The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 9, 1933, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY. JUNE 9, 1933 | Baer Knocks Out Schmeling in 10th as Warning to Title Aspirants MURDEROUS Rit JIMMY FOXX HITS THREE HOMERS AS MACKS BEAT YANKS - PROVES TOO MUGH | our BoarpING HousE By Ahern |; ‘A Blasts Out Five-Strok FOR CHRWAN STAR ff sccarcumsmee ee ern eee Lead in First 18 Holes of Meet OF ceNNA nave ENCUCH | pte vars ‘om sooe-| [EADING U. 8, TRAPSHOOTERS | , ENTER BREEZY POINT SHOOT RED PAINT, MISTER 2 | RIGHT NOW YOU HAVE Dark For Other Leaders | se | Babe Ruth Reasserts Suprem- Grabs Mortgage acy By Clouting His 12th TH START FOR TWO PICTURES~ Homer of Year OX—THATS GONNA BE TH MASOR—~I THOUGHT IT WAS ASEALBALANCING A RED BALL J-—WHERE ARE YOU GOING To HANG TH’ PORTRAIT WHEN 17S FINISHED, MASOR—~IN A SHOOTING GALLERY © Victor Looms As Greatest! Young Heavyweight Pros- | pect Since Dempsey EXHIBITS KILLER { A STILL LIFE OF A TOMATO OR A VENETIAN SUNSET 7 | Glenview, IL, June 9.—(®)—Tom- | {my Armour, had his competitors all | but rubbed off the market Friday with |@ record-breaking five-shot mortgage jon the National Open Golf champ- ionship. PT RTS LTE TT | The Silver Scot, pulled his coup on LEFTY GOMEZ IS SHELLED, | Fawcett, Troeh, Mrs. King, Fauskee, Donahue and Cunningham Expected INSTINCT | | Crowd Pays $239,195.55 to In- sure Promoter Dempsey a Fair Profit PAY NO HEED To THEM , BERNALDY 7 THEIR APPRECIATION OF ART IS LOWER THAN THAT OF THE NEANDERTHAL. the big prize market of golf Thurs- day by storming in with a record 68 that not only broke the course record |for the North Shore championship |layout but sent him five strokes a- head of the field after the first 18- | | Breezy Point, Minn., June 9.—()—-. ; The nation‘s leading trapshooters, in~ | cluding two former members of | United States Olympic teams, wild | participate in the annual Minnesota Cleveland Loses Fifth Straight; New York, June 9.—()—A roister- | Cards Beat Cubs and tng young blade from out of the west, | with thunder in his brawny fists and all the “killer instinct” he has any use | for, Friday stood a threatening men- ace to Jack Sharkey’s heavyweight; crown. | Victor Thursday night over Max; Schmeling by a crushing 10-round| knockout that left 65,000 spectators pop-eyed with amazement, Max Bacr of California established himself the greatest young heavyweight to crash the big scene since Jack Dempsey whittled down Jess Wiliard at Toledo. “I'm going to win that champion- | | Jack Thinks Baer Will Revive Sport By JACK DEMPSEY (As Told To Edward J. Neil, Asso- | ciated Press Sports Writer) | New York, June 9.—(4)—Boxing has found in Max Baer the kind of fighter who can bring the game back to the old days—the day: when big men fought to knock each other out, and you couldn't find places big cnough to hold every one who wanted to see it | done. It seems to me that the possi- bilities in this California young- ster are only starting to be uncov- ered. AS great a puncher as Schmeling couldn't hurt Baer. And until last night I hadn't seen any one fighting today who could out- wallop the German. So I believe that boxing’s come- back now rests right on Baer's shoulders. He is only 24 years old, | he’s the biggest, strongest many fighting today, and he hits with terrible power. He might have more trouble hitting a man as | clever as the champion, Jack Sharkey, and he'd certainly have trouble evading the titleholder's left hand, but that will be a fight equal to anything that has gone before in the ring.” whip!" he shouted as a shower swept away every trace of the combat. Not one of the vast crowd that saw him floor Schmeling with a murderous right and then, a few seconds later. leave the former champion hanging on the ropes, helpless, will argue the point. A minute and 51 seconds of the 10th tound had ticked away when Referec Arthur Donovan stepped forward, mercifully, to lift Baer’s hand and spare the game German further pun- ishment. Sagging, ready to drop, his guard down and his eyes glazed,! Schmeling was an open target for a punch that might have done lasting | | | { jury. | Right Like Mule Kick Fighting as he did Thursday night, at the same vicious pitch, the man from California would be a favorite to tear through Sharkey’s guard and stretch him on the canvas, or to cut down the gigantic Carnera with the fury of his attack. He apparently is immune to punishment, and his own right is like the kick of a mule. “I don't know what happened,” said the dazed Schmeling. “He wasn't hurting me, so I got eareless and opened up. Wham, I thought a house had fallen on me.” It was the first time Schmeling ever had been on the floor since he first came to the United States five years ‘ago. The only blemish attached to the young Californian’s triumph was his frequent use of a backhand blow that Drought warnings from the referee and razzberries from the crowd. In the first two rounds Baer launch- ed two-fisted attacks that beat his :Gan coming over the mountain. He L £1999 mY NEA SERVICE, {Fe Indians Rattle off 12-Gan me Win Streak to Worry Loop Leaders Only a Game and a Half Behind Columbus As Series With Millers Opens Although outhit 11 to 7, the In- dians pwt on the gas in the seventh and last inning Thursday afternoon to defeat the Athletics 12 to 10 in the first American League contest of Bismarck’s junior baseball program. The American League includes boys 13 and 14 years old. T. Fox, winning pitcher, allowed 11 bingles but he kept them scattered except for the fifth inning, when his adversaries counted seven runs. The Indians failed to score in only one inning. H. Asseltine of the losers allowed From there on he was content to bide his time. Schmeling, taking advantage of Baer's let up, crowded in with a short, | sharp attack that won him his only | three rounds of the fight, the fourth, sixth and seventh. Comes Over Mountain Starting the eighth, Baer really be- | rushed out and socked Schmeling with ‘INDIANS STAGE FINAL RALLY TO WIN FIRST JUNIOR GAME| only seven hits but he walked eight Indians. The ‘box score: Indians (14) D. Larson, c . E 2 0 PobecSeene Buseoneees Leseenaees Athletics Simonitch, 3rd. . L, H. T. R. J. Bowers, c . Humphreys, rf L. Kunkle, cf A. Bowman, If . C. White, 2nd . Totals .. Score by Indians ..... 210 Othletics .... 010 0’ 3 Summary: Double plays—Fox to Smith to Lar- son; hits off Asselestine 7 in 7 inn- 1 in 7 innings; struck 5, by Fox 10; bases on balls off Asselstine 8, off Fox 0; umpires—Burchardt and Bolton. Croonmunce 11 6-12 7 70 2—10 11 1 everything in the book, both at long | and short range. In the ninth he nailed the German against the ropes twice and measured him with terrific wallops to the jaw. Baer wasted little time finishing his ;man in the 10th. They came out of a |clinch in mid-ring, when the Cali- |fornian's right darted out and thudded ton the point of Schmeling’s jaw. | | Down he went, sprawling on his back, | then rolled over to watch the knock- | ‘down timekeeper. He barely rose at the count reached nine. i Baer sailed into his battered rival; with a flurry of punches. @chmeling | covered up. But Baer was on top of; him, throwing his 203 pounds into! every shot. | A left doubled Schmeling up, and a} right sent him slumping against the | ;Post in a neutral corner. And that | | was the end. | | The crowd paid $239,195.55 to wit- | ness the battle and to assure a fair ‘profit for Jack Dempsey in his first unsmiling antagonist all over the ring. big promotorial venture. | OUT OUR WAY PEEaINeND) PECORA of New York is SPECIAL COUN- SEL for the Senate committee investigating J. P. Morgan and other bankers. The Kiel canal joins the BALTIC SEA and the NORTH SEA. The ST. LAW- RENCE is North America’s widest river, 90 miles at ite mouth By Williams THE WORRY wart © 1033 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. RES. SS TRAMs, PAY.OFF. 6-9 1| 2 f i | Victors Outhit 11 to 7 But Eight Get to First Base on Hurl- er's Wildness Chicago, June 9.—(#)—The Indian- japolis Indians appear to be downright | jearnest about worrying Columbus and \the rest of the American Association. They have rattled off a 12-game |winning streak to date and as they ‘aced the opening of a new series with | Minneapolis Friday, were only a game {and a half behind the Red Birds. Indianapolis accomplished number} |12 Thursday night beating the much- ‘battered Kansas City Blues, 3 to 1. Columbus lost ground, dividing a doubleheader with St} Paul. The Red Birds, behind Jim Lindsey's good pitching, won the first game 3 to 2. beating Floyd Newkirk. The Saints} came back to win the second contest, 5 to 3, to salvage one decision out of the five-game series. Toledo made it four out of six with Minneapolis by splitting a double- header. The Millers broke out with a 19-hit attack to win the opener, 13 to \6. The Mudhens made good use of their hits to take the other, 10 to 7.| Joe Hauser, Minneapolis’ slugging first baseman, banged out two home! in the second game to boost his seasot total to 22, \ Louisville scored two runs after two! were out in the ninth to defeat Mil- waukee, 4 to 3. Scores ed innings: jut Brews Kerns Nost 01 wn OE Kansas City 100 002 000- | Milwaukee. 000 12— 4 10 Caldwell and Bengough; Weinert, Hatter and Thompson. Millers, Hens Split First Game H E Minneapolis 512 002 201-13 19 0 Tol ee 400 000 020-6 12 2 | Petty and Glenn; Lee, Bachman | and Reiber. Second Game | E | Minneapolis 000 121 003-7 9 3 Toledo .... 204 020 20x—10 13 2 | Tauscher, Hilcher. Vandenburg and | Henline; Twogood, Winegarner, Reibe /and Healy. Birds and Saints Split } First Game St. Paul... 010 010 000-2 7 1 | Columbus .. 200 000 010-3 9 0 Newkirk and Fenner; Lindsey, Lee and Delancey. fi Second Game ,R H St. Paul... 012 000 O11—5 12 Columbus .. 002 000 100—3 11 Harriss and Guiliani; Teachout Lee and Gonzales. Indians Beat Pines, H Kansas City 000 100 000-1 6 Indianapolis 012 000 O0x—3 5 Shores and Connelly; Burwell an Angley, Riddle. 'Crookston Pitcher Hurls One-Hit Game St. Paul, June 9.—(?)—Brilliant pitching performances featured Thursday's play in the © Northern League: with Babs Johnson, Halstad, E 1 2 t, E 0 1 id. hit game of the season. Johnson, who plays in the Crooks- ton outfield when he is not taking his turn on the mound, limited the hard- hitting East Grand Forks club to one fifth consecutive victory by a 4 to 0 score. Goldworthy of Winnipeg won his eighth straight game in downing Moorhead-Fargo, 5 to 3. He permit- ted only five hits, one of which was |@ home run by Moore, Twin outfielder. Eau Claire rallied in the seventh inning to score four runs and defeat Brainerd 5 to 3. The latter team counted one run in the eighth and another in the ninth due to some ex- tra-base hitting. Winnipeg and East Grand Forks, ranking second and third in the standings, were to meet on the Min- nesota diamond Friday, with Brain- erd continuing its series at Eau Claire. Crookston moves away from home to meet Moorhead-Fargo. The Cherokees are the only Indians to have literature recorded in an In- dian alphabet. Sequoyah, a Chero- kee inventor, worked out this alpha- bet in 1821. In the process of manufacture, shoes go through 150 different operations. Minn., youth, turning in the first one- | W! single as Crookston marked up its| Giants Win BY HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. (Associated Press Sports Writer) | Philadelphia fans figuratively shed-/| ding tears over the failure of Jim-| mie Foxx to live up to the proud boasts they made for him when he} ciouted 58 home runs last season, ap- parently can dry their eyes and start cheering him on toward record| achievements once more. | Jimmie looked very much like the ciouter of 1932 when he blasted his way back into the thick of the fight at the expense of the mighty Yan- kees Thursday. With the redoubt- able Lefty Gomez as his mound op- ponent, Foxx crashed three home runs, batted in five tallies and was a ading figure in the 19-hit attack hat gave the Athletics their first victory of the season over the Yan- kees, 14 to 11. For a while, Foxx was tied with Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig for the big league home run lead with 11, but after the A’s had put the game away with a six-run rally in the eighth, the Babe reasserted his su- premacy by pasting his 12th. Another Philadelphia-New York game was decided on long distance slugging as the Giants, who have given New York a monopoly on first places for the first time in years, turned back the Phillies, 7-6. Senators Cut Loose Washington's Senators cut loose| against Boston with 17 hits in the! second game of a doubleheader to| win 12-3 after they had “blown” a 4-3 decision in the opener. The even break gave them second place in the American League once more as De- troit ended the six-game winning streak of the Chicago White Sox with an ll-inning 3-2 triumph when Catcher Frank Grube dropped a throw and let the winning run count. The St. Louis Browns continued Cleveland's losing streak to five games by pounding out a 5-3 decision. Dizzy Dean of the St. Louis Car- dinals outpointed Lonnie Warneke of the Chicago Cubs, giving only three hits to win 2-1. The victory kept the Cards only a few points behind the Giants while Chicago lost a good chance to take third place when the! Pittsburgh Pirates suffered an 8-2 setback at the hands of the Cincin-| nati Reds and their old “jinx” moundsman, Eppa Rixey. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Browns Take Cleveland R St. Louis.. 000 410 000—5 10 Cleveland.. 010 020 000—3 8 Wells and Crouch; Brown, Connall; and Pytlak. Tigers Win In lth R H Detroit 000 000 002 01-3 10 Chicago 001 100 000 00-2 8 qa pings Horring, her, Hogsett and Hay- worth, DeSautel; Jones and Grube. Athletics Club tankers H New York. 210 002 401-10 13 1 Philadelphia 020 150 06x—14 19 @ Gomez, Moore and Dickey; Freitas, Mahaffey, Combs and Cochrane. E Bosox, Senators Split First Game + R H Washington 010 100 010-3 9 joston .... 010 001 002— 4 8 Thomas and Sewell; Brown, and Ferrell. bit cai E 3 1 e Second Game R H Washington 010 200 063~12 17 Boston .... 010 000 110-3 11 Russell and Berg, Sewell; Kline, Andrews and Ferrell: NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Trounce Pirates Cincinnati. 110 240 o00—'S Pittsburgh. 000 000 101— 2 Rixey and Lombardi; Meine, Hoyt and Padden, Gra Giants Nip Phillies R Philadelphia 150 000 000— 6 New York.. 105 010 00x— 7 Hansen, Collins, Liska and Todd: Parmelee, Bell, Hubbell and Mancuso. Cards Trim Cubs E 9) 0 h, ‘0 8 French, ce. H E 9 0 8 E gO 0 0 id St. Louis.. 100 100 00x—2 6 eee, and Hartnett; Dean an Only’ games scheduled. i Fights Last Night | E e The Associated Press) lew York— Max Baer, Livermore, Calif., stopped Max Schmeling, Ger- man, (10); Jack Redman, South Bend, Ind., outpointed Marty Fox, New York, (8); Charley Massera, Pittsburgh; eutpointed Abe Feldman, New York, (8); Tony Galento, Cleve- land, knocked out Donald (Red) Bar- ry, Washington, D. ©.. (1); Jack Van Noy, Los Angeles, outpointed Phil Co- hen, Brooklyn, (4); Georgie Simpson, California, and Joe Mack, New York, drew, (4) Pittsburgh — Vince Dundee, Balti- more, knocked out Frankie Goosby, Pittsburgh, (8); Fritz Heinz, Saginaw. ‘Mich., outpointed Anson Green, Homestead, Pa., (5); Harry Jacoby. Newark, O., knocked out Billy NicHe Pittsburgh, (4); Red Bruce, Pitts. burgh, and Sammy Glenn, Spring- field, O., drew, (6). Tacoma, Wash.—Fred Lenhart, Ta- | coma, outpointed Terris Hill, Chicago. (10). Use the Want Ads | Qtandin F 5| Br h, hole round engagement, with Walter Hagen and six others tied at 73. Fifty-four holes were left before the end of the big battle and most of the favorites were grouped well up but it looked like another crown for Armour, win- ner of the title at Oakmont in 1927. No one in the 36 years of play in the National Open ever held such a margin after 18 holes. What made it look all the dark- er for the field, among them de- fending champion, who took a 74 to Gene Sarazen, Jand in an eight- way tie for eighth, was that Armour has a habit of getting better as the battle gocs on. Pace-setters until Armour came home, the six dead-locked for sec- ond place included two amateurs, Neil White of Topeka, Kas., and Southern California, and Maurice McCarthy, Jr., of Cleveland, and four profession- als—Hagen, Henry Ciuci of Flushing, N. Y.,; Craig Wood, Deal, N. and Young Jimmy Revolta of Menominee, Mich, The group tied with Sarazen, a vic- tim Thursday of wild tee shots, num- bered Al Watrous, Detroit; Tom Creavy, Albany, N. Y.; Joe Kirkwood, Coral Gables, Fla.; Ky Laffoon, Den- ver, and a trio of dark horses—Carl Gustafson, Chicago; Lee Wilcox, Nor- folk, Neb., and C. H. Mayo, Long Beach, Calif. Such famed shotmakers as Olin Dutra, Bobby Cruickshank, Johnny Farrell, Johnny Goodman, Paul Run- yan, and Horton Smith brought up the rear with 75s. Eighteen holes were on Friday's pro- gram, starting at 7:30 (C.S.T.) efter which the field was to be trimmed to the 60 low scorers for the final 36 holes Saturday. AMERICAN LEAGUE wis New York Pet. Pittsburgh : 0. Cincinnati Boston . Brooklyn . Philadelphi: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w iL Columbus .. Indianapolis Minneapolis Mil Te Lot Kansas City NORTHERN LEAGUE wie Superior ............ 18 Winnij oe (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Martin, Cardinals, 350; ‘Moore, Braves, .348. Runs—Martin, Cardinals, 39; Bar- itt Phillies, and P. Waner, Pirates, 3 Hits—Fullis, Phillies, 69; Klein, Phillies, 68, Home runs—Berger, Braves, Klein, Phillies, and Hartnett, Cubs, 10. Pitching—Hallahan, Cardinals, 7-2; Schumacher, Giants, and Carleton, AMERICAN LEAGUE West, Browns. .360. Runs—Combs, Yankees, 43; Gehrig, Yankees, 41. Hits—Simmons, White Sox, Manush, Senators, 68. Home runs—Ruth, Yankees, 12; Gehrig, Yankees, and Foxx, Athletics, a: n; Pitching — Brennan, Yankees, 5-0; Allen, Yankees, 4-0; McAfee and Rus- sell, Senators, 3-0. GRAIN PRICES‘ aucaco MAY 25,1932-/933 38 agg ®@sevaszsg State Trapshooting tournament at Cardinals, 6-2; Thurston, Dodgers, 3-1.; Batting—Simmons, White Sox, .374; took a first mortgage on the 1933 na. tional open golf championship Thurs: the field by five strokes. ; By The Associated Press) Joe Kuhel, Senators—Rapped Bos singles in doubleheader. ing Phillies to one hit. Chick, doubles against Pirates. Jimmie Foxx, walked to score fourth run. Dizzy Dean, Cubs to three hits, fanning five. on Cleveland with trivle and double. Animals grow, grow. —————_—————— Tommy Armour, the silver Scot.| day when he blazed out a 68, leading Yesterday’s Stars Ti ——» Carl Hubbell, Giants—Held one-run lead through last four innings, hold- John Stone, Tigers—Hit homer in ninth to tle score against White Sox. Hafey, Reds—Walloped two Athletics — Clouted three homers against Yankees, and Cardinals — Limited Art Scharein, Browns—Led attack live and feel; plants grow and live; minerals only Breezy Point Lodge June 24 to 27. Captain W. H. (Billy) Fawcett ot Minneapolis, who captained a United | States Olympic team victory in | Switzerland in 1924, and ink Troeh ;of Portland, Ore., member of several | Olympic teams from. this country, j head the list of outstanding gunners already entered. The entrants will come chiefly from | Minnesota, North Dakota, South Da- (kota, Wisconsin and Iowa. Six hun- |dred dollars in added money and 14 Trophies also will be awarded to win- ners in the various events. everal women trapshooters also vill take part in the tournament, in luding Mrs. E. L. King of Winon: David Fauskee of Worthington, na- tionally-known amateur shooter, and Earle Donahue of Minneapolis, who won the professional championship a year ago by breaking 200 consecu- tive birds, also have entered the tour- - | nament. ton pitching for two doubles and four | Planning to-be here to defend his | title as singles, doubles and all-around champion is Jack Cunningham of Sturgeon Lake. A year ago Cunning- ham tied with H. W. Maginnis of Minneapolis for the diamond badge by breaking 50 consecutive birds but Maginnis beat him in the play-off. The tournament opens the after- jnoon of June 24. , The first American-built ship to cross the Atlantic was a.pinnace built by a band of Huguenots at Port Royal in 1562, and in which they returned to France. The fastest thing you can do is te wink your eye, and that takes an av- erage Of one-tenth of a second. SIDE GLANCES - ! : WW Y - By George Clark 2.1939 BY NEA SERVICE, CRE. U.S. PAT. OFF. ~— “We didn’t want to travel this year, but simply couldn’t afford to keep our home open.” — THIS CURIOUS WORLD —

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