The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 29, 1933, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 193 | Bismarck Continues Heavy Hitting to Wallop Gray Ghosts 14 to 3 LOCALNNG oS |HIGHWAYMEN RALLY IN LA 48 HTS, INCLUDING ' BXTRA-BASE SWATS i Roosevelt Davis Allows 10 Hits, | Lacking Effectiveness in One Inning SEARS IS LEADING CLOUTER | Capital Citians Next Sunday Will Face Colored House ‘ of David Here Going on another hitting rampage ‘Wednesday evening behind the effec- tive pitching of Roosevelt Davis, Bis- marck’s baseball team walloped the ‘Gray Ghosts of St. Louis, Mo., 14 to 3. The Ghosts explained their weaker- than-usual pitching by the fact that their two leading hurlers had left them to join the Gilkerson Union Giants. Bismarck’s 14-to-3 win followed on the heels of the Capital City’s 16-to-0 conquest of Fort Lincoln last Sunday. ‘The Legion outfit secured 18 hits, Mncluding three triples and a couple of doubles, Wednesday evening. Davis, new pitcher from Columbus, ©,, allowed 10 hits, but kept them well-scattered. Only in the second 4nning did his effectiveness wane, and the visitors scored three runs in that canto. Not a man reached second dase in the remainder of the game. Bismarck began scoring in the third, pushing across seven runners, and continued with another in the fifth, four in the seventh and two in the eighth. : Each Bismarck player hit safely once or more. Sears led with four hits in five attempts while Sagehorn hit three times in five trips. Kitchen, Feske, McCarney and Hyland each hit safely twice. For the Ghosts, Cowan, Werell and Davis each secured two hits in four attempts. Besides hitting well, Sears played a ‘bang-up game at shortstop. He handl- ed six assists and three putouts and once served as the middle man in a tipping double play. Next Sunday at 3 p. m. the Bis- marck team will face the Colored ‘House of David team at the city park. The box score for Wednesday eve- ning: Bismarck (14) ABRH POAE S. Goetz, cf .. . 2 N. Kitchen, 2b .... R. Sears, ss . F. Feske. 1b . R. Davis, p J. Sagehorn, rf .... B. McCarney, 3b .. Q. Roberts, c ...... 8. Hyland, If .. NIK OAwWAN Totals . teeee Ghosts (3)— Boelter, 3b Van, ¢ .. ‘Wehrle, 1b Hamilton, p Jones, 2b McFall, cf Cowan, If ‘Werell, ss Davis, rf Totals ... Summary: Stolen bases, B. McCar- ney 3, Hyland 2, Hamilton; two-base hits, Sagehorn, Hyland; three-base hits, Hamilton, Sears, Feske, Roberts; home runs, Cowan; double plays, Oroccccce] | { | THAT THE ACRID MENDED ! 1 ‘ ® EGAD,JASON~I DONT THINK YOUVE EVER SEEN ME.IN We MASORS UNIFORM THAT I WO! IN THE BOER WARY HAR-RRRUME / WONDAH IF YOD LET @ IT 1S ONLY IN RECENT YEARS SMOKE HAS LEFT THIS COAT 7 OF COURSE,T HAD THE SEVERAL BULLET AND SHRAPNEL HOLES IN IT OUR BOARDING HOUSE ME ODOR OF CANNON, FORCEFUL FIGURE, EH, MY MAN © the victors, allowing the visitors but eight hits. The box score: Beulah Miners (9) ABRHPOAE Kerbs, cf S221 ‘Webber, 31 J. Stewart, ss Thronson, 2b F. Stewart, rf Viestenz, 1f Wessels, ¢ Kemp, p . Heihn, 1b Conoco aHoe eros00000 Totals Ghosts (5) | Boldridge, 3b Worrell, ss McCowan, If McFall, p a Beulah Miners— 010 008 00x—9 10 1 100 200 200-—5 8 5 Stolen bases—Webber; —Kerbs, Webber, Thron- son, Worley; home runs—Hayes, Mc- Fall; double plays—J. Stewart to Heihn, Worrell to Hamilton to Van; hits off Kemp 8 in 9 innings; off Mc- Fall 7 in 6 innings; off Worley 3 in 2 innings. Struck out by Kemp 8, by McFall 1; bases on balls off Kemp 1, McFall 6, Worley 1. Umpires—Gentz and Fuerst. Kitchen to Sears to Feske, Werell to Jones to Wehrle; hits, off Davis 10 in 9 innings; off Hamilton 18 in 8; struck out, by Davis 5, by Hamilton 2; ‘bases on balls, off Davis none, off Hamilton 7. Umpires, Shipley, Mohn. Scorer, B. Hummel. BEULAH OUTFIT WINS IN EIGHT-RUN RALLY (Tribune Special Service) Beulah, N. D., June 29.—An eight- run rally in the sixth inning enabled the Beulah Miners to defeat the Gray Ghosts, traveling baseball nine, 9 to 5 here Tuesday night. The Miners cashed in on three - doubles, three singles, two bases on - ‘balls and an error in that run-packed canto. Burley Kemp pitched steady ball for ‘| OUT OUR WAY aan Ee EEE | Fights Last Night | 3 OH (By the Associated Press) Hartford, Conn.—Jimmy Leto, ‘Tampa, Fla., outpointed Herman Perlick, Kalamazoo, Mich., (10); Joe Rossi, New York, outpointed Jerry Emard, Holyoke, Mass., (8). St. Louis—Joe Huff, St. Louis, outpointed Frankie Hughes, Clin- ton, Ind., (10); Clem Reed, Quin- cy, Ill, outpointed George Daw, Pipe Lawn, Mo., (6); Steve Mar- re, St. Louis, outpointed Russell Cross, Quincy, (6). Montreal—Billy Townsend, Van- couver, knocked out Stanislaus Loayza. Chile, (2), Vrurey oP wir ATOWEL, MA! « THERE ISN'T ANY HERE — HURRY! MY EYES ARE FOLL OF SOAP Beats Neil Smith of Dallas and Owen Covey of Salt Lake Wednesday © Colorado Springs, Colo., June 29.— (?)—Champion Gus -Moreland of Dallas Thursday met Johnny Daw- son, Chicago stylist, in the quarter- finals of the trans-Mississippi golf tournament. Moreland Wednesday nosed out Neil Smith, Dallas, on the 19th green and went eight holes to beat Owen Covey, Salt Lake. Dawson eliminated |B. J. Rogers, Oklahoma City, 7-6, ‘and Verne Stewart, New Mexico, 2-1. matches were Zell Eaton, Oklahoma City, and L. B. Maytag, Newton, Ia.; Lawson Little, San Francisco, and Frank English, Denver; Ben Cowd- ery, Omaha, and Howard Creel, Pueblo. Also-Rans Get Chance In Track-Field Meet Chicago, June 29—(P)—The Also- Rans of America’s amateur cinder paths were to get their chance Thurs- day. As an inaugural feature of the an- nual National Amateur Athletic Un- jon track and field games, every hopeful who has failed to win an im- Portant race or field event was group- ed in the junior class for a series of tests at Soldier Field.. No records were expected but stirring battles were promised in every event. The heavy shelling on outdoor rec- ords opens Friday when a record field of women and men engage in the sen- for championship events. More than 100 women stars will shoot at the marks in the afternoon with a record field of 389 men athletes, many of them America’s greatest track and | field performers, blasting for new world’s records under the arc lights of Soldiers Field at night. BIKE RACER SUCCUMBS Passaic, N. J., June 29.—()—Pre- dent De Lille, six-day bicycle racer, collapsed and died late Wednesday | night soon after finishing a two-mile | tandem race at the Velodrome, Nutley. | He was 23 years old. 5 By Ahern | LAWSE, MISTAR. MASAKO SURE IS A ONE-MAN PARADE. IN DAT GRAN’ RIGGIN-UP? WEAR DAT HERO'S COAT NEXT MONTH AT OUR ‘ANNULE PICNIC _OB TH’ _ < EXALTED PRINCES OB TH’ . GOLDEN CHARIOT OS MANI~HOW TI” COULD BLOW TH’ LINING OUT OB TH TRUMPET, | WHILE WEARIN) ‘DAT UNIFORM 7 Sharkey and Carnera at Even Money as Battle Approaches CHAMP. GUS MORELAND STILL IN THICK OF GOLF TOURNEY Giant Italian's Position With Bettors Has Improved During Training New York, June 20.—()—Jack from Boston, will defend his heavy- weight championship of the world against Italy's “man mountain,” Pri- mo Carnera, in a 15-round bout at Madison Square Garden’s big battle bowl on Long Island Thursday night. A crowd of 60,000 is expected to cram the bowl and pour more than $250,000 into the coffers of the garden and of the milk fund, which shares in the receipts. The disparity in the sizes of the contestants; Carnera’s undoubtedly great improvement since the Boston gob handed him an artistic lacing at Paired in the other quarter-final | Ebbets Field two years ago; Sharkey's temperament, which has betrayed him into costly mistakes in previous bouts, gave the meeting a flock of “angles” which still had the faith- ful jittering around in search of a favorite Thi . Sharkey started out with an edge in the betting, but the confidence of Carnera’s backers. pounded the odds down until Thursday the fans were faced with the unsual situation of having a champion rated at no better fae even money against the chal- ger. Stanford Racketeer Endurance Champ Haverford, Pa., June 29.—(P)— Regardless of who wins the 49th annual national intercollegiate tennis championship tournament. now in progress at the Merion, Cricket club, endurance honors ree go to Stanford’s Joe Cough- Although he has played only seven sets and three matches in his triumphant march into the quarter-final bracket, the west coast racquet wielder has com- peted in a total of 106 games, and computed in time, has been on the courts longer during the tourney than any other of the eight survivors. In one of these matches—that second-round record-breaker against Egbert Miles of Yale, in which one set went to 54 games— Coughlin was on the court almost three and a half hours. He and Miles each lost 10 pounds weight. Thursday, the Stanford ace was By Williams NO You DONT ! WE'LL TRADE, RIGHT HERE GWE ME THaT Stove RAG! to stack up against Dick Murphy of Hamilton. Winnipeg, Superior Are in Warm Battle St. Paul, June 29.—(?)—Six per- centage points separated Winnipeg and Superior for leadership of the Northern League as a result of a pair of victories for the Blues over Brandon Wednesday. Winnipeg stayed in front with an 8-to-1 win over Crookston in seven innings but Superior won both ends of @ doubleheader with Brandon, 18-8 and 8-3. halted by darkness at and the score Sharkey, the temperamental ex-sailor |™UDS- SCORE 10 RUNS AS A.0.0, W. DEFENSE CRUMBLES AT END as Road-Builders Advance to Second WILL DEFEATS COMPANY A ‘Homers and Triples Frequent in Wednesday Evening's Doubleheader STANDINGS Won O. H. Will company ¢ Classic Barbers. Com G. P. Restaurant. 333 Diamondball stars of the state high- way department Wednesday evening went on a rampage in the last inning of a city league game to score 10 runs, wallop the A. O, U. W. entry 12 to 4 and knock their victims from a tie for first place. ‘The result gave the O. H. Will and company ten sole posession of the top Tung of the ladder. The Will outfit defeated Company A 12 to 6, The shuffle put the high- waymen in second place and the club men at third post. Adam Brown, Workmen twirler, had built up a 4-to-2 lead over the road- builders but five hits, five free passes to first and two errors brought de- feat in the last canto. Brown al- lowed nine hits in all, striking out six. C. McCrorie of the highway de- partment and H. Fortune of the ‘Workmen were the only performers to get more than one hit. Schwahn of the Workmen and Flagg and Fischer lof the highwaymen clouted home Hit For Distance Long distance hitting featured the ‘Will-Company A contest. M. Hummel allowed the national guardsmen nine hits, four of them home runs. All of ‘Company A’s runs were scored on homers. Four-base clouts were sent on their way by Masseth, Flagg, H. Potter and F. Potter, the former two bringing in one each with them. The seedmen touched Paul Hed- strom for 12 hits, including one home run, four two-base bingles, three triples and five singles. Wetch hit the home run and J. Aller secured two triples and Spriggs one. E. Spriggs hit safely three times in four trips while Doc Priske hit safely three times in as many attempts. Hummel fanned nine soldiers while Hedstrom whiffed four seedmen. The box score: Company A (6)— H. Potter, rss . vo neato es eo a BE Babooery K. Toews, rf W. Smith, ct. 0 J. Spriggs, if F. Wetsch, 2b : 185 HS larcomwonmn ol ommmmronomn thal wocoooreHo Summary: J. Spriggs, Enge; two-base hits, Fal- coner, E. Spriggs, F. Hummel, J. ter, F. Potter, Mosseth, E. Benser; double plays, E. Spriggs to Priske, Hedstrom to H. Potter to Mosseth, H. off M. Hummel 9 in 7 innings, off by M. Hummel 9, by Hedstrom 4; Scorer, 8. Tolchinsky. Highway Dept. (12) J, Flagg, ist - J. Neibauer, If A. Fischer, 3rd C. McCrorie, c P. Neibauer, p A. Neibauer, 1.ss D. Meyer, rss . ‘W. Maddock, 2nd L, Knapp, cf . H. Skogen, rf .. [aed aes elias innings 1. Thursday East Grand was to play at home against and Superior was to con- its series at Brandon. State Trapshooters Assembling at Forks Grand Forks, N. D., June 29.—(7}— Approximately fifty marksmen from the northwest were expected here ‘Thursday for the opening of the 38th annual trapshooting tournament of the North Dakota Sportsmen's associ- ation, Shooting was to open with three preliminary events Thursday in sing- Jes, doubles and handicap divisions. Friday will see firing in the first half of the state singles championship and {naming of the state doubles titlehold- er. The last half of the singles event QSHHOnP Rap i SB actlial coccommmnmoe ol Cn MOMM HEE ty autial tcocommonne + | coooocooenm Summary: base hits, Bro runs, Schwahn, Flagg, Fisher. off A. Brown 9 in 7 innings; off P. Neibauer 5 in 7 innings. Struck out by A. Brown 6; by P. Neibauer 6. Bases on balls off A. Brown, 1; off P. Neibauer, 2. Umpire Dr. J. O. Thore- son. Scorer, J. Warner. At 452 degrees below zero some will be fired Saturday along with the handicap championship. ‘The state skeet tournament will be Bement metals, as silver and copper, lose their resistance to electricity, be- Club Men Drop to Third Place] i Chicago .. tolen bases, H. Potter, | Aller; home runs, F, Wetsch, H. Pot- | Pittsburgh Brown to H. Potter to Mosseth; hits, Hummel 12 in 6 innings; struck out, bases on balls, off M. Hummel 2, off Hedstrom 4. -Umpire, George Hays. Last 17 and Nine Out of Last 11 Games By Orlo Robertson (Associated Press Sports Writer) If Cleveland baseball fans an immediate about face on the part of the aor) when Walter Johnson took over Managerial reins from Roger Peckinpaugh, they have been badly disappointed. Of their last 17 games, they have won only seven and they have dropped all except two of their last 11 encounters. ‘Wednesday the Indians were the victims of the ram} Wi with a pig attack in the first inning, en coasted to victory behind the pitching of Walter Stewart. The Senators failed to gain ground, however, as the New York Yankees came from behind to plaster the De- troit Tigers with eight runs in the last two innings and 10 to 7 triumph. The trailing by one full game. Babe Ruth returned to the Yanks starting lineup and hit ‘his 17th home run of the sea- Ruth and Lou Gehrig in the home run race, hitting his 18th of the season, but the Athletics fell before the White Sox 9 to 8. Giants Gain 2 Game home run hitting spree to get an even break in a doubleheader with the Pittsburgh Pirates and gain a game on the St. Louis Cardinals, who dropped two to the Boston Braves. The Pirates won the first game 5 to 2 behind the effective hurling of Steve Swetonic and appeared to have the nightcap well in hand until Hughie Critz tied the score with a home run in the ninth. Then Gus Mancuso hit 8 circuit blow, with two men on base, to clinch the game in the 10th, 7 to 4. Mel Ott and Lefty O’Doul hit a homer apiece and Gus Suhr connect- ed once in each game. ‘The Braves, in defeating the Cards, beat Bill Hallahan and Tex Carleton 4 to 3 in the first game and then with Pred Frankhouse pitching three-hit ball, took the second 3 to 0. Bill Jurges, led the Cubs to a double victory over the Phillies, pounding out @ pair of singles in the first, which the league champions won 9 to 5, and connecting with four more safeties, one @ home run, in the team’s 8 to 3 triumph in the nightcap. Cincinnati and Brooklyn split a doubleheader, the Reds winning the first game 8 to 1 with Paul Derringer hurling six-hit ball. The Dodgers squared accounts by coming from be- hind to take the second, 6 to 5. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Yanks Rally To Win New York.. 200 000 Detroit.... 020 9 3 Ruffing, Moore and Dickey; Frasier, Fischer and Hayworth, Chisox Nip Race, ae Philadelphia 000 030 113-8 12 a 003 030 12x—9 13 0 Mahaffey, Cain, Oliver and Coch- ; Durham, Heving and Washington 912 1 Cleveland.. 020 000 000— Boston-8t. Louis, called fourth, rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cubs Win Doubleheader R 602— 9 010— 5 RHE +. 210 104 000—8 12 0 000 102 000-3 8 2 and 3 A i ‘Hartnett; Holley, Lis- - 000 100 os1— hoe 001 100 000— Hubbell, Bell and Mancuso, Second Game Piebaret “ alien ot New York 000 0-4 5 2 002 3—7 10 1 French, “Seite id Pit melle, Luque, Uhle and Mancu sie Cincinnati. 000 014 +++ 000 000 100—1 and Manion; n. The New York Giants went on a| E| Pitching | Crowder, ;Pitehers Whiff 11 Foes as Pir- ates Are Dealt 8-to-4 Beating Behind the two-hit pitching of W. Shepard, the Giants outhit their vic- tims Wednesday afternoon to de- feat the Pirates 8 to 4 in ational the offerings of O. Sorsdahl to score in five of the seven cantos. Shepard struck out 11 box score: Giants (8) victory left the world champions} x, son. 8. Jimmie Foxx jumped out in front of BERR BSBREERE 4 bc} NATIONAL LE. New York .. St. Louis . > GUE Chicago Boston . sede | eeseeees. 4 BUSReBsE auvesese,. BRREERES REREREERT BRGBREEEY Buse Hits — Fullis, Phillies, 104; Klein, Phillies, 100. Home runs—Berger, Braves, and » Cardinals, 10-3; Klein, Phillies, 13. Pitching—Carleton, Cantwell, Braves, 9-3. RH 365, 030— 8 u : Hits—Manush, Senators, 106; Sim- ; |mons, White Sox, 105. Senators, 11-4. es, outes:| Columbus Red Birds Won’t Observe Rule Viscount Ishii is chief of the JAPANESE DELEGATION at the Economie Conference at London. The symbol ts the STAR OF DAVID. The animal is a CHA- Shattuck School here July 10 to 13. The junior tournament is open to contestants under 18 years of age ani | the boys’ tournament is open to those | under 15. | Reservations are being made with | i J. Saints, In Rally, After Columbus Saints Make It Three in Row, Over Milwaukee As Hens Defeat Birds Chicago, June 20—(#)—St. Paul's Saints, in the midst of another win- ning streak, are back haunting the Columbus Red Birds in the American Association it race. While the Red Birds took one on Milwaukee, 6 to 5 in 10 innings, to draw within three and one-half games of the leaders. The Saints scored their winning marker on Radcliffe's double, a sacrifice and Conolly’s er- Tor on McCann’s easy grounder. It was the second straight extra-inning game between the clubs, with the Saints winning both. Joe Hauser cracked out number 31 Wednesday as Minneapolis defeated Kansas City 4 to 3 in another 10-in< ning battle. Powers drove in three runs with q single, double and a triple and scored two more as the Hens dropped Colum= bus 7 to 4. Rain halted the night game be< tween Indianapolis and Louisville after one inning. Scores by innings: Saints Cop In Kia a Milwaukee. 030010 0100—5 9 St. Paul. itn ee 1-6 11 2 Braxton, and Young; Thomas and Fenner, io Millers Win In sa af Kansas City 000 200 001 0—3 10 Minneapolis 001 001 1001—4 10 0 Mails, and Brenzel; Hols- claw, Petty and Glenn. Hens Defeat Columbus RH =| Toledo .... 111 000 190-7 12 Columbus .. 000 101 002-4 9 1 Pearson and Retber; Lee and De- Louisville at In: 5 of ane Seat alediens Yesterday’s Stars | (By The Associated Press) Bill Jurges, Cubs—Hit homer and .|five singles in two games against Phillies, Heinie Manush, Senstors—Had pers fect batting day against Cleveland, hitting single and homer with bases fall in first inning. Paul Derringer, Reds, and Sam Les- le, Dodgers—Former pitched six-hit . ball to win opener, latter hit four straight in nightcap. Al » White Sox—Knocked in sie runs against Athletics with three Fred Frankhouse, Braves—Blankeé Cards with three hits in second game, Lou Gehrig, Yankees — Touched Detroit pitching for double and twa singles, Steve Swetonic, Pirates, and Gus Mancuso, Giants — Swetonic pitched Pirates to victory in first game, Man- jcuso won second with homer in 10th, FORMER GRID STAR KILLED Las Vegas, Nev., June 29.—(7)—L. ‘W. (Bud) Steele, 28, former football Player at the University of Montana, was killed Tuesday night when he was struck by a truck while he was working as a hook tender at Boulder STATE PARK DEDICATED u, N. D., June 29.—(P— Dedication ceremonies making a state perk of Butte St. Paul, highest point in the Turtle Mountains, 14 miles northwest of here, and a spot of his- torical interest dating back to 1850, took place Wednesday. Chicago had its heaviest rainfall on Aug. 11, 1923, when 2 2-5 inche of rain fell in 80 minutes. ‘The circumference of the standing tree in this country is feet. Use the Want Ads NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN: That by virtue of a judgment and decree of foreclosure and sale entered on the 10th day of June, A. D., 1933, in an ace ;| tion in the District Court of Burleig! Fourth Judicial District 01 ‘Wheeler of Shattuck School, | arc] h Dakota, » Corporation, Mandan Mercantile Company, a Corporation, Thompson Yards, Inc, a and Chas. Hettig, are betendants; an & special execution issued thereon, the undersigned as Sheriff of the County of Burleigh and State of North Devote, for the purpose sppointed, sell at public auction at the front door of the Court House at Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and Sta of North Dakota, on the 34th day o! July, A. D., 193%, at the hour of two o'clock P, Mf, of that day, th Teal property and mortgag situated in the County of and State of North Dakota, directed in to, Be.sold, and inore Bertioulsriy dee and more cul jen~ cribed as follows, to-wit: id a8 tion Thirty Hundred Fx Rai » with interest thereon froi te of said judgment and thi | “Dated thie 13th agg we lay of June, A, >j J, L. Kelley, Gherite Re pereen County rok, Geo. F. Shat bide a | Attorney for Plaintite, smarck, North Dakota. [chatrman of the committee in charge. Rar 436-13-20, . ST INNING TO BEAT WORKMEN . Walter Johnson Has Failed to Pull Cleveland Out of Slump indars Have Lot 30 ow | GTANTS WIN JUNIOR FRACAS AS _ SHEPARD HURLS TWO-HITBALL . es a Aaa i hci) aac ls i i ll Owns eeepen ps ros oere

Other pages from this issue: