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CAPITAL CITY COPS TWO VERDICTS AND WINS TIE IN OTHER Reached Dramatic Peak Sunday When Satchel Paige Out- pitched Willie Foster CRUSHED VISITORS MONDAY Two Teams Will End Their Sea- sons Next Sunday With Contest At Jamestown Winning two games and earning a tie in the other contest of a three- game series with Jamestown here over the Labor Day week-end, Bis- marck’s potent baseball club decisive- ly advanced its claim for the unof- ficial state championship. About 7,000 fans saw the series, which reached its dramatic peak in the 10th inning of Sunday's game when Satchel Paige singled in a run from second base to win his own game against Willie Foster and came to a roaring end Monday when Bis- ™marck routed both of Jamestown's mound aces, Barney “Lefty” Brown and Willie Foster, to win an 11-5 ver- dict in a walkaway. Bismarck will play its last home game Wednesday evening when it battles the strong Dickinson club at the city park beginning at 6 o'clock. Finale at Jamestown Next Sunday the Capital City club will end its greatest season with a Grand finale at Jamestown. It was snnounced at Monday's game that ‘another special train to Jamestown 4s being arranged for the Bismarck fans. A scheduled doubleheader here next Sunday between Bismarck and the St. Paul Northern Pacific team has been cancelled. Saturday night's ragged opener ap- eared to be in the bag for Bismarck, when the Capital Citians entered the last inning with a 7-4 margin. But the visitors fell on Roosevelt Davis, who was sent in to relieve Paul Schaefer, for three runs to tie the count before the hitting spree ended. Bill Freeman, hurling the tirst game for Jamestown, was nicked for 15 bingles while Schaefer, who had the Stutsman county crew well in check for five innings, and Davis allowed only nine hits between them. Besides outpitching Foster in a brilliant mound duel Sunday between the two greatest hurlers in colored baseball, Satchel Paige, Bismarck’s elongated right-hander, knocked in all three of Bismarck’s runs to nip Jamestown 3-2, Satchel’s last single coming dramatically in the 10th in- ming to score Oberholzer from sec- ond and end hostilities for the day. Paige Whiffed 15 Besides restricting the visitors to six hits in 10 innings, Paige whiffed 15 of the visitors. Foster, the col- ored race’s great southpaw, was nicked for seven safe hits and in flurries of wildness, intentional and unintentional, gave 10 free tickets to first base. Bismarck’s hitting power blossomed in the finale of the series Monday afternoon, with the Capital Citians knocking Lefty Brown from the mound in four innings and shelling Foster from the hill in the next two. Wild Bill Freeman, who finished the | fame, held the home club in check. Bismarck secured seven safe hits off | pl pnd en re off Foster, | four runs in each of two in- uings. | On the other hand, Roosevelt! Davis, pitching for Bismarck, was ef-| fective throughout, keeping the visi- tors’ 10 hits well scattered and being in trouble only through errors after the second inning. Only two of the visitors, Art Han- cock and Barney Brown, were effec- tive with the stick throughout the series while every Bismarck man was dangerous at the plate throughout. Figures Tell Story In the three-game series, Bis-|out in North Dakota's history. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams i AY SEEN DAT BOY ORS LET ME V8) cu mPatiteTic Line BUCH OFFN A Bismarck Nine Claims State Champ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPLEMBER 5, 1933 ionship After Routing Jamestown NEW YORK GIANTS, FAR OUT IN FRONT, FACE FURTHER TEST OUR BOARDING HOUSE Virginia Van Wie Stages Comeback | YOU AND THE WAY FRUIT ARE THE TWO MOST USELESS ORNAMENTS IN THIS HOUSE 7 TVE MADE UP MY MIND THAT YOU'RE GOING TO GET WORK OF SOME KIND, iF T | HAVE TO BUY A GRINDSTONE | AND SEND YoU OUT SHARPENING | KNIVES (THERE ISNT ONE WHOM I KNOW OF,IN THE WHOLE HOOPLE TRIBE, WHO 1S GOOD FOR ANYTHING, EXCEPT MAYBE FOR BALLOON PET STORE 0 BUSINESS ; to Beat Helen Hicks and Hold Title | Rallies After Going Four Down MICHIGAN GRIDDERS HOPE TO | WIN FOURTH STRAIGHT TITLE on First 14 Holes; Hits Birdie Stride | | | will be tried often in competition this; Highland Park, Il, Sept. 5—(P)—A joach Harry Kipke Has Devised | fall. ° 4 Ms Also Kipke plans to use his new Rump Wheel’ For Offen- “rump wheel” or “guard wheel” for- ive Thrust | mation, which is designed to give the sive Thrusts | guards an opportunity to attract the attention of spectators. Michigan {guards come back out of the line as soon as the ball is snapped to form interference on 75 per cent of all “rump wheel,” Kipke, will help them get out of the Ann Arbor, Mich., Sept. 5—(?)— Harry Kipke plans .to introduce “something new” this coming foot- ball season in the drive to give Michigan its fourth successive west- ern conference championship. Since the Wolverines have lost only one game in three seasons, the head coach feels the public cannot be sa- tisfied with mere victory and the thrills of the wide open type of play must be furnished. In spring prac- tice Kipke stressed sweeps outside tackle and spectacular forward-la- teral passes. He has indicated these marck outhit Jamestown 36 to 25 and outscored the visitors 21 to 14. Jamestown's play defensively was ragged, the visitors being guilty of 14 misplays in the field for the three games while the Capital Citians were charged with six misplays. Bismarck probably will be without the services of Satchel Paige this week, though it is possible he will return here for the winter and next season. Paige Tuesday was planning tentatively to accept an offer to pitch for the Easterners next Sunday against the Western All-Stars in a feature game between colored teams as a World's Fair feature at Chicago. Willie Foster will pitch for the West- ern club. More than a thousand fans turned out for the Saturday night game here, 4,000 for Sunday's game and 1,800 for the Monday contest. A spe- cial train from Jamestown Sunday) brought nearly 500 here to swell the) crowd into probably the largest turn- S000 4 1\) coRLY OWOOR!N) OFhi ay B/ yon Mean, I GOT TO at/| wait A SvuSPicioues Despite the loss of Harry Newman and Ivy Williamson, passing combination which accounted for several wins last season, the aerial game is expected to produce results again this fall. The Michigan line from end to end is ready to pick up where it left off Major Leaders’ | —— (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Foxx, Manush, Senators, .333. uuns—Gehrig, Yankees, 113; Foxx, Hits—Manush, Senators, 189; Sim- mon, White Sox, 185. Home runs—Foxx, Ruth, Yankees, 28. Pitching — Grove, Athletics, 19-7; Whitehill, Senators, 18-7. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Klein, Phillies, .381; vis, Phillies, .347. Runs — Martin, Cardinals, 103; Waner, Pirates, 85. ee eeln, Phillies, Home _runs—Klein, Berger, Braves, 25. Pitching—Cantwell, Hubbell, Giants, 19-9. Glass is three-fourths sand. AN’ STOMPED, AN’ ; KICKED, BUT Ar HAI NEBBER HEAR Him TRwiLUANs LAST champion who wouldn't be beaten stepped up Saturday to accept the ancient silver trophy, emblematic of the women’s golf championship of the United States, for the second suc- cessive year. Virginia Van Wie was her name and, as she hugged the big cup on the portico of the old colonial club- house of Exmoor, she was given one of the greatest ovations ever ren- dered any champion by 3,000 specta- tors who watched her come back from almost hopeless defeat to a great 4-3 triumph over her last bar- rier to the title, Helen (Billy) Hicks of Hewlett, Long Island, New York. There have been greater come- backs in sport but the galleryites at Exmoor never will forget how the girl from the Beverly club of Chicago came back to win a decisive victory with a brand of golf seldom equaled brigade, Drawn and tired from her semi- final victory over Enid Wilson, Eng- land’s three-time champion, Virginia fell 4 down after the initial 14 holes of the final battle for the prized title and almost everyone, knowing her reputation for losing champion- ship finals by wide margins, figured she was all through. putter turned magic and turned de- feat into victory. > >|| Fights Last Night *|° (By The Associated Press) Asheville, N. C.—Buck Everett, 184%; Gary, Ind., stopped Corn Griffin, 17912, Fort Benning, Ga., @. Macon, Ga. — Clyde Chastain, 169, Tex. outpoiated Carl Knowles, 165, Savannah, (10). Windsor, Ont. — Joe Rivers, Towa, outpointed Sammy Man- dell, Rockford, Ill., (10). 5 ipoiny Safret, 146,‘ Kannapolis, N. C., (10); Tennessee Kid Phillips, 148, Columbus, O., knocked out Ten- nessee Wilson, 154, Concord, (3). East Moline, Ill.—Kid Leonard, 159, East Moline, outpointed Mil- lion Militto, 149, Omaha, (8); Lou Vine, 131, Chicago, outpointed Carl Scarlice, 130. Erie, Pa., (6); Speedy Ricco, 1221s, Denver, out- pointed Tony Conger, 121, Chica- go, (6), Nampa, Ida.—Sig Ecklund, 165, Portland, Ore., and Hal Hoxweld, 164, Des Moines, drew, (10). San Lius Obispo, Calif. — Joe Teiken, 117, Japan, outpointed Little Pancho, 116, Manila, (10). Reno, Nev.—King Tut, Minne- apolis, outpointed Battling Dozier, 147, Wichita, Kas., (10) Yesterday’s Stars (By the Associated Press) Tommy Thevenow, Pirates—Singled in ninth to drive in winning run | 2a" against Reds. Oral Hildebrand and Clint Brown, Indians—Each pitched eight-hit ball! to beat Browns twice. in the ranks of the “powder putt”| But back she came with a subpar golf that tied and then beat her, long distance rival with ease as her __ By Aberm 1), BATTLE WITH INDEED! HME -sPUTT-T. 2 EGAD, MADAM—WITH A. BIT OF MONEY I HAVE LEFT, T AM BUYING A BUSINESS ENTERPRISE FOR MYSELF ! A HOOPLE 1S CHATTLE TO NO MAN HAW —WHAT SAX YOU TO THIS P-1 AM GOING INTO THE ONCOMING PIRATES IN ANOTHER SERIES Back Into Fourth Position -Over Week-End Cubs Dispose of Dizzy Dean and] detested by Gar ubs Dispo: izzy in an aieaay Tex Carleton to Win Two Games Monday (By The Associated Press) The National League drama moved into Forbes field in Pittsburgh Tues- day as Bill Terry’s Giants swung west for the last time this year with at least two of the first division trail- ers hanging doggedly to what little} ¢—————__----__. Saturday a mt Duplicating the stirring scene that|~ Bismarck (7) prevailed as the Giants battered back/nzassmann, 2b. the bid of the Braves Boston last|noore, a chance remains of catching the lead- ers. week, the Pirates mustered every ounce of strength for the five-game series that will tell their tale for this Ringhefer, Seven and a half games back in e second place, riding a winning streak IMorlan, ef. a that swept to nine victories in the/schaeter, p. last 10 games, George Gibson's Buc-|navis, p. caneers can make the grade by rid- dling the Giants and capitalizing on any damage that may be done to the Terrymen later by Cincinnati, Chi-/q. Cleve, 2b:..... cago and St. Louis. Rain gave the Giants a day of rest by Monday, wiping out a doubleheader with the Phillies. “crucial” conflict by edging in one game with Cincinnati before the B. rain poured down, winning 1-0. The Cubs disposed of St. Louis’ twin aces, Dizzy Dean and Tex Carle- ton, to win both halves of a double- header, 6-4, and 5-2, and edge the & game. The only activities in the Ameri- can League that escaped the holiday downpour were doubleheaders in De- troit and Cleveland. The Tigers took two from the White Sox, 8-0 and 5-4, while Walter Johnson’s courageous Indians twice beat the St. Louis Browns, 3-2 and 2-0. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Indians Beat Browns « 000 100 001 0—2 8 000 002 Wells, Knott, Gray and Hildebrand and Pytlak. . Second game— St. Louis . 000 000 000—0 8 Cleveland + 000 110 O0x—2 6 0 Hebert and Shea; Brown and wee Beat Chisox Twic rs = e First game— Chi Detroit . and Haywort! Second game— RHE Chica; 000 000 310-4 9 2 Detroit . 203 000 00x—5 7 0 ns and Berry; Auker, Marberry Pasek. NATIONAL LEAGUE ibs Down Cards Twice First game~- ket apa ae Dean, Johnson, Walker, Lewis; Bush and Hartnett. game— St. Louis . Cincinnati ..... 000 000 000—0 Pittsburgh .... 000 000 001—1 Johnson and Manion; Smith and Grace. The Crandings AMERICAN LEAGUE Wi NATIONAL LEAG! York EBSS8AIG SSAayse SRSsSeSAsQ SeussSIe aseease EBSSERZ? beRasESe RBWIAsVSA FS : gg lia Hubert Scott-Paine Only 22.33 Seconds Behind as Sec- ond Heat Ended BUCCANEERS GOING STRONG) sarine city, mich. sept. 5.—( Latest member of thet growing Wood, Hubert Scott- year. The first remark challenger after he lost the second NATIONAL TENNIS TOURNEY POSTPONED A DAY BY RAIN' of the British Hewnmemanal COOMOMMHOnD scotessccse| | Or corroocoonm® The Pirates made ready for the|,’ gonauer. If. COCKS RH HH Day | Re OR er ere BS | onnocoworompa watial onmmonnoomme idle Braves from third place by half} 5, aaFBlonwsnwommogh eT bie: Summary base hiit — Cleve. by. . balls—off Schaefer 1; off Freeman 1. Wild pitches — Freeman, Hit H E|pitcher—Ringhofer by Freeman; Hancock by Da’ ‘Umpires—Shi} 2 000 1-3 9 O/Danuser, Hemsley; /g——__.. RHE me me BB wenancSun SS! nmonBsocod %40 000 Cow 13 9) Held, If... Sones, Kinsey and Grube; ‘Sorrell Oberholser, 3b. wrwoocoort @owororooD> eccoconcoms— ~ = al cnorounocoka sett | mHonnonmom wwtte | cocomocoomH art I Me mom me meey vara omrn cece tt onrobauwce eococooss ~ = o = Bl wnneeserenaa al eccoconource Sl moconnmowror eIZlocomneonnnean % wotialcoocoreepoone SSMS | woounmacrnwe : S I j >! es E ° oe Bk tl and final heat of the 1933 race on the race” of necessity means race, for he lost by only seconds, the closest finish ever seen in the international event which annually establishes speedboat su- remacy. food's time for the 35 nautical miles, in his Miss America X, was 27:48.92, an average of 86.937 statute miles Paul Cook Cracks Par to Cop Golf Tournament Over the Week- End BRITON PLANS TO TRY AGAIN AFTER LOSING TO GAR WOOD ana at ak Neil Croonquist of Bismarck Finishes Third; Tunell Cops Flight , N. D., Sept. 5.—(P)—Crack» tig par by one stroke in 36 holes of medal play, Paul Cook, Bismarck, who for four consecutive years was North Dakota golf champion, Mon- day won for the second pe year the fourth annual international tournament played at the Country club. Cook had a medal of 143, 12 strokes below his nearest competi~ tor, Dr. Russell Gates, Minot, who was one stroke ahead of 16-year-old Neil Croonquist, Bismarck, who turn- ed in 156. ‘Vanderberg, 16-year-old cad: Lene the Washington Park 001 who was medalist with 75, three strokes over par, as result of haying shot a sub-par 34 on the second round of qualifying play, and 17-year-old Herman Dahl, Minot, it Ellsworth Vines Says He Is Too Professionalism Forest Hills, N. Y., Sept. 5—(#)—A i jtainy afternoon and consequent post- ponement of second-round matches in i the national singles tennis champion- ships have given Elisworth Vines still another chance to deny emphatically jany immediate intention of turning | professional. | Informed that Martin Pisa, veteran professional, had said in Paris that he and Henri Cochet would meet Vines! and Big Bill Tilden in New York next winter, Vines declared there was no basis whatever for the report and that he was too busy defending his Amer- ican amateur crown to give any thought to professional offers at this ime, Cochet is to make his professional debut in Paris late this month, he and Plaa representing France against the American pair of Tilden and Bruce Barnes, Monday’s postponement in the na- initial test in the defense of his title until Tuesday. The tournament com- mittee decided to move tthe whole Joe Hauser Runs | Home Run Total Millers Lose Second Game to St. Paul, However; Turn Eyes to Bonuses To 65 Labor Day\:= were tied with 159 for fourth place in the championship flight. Flight winners and runners-up were: First, L. G, Power, Minot, and Raymond C. Dobson, Minot, after a Busy to Seriously Consider ‘play-off with C, M. Doth, Litchfield, Minn. Second, M. V. Carlson, Por- tal, and O. H. Butler, Minot. Third Fred Tunell, Bismarck, and Charl ‘Wood, Minot, Fourth, C. W. Storms, Portal, and Glen Parson, Minot. Fifth, Dr. R. W. Pense, Minot, and R, R. Dowling, Brandon, Man. Sixth Geo. Kalbfleisch, Minot, and J. Loberg, Bismarck, by flip of co! Seventh, Henry M. Wilson and N. Hotham, Waskada, Minn. Eighth, Don McCannell, Minot. KIRKWOOD AND SABAZEN BEAT COOK AND JAYNES Gene Sarazen and Joe Kirkwood internationally-famous golfers, took two Bismarck shot-makers into carap Sunday in an_ 18-hole exhibition match over the Wiltonveldt course at Wilton. ‘The Capital City golfers in the fea- ture, which was followed hy @ gallery of nearly 350 fans, were Cook, for four years North Dakota cham- pion, and Doc Jaynes, local profes- sional. Kirkwood was medalist with a blaz- ing 69, good for a new course record, Sarazen second with 71, Cook third with 75 and Jaynes fourth with 6. Kirkwood and Sarazen each ac- counted for five birdies, Cook three connpigad had one eagle and one Cook was one stroke ahead of Kirk- wood and three up on Sarazen at the end of the fourth hole, but from there on his putter failed him though he ai the stars even with his wood 43433535 5334435 36-1 Out—4 4424544637 In—4 55345435 38-75 Kirkwood— Out—4 4433543535 1 In—3 54235345 3469 | Jaynes— Out—4 3544663742 In—4 45345647 4% | Fargo, N. D., Sept. 5- W. Pote, former state chamolo a feated Tommy Hel » the youth- tol tut defending champion, in the final , {08 the third annual all-city tolt tournament, sponsored. Forum, at the Fargo oe Monday. The score was 3 and 2, Pote and Hellander are the only pre- vious winners of the event which was inaugurated in 1931, Vern state champion, event. = First game— mort ont Wed., Sept. 6, at 6 P. BISMARCK BALL PARK ~ - Adaniasion 49 cents a