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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1933 Bismarck Nips All-Nations 5 to 4 in Opener of Three-Game Series BIL MORLANS RUN IN FIRST PROVES T0 BE WINNING MARGIN Each Team Goes on Hitting} Spree to Score Four Count- ers in One Canto QUINCY TROUPE HITS HOMER Teams Will Meet Again Tues- day Evening; Davis Will Oppose O'Conner Bismarck’s potent baseball club Monday evening extended its long unbeaten string at the expense of the Cleveland, All-Nations nipping. the invaders 5 to 4 behind Paul Schaefer's steady pitching in all but one inning in a contest which saw cach team score four runs in one in- ning. The Capital City contingent scored what turned out to be its winning run in the first frame, with the first two men up hitting safely. Bill Morlan sent a Texas Leaguer out to left field and went to second when Deroes buffeted it about. Les Moore singled to score Morlan and Haley, Troupe and Oberholtzer went out in order. Bismarck increased its lead to 5 to © in the fifth frame on a series of bingles capped by a terrific home run over the All-Nation’s center-fielder from the bat of Quincy Troupe with two men on the bags. Go On Hitting Spree Five of the first six men to face Schafer in the sixth frame, however, singled and the All-Nations scored four runs. Massmann and Hann both got on base before Sidowski struck out. Then came three successive hingles by Ringhofer, Desiderato and Salamanca, the latter being put out at second after O'Connor struck out and Moorehead, the visitors’ popular catcher, forced the runner at second with a grounder. Three double plays were executed in the contest. Schaefer gave the visitors only eight hits in nine innings while his mates were collecting nine from the offerings of Chief Nusser, All-Nations’ mound star, in eight times at bat. Schafer struck out eight batters while only four Bismarck men whiffed. The visitors were guilty of three er- rors, the Capital City one. The two clubs will renew their three-game series at the city baseball park at 6 o'clock Tuesday evening and will wind it up with another game at, the same time Wednesday evening. Davis Will Pitch Roosevelt Davis will pitch for Bis- marck Tuesday evening. It is under- stood O'Conner will go to the mound yor the invaders, ‘The box score of Monday’s game: Bismarck (5) AB RH PO B. Morlan, cf ...... 4 L. Moore, 2nd . G. Haley, ss Q. Troupe, ¢ D. Oberholtzer, ord P. Schaefer, p ..... R. Davis, If ... . R. McCarney, Ist .. 8. Goetz, rf ........ OHOCORRHE waoorouor COON wHH LOD ecoHrocoooom Totals . All-Nations Massmann, ss ...... Hann, 2nd ......... Sidowski, rf, If . Ringhofer, ist ... Desiderato, 3rd . Salamanca, cf . Deores, If ..... Moorehead, c . Nusser, p ... O'Conner, rf ce © He Summary: Sacrifices — Moore, Goetz; home run—Troupe; 6. double | OUT OUR WAY OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | ) WELL? WHATS ALL THIS? AN INDOOR OWLS CLUB PICNIC? DIDNT YOU GET MY LETTER, SAYING TD ARRIVE IN TOWN TONIGHT AT EZ \WeN-AH-uLP- Z; KAFF-KAFFE — A SNACK OF GRIDLEYS SENSATIONAL HAMBURGERS AND EGAD~- MARTHA, M DEAR 2—~AH-UM- BY JOVE~YOURE JUST IN TIME FOR MAYBE IF / 1 WALK WITH A LIMP, SHELL KINDA PULL, : HER PUNCHES! Wetcome HOME, MARTHA [A SENVICE, INC. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. Breaking a 37-year-old record in qualifying for the U. S. women’s golf championship tournament, Miss Enid Wilson of Great Britain Monday established herself as a heavy favorite to win the national crown. The tourn- ament is in progress at the Exmoor Club at Highland Park, Ill, and will be completed Saturday. Schaefer to Haley to McCarney; Hann to Massmann to Ringhofer; hits off Schaefer 8 in 9 innings; off Nusser 9 in 8 innings; wild pitch—Schaefer; struck out by Schaefer 8; by Nusser 4; bases on balls off Schaefer 3; off Nusser 1; umpires—Shipley, Bis- jmarck; Hagen, Fort Lincoln. | plays—Troupe to Haley to McCarney; | tory. ous Australians, Quist And Turnbull Brookline, Mass. Aug. 29.—(P)— Leading by a set, George Lott and Lester Stoefen Tuesday appeared un- beatable as they prepared to resume their national doubles tennis semi- final play against the dangerous Aus- tralians, Adrian K. Quist and Don Turnbull, at Longwood. These teams started play late Mon- day, after Frank X. Shields and Frankie Parker had registered their surprising victory over the defending champions, Ellsworth Vines and Keith Gledhill, and a murky sky, the her- jald for a heavy thunder-storm, soon forced them to suspend play because of the poor visibility. DEES EEE EPSP Yesterday’s Stars Pe eee ald ars | (By The Associated Press) Vic Sorrell, Tigers— Held Yankees to four hits. Bob O'Farrell, Cardinals — His two homers helped whip Giants. Jim Peterson, Athletics, stopped White Sox with three hits in four innings in relief role and was credited with vic- Red Lucas, Reds blanked Braves with two hits. Floyd Vaughan, Pirates — Solved Philly pitching for home run, triple end four singles in doubleheader. By Williams O# -Hort— GULP GuoL_P GULP — JEST WHEN 1 SAVED! SAVED FROM COMMITTIN' A TORRIBLE CRIME ~— GULP— 1 SEEN) HIS CLC ES ON TH’ ROCK WAS 'BouT TO PULL_ TH TRIGGER — I-1-OH- GULP — I HoT TWAS A STARVIN' WALRUS ~— L WAS AGO! TO PLT 1T OUT @\ OF 1TS MiseRY! Coo T Gi OvR CooWw— How BE so~ L THouswt 1 HEERD A JACKASS A BRAIN’ |Marty Fuller Gets Barney Ross’ Workout Interrupted When Canzoneri’s Friend Shows Up LOTT AND STOEFEN ESTABLISH | LEAD BEFORE RAIN HALTS PLAY = ene Foreign Threat >| Have Margin of Set on Danger- ‘Thumbs Down’ Sign; Will Try False Beard Next Time New York, Aug. 29.—()—The next time. Marty Fuller tries to push his way into Barney Ross’ training camp he'll be equipped with false whiskers and a beard. Marty felt the urge Monday to take &@ peek at Ross while the Chicagoan ‘was getting himself in shape at Lake Swannanoa, N. J., for his forthcoming lightweight title defense against Tony Canzoneri. But the fact that Fuller hap- Pens to be as close as that to Can- zoneri—one of the former champion's bosom pals in fact —led Ross’ over- suspicious handl- ers to believe his visit was not with- out ulterior mo- tive. As Marty sought to strut into the outdoor boxing pavilion where the champion was getting ready to go to|St. Louis .. A ey = “thumbs New York . work, he was given the down” sign by Sammy Pian, one of Ross’ rs, “There'll be no boxing here,” he|*" Mancuso. told Fuller, “until you clear out so you might just as well go.” Marty did, muttering dire threats} Boston . = aD cs LUGAS GRANTS "BOSTON ONLY TWO. APTS FOR SHUTOUT: Bob 0O’Farrell, Whom Terry Abandoned, Starts Rally Against New York VIC SORRELL TAMES YANKS Pirates Win Two from Phillies; First-Division Clubs in Bril- liant Race (By the Associated Press) There must be something in the makeup of a ball player that sets him afire with vengeance and curtains his batting eye with a piercing ultra-red when he stalks back into the home grounds of a former employer who once tied the tinware to him and theoretically stamped him “through.” Bob O'Farrell of the Cardinals was sent there last fall by Manager Bill Terry of the Giants with a bundle of Pitchers in exchange for a young catcher, Gus Mancusco. Monday at the Polo Grounds the O'Farrell roused himself, and his two home runs, the last one in the ninth inning touching off @ seven-run barrage that snowed the Giants under 12 to 8, brought their third straight defeat with one tie in the last four games, and com- Pletely upset Terry's pitching staff with a teriffic double-header sched- BRAVES AND GIANTS BOTH LOSE AS VETERANS SCINTILLATE Enid Wilson, British Golf Star, | BYGONES ARE BYGONES You wouldn’t think from the above picture that several dis- paraging words were exchanged between Joe McCarthy, left, and however, ule looming ahead. Still Lead By Six Games The Giants remained six games in front of the Boston Braves who ran into Red Lucas on one of his best days and were shut out 2 to 0. Lucas allowed but two hits in a duel with Lefty Brandt. Despite their victory, the Cards dropped into a fourth-place tie with the Pittsburgh Pirates, who took two games from Philadelphia, 9 to 5 and 9 to 1, behind the steady pitching of Bill Swift, Leon Chagnon, and Lefty French. So close packed are the contenders that the third-place Cubs, rained out Monday at Brooklyn, are but a game ahead of St. Louis and Pittsburgh, with the Braves only one game in front of the Cubs. Only two games were played in the American League. The Athletics rall- jed in the last three innings with jeight runs to beat Chicago 9 to 5 while Vic Sorrell tossed four-hit ball to beat the Yankees 6 to 1. Scores by innings: jagnon. 4 Grace; Elli Berly, Liska and Davis. ot, RHE 14 0 6 Rag- Second Game Pittsburgh soe+ 014 000 301— oa . Ped o01— i al cinich; Holley, jland and Davis, aed Cards wae Giants 000 030 117-12 13 1 $2000 102 032— 812 0 all the symptoms of friendship. were apparently patched up when Joe’s Yanks met Rogers’ Browns at St. Louis recently, for the two are displaying Rogers Hornsby when the latter succeeded the former as mana. ger of the Chicago Cubs several years ago. The differences, HAUSER’S HOPE OF SWATTING 70 HOMERS APPEARS REMOTE «THE SCOURGE ae Carleton, Vance and 0 veil; _Parmelee, Schumacher, clark Red peas iaiauks Bes: Cincinnati . 000 100 one 4 iH 1 0 000 000 000— 0 as to what Tony would do to Ross in| Lucas “and Lombardi; Brandt Be the Polo Grounds two weeks hence | Spohr and doubtless wondering, at the same time, just where he could put his hands on those false whiskers. R..L, Voelz Ousted as [Peto Northern League Head rell and Hayworth » Minn, Aug. 20.—()}— Crookston, For what they termed his “inability | py; hia, to handle league affairs in a proper Citene tees way,” club owners and managers of} | Cain, terson the Northern League Monday ousted | Jones, Lyons and suliven. R. L. Voelz as president of the circuit and named Danny Boone of Crooks- ton the new head. Volez, who tooj over the league's chief job while @wner of the East. Grand Forks club, owned the Eau Claire franchise for a time but later turned it over to the Eau Claire Base- ball Club, Inc. The charges against him were formally adopted in a reso- lution. Besides Boone, who is owner of the Crookston Pirates, those attending the | 124, meeting included Ray Mergens, Bran- don club owner; Johnny Mostil, Eau Claire manager; Bruno Haas, Winni- peg owner, and Johnny Anderson of East Grand Forks. Former Fordham Mentor Near Death O-Rwiliams 2-24 Marshfield, Mas: Life ebbed slowly Tues Frank W. Cavan- augh, former Fordham _ football coach. Dr. Don- ald Peggs, who be- lieved the end to ‘be but a few hours away, left the Cavanaugh home shortly after 2 a. unable to give “Cav” any medi- cal treatment that might be of avail. Major Cavan- augh’s health, which caused his Cavanaugh retirement from football coaching, seemed improved after a recent ab- @ recovery doctors considered re- Last week, he suffered a markable. shock. vs. Bismarck er, AMERICAN LEAGUE Sorrell Tames Yankees New York ae a 6 004 20x— 6 0 0 nen and Dickey; Sor- Athleties Rally Rally To Win Senin S AMERICAN REAGYE 859 FA 590 62 516 62.496 65 492 67 + .468 12 424 81 362 NATIONAL LEAGUE New aoe 11 46 .607 Chicas 38 es }O c St. Louis 57° 537 Pittsburgh 56 537 Brooklyn 68 .424 Philadeiphii 70 417 Cincinnati The Sphinx has had its face “lift- ,” and now, for the first time in dominal operation. He had been re- | 3,600 years, the entire figure is visible leased from the hospital Aug. 9 after | above the sands. ‘The curve of the earth’s surface is about two inches per mile. The young ‘Yellow above (you'll note he’s not old enough to wear long pants) is bound to cause some trouble when the man’s national tennis singles get under way at Forest Hills, Sept. 2. He is Frankie Par- ker, the Milwaukée and New Orleans youth whose specialty is upsetting stars. The pic- ture was taken just after he beat Fred Perry, English champ, in an exihibition at Rye, N. Y. CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK Gibson White, 18-year- Minneapolis Slugger Had Bad) Week-End; Only One Away From 63-Mark, Though Chicago, Aug. 29—(#)—Joe Hauser still has plenty of time in which to better his own record of 63 home runs in @ single season but his hope of making it an even 70 appeared re- mote Tuesday. The Minneapolis slugger hit his 62nd round-trip blow Saturday, but failed to get one out of the lot Sunday or Monday. He still has 12 regularly scheduled games in which to beat his 63-mark, but will have to mistreat op- position pitching at a great rate to get his 70. ‘The Millers Monday bunched their | ,|aits off Paul Gregory in the fourth and fifth inings to defeat Milwaukee 6 to 3. After holding Toledo scoreless for six innings, Jack Tising boggod down in the seventh and the Mudhens de- feated Indianapolis 6 to 3 in a night game. Score by innings: Millers Wallop Brews 900 430 0008 12 ‘inneapolis .... Milwaukee + 1 001 OO1— 3 11 1 ‘Murray and Grote Gregory, Cald- well and Young. Hens Rally To Win Indianapolis ....000 200 00I— 3 8 2 Toledo .. aed 000 5ix—6 9 1 is Angley; Lawson and Healey. man, is following in the footsteps of his father. CAGE COACHES TO MEET ‘The annual meeting of the National Association of Basketball Coaches will be held at Atlanta March 29-31. A completely streamlined automo- bile is said to require approximately half as much power to drive it for- ‘-old son Of “ward as the common type automo- Ben White, the noted harness reins- hile. HE MAKES. BOATS FLY A thin metal band underneath a motorboat, on which the craft lifts itself and skates across the water as on a stilt, has been de- signed by Dr. Oskar G. Tietjens of Swarthmore, Pa., to double the speed of a boat. This device, a “hydrofoil,” recently enabled a 12-mile-an-hour boat to do 24 miles an hour, as is shown below. Dr. Tietiens is showing the “hydrofoil.” Cleveland All-Nations Tonight & Wednesda a Start Promptly at 6 P. M. i 4 E | Louisville—Maxie Strub, 138%, Favored to Win American Honors | Foreign Shotmaker Threatens To Make History After Cracking Record Highland Park, Ul., Aug. 29.—(F)— Not in 20 years has a foreign invader captured the American women’s na- tional golf championship, but over the rolling hills of Exmoor Tuesday strode England’s queen of the fair- ways, Miss Enid Wilson, to offer a challenge that threatened to crush her opposing field. Carrying on from Gleneagles, Scot- land, where she became one of Eng- land’s immortals of golf by capturing the British title three years in suc- cession, Miss Wilson opened fire on the American crown Monday by level- ling the Exmoor layout with a 76, the lowest qualifying score in 37 years of play in the big show of American women’s golf, and winning the medal with two shots to spare over such con- tenders as Virginia Van Wie of Chi- cago, the defending titleholder; Mau- reen Orcutt, Haworth, N. J., and |Helen Hicks of New York, champion in_ 1931. It’s a long way to the finals of Sat- urday—four treacherous 18-hole rounds—but around the clubhouse |Tuesday Miss Wilson was an out- standing favorite to capture the title she has sought twice before. Virtual- ly every front ranking American star |was left in the field that needed less than 87 shots to qualify and Miss | Wilson had her work cut out. Those |who watched her hit her marvelous | wood and fron shots picked her to jbeat the field. (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE | Batting—Klein, Phillies, .377; Davis, Phillies, 346, Runs—Martin, Cardinals, 101; P. Waner, and Klein, Phillies, 81, Hits — Klein, Phillies, 182; Fullis, Phillies, 166. Home runs — Klein, Phillies, and Berger, Braves, 24. Pitching — Cantwell, Braves, 18-7; Parmelee, Giants, 12-5, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Foxx, Athletics, .356; Sim- nucns, White Sox, .340. Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 111; Foxx, Athletics, and Manush, Senators, 100, Hits—Manush, Senators, 183; Sim- jmons, White Sox, 182, | Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 36, |Puth, Yankees, 28, Pitching—Whitehill, Senators, 18-6; Grove, Athletics, 18-7. Se aan "Fights Last Night ee | (By The Associated Press) Newark, N. J.—Eddie (Un- known) Winston, 190, Hartford, Conn., outpointed Tony Galento, 220, Orange, N. J., (10). Chicago—Freddie Heinz, 16212, Saginaw, Mich., outpointed Bud Saltis, 162, Chicago, (8); Henry Rothier, 150, Moline, Ill, out- Pointed Jerry Kucera, 151, Chi- | cago, (4). | New York—Harry Ebbets, 173, Brooklyn, stopped Frank Lo- | bianco, 168, New York, (3). | Bethlehem, Pa.—Dann Devlin, 147, Allentown, Pa., knocked out Jackie Wilkinson, 146, Philadel- Phia, (2). Erie, Pa., outpointed Jackie Pil- kington, 13712, Louisville, (10). Syracuse, N. Y.—Bucky Law- less, 150, Auburn, and Baby Joe Thompson, 147, California, drew, (6); Pedro (Rooleto) Lorenzo, Philadelphia, stopped the Mohic- an Kid, 129, Scranton, Pa., (3). Atlantic City—Tony Falco, 136, Philadelphia, outpointed Buster Brown, 137, Baltimore, (10); Lew Raymond, 10, Baltimore, outpoint- ed Jinimie Reed, 139, Washing- ton, (8); Robbie Abel, 123, Phila- delphia, and Peter Jackson, 124, Baltimore, drew, (6); Sammy Fos- ter, 174, New ‘York, outpointed Conrad Bennett, 179, Philadel- phia, (6). Sioux City, Ia—Frankie Gra- ham, 133, Oklahoma City, out- Pointed Johnny Stanton, 135, Minneapolis, (6); Floyd Morey, 130, Lincoln, outpointed Jess Ackerman, 132, Des Moines, (6); Frankie Wolfram, Winnipeg, and Young Rightmeier, Sioux City, drew, (8). San Antonio, Tex—Willard Brown, 147, Indiana, outpointed | Carlos Garcia, 147, San Antonio, (10). A small-jointed animal, related to | the fresh water shrimp, is parasitic jon the skin of whales and is known | 88 the whale louse. Of all new automobiles, 62 per cent are bought by persons paving a yearly income of less than $3000. Carlos Manuel de Cespedes was named the PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT OF CUBA. Boule , der Dam is in the COLORADO RIVER between Arizona and’ Nevada. The largest city in Texas is HOUSTON. Bismarck Ball Park Admission 40c Children Admitted Free to bleachers