The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 25, 1933, Page 6

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RE NE RES ISON NERC R UT ee EY Sere THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1933 Bridges of Detroit Again Comes Within Ace of No-Hit Game SEIS BROWNSDOWN NORTH DAKOTA HAS HEAVY FOOTBALL SCHEDULE THIS WEEK \Giants Should Be ‘People’s Choice’ ' - Over Washington in World Series INODAKS DEFEAT WINNIPEG 20-12 IN OPENING FRACAS WITHOUT HIT UNTIL | ONE OUT IN NINTH Wins Crown as ‘Hard Luck Guy’! With Fourth Approach to Perfect Game MACKS WALLOP SENATORS Bucky Harris Resigns as Detroit Tiger Manager After Dis- mal Season (By the Associated Press) Finals returns on the Major League aseball season won't be in for another week, but young Tommy Bridges of the’ Detroit Tigers has clinched the} crown as the year’s “hard luck guy’ without further argument. Bridges, one of the bright spots in an othepwise discouraging season which finally impelled Bucky Harris to resign his post as Tiger Manager Saturday, has made four gallant ef- forts to add his name to the list of no-hit pitching notables and each time has failed by the slimmest of margins. His troubles started last year when a pinch hit by Dave Harris in the ninth inning cost him a no-hit game against Washington. Early this sea- Ti ee MENTION BABE RUTH | Detroit, Sept. 25—(#)—The fans are putting Babe Ruth's name first PETS EAT UP THE PROFIT OUTSIDE OF THAT, I HAVENT EVEN SOLD ATIN OF FISH FOODI-uUM-M- TIM BEGINNING TO WONDER IF | THIS |S A GOOD BUSINESS For Mi BIZ \N TWO WEEKS -HM-M- | OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD, SNUFFY ~I JUST HAPPENED TO THINK —~YOU KNOW, I HAVENT DONE ANY BUSINESS SINCE I TOOK OVER THIS PET STORE, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THAT #12 By Ahern | ITS TOO LATE NOW, BUT MY ADVICE TO A ONE HE CAN EAT, LIKE PARROT I SOLD TO OFFICER MADDEN { /ZA, A DELICATESSEN, JUSTIN CASE THINGS GO ZUNK? T LEARNED THAT ONE TIME.WHEN T HAD A STORE AN WAS, LEFT STUCK WITH SOO SOAP BUBBLE PIPES? Forks-Devils Lake, LARGER HIGH SCHOOL ' BLEVENS WILL BEGIN GUY BUYIN’ UP A | BUSINESS, |S TO PICK MAJOR COMPETITION Mandan- Bismarck, Fargo-Minot Tilts Carded MINOT UPSET BY MOHALL these days when they talk about | possible successors to Stanley R. (Bucky) Harris as pilot of the De- troit Tigers. Frank J. Navin, pres- | ident of the club, who accepted | Harris’ resignation Saturday with | regret, is saying nothing, except | that Ruth and a lot of other good | men have been suggested to him. Stunned By Week-End Upsets, Grid Fans Look Ahead to More Reverses Every Section of Country Will) ease son he hurled one-hit contests against St. Louis and the Senators and Sun- day he blanked the Browns again without a blow for 81-3 innings be- PETROLLE AND VAN KLAVEREN [North Dakotan Won Technical Nine Out-of-State Teams Will Play N. D. Elevens Over Week-End (By the Associated Press) A heavy schedule of high school and college football games faces North Dakota's sports fans this week as ad- ditional schools open the fall series to join numerous teams that already have seen action on the gridiron in regular games. The prep school program calls for first contests between representatives of the state's larger schools, and among them will be Grand Forks vs. Devils Lake, Mandan vs. Bismarck, and Fargo vs. Minot. Other games include those between Valley City and Jamestown. Members of the North Dakota In- tercollegiate conference generally play initial contests Oct. 6. An exception is Jamestown College, which lost a 12-to-6 verdict at St. Cloud, Minn., last week. The “Big Ten” high schools were victorious last week except Fargo, nosed out 7 to 6 by Aberdeen, 8. D., and Minot, loser to Mohall by a 7-to- 0 score. Grand Forks, Jamestown, Dickinson, Valley City, Devils Lake, Mandan, Bismarck and Williston all defeated their opponents. Nine out-of-state elevens will en- Northerners Make Spirit- |Outptayed 19 to 0 in First Half, i ed Comeback ;. Winnipeg, Sept. 25—(P)—A_ husky eft half, Jack Charbonneau of Fargo. | led the University of North Dakota) {20.8 20-12 victory over Winnipeg in an; jexhibition game that opened the rug- | by season here Saturday, Outplayed 19-0 for the first half, which was gov- ered by American rules, Winnipes (staged a spirited comeback, scoring 12] ‘paints while holding the visitors to a iciara’s ilone marker. } Commencing with a North Dakota irush, the v {touchdown after two minutes of play/ jwhen Capt. Raiph Pierce of the Sioux | lraced 90 yanis for a touchdown. Char-! perore. Tt took A/iine last year. 12 bonneau Kicked for the extra point. 15-yard penalty the Sioux | chances of another touchdown. Santa Clara Beats | California Again| Broncos Strike Hard When Op- portunity Offers to Score 7-0 Triumph Berkeley, Calif, Sept. Striking fast when a break of the game put them in possession of the ball 20 yards from the goal, Santa Broncos galloped down the | touchdown trail Saturday to score & 7-0 victory over California’s Bears ‘ors scored their, first) ang start the season on its way with an_ upset. Santa Clara. however, had done {t California down the to 0. Some 60,000 fans, largest opening 3.) —| 4 |day crowd ever assembled here, saw Opening the second quarter the! Coach Clipper Smith's fleet-footed Sioux worked the ball to the Winni-| squad defeat the Golden Bear team Peg 10-yard line but lost possession | which Coach Bill Ingram had pre- when they failed by six inches to} dicted would be the best he had de- make a down. Winnipeg kicked out| veloped here. of danger but the Nodaks neal cae ~———“—-_-—-—---- back to another score. A series of| | line plays brought play to the 5-yard | | Football Scores | line and Charbonneau plunged wens high 7; Fargo 6. fest tt Mohall 7; Minot 0. Pierce's kick for the extra point! nicxinson 55; Beulah 0. was blocked. Charbonneau gained his! yyoorhead Teachers 7; second touchdown after a forward pass, Charbonneau to Pierce, which advanced the ball to the 15-yard line, and again Pierce's kick for the ex- tra point was blocked. ‘Winnipeg’s offense was built|¢, around Carl Cronin, former Notre Dame backfield star, and Gregory Duluth ers 7. University of North Dakota 20; ‘Winnipeg 12. Santa Clara 7; California 0. St. Cloud Teachers 12; Jamestown ollege 6. South Dakota State 27; Northern Kabot, captain of Wisconsin’s 1932 WILL FIGHT AGAIN SATURDAY fore Sam West, the “villain” on @ occasion, and Art Scharein found him for singles. Tommy's two- hit hurling brought the Tigers a 2-1 victory in the first game of a double- header and they went on to clean up with a 5-2 triumph in the afterpiece as Carl Fischer allowed only five blows. Buffalo Leading In Little Series Bison Cops First Game From Columbus Red Birds By 7-to-6 Count Macks Pound Senators ‘The Philadelphia Athletics batted out an 11-to-4 victory over Wash- ington’s American League Champions.| oojymbus, O., Sept. 25.—()—With ‘The Boston Red Sox beat the second-/ the first game of the Little World ser- place New York Yankees 10-8 in Alicg tucked away 7 to 6, the Buffalo game which produced 18 hits, nine’ Bison of the International League oe seo 16 walks, ...|Monday sought to make it two in a The Chicago White Sox and Cleve-|row over the Columbus Red Birds. land Indians divided a twin bill, col-|""mme american Association pennant lecting a total of 50 hits. The Sox won| winners, whose belated. elght-inning the opener 8-7 and the Indians came ray failed to tie the score Sunday, back to hammer out a 12-6 triumph. relied on Clarence Heise, leading hurl- Chicago and Cincinnati let’ the|er of the association, in their attempt pitchers have their say for the Na-|to square matters with the herd. tional League as they divided a pair of) Either Wilson, or Gallivan, whose games. The Cubs won 7 to 1 in the /relief pitching stood out in the first opener and Cincinnati won 1100. igame, were ready to take the box for New York Giants won the first) Buffalo. It was Gallivan who went to | Knockout Verdict in Their First Battle New York, Sept. 25—(#)—The first start of his comeback campaign a dis- mal failure, Jack Sharkey, former heavyweight champion, will begin all over again in a 15-round match with Tommy Loughran at Philadelphia Wednesday night. Sharkey was floored and decisively whipped by King Levinsky in Chicago the other night and may take another beating from Loughran if the clever Philadelphian can keep his chin out of the way of the Boston sailor's pow- erful right. Other major shows this week will be offered by Cleveland Tuesday night and by New York on Saturday. At Cleveland, Freddie Miller, of Cincin- nati, National Boxing association featherweight champion, meets Frankie Wallace of Cleveland in a 10-round non-title bout. In New with Boston 6 to 5, and the Braves won a five-frame after-piece, 5 to 2. The Brooklyn Dodgers saw thelr second game cut to five innings by darkness, but they had time to beat the Phillies twice, 12-7 and 5-2. ‘The Pittsburgh Pirates and St. Louis Cardinals split a pair of 3-4 decisions. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Athletics Trounce Nesiiagen wall | Philadelphia .. 304 100 201—11 12 1 Washington ++. 010 200 100— 410 2 “Makeithan, Grove and Cochrane; Crowder, Prim, Chapman and Boul- ton. Bosox Wallop Yankees a4 New York 001 100 501— 8 8 5 . 301 000 24x—10 10 4 eee and Rensa; Wel- land, Rhodes. ‘Andrews and Ferrell. Tigers Beat Browns Twice «Pirst game) RHE! St. Louis .. Det . 000 000 OO1—-1 2 1 troit .. 000.000 02x—2 11 1 Coffman and Hemsley; Bridges and game) RHE St. Louis It. - 100 006 00x—5 5 Knott, Hebert and Shea; Fischer and Desautels. RHE 000 040 301—8 13 0 ‘Chisox, Indians Split cFirst game) 211 020 010—7 12 1 and re iy. Gierehnd ‘Hutchinson, att, Lyons a a Hildebrand, Connall and Pytlak. (Second game) a + 000 013 O11— 6 Chicago .. ont Cleveland Greasy. ler, Wyatt and Berry; | Lee and Spencer. ie | NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants and Braves Divide (First game) Cineinnatt 000 000 100-1 8 7 Chicago ......,. 000 400 2ix—7 13 1 Lucas Lombardi; Root and ae {Columbus |Sc. Louis .. + 200,000 000—2 5 Ale York, Billy Petrolle, Fargo, N. D., wel- terweight, and Bep Van Klaveren, speedy Hollander, will stage their long-delayed return match in the Lit- tle Ridgewood Grove arena. Petrolle von their first bout by technical ae knockout wren a rg ae Van Klav- 2 i ‘ leren's eye e referee to stop Score by innings: ae p | nostilities, seoes 201 220 000-711 2!) | | 5 "200 oot 0390-6 10 2] Dickinson Gridders Milstead, Gallivan and Crouse; Lee, | Teachout, Judd and Delancey. 1 the rescue of George Milstead in the eighth, and ended the Red Bird’s three-run rally by forcing the third out on a short pop. In the ninth he; fanned two and allowed the third bat- ter to hit an easy roller to second} Buffalo ... Mickey Cochrane, Athletics—Wal- loped three doubles against Senators. Earl Averill, Indians—Clouted hom- a 55 to 0 victory Saturday. er in each game against White Sox. “ * Collins and Davis; Carroll and Ou-| incon pall-carriers. The lineups: ten. Cards, Pirates Divide (First game) RH E} Pittsburgh ..... 030 000 100—4 8 0 «+ 000 221 O0x—5 14 2 French, Swetonic, Hoyt and Grace; Carleton and O'Farrell. (Second game) Pittsburgh . it Louis RH 000 000 400 1—5 12 000 400 000 0—4 9 Meine, Swift, Chagnon and Padden, Grace; Dean and Wilson. a / TAERE YOU Are! ‘ATS WHUT L GOT To PuoT LP wiTH! NOT SATISFIED WITH A SHIRTFUL , HE HAS To FILL HIS WAT. YEW Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 25—(P)— Dickinson high gridders romped through a fragile Beulah defense for Beulah was helpless before the massed interference set up for Dick- Offer Major Contests This | Week-End gage North Dakota teams Saturday.|Big Ten team. They were respon- They are Glendive, Wibaux, Plenty-|sible for the majority of the Winni- wood and Baker, Mont.; Moorhead,|peg gains. Cronin, Rebholtz and Mo- | by developments over the {week-end, football's major college |teams swing right into a long series of intersectional and . conference games this week. Recollecting the disasters of the last week when Southern Methodist, California and Virginia military all were beaten and Virginia, Clemson and Mississippi tied by teams of lower rating. The big fellows are facing the future with some apprehension. The material for further upsets is ready at hand. . Every section in the country will of- fer one or more major contests this week with the south and east the principal storm centers. Glenn 8. (Pop) Warner will make his debut as Temple's head coach Friday night when the Owls face South Carolina of the southern conference at Philadel- phia, The following day Army and Navy will open their campaigns, the Cadets against Mercer of Macon, Ga., and Navy against William é& Mary, which handed the Midshipmen a 6- 0 setback last year. Pitt will face Washington é& Jefferson at Pitts- burgh. In the south, Biff Jones’ Louisiana state Tigers and Tulane’s green wave will take their stand against south- west conference foes, Rice and Texas) A. and M., respectively. Northwestern will meet Iowa in the} opening Big Ten clash of the cam- Paign while three-other western con- ference outfits, Illinois, Indiana and Minnesota, will make their initial \st fon, Defeat Beulah 55-0) "tn te'ter west, tie tiret Pacitic Coast conference send Stan- ford against the University of Califor- nia at Los Angeles, Washington against Idaho and Oregon State against Montana. BEARS, SPARTANS WIN Chicago, Sept. 25.—()—Profession- al football commanded its share of interest in the sports world Monday following games in which the champ- ion Chicago Bears inaugurated the season with a 14-to-7 win over the Green Bay Packers, and the Ports- mouth Spartans beat the New York . McKenzie | Giants 17 to 7. The Bears were beat- Baggenstoss|en until the last minutes of play, but . Schiff|Left End Bill Hewitt, who learned his Agnew! football at Michigan saved the day Clarke‘ by blocking two kicks. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams —A GLUTTON FER PUNISH MONT ! THEMS BUMPS ON MY HEAD, | FROM “THROWIN CLUBS LP IN Fergus Falls and Crookston, Minn.;|berley pulled off three good end runs Sisseton and Lemmon, 8. D. New York, Sept. 25.—(?)—Still a bit: shaken The week's schedule: Monday Bismarck at Glendive, Mont. ay Minot Normal vs. South Dakota School of Mines at Rapid City. St. Thomas vs. North Dakota Ag- ricultural College at Fargo. Grand Forks at Devils Lake. Mandan at Bismarck. Moorhead, Minn., at Jamestown. Valley City at Carrington. Hankinson at Sisseton, 8. D. Fergus Falls, Minn., at Wahpeton. Enderlin at Oakes. Wishek at Linton. and the passing attack of Cronin to Rebholtz netted large gains. ‘Winnipeg gained four points from a safety touch and two kicks to the dead line in the third quarter. Winnipeg outplayed the North Da- kotans during the entire fourth peri- lod. A touchdown was secured when Neunschwander’s kick back of his goal line was blocked, Rebholtz falling on the ball. Another safety touch gain- ed when Rebholtz downed Neunsch- wander to cnd the scoring for the day. ‘The game ended with Winnipeg driv- ing for another touchown when they failed in several forward passes and gained yards in another. A crowd of |Ph! _| Frey. hits in opener; North Dakota—Smart, Huddleson, Jacobs, Neunschwander, Eckholm, Ol- son, Bentz, Wold, Nordell, Shepard, Morrow, Winslow, Johnson. Officials: C. L. Starbeck and Irv MOHALL YELLOW JACKETS TEAM toa 7-0 defeat, It was the first time| 2% Alan Davidson (second half). Mi aed the first ‘am the Y llow. ant e el jf scored, ‘iclans |hree runs against Yankees with dou- Sines 108. on the Magicians) -70"and single. lege 0. Yellowjacks Saturday and went down|<uPcinet (first half); Bob Thomson | Buck Walters, Red Sox—Drove in and two singles in first game; Carroll Normal 0. South Dakota U. 20; Yankton col- Utah 61; Mintana State 0. Towa State Teachers 13; Columbia college 0. Hampden-Sydney 7; Virginia 7. Southern California 39; Occidental Southern California 51; Whittier 0. Davis & Elkins 62; Langley Field 0. ‘Washington 13; Gonzaga 0. Luther 18; St. Mary's 0. Southern Normal, Springfield, 8. D., 13; Western Union 0. Stanford 27; San Jose State 0. Kentucky 46; Maryville 2. mal 0. Augustana (Rock Island, Ill.) 13; Towa Wesleyan 7. U of Miss. 6; Southwestern (Mem- is) 6. Iowa State 14; Central 0. Lidgerwood 6; Sisseton, 8. D., 0. Carrington 14; Hillsboro 7. Beach 14; Belfield 0. Langdon 13; St. James, Forks, 7, Johnny Frederick and Owen Car- roll, Dodgers—Frederick hit homer Grand held Phillies to four hits in short |Are Youngsters Who Have Made Good; Senators Are Sea- soned Veterans { New York, Sept. 25—(}—From most any angle that you may consid- er the world series proposition, the ;rollicking Giants should be the “peo- :ple's choice” over the Senators. Metropolitan “wise money” may favor the American League champions but from Dolgeville, N. Y., the home of Hal Schumacher, to Meeker, Okla., where Carl Owen Hubbell raises pe- ‘cans during the off-season, the hopes of the countryside will be largely with the smalltown boys who have made good in the big city with the Giants. “Who's who in baseball” is crammed with the exploits of all the Washing- ton regulars, ranging in big league service from three to 13 years, but at least a half dozen cogs in the New York machine were not conspicuous enough even to be mentioned with the game's “blue bloods” when the 1933 season started. The Senators also were for the 1933 campaign, but on a vastly different basis, Where Terry publicly announced and carried out a policy of rebuilding with youth and enthusiasm, Clark Griffith went out into the open market to engineer a series of whole- sale swaps for seasoned, certified base- ball talent. The Giants were satisfied to make the great experiment and gamble with relatively-inexperienced or fresh tal- ‘ent but the Senators looked careful- ly at all labels and took no chances. ‘This week, both championship teams have an equal opportunity to rest their stars, iron out the “Charley Horses,” discuss their strategy and mail tickets to the home folks. Major Leaders | AU es Dauentnieeinne (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Klein, Phillies, .372; Davis. Phillies, .345. Runs—Martin, Cardinals, 119; Ott. Hits—Klein, Giants, 100. Phillies, 215; Fullis, Phillies, 192. Home runs—Klein, Phillies, 28; Ber- ger, Braves, 26. Pitching —Tinning, Cubs, Cantwell, Braves, 19-9. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Foxx, Athletics, .352; Man- ush, Senators, .332. Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 135; Foxx, Athletics, 122, Hits—Manush, Senators, 214; Geh- 13-6; Centenary 18; Louisiana, State Nor-|inger, Tigers, 203. Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 47; Ruth and Gehrig, Yankees, 31, Pitching —Grove, Athletics, 24-7; Van Atta, Yankees, 12-4. Wibaux, Mont., at Beach. Hazen at Stanton. About #500 witnessed the game. The) yeount Union 20; Marietta 0. | he Garrison at Wilton. U.N.D. ‘Winnipeg Valparaiso 26; Eastern Ill. Normal 0. " e Crookston at Grafton. Pierce ab 'T. Moberly |__ Villanova 45; Westchester Teach- Leeds at Lakota. Cope fb * Olander |¢8 0 | n | n 1S Langdon at Cando. Charbonneau ih Rebholtz| N- ©. State 7; Catawba 0. { Crosby at Plentywood. oth Cronin| ,, Washington é Lee 0; West Virgin-| ———SWERICAN TEAGUE > ce ee Riechert le _H, Moberly |!#,0. : Washington .. 97 Bl SSE LaMoure at Lisbon. Sowle It Kushner South Carolina 31; Wofford 0. iNew York . "88 36 611 Edgeley at Monango. Schwartz lg Cerretti| William & Mary 12; Randolph Ma-| 7 68 [531 St. James, Grand, Forks, at Lari-| Bentz 4 Adeimann {°° 2 75 74 «508 more. Gehrke Christie Indiana State 13; Gary 0. -B 1 480 8t. Mary's, Bismarck, at Beulah. Goethe z Kaboe. Vanderbilt 50; Cumberland 0. oe ae Sherwood at Kenmare. Tait = eas 2S ae 40; College of the o 5 a Bhsidon at Milnor. Scoring: Touchdowns — Pierce,| Rice 7; Texas College of Arts and NATIONAL LEAGUE Hettinger at Rhame. Charbonnel. eee |tnausrien,0 New York . . 89 58605 ‘Washburn at ‘Turtle Lake. epee gers: a D, Rebholisnosien State 21; Southern Oregon | Pittsburgh . 68 563 Max at Underwood. seit ;Normal 0. 68 553 Hatton at Page. Milastoger he Sora kick to dead line—| ‘Texas A & M 38; Trinity 0. St. Lou 69 Cavalier at Park River. pacar U. of Callf., Los Angeles, 13; San) ® 70 1330 Seay, North Dakota. s.:-ss.. 7121 0-20) 'efenhingtons : ‘S00 Fargo at Minot. . Washington State 48; Whitman 0. 387 r at Sentinel Butte. i: + . lubsistence farming is Watford City at Stanley. Rennix, Stringer, Johnson, Mogal,| Kenmare 32; Stanley 0. unless we are willing to aac aoe Bowman at Reeder. _ |Stratton, Carrick, Penney, Morris.) Wahpeton 6; Breckenridge 0. tically everything that we now call de- sirable in our present civilization — Leonard J. Fletcher, engineer. ‘They have a lot of pygmie: at that fair. I bet no one ever sere to see how they were dressed—Judge Joseph B. David of Chicago. I don’t know how they can collect second clash. Mohall scored in the first period. distance. Twice it was lost on fum- bles on the 10-yard line. Another time, Mohall held Minot thrusts, re- gaining possession of the ball on the 6-inch line, The fourth time, Mohall held Minot for downs and gained pos- session of the pigskin on the 3-yard stripe. The lineups: o Mohall Minot Deits Is Amick Clark jt J. Mackenroth Smith ig Wampler Southam e P, Sundah! re Bussen, Asheim rt McDowell Bonderson re Arnold W. Barcus ab Balo E. Barcus th Lerbo Fitzmaurice th Kans L, Sundahl fo TT. Mackenroth riser" = Secs RRS NRE RG PERT. of Gel | Yesterday’s Stars | ———_—_—__—__ (By The Associated Press) hit ball.in second. Forrest Jensen, Pirates—Led attack with triple and two Charley Root, Cubs, and Benny , Reds—Root held Reds to five Frey’ blanked Cubs | with seven in nightipsn, cn fish Levinsk: «A glove comes swishing up out of nowh y's way of making hay while dler pounding away at the ex-champ against the ropes in 's shine. Jack Sharkey takes it on the chin! The picture shows the C! their recent fight, bau pre the verdict. I haven't got 75 cents, let {alone $75,000.—Claire Windsor, actress LEVINSKY’S WAY OF MAKING HAY ‘That's King- ' fish ped- which Levinsky Riad eS »

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