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Luck I—1 SELL THE PARROT To HAS TH’ FINGER ON : OFFICER MADDEN FOR #12—~HE SOME GUYS ALL TH | | " cronin Shocked as Hubbell set HAS THE DRATTED BIRD FOR AWHILE~{¢ TIME 7—BLOKES - | IS FORMIDABLE T00 - His Men Down in 4-to-2 THEN IT NAMES THE SPIGOTTY LIKE You AN? ME \ Victory | GANG MEMBERS, WHO HAVE ONLY GET TH’ | ee { BAFFLED THE WHOLE POLICE FORCE BREAKS IN ODR ) | Expects Army, Under New| | FOR OVER A YEAR, AS TO THEIR SHOELACES,OR JI} | ind Going Dit ml CALLS ON HIS WHEEL HORSE! IDENTITY THEN “THE POLICE ARCHES ? wy «| ~—«CCoach, to Find Going Dit- ; CAPTURE THE WHOLE GANG, AND HECK, DIDNT H ficult This Year ' J Young Mel Ott Led Terrymen in; MADDEN GETS A HANDSOME I_GET BLOOD ' pee nto MAES Ae 10-Hit Assault as Series REWARD! ALL POISONIN’ ONCE, INAVY EXPECTS BIG SEASON| ee; 0 BECAUSE OF THAT NALING Wes e ul RSE SHOE; a : INFERNAL PARROT Ho! New York, Oct. 4—()—Prowling WE HAD SUCH A Temple, N. Y. U., Princeton and Tie esonry ees daa ace ‘ HARD TIME | Harvard Also Have Bright the lantern-jawed young leader of the SELLING 7 ! Prospects Washington Senators, rallying his! , hee. eas forces for the second game of the ' world series, and keeping a sharp j Bx JACK SUTHERLAND lookout for those fellows who told Pi sh, Oct. 4.—A good football him Bill Terry's Giants couldn't hit. be measured by the cali- It probably was less of a shock to opposition, not by the num- | ODDS SHIFT TO GIANTS | an | Meine cen Wedeclae shift | Lesh brid not) tit had inning established the New York Younes | percentage” of an : :! ig /° Wally Stewart loose from the ball THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1983 Al Crowder and Hal Schumacher to Pitch Wednesday’ s Contest BY GIANT SLUGGING, IN OPENING FRAGAS; as favorites to win the world | series. After the Giants had won Tuesday's opening game, Broad- | | way commissioners quoted 10 to 7 | | OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGADI CAN YOU IMAGINE SUCH By — SUTHERLAND THINKS | | Ov LADY HARD LUCK ‘PITTSBURGH OUTFIT! eleven that has rushed through a nicely built up schedule, merely because the form- “SINITORS STUN STUNNED FORDHAM AND COLGATE APPEAR BEST ELEVENS | IN EAST i ~__ Geore W ashi ington Key Men Who Face gton Key Men Who Face Nodaks Friday | Friday | f | on the Giants to win the series as || | had to play four compared with the 6-to-5 price Glass er offered before the series began, ARD LUCK os 08) strong op- with Weshington favored. Even HEADGUARTERS” A\ the minds of those ™ . \ money was quoted for Wednesday's | | | game with Hal Schumacher oppos- | | | ing Alvin Crowder on the mound. | him than he'd care to admit that Carl Hubbell, the lanky screw ball king of the National League pitchers, struck out 10 of his own mighty bats- men and allowed but five hits, all ‘singles and a couple of them scratchy, as the Giants raced away with the opening clash of the annual inter- | league battle, 4 to 2. Wednesday Cronin definitely nom- | inated “General” Alvin Crowder, his right-hand star and wheel horse all feason, to work the second game; ‘against Young Al Schumacher, the Giants’ right-handed sinker ball sen- sation. ‘With the series shifting Wednesday night to Washington for games there ‘Thursday, Friday and Saturday before | returning here for games Sunday and | Monday if seven are necessary to; ‘bring one side four victories, it be- hooved Cronin to get his best in from now on before it suddenly be- comes too late. Headed by Mel Ott, the young right- fielder John McGraw picked out of a high school in Gretna, La., eight years ago, the Giants ruined Cronin’s pitching strategy Wy belting Lefty! AN EYEFUL OF FOOTBALL | \Cubs Favored Over Chisox in City Series Because of Pitching ting Edge | American Leaguers Have Won) 12 of 20 Previous Chi- | cago Meetings Chicago, Oct. 4—(#—The White Sox and Cubs were to renew their municipal baseball fued Wednesday in the first game of the city series at Wrigley Field. Like the world series, the city title | Will be awarded on a basis of four | Victories. tween the north and south-siders, the Sox having won 12 of the previous meetings. One ended in a tie. Manager Charlie Grimm’s Cubs have been made the betting favorite because the team is well fortified with good pitching, in which the Sox are sadly lacking. — | Fights Last Night It is the 20th series pe- | Prosi who know football there will be little doubt as to its su- periority over the latter. Sutherland Then, too, a schedule might have four teams on it, but they might be so nicely sandwiched between setup con- | tests that the edge will be taken off \vietory. On the other hand, some; {cards have important interseetional | games separated by contests with sec- tional rivals. These are hard. Pitts- burgh had such a card last year, and/ has another this fall. * * # | There are two teams in the enst | that have better than average chances! of finishing the 1933 season with win- ning records. While there are going to be lots of others who are likely to turn up with exceptionally strong teams, Fordham and Colgate, on pa- per at least, have the most cheerful pects. Fordham will be under the direction of Jimmy Crowley, former Notre Dame “horseman” and successful coach at Michigan State. He is taking the job held by the late Major Frank Cava- naugh, whose death shocked the foot- ball world this last summer. Crowley is a good football coach and at Ford- ham will get the most out of his ma- terial. Fordham has one of the Columbus Red Birds Cop Little Series Defeating Buffalo Club American Association Cham-; pions Invincible Behind Jim Winford Buffalo, N .Y., Oct. 4—(}—The | Little World series championship was | in the hands of the Columbus Red | Birds of the American Association | Wednesday as the result of their five- out-of-eight-games victory over the Buffalo Bisons of the International League. | ‘The Birds climaxed their drive to| the title Tuesday night with a 10-2 | victory in a game featured by the brilliant pitching of their tall right- hander, Jim Winford. Winford allow- ed only five hits and struck out al isons. ‘The Bisons qualified for the series inois. in oked ood tn Leach ir iil pe torn against the freshmen... Maroons dummy scrimmage. «. Coach Ossie Solem put Iowa's}. . . Reeves win pay Ue Wwad- squad through a signal drill... Min- cat freshmen Saturday. | by defeating Baltimore and Rochester | i | ares League; Moriarty and Orms- American League. Follow the Ball! _ By ART KRENZ { reasonably bright xk e ‘The real challengers for the pace- setters will be the Navy, where Rip Miller is looking forward to his best year since taking over the reins at the tawa, stopped Tommy McCarthy, 1324, Ogdensburg, N. Y., ( Frank Martin, Montreal. out- Pointed Horace (Lefty) Gwynne, (8); Babe Amos, Terre Haute, game in the third inning, touched toughest schedules in the east. Col-|in the playoffs of their league after Righthanded Jack Russell for four (By the * | gate will have few worries. j barely squeezing into the fourth qual- } hits in five frames, and then sub-| dle prspear nis bog xe Oe ifying position. : sided areal the a Al Thomas bourne 159, Enid, Okla. ienooked A number of last autumn’s leaders | ¢_—____ patents jase . } 4 their turn at ba: 2 4 " will not be so formidable. The Army, / Be esis cance was layed. bee gut Jaric ‘Lawson, 168, Brooklyn, tinder its new mentor, Lieutenant | | Around the Big ' Ten unexpectedly crowd o aes Davidson, who is replacing Major |{¢———_-—-—_-—-—- nearly 47,000 cash customers. | | gecgurel, Mo—Eddie Burl, 125. | Ralph Sasse, will find the going rocky. (By The Associated Press) ‘ Probable lineups for the second | |e : 4 pointed | The Cadets lost only to Pittsburgh last! tmgiena worked on Minnesova, fore | game: i Benny Schwarte, 123, Baltimore, {year and thelr 1982 victims will be! mations” “Duste Surie out de aoet | : ‘ ‘Washington New York i] iD Jose, Calif—Tony gunning for them. Harvey Harman's peyeia pean peat . Thoroughly | Myer 2 Moore If | 147 "New York cutpoimed Babe [Penn eleven, also lost only to Pitts-| ‘i estened for “loafing,” Fay, and AUS. ; Goslin rf Critz, 2b } , New York. outpoin' burgh, but this year will be hit-by|f . at y. x | Manush if ‘Terry, 1b | Anderson, 147, San Jose. (10), | graduation and will have a difficult|/i™ were back on Michigan's team | Cronin, ss Ott, rf! Portland. Ore.—Young Peter time winning as many games. Brown| Tuesday . . . Dick Heekin, | } genuite, ct Davis, et| | Jackson, 135, Los Angeles, knocked | an4 Cornell face the same problems, |back, at Ohio state, 1s likely to start ! Kuehl, 1b Jackson, 3b oe pintaak Datto, 133, Manilla, Pittsburgh in turn must replace against Virginia Saturday . +++ Wisoon- | \ Bluege, 3b Mancuso, c Sak ik Warren Heller and three veteran line-| | Sewell, c Ryan, 58 | oe ee gre 120. New |men. Our 1932 opponents will vouch | i Crowder, p Schumacher, p | Tawar, soutmpinted “ocy Ponce, for the difficulty of this task. How-| Umpires:—Moran and Pfirman, Ottawa—Eddie Carroll, 136, ot- |C%e"> Pitt's chances must be rated as: { 5 Football was juct a big pain in the eye to Watner, end of the Whittier, Calif., college team, when it opened the season in a double- header with Southern California. Homer Griffith, Trojan back, is shown giving Watner an eyeful of fingers as he attempted to catch By ART KRENZ Pee Bangor Me, (0. yee eee: Persie where pent the mis “POP” WARNER OFFERS HIS FA- 7 oo a s outsta: players, farbold, MOUS CUTBACK New York Wrestler —| © minutes to a draw. Bobby Hein, PLENTY OF MATERIAL center, and Gordon Chung-Hoon, Wi t Mi li St. Paul heavyweight, used a back In 1 drop to defeat Frankie French, Ren- on MRED 8 wick, Iowa, in six. Zaleisies, Albert | Loset, Minneapolis vyweight, Minneapolis, Oct, 4.— (2) —Abe| threw Bud Levine, Detroit, Mich, with Kashey, New York heavyweight, de- | ,& headlock in 11:42, Stanley ‘Mysla- feated Andy Moen, Fergus Falls,’ jek, Minneapolis heavyweight, and Minn., in a one-fall wrestling match | Bobby Burns, Minneapolis, went 30 here Tuesday night. Kashey won with | Minutes to a draw. eae a series of flying headlocks after 39 JUST A YOUNGSTER minutes, 43 seconds. Montana has nine institutions of| Fred Perry, the English tennis star t Allan Eustace, Kansas heavomeisht, | higher learning; one to every 60,000; who beat Ellsworth Vines,’is only 24 jand Mike Brendel, Austria, wretied | Het oC pone ‘years old. halfback, will perform. Temple, with Pop Warner back in} the east after an absence of nine| years, and Columbia, where Lou Little} has his system fairly established,; should offer the stiffest sort of opposi- tion. N. ¥. U. will be There are other schools where the rise of one or two individual stars, hitherto unknown, may give the team [the necessary spark to carry it to the top. Such a team may be Fritz Cris- ler's renovated Princeton Tiger. ‘Nassau outfit made giant strides last year. Eddie Casey’s Harvard team will bear watching, and Jack Cannell’s Dartmouth Indians are about due “Pop” Warner, now coach at Temple University, diagrammed this cutback play for me as one of his favorites. ‘The play starts as if it were to be an end run. ‘The team lines up in a double wing- back formation which has two of the backs playing a yard or so outside of their tackles and a yard or so behind the line of scrimmage. The line is unballanced to the right. Eighty-five men turned out for the “A” and “B” football squads of the U. 8. Military Academy this year. PLENTY OF BEEF The University of Kentucky has tight 200-pound candidates out for its football team. BISMARCK TRIBU with SCISSORS in HAND TEL OUT OUR — Ul By Williams | an Hanson es eae How- % WHY, SURE! GWE THEM 7 Me, AEDST. TOONS. Dee SDE: BOGE: pee iH I WANT MY HANDS $0 : cane Take A’ PoKE. ne ee eee ee You'll find the practice inter- " FREE. WHoTIF T A (oJS) WANT MY Virginia had a sophomore team last HS FAVORITE Tee ae MERE Sou ee fal /and thee ae esting, helpful and profitable. PLAY, DISGRACE. MYSELF ON pny ia Lafayette, You'll find in The Bismarck WE OP IN TIME? ER, A MAIN STREET. Holy Cross, and Man- \ Tribune many items that are CUT BACK WHUT IF SOMEBODY BALAN B68 AGRI £05 8 sh0rs secare Ay TooK 4 Poke AT ME? place in the sun and may arrive this helpful to you in carrying out WHOT THEN ? Root, in his first year at your daily affairs ... menus, rs 4 household hints, fashion notes, health suggestions. And, probably most valuable of all, you'll find that clip- ping items from the advertisements not Madagascar lies ox Ine EAST COAST OF AFRICA. Farra- gut's famous words’ were, “DAMN THE TORPEDOES— ‘The Bismarck Tribune TRAMs! GO ‘AHEAD.” mens ie . ion xP The ‘Home Newspaper for Bismarck and the Missouri ad e; 4 ’