The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1933, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1933 Petrolle Wins Questionable Knoc kout Victory Over Van Klaveren DOCTOR CALIS HALT EAST GRAND FORKS OF NORTHERN LOOP BLANKS BISMARCK AS HOLLAND FIGHTER OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern |/TQCALS GET 2 HITS | SUPPERS CUT BYBUD! cores EVERYBODY HERE COMES sic | ‘Dutch Windmill’ Puts Up Stren- INFLATION ? uous Protest, Challenges Billy Again wenetpat” WHY DONT NOU WADE IN, EVEN FANS START FIGHTING Beginner Had Made Highly Im- pressive Showing in Four- | Round Contest New York, July 13.—(P)—Billy Pe- trolle, the rugged Fargo, N. D., welter- weight, Thursday held a somewhat disputed victory over the speedy Hol- lander, Bep Van Klaveren. Petrolle was awarded Wednesday night’s bout at the polo grounds on a technical knockout in the fourth round when Dr. Joseph Sheridan, New York State Athletic Commission phy- sician, ordered the fight stopped be- cause of a deep gash in Van Klaver- en's right eyelid. The interruption came between the fourth and fifth rounds, after Van Klaveren’s seconds apparently had checked the bleeding. The “Dutch windmill” put up a protest that lasted almost as long as the bout before he finally was induced to leave the ring. He followed Referee Billy Cavanaugh around trying to persuade him to let the fight continue and then dared Petrolle to get up and continue. Billy seemed willing, and shucked his famous Navajo blanket but that was as far as it got inside the ring. Outside the fans took sides and put on a few impromptu bouts of their own. Up to the sudden end of the scrap, Van Klaveren made a highly impres- sive showing in his first “big time” fight. He outsped Petrolle and easily} won the first round and made a game} stand after Billy landed a couple of! sharp lefts on his eye, which was dam- aged when he came into the ring. | Petrolle weighed 144 pounds, Vanj| Klaveren, 145% | Sebastian Goetz _ HOLD TH POSE, GUY, UNTIL I GET CLEAR OF TH TIDAL i NAVE J I THOUGHT THEY HARPOONED THAT WHALE 0 LAST SUMMER, HE OUGHTA GO IN TH WATER Wi ALL WERE HAVING A GOOD TIME, UP TILL be , OF THE SEASON =, OFF BAUMGARTNER | IN 4-T0-0 CONTES Sebastian Goetz Gets Both Bingles in Addition to Pair of Walks Capital of the Northern League, restricting Capital City batsmen to two hits Wed- nesday evening, East Grand Forks de- feated Bismarck 4 to 0 in a classy baseball game at the city park. M’CARNEY AND DAVIS HURL|®: MacLeod, if City Club Will Play) st, Strong Beulah Outfit Haigh. 3b ... i lA. Williams, ss. Again Sunday ‘Hartly, If ..... jHelixon, ef .. With Baumgartner, leading pitcher jNickelson, 1b {East Grand Forks Py ye == 42, SHE BIG SPLASH 1-13 It was Bismarck’s first opportunity this season to see a member of the newly-organized Northern League in action. Sebastian Goetz, fleet Bismarck cen- terfielder, secured both hits off Baum- gartner, in addition to collecting two walks, to enjoy a perfect day at the Plate. For five innings Bob McCarney a | pitched fine ball for the Capital City} contingent, allowing but four hits and one run. He was given sparkling sup- port by his mates, particularly in the ©1033, Sweet Shop Wins Third Victory in As Many Nights, Beating Company A HENS, INDIANS, SAINTS CAST | IN THREE-CORNERED CONTEST, Indianapolis, Winning Two outer garden. Relieved By Davis In the sixth he was relieved by Roosevelt Davis, Bismarck’s Negro hurler, who allowed two hits in the last four innings. A walk and two successive errors in the sixth enabled the visiting Colts to score twice. a , Two successive walks and a single Chefs Break Loose in Sixth and in the ninth gave the Minnesota club Seventh Innings to Score its fourth and final run of the con- test. 14-5 Win Davis struck out eight East Grand Forkers in the four frames he| St. Paul.... Lawson and Healy; Newkirk, Gar- 100 000 10—2 6 2) worked. | STANDINGS A. Williams of the visitors secured jin 4 innings; off Baumgartner 2: in ! j11 innings to a 2-2 draw. The box score for Wednesday eve- | ning’s tilt: |_ Bismarck (0) iS. Goetz, ef.. |M. Goetz, 3b. |R. Sears, ss. {S. Hyland, c. |F. Feske, 1b.. |J. Sagehorn, rf. R. Davis, If.. |N. Kitchen, 2b. 'B. McCarney, p- er eee creer 0 0 ecocooccce eoooooccon ouscooomne East Grand Forks & MHoMMoowom P. Williams, rf. Ebnet, 2b . Bastian, c . Baumgartner, p . onetwonend 8 NOWSSDSOUHPD @ BS no Ro wo Ho Score by innings— 000 012 001— 4 Bismarck .......000 000 000— 0 Summary: Stolen bases—Nickelson. Sacrifice—M. Goetz, P. Williams. Two base hit—A. Williams. Double plays —M. Goetz to Feske; Ebnet to Nickel- | son. Passed ball—Hyiand. Hits off| McCarney 4 in 5 innings; of Davis 2 9 innings. Struck out by McCarney 2; by Davis 8; by Baumgartner 4 Bases on balls off McCarney 3; off Davis 3; off Baumgartner 4. Umpires —Cayou, Mohn. Scorer—B. Hummel, | Fights Last Night |’ OO (By The Associated Press) New York—Billy Petrolle, Far- go, N. D., stopped Bep Van Kla- veren, Holland, (4); Wesley Ra- mey, Grand Rapids, Mich., out- | pointed Jimmy Slavin, New York, {| (5); Varias Milling, Los Angeles, | outpointed Al Roth, New York, { (5); Herman Perlick, Kalamazoo, Mich., outpointed Patsy Pasculli, | New York, (5). | ABRHPOAE 2 9 | unostentatiously into second place in | Jorgens. Ui The Cubs extended their current | ecoooco9v0t Champion Chicago Cubs Climb Into | Second With Seventh Straight Win ! 4 | , Durham and Berry; Whitehill, Mc- Giants and Senators Protect/ Afee and Sewell. Their Leads as Both End Athletics Scalp Indians Losing Streaks RHB Cleveland.. 100 012 000— 4 Philadelphia 200 003 Olx— 6 2 t | 1 ae Hudlin, Bean and Pyt- | By HUGH S. FULLERTON, yr. | fe ene: | (Associated Press Sports Writer) | |, The champion Chicago Cubs, who | BR jhaven’t been attracting a great deal of Ree ee. Oe en oe: Gt 2 New York.. 020 000 11x— 4 jSttention this season, have climbed! Wells and Shea, Ruel; ‘alten and Yankees Trim Browns \the National League. | NATIONAL LEAGUE | winning streak to seven straight Wed- | eesyete Taine | RH |nuesday with a 5-to-3 victory over| Philadelphia 010 000 000— |the Brooklyn Dodgers, who haven't | Cincinnati 003 000 for 444 | | | Won a game at Wrigley Field since last} _ Elliott, A. Moore and Davis; Bent July. One fair hit, three Dodger er-| and Manion. i Tors and a fly ball which fell for a eee Produced three runs and set-! balk tied H fe game in the opening inning.| Boston .... 0 The giants defeated St. Louis 3 to| Pittsburg! a oo. os 00 <3 18 $ |0 to increase their own lead and to| Brandt, Mangum, Betts and Hogan, |Shove the Cards down into third place. | Hargrave; Meine, Chagnon, French ‘The Pittsburgh Pirates interrupted | 224 Finney. : | Boston’s winning ways by taking a/ 10-inning slugfest 9-8 on Arky Vaugh- | Cubs Defeat Dodgers 2. an’s triple, after the Braves had slammed out all their runs in the ninth inning. The Cincinnati Reds, after a day in the National League cellar, climbed out again by defeat- ing the Phillies 4-1 behind Larry Benton's seven-hit flinging. Washington's Senators held their Place two games ahead of the New York Yankees in the American League Trace when good pitching netted each team a victory. Washington defeated the Chicago White Eox 4-1 as Earl Whitehill pitched five-hit ball and Bill McAfee finished the job when he began to wabble in the ninth. Johnny Allen's expert elbowing enab- te ee nirved wo turn in their fifth ry, 4-2, agai Louls Browns. gainst the St. Boston Red Sox outpointed the Detroit Tigers 1-0 in 11 innings. Jim- mie Foxx’s 25th home run sent the Philadelphia Athletics off on a three- Tun rally in the sixth that produced @ 6-4 victory over the sixth place Cleveland Indians. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Bosox Win In 11th R [Brooklyn .. 020 001 000— 3 ‘Chicago .. 300 200 00x— 5 | . Benge and Lopez; Bush and nett. i Giants Blank Cardinals | RH | New York.. 002 | St. Louis..: 000 ooo s00= 8 é ) |, Schumacher and Mi 5 ‘ i} ang \. han, Vance and Wilson” Halla > il Yesterday’s Stars | o iveauin Aaronin Press) al lumacher, Giants—] Cardinals with six hits. ee Jimmie Foxx, Athletics — Clouted 25th homer and double against In- dians. He rate Vaughan, Pirates — Knocked {in five runs, including wi y, | against Braves. eae | Lloyd Brown, Red Sox—Held Tigers | to seven hits in 11 innings to win 1-0, Wally Roettger, Reds — Hit triple with bases full to beat Phillies, | Earl WMitehill, Senators — Hel¢ | White Sox to five hits. i Gabby Hartnett, Cubs— Batted in Won Lost i “KO” ‘ 5 z rT d F . two of the six hits the Minnesota team Oakland, Calif—Meyer “K. 0.’ Detroit... 7 0) three runs v1 | Doubleheaders in as Many eee cae en | Bintieny sDesart 6 peered: h pe el aa o nani | Sorreti aa. Beye rer Si oan qa a Stl = : Will Play Beulal jose Santa, Portugal, 3. Pint | ell an », Brown and} Ben Chi ow u Leads Local Club Days, in Lead teint came | pees In its next game, Bismarck will face) De Sa, Portugal, knocked out Ferrell. | Rnnteingeaiersin Brown | H F| Sweet Shop the strong Beulah club here at 3 p.| Joe Herrera, Oakland, (2) leaeie eden ey I W k With B ti Sar ee Indianapolis 152 000 000—7 11 0 Gi P. Restaur: m, Sunday for the sixth meeting be- . —." | eee ee ee H =} Tutankhamen is interpreted as . in or! I a Chicago, July 13.—(#)—There oo iva ee oe ged ce Gy Q AE bases aig tween the two this season In their| The average weight of an elephant | .+. 000 010 000—1 5 1|meaning the living image of Amon, « ie nothing very stirring about the first well and Young. ley; Pressnell, Cald- shige game here last Sunday they battled|is about five tons. We 100 8 1Jone of the Egyptian gods. r i and second-place competition in the Second Game Rallying to score 11 runs in the last = Fleet Centerfielder Has .367: | american Association, but Toledo, In- Htadapoun anand RH E two innings and defeat the Company : Average; Roosevelt Davis dianapolis and St. Paul are staging |Milwaukee 140 02) ol0=0 24 1/4 contingent 14 to 5, the Sweet Shop r fiiSseondiPlace battles for the No. 3 spot. prihomas, ‘ising and Angley: Hillin, an ee ay, evenins won mn third city 2 By taking two doubleheaders in as {Pressnell, Stiely and Bengough. jamondball league game in as many 3 A perfect day at bat Wednesday evening in Bismarck’s game with East Grand Forks of the Northern League enabled Sebastian Goetz, recently re- turned from a two-week vacation rtip, to take the batting lead of the Capital ‘City baseball nine in ail games played so far this season. In 49 trips to the plate, Goetz has | slammed out 18 hits for an average! of .367. | Roosevelt Davis, Bismarck’s Negro pitching sensation, was not far behind | him Thursday morning, according to many days from Milwaukee, the In- dians Thursday had possession of the place with the Saints in fourth place and Toledo close behind in fifth. Indianapolis tr:mmed the Brewers, 7 to 3, in the first game, then broke out with an uproarious 24-hit assault in the second for a 14-to-9 decision, St. Paul and Toledo each got a good bit of pitching and divided a double- header. Slim Harris gave only five hits in the first game as the Saints triumphed, 5 to 1, and Roxie Lawson permitted six blows in the second, the Hens winning 9 to 2. Colonels, Blues Split R BE Louisville.. 600 001 014-12 16 1 Kansas City 100 010 010-3 10 2 Marcum and _ Erickson; Blackwell and Brenzel. Second Game : RH E Louisville... 100 020 202-5 9 3 Kansas City 000 100 41-6 9 3 (Eight innings by agreement.) McKain, Jonnard and Thompson; | Brown, Carson and Gaston, Major Leaders | Shores, / mates were collecting 12 from the of- evenings. | Larry Schneider, making his first appearance in the box after a two- week layoff, restricted the national ;guardsmen to four hits while his ferings of Paul Hedstrom, losing hur- The Sweet Shop, however, broke} loose in the sixth to count nine tallies | and the chefs added two more in the/ seventh, Nine crrors marred the contest, Nes. For five innings the battle was nip- and-tuck, with Company A. leading \4-3 at the end of the canto. e G ; Columbus increased its lead over 3 ia Official scorer for the | Minneapolis to five games by beating ° ——* with the guardsmen guilty of two- tl Tn 25 attempts, Davis has clouted | ie Millers 7 to 8 in s battle of home SRUREGE Ete Se ete © z ; z runs. Joe Hauser got his 39th homer ICAN LEAGUE » Agre, A. Schneider, G. out nine Bugs for'a Seoraverage, [Tung Joe Hauser got his oth homer) | AMERICAN LEAGUE, | E Aare, A. Schneider, , Benzon —neither strong enough, nor per encere are L. Klein .318, R.| Rothrock, Mickey Heath and Nick | ons, White Sox, .369. jof their team’s dozen bingles, each ; Seathor age, PCN? 263 and John | Cullop each contributed a circult swat. aren elation Wie «Box, 11255) BEBE RARE ae ee ‘ pape ee, The Kansas City Blues finally man- |Manush, Senators, 122, only home run clout of the evening. 2 b Hummel’ batting statistics: aged to break the winning streak of| Home Tuns Foxx, Athletics, 25;| Allowing ‘a protest resutered by/ SQR@ enough nor quiet enough f Be acain Pet. | the invading Louisville Colonels when | Ruth, Yankees, 22. iCompany A to a previous game with y i Boe 18 367! they pushed over a run in the eighth| Pitching — Allen, Yankees, ; the state highway department team, L Kien . 9 360 and final inning of their second game ‘Grove Athletics, 13-4. managers of the league Wettnesday “i a e Bet : i Wednesday night to win 6 to 5. The — evening ordered the contest re-played. f th b d f | t | k een ++ 10 270! Colonels took the first game 12 to 3. NATIONAL LEAGUE The box score for Wednesday or epo y ota qua | y Car like p peo 263 | Scores by innings: Batting—Klein, Phillies, .362; Da-,Hight’s tilt: : . Sagehorn . 254) Red Birds Beat Millers vis, Phillies, .356. patinas {Sweet Shop (14) AB RH E Seen .... 250 R HE) Hits — Pulls, Phillies, 120; Klein,|©- Martin, rf a ee f T. Simle .. 235|Columbus.. 010 103 200-7 12 1| patie qiq hi Een ae Aare, At 3 2 0 | N. Kitchen 235 | Minneapolis 100 002 011-5 8 1 pe a R. Boelter, cf . 6 io a) o;| Lee and Funk, Petty, Vandenberg| Home runs—Klein, Phillies, 17; 4 Heat ‘ | and Glenn. Berger, Braves, 16, A. Schneider, r, ss S McCamey 209 z Pitching—Tinning, Cubs, 7-1; Cant- |: Hugelman, 3rd. yee ie am Hens and Saints Divide well, Braves, 12-3, i Ge eeneony and’ ee e . Hyland . 196 First Game re E. Manney, Ist .... 21 0 d R. McLeod 167 RHE \ G. Schlickenmeyer, 1, ss eer yee : Q. Roberts . TOU Zeedos, 27, CON 00} 00-2 15 0) A modern airplane taxi service 1s|l- Harlon, ¢ .- 4 A 4 : "a 130 aag| Nekola and Relber; Harriss “and | PeiN& Planned for Alaska, with fast » Echnelder, p . eotontny Why isitthatevery12- The trouble with steel alone is that it § : ee 2 Guiliani. passenger plane service between White . tind 16-cyli A shock A ¥ ee = | scons scams Horse and St. Michael. A water trip| Totals ... 4 123 cylinder and 16-cylin- stands just so much and punish- ee : 1 ae pe ee delivery of mail in R H_ B| over the same route ordinarily takes der car in America has bodies of stee/_ ment. Steel alone is also inclined to S ie Uni States was in 1863, | Toledo +++. 100 200 051—9 13 1| ten days. Company A (5) pha u a 3 2 reinforced by hardwood? Why is it rumble and rattle. BUT—when you : OUT OUR WAY By Williams Benser, 18s Oeste ao) that every make of car selling for over _ put the two together—a heavy, staunch : me 2 ant Cea $4000 uses bodies of exactly the same _steel body over tough, solid hardwood : . : Carer ce Aeaaeaai ; i Beer, t, 55 ..... 101 type? Why? For the same reason that —then the hardwood reinforces the WIRRIEES GOSH! WHOSE BIRTHDAY YES, AND THEN Ceslander, 6f-.:- ae so Chevrolet uses it exclusively. Because steel—and vice versa! And the re- \TTEN DOWN | PARTY Is THIS GONNA BE, Yours \{ RAISE THE ROOF. s 2 1 every test and iment h It: the stron; fest f bod: \DA, WILMA ERM 4 i ss aren, C ... Aid ery every experiment have sult: the gest, sa: type o! Ys q : INE 7 ASK ALOT OF GIRLS |(NOUR SISTER 1S Hedstrom, 1 1 | definitely proved: STEEL ALONE IS. ‘such as Fisher builds for Chevrolet. GRACE, SARAH] AND WHAT'LL THEY D0? WANNA U RIGHT! You'LL HAVE eMeey and... 11% NorenouGH! See cet satraiateee er ae ee at DOROTHY, ANNA] PLAY KISSIN’ GAMES RIGHT AWay.| To INVITE YOUR GIRL 5 4 6 ‘ si : a eel HELEN....) GEE WHizt IM GONNA BE TOO OLD } FRIENDS, TOO. Sweet Shop.. 300 009 2-14 12, 3 All prices t. 0. b. Flint, Michigan. Special equipment extra. Low delivered prices . ? 13 ELSE DOJ FER SHAT KINDA STUFF. 1'D BE Company A.. 030 010 1-5 4 6 spttaey, Br Mlidh Cristes # Eaters emse aaa: e : é TE SATISFIED TO UUST HAVE WALT, _ Summary: ‘Two base hits—Hatlan, i WAN Asc? x 1 neider, Benzon; home runs—E.} $ $ oe) ZS Z\ CARL, DUTCHY, ART, BILL, JACK, Manney; hits off Schneider 4. in 7 To ie BOB AND HANK. innings, off Hedstrom 12 in 7 innings; eGR ‘ : t struck out by Schneider 9, by Hed- ; s ‘ae { rie | : ——— strom 6; bases on balls off Schneider \ S 4 . | |7, Hedstrom 3, Umpire—George Hays. \ : on i Scorer—J, Warner. = ; Tibetans write their prayers on the shoulder blades of sheep and hang them over a pathway; when set in motion by passers-by, the bones are believed to offer up the prayer. wi nc Tages 3 NRE LGA Ap J seo ; 4. = 7 4 38 P STEEL BODY HARDWOOD REINFORCEMENT STRONG, SAFE BODY BY FISHER st su 80 . - sass veinon coor apita evrolet Compan wrote “The Last of the Mohi- ‘ 3 fs cans.” The Detroit baseball Se, (La A team is calleé the TIGERS. The ‘Phone 432 Bismarck, N. Dak. 101 Broadway a © 1959 BY NEA SERVICE, nc HE GREAT BIG LITTLE FELLA. flower shown is the PRIM- co BOSE.

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