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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1934 Bismarck Drops Opener in Renewed Baseball Feud With Beulah | CAPTALCTY NE |BISMARCK HIGH TRACKSTERS PLACE SECOND IN FARGO MEET TAKES 7-6 DEFEAT | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern MIDGETS PILE UP ‘Athletic Fans Find New Comfort | in IN DEBUT CONTEST Yk NERUY, MDEAR SL WA 64 1 POINT TOTAL Strong Arm of Young Joe Cascar ella Tn ‘Seer mcesmces'| | TOTAKE CLASGIC)REGAN BALL CLUB "Sisto Morlan Fans Ste ND. Ne Se tamer FROM THE LOOKS OF THIS HERD OF EMPTIES, IT 1S EVIDENT YOU PITCHED QUITE A PARTY WHILE I WAS VISITING MY SISTER OVER THE WEEK END/ Hurler Becomes Mainstay ig Connie Mack's Lineup; JUDGE AND FAMOUS Beats Browns 9-3 MINERS GET 11 HITS) Heihn’s Homer Scoring Stewart Breaks 5-5 Deadlock for Winning Runs Renewing hostilities where they left off last year, the Bismarck baseball club traveled to Beulah Sunday aud took a 7-to-6 defeat from the Miners in a hard-fought and rather hectic engagement which opened the 1934 season for both teams. ‘The opener was a repetition of last season's first engagement between the rival ball clubs insofar as the out- come was concerned, Bismarck taking the low end of the score. But the game was not decided until the last ball was pitched. Strike three ‘was counted on Morlan with Haley and Troupe on second and third wait- Beef’ Ringhofer To Join Bismarck | “Beef” Ringhofer, hard-hitting | first-baseman who finished the | season with Bismarck last sea- son, left Louisville Monday for the Capital City to re-join the team for the coming year, according to Neil O. Churchill, manager of the local club. “Beef” this season has been play- ing with Louisville of the Ameri- can Association as a utility catch- er and first-baseman. Bismarck, however, has had a standing bid for his services in effect since early in the year. Ap- parently not getting much oppor- tunity to play at Louisville, “Beef” Saturday telegraphed Churchill that he would leave for Bismarck | Monday. | ing for a chance to score and reverse the one-run lead held by the Miners. As it is, Manager Neil Churchill and his boys will have to wait until a return engagement with the Miners to reverse the totals. They are con- ident that they can. ‘The Bismarck club met with strong- er opposition than was expected for the opener. The Miners have bol- stered their offensive strength through the addition of a pair of dangerous batsmen in Anderson, catcher, and Perkins, outfielder. Anderson ac- tounted for two triples. Miners Collected 11 Hits Altogether the heavy-hitting Min- ers collected 11 big bingles, 10 from Simle and one from Desiderato, who relieved the former in the eighth. Simle, with only a few spare moments of practice in throwing the ball —~EVEN IF YOU GOT RID OF THESE BEFORE I RETURNED, 1D KNOW You HAD YOUR OWLS, FOR A SHANTY SOCIAL ) STALE TOBACCO SURGEON SURPRISED ME WITH A CHESS URNAMENT AND DUTCH LUNCH EGAD } Y AND OLD CLOTHES/ Gaiy WOULD FLOOR FEARED Lowly Red Birds Halt Pace-Setting Millers in Winning Week-end Series columbus comes Back with MRS, SLOANE WI 6-4 Win Sunday After Tak- ing First Game, 11-0 Chicago, May 14.—()}—Columbus’ American Association champions, have not done so well against most of the other members of the circuit, but just concluded a highly satisfactory series with Minneapolis, the current pace- setter. After walloping the Millers, 11-0 Saturday, Columbus came back Sun- day to win both games of a double- header and sweep the series. Lefty Heise held Minneapolis in the opener and won, 6-4. In the second game, the Red Birds battered Walter Tau- scher and George Murray for 13 hits and a 14-6 decision. Joe Hauser, leading hitter of the league and home Tun specialist. was held to one hit in seven times at bat. Louisville lost three in a row to around the lot, pitched a great game | Milwaukee over the week-end. The for Bismarck through the sixth when his arm began to weaken and the Miners were quick to grab their chance. The 11 Beulah swats, how- ever, were long and hard, including two doubles, two triples and a pair vf homeruns. The Miners’ second home run, by Heihn, decided the game in the last of the eighth. Heihn’s homer scored FP. Stewart ahead of him to put the score at 7-5 after the Bismarck team had counted three runs in the first half of the inning to deadlock the vount at 5-5. Beulah opened the scoring in the second when Perkins got on through fn error and came home on Stewart's Gouble. Bismarck’s scoring began in the third when Haley took a base on balls, went to second on Troupe’s hit and came home on Stewart's error in left field. Troupe scored on a wild pitch. The score remained 2 to 1 for Bis- marck until the last of the fifth when Beulah counted twice again as Web- ber got to first on an error at short nd was sent around the remaining bases by Anderson's triple. Anderson scored as Goetz muffed Thronson’s fly to left field. Beulah scored its fifth pol in the sixth on Martin's circuit Stewart Relieves Kemp At this point of the game Stewart ‘was sent to the mound to relieve Lefty Kemp. At the beginning of the eighth, Haley, Troupe, McCarney and Simle found the change in pitching to their liking and pelted the relief hurler for hits that brought in three runs and tied the score at 5-5. But Stewart's hit followed by Heihn's homer placed the Beulah total at sev- en, one too many for the Bismarck clubbers who added a final run in the ninth. Kemp and Stewart each struck out seven. Simle fanned six; Desiderato, one. The Miners collected 11 hits to Bismarck’s eight. Batting honors in the initial tilt went to Red Haley who collected three hits in four times up. Troupe got three in five times up. For Beulah, Anderson, Stewart and Martin each got a pair. Nine errors chalked up in the opener saw Beulah take six; Bismarck three. ‘The box score: Beulah (7) AB Kerbs, cf .... ¢ Webber, 3b .. 5 2 El wee momnenon o J a 3 3 t mown ml onoccconmnne of cocpcccccce elececccccccs ol coccccccce wlonmoonoccooe 31 connmenwooot wl cccotommne al ennnroonne Btoccceraucn 8) cownonnsoo Slowmonccowne a! cnccormnwoy wl cnonccuwocs Brewers won 7-3 Saturday and Sun- day blasted the Colonels, 15-3 and | 15-1. Toledo and St. Paul divided their Sabbath doubleheader. The Mud Hens won the first game, 2-0, and St. Paul made good use of 12 hits to take the second, 8-3. Kansas City scored four runs in the eighth to break up another pitching battle and defeat Indianapolis, 5-1. Scores by innings: Saints, Hens Divide (First game) Thomas, Fette and Fenner; Sewell and Desautels. (Second game) NS PREAKNESS DESPITE CAVALCADE’S DEFEAT Columbus .... 003 205 22x—14 13 0 Tauscher, Murray and Hargrave, ‘Wyss; Teachout.and O'Dea. Blue Wallop Indians R Kansas City 000 010 40-8 8 3 Indianapolis 100 90 000—1 11 1 Carson and Brenzel; Logan and Riddle. (Second game postponed, account rain) Brewers Crush Colonels (First. game) RHE Milwaukee .... 620 001 150—15 19 0 Louisville ....... 000 000 102—3 14 2 Presnell and Rensa; McKain, Wein- ert, Bass, Nachand and Erickson. (Second game) RH Milwaukee .... 601 102 401—15 20 1 Louisville ....... 000 010 000-1 3 1 Walkup and Young; McClean, Nachand and Thompson. Schmeling Fails To Get Decision Former Champ Pounds Uzcudun Through 12 Rounds But It’s Called Draw Barcelona, Spain, May 14—(7)— Max Schmeling’s second encounter with Paulino Uzcudun had gone into H E'the record books as a draw today but St. Paul . Toledo .. (Called in catch train. Claset and Guiliani; Perrin, Sundra, Doljack and Garbark. Red Birds Win Pair First Game) to allow St. Paul to RHE ‘Minneapolis 040 000 000-4 8 2 ‘Columbus .. 300 001 20x—6 8 0 Petty Tauscher and Hargrave; Heise and Gooch. (Second game) RHE 7 Minneapolis ... 100 100 103— 6 11 R - 000 001 25—8 12 O/the impression was general he easily - 010 010 01-3 7 1) had earned a decision he didn’t get. ‘Through 12 rounds, the former heavyweight champion pounded away at Paulino’s face, had the veteran Basque bleeding badly from the sixth round on, and outboxed him by a wide margin in the feature match of Montjuich stadium's 160-round boxing carnival Sunday. But at the finish the judges called it a draw. Ringside critics, giving Schmeling at least eight rounds, thought the judges had been unduly influenced by the courageous fight Paulino put up against @ younger, more skillful rit High Quest, Which Nosed Out Derby Winner, Also Prop- erty of Woman New York, May 14—()—Having set- tled their personal feud for the time being at least, Mrs, Isabel Dodge Sloane's High Quest and Cavalcade, co-rulers of the turf’s three-year-olds, Monday had come to the parting of the ways. Back in their stalls at Belmont Park, following a stirring stretch duel in the Preakness at Pimlico, in which High Quest beat Cavalcade by the narrowest of margins, the two stars started training for campaigns on two separate fronts. Lawrence Schneider Counts 11 of Capital City Total of 21 Points COMPETITION IS CLOSE Local Quartet of Runners Wins Relay Honors in Fast Time of 1:39.2 Fargo, N. D., May 14.—Fargo high ‘school’s well-balanced track and field team dominated the 26th renewal of the May Festival prep athletic fixture, concluded Saturday, winning the event with 64% points. In addition to overwhelming the field by a larger margin than even their most ardent supporters would Predict for them, the Midgets also carried off whatever honors were left, Floyd Clements, co-captain of the scantily-clad athletes of Central high, winning the individual honors with an even dozen points, while Orville Fish- be aaa for the only new stan- jard. Fisher's record heave in the javelin came at an opportune time to displace the old mark of 158 feet, 6 inches, established by his brother, Lyle, now a student at Northwestern and pick- ed as center on the mythical Big Ten ‘basketball team of last season. Lyle established his record in 1931, and Orville surpassed this on his final heave with 169 feet, 11 inches. Following the Midgets in order came Bismarck, winner of the event two years ago, when it was last held, with 21 points, 11 of them by its ace, Law- rence Schneider; Grafton, with 14; Nome, with 10!4; Cooperstown, with 10; Valley City, with 9%; Wahpeton Indians and Sharon, with 4 each; Thief River Falls, with 2%, and Wah- Peton, with 1. Competition Was Close ‘What the meet lacked in good marks, it more than compensated for with close comeptition. Thorne was a surprise victor in his conquests in the two middle distance events. He outran Joe LaFountaine of the Wahepton Indians in the stretch of the quarter-mile in 544 seconds, and in the half, run in two heats, he came from well back in the | ®- Hopk! field in the second section to nose out DEFEATED {1-10 BY GROVE GIANTS State Prison Team Breaks Loose In Ninth to ! Score 5 Runs j | Grove Giants, state penitentiary; baseball team, chalked up their sec- | ond victory of the season Sunday by} defeating the strong Regan club, 21; to 10. After holding their lead for three} successive innings, the Regan nine} fell behind under a cluster of six hits; which netted the Giants five runs. Daniels, on the mound for wen. (North Dakota College Tallies, pitched effective ball until the ninth. when the Giants broke loose with a series of mighty wallops. The game was featured by the cir- cuit clout of Worder, Regan catcher, in the sixth when the bases were Joaded. McKay pitched great ball for the Giants, collecting seven strikeouts in seven innings. Charles Smith relieved McKay, showing plenty of stuff but finding trouble in locating the plate as he entered the game with the bases loaded. Smith allowed only two hits and struck out three in his two in- nings on the mound. The summary: Regan Wold, ss . Tosset, 3b Mitchell, c! D. Hopkins, Worden, ¢ | acownnnauar COOH HK NOM My CloH mmo om Crm awnoweng® mOccenooOn, OM HM Onmooomtt & s WOrnonmewown ss 38 Davidson, 1b Kohler, cf Lemay, rf Fern naoauar Or Swoononon HOrennunsouy, & teammate, Emil Mattson. Thorne | Totals ran the four furlongs in 2 minutes, 85 seconds, while Mattson required | Re 2-10 of @ second more-in the first heat. Neil Beylund of Bismarck and Bill Codding of Valley City ran a dead heat in the low hurdies. Beylund leading all the way but breasting the |™! tape simultaneously with his Hi-Lin- er rival, who lunged at the yarn fin- The future of Cavalcade, galloping | ish. winner of the Kentucky Derby, lies in the west with the American Derby at Washington Park, June 2, his next objective. High Quest will be point- ed for the one and one-half miles of the $50,000 Belmont stakes at Bel- mont Park June 9. Levinsky Disappears As Lasky Bout Nears Los Angeles, May 14.—(4)—King Levinsky, the Chicago heavyweight who was to do battle with Art Lasky, Minneapolis, here Tuesday night but turned up missing Saturday, still was unaccounted for Monday. ‘Whether he had an idea his absence would stimulate interest in the bout, or whether he is not going to fight were questions he alone, it appeared, could answer. Levinsky’s manager-sister, had asked the state boxing commis- sion to allow the fight to be post- poned for a week on the ground that the former fish peddler was about to have a nervous breakdown. But the association's specialists said his nerves seemed all right. Shortly afterward he and she checked out of their Hollywood resi- |ond, val. dence and left no forwarding address. Schneider ran a strong race in the 220-yard dash, leading almost from the outset. He pulled up near the finish as Carl Rorvig of Nome and Francis Whalen of Grafton fought it out for the next two places, with Ror- vig crossing the finish line a fraction Of a stride ahead. The marks in the field events were under the standards of other years, with the exception of Orville Fish- er's javelin record and Clements’ broad jump mark. Clements was un- able to better his 20 feet, 9 inches of Friday when he threatened the 21 feet 3 inches established by Fait of Valley City in 1931. Bismarck Wins Relay Bismarck’s baton-passing quartet of George Shafer, Junior Neff, Lawrence Schneider and Billy Owens won the half-mile relay, leading al although Owens, Lena,|by Ernie OUT OUR WAY By Williams | vale - Distance—42 IM NOT SUPPOSED TO TELL THIS, BUT- WELL- I KNOW YOu'D _NEVER— a 2a WHy- I'VE Gor BREAD IN THE OVEN, TOO! Discus throw—won by Maxwell, Grafton; Vosburgh, Fargo, second; » » third; O. Fisher, Fargo, fourth, Distance—114 feet 2% One-mile -mi Tun—won by Stromme, Cooperstown; Zickuhr, Valley City, second; Korstad, ae River Falls, third; Barnard, fahpeton, fourth. Time—5 minutes 6 seconds. 220-yard low hurdles—Beylund, Bis- marck, and Codding, Valley City, tied for first and second; Sexton, Fargo, third; Clements, Fargo, fourth. Time —21.8 seconds. Javelin throw—won by O. Fisher, Time—|to the faculty men. The 7 in 7 innings; Smith, 3 in two Hits: Off Danielson, 16; off McKay 10 in 7 innings; off Smith, 2 in 2 in- ings. Home run: Worden, 1. Snyder pinch hit for Smith. Hit by pitched balls by Danielson, McKay and Davidson. Stolen bases: Brennise, 1; Johnson, 2 R. Hopkins 1, Lemay 1 and Snyder Left on bases: Regan 10, Giants 12. Earned runs: Regan 6; Giants 7. Umpires: George Johnson and George Loomis. Training Table Revival Planned Western Conference Athletes May Get Free Fare If Faculty Approves Chicago, May 14.—(4)—Western conference teams will be permitted a modified training table, if the faculty committee on Athletics gives its ap- pore at the annual meeting Friday turday. The coaches have voted in favor of giving the gridiron warriors one meal a day—dinner at a training table. Final decision, however, is up training table plan went out of existence in the Big Ten years ago, but the jccaches felt the athletes, some of whom work their way through school, should be assured of one warm meal ptember against Chicago. jush, Cubs—Limited Giants to three runs in rally that beat Tigers. Lou Chiosza, Phillies—Doubled in 10th to drive home winning run against Reds. Lefty Gomez, Yankees—Shut out Indians with four hits, fanning five. Jack Rothrock, inals—Made three hits to send in four runs in tri- WME WA RHA RA Fhe Bilondiaye Neransk Tadestiial schon invite, Ua EK RE Mel Meet Hew Kat ARAN MEAG SS points to Daal ie CatRNIAE ohRMplOn, Cavingtan, Ide aD Wier Sh IS Raden VA AG WHR TD Monanga hed iO LB Cakes, Ttremans, 8 Ries dale 2 and Svam, 3 A DER Wind was A hendionn Raita a Tamastown was high FARR Wiens, FO TOwad de Wheeler of Camingtan, Cue and maiaia wore Prwwenwed 1) winnems Af A Danduet. Mayville Comets Win at Moorhead’ 74 Points to Annex Meet Honors Moorhead, N. D.. May 14.—Present- ing ® well-balanced team. the May- ville State Teachers college squad, coached br Lewy Lee, took hon- ors in an invitational event at the Moorhead State Teachers college Sat- urday. The Comets tallied 74 points. The Dragons captured runnerup honors with 58 points. Other schools in the meet and the order in which they finished were Wahpeton Science, 32, and North Dakota Agricultural college and Bemidji Teachers each 12. The Bison and Bemidji, however, did not have full teams entered. The Bison sent four men, one of these finishing second for individual hon- ors, while Bemidji came to the Spud city with seven men. Gus Schwartz, whose home is Bis- marck, but who is @ student at the Mayville Teachers, captured high scoring honors with 14 points. Schwartz was entered in only three events, broad jump, high jump and discus but he managed to place first in the first two and second in the dis- track; (Ry the Associated Press) When Connte Mack said early this spine (hat he thought his club might & Bonewhere in the American League ids season if only @ few of his young Wiehers came through in vew sf any of the Athletics’ | As things turned out, Joe see | to ave Decome one of the A’s j ramnatays, Ne took the play Sunday and Case ta made it the occasion for § S$ Philadelphia victory over St PLANS. j__Washington bumped Detroit 7-4 | The Yankees slammed the seconde lace Cleveland club into submission |§-0 as Lefty Gomes allowed only four ta for his fifth straight victory. Low Gehrig hit his eighth homer with the Dases filled. BS eae Sox slaughtered Chicagé 14 to 2. ;__In the National League the pirates |assaulted Lefty Ed Brandt and the Boston Braves for a 9-2 decision while the Cubs defeated the Giants 7 to The St, Louis Cardinals blasted a 12-7 victory over Brooklyn. The seventh-place Phillies had to go 16 innings to defeat the eighth-place Reds 5 to 4. Score by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Gomes Blanks Indians RES Cleveland ... 000 000 000-0 4 6 New York .. 420 100 10x-811 @ L. Brown, Connally and Pytlaks Gomez and Dickey. i Athletics Wallop Browns RHS St. Louis .... 000 000 120—3 12 Philadelphia 100 341 O0x—9 12 Andrews, Wells, McAfee and Hems- ley, Grube; Cascarella and Berry. Senators Rally To Win RE Detroit . 000 010 210-4 9 Washington . 100 000 60x—7 8 Bridges, Fischer, Auker and Hay- cus. Burt Anderson, trackster from the N. D. A. C. was runnerup for in- dividual honors, with 11 points. The Bison athlete took first in the high hurdles, second in the low hurdles and tied for second in the high jump. ‘The Moorhead Teachers won first in the half mile relay with Wahpeton second, Mayville third and Bemidji fourth. The time was 1 minute, 36.6 seconds. A spirited contest broke out in the broad jump, the event which closed the meet. Schwartz and Bob Thor- son, both of Mayville, kept outdoing innings. | each other in the trials until Schwartz finally chalked up a mark of 21 feet, 11% inches to take first place. Jim McLearie, Brainerd, Minn., flash, took the century dash for Moorhead. His time was 10.3 seconds but he was forced to run against a fairly stiff wind. out (By The Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting —Hemsley, Browns, .481; Reynolds, Red Sox, .426. Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, and Mor- gan, Red Sox, 22. Hits—Reynolds, Red Sox, 40; Man- ush, Senators, 39. Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 8; Ruth, Yankees, 7. Pitching — Ruffing and Gomez, Yankees, 5-0. Saint ee LEAGUE Leslie, Dodgers, .382; Cuy- ler, Cubs, 381, worth; Whitehill, Russell and Phillipa, Bosoz Wallop Chisox HR R Chicago —— 000 010 100—2 8 2 Boston .... 045 O01 40x—1415 3 Baston, Heving, TieJe and Ruelj Rhodes and Ferrell. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cubs Defeat Giants 3 RH New York 000 030 000-3 7 0 Chicago .. + 010 110 40x—7 12 0 Bell and Mancuso; Bush and Harte nett. Pirates Wallop Braves Bg RH Boston ... + 000 020 000—2 11 1 Pittsburgh . + 200 214 00x—9 13 0 Brandt and Spohrer; Smith and Padden. Phillies Win in 10th RHB Philadelphia .. 000 000 1211-5 9 0 Cincinnati ... 001 210 000 0—4 11 2 (10 innings). Collins, A. Moore and Wilson; Bren nan, Stout and O'Farrell. Cardinals Win Slugfest RH 3 ‘Brooklyn . 002 100 310—7 7 St., Louis . 135 000 111-12 18 § Leonard, Beck, Page, Perkins and aid Sukeforth; J. Dean and V. vis, Superior Blues Lead In Northern League St. Paul, May 14.—(#)—The Super- for Blues were back in first place of the Northern League Monday as a res sult of Eau Claire's third defeat of the Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 29; Klein, | Season. Cubs, 24. Hits—Moore, Giants, W. Herman, Cubs, and Urbanski, Braves, 35. Home runs—Klein, Cubs, 9. Pitching—Bush, Cubs, 6-0; War- pene Cubs and Frankhouse, Braves, Mohall Lad Heaves Shot for New Mark Minot, N. D., May 14.—()—Hollis Dietz of Mohall heaved the shot 51 feet, 4% inches to shatter the meet, and state records and turn in the most. brilliant performance of the northwest high school track and field meet won here Saturday by the Yellowjackets, The official state record in’ the shot is 50 feet 8 inches. One other mark, that in the high jump, tumbled when Allward of Este- van, Sask. leaped 5 feet 7% inches as his team finished second to the Mo- hall contingent, which collected 63 Penis The Canadians’ total was A wind that approached storm ve- locity proved an adverse factor, es- pecially in the running events. Nine- teen schools participated in the meet, the fifth annual event sponsored by, Minot Teachers college. The order in which other teams fin- ished were: Crosby, 12%; Minot, 10% Model, 10; Cole Harbor, 6%; Ambrose, 3; Anamoose, 3; Drake, 3; Kenmare, 2 1-3; Velva, 1; Flaxton, 1; Max, 1. in pitching team to victory over! 1. Braves. F : seconds, || Fights Last Night (By The Associated Press) Barcelona, Spain—Paulino Us- cudun, 207, Spain, and Max nth » 187, Germany, drew, Fargo; Kreuts, Fargo, second; Bakke, Nome, third; Schneider, Bismarck, fourth. Distance—20 feet 9 inches. ; Wahpeton, third: Nome, fourth. Time—1 minute 392 seconds Minot Model each got 10. The summary: Golfers Battle for 109 Places in Open rE New York, May 14—(#)—The 100 vacant places in the National Open golf championship field were to be filled by the annual sectional trials in districts scattered from one coast The Blues topped Winnipeg 3-2 Sunday, while Eau Claire was shut out by Moorhead-Fargo 11-0. Greater Grand Forks remained in third poste tion when it downed Brainerd-Little Falls 16-11, while Duluth lost a 10- inning game to Crookston 3-2, All teams are scheduled for an open date Monday. Saturday's games were postponed because of rain and wet grounds. fhe Qrondings w Pittsburgh . 15 Chicago .. St. Louis . New York . Boston .. Brooklyn Philadelphia Cincinnati .... AMERICAN New York .. . Cleveland .. Philadelphia . Washington Boston .. EBEEEB? IT Ss 4 12 8 7 tots it) Se2828 AMERICAN Minneapolis .. Louisville .. | Kansas c1iy": Milwaukee St. Paul . Toledo .. . 9 15 NORTHERN LEAGUE juperior .. woe 7 Great Grand Forks .. Duluth .. 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