The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 7, 1933, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 19338 New York Giants Hope to End World Series Struggle Saturday HALSCHUMAGHERIS DEMON AND SAIN SELECTED TO START | ~ AGAINST SENATORS General Alvin Crowder Appar- ently Will Go to Mound For Washington OUR BOARDING HOUSE GOING AROUND WITH YOUR NOSE RIDING HIG! AN’ GIVING US THAT | MOOSE SNORT? WHATS YOURE LIKE THE GUYS WHO GO AROUND TOS SOUND IMPORTANT MAKE A SALE OF A GALLON OF IMPORTED GOLDFISH WATER, IN YOuR PET SHOPPANY: | LITTLE THING GOES To RYAN AND HUBBELL HEROES A SANGLING TWENTY IT ALL ABouTe DID YOU /72 KEYS ON A RING, CMON § HAUL NOUR SNOOCT DOWN! YOU'RE COMING MINOT AND LINTON 'Jamestown’s Blue Jays Wallop RUN ROUGHSHOD IN | FRDAY GONTHSTS|MANUSH AND GEHRIG TIED FOR SECOND IN SWATTING| “ “3 rca’ PIRATE PILOT? By Ahern | y Bismarck Walloped 25 to 0 While St. Mary’s Loses By 33 to 0 Fail to Break Deadlock in Last Two Games; Foxx and Klein Champs Manush Chased from Thrilling YOUR HEAD, LIKE TO A LOW | 11-Inning Contest Won by SHAMPOO ES BRIDGE? MAGICIANS CLASSY TEAM SOAP? VEO) “ ° sella acta New York, Oct. 7—(7)—With Jimmy New Yorkers Washington, Oct. 7.—(AP)—Those | nerve-wrecking New York Giants Sat- urday reached for the baseball cham- | Pionship of the world, just a single step away after one of the most dramatic duels in world series his- tory had swung them two games up on the dazed Washington Senators. The Giants emerged victorious, 2) to 1, in a tremendous 11th-inning cli- max. Up to that point each had) seored a single counter. Bill Terry, Giant playing manager, put his team out in front in the fourth with a nomer far into the temporary bleach-! ers in center field. | The fighting Senators came back/ to tie it up in the seventh when Luke | Sewell's single drove in Joe Kuhel,} who had got on on a bunt and been| sacrificed to second by Ossie Bluege. | The exhausting 11-inning battle roared for three full hours Friday through the Clark Griffith stadium, flung Carl Hubbell and blonde John Ryan high among baseball’s heroes, | packed thrill on thrill until the ner- ves of 27,000 sang like kona nen carried Monte Weaver to the heig! —_ and then dropped him, and! wound /Colonials Riddle Line; Shepard ® sttong wind at its back. George up with police smuggling an umpire i i ‘Washington received the kickoff and safely from the park after he had put} Of Bismarck Figures in |Pierce kicked to F. Parrish who re- a player out of the game. Nodak Sc: turned 20 yards to his own 30-yard Washington still reverberated with | oda ‘ore line. The Colonials reeled off a first the after-affects of it Saturday. | an So ‘The New Yorkers, with a thiree-to-| one lead in games, sought to close out the inter-league champions’ strug- gle Saturday behind the pitching of young Hal Schumacher, winner of the lity of North Dakota's line to score a second game in New York. a Crowder Probable Choice Bb petting Memorial stadium here viceked and went out of bounds on “General” Alvin Crowder, Washing- the 50-yard line. The Colonials ton's veteran righthander, was JOe|, ta defence the Colonie aeorti oes marched to the North Dakota 26-yard jone counter in the first half, another |pn Where the Sloux held for downs, in the third period, and then scored |Falgren circled right end for 12 yards, twice in the last quarter as the Sioux | ‘Hen Pierce quick-kicked over the goal ‘The odds rocketed sky high weakened. But with Kupcinet, reg. |/ne and the Colonials took the ball on such possibility. their own 20-yard mark. Carlin re- "Commissioner Ee. M. Landis had poem Who has been out of the /turned the punt to the North Dakota Umpire Charley Moran and his three | evn with & broken wrist, returning /44 yard line and on the next play mates on the carpet Saturday ex-|'0 action in the closing minutes of the | Charbonneau fumbled and the Colon planing Just what brought about the |Contest, the Sioux came back fighting |iais recovered. Led by Bomba, big of Heinle Manush,! Wash-/*nd swept almost the length of the |runback, George Washington plowed field for a score, with Kupcinet plung- through the North Dakota line to the eee shortly before the game|ig.vard line as the first quarter It was the first defeat for North | "ded. Dakota on its home field since the Haskell Indians won in 1929, 13 to 6, players mixed in one tangle after an-| George Washington scored first the Geor; i other. Manush wound up ‘chased| with Bomba pushing over a touch-|sng MeCerver: tone a eee] from the field of play, while the en-|down in the second period from the |Parrish, who ran to the North Da- raged faithful screamed and raved |two-yard line after a long run by Mc-|yota 36-yard marker. Bomba barely and swore that Moran, who thumbed|Carver had placed it there. Baker! made g first down in four tries at the the outfielder away, would never get|Kicked the extra point. line, then McCarver broke away off off that premises intact. He cid, but oe i conten Bits pee only through the intervention of po- ichdown for visitors in the|,, Hee who escorted him safely 'on his|third period and Baker again kicked | Went {2 the two-yard line before he way to a hotel. bg ich igh ahr second attempt, Bomba took the ball Buddy Myer, Senators’ second-base-/_ Bomba rushed over for # another !cver for a touchdown. Baker kicked man, opened the sixth with a single|counter soon after the final quarter the extra point and ‘the score was through short and “Goose” Goslin|opened and also the fourth touch- George Washington 7, North Dakota 0. sent him along to second with a neat|aown later and Baker's kick was good, ote Sent q sacrifice. With the tying run in Shepard Aids In Score ee ee scoring position, Manush smashed a/ Shepard and Kupcinet combined to| North Dakota chose to receive and drive between second and first that|score for North Dakota, the latter go- | Falgren returned Bomba’s kick to the ing over. pager une. Beree- puntos. against North Dakota won the toss and/the wind and the ball went out of chose to defend the north goal with |bounds on the Nodak 40-yard line. A . i five yard penalty for offside stopped Moran, a National League umpire sta- | Jackson was home with the winning|the Colonials and Leemans punted tioned at the base, waved him out, jrun. jover the goal line. Storms After Arbiter The probable lineups: Charbonneau and Pierce made a Enraged, Manush stormed after the| N. Y. Giants (N.L) Senators (AL) | first down on the 32, then Pierce arbiter and the entire band of Sena-| Moore, rf Myer, 2b punted out of bounds on the Colon- tors, feeling they had started Hub-| Critz, 2b Goslin, rf jals 42-yard line. The Sioux line bell on the way out and were being| Terry, 1b Manush, If held and Leemans punted over the ‘wronged, tore into action. Soon the | Ott, rf various factions were holding each/ Davis, cf other apart. In the midst of the arm-| Jackson, 3b Kuhel, 1b field as the half ended. Pierce almost waving it appeared as though Man-/ Mancuso, c Bluege, 3b got away, circling right end for 13 ush’s hand touched Moran's cheek. | Ryan, ss Sewell, c yards. He slipped as he attempted ‘Then came the Giants’ 11th inning| Schumacher, p Crowder, p to sidestep McCarver, Colonial safety climax. Travis Jackson started it by; Umpires: plate, Moran (NL); first|man. beating out a bunt. Gus Mancuso/base, Moriarity (AL); second base,| North Dakota took the ball on its sacrificed him to second and Blondy!Pfirman (NL); third base, Ormsby|own 40-yard line when two kicks by Ryan shot a line single to left, and! (AL). Bomba went out of bounds, but the Me HASNT TOLD ABOUT THE $500. Carlin got off a long punt to Pierce |who was downed on his own 20-yard jline. Aided by an offside penalty, the Sioux made a first down on the 30, then Pierce's punt was partially and the outburst which for 15 min- down, McCarver's pass was incom- Cronin, ss Schulte, cf & drive that carried them to mid- \J no, an tHatS wore Yer ~ANo “THAT Looks | WRONG wid TH Country, \You've PROBLY Minder Opn! | 1 Twn! MY CAR, SPENDIN’ WHOT , INE MADE, AN WHOT LHANENT MADE MET — TH' OL MAN NEVER) Potent George Washington Team ts here, that Minot |Saturday and Sunday to end the Crushes North Dakota U 27 to Gis iibiscs pron tiles alls pretios «3 or down, with Bomba hitting the left |touchdown journey. Bomba and Car- |Leod’s boys make any teal progress, Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 7—()—A | Side of the Sioux line for seven yards. 'lin, plowed through the Sioux line to Lierbo, Amick Flashy ‘momentarily halted by a 15-yard pen- |Sweeps, which found the whole linejAmerican League hurlers with 12 |to McCarver to place the ball on the |delayed spinners and passes was led ,Score was North Dakota 0, ‘Washington 14, The Sioux line braced and on fourth | plete. Pierce punted out of bounds on jeantes: then McCarver ran to the 15-1. 9 variation of that being used by the North Dakota right tackle and eal goal, from where the Nodaks opened | Bake: | OUT OUR WAY By Williams _||¥, Pex Fox firmly ane as the ane i can League champion for Iinotare; With CIMay Site, | ia rie em Peete Saasey Whats Start Touchdown Drives _|ington’s veteran ‘outfielder, and Lou At Will (Iron Man) Gehrig, of the Yankees, it staged a neck and neck race down to the final games for runner-up honors, but neither was able to break the deadlock. Three hits each in the last two games of the neo iad the slug- ” gers an average according to A few hours after Linton’s potent the final unofficial averages. Foxx, Lions had run roughshod over St.!with four hits in his three final Mary's eleven for a 33-0 victory at |games, completed a 149-game schedule the Emmons county city, Minot’s big; with an average of .356. Although and fast machine scored a touchdown |failing to get a hit in his last game @ quarter to wallop Bismarck high/and losing one point as the result, school 25 to 0 under floodlights at|Ai Simmons of the White Sox easily, {Hughes Field here. held fourth place with a mark of .330. The classy Minot Magicians ap-| Chuck Klein four points in peared to be a team, which after/the closing days, but won the National losing to Mohall and being held to a | League honors in a gallop | scoreless tic by Fargo, was just be-|with an average of .368, the same fig- {ginning to “click.” ures compiled by Lefty O’Doul in tak- \ Coach Glenn Jarrett, former grid |ing the 1932 title, Klein’s average was star at the University of North Da-{20 points higher than his own mark kota, has given his Magicians an un-|last season. ————- {usual shift which apparently the| Although unchallenged for second Minot huskies are just beginning to)place honors in the Senior circuit, ae ey my abut Pity|tettersee, actin ane Intersectionals Hold Interest in All Parts of U. S. in ‘d seit dee tun for another Two Capital City high schoél foot- ball elevens went down to crushing defeat Friday. minute left to play. Dame Rumor is spreading the word that Manager George Gibson will ‘not be on deck when the Pirates set sail next: year. Freddie Lindstrom, above, outfielder the Bucs got from the Giants, may manage the baseball crew. next year, says. * down marches just as it desired. Few | Close behind trailed Bill Terry, show- Sioux could make no headway and|times did Bismarck backs get through {ing the way to his pennant-winning Pierce punted to the George Wash-|the line for any appreciable gains|Giants with a slugging mark of 322. ington 28-yard line. Bomba broke|and only in the last quarter, when| To a pair of youngsters, Bud Tinn- away for 17 yards on an end run to|the Demons opened up with a pass- |ing of the Cubs, and Russell Van Atta, start the Colonials off on another|ing attack, did Coach Roy D. Mc-|of the Yankees, went pitching honors. captured the National League title with 13 victories as compared Minot’s vicious attack of end|tq six defeats while Van Atta led the eral Others, Scheduled the 17-yard marker, where they were For Saturday - alty for holding. But Carlin passed |Tunning interference, tackle slashes, |triumphs and only four setbacks, 1 New York, Oct. 7.—()—The thun- | 1e ill tramp- Carney Score fense to cross the goal for a touch-|Classy back. Arnold, all-state end down. Baker's kick was good and the | last season, played a whale of a game were incomplete and Cope punted |difficult td pick out unusual perform-|Jamestown Collegians Come short to his own 46-yard line. Bomba |ances from the sterling play of the; From Behind to Tie Count Passed to Cope, who fumbled, and|mons presented no outstanding per- ‘Stewart recovered for the Colonials on|former, unless it was Quarterback \11-yard mark, . McCarver — circled|by Lierbo, flashy quarterback whol mge 4 |right end for six yards and a first |gave several neat exhibitions of brok- ot ea ers George defensively. But on the whole, Minot outclassed failed to gain in two plays, Leemans|entire eleven. was thrown for a two yard loss, then| With Bismarck’s ‘line outweighed, Near Finish the Sioux 33-yard line. McCarver, Then Bombs dewn, then outran the Sioux de-|er field running, and Amick, another q ‘ And Jimmies Tie The Nodaks received, two passes|Bismarck so decisively that it was punted to the Sioux 20. Kupeinet/outcharged and outplayed, the » Bomba picked up seven yards at 4 Minot, N. D., Oct. 7.—Minot Teach- Qille Borsdahl- who made most of the lers and Jamestown college battled to| west, and Temple and Carnegie Tech- eae cae & 6-to-6 tie here Friday night in a/and Pitt and Wést Virginia in the Played well defensively. hard-fought contest. acored| cast, - Coach Jarrett said the Minot shift oehscab duane iis atin: harden clout yard line. He added nine yards at Universit; engagements of the day, for most left tackle, ther Bomba made a first [Conch Jack, West at the University ith about six minutes of the game|cther major schools either started down on the three yard line and car- ‘The story at Linton was essenti- he or continued with the “warm-up’ Seabhan vrdien rie fourth at-|atly the same, although the Lions’ ‘ae ary tatecai fae and th ras 20 to O fee ine enn [power Was not freely unleashed until | Paty’ With Line plone oe score | Shape for more important games later an je score was for the Col-lthe second half. Dogeagle, giant tts passes 5 in the season. Linton end, ran roughshod over the | touchdown. ‘The south once more was the lead- at Tock, Zecelved and Shepard lighter and inexperienced boys from |,,Jamestown droye from its 20-yard |ing factor in intersectional warfare, LE et cae Cnn Cee prcil acto” (a ny dee ni Meret, ea ey ae ine, Kup- Saints ten Once : tary ™ a eines baste for seven} ‘The Saints held Linton to a 6 to 0 Navy, Cornell and Army respectively; yards, then made it first down on the in the first half and even ad- and Virginia into the midwest to play , George Washington 40-yard line. The as far as the elght-yard line Ohio State. South ibricarec Colonials took a five-yard penalty for. quarter, only to lose while, remained at home to battle offside and Kupcinet waded through. on downs, Villanova. ‘The east watched the maiden ef- r Of Penalty set the Col- forts of ‘Yale and Harvard onials back on their 17-yard line and against Amherst, Maine and Bates the Nodaks were given the ball on the respectively. six-yard marker when Leemans inter- In the midwest Purdue's Boiler- \fered with Shepard on a pass from Kupeinet. Kupcinet went to the one- yard line in a try at center, then car- ried the ball over to make the score: North Dakota 6, George Washington 27. A pass for the extra point failed. tain The game ended a minute later is after Meinhover had kicked off over well against the Linton club, but the air often with success, just as Linton scord two touchdowns in Bd the Associated Press) timore, Md.—Hans Birkle, 6. Butler 6; Drake 26. iphia Philadelphia, outpoint id Divodi, 151%, New York (10). ‘The automotive industry consumes more than 80 per cent of all the rub- ber consumed in the United States. SIPS Ad oes Chicago White Sox In Three-Game Lead |2obe#" Chicago, Oct. 7—()—The city se-| Keone ries game scheduled for Saturday] amick between the Chicago White Sox and|" gupstitutions: Cubs was postponed until Monday! arnold, Senechal for out of respect to William L. Veeck, | tierbo, Howard for the Cub president, who dled lest] Bowman for Agre. jureday. - Scoring: Touchdowns — Amick 2, However, the two clubs will play Lerbo 2, extra point—Lierbo (plunge. Sunday. Monday's game will be ie ha , and another victory would clinch the <i ames); un The Sox shut out the North-Biders | Pire—Struts (Jamestown); head lines- mn eae thee ee man—William Ellison (Mandan) “Infernal machines,” football players call them. Grid coaches are now using them as a form of torture to round their charges into shape. The contraptions in- clude stuffed dummies for tack- _ ling, discarded automobile tires for teaching sidestepping and a complicated piece of macnmery- with springs and levers used for practice at line plunging, Above, Harvard candidates are lie s i i Beg .dox Hh rf T ELEVENS SUFFER CRUSHING. SETBACKS Highly Touted Devils Lake 20 -6 | Harold Westby Is Shining Ligh Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 7.—()—Out red again. ird quarter Westby made Devils Lake's lone touchdown came at the end of the game with one Westby again held the stellar role running tory; Maule, McDonald and Spriggs and Baker were outstand- down the field from/campaign designed to put them in|ing in the Valley City backfield, Ripon 6; St. Thomas (St. Paul) 0, Moor! 6; Winona «| A MAN COULD PLOUGH IN A | DAY. Dice were in use in the EARLY ROMAN ERA. Veni, Vidi, Vici) means { CAME, 5 SAW, I tinton An acrew originally was AS MUCH AS A PAIR OF OXEN AND e 4 : ‘ rz a » Scoring—Dogeagle 3, Jer 1 (touchdown) ; point + iown—Dogeagle 1 (plunge); (passes). i tg f t Derspiritg at a bucking ma chine, and some are Betting a free ride. At lett Coach Dick Hanley is operating # line- plunging machine while his Northwestern gridders buck it Sr RS

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