The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 3, 1933, Page 6

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aeeees 2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1938 ; s _ Traditional Color and Excitement Prevail for World Series Opener | MWYOR GUNS (PIGSKINS WILL HAVE BUSY WEEK-END IN NORTH DAKOTA AND WASHINGTON’S | OUR BOARDING HOUSE - By Ahern NODAKS. BISON AND [Cart Hubbell and Jim Foxx Found ! | SENATORS ARE sel MANY HCH SCHOOLS Most Valuable by Sporting News : ! ZB WEY, LISEN (cET A LOAD OF THIST Y “PARROT CAUSES ARREST OF NOTORIOUS GANGSTER MOB- A PET PARROT OF LY Entertain Hopes That President Giant Left-Hander Second Since a WW : Received Unanim- ‘ Roosevelt Will Toss Out | PATROLMAN DENNIS, MADDEN UTTERED | HAVE SERIOUS TLS Who'll Win Series? Joey, Sure! 1922 to on i First Ball | THE NAMES OF FIVE MEMBERS OF THE bests J & po eee DREADED, MYSTERY SPIGOTTY GANG- ‘ ‘ SPIGGOTY, WHO WAS SHOT LAST YEAR, }} TALKED THE SARGON| . | University to Play George Wash- Louis, Mo, Oct. 3—For the wc» Ay i TERRY HAS COLD IN EYES "REFUSED TO NAME OTHER MEMBERS - Saaee * ington, A. C. to Face - since the most valuable : pea nena oe ~ EGAD— | ‘ : inaugurated in . . OF HIS MOB-TIP By PET PARROT = i Morningside . : : : : ote ot ths cla : Hubbell Will Pitch for National; LEADS POLICE IN COMPLETE ROUND-UP Sane sae fi i pubis tba cat : ahd Opposing Moundsman Vos ieee aes MINOT WILL PLAY DEMONS aaa FOR MURDERS, HOLDUPS REWARD Glanta, Unannounced AND KIDN, APPING —” a A : val- : Devils Lake-Jamestown Contest; eta. al Shi Se URGR GBS Will Share Prep Sched- ‘nnual wor! series drama, a lay without a plot, where heroes and vil- ule Spotlight lians alike make their parts and the ait Pee Un cea. millions watch (By The ) { The stage is the Polo Grounds, the Football takes a second breath as been actors Bill Terry's Giants and Joe it plunges into a packed October ibbell’s Cronin’s Senators, champions of the schedule in North Dakota this week. League also marks i ‘This week marks the first general 1924 that s pitcher . i Probable Lineups unlimbering of all college elevens into Sia pases “Vas For Openin; Game the fall campaign’s weekly series of winning the s | engagements. College games feature the two leagues. New York, Oct. 3—(%}—The | George Washington at the University GIaaEhs in he Beate Probable lineups for the first game | in a night game and Morningside at sion, Chuck Klein of the world series today: | the State Agricultural college. ing selected in 1932, after Washington (A.L.) New York (N.L | Members of the state intercollegiate in 1931, It is the fourth Buddy Myer 27 Joe Moore If | onterence playing are Ellendale Nor- er has been named twit fers Leon Goslin rf Hugh Critz 2b \\ mal at Wahpeton School of Science; Gehrig having . ‘ Heinie Manush If Bill Terry 1b | \ Jaivestown ‘College et Thlnoe esrinal Preteshune of Travis cre a | Paro. \ ) and Dickinson and Valley City state . : ong | Joe Kuhel 1b George Davis ef Suns oF tA sence 2 teachers college. : : . q Ossie Bluege 3b Gust Mancuso ¢ Important tilts in the prep school Luke Sewell c J (Blondy) Rryan ss i Soret aba, GitLs Casares dane: : night game, Devi vs. James- “ . aivin cevaee pct mnie? /SOAnSOn Thinks Senators Will Win. 2 ee bee ‘ or Walter mtewait > [eseret BM for eM cd Man-;° dishwashing these days, apie lpted ” 4 i al vs. Valley City. far away from the ro of her |imectame ioe mest> | Series in Not More Than Six Games 3c 2 a 7 y | yg ie rouine of ter san Pranciso wtchen: on tage Ma nteay those which saw Minot battle Fargo) the mother of the youngest manager in the major | (National league): first base, George Moriarty (American league) | 3 Ta ° to @ scoreless tie, Bismarck defeat Cronin, skipper of the Washington Senators. And will second | base: Charles Ptirman {Thinks Hubbell May Give Giants Judge Wally Steffen Commuting Mandan, Devils Lake win & 14-to-6] tors win the world series? ‘That-broad smulle you see is the answer. Emmet Ormsby (American league). | TWO Wins At Most in | ° ¢ __ |rington defeat Valley City. ‘Weather—Cool and partly cloudy. Diamond Classic Again as Tartans Open Practice cad sua ee DEATH P UTS STRIBLING DOWN National and American Leagues in bahaeaacaa rae | ord - FOR COUNT AFTER ACCIDENT that order. All the color and ex- BY WALTER JOHNSON Pittsburgh, Oct. 3.—(?)—“Wally” , sweatshirt and baseball pants out of National League: Carl Hubbell, New citement of tradition and long stand- York Giants, 64; Chuck Klein, Phil- (As tol » NEA Ser-|Steffen, the Chicago judge who/the locker room, and hastened out on A Se ae . Hartnett, Chicago mie "i ee pert Elie) [benched himself as Carnegie Tech's) tiny ‘Stongo ve now ‘nines were get- Bislenee, Normal st Wahpeton |prominent Heavyweight Suc-|| Loses Last Fight | Oi, 2 vray Breer tons oar 8 curtain rises Tuesday at 1:20 ce eer ork eee daar apes ~~ ae he oe : oot, Howard Suid or Jamestown at Minot ferns. cumbs to Injuries Suf- Bae a feat . ‘ » mM. .T.). fi tween. Lovew kinson at Valley Teach- ;. Diszy Dean, is ‘Through two days here, three more ae ae fess of ine an erld | windy City and Pittsburgh, is riding | coach, went into a Recon ore al ers. fered Sunday ponent =e in Washington, then two more here, to riberd < debi vate ee la the same old trains again. ly to thresh out the prob! Per-! Devils Lake at Jamestown. 2 Sc ill epee Grounds. sae a , f an Stiboville when pesimnpage te ietatuneen arent 20 good, but] Grand Forks at Gratton. Macon, Ga., Oct. 3—William Law. ] In the last analysis it seems to me caus "round. with the judge’s help, a big veteran rence (Young) Stribling, Georgia Series Facts that a club with power, plus a fine} ‘The training season was hardly un-|line and a fair backfield, Harpster, an heavyweight, died at 6 a. m. (E. 8. T.) defense plus a good pitching staff der way before the judge hopped off| all-American halfback on Steffen’s injuries received Sun- (headed by the best of them all, Alvin a train in Pittsburgh, grabbed his old! 1928 team, is on the hopeful side. Minot at Bismarck (night). ences von Giant, eds)| [Creme wil teee nS 8 good, xT the; 2 ex] to see Sentinel Butte at Beach. : tional League Champions, vs. |!Pooa"derense bur lackieg in Punch at from these box mea, and have besten | He Drills Nats Ray at Watford City, ptenane Washington Senators, American || fP09 fy . |all the good American League pitchers Oakes at Ellendale. At his bedside ee niscecteaieanll » 43 jungo, Ene ee aan |at one time or another, On Screw Ball | Miser st Lidgerwood. trainer, his wife, “Claire, erect @ m _ Schedule — First’ game Polo || sruppent may stop the Washington Aap | Portland at Hatton. Sees cin necaen following the 3. Grounds, New, York, | Tuesday: ||nitters. But T believe he is the only| If this were to'be a pitching prob- | 5 Lisbon at Enderlin. patient at the hospi rs pee bene, Polo Grounds: Wed- |New. York itcher, with the possible/lem—leaving the Nats superior bat- Maddock at Carrington. jimmy Se ee fourth and fitth Jion of Fitssimmons, who can (ting out of it for » moment-—I reefer Crosby at Minot (Beaver Kits), = p : Philadelphia, 49; Lou Gehrig, games, Griffith stadium, Wash- ||tO°S> On the other hand what are ithe Nate’ staff to that of the Giants, Bottineau at Leeds. : York, 47; Charley Gehringer, Detroit, Py ington, Thursday. Fridey and Sat-.|ithe Giants going to do against such’ Offered my cholce as a manager be- Cavalier at Langdon, ° Physicians : 32; Joe Cronin, Washington, 30; Al urday; sixth and seventh games, | rine pitchers as Whitehill, Stewart and tween the two staffs, I would take St. Mary's, Bismarck, at Linton. if necessary, Polo Grounds Sunday |i Wesver—and, if they start him, Bob| Washington's. : ee es eeanen, and Monday, Series decided on || Weave and J ae | athe ine men of the Nats’ pitching Wilton at Max. ee pi. of seven games ‘Sooner or later the Washington |department are Crowder, Whitehill, Turtle Lake at Underwood. Times of kames—1:30 p. m. (E. | nats will begin to click. ‘There is no/stewart, Monte Weaver, Al Thomas, Rhame at Bowman. § T) dally, except Sunday game at | 70%. “Ruth among them, but every|Alex MeColl, Bob Burke, fd Chap- Marmarth at Hettinger. NGfanegers--Willam Hf, ‘Terry, (mation the club hits hard, Tt will be|man and Jack Ramell Ray Prim, Ba Giants, and Joseph Cronin, Sen- ||* stiff test for the Giants defense. neweomer, not el le, but un- oe Re tit panne pitehere= (| Next to the nore of Crowder, I ea: | outantta gee that te Nats hve e Jimmy Dykes, Chicago, 2; Irving Carl Hubbell, Giants: Alvin Crow. |)Pect the finest pitching for, Washing- been practicing with thelr bats against) Has Line Problem Burns, St, Louls, and Dusty Cooke, er, Bard Whitehill oF Walter |niched by Walter Stewart, He is the| "To sum up, the Glants will be going Boston, 1. Penne eesciea ats $5.50; | kind of smart, steady southpaw base-|up against “st as good a defense as Are| cluding thoes atte leagues and The unreserved grandstand a $3.30; | Ball men like to ave on shale /balli tate sown, willles berene Leguwrd Four Backfield Veterans Are Sporting News are: : bleachers $1.10. | elube. ts a. Pitehing statt pales Back, Including McDon- American League: George isler, . ‘ || Besides Hubbell and Fitz, there is 2 | National League, and the Giant &t. Louis, 1922; Babe Ruth, New York, good chance for Hal Schumacher to/ing staff will have to throw the ball ald of Mandan 1923; Walter Johnson, Washington, cept for the possibility of bad weather, |see service in the box. He has a fine|past an offensive power the like of 1924; Roger Peckinpaugh, Washing- the scenes will shift and flow until|sinker ball, but his youth may count|which they have not seen all season. a oD. D. oct. 3, ton, 1925; George Burns, Cleveland, one team or the other has captured|against him in a series where the| It is my guess that Hubbell will win a peed ade pa 1826; Lou Gehrig, New York, 1927; four performances and the world|pressure is high and where so much |a game, and that Fitz and Hubbell will “ they're ee fe Peggercary pve ing Mickey Cochrane, Philadelphia, 1928; championship. is expected of a pitcher. Paul Der-|win another. Washington takes the) calling Ray Prim, above, in 1933 Dickinson state teachere college |Al Simmons, Philadelphia, 1929: Joe The weatherman says they'll have|ringer, a fine pitcher for the Car- |other four. | Washington these ‘a y Alphonse | cleven for the opening game at Valiey |cronin, Washington, 1990; Lou Gehrig, fair conditions for it, if not the very|dinals a couple of seasons ago, but ——____ is a left-handed screw ball art- bis mates (call “Tutty,” | champions of the last 10 years, but he |Cleven,for the opening ga sUe¥ |New York, 1931, Jimmy Foxx, Phil best, cloudy and cool and a trifle bet-|when he got into the world series NOT PRINCELY WAGES ist the Nats got trom Albany. Plotnickt better/Giint have the power to become a| City fe ere 1932, ter gulted to football. x, | uainst the A's he could not get the) me 3.009 drivers employed by har-| He pitches to Cronin's boys in ee nt ae aaa toe the aimed ne sdgetie: amy Vance, Roosevelt, over late. i battin: ractice to get them “Pa”, managed Brooklyn, % due here Tuesday morning from Chi-| ‘The Giants, besides Hubbell, Pits- /Déss Tacing, average $2,500 a year In} Banting | practloe to get thee nA of the tall term last week, With four |r outs, 1625; is cago, whys Seay an Jariiatien fo simmons and Scruamnaches, bare: ees pa es, heralded screw ball Hubbell attend opening game an out/man Bell, Adolfo Luque, fat will try to breeze past them in the first ball, added an imposing|Clark, Leroy Parmelee, John Salve- | SWITCH MADE HIM eg iey ‘ touch to the picture. son and Glenn Spencer. I do not ex-! Ralph “Pep” Young never hit left- ‘There was little prospect of the|pect the Nats to have trouble with handed until he reached the major! spent 15 years with the New York crowd for the opening game exceed-|any of these latter pitchers. The Nats leagues. The former big leaguer, now | Highlanders, Phillies, Detroit and the i; . F ing 40,000 which is 9,000 under the|have looked at better pitching all year | aaseball coach at Temple university, | Athletics, capacity of the Polo Grounds. Therc 1982, 1 ition, will : : Foss Columbus Leading OUT OUR WAY By Williams | : iol Pea gaa In Little Series the athletes started ae ee ee Tne eee S| esta, ¥, Got, 2—in—Paul swarming yp before the game. eget Dean held the Bison to four hits as gh, left-handed €arl mune | HAAH-HAAH - GuLe— Boy, EF wes 7 would around 190 pounds. Fetch. |Columbus defeated Buftalo 7 to 2. ‘The uncertainty over Cronin’s pitch. HE ONLY Wore ‘EM EBBER WEAR bs \ may be faking four-to-three margin in the ing choice has disorganized the bet ONCE! HAH-HAN~ HEE | DEM PANTS AGiN, een which ha: < RHE 2 is been very light. Th HE BORROWED ‘EM OFF DEM PANTS Gwe Columbus.. 001 200 400—7 10 tossed han Ww és q posts, Gardiner he = epenpley PAGE pane ' ES. AN HE'S Gor to GT TER BE DE STRONG |*2','s . Butfalo take your choice, proposition, both! ‘em Bacw LIKE THEY WAS. Yj CHARACTOH AN’ for the first game and the series. 1 ‘The very best of condition prevail- STRONG CHARACTERS 1S BEND HIM DERE LIKE THET — THEY MAME war! } Mamtelecky and Motiee.9r9. Demoun: gen managed ape al ENERY THING AROUND THEM id A d grected | Fights Last Night ‘Yankee Stadium. Terry Z — - ji lac Bryneldson, Chapin, Paris—Marcel Thil, “nny that his hitting skill was not 7 : Sy Huffman,| France, the asjlment caused h iy ‘ + 157, Cuba, (15). in the camp of the iearacitee, Ee cog a, tt. , Marseilles, Savoldi Beats Self ee IL, stopped Nick Silo, Johnson City, Til, 150%, (1); Danny Neenan, 136, Chicago, Ay stopped » With Odd ‘Drop Kick’ ef, and Orlane, @O, ee US New * New York, Oct. 3.—UP)—"Jumping” ing B. aE The UNIVERSITY. OF -MICH- IGAN was the first to admit, women, Philadelphia was the capital of the United States from 1790 to 1800.

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