The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 1, 1933, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1933 ARs VERGES AND LINBUPS FOR SEASON Giant Has Operation For Appen-: dicitis; Brave Breaks His Right Hand JO MOWRY TO SUBSTITUTE; bston Red Sox Succeed Winning At Yankee Stad- ium; Score Is 15-2 (By The Associated Press) Both crippled by serious casualties, § Boston Braves and the New York Giants resumed their vital National . Series at Boston Friday with uch depending on untried reserves. Victorious Thursday 7 to 3 in the “first battle of the six-game engage- »Ment, the Braves trailed the pace- 8 ng Giants by only five games with She knowledge that their well-rounded ching. staff was intact while New Bork’s big four had begun to show gns of overwork. ‘The managers were forced to call ut their replacements, however, as @ result of accidents which will keep ° oe their stars out of the game for painder of the season. dy ‘Moore, Boston's slugzing fielder, suffered a fractured hone right hand, when he was hit by x Leroy Parmelee’s pitches, while Vergez, Giants’ star third- "baseman, was recovering from 9 hur- ried appendix operation, Thursday night. in Joe Mowry, the $50,000 purchase from Minneapolis, was Bill McKech-| nie’s choice to replace Moore in the Braves’ right garden. Though label- as a hitter in the minors, Mowry can be expected to equal) Moore’s brilliant defensive play. ‘The Giants-Braves game overshad- lowed the rest of the major league | although the Pittsburgh Pi- | tes completed their sweep of the Phillies to remain one and one-half "games back of the Braves and the St. Louis Cardinals closed tn with a dou- f ole victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers. | AMERICAN aes 4 Bosox Slaughter ¥ aes Ree i: a -t4 ate vlad a Rhodes and deel: Pomoc, Uhl _ MacFayden and Dicke Indians Scalp "ches ©dveland. 000 002 200-4 12 0 ‘i ory L000 0 Pytlak; EB 2 2 le, 2 3 and Lyons and oo ieee Aapeerta Trip Giants kK oe “4 010 002—3 11 2 ee 000 05x—7 8 0 | ~ Parmelee, Bell and Mancuso; Cant+ well and Spohrer. Pirates Lace Lace Phillies _ a0 O10 S01— ned Philadel —) Smith, Swetonic, Hoyt and Grace; Moore. ‘ears, Collins, Rhem, Bert and Davis. Cards Beat Dodgers First Game Pi HE 4 1 Twice G : RH Louis 600 ieee 12 2 Bx 000 oo Oll—3 8 5 Carleton ‘and Lewis; Mungo, Leon- ard, Shaute as Lopes. Quten. Gdme RHE 200 301-10 13 1 010 021— 410 1 and O'Farrell; Benge. Y Bt. +» 301 St. Louis 4 RANDY MOORE OUT OF | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern AS PRESIDENT OF TH’ Ge \OKFERS LEAGUE, WHAT CODE ARE You ADOPTING For TH NRA ®@-I SPOSE YOULL CUT YOUR EIGHT- ‘DAY CLOCK DOWN TOA FIVE-DAY BASIS ~AND FAW 1 BEGONE WITH YouR E| just “around the corner. H E/Fargo, and Jamestown and many AFTER THIS, \ ARRANGE TO DO YouR WEEKS THUMB-TWITDLING, \N FORTY TM _ NOT IN BUSINESS ? SCIENCE OF \NVENTION, FOR A DIVERSION @ RETIRED LOAFER© q-t- BALDERDASH ¢ TM A RETIRED GENTLEMAN — BUT OCCASIONALIY L DELVE INTO THE YOUD BETTER GET % | OUT YOUR MAPS, TO | PICK TH SHORTEST] | "ROUTES To TH* | SOUTH SEAS ~ T HEAR THAT YOUR WIFE IS SETTING ATIME FUSE ON You FoR A SOB! o> ‘Minot, Fargo, Valley City, Devils Lake and Bismarck Have Many Vets (By The Associated Press) Pigskins—Deflated since last fall see a trend toward inflation on the basis of reporis from all sections of | North Dakota Warriors of the gridiron are answer- ing the call to dust off those long- stored moleskins, put air in deflated pigskins, loosen up muscles unused since last fall and in general prepare for another football nm which is High school gridiron mentors in most of the state's larger cities already have issued the call for football can- didates from which to fill team va- cancies caused by graduation. Squads are in training at Minot, schools, including Valley City, Devils Lake, Mandan and Bismarck, are scheduled to start practice sessions Monday and Tuesda; Jamestown gridders are working out under Coach Ernest Gates. At Minot, Head Coach Glenn Jarrett is putting his charges through limbering up ex- ercises with one of the best teams in years in prospect. Magicians Are Heavier Minot expects to have a heavier! team than those of the past two one with six lettermen in the list of can- didates and six other experienced men forming the nucleus around which| Minot will prepare for a hard sched- ule of eight games. Magician lettermen are Lierbo and Salo, backs. Captain Jack MacKen- roth, Arnold, Amick and Tom Mac- Kenroth, linemen. Experienced play- Haines Shaute, ‘Ryan and Outen. ers include Smart, McCannel, Bussen, ME MAO 19S MOO + THRU A AcRoSsT OUTOUR WAY : WHOT MAKES THAT YO FOUER | TIME TO A DoMMY UKE |] OLOT A PRIMROSE | TOO ~ WHLTS A RIGHT THORN 2 BRIAR PATCH AMILE SASEBAL en ome wi land a group of 1932 freshn-2n North Dakota High School Football | Prospects Bright as Training Begins: Denis, Wampler, Schlixbier and Harti, linemen. Mandan, considered the 1932 unof- ficial state champion, has six letter- men among candidates reporting for Tuesday's opening practices. are Sam Partridge, Gene Stumpf, Dietrich, linemen; and Helb- ling and Ferderer, backs. Li C. Mc- Mahan is coach. Nine monogram-holders, 19 reserves will carry the colors for Bismarck. Captaii Lawrence Schneider, an end, head: the group. Others are Norman Agre, George Shafer, Jr., Lee, and Sorsdahl, backs; Engen, LaRue, Boelter and Lawyer, linemen. Milton and Russel Kanz, formerly Minot gridders, will join the Bismarck crew this year. With eight lettermen returning to the squad, Coach Claude Miller will begin building his 1933 team at an initial practice Monday. outlook is the best in three years. Prospects are for a powerful line with fast, hard-hitting backs. Veterans are Jacobson, Wicks, Persons, Eckel. Die- mert, Scott, Zickuhr and Curtis Pforr. | Ertel, Edic, Gunderson and Strous are other veterans. Fargo Prospects Bright Listing his team’s prospects as bright, Athletic Director Robert Brown of Fargo sent his Midgets through their first workout Monday. He faces a gruelling schedule but has 12 letter- men back plus a group of promising reserves. lettermen are Callinan, Fisher, k Kereluk, Charles Nelso! Joe Tuor, Uthus, Vosburgh, an Wheeler, linemen; Mattson, Norman Olson, Wilbur Swanson, and Ray Wal- lace, backs. Nine lettermen will be among a squad of grid candidates reporting to Coach Doug Smith for the first prac- | , tice Monday at Devils Lake, Co-Cap- jcal managers indicate that star ball} By Williams Gwe us ANY TH Pick’ PATH , WHEN HE. BoeseD UP IN, THAT ORCHARO! "DID HE ? ANSWER ME THAT. 3 Game Series 1 Onw/ IORNS IN YOO — 1 GOT THEM AN’ HIS FOOT, WHOTS A LOTTA THORNS > Ma yo Baar iat SHiteriee Sy May tel Valley City’s! “tains Hilbert Smith and Harold Res- | lock lead the returning veterans which | include five linemen and a complete backfield. Hilbert Smith, Chuck Wood, Bill Burckhard and Jensen will form the backfield. Reslock and Moore, veter- an ends, Harry Bodlak and Jimmie Collinson, lettermen, and Wood, tackles, and Vincent Whitbeck, guard, are other veterans. At least 80 candi- dates are expected for first tryouts. New England Plans Baseball Tourney Home Club, Hettinger, Regent, Havelock, Bowman and Lemmon to Participate | New England, N. D., Sept. 1— | Drawin: the fire teams to parti- ‘ipate in the baseball tournament at New England, Sept. 2 and 3 were ;made at Lemmon, 8S. D., Monday, ac- \cording to W. L. Gardner, manager of the New England Firemen. New England drew a bye for the | Saturday games. The first contest on {Saturday will be between the Hettin- ger Lions and the Regent-Havelock team. The second game Saturday will be between the Bowman Bron- jehos and the Lemmon Cardinals. There will be two games Sunday, Hl vith New England playing the win- jner of the Hettinger and Regent- {Havelock contest. The winner in the \first Sunday afternoon game will play the winner of the Saturday game be- jbween Bowman and Lemmon. Player lists now in the hands of lo- ossers from Aberdeen to Marmarth jwill apper in this southwest tourna- jment, the first to be held at New Eng- | land. team member. for children on Saturda: hi ber MADE FOR CHILDREN N on aa aa Monday, Can SmAROF 9 ENGLISH CHAMPION BETTER THANEVEN CHOIGE AS VICTOR ™ Soston Braves Wallop New York Giants in Opener of Crucial Series ENID WILSON AND VIRGINIA VAN WIE BATTLE IN SEMI-FINAL PARK HERE TO SEAT 3,000 FOR WEEK-END JAMESTOWN SERIES lana Poindexter of Bismarck and kaise and Danuser of Jamestown. Paige vs. Foster | ‘With Satchel Paige of Bismarck |}@———————— and Willie Foster of Jamestown, ack- |nowledged the two greatest Sinead (go ceteeees | pitchers in baseball, scheduled to ST eer Special Bleachers Are Being In- stalled For Colorful Cla: ic in Capital ‘Helen Hicks and Maureen Or-' Bismarck’s baseball park will .000 spectators comfortably for the three-game series between the crack -Pismarck and Jamestown nines ‘his week-end, it was announced Pai day by Neil O. Ga |, Manager of the Capital City club. . | 'ENID’S CLUBS ARE LARGE) “additional bieachers are being | ‘added to bring the seating capacity, | loutside of automobiles, to 3,000,” the) lot said. Invader Hits Tremendous Shots; >! ices. wal OdHakbe atsing| Already Has Won British {the series, Churchill sald, Shipley Title This Year A champion | cutt Clash in Other Brac- ket Penultimate [insure two “naturals.” and a star had to fall. | Miss Wilson, making a last try for Highland Park, Ill, Sept. 1—()— the American title, never has passed | Soaring along the championship trail beyond the semi-finals but she was with a game that has beaten par by better than an even choice to win seyen shots for .66 holes, England’s Friday and then go on to victory, Enid Wilson found hersedf challenged ‘thus becoming the second woman in Enid-Wilson found herself challenged history to win the English and Amer- Wie, at Exmoor Friday, ican titles in one year. In an 18-hole match that drew on| Packing clubs of even larger dimen- the imaginations of the spectators sions than the average male profes- with its international angle, the two sional and hitting tremendous shots faced each other in a struggle for a off the tee and fairway, the English final berth in the title fight while a/girl has dominated the championship pair of America’s greatest stars of the scene from the very start in her feminine ranks, Helen Hicks of In- | march. Starting off wtih a record wood, N. ¥., 1931 titleholder, matched |low qualifying medal of 76, she has’ shots with the noted stylist from|submerged her rivals two straight Heworth, N. J., Maureen Orcutt, to days with golf close to men’s par. ‘is scheduled for 3 p. m. and the Mon- ; sgainst each other in Sunday's con- test, Churchill anticipates the largest | jetowd of the season here for that| game. } A special train will bring hundreds {of Jamestown fans here for the con- | test. The train will leave Jamestown | at 9:30 a. m. and leave here on the return trip at 7 p.m. A round-trip |fare of $1 is offered by the Northern | | Pacific Railway company, with half- \a-cent-a-mile rates to prevail for in- | lagers points. | The Saturday night game will begin at 6 p. m. while the Sunday contest day fracas for 3:30 p. m. To date the two great outfits have | Played three games, breaking even. | Jamestown won the first 1 to 0, Bis-| 'marck the second 3 to 2 and last Sun- | day they battled 12 innings to a 1-1: draw. Unbeaten Since Aug. 2 Not since Aug. 2, when the Capital City bowed to Jamestown, has tel ; Bismarck club met defeat. Children will be admitted free to the Saturday night game, it is an {nounced by Churchill, but because of | the large crowds anticipated, juve- niles will be charged for admittance | Sunday and Monday. Who will pitch Saturday night and Monday depends upon the rengr tig selections, the Bismarck manayer said. Churchill expects to start Roosevelt Daivs when Barney “Lefty” Brown takes the mound for Jamestown and Paul Schaefer when Wild Bill Free- man is the visitors’ choice. All three of Jamestown’s hurlers and Paige and Davis of Bismarck are Negroes. Yesterday's 8 Stars | (By The Associated Press) Ben Cantwell and Wally Berger, Braves—Former held the Giants in check and latter drove in first run with homer, and Dusty Cooke. Smead Jolley, Red Sox — Collected nine of the Sox’ 18 hits off Yankee pitchers and drove in 10 runs. Floyd Vaughan, Gus Suhr and Pie Bill Werber | Traynor, Pirates—Drove in three runs each in victory on Phillies, FOUR expeditions have flown over the North Pele TOMMY ARMOUR is known as the Black Scot. The port side of a ship is the LEFT SIDE. Gillette Blades Both Blue and White Probak Blades vs. Bismare GILLETTE ANNOUNCES SENSATIONAL PRICE REDUCTIONS EFFECTIVE NOW! Reduced to H fie 25 Saturday, Sept. 10~ 49 yas drastic price reduction enables every man to enjoy the comfort ‘and satis satisfaction of shaving with the finest razor blades. that can be produced. We positively guarantee quality will be , maintained at the highest level. You will find the old price mark ; "of 50c on the package of five blades and $1.00 on the package. of ten blades now at-your dealer’s— pending the printing of new GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR C H BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Crondin S Valet Auto Strop j 1 ae vashin AMERICAN LEAGUE, | Washington . 43 «656 New 2: 51 Cleveland . 68 63 Philadelphia . 61 «63 Detroit . 63 «66 Chicago 6 68 Boston 550 73 St. Louis 47 «82 NATIONAL or. New York . ston. a z Pittsburgh 68 56 icago . 69°58 St. rool ‘ 6 59 Brookly1 52. «72 Philadelphia 50 «73 Cincinnati 48 «78 AMERICA: SSOCIATION um! 92 48 «657 Minneapoli 81 64 6.559 Hie ae ee a ul Toledo 68 74 479 Louisville 65 76 461 Maauikes os ay This ADEE ba pack announ i ; i fe at isxoer, | ages. T cement is your dealer’s authority é | Vv | Winnipeg.” FA HH ot to sell you Gillette, Probak and Valet Auto Strop blades at Crookston 20 22 476 7 7 H Crooksto 0 BR 4% the amazing low prices listed above. East Grand 19 25 432 Moorhead-Fargo 12 36 =«.250 SIGN FRED FELBER Philadelphia, Sept. 1.(@—The | Eagles, new member of the national Professional football league, Thurs- day announced the signing of Fred ‘Nip’ Filber, former North Dakota university and Boston professiorial 2, at 6 P. Sunday, Sept. 3, at 3 P. M, Monday, Sept. 4, at 3:30 P Adults Admission 40 cents | BISMARCK BALL PAE Facilities Have Been Enlarged to Accomodiate 3,000 Persas 4 oe RA

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