead of the Cleveland Indians. The Pale Hose blasted 23 hits off the combined deliveries of George Blae- holder, Sam Gray and Rolland Stiles. four going to Evar Swanson, fleet out- fielder. % Vie Frasier, made his debut for Detroit but failed to go the route, al- though the Tigers eventually emerget! with an 8-7 triumph. Frasier went out at the end of five innings with the score 5-4 against him and Vic Sor- Tell received credit for the victory earned by a two-run rally in the ninth. Rain halted the only National League game of the day, when the St. Louis Cardinals leading the Cincin- nati Reds 2-0 after three and one-half innings. Scores by innings: NATIONAL LEAGUE No games. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Claw Indians HE troit ... 010 030 202-8 14 4 Athletics Take ee E Washin: 100 002 100—4 11 0 Eitieuelitn O08 200 OOx—7 14 1 Crowder, Burke, McAfee and Sewell, Berg; Grove Chisox ae nF Chicago 204 141 101-14 23 ; St. Louis... 101 100 103—7 10 ‘Wyatt and Grube; wopenltad Gray, and’ Cockrane. 343| stiles and Shea, Crouc Only games schedule: Stecher and Nagurski Win Wrestling Bouts Milwaukee, Wis., June 6.—(#)—Joe Stecher, of Nebraska, former heavy- weight wrestling champion, defeated Lou Sun Jennings, a Cherokee In- ‘426 | Gian, in straight falls in the windup’ of a wrestling show here Monday | night. The first fall required 18 min- utes and the second 7 minutes, 45 Pet.| seconds. Stecher won with body scis- 543 sors in both falls. In the semi-windup Bronko Nag- urski, of Minneapolis, former Univer- sity of Minnesota football star, de- feated Henry Graber, of Germany in 444) eight minutes, 30 seconds, using a flying tackle. ret. Moorhead-Fargo Nine Suffers 17th Reverse St. Paul, June 6.—()—Northern League teams were to swing into a full schedule of games again Tuesday, with the East Grand Forks-Winnipeg tilt topping the program. These teams mere forced into idleness by rain Mon- y- Only one game was played Monday, Crookston pounding out 10 hits, cluding three by Danny Boone, for a 10 to 3 triumph over Moorhead-Far- go. It was the 17th reverse for the twins. The second game of the ser- four runs against Browns with triple jes was slated for Crookston Tuesday. Eau Claire returned to competition and two singles. Charley Gehringer, Tigers—His after nearly a week's layoff, playing fourth hit drove in tying run against, at Brainerd. Indians and put winning tally in pos- ition to score. Fights Last Night —__—____________4 (By the Associated Press) + Pittsburgh — Jackie Wilson, Pittsburgh, stopped Tommy Paul, Buffalo, N. Y., (8); Tony Marino, Pittsburgh, outpointed Johnny Perrini, Buffalo, (10). Stevens Point, Wis——Mike Dun- dee, Rock Island, Ill., outpointed John Early, Minneapolis, (8); Al Salbano, Syracuse, N. Y., outpoint- ed Irish Kennedy, St. Paul, (6). ‘The honor of serving you at a time when efficient do everything as near- ly perfect as possible. You can rely upon us. WEBB BROS. Funeral Directors Phone 50 Night Phone 50 or 387 Armour, Farrell, Walker and Burke Watch Ciuci Turn in Low Score Chicago, June 6.—(}—Four one- time wearers of the national open golf crown already have arrived on the scene of this year’s battle at the North Shore Gold club and gone around the course preparatory to the opening of the tourney Thursday. They are Tommy Armour, Johnny Farrell, Cyril Walker and Bill Burke and Monday they had to content themselves with seeing an outsider, | ALREADY ON TOURNEY SCENE Henri Ciuci, Flushing, N. Y., profes- sional, turn in the low score of the day—a 70, two under par. Gene Sarazen, defending cham- Pion, was there, too, but he played only nine holes. Terre Haute, Ind—Tiger Jack Fox, Terre Haute, knocked out Joe Docktor, Buffalo, N. Y., (3); Bud Creed, Lima, O.; knocked out eo Elberts, Springfield, Mo., @). Blackfish and porpoise oil has been found especially good in lubricating delicate mechanisms. * that: makes utdoor Grrl -]. Face Powper i * ‘There“sre"many good face powders. But Outdoor Girl alone is: made with a pure olive oil base! Olive oil has been the secret of famous beauties since Cleopatra. It is the finest aid to skin beauty experts know, even today. And Outdoor Girl is the first and only successful combination of olive oil in a face powder! That's why it’s so very, very different from any other face Why it iestantly transforms your comp!exion—makes your skin so and satin-smooth! 4 And it lasts for houss! Outdoor Girl Face Powder clings—yet it’s light, fluffy-dry, almost invisible! Protective—yet it becomes a very ‘part of-your skin! 4% 0u,can try, this famous ‘powder without'extravagance, for your, -drug or department store now has the generous 10c and 2c sizes as well as the $1 box. Use Outdoor Girl once—and you'll wish you'd discovered this olive oil face powder long ago! _ If your druggist is out of stock, or if you would rather have liberal ‘trial sizes of five Outdoor Girl‘Beauty Products, mail the coupon . 7 ~ OUTDOOR GIRL FACE POWDER TION, apt. HE enclose 0c to | ALMOST THERE, BUT WE SHOULD HAVE TELEPHONED. THEY MAY BE AWAY. WELL, WE'LL BE RIGHT BACK BE RIGHT BACK. LET'S ASK A PLL CALL MABEL AT Home £7} AND SEE IF THEY HAVE Gee

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