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QQevne cases \ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1934 Seventh Inning Rally Gives Sweet Shop First Title Game, 9-8 SCORE THREE RUNS IN LAST STANZA 70 DEFEAT 0. H. WILLS Neither Pitcher in Best Form During Free-Hitting Con- test Tuesday Night MATT HUMMEL HITS HOMER Second Game Will Be Played Thursday for City Diamond- ball Championship Trailing by two runs when they came to bat in the last half of the seventh inning, the Sweet Shop stag- ed a three-run rally on two triples, a single and an error and won the first game of the city diamondball cham- Pionship series with the O. H. Will team, 9 to 6. The Sweet Shop opened the scor- ing in the first inning when Eddie Agre, Bob Boelter and Gus Schlick- enmeyer got singles scoring gre. Equalizing the count in the second stanza on hits from the bats of Tom Lee and Matt Hummel coupled with two errors, the Seedstore team went ahead in their half of the third on Joe Zahn’s double and another error. Sweet Shop Ties Score The Sweet Shop tied it up in their turn at bat when Lawrence Schneid- er singled and scored on Eddie Agre’s second safe hit of the game. Singles by Steve Goetz, Matt Hummel, Adam Junda and Joe Zahn and two bases on balls gave the Will club a three run advantage in the first half of the fourth and they held the lead until the sixth. Scoring one run in the fifth and two in the sixth while the Will team got only one counter in the sixth the teams went into the seventh with the score tied. Johnny Spriggs got a single for the Will team and scored on Frank Hummel'’s double. Hummel scored on Tom Lee's single to give the team a two run lead. Norman Agre came to bat for the Sweet Shop and got on through an error. Bob Boelter and Gus Schlick- enmeyer connected for doubles and Arnold Schneider got a single to score three runs and end the game. Schneider, Zahn Pitch Neither pitcher was in their best fettle. Schneider allowed 12 hits. struck out four and issued four bases on balls. Zahn was nicked for 13 safeties, retired three by the strike- out route and walked one. M. Hummel with three hits, includ- ing a homerun, in four times at bat was the leading sticker for the Will's while Boelter and Schlickenmeyer were pacing the winning team each with a triple and a single. The second game will be played ‘Thursday night at 6:30 p. m. at the southside diamond. The box score: O. H. Will— J. Spriggs, If. P. Hummel, ¢. S. Goetz, Is: Steve Goetz, T. Lee, cf. M. Hummel, H. Falconer, 3b. CH Rownoone DD CvVHounHomnm Eigeueceouy SCrowsooo000R RoorKsOrcCON G. Schlickenmeyer, A. Schneider, rss. F. Lee, 1b... L. Benser, r C. Johnson E. Martin, r. L. Schneider, p. ‘Totals.. Score by innings— ©. H. Will. Sweet Sho Summary Stoien™ bases—N. Agre, ‘A, Schneider, F. Lee. Sacrifices—E. Martin, E. Agre. Two base hits — Zahn, F. Hummel. Three base hits— Boelter, Schlickenmeyer. Home runs —M. Hummel. Double plays—John- son to F. Lee. Hits—off Schneider 12 in 7 innings; off Zahn 13 in 7 innings. Struck out—by Schneider 4; by Zahn 3. Bases on balls—off Schneider 4; off Zahn 1. Umpire—Bennett. ———————————) | Dean Duo, Angered | At Fine, Quit Cards | —_— St. Louis, Aug. 15.—()—The truant ‘pitching aces of the Cardinals, Dizzy and Paul Dean, may be back in the fold within a short time—If they don't decide fishing in Florida is more tractive than pitching for the Louis Nationals. It’s up to them, Manager Frankie Frisch said here Tuesday. Although they have been suspended without pay and fined for not accompanying the club to Detroit for an exhibition game, they are free to rejoin the team they see fit, Frisch said. Disciplinary action was taken on the team’s return from Detroit, Dizzy being fined $100 and Paul $50. Diazy ‘was given the heavier fine, Sam Brea- don, president of the club, said, be- cause he is older and receives more Wachter League Club Needs On- ly One More Win to Cinch Junior Championship Nicking three Giant pitchers for 13 hits, the Senators of the Wachter League took their third game from the William Moore representatives, 14-13, Tuesday in a twilight game call- ed _at the end of the fifth inning. Scoring three runs in the first in- ning the Giants took a lead which was overcome by the Senators in the third. They scored five more runs in the fourth and an equal number in the fifth but the winners allied seven times in the fourth and added three more in the fifth for the victory. Masseth, Olson and J. Goetz play- ed the best games for the Senators. Masseth got three hits including a and one hit while playing errorless ball in the field. Stewart, Peters and Tilsen were the main threats for the losers. By virtue of their win the Senators have a three to one lead in the series and need only one more victory to annex the title. The box score: Giants Martin, 2nd Stewart, Ist Peters, 3rd . Tilsen, If . M. Scott, ¢ Coons, rf Skooje, ss .. Fevold, cf, 2nd Jones, p, cf HoH mMoonuancny Martineson, p V. Scott, cf ... Totals .....se000 1 Senators G. Goetz, 55, P .... R. Masseth, p, Ist . Shuck, p ... F. Weiszerber, Ky Olson, ¢, Ist J. Goetz, cf . Rosenberg, 3b Greinstiner, 2b L. Glosser, lf J. Doll, rf COMM we mem D COM ooHOOMHHOR Sroconomnuung CooHronocowory Come rHootHoet seo mrss co sen om 7 300 55—13 103 73—14 TO —~YOU ARE SUCH AN INTELLIGENT LISTENER MR SAPPELHEFF I AM GOING TO TELL YOU SOMETHING IN CONFIDENCE /— HAR-RRUMF- I JUST RECEIVED A QUARTER OF A MILLION FOR MY LATEST INVENTION =-~THE “ HOOPLE MAGNETIC WAR TORPEDO —~ BATTLESHIPS, AS YOU KNOW, ARE PLATED WITH STEEL ARMOR MY TORPEDO 1S EQUIPPED WITH A HIGHLY MAGNETIC HEAD, AND WHEN RELEASED AT AN ENEMY SHIP, ——~-WELL>~ YOU GET THE IDEA, MR, SAPPELHEFF | double, Olson collected two hits and} Goetz scored three runs on two walks! SENATORS DEFEAT GIANTS FOR THIRD WIN OF ‘LITTLE SERIES’ | eters. Sacrifices, Fevold, G. Goetz. Two base hits, Olson, Masseth. Hits off Jones 9 in 4 innings; off Klein 3 in 2.3 innings; off Martineson 1 in 1-3 innings; off Masseth 2 in 1 in- ning. Shuck 4 in 3 innings, G. Goetz. 1 in 1 inning. Struck out by Jones: 5; by Klein 2; by Shuck 2, by Goetz 0, Masseth 2, Martineson 0. Bases on balls off Jones 4. off Klein 2, off Martineson 4, off Shuck 5, of Masseth 7, Goetz 3. Time of game 1:46. Um- pire, J. Masseth. PLAVING | WHEN | A LONG i} Many of our leading pros advise a tighter grip on the club for long iron Play. * Don't confuse a tight grip with) @ tightening of the wrists. Tight wrists must be avoided. If there is tension in the wrists, the shot will be spoiled. ‘When playing from sand or heavy rough with a niblick, the need for a tight grip is urgent. It is sometimes necessary to plow through sand or heavy grass to get the ball out. U. 8. GOLFERS ADVANCE Laval-Sur-Le-Ac, Que., Aug. 15.— (®)—Eleven players from the United States including the defending title- holder, Albert (Scotty) Campbell of; Seattle as well as Jesse Guilford of, Boston and Jack Munger of Dallas. stood safely in the second round of the Canadian amateur golf champ. ionship Wednesday. Java has more thunderstorms than Summary: Btolen bases, J. Goetz, any other country in the world. OUT OUR WAY By Williams Y WHY, WE'D LO I ripicucous, GOINGS ‘TH’ PAVILION, i HOSE || th ‘€ STRUT til i ig jon Chicago pitchers with 7 te 38... CLARKATHE | THE BAR/- ONE WITH THE CHANNEL Buoy £ NOSE /~LET HIM. CORRAL YOU, AND HELL TALK UNTIL YOUR EARS RING LIKE CLOCK PUT AWAY SO MANY SCOTCH AN* SODAS, Seeded Net Stars Advance in Meet National Public Parks Tourna- ment Moves Into Third Round at Minneapolis Minneapolis, Aug. 15—(#)—Their ranks still intact, though shaken up bit here and there, the eight seeded Players in the National Public Parks. tennis tournament Wednsday moved into the third round to meet the challenge of eight others still in the tourney. Arnold Simons, Louisville, the de- fending champion, got back into ac- tion in the men’s singles event after joining Warfield Donohue, a fellow- townsman, in a doubles triumph over & Minnesota combination, Ray Hite and Clifford Johnson, in which they dropped but three games in the three-set affray. Chief scare-producer Tuesday was Leo Kronman of Buffalo, N. Y., who gave Ted Drewes, St. Louis, four times national public champion, a hard afternoon before succumbing in @ well-fought four-set match. ‘The feminine stars also got into action, with their champion, Ruth Prosser of St. Louis, and other favor- ites subduing opening round oppon- ents. Mrs. Prosser turned back Mar- ian Nordland, Minneapolis, in two sets. Four of the seeded stars, Walter Smigel of Cleveland, Scott Rexinger of Chicago, Bill Schommer of Min- neapolis, and Barnard Welch Washington, impressed the gallery with their sparkling play in yester- day's matches. ee Yesterday’s Stars (By The Associated Press) Gus Suhr, Pirates—Batted in two runs and scored other in 3-2 victory over Giants. Charley Gehringer, Tigers — Wal- loped two homers and three singles, batting in six runs, in two games against Yankees. Bennie Frey, gal out Dodg- ers with seven hi Lefty Grove, Red Sox — Limited Browns to six hits, fanning five. Baxter Jordan, Braves—Led attack four singles. Mel Harder, Indians—Held Senators to four hits. Bill Delancey, Cardinals—Had per- fect day at bat against Phillies with E M. ace OF ‘TRIU homer and two singles, / AWRIGHT—A bei RIGHT, THEN, DROWN! 1 MPH, TO OVER THERE UNDER? ANT tan Lo OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ‘| CROWDER ANDR AND ROWE Mil ELBOW DETROIT T0 VICTORIES, 9-5, 7-3 Indians Behind Mel Harder Trample Senators; Red Sox Subdue St. Louis PIRATES DEFEAT GIANTS Braves Pummel Four Cub Pitch- ers for 15 to 2 Victory; Cards Beat Phillies (By The Associated Press) Labeled as a “Team of Destiny” as Plainly as if the words had been sewn on their uniforms, the Detroit Tigers, were riding the crest. of the baseball wave Wednesday as they faced the third game of their important series with the Yankees, Triumphant in their opening dou- bleheader with the second place club before a record crowd, Tuesday, the Tigers had a 6% game lead with nothing more to do than protect it in the three remaining games of the se- ries. They boasted two more brilliant achievements which shone the bright- er after Tuesday's 9 to 5 and 7 to 3 victories. Their winning streak had been stretched to 14 consecutive games, just five short of the American League record set by the White Sox of 1906, and their young mound ace, jLynwood’ (Schoolboy) Rowe, had his 13th successive mound triumph, three behind the league record in that re- spect. ‘Wednesday Tommy Bridges, second only to Rowe among the Tiger pitch- ers, was ready to face either Johnny Broaca or Johnny Murphy, the only ‘Yankee moundsmen available to start after five flingers tried vainly to stop the Detroit assaults Tuesday. For/5, Thursday it is Elden Auker’s turn and then Rowe may be sent back in the final clash of the series. Crowd Attends ‘With a crowd of 77,000 cash custom- ers, one of the greatest in baseball annals, looking on, the Tigers twice performed their favorite feat of com- ing from behind to victory. After al- lowing their opponents five runs in the first three innings of the opener they blasted Lefty Gomez into sub- mission to tie the score in the sixth as Charley Gehringer opened the rally with the first of two home runs he hit during the day. In the next inning Jimmy Desfidng was pelted out when the Tigers again batted around and scored four runs. Meanwhile “General” Alvin Crow- der, recent cast-off from the Senators, justified Mickey Cochrane's man- agerial strategy in picking him as starting pitcher. He fecovered from his bad start and pitched shutout ball for five innings before Fred Marberry finally relieved him in the ninth. Rowe was the biggest factor in the second triumph as he pitched four- hit ball and walked only one. But after Gehringer again provided a fly- ing start with a first-inning homer, the Yanks were able to tie the count in the sixth when Lou Gehrig slammed his 37th circuit blow of the season. Charley Ruffing, who pitched | mort, the whole game for New York and struck out eleven, failed to match the grown-up schoolboy in the last two frames and yielded three hits and two runs in each. Other Clubs Gain The American League's other first- division clubs, Cleveland and Boston, also gained on the Yanks. Mel-Har- der limited Washington to four hits to give the Indians a 5 to 1 victory while Lefty Grove, making his first starting appearance since having his tonsils removed a few weeks ago, the Red Sox a six-hit game agi Louis and won it 7 to 3. Pittburgh's Pirates laid themselves open to suspicion of a conspiracy ainst the Nationa] League leaders when they pitched two reputedly fading veterans, Burleigh Grimes and Waite Hoyt, against the mighty Carl Hubbell and beat the league-leading Giants 3 to 2 with rallies in the last two innings. Grimes pitched six-hit ball for eight innings and left with ‘the score tied though Hubbell had granted only three hits, two of them in the eighth. Two more blows, Fred Lindstrom’s double and Gus Suhr'’s single, won the game in the ninth. The second-place Cubs took an even worse licking when the Braves lam- basted four flingers starting with Guy Bush, for 23 hits and won 15 to 2 behind Ed Brandt. Boston had two six-run innings in the slugfest. The Cardinals imitated Pittburgh’s mound tactics in gaining # 5 to 1 de- cision over the Phillies” Dazzy Vance toiled seven innings, giving three hits and fanning six, before a blistered finger forced him out. Jess Haines finished. Bennie Frey's ' seven-hit' elbowing and a couple of concentrated attacks on Ray Benge enabled the last-place Reds to defeat Brooklyn 500. NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Blank TIGER ‘TEAM OF DESTINY’ TAKES TWIN BILL_FROM YANKS lers Cling to Fractional Point Lead Over Red Birds in Association [___ El Lagarto Wins Gold Cup Hornet. ee ee me the race. Local CCC Downs Fort Lincoln, 8-5 Four Runs in Last Two Innings Give Civilians Victory Tuesday Afternoon Bismarck’s Civilian Conservation Corps team defeated Fort. Lincoln Cook to > Defend Jimmy Golf Title Fred Crummer, Fargo and Billy Sundahl, Jamestown, Will Lead Challengers Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 14—(7)}— A strong field of North Dakota ama- teur golfers are expected here next in a surprise preformance at the lat- ter’s diamond Tuesday afternoon. - The CCC's hit Watson's offerings) regularly to keep the score tied and then drove in four runs in the last) two innings off Lofgren to win 8 to Except for two bad innings, Lischif- ster held the soldiers well in hand Sunday for the Gladstone Pharmacy fourth annual match play golf tour- nament. Indications point to a re- cord entry list. The tournament will be conducted over the Oweti public links. Paul » Bismarck. five times winner of the state goif title, holgs the championship and will defend Columbus Drops Blues for Sixth Straight Victory;. Millers Wallop Indians Chicago, Aug. 15—(#)—The battle for the e leadership of the American Association was still a problem in small fractions Wednesday, with Minneapolis clinging to its margin of less than one percentage point over Columbus. The Red Birds won their sixth straight victory Tuesday afternoon, 3 to 1, over Kansas City. The Mil- lers, however, caught up again in s night game, defeating Indianpolis’ battling Indians, 11 to 3. Louisville walloped St. Paul 16 to 6, to gain notch = Indianapolis, while Milwat kee an night doubleheader. Garland Braxton, southpaw, accounted for his eigh- teenth victory of the campaign and his eighth in succession, in beating . Toledo, 4 to 1, in the afternoon game.., At night, Toledo cracked Forest Pres-, nell and Elton Walkup for five runs ~ in the first inning and Roxie Lawson coast to a 9 to 3 victory. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Toledo . and pitched himself out of a.badithe title. Cook recentiy battled his Braxton hole in the ninth when he fanned’ Leitz and Dunne with the bases full as Fort Lincoln made a strong rally. Fort Lincoln— Discipio, 2b Becker, cf Leitz, 88 Dunne, rf . Lofgren, A., 1b, Murgitroyde, If Deatherage, 3b Schafer, ¢ ‘Watson, p Cassidy (in qth) 1b eS Totals Bismarck Naylor, ss, 3b McPhail, 2b West, ¢ Rubish, ci Durkee, If Cooper, rf 3 Lischifster, p 4 Dyke, lb . 4 McDermott, 3b 2 Roberts (in for McDermott in 5th), 3s 1 BBB) i OC COnmeH man Ba] Coommoone lt © rewcrownnO3| oo eunohooaug Cowoconrareloe wanvoo-nn?s way through a record field at the state tournament to carry off first honors. Desautels. Second Game— Fred Cummer, Fargo, Edgewood’s| Toledo Premier golfer. was runner-up to) Cook in the 1933 pharmacy competi- tion and this year reacaed the semi- finals of the state event. Cummer, too, has sent word he will be on hand for the tourney. Last year’s tournament drew a field of 76 golfers from the state’s ama- teur ranks, making it one of the larg- were 10 state title contenders with an eye toward adm! Pected to be equally strong. Jamestown will enter a formidable group in the golfing test. Heading the list is Billy Sundahl, youthful city champion. He recently estab- Oweti layout, clipping seven strokes from perfect figures. Owetl’s pine hole course has a 36 par. Qualifying rounds are to be omy ed Sunday but practice rounds will|Leitz, eee 38 13 27 12 Rg .613 000 001—5 001 102 013—8 @, gren, “A. @) Murgitroyde; fcPhail, West, Durkee, Cooper, Lischifter. » Cooper. Two-base hits: Murgitroyde, Naylor, Rubish. Home runs: Durkee. Doub- le or triple plays: Lischister to Mc- Phail. Hits off Watson 10 in 7 1-3 innings; off Lofgren, A., 3.in 1 2-3 in- Struck out by wolaoo Fargo Man Ties for Third in Gopher Open St. Paul, Aug. j. 15—()—Joe Coria, state public links champion, open golf title y hy mooring 308 be allowed Friday and Saturday. Six- brackets. Mt the event will be nine holes. Crandings the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE se aeaererse Bek? EsREEERE? EREEEEE Bees . Y, Aug. 14.—(P)— final for the wom- en's national tennis Seenvioosiie ap- assured We with little Sarah of Brookline, Mass., a top-heavy favorite to be in here against either Helen Jacobs, the-two-times title-holder, or Angeles. Fort Lincoln Beats New England Nine - Fort Lincoln defeated the 795th ‘CCC Co., from New England 8 to 3 in @ fast ga day. While fourteen of th visitors, his team- mates bunched timely hits to score heavily in the third and seventh inn- ings. With this game Fort Lincoln took Fu ag the three games. 8 we Rosson onr> Discipio, 2b Becker, rf CRommoornor eee errr 1 SI ol Rl ene wrewsas El ewonwecone> , Tigers, 110; Were - ber, Red Sor, 108, Hitse—Mani enstor Tigers, 160. % ant Toledo- split a day-and. Milwaukee . at Fort Lincoln Sun- | Lofgren struck out 2 sree ses enceorn-