The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 11, 1934, Page 6

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aot ——ESETINEIS ‘ RF REE AE ER LEAS pee a aaa ts THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1934 MPCARNEY’S HIT IS TURNING POINT IN GREAT TILT SUNDAY Local Heavy Stickers Tally Nine Runs in Single Frame of Battle TROUPE KNOCKS HOME RUN Jimmies Saves Selves From Shutout With Lone Count in Ninth In a disastrous sixth inning—for} Jamestown—which began with McCar- ney’s single, driving in two runs, and ended some time later with Troupe’s homerun, Bismarck took revenge over their baseball rivals Sunday in a game ax the local ball park which ended 10 tol. Up to that point, the game had been; @ great pitching contest between the two Barneys—Barney Morris of Bis- marck and Barney Brown of James- town. Brown had allowed a single hit to Troupe and Morris had given Radcliffe a scratch blow and Ober- holzer a single which, incidentally, the} former Capital City player tried to stretch into a double and was tossed out, McCarney to Haley. at second. ‘When Morlan stepped to the plate in the sixth, Haley and Morris had both struck out but the bases were loaded by Troupe, Ringhofer and Vin- cent. Brown had walked Vincent in- tentionally in the hope of finding an easier putout at the end of the Bis- marck batting list. Morlan never had a_ chance to either hit or strike out. Brown tossed four consecutive balls across the plate, putting Morlan on first and letting Troupe walk home. That lone score held by Bismarck, however, could not be termed the turning point of the game. There were two men out and McCarney. holding down the tail end of the batting list, was next to the plate. McCarney Comes Through McCarney, who apparently has been waiting for just such a fair June day as Sunday to show the local fans) what he can do on the baseball lot, drove a hard liner into right field. Ringhofer and Vincent came home. That left McCarney and Morian for Massmann to bring in, and he did, as Perkins made a valiant try to catch 6-tl- TLL TELL YOU WHAT HAPPENED, PARDNER/ | THEY BUILT YOUR TIMBER TUNNEL IN TH LATE WINTER SEASON, THRU A SNOWDRIFT THAT WAS TWENTY FEET DEEP AT THis BOTTOM OF THIS MOUNTAIN -AN NOW ITS THAWED OUT, AN THERES YOUR ff TUNNEL /<TH SAME THING WAS DONE TO OL BLINKY HARPER ZZ} a \ SNS D , KBOUT THUTTY YEARS AGO-AN HE SPENT HALF HIS LIFE SCRATCHIN FOR SES ENOUGH GOLD To BUY A SIX- SHOOTER } / 1936 By NEA TM. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF SERVICE, Vf) NM, in) S : Dy NAST, | i ) . I D % aoe“ D> Ar Y ¢ \f \ J ? - h "7 \ 4 IN = ZN (FS = AW \\ @ \' \ = . * Va \ UN (REVHOLE PETE E ( \ EXPLAINS IT= J, ines BREWERS WIN TWICE SUNDAY TO EVEN UP MILLER SERIES 2 So, etn a Finish Where They Started in} Attempt to Halt Associa- tion Pace Setters Chicago, June 11—(\—Milwaukee's | latest attempt at overhauling Min- neapolis, the American Association's pace-maker, has finished right where it started, and it might have been worse from the Brewer viewpoint. After losing the first two games of | the ball, nicely placed in center field,! and + The end was not yet and Brown) was plainly becoming weary. Desid-| erato walloped another of Brown's; tosses for a safety, scoring Massmann. Brown gave up. Until the fatal sixth, he had pitched great ball,| allowing the Bismarck heavy stickers! 8 single hit. Davis replaced him. The change did not halt the Capital) Ville defeated the 1933 champion, 4-1, City scoring machine. the relief moundsman scoring Desiderato. It took Troupe, the mightiest club- ber of them all, to wind up the in-j ning. He swung at a fast ball and) connected for a high fly that sailed up| and out of sight finally behind the left field fence. The savage attack of the Capital ‘City nine finally came to an end as Ringhofer flied out to center field. Bismrack’s tenth run came in the; eighth when Desiderato got fo first on Oberhoizer's overthrow to first and came home when Davis muffed/| Haley's bunt. Jamestown's lone tally came in the ninth. Foster hit and made his way around on a fielder’s choice and sacri- fices of his teammates, Deeds, Ober- holzer and Davis. The game ended as Morris caught Radcliff's pop up in front of home plate. Morris came within an ace of pitch- ing shut-out ball. He allowed the dangerous Jamestown batsmen only @ pair of clean hits, one in the first ‘and the second in the ninth, Valley City Next Foe Bismarck's next foe on the home grounds will be the reorganized Val- ley City team in a twilight game ‘Tuesday night at 6:30. Valley City, ‘mong other victories, boasts a victory over Jamestown and is expected to furnish some of the toughest opposi- tion seen here this season. Haley found) for a single,| The box score: Bismarck— ABRHPOAE Massmann, 3b 511241 Desiderato, ss . 421010 5113 4 2 522610 41112110 210100 400210 ata = 310000 £.4.04:.3. 2450: their series to the Millers, the Brew- ers came back Sunday to win both games of a doubleheader, 7-4 and 9-4, and square up the series. Indianapolis got two steady, pitch- ing performances from Jim Turner land Lefty Logan to beat Toledo twice, {6-1 and 12-4, Archie McKain held Columbus to five hits in the first game as Louis- but Bud Teachout pitched a five-hit- ter himself to give the Red Birds a| Toledo 15-1 victory in the other one. St. Paul and Kansas City also di- vided their doubleheader. Harry Hockette blanked the Saints, 17-0. Shealy held the Saints to six hits in the second game, bunched for a 2-1 St. Paul victory. Blues, Saints Split Pair (First Game) Brewers Win Two (First Game) RHE Milwaukee 000 320011—7 14 0 Minneapolis 100 000 040—4 11 0 Braxton and Young; Marrow, Rich- mond and Hargrave. (Second Game) HE but they were! RH E) Kansas City ..... 500000 002—7 10 1 St. Paul .........! 000000 000—0 6 2 Hockett and Crandall; Fette, Brown, Phelps and Fenner. «Second Game) RHE Kansas City ..... 010000000—1 8 0 St. Paul ........ 010001 00x—2 6 1 Shealey and Brenzel; Clast and Giuliani. Minneapolis .......' 000 2011-4 7 2 (Called end 7th, 6 o'clock law) Hutchinson, Pressnell and Rensa, Young; Tauscher and Hargrave. Colonels Divide With Birds (First Game) RHE Columbus .000000010—1 5 1 Louisville . 001 03000x—4 7 2 Spencer, Sims, Cross and Gooch; McKain and Erickson. (Second Game) RHE Columbus 100 422 132—15 14 0 Louisville . 000010000— 1 5 4 Teachout O'Dea; Hatter, Pe- terson and Thompson. Indians Take Two (First Game) RHE Toledo -010000000—1 7 3 Indianapolis .001 000 32x—6 9 0 | Perrin and O'Neail; Turner and | Sprinz. «Second Game) Indianapolis = a Bowler, Sundra, Doljack and De- sautels; Logan and Sprinz. 'Cook’s 69 Paces Club Tournament |Dr. Henderson Wins Handicap Matches With 65 After 12 Stroke Discount | ; Paul Cook paced the field of 41 entrants, shooting a low gross of 69, to win first place in the 18 holes of medal play of the Bismarck Country club handicap tournament Sunday, | Dr. R. W. Henderson won first place | for low net score. His gross of 77 with a handicap of 12 gave him a net of 65. Nadine O'Leary, only woman entry, was given a tie for fifth and sixth Milwaukee .. R ..-0450000—9 9 0 OUT OUR WAY I AINT DONE SO! KNOW— I JU I GUESS ~~ ON’ T-I— WELL (\ 7.M.AEG. U.S. PAT. OFF, WHY, NO I HAVEN'T! L DON'T WANT YOU TO BELIEVE IN THAT KINDA JUN~ I MEAN-FORTUNE TELLIN'— IT'S ALL RIGHT, OON'T BELIEVE IN IT, BO Wecees 2 ‘ HEROES ARE MADE-NOT | place in the handicap matches with Don Bowman. Both made the round You IMETHIN' NOU! S' DON'T 'Y I sus’ I— Y) in 84 to be credited with net 73s after discounting 11 stroke handicaps. Other prize winners in the low gross George Stienbruck, fourth, with 82. Results for the first seven prize- |winning places in the handicap matches were as follows: Gross Handicap Net Dr. R. W. Hen- VETERANS SURPRISE IN UPHILL BATTLE New Golf Champion Shot Low 293 Total, One Stroke Ahead of Sarazen New York Giants Reach Clout- ing Climax Against Phil- lies With 20 Hits (By The Associated Press) In their latest spurt to the head of the National League standing, the New York Giants, “hitless’ champions of 1933, have turned into a bunch of high-powered sluggers. In the course of winning 12 out of 15 games, the Giants have touched the 10-hit mark nine times, reaching a climax Sunday when: they battered the Phil- lies for 20 blows ard an 18-7 victory. The second-place came through with a 3-2 triumph over Pittsburgh. The Cubs, in third, came back to beat Cincinnati, 7 to 4. Brooklyn’s “daffiness boys” lived up to their reputation in the fourth Na- tional League game by dropping a 10-8 decision to the Braves. The American League leaders tight- ened up their race again when De- troit’s.pace-setting Tigers ran into a 3-1 setback at Chicago's hands. The second-place Yankees smashed. out a 7-3 decision over the Athletics. Boston got a 4-3 triumph over Washington. Cleveland broke a virtual tie for third with St. Louis by slamming out 15 hits and a 6-1 decision over the IS LOW AMATEUR LITTLE Three Players Led Victor Up to Last Round of 72-Hole Links Fight New York, June 11.—(#)—Only two years after making ris first big chal- lenge for America’s premier golfing honors, Olin Dutra, the clouting Cal- ifornian, holds the open golf cham- pionsh:p of the United States, which with the conspicious uptrend in the sporting business may well be worth $25,000 to him before he h: to de- fend it in 1935. : Dutra came east in 1932 with a great record, hailed as a coming champion. Simultaneously the stocky Gene Sarazen came back from Eng- Jand with the British open crown. Twin favorites in the United States open that year at Fresh Meadow, Du- tra paced the field for one round, but Sarazen came from behind with a glorious finishing 66, on the last 18 holes and won the tournament with the record-equallinc score of 286. Dutra finished seventh. Saturday, over the magnificent east course of the Merion Cricket club, which completely jolted the over- confidence of the professional lead- ers, the tables were abruptly turned. Starting the last round of the 72- hole battle, Sarazen was out in front, worrying not about Dutra, but about a pair of veterans ahead of him, Bobby Cruickshank and Wiffy Cox. While this trio staggered and NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Pound Phillies RHE New York ..... 421 015 320—18 20 0 Philadelphia .. 300 013 000— 716 3 Hubbell, Luque, Bell and Mancuso; Collins, Grabowski, A. Moore, Joh son and Todd. Braves Win in llth RHE Boston ..... 312 017 000 02—10 15 1 Brooklyn .. 010 024 100 00— 8 13 2 Brandt, Frankhouse, Smith and Spohrer, Hogan; Leonard, Carroll, Smythe, Beck, Munns, Mungo and Lopez. Cubs Defeat Reds derson ....... 77 12 65 RHE blundered down the stretch, the iE E. arr eeceee oS i . swarthy California Spaniard came ++ 100 012 000—4 11 0 dower teeny 86 “ 72 |@alloping from behind to pass all . 301 010 11x—7 13 1 | eoeaadenin it~ 72 | three and snatch the vietor’s gold and| Derringer and Lombardi; Warneke Nadine O'Leary. 4 61s 7g.*[810rY. ‘This time, Sarazen was the/and Hartnett. Dr. G. R. Li Bees 86 a 74 | Tunner-up by a single stroke. Collins’ Homer Beats Pirates eer eee The final totals were Dutra 293, RHE = Sarazen 294, Cooper, Cruickshank and «+ 010 100 000—2 9 1 |Europeans Fight. for Cox 295 each. MacDonald Smith of|St. eseeee O01 100 O1x—3 13 1 Chance at Davis Cup (By The Associated Press) uropean zone eliminations for the | Davis Cup, emblematic of orld ten- inis supremacy, had progressed to the ; Semi-final round with France, Italy, Australia and Czechoslovakia still s. rviving Pairings in the next round send Australia against France and Italy against the Czechs. The wiriners will clash in the zone final and then face the United States in the interzone finals at Wimbledon July 21, 23 and 24. A week later the ultimate sur- vivor will play Great Britain's cup- holders on the same courts. ——_——_——_* Yesterday’s Stars Jimmy Dykes, White Sox—Made three of team's six hits and drove in winning runs against Tigers. and single, scoring twice, in victory over Senators. hits for perfect day, runs against Phillies. eight in hurling seven-hit game against Browns. Kiki Cuyler, Cubs—Knocked in three runs against Reds with double and two singles. Randy Moore, Braves—Singled in llth to drive in run that beat Dodgers. Parts of the Sahara desert have frost one or two nights a year. By Williams HAVE TOO? 'VE DONE SOMETHING You DON'T WANT ME TO KNOW! THATS WHY YOU DON'T WANT AUNT ALICE H THAT CUP, w/t TRL Park Bill Cissell, Red Sox—Hit homer Blondy Ryan, Giants—Made four drove in five Bod Weiland, Indians—Struck out Nashville and Bill Burke of Cleve- Jand, were in another tie for sixth Place at 296. ‘The new champion’s four rounds were 76, 74, 71 and 72. Young Rodney Bliss, Jr., of Omaha, who outscored the defending cham- pion, Johnny Goodman, and created the amateur sensation of the tourna- ment, was going like a house afire until he stumbled into an eight on his third round. Lawson Little, the new British amateur titleholder, be- came low amateur with a total of 306, one better than Bliss. Goodman dis- appeared with a total of 311. $400,000 GATE IN SIGHT FOR BATTLE OF HEAVY WEIGHTS Primo Working Too Har Not Enough Is Dope CLUB No. 8-123 jerid, 1 ¥! All Five for $5.49 CLUB Ne. 8-135 Pathfinder (Wkly) 1 Ye. ing Box Office New York, June 11.—(#)—For fight in which one principal allegedly hasn't worked hard enough to get up Bismarck Tuesday, _ Baseball a sweat and the other now is re- ported to be overtrained, Primo Car- nera’s heavyweight title defense against Max Baer is doing right well from a box office standpoint. The advance sale Monday was un- derstood to be a shade under $200,000 with indications of a “gate” of $400,- 000 or more by the time the boxers enter the ring of Madison Square Garden’s Long Island bowl Thursday night. perhaps as a counter-irri- tant for the adverse criticism attend- ing Baer’s training camp clowning at Asbury Park, advices from Pompton Lakes began to stress the fear that Carnera might be overtrained. Although Baer has made a much more impressive showing the last two days, punctuating his usual line of light banter with some sturdy left hooks and straight: rights that his sparring partners absorbed without perceptible amusement, the betting odds remained in the champion’s fa- vor, at 2 to 1. op lgue AMERICAN LEAGUE tting—Gehringer, Tigers, .407; Manush, Senators, .380. Rune eneingrr and Goslin, Tig- ers, 43, Hits—Manush, Senators, 82; Geh- ringer, Tigers, 76. Home eae Yankees and June, 12. 6:30 P.M, leCall’s Mi jagasine, 1 Yn, Pictorial Beview, 1 Xs. Delineator, 1 Yr. Better Homes & Gardens, 3 Country Home, 1 Yr. 1 Year Value $6.85. You save 62.05 The Bismarck Tribune, All Six for $5.80 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Meine, French and Grace; J. Dean and V. Davis. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chisox Down Tigers RHE Chicago . «+ 001 000 200-3 6 0 Detroit . +. 000 000 010-1 9 0 Jones and Madjeski; Rowe and Cochrane, Yanks Blast A’s RHE 000 010 020—3 10 1 +. 411 000 10x—7 8 0 Mahaffey, Dietric, Marcum and Hayes; Murphy, Grimes and Dickey. Red Sox Upset Senators RHE Washington .... 102 000 000-3 8 1 Boston ........ 200 010 001-4 8 1 Thonas and Berg; W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell. Browns Take Beating RHE St. Louis ...... 000 010 000—1 7 2 Cleveland . 021 100 Oax—6 15 0 Coffman, Mills and Hemsley; Weil- and and Pytlak. WRISTS SHOULD BE FULLY COCKED AT TOP OF PITCH As the top of the backswing is reached in the pitch shot, the wrists should be completely cocked. At this point, in the shot of many good golfers, the left heel has risen from the ground just enough to allow| The Bismarck Tribune North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper = Offers To The Public ON LEADING MAGAZINES CLUB Ne. 8-123 Review, 1 ¥ Rodsehola Magsaine, 1 Ye. Geoa 81 7 ¥ 7 Mother's Home Life, 1 Yr. America, American Poultry Jomraal.| Biomarck, ‘Trivune, 1 Year 1 Yr. Value 99.25. You save $3.40. Value $7.50, You save $3.00 All Seven for $5.50 ‘These Club Offers are not the city ef Bis- ‘Tree jueted in Sub- of (ONE YEAR) Liberty Magasine (63 te~ euen) Radiclané, 1 Yr. American Magasine, 1 Yr. jarck Tribune, 2 Year bed Value $10.00. You save $4.08 Sixth Inning Fatal To Jamestown As Bismarck Scores 10-1 Win OLIN DUTRA TO REALIZE $25,000 AS U. S. OPEN TITLIST . OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | ¢ ALIFORNIAN G AVE ‘Hitless’ Champs of ’33 Turn Into Powerful Sluggers Te Win 12 of 15 he necessary turn of the body with- ol restraint. tetethay ae an necessary if the golfer c f° ficient turn to the body without this action. Bobby Jones and Gene Sarazen ar6 examples of golfers who play the pitch without lifting the heel in the back- swing. Never should there be ® conscious lift of the heel from the ground. Brandings NATIONAL LEAGUE w iu Pot New York vee 32 1840 St. Louis 29° «18 «= (BIT Chicago 300-20 608 Pittsburg! 2 «19 518 Boston . 24 (22 522 Brooklyn . 20 «29 = 408 Philadelphia . 16 29356 Cincinnati ... 33250 AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit. .. . 2 20 592 New York 27-20 Th Cleveland 24 200545 St. Louis . 24 ©«622)—(«52 Washington 2 «625 ~=—(500 Boston . 24 24500 Philadel 19 28406 Chicago .. 17 30362 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis .. 34-200 630 Milwaukee .. 3 a ay Indianapolis Columbus 2% «8626 =| —508 St. Paul . +25 ©6626 «490 Kansas City 23 «29 AD Louisville 23«-29 AD Toledo ... AS Sir Henry Morgan, the famous pi- rate, was knighted by the King of Engand and made lieutenant-gover- nor of Jamaica because of his fear- less expeditions against the Sp&in- ish. It has been estimated that, of the 196,950,000 square miles of the sur- face of the earth, of which 57,150,000 miles are land, 5,000,000 square miles are desert. Two of our present U. 8. senators are blind. 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