The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 20, 1934, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1934 Boston Red Sox Begin Paying Dividends by Beating Senators Twice Pick PATROOTS Day |MIDDLEWEST TRACK STARS ASSEMBLE FOR KANSAS RELAYS NUOPEN FREWORKS|( or soam>ncHOUse iy IN JUNOR CIRGUIT Big Investment by Owner Tom Yawkey in New Stars Is Bringing Return 34,000 FANS IN AFTERNOON Giants and Cubs Win Third Straight; Terrific Clouting All Down Line (By the Associated Press) ‘The Boston Red Sox, picking Pa- triot’s Day, a strictly Bostonian holi- day, as their starting point, already have begun to pay dividends upon Owner Tom Yawkey’s big investment in them. After dropping two tough decisions to Washington's Senators, the Sox made it all up Thursday by trimming the 1933 league champions in both halves of the holiday doubleheader, 6-4 and 7-3. ‘The afternoon drew 34,000 fans, the largest crowd since the re-building in. The terrifi¢ clouting continued right down the American League line, with the single exception of the Cleveland- St. Louis duel, and the Indians won that when Joe Vosmik clouted a 400- foot line homer with one on in the eighth. Chicago's White Sox added the Detroit Tigers to the list of clubs which lest one game by pounding out 9-8 victory. The New York Yankees} — Nine Leading Amateur Golfers Ready outswatted the Athletics 10 to 4. The world champion Giants turned four hits, one a homer by Bill Terry, into a 2-0 victory over the Phillies. Brooklyn and Boston provided one of the early-season oddities in a 1-1 seven-inning tie. A thick fog, which Tolled in to obscure the outfield, forc- ed the umpires to call the game. Pat Malone's five-hit hurling gave the Cubs their third straight triumph over Cincinnati by a 4-to-1 count. The Pittsburgh Pirates trimmed the Cardinals, 14-4. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Vosmik’s Homer Wins R Bt. Louis .. 100 010 000— 2 Cleveland. 000 100 02x— 3 Wells and Grube; Harder, garner, Connally and Pytlak. Yanks Rout Athletics RH New York. 030 010 213—10 13 1 Philadelphia 000 101 O11I—4 11 3 Macfayden and Dickey; Mahaffey, Matuzak, Kline and Hayes. Chisox Win In Ninth R HE Detroit ... 310 300 010-8 9 3 Chicago .. 231 010 002-9 11 3 Rowe, Auker and Cochrane; Galli- van, Heving, Wyatt and Ruel. Bosox Beat Senators Twice First Game R H E Washington 100 010 200—4 7 2 Boston .... 100 102 001I—5 10 0 Stewart, Crowder and Berg; Wal- berg, Rhodes and Hinkle. Second Game RHE ‘Washington 003 000 00-3 5 0 Boston ... 002 140 OOx—7 13 1 g|Tunning but Dave Komonen, 35-year- | Kelley in 2.36:50 2/5. EGAD , DENNIS —-MAY BE YOU CAN HELP ME !=A CHAP AT THE OWLS CLUB GOT A TICKET FOR SPEEDING—AND, FOR SOME REASON; THE CLUB ALWAYS ME AS THE OFFICIAL FIXER —BUT, \N THIS CASE,T AM EMBARRASSED) —~THE MEMBER |S TO APPEAR ; BEFORE JUDGE RENCHY , WHO IS A STRANGER TO ME-AN ToHAVE # REFUSED MY HELP, OR To FAILIN THE TM SUST A LEATHER, BURNER, HOOPLE, AN’ fT COULDNT EVEN PUT 1B IN A PLUG FOR YOU ON HAS RELIED ON TH PHONE PANEL MISSION ,WOULD GREATLY REDUCE MY CLUB ! E X, PRESTIGCI artis SUDGE RENCHY WAS APPOINTED ~SO DONT CARRY TH BANNER THAT YOU ELECTIONEERED FOR HIM/~—BEST , HIS NOSE IN (>, FOR ABI For Trip to Walker Cup Competition FINN FROM CANADA IS WINNER IN ANNUAL BOSTON MARATHON Dave Komonen, 35-Year-Old Mine Carpenter, Thanks ‘Snow-Shoeing’ | Boston, April 20—(#)—Finns are | supposed to know all about distance old mine carpenter, had to immigrate to Canada to learn how to win the! famous Boston A. A. marathon, This wiry runner, who has been living in Toronto and Sudbury, Ont.,| for five years, believes snow-shoeing gave him the stamina needed to lead Thursday's crack field of 193 over the 26 miles, 385 yards of hills and lane that stretch from Hopkinton farm to the B. A. A.’s clubhouse in the back bay. Komonen had only two real threats against his success, Johnny Kelley, young Medford runner who finished second, and Bill Steiner. cocky New York German, who placed third after leading the field for 16 miles. Ko-| monen was clocked in 2.23:53 4/5, and 4 Linke, Prim, Filley and Berg, Klumpp; Welch and Ferrell. NATIONAL LEAGUE Parmelee Blanks Phils RHE Philadelphia... 000 000 000-0 5 1 New York .. 100 010 00x—2 4 0 Collins and Wilson; Parmelee, Lu- que and Richards. Cubs Sweep Series RHE Chicago .... 000 111 O01I—4 9 0 Cincinnati . 100 000 000—1 5 2 Malone and Hartnett; Derringer, Brennan and O'Farrell. Pirates Club Cards HE R + Pittsburgh . 000 064 310-1419 2 St. Louis ... 100 001 011-4 8 5 Birkhofer and Veltman; Hallahan, hem, Mooney and V. Davis. Dodgers, Braves Tie RHE 130 In Marquette’s Meet Milwaukee, Wis. April 20.—(7)— ‘With more than a dozen invitations tentatively accepted, officials ith annual Central Intercol- itdoor track and field meet, to be held in the Marquette Univer- stadium’ June 8, igre y predicted athletic director, said the early ten- tative entrants include s number of schools —_——__—_—_--_.-. | Yesterday’s Stars | ey (By The Associated Press) Pat Malone, Cubs—Limited Reds to five hits and fanned six. Joe Vosmik, Indians — Clouted homer with one on in eighth to beat Browns, 3-2. Freddy Lindstrom, Pirates — Hit triple, two doubles and single in rout of Cardinals. Carl Reynolds and Johnny Welch, Red Sox—Former made five hits, in double victory over Senators; latter Pitched five-hit ball in second game. Walter Beck, Dodgers—Held Braves to three singles in seven-inning tie. Zeke Bonura, White Sox — Made three hits and scored winning run in 9-8 triumph over Tigers. Bud Parmelee, Giants — Shut out Phillies with three hits in 7 1/3 in- nings, fanning five. Bill Dickey, Yankees — Batted in three runs with homer and single against Athletics. _HE’S NEW UMP There'll be a new face in American League this season, and it belongs to Charles H. Donnelly, above, newly appoint- ed umpi He is 37, a native of Newport, Ky., caught nine years in the minors and worked last year as an official in the International. BROWN HEADS MILL TEAM Grand Forks, N. D., April 20.—(4)— Kenneth Brown of Minneapolis, a junior, was. elected captain of the University of North Dakota boxing team here Thursday. Brown is the northwest amateur middleweight champion. It is impossible for a Catholic priest | to approve Nazi principles.—Cardinal Justinian Seredi. George T. Dundap, Jr., and Johnny Goodman, Cham- pions, in Group New York, April 20.—()—Nine leading amateur golfers of the na- tion, including the U. 8. open and amateur champions, gathered in New York Friday preparatory to starting an ocean voyage which ulti- mately will lead to 8t. Andrews in Scotland for the international Walker cup team matches with Great Bri- tain on May 11 and 12. The team sails Saturday at noon on the Cale- donia. Francis Ouimet, the team captain, came down from Boston; Chandler Egan, the 50-year-old marvel, arrived from the Pacific Coast; Gus More- land came up from Texas. They were joined by George T. Dunlap, Jr. and Johnnny Goodman, amateur and op- en kings, respectively, Jack Westland of Chicago, Johnny Fischer of Cincin- nati, Max Marston of Philadephia and. Lawson Little of San Francisco. Together they are considered one of the strongest aggregations the U. 8. Golf association has ever sent abroad. Ouimet has played on every Walker cup team. Dick Demeray Stops Larry Ross, St. Paul Jamestown, N. April 20.—(4)— Dick Demeray. Jamestown welter- |in the stopped Larry Ross of St. Paul | in the second round of a scheduled six-round feature bout on the Amer- \ican Legion’s combination boxing CUNNINGHAM VENZKE MILE WILL FEATURE SATURDAY PROGRAM Glen Dawson, Harold Manning and Ray Sears Also Will Run in Race IS FIRST OUT-OF-DOORS TEST Field of Eight Plunges Into Missouri Valley A. A. U. Decathion Lawrence, Kas., April 20.—(®)}— Track stars from 50 western colleges and universities along with Gene Venzke, lone contender from the East, stretched their legs Friday in prepar- ation for the first major test of the outdoor season—the 12th annual Kansas Relays. As the record-seekers flocked in and the experts wondered whether Ven- zke’s presence could press Kansas’ own Glenn Cunningham to a new world mark for the mile Saturday, a field of eight plunged into the first half of the Missouri Valley A. A. U. decathlon. The 10-event test will be completed Saturday morning. Cunningham will run a special in- vitation mile race with Venzke, Glen Dawson of the Tulsa, Okla, and Harold Manning of the Wichita, Kas., A. C., and Ray Sears of Butler uni- versity, holder of the American two- mile record. Red Bird Sluggers Getting Under Way Mickey Heath Leads Way With Four Singles as Champs Nick Louisville Chicago, April 20—(#)—The slug- ging department of the Columbus Red Birds, 1933 champions of the Ameri- can Association, is wasting no time in getting under way. Led by Mickey Heath, who connect- ed for four singles, Columbus ham- mered two Louisville hurlers, Jim Peterson and Ken Penner, for 18 hits ‘Thursday. Nick Cullop, veteran Bird’ outfielder, got his first home run of the season as Columbus won 10 to 7. Kansas City made it two out of three over St. Paul by making a lot of use of six hits. The Blues grouped four of their blows in the eighth to| defeat the Saints 4 to 2. Toledo scored five times in the seventh inning to defeat Indianap- olis, 12 to 9. Milwaukee and Minneapolis were kept idle by cold weather. The scenes shifted Friday, with Louisville at Toledo, Indianapolis at Columbus, St. Paul at Milwaukee, and| St. Louis. Minneapolis at Kansas City. Gcores by innings: Blues Rally Fo Win RHE St. Paul.... -000 010 010— 210 0 Kansas City....000 000 Otx— 4 6 0 ‘Trow, Freitas and Guiliani; Shores, Moore and Brenzel, Gaston. jand wrestling show here Thursday ‘D8 night. In the five-round semi-windup. Swede Larson of Jamestown and George Stoods of Edgeley drew. They are welters. Floyd Janes, Windsor lightweight, staged a comeback in the final three rounds of his four-round bout against Irish McCurdy of Jamestown to win the decision. Janes was down for three nine-counts in the first round. In the wrestling feature, George Deck of Oklahoma City won from ‘Ivan, the Terrible Swede, of La- Crosse, Wis., after 17% minutes. OUT OUR way By Williams | WELL OF ALL TH’ ALLS! WE'VE GOT TO GO BACK— —— Reds Trip Colonels RHE Louisville ......001 202 002— 712 2 ‘Columbus 012 022 30x—10 18 4 Peterson, Penner and Erickson; Beckman, Spencer and O'Dea, Gooch. Game Postopned Minneapolis-Milwaukee, postponed, cold. Little and Kipke Defend Football Cleveland, April 20.—(#)—Any critics inclined to cry “over- emphasis” at college football are Southern California Freshman Slated For ’36 Olympic Hurdle Championship Temperamental Tenniseer Big, blond Les Stoefen is an artist’ atthe and he has perament, too. Here we Uncle Sam's hope jn Davis Cup competition this year indulging in a fit of racquet throwi @ recent tournament at Hous- ton; Tex. Stoefen throws his racquet wildly after failure in various departments ‘of his ‘game,’ JOHN MACH TAKES ATHLETIC DIRECTORSHIP AT WILLISTON Former Mohall Coach Is Pro- duct of Grafton High and Qandings Cincinnati Philadelphia AMERICAN LE, Detroit . New York. Conn weows CUM HMoOon > GUE tt pa aes es avec ns 2b 0909 89 me me EY AMERICAN ASSOCIATI 3 TH eeessass? gueseass? seuee338? WEE EF athletic teams have been prominent in North Dakota the last five years, | title last eyar. has accepted the Phil Cope of Oklahoma City Went West to Learn From Dean Cromwell Tos Angeles, April 20. — The 1936 Olympic Games high hurdles cham- pion is now a freshman at the Uni- verstiy of Southern California, In case you think that’s a pretty broad statement, look at the record of Phil by Cromwell as the greatest athlete he ever coached). 2. Leighton Dye, 1926 National A, What with en Are Assured Final- Round Rights F : a i from Philadelphia, into 6-} 6-2 defeat, was to battle elther Brvett M. Grant of Atlanta or Berkeley Bel of New York. Rain forced postpone- has| ment of the Grant-Bell quarter-final with the southerner - 6-1, 3-2. mane ON markably clean,” with few excep- <- ‘Olymple bas Cieere. Cnllegn, Benet, Po va, Diamond Has Large oe ion at ie spars ¥ Toll in Accidents My, S wy ww ” e 4 B i Regd Wns = i TE ih eee 5; ’

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