The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 9, 1933, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1933 Bismarck Baseball Nine Will End Season at Jamestown Sunday SATCHELPAICE AN) |HHUBBELL RESUMES HERO’S ROLE, BEATING PIRATES 2 TO ! . BARNEY BROWNARE | our BoaRDING HoUsE By Ahem | WINS FINAL CLASH [Hauser and Millers Confident of Scoring Upset in Pennant Series F ‘AIR QUEEN OF FAIRWAY. Seven-Game Conflict With Col. umbus, League-Leaders, 7 to Begin Tuesday —————— Chicago, Sept. 9—()—The experts will ‘tell you that Columbus _ about a 3-to-1 choice to defeat - an cepa geese i | EXPECTED 10 PITH eon UF RSE MOSM | TO NGURE GIANTS |__ Yh DELIVERING AN ANT EATER? HM-M-CANT FIGURE THIS Y, - OUT, LADY ~—WHY THIS BIRD Y USED To EVEN TALK IN HIS SLEEP /—WE KEPT HIM CAGED BECAUSE HE WAS ALWAYS USING TH PHONE § —~A PHONOGRAPH COMPANY RENTED HIM,ONE TIME,TO THAT BIRD? HOW CAN I EVER TEACH \T SPANISH, FRENCH AND ITALIAN, WHEN \T CAN'T EVEN TALK ENGLISH? ALL IT DOES 1S SHRIEK I WANT MY $12 BACK? Y/ Special Train Will Carry Capital CA City Fans to Stuts- COMFORTABLE EDGE man City ——————_ Terry’s Men Move Out of Smoky City With Six and Half NAV ic MY GREAT BATTLE IS FORECAST WORD) Local Colored Hurler Turns _ Down Invitation to Pitch H At Chicago - ——$__— Bismarck’s potent baseball club Sunday will end its season when it clashes with the strong Jamestown nine at the Stutsman county city. The game is scheduled to begin at 3 o'clock, according to Neil O. Church- ill, manager of the Capital City con- tingent. Having turned down an invitation to pitch for the eastern colored all- stars in a World’s Fair feature game WAR against the western all-stars at Co- misky Park, Chicago, Satchel Paige, elongated right-hander, will take the mound for Bismarck. Satchel last Sunday climaxed his home stand here by outpitching Willie Roster, left-hander who will hurl for the western all-stars at Chicago, as well as driving in all three runs in Bismarck’s 3-2 conquest of the Stuts- man county crew in 10 innings. Brown Probable Opponent It is likely that Manager O. K. Butts of the Jamestown team will start Barney “Lefty” Brown, another colored southpaw star who is a great Pitcher despite the fact Bismarck drove him from the box in four in- nings Labor Day. Brown secured eight hits in 12 trips to the plate for ‘an average of .666 in the three-game series between Bismarck and James- town last week-end. Churchill probably will start Quin- cy Troupe behind the bat, Ringhofer at first base, Massmann at second bace, Haley at shortstop, Oberholzer at third base, Moore, Morlan and Schaefer in the outer gardens. Butts will have Charlie Hancock as catcher, Elmer Ruud as first-base- man, Frank Cleve at second base, Art Hancock at shortstop, Fred Schauer ‘at third, Al Schauer, Deeds and Wild ‘Bill Freeman in the outfield. In view of the fact that Bismarck has a two-game edge on Jamestown in their season's meetings, Jamestown is expected to make a great effort to cut down the margin Sunday. In six games Bismarck has won three, Jamestown one and the other ended in knotted scores. ‘Unbesten In Month Likewise, Bismarck is expected to Put forth extra effort to maintain its long undefeated string. Not since early in August hes the Capital City. Jost = decision, A special train will carry Bismarck engagement. The train will leave at 9:30 a. m. junday and will leave Jamestown on return trip at 7 p.m. More than ial train from here ‘With Paul Schaefer, Capital City hurler, restricting his opponents to two hits while his mates were collect- ing 13 from the offerings of Lefty 10 to 2 at Dickinson Friday evening. Schaefer pitched five innings and Satchel Paige, elongated colored right-hander, performed in the last frame of the six-inning contest, which was called because of dark- ness. Ringhofer and Oberholzer hit home runs for Bismarck while Moore cloute ed out a double. The box score: 0 Come ON, MASOR~ HAND BACK THE $12. 7 MAKE RECORDS FOR LEARNIN’ OTHER PARROTS HOW TO TALKS ‘908. U.S. PAT. 0a Stoefen, Shields, Perry, Crawford Reach Tennis Singles Semi-Finals Game Margin WILL BATTLE CHICAGO NEXT Cubs Gain Tie For Second Place SOUTH DAKOTA U COACHES ARE he Angeles Blond in ‘Outsid- SATISFIED WITH GRID TURNOUT Annual City Golf Tourney Launched’ Entrants Qualifying This Week- | End; Match Play Set For | Next Week Bismarck’s annual city golf champ- | jonship tournament got under way this week-end over the course of the Country club and will continue throughout next week. Entrants were to qualify Saturday) afternoon and Sunday over 18 holes, | with the eight low men to be cast) in the championship flight. Eighteen-hole matches in the) championship flight will be played throughout the week, with the final match set for Sunday, Sept. 17. Paul Cook is defending champion, having won from Neil Croonquist in the final last year. eoooN Taylor, ss Van, ¢ Score by innings: Bismarck . . Dickinson ++ 002 Two base hits, Moore. Ringhofer, Oberholzer. Schaefer 2 in 5 innings; off Smith- Son 13 in 6 innings; off Paige 0 in 1 inning. Struck out by Schaefer 8; by Smithson 5; by Paige 2. Bases on balls off Schaefer 3; off Smithson 4; off Paige 0. Passed balls Van. Um- Pires, Roberts, Dickinson; Poindexter, Bismarck. WHY, HARYEY.WIO A FORM LUKE THAT. AN' BLUSHIN? WiD PEOPLE UsIN' EVERY ART Known ,“To SHOW OFF THER FIGGERS, AN' YOUR CHANCE COMES AN’ 4OU BLUSH — WHY, HARVEY! . More Than 20 Huskies Showed Up For First Workout Last Monday Vermilion, 8. D., Sept. 9.—()—“Not bad at all” is the way coaches and fans regard the response to invita- {tions extended to candidates for the University of South Dakota football jteam to come here from early prac- tice. The camp, which opened Monday, found more than 20 huskies out in uniform and every day since has seen [an increase. Before the second week rolls around Coaches Stanley G. Back- man and Carl B. Hoy expect the goal of four full teams to be realized. Among the recent arrivals are two boys who had caused some worry be- cause of their non-appearance, Dale Freeburg, conceded to be one of the best fullbacks in the conference in his sophomore year, and Red Man- ning, who is being groomed as a pos- sibility for the troublesome guard Positions. It's the guard and tackle positions that are causing coaches the most misgivings. Annual Amateur Golf Meet Opens Monday Kenwood Country Club, Cincinnati, Sept. 9.—(P)—One of the oldest and two of the youngest of Americi yanking amateur golfers drew atten- tion Saturday among the horde which starts Monday in quest of the national amateur championship. At one extreme is 54-year-oldChand- ler Egan of Del Monte, Calif. na- tional champion when the century was young—in 1904 and 1905. At the other are two youngsters just turned 18 — Willie Turnesa of the famous New York golfing family, and Bobby Servis of Dayton, O., already Ohio's king of the Simon-pures. Egan shot a par 71 Friday over Kenwood’s layout, the second longest the national amateur event has known, while most of the others in the field of 162 who ignored the in- tense heat long enough to finish 18 jholes were in the high 70s, By Williams | wry, HAAN! I vKinow PEOPLE WHO WOULD GWE THe © SCALPS TH HAVE AN’ ACCIOENT LIKE er's Role’; Friday Victor- les Decisive | Forest Hills, N. Y., Sept. 9§.(?}— | American youth, represented by two ‘young giants from California and New York, was arrayed Saturday against two Titans of international tennis in [the semi-final stage of the United States mens’ singles championship. Blond Lester Stoefen of Los An- geles occupied the “outsider's” role in @ challenge to the court craft of Fred- erick J. Perry, England's Davis Cup hero. Frank X. Shields of New York faced the resourceful Australian wizard, Jack Crawford, in the second semi- final. Crawford trounced Clifford Sutter of New Orleans, 6-3, 6-3, 6-4, and Perry defeated Adrian Quist'of Aus- tralia, 6-4, 6-4, 6-0, Friday. Shields turned back Gregory Man- 3in of Newark, 6-4, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3. Stoe- fen beat Bryan Grant, Jr., Atlanta, 8-6, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. Crosby To Stage Glof Meet Sunday New England Club Announces Its First Tournament For Sunday, Sept. 17 Crosby, N. D., Sept. 9—(#)—Out- standing among tournaments sched- uled in North Dakota for Sunday is the first annual invitational affair of the Crosby Country Club. The tournament will consist of 18) holes of medal play with the first nine to qualify. Golfers have yet to shoot a par 36 on the course, a nine-hole layout of 3,100 yards, Arrangements are being completed for two tournaments to be conducted at Mayville and New England the fol- lowing week-end. Mayville will be host to the annual invitational golf tournament spon- sored by the Mayville Golf Club Sept. 16. Match play will start immedi- ately after completion of nine-hole qualifying rounds. will be held Sept. 17, it was announced by Dr. T. L. Stangebye, club presi- dent. ——_—-——* || Fights Last Night | . _ (By The Associated Press) Boston—Billy Petrolle, 142, Far- go, N. D,, and Sammy Fuller, 138, Boston. drew, (10); Werther Ar- celli, Boston, and Tommy Ro- many, Watertown, drew, (17); Charlie Retzlaff, Leonard, N. D., outpointed Gene Stanton, Cleve- Inad, (7). Baltimore — Frankie Klick, 133 1/3, New York, outpointed Eddie 5, @). Hollywood, Calif.— Baby Ariz- mendi, 126%, Mexico City, out- Dayton, ©. — Joe Sekrys, 182, Dayton, outpointed Les Kennedy, 190, Los Angeles, (10), Although usually packed in small, half-pound cans, the turis fish some- New England's first golf tourney Pitt ‘With Their Fifth Conse- cutive Victory (By The Associated Press) Carl Hubbell’s already famous abil- ity to pitch his best when the going gets tough once more “had enthroned him as New York's baseball idol Sat- urday and had virtually wiped out the pennant hopes of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Beaten in the first game of the im- portant series between the Pirates and the league-leading Giants, Hubbeil same back Friday to defeat the Bucs 2 to 1 in the fifth and final clash and sent the Giants on to Cincinnati with a 6's game lead.: The Pirates won three of the five games, but their failure to take the final clash left them with only faint pennant hopes and installed the Chi- cago Cubs as the next big threat to the Giants. While the Pirates lost, the Cubs beat the’ Boston Braves again, 8-3, and climbed into a vir- tual tie for second place. Next week the Giants will tackle a six-game se- ries at Chicago, Cubs Continue Onward The Cubs gained their second-place tie by battering Ben Cantwell, Leo Mangum and their successors for a dozen hits while Guy Bush pitched steadily. It was their fifth straight victory and their 47th in 62 home games so far. The fourth pldce St. Louis Cardi- nals swept their series with the Phil- lies by winning 6 to 5 despite Chuck Klein’s 27th homer. Silas Johnson, Cincinnati pitcher, finally found the victory he had been seeking since May 26, holding Brooklyn to six hits to win 12 to 0, Washington's Senators avenged Thursday's defeat and- maintained their 814 game lead in the American League by walloping the Chicago White Sox 11 to 2 to give Al Crowder ‘is 22nd mound victory. The New York Yankees beat the St. Louis Browns 5 to 3. Jimmie Foxx’s 42nd home run of the season aided the Philadelphia Athletics to a 9-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians, their third straight. The Detroit Tigers took two decisions from the Boston Red Sox, each 4 to 3. Score by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Athletics Hammer Indians RH Cleveland .. 000 020 0o00— Philadelj 2 004 000 32x— 9 1 Ferrell, Hudlin and 4 and Cochrane. Rese Yanks Beat Browns ena St. Louis .. New York .. Coffman, Braxtan. Gray and ley; Van Atta and Dickey, RHE Chicago .... 100 001 0—2° 5 4 Washinton” nozt 201, 2OX—iL 13. 6 % , Gast ga ent E 1 0 in 000 000 030— 3 003 110 O0x— 5 1 Hems: Faber and wder and Sewell. ri Sow Boston 112 000. 000 Osis ‘Marberry, Auker, t ny Welland, Kline, Welch NATIONAL LEAGUE en rot H ay Brookly: Cincinnati i Suot breeted J Queen of the nation’s women golfers Virginia Van Wi New York, Sept. 9—(#)—Take it from Benny Leonard, who ought to know, Tony Canzoneri had better place his reliance on boxing skill rather than hitting power if he wants to regain his lightweight championship from , Barney Ross in the Polo Grounds ‘Tuesday night. Himself one of the greatest lightweight title-holders in pug- ilistic history, Leonard thinks Tony will make a serious mis- take if he fights Ross with the idea of putting the Chicagoan Hauser Will Win Most of Slugging Honors in League Frank Sigafoos of Indianapolis Apparent Batting Cham- pion, However Chicago, Sept. 9.—(—Frank BSig- afoos of Indianapolis looks like the new batting champion of the Ameri- can Association, but for all-around batting and records the top honors go to Joe Hauser of the Minneapo- lis Millers. Unofficial averages including all of ‘Thursday's games e: the sched- uled night contests show that Siga- foos holds a seven-point margin over Radcliff of St. Paul. Hauser was virtually certain of taking four titles in as many depart- ments. He has clinched the home has shown undisputed superiority over her sis: nd how about looks? ! Benny Leonard Says Tony Canzoneri __ Had Better Rely on His Boxing Skill’ Athletic Boosts Both His Batting run tile with a record of 66 circuit ponte Major Leaders (By New national They’re Nation’s New Doubles Champs econd consecutive time, In that opinion Leonard has Plenty of company. Some com- Petent critics believe the worst things that ever happened to Canzeroni were the knockout victories he chalked up over Al Singer and Jack (Kid) Berg late in 1990 and early in 1931. Canzoneri wound up hard train- ing Friday, boxing five fast rounds against three sparring partners. Ross, at Lake Swannanoa, N. J., took a two-mile jog early in the day but did no boxing. blows and the total base production with a new high record of 424, one higher than the old mark set in 1922 by Jay Kirke of Louisville. _ He also Jeads in runs scored with 149 and in runs batted in with 174— 11. short of the league record estab- lished in 1921 by Bunny Brief of Kansas City. Other individual leaders and prob- able champions in hitting are: Hits, Jeffries, St. Paul, 230; doubles, Siga- foos, 51; triples, Cullop, Columbus, ; stolen Andetson, Columbus, 31. St. Paul led in double plays with 168. Minneapolis led in team bat- ting with an unofficial .303 while the leadership in team fielding was a deadlock at 973 between Indianapolis and St. Paul. Heise of Columbus took the lead in the pitching race by running his sea- son's mark to 16 won and 5 lost, France has 392,500 miles of motor- ing roads and ranks first among European countries in this respect. Exports from the port of New York in 1927 totaled 10,461,159 tons of car- go. neapolis in the post-series play-off tor the ‘American Association pennant but Joe Lee and oe aad are nt of ing an my a regulation four-out-of- seven affair, will open at Columbus at 3 p.m. Tuesday. Night games will be played Wednesday and Thursday. ‘The teams will move the champion- ship series to Minneapolis, opening up there Saturday and playing until ‘one team has won four games. ‘Thomas Jefferson Hickey, president of the circuit, Saturday said the mag- nates as a whole were satisfied with whe 1933 season, which ends Sunday. Hauser ran his home run total to 67 Friday as Minneapolis defeated Milwaukee 7 to 3 and still has a chance to reach his goal of 70. Paul Dean, brother of the famous “Dizzy” of St. Louis Cardinal fame, won his 22nd game of the season Fri- day as he pitched Colmbus to a 9-to~ 6 victory over Louisville. Les Munhs of St. Paul ran his vic- tory string to 19 as the Saints defeat- ed Kansas City, 8 to 4. Third place in the Association standing was clinched by Indianapolis Friday night by a 2-to-0 victory over Toledo, Scores by innings: Saints Wallop Blues Kansas City ....000000103—4 8 S&t. Paul .........10€00012x—8 13 0 Roberts and Brenzel; Munn, Har- riss and Guiliani. Columbus Pounds bay Columbus . --100111410—9 15 Louisville - 000 200 103—6" 10 Dean and Gonzales; Weinert, Bass and Erickson, Thompson. Millers Crush Brewers RHE 011 000100—3 11 2 foung; A ss 4 Griffin. Clinch Third Milwaukee Minneapolis Presnell and claw, Hilcher an Indians Toledo .. -000000000—0 8 Q Indianapolis .20000000x-—-2 4 0 Bachman and Healey; Turner and Riddle. i Jimmie Foxx and Lou Gehrig Snare Most of Honors and Home Runs Leads; Yank Improves New York, Sept. 9—(P)—It was. {Jimmie Foxx against Lou Gehrig for major league batting honors in tha last week and Foxx captured most of them. While National League aces were Just breezing along with Chuck Klein so far out in front no one expected to catch up to him, Foxx put on a hit- | ring waded py ee both his home {Tun record ai ting at in \the week which ended with, Friday’ games, Gehrig charged right after him, gaining second place in the American League race. Foxx hit safely 11 times and five of his wallops were homers. {This gave him 42 circuit swats and sent his batting mark up six points to .364. Gehrig made nine hits, in- eluding three homers, and brought his average to 335, Al Simmons, second a week ago, lost down to fourth seven points and went three points behing Place at .329, Heinie Klein's three-point loss reduced average to 378 while the mola man, Bud Davis, lost just and wound up with .344, (Tribune Special Service) len: N. D,, Sept. 9. — Poi golfers from throughout central western North Dakota are pee the of here Sunday to participate fourth annual Wilton invitations tournament, according to H. W, Grey, member of the committee in charge. rf doubies champions, George. M. Lott Jr. (left) of Chi- cago and Lester Stoefen of Los Angeles, are shown at Brookline, Mass., atter defeating Frank Shields and Frankie {a @ gruelling, three-hour final tha’ Lott the wi it required 65 tb games fora Parker for the title ision, John Singer DISTINGUISHED en PAINTER. ‘There are YARDS to an Ameri Morrow Castle ig it the entr; 1 © the barbor ‘ance its,

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