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~ . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934 ; \ CLOUT WITHMANON [EXPECT WORLD RECORDS TO FALL BASE BRINGS LOWLY » CINCINNATI 5-4 WIN Fidgety. Phil Collins Hurls An- other Fine Game as Phils Nip Giants SENATOR LINEUP REVAMPED Pitching Dominates as Braves Blank Dodgers and Cards Crush Bucs (By The Associated Press) With the first failure of a Cub starting pitcher to go the route, Chi- cago’s seven-game winning streak that opened the National League sea- son in sensational style has come to an_end. Charley Root ran into a streak of wildness in the second and had to give way to Bud Tinning, but even then it took a ninth-inning homer by Sunny Jim Bottomley with one on Appendectomy Robs Giants of Pitcher New York, April 27.—(4)—The world champion Giants’ pitching “big four” had become a three- some Friday as Leroy (Tarzan) Parmelee, fast-ball right-hander, began a recovery from an emerg- ency operation for acute appendi- citis. Stricken ill suddenly at Phila- delphia, Parmelee was brought hurriedly to New York and un- derwent an operation for removal of his appendix late Friday after- noon, He will not be able to rejoin the club, however, until mid-sum- mer, if then, to earn Cincinnati a 5-4 victory. Prev- jously Chuck Klein had walloped his fourth home run to help Chicago take the lead. Fidgety Phil Collins, who had held right back at -hitter to pitch the triumph, 3-2, minated the other | for 14 hits Thursday, the Millers fail- Harris. Detroit's Tigers won « 2-1 triumph over the White Sox. A pair of rook- jes, Joe Cascarella and Frank Hayes, by innings: NATIONAL LEAGUE » 200 002 000— 4 &i Johnson, Benton and O'Farrell; Root, Tinning and Hartnett. eee 200 000 OOx— 2 rd and Lopez; Zachary and Cerda Crash Pirates RHE f. Louis.. 100 100 413-10 16 0 Attsburgh. 000 100 000-1 6 3 ‘\Hallanan and V. Davis: Birkhofer, hagnon, Smith and Veltman. Phillles Nip Giants RHE “ea SR: G00 lol 000-2 5 1 Chiladelphia 100 101 00%x—3 8 0 Fitzsimmons. Bell and Richards, Mancuso; Collins and Wilson. AMERICAN LEAGUE Athletica Nip Yankees Mahaffey, Cascarella and Hayes; ‘Allen, Uhie and Dickey. Bottomley, - ted ‘with one on in 0 ninth to beat “Chicago Cubs Suffer First Loss As Jim Bottomley Hits Home Run | OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD ,TOBEY~DESPITE THE ™ FACT THAT SUDGE RENCHY AND T WERE ‘ROOMMATES AT COLLEGE, I WAD A DIFFICULT TIME GETTING YOUR SPEEDING TICKET QUASHED | 1T WAS DONE ONLY BECAUSE OF HIS GREAT AFFECTION FOR ME~ £7 BUT, HEED ~HE SAID, \F You ARE CITED AGAIN FOR ATRAFFIC VIOLATION, HE'LL GIVE You OWLS CLUB BIS FAXERS, ff HAVE MY BROTHER STEVE DROP OFF A QUARTER-BARREL OF BOCK 7 YOUR HOUSE, ANKS, HOOPLE/ TLL ZA Gg Z Z BZ I DONT KNOW HOW HE Dip tT) SUDGE RENCHY \S HARDER To GET TO THAN AN EAGLE NEST Game Commissioner Has Suggestions For Fishermen in State MILLERS’ WIN STREAK ENDED BUT JOE HAUSER CARRIES ON Slugger Has Poled Out Seven Round-Trippers in Eight Games This Year Drake Relays Have Silver Anniversary Des Moines, Ia., April aL Fair weather and 9 colorful entry list combined Friday to honor Major John L. Griffith, founder of the event, upon the silver anni- versary running of the Drake Relays. Relay officials predicted the largest opening day crowd in the 2% Years of the classic as 3,000 ath- letes from 17 states made ready to Chicago, April 27—()—Minneapo- lis’ winning streak was over Friday, but Joe Hauser’s home run production. still was crowding a one-a-day sched- ule. Although they belted Hobo Carson ed to concentrate their attack and to Kansas City 8 to 2. Hauser, jawever, banged out his seventh, This Season Thoralf Swenson Lists Dates for Certain Specips in N. D. Waters Dates of the open season on certain fish in North Dakota were announced Friday by Thoralf Swenson, state game and fish commissioner. Open and close of the various sea- sons on protected fish are: Land-locked salmon and trout op- ens May 1 and closes Sept. 30. Wall-eyed and northern pike and Perch opens May 15 and closes Oct. 31. Sunfish, bass and crappies opens June 15 and closes Oct. 31. ______ em I ypTcHlF, KES [Bt AND CUNNINGHAM TO ENTER SPECIALTIES Hornbostel, Lambertus, Hardin, Fuqua, LuValle, Brown Expected to Enter $20,000 UP FOR TRAVELING Qualifying Marks for Entrance Indicate Calibre of Com- petition in Store Los Angeles, April 27. — Several world records may be tossed into the junk pile during the National Collegi- ate Athletic Association track and field championships at. the Olympic Stadium here on June 22-23. Star performers from every state in the Union will make competition the keenest in the 13-year history of the great athletic carnival, perennially the biggest meet of all. Among outstanding athletes who undoubtedly will participate are Ralph Metcalfe, of Marquette, the greatest sprinter now in competition; Bob Kiesel, California's splendid dash man; Glenn Cunningham, of Kansas, foremost American miler; Chuck Hornbostel of Indiana, probably the premier 880 man in American college ranks, and Haye Lambertus, of Ne- braska, who is about ready to crack, records in the 220-yard low hurdles. xe * Other national track figures to per- form will be Glenn Hardin, of Louisi- ana State, who will be a favorite to ‘vin both the 220-yard low hurdles and the quarter mile; Ivan Fuqua, of Indiana, national 400-meters cham- pion; Jimmy LuValle of U. C. L. A.; Blackman, of Stanford, and McCar- thy, Fitch, Albowich and Tompkins, of U. 8. C., running against Hardin, Fuqua and LuValle in the quarter, and Jack Torrance, of Louisiana State, and Johnny Lyman, of Stan- ford, in a shot put engagement for a possible world record. Two of the outstanding duels will see Bud Deason, ‘of Stanford, in the pole vault, with Keith Brown, of Yale, a possible opponent, and Walter Marty, of Fresno State, against Willis Ward, of Michigan, and perhaps George Spitz, of New York Univer- sity, in the high jump. The cream of the crop, these lumi- naries will be aided by California’s climatic conditions, which played such rundetrip wallop in eight games. Thé || 85Sault the records. Millers hed won six in a rov, ‘and ‘Thursday's was their second “eitat of the season. a The Blues nicked Hey Holsclaw and George Murr3y-for 12 hits, and, Any other species of fish may be |® important part in the breaking of taken at any time of the year, there|MUmerous records by Americans dur- being no closed season and no posses- |in& the 1932 Olympic Games here. — sion limit on fish not included in the}, University of Southern California Protected list, Swenson said. has put up a fund of $20,000 for trav- Fishing licenses cost 50 cents for|¢lN& expenses of the finest perform- residents and $3 for non-residents, ex- |@TS: And at least 200 are expected. To Foxx Doubts He Will Crack Record * 2 #8, & & ee ene WANTS 18 BY JUNE 1 see ** ** eae Expects Pennant Race to Be Scramble New York, April 27—()—If in luck,” Jimmie expla! you don’t care to worry along through the closing days of Sep- tember adding up Jimmie Foxx’s home runs and if hell break Babe Ruth's record of 60 in one season, here's a short cut. Put a ring around June 1 on ir, baseball calendar. “If I have 18 by then,” says the burly belter of the Athletics, “I'm on my way. I'll make it. If I'm under 18, well... .” Jimmie shrugs his wide should- ers and grins cheerfully. He's only 27 years old with years of slugging ahead of him. He hit 58 in 1932, two shy of the Babe's great mark. It would seem as though adding two homers to that output shouldn’t be too tough a task for a fellow who was that close once, But it’s far from simple. “You have to have every break Penn Relays Draw, 3,200 Performers Glenn Cunningham, Gene Ven- zke, Bill Bonthron, Chuck Hornbostel Enter Men Report for Bison Grid Workout Prospects Brightest in Y rs as Veterans and Classy Freshmen Train Philadelphia, April 27.—()—Thirty- two, athletes tutil ipson, who alternated with Earl at the center position, and fi i last season’s reserves out ® position on next year's i BEE ith H Dakota State college, how- 7 e starting with the fifth, bunched them. tand | n S Bruce Connatser led the Kansas City attack with three singles, while Haus- | qa GPa er, Pinky Hargrave and A. Wright (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE |cept that residents under 18 years of age and non-residents under 12 years of age may fish without licenses. issued by the game and fish commis- A list of don'ts for fishermen was claim such expenses, an athlete must have set a certain high, or low, as the case happens to be, mark in his particular event. Here are the “eligi- bility” records, showing what brand poked out three apiece for Minneapo- lis. Gene Trow, young St. Paul right- hander, restricted Milwaukee to five hita as the Saints won 5 to 0. Trow was in trouble once, in the ninth when Earl Webb led off with a triple. The former Major League star remained right where he was, however. Phil Todt paced a nine-hit assault on Americus Polli with a home run and a triple, driving in three runs, Rain caused postponement of the | Toledo-Louisville and Columbus-In- dianapolis contests. Scores by innings: Trow Blanks Chicago ... New York . Boston . Pittsburgh -oeceeeas vaevrewnn® aavewunnl Stugging Millers Beaten RHE 000 013 013— 812 1 Minneapolis 000 100 O0I— 214 2 Carson and Gaston; Holsclaw, Mur- ray, Marrow and Hargrave. Kansas City. 6 4 3 3 4 3 2 2 Milwaukee ‘Two Games Postponed ‘Toledo-Louisville postponed, rain. Cotneaias - Indianapolis, postponed, rain, ‘The world is divided into 73 Empire as a unit. OUT OUR WAY By Williams | LY WELt, tions, counting the entire British It's BAD ENOUGH TO FEEL of performers will participate in the Pet. N.C. A. A. this year, 875 750 625 STL 500 | 286 | sioner, They include: Do Not Use more than one hook and one line or more than one art@ficial Jure. Take more than the legal limit of any species of protected fish. Use carp minnows for bait. Sell any protected fish. Fish within 400 feet of any fish- way. Use a net, hoop net or set line in| py taking fish unless you have both 8] gno¢ {resident and commercial fishing li-| niseuss ¢ cense and then only in the waters! javelin throw . opened to commercial fishing, which | tammer throw are the Missouri, Yellowstone and * Mouse rivers and Antler creek in Bot- tineau county. 125 The N. C. A. A. draws a bigger field ith pike eggs from Canada again this ° year, Swenson announced. If the nites es ane See hatch proves successful, he said, the} for schools that belong to the associ- sepettment shouldbe ame. a pian ation, and that leaves out most of a large number ry Ing tl coming hatching season. ee TS ‘There is only one manual fire- fest uit Loneson mnie: engine to serve the rural district of jcago, which city always has staged it Williton, in Somerset, England. which! in the past, included Ralph Metcalfe’s contains property worth more than|199 yards in 9.4 seconds and 220 in $10,000,000 and @ population of 12,000/29 4 seconds; Glenn Hardin's 47.1 sec- spread over 100,000 acres. onds in the 440; Glenn Cunningham's Great 4:00.7 mile a few minutes after Placing second to Hornbostel by inches in a 1:05.9 half-mile; Gus ————|Meler’s 14.2 seconds in the 120-yard high hurdles; Hardin’s 22.0 seconds in the 220-yard low hurdles; Bill Gra- ber, of U. 8. C., and Matt Kordy, na- (T HIT YOU, SHUT YOUR EYES FER? ‘THAT BALLS LIABLE To HIT You. WITHOUT SEEIN’ IT HIT YOu. (By the Associated Press) Pe a RATIONAL LEAGUE Runs—letn, ” Cube ‘i one Cubs 9; Cardinals, Vaughan, Pirates, and, Stainback, Cubs, a Dodgers, 13. Ms Teecaciete Home AT 1934 COLLEGIATE MEET marck and Mandan Arrange Dual Track-Fleld Meet At Hughes Field Four Athletes Representing St Mary's Journey to Aber- Relays. Coach George L. Hays elected John Boelter, Arthur “Stretch” Hulbert, acd AS sneitrage and Robert Schmidt represent St. Mary's at the South Dakota city. ais The coach and his quartet motored to Aberdeen Thursday, with Philip Webb, Capital City businessman, driving the car. They expect to ree turn Sunday. Coaches Roy D. McLeod of Bismarck and Leonard C. McMahan of Mandan expected to stage only those events in the dual meet in which both the Demons and Braves have entrants. Both Bismarck and Mandan have comparatively green squads this sea- and the dual sffair was arranged ive them a workout preliminary 1th annual Capital City track et here Saturday, May 5. informally as the ti Field, bu ly according to high school rules and specifications. The first event was set for 3:30 o'clock. Fights Last Night i Press) Roy Clements, 0), 190, Pittsburgh, ROSEQUIST A BEAR One of the newest. of the pro grid- ders is Ted Rosequist. Ted was Ohio State’s giant tackle last season. ever, will not relinquish the cham- pionship it won last season without @ real battle and the University of North Dakota is determined that next season will be its season, so the green ‘and yellow have eome real work cut out for them. One of the features of the Bison schedule next fall is the game with the University of Minnesota, Sept. 29, at Minneapolis. The Gopher team is picked unanimously by the dopesters for the next national champions. 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