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\ HANS SNGE HT |WILL’‘S EVEN PLAYOFF IN CITY DIAMONDBALL CHAMPIONSHIP | OUR BOARDING HOUSE "By Ahern | (7yirtopy |Weather Forces Yankee WI 1847 VICTORY To Play Doubleheader on SCORES M’CARNEY WITH WINNING RUN Stewart and Carter Engage in Brillant Pitching Duel Over Long Route THREE DOUBLE PLAYS MADE Two Hits, a Walk and a Passed Ball Give Locals Winning Tally in Tenth Two hits, a walk and a passed ball gave Bismarck one lone tally in the last half of the tenth inning as the locals scored their third successive victory this week defeating the Val- ley City Hi-Line club, 1 to 0, in a twilight game Thursday night. A high fly from McCarney’s bat that fell safe over the second base- man’s head started the trouble in the extra inning. He advanced to second when Mike Goetz walked and they both advanced a base when Charley Hancock let one of Carter's high ones tlip through his catcher’s mitt for a passed ball. With no one down. a hit meant winning the game. Massmann foul- ed out to Hancock and Hahn came up. The veteran second baseman lined & hard drive right between the short- stop and second base scoring McCar- ney and the game was won. Nip and Tuck Battle Up until that time the game had been a “nip and tuck” battle featur- ing Frank Stewart and “Spoon” Car- fer in a superb pitching duel. The Valley City hurler held his former Bismarck teammates to five hits in the first nine innings and allowed only one man to see third base. Stewart was just a shade better, however, and turned in a similar per- formance over the ten inning route. Each retired six opposing batters on strikeouts but Stewart went without (ssuing @ pass while Carter was walk- ing three. Bismarck threatened to score in the very first inning when Hahn was hit by a pitched ball. A. Luther, play- Ang second base for the Hi-Liners, muffed George Fisher's hard ground- er and Hahn went to third where he was stranded as Haley and Troupe struck out. Valley City Threatens In the fourth A. Luther started the Hi-Line club out with a nice single and went to third on Lehner’s clean hit after Grangaard had advanced him to second on a sacrifice. But the usually hard-hitting Art Hancock fouled out to McCarney and brother Charley boosted a high one to Fisher for the third putout. Fisher laid the wood on one in the sixth but the Valley City second base- man jumped high in the air to spear Troupe’s liner, wheeled and threw to first catching Fisher halfway down to second for a double putout. ‘The Capital Citians executed two flouble plays. One came in the sixth and the other one in the ninth. Both ended what looked like scoring ral- lies. Hahn with two singles in four times at bat was the leading light for the locals while Lehner got two safeties in four trips to the plate to top off his teammates at the plate. Sunday the two teams play a re- turn game at Valley City. Bismarck Scores 1-0 Victory Over Valley City in 10 Innings TH FLOAT KID, AN SHOW US HOW YOU WON TH BURPVILLE WADING CHAMPIONSHIP IN TH TOWN HALL FOUNTAIN/) = 8-(7- (© 1994 BY REA SERVICE. INC = Zower, ZG spy usten!~eoao, ITAINT OL” LY when TI WASIN MY PRIME MAN NEPTUNE!) couLD SHOW YOU BABOONS» || STRETCH A GET OUT OF "2 WiiaT SWIMMING REALLY MEANT] Ace ose thr ' ALLYOU DO IS STAND AROUNDY “BATH TUB AT LIKE CRANES/—FAFF ~~ HM-M— KNOW WHAT T LOOPS OF ROPE OVER MY MASSIVE SHOULDERS, THEN GO INTO A CRAWL STROKE WITH THE SPEED OF A MARLIN, CR mz MRS, HOOPLE Z <3 SAYS YOU HOME/—YEH- —WONT SIP (| AT LOW AND CRUISE AROUND GIVING THEYRE ALL SHOWER-BATH STARS 3.0. nea US PAT. CFF. Plans Completed for Annual Missouri Slope Diamondball Tourney Sunday Mill City Titlists Are Hard Pressed Advance to Semi-Finals After Hard, Five-Set Victory in Public Parks Meet Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 17. Racquets swung fast again Fri champions sought to protect in the national public parks tournament with contestants broiled duels. Pride of most onlookers, the title- defending doubles team of Charles Britzius and Billy Schommer of, Min- neapolis, victor in a five-set scrap) Thursday with Scott Rexinger andj Gene Quinn of Chicago, was to meet Bob Norton and Ted Heuermann of St. Louis. Schommer, who brought the doubles championship to the home town a year ago with Britzius, remained alone i the singles, however. Engaged with Walter Smigel of Cleveland in ‘the quarter-finals. Arnold Simons, |defending singles champion from Louisville, faced Dooley Mitchell of Washington. Two other Washington challengers, Ralph McElvenney and Barnard Welsh, stayed in the title pursuit, the former to meet Ted Drewes of St. y as! crowns | {ennis em- in quarter and semi-final Dean Duo Mutiny Subsides Friday St. Louis, Aug. 17.—(?)—Mutiny in the Cardinal camp, which Paul and Dizzy Dean, ace pitchers, be- gan so enthusiastically by skipping @ Detroit exhibition game Monday, had nearly died out Friday. Paul, the younger of the broth- ers, joined Dizzy in expressing willingness to return to uniform, Pay the fines and everything, just » Geel Howie get back on the iound for the pennant chasii Red Birds. si oe Least interested in the affair seemed the Cardinal management. “They don’t want us back at all,” said Dizzy. “They asked us why we didn't go on down to Florida, when we saw them Thursday.” “Ten more days off the payroll,” was Manager Frisch's answer to Dizzy's first move toward peace. At that time Brother Paul hadn't become reconciled to the idea of. paying a $50 fine. Sawyer Sets Course Record at Birchmont Bemidji, Minn., Aug. 17—()—Dick Sawyer of Minneapolis, setting a new amateur record for the second nine after going two over par on the out-. nine, set the pace with 69, three un- der par, in the first day's qualifying of the tenth annual Birchmont inter- national golf tournament here Thurs- day. Among those who qualified were Pat Sawyer, Minneapolis, 73; Ken- neth Rolf, Grand Forks, N. D. 73; Bunchie Stevens, Bemidji, 75. In the women’s qualifying, Mrs. C. P Rohman of Lincoln, Neb.. Birch- mont winner in 1930, led early quali- fiers with 86. Jane Skiles of St. Paul and Agnes (Pat) Murphy of James- town, N. D., were tied for second hon- ors with 91 In practice rounds Nadine O'Leary, champion, carded an 80 to establish a new women’s course record, bettering by one stroke the mark set by Mrs. Rohman in 1930. Ladies par is 78. The Africander sheep has a 30- Valley Citys AB RH PO A £/Louls and the latter Jess Millman of A. Luther, 2 40)-1 3) 1 1 | Pe Aneeee.. Grangaard, cf ......4 00100 Semi-finals in the doubles also Lehner, If ... t402300 pitted McElvenney and Welsh, A tec as. t40131 9 |Straight set victors over the Simons- ©. Hancock. c 4 0.0 9 1 0|Donohue Louisville pair Thursday. V. Luther, 1b 40 0 4 0 0j2gainst Leo Kronman and Kaseal Erick 3b. 3 0 1 1 1 0|Peckoff of Buffalo, who won a drawn- Bergstrom, rf 300200 out struggle from Roy Huber and See 3 0 0 1 2 0|Martin Stesin of St. Paul. *Gaines 100000 a = ra Pa gis sk | Yesterday’s Stars 0 527 6 1\@———___________4 RHPOAE (By The Associated Press) 0 1 2 3 1| Jim Collins, Cardinals—Soored 0 2 3 4 ©0|Winning run in 11th inning of first 0 1 5 0 0j)8ame. belted 27th homer in second. 0 9 6 0 0| Billy Herman. Cubs, and Flint 0 1 0 2 0!Rhem, Braves—Herman's tenth inn- 0 1 0 2 O|ing double won opener; Rhem pitch- 0 0 1 0 0|ed Braves to victory in second clash. McCarney, 1b 1 111 0 0| Adam Comorosky, Reds—Pounded Goetz, rf .. 0 0 2 0 0|Brooklyn pitching for triple and two ee singles. Totals... 17300 1 “Batted for in 10th. Score by innings— Summary: City 3, Bismarck 11. Grangaard. Two base hits—Haley, A. Hancock. Double plays—A. Luther to V. Luther, Hahn to Massmann to Mc- Carney, Massmann to Hahn to Mc- Carney. Hits—off Stewart 5 in 10 innings; off Carter 7 in 10 innings. Struck out—by Stewart 6; by Carter 6. Bases on balls—off Carter 3. Hit by pitcher—Hahn by Carter. Passed balls—C. Hancock. Time of game— 1:35. Umpires Poindexter and Lena- berg. OR LEAGUE a) (By The Associated Press) (including yesterday's games) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Terry, Giants, 366; P. Waner, 364. » Giants, 99; Terry, Giants, 93. Hits—P. Waner, Pirates, 161; Allen, 159. Home ng ag Giants, 30; Col- _ Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees and - Pitching Gomez, Yankees, 19-3; W. ,| OUT OUR WAY Left on bases—Valley Sacrifices— Za pound tail. JOO-H-HH? I TAKE 1M TO A SWELL PARTY, TOO FAST, HE STUFFS HIS SHI FULL AN'COMES OU’ Bismarck, 1934 North Dakota women’s! THEY WAS IN eT A my STUMMICK. | | Drawings Will Be Made at 8 A. M.; Fargo Team Is De- fending Champion Preparations for the annual Mis- souri Slope diamonball tournament were completed Friday and the layout of three diamonds at Bismarck’s “big league” ball park was started for the play which opens at 9 a m., Sunday. Andy's Tire Shop of Fargo, defend- ling champions, are expected to be among the 20 or more teams seeking the $10 cash prize to be awarded to the winning team. A $5 prize will go to the runners-up and $2.50 will go to winners of third place. Drawings will be made at 8 a. m., Sunday at the World War Memorial building here. Entries will be receiv- ed until Saturday night. Each team may enter as many play- ers as they desire but no man will be allowed to play with more than one team. All entries should be mailed to Clement Kelley, 405 Eleventh St., Bismarck, accompanied by the $2.50 entry fee. Invitations were mailed to many of the outstanding clubs in the state but all North Dakota teams are in- vited to enter the tournament. Visitors will be charged at 25 cents admission price and may see all of the games for the one admission. Two U. S. Golfers in Canadian Semi-Finals Laval-Sur-Le-Lac, Que., Aug. 17.— (®}—International warfare over a, 36 hole battlefield was the program Friday as the four survivors of the big starting field in the Canadian amateur golf championship met in the semi-final matches. Canada and the United States each had two survivors and the draw pitted them against one another. In one match Albert (Scotty) Campbell, the defending champion from Seattle en- jcountered Ernie Palmer of Winnipeg, in the other and probably more im- |Portant clash, Jesse Guilford of Bos- ton met C. Ross (Sandy) Somerville, Nine hundred eighty communities expended a total of $38,518,194 for rec- reation in the United States and Can- ada in 1930. TAILLIAMS Punea ys earcrr, SmI} By Williams FROM SWERT SHOP IN SECOND CONTEST Each Team Uses Two Pitchers in an Effort to Stop Heavy- Hitting Attack FINAL GAME WEXT WEEK Homeruns feature Thursday Night's Battle; Seed Store Takes Early Lead ©. H. Wills forced the playoff in the city diamondball championship to the third game when they downed the fast Sweet Shop club, 18 to 17, in a free-hitting contest Thursday night. Each team used two pitchers in an effort to stem their slugging oppon- ents. The seed store club had the best of the argument driving out 17 safeties to their opponents 13. The winning run came in the last of the sixth after the Sweet Shop had knotted the count in their half by scoring three runs. Joe Allen came to bat for the Will team, cracked a single and’ then went all the way around the bases on an error. Pitchers Hard Hit Without time to warm up_ before the contest, both hurlers were hit hard in the opening stanza. The Sweet shop tallied eight times on five hits, including a homerun by Emil Martin, two errors and two bases on balls. + But the Will team, not to be out done, batted all the way around and a little more to score 10 counters. Tom Lee, Joe Zahn and Steve Goetz con- tributed homeruns to the assault, Add- ing another run in the second and five more in the third the seed store club took what looked like a safe lead. Sweet Shop Rallies In the fourth George Schlickenmey~ er drove in two runs for the Sweet Shop with a four base clout and his teammates went on in the fifth to tal- ly four more. the mound for the Sweet Shop in the sixth inning while Matt Hummel went in to pitch for the ‘winners replacing Joe Zahn in the fifth. . The date for the third and final game has not been set as yet but it is expected that it will be played sometime next week. ‘The box score: Sweet Shop— N Agre, 3b .... F Lee, 1b, Iss . B. Boelter, cf . Schlickenmeyer, rss A Schneider, c E. Agre, Iss, p C Johnson, If L Benser, % .. E Martin, rf ....... LL. Schneider, p-1b .. G. Hays, Iss w wee Oo Ra ee nt ay CHROMO RO RAED ORNOHEnm ono Cr wennoumnwod COSHONOSOHOSD COSSCSH OUMNH Totals 48 POAE 331200 322221 -423101 J. Zahn, p-cf-rss....4 22010 S Goetz, lb... -342700 M. Hummel, p-rss .. 3 1 1 0 2:0 C. Kelley, c ...... ..' Sob 1 210 H Falconer, rsscf,3b 4 1 2 2 0 2 A. Jundt, rf. -#413200 J. Aller, 2b ... -310001 Totals ............ 34181718 6 4 Score by inning: Sweet Shop . » 8 00 243-17 Oo H. Will -10 15 O11—18 Lawrence Schneider was relieved on Re iz In This Corner . . . By Art Krenz Renews Old Series BRITISH HAVE LONE SURVIVOR IN AMERICAN NET TOURNAMENT |": GOLF If you find it difficult to hit a low iron shot, it is only necessary to play the ball back farther toward the right; foot. The farther back the ball is) played, the lower will be the shot and more distance with the iron. Summary: ses E. Agre; Leo Benser 2; M. Hummel 2; 8. Goetz. Sacrifices, J. Aller; ©. John- son; L, Benser. Two base hits, T. Lee, M. Hummel, H. Falconer, A. Jundt, F. Lee. Three base hits, L, Schneider, B. Boelter. Home runs, Martin, E. Agre, Schlickenmeyer, Goetz, Zahn, Lee. Double or triple plays, F. Lee off Hummel 7 in 2 innings; 6 in 4 innings; off Schneider 12 in 5 1-3 innings; off Agre 5 in 2-3 inn- ings. Struck out by Hummei 1; by Zahn! 9; by Schneider 2; by Agre 1. Bases on balls off Hummel, 3; off Zahn, 3; off Schneider, 5; off Agre, 0. Umpires: Bennett and Kenney. mt YOU'RE i TELLING ME Jacksonville, Fla., is seeking a berth in the Southern League... and reports are that there will be plenty of Florida dougi behind the cub... That Lou Chiozza gent Playing his first year under the Big Tent with the Phillies, is said to be the fastest man in baseball... . The ideal tennis player would have Til- Gen’s backhand, Doeg': left-handed service, Lett’s lob, Borotra’s over- hand smash, Cochet’s volleying, and Perry's forehand ... says Ellsworth this year, gets a job in the movies ... for being selected on that all- collegiate outfit that meets the . Paul Runyan 508 488 437 429 Pet. 858 605, 542 531 The raucous howls of “Oh, 445 . .. On, all |’ Boy.” emitted by Patsy O'Toole, 43 shown above in frenzied action, Alo i Note the position of the ball in re- gerd to the right foot in the illustra- tien, vines Se dal is played from 7 this position, a situple matter. to ee paige gare hit a crisp, descending blow, and to take turf immediately after the ball is sent on its way. Because of the high altitude of there; through the rarefied atmosphere. MUZZLED Katherine Stammers Definitely Established as Threat to Miss Jacob's Title Forest Hill, N. Y., Aug. 17—()—John Bull’s tennis constellation boasted Friday a third star to add to Fred Perry, who won the Wimbledon title for England for the first time in 25 years and Dorothy Round, the first English girl to capture her nation’s women’s championship. | She has no particular on the American championship, al- quarter-finals Friday was Carolin Los Angeles. . holding. forth asthe stellar singles attraction of the day, the other quar- Jacobs, the defending James of , and Milwaukee Juniors Win Regional Title Watertown, 8. D., Aug. 17—(P)— Bien bg ry-sqpem mob out in the opening game against Grand Forks, N. D., Milwaukee’s American Legion junior baseball team won the regional championship here Thursday in @ 11-7 victory over Sioux Falls, the The victory paved the way for the in the sec- \though she. won't pass up an oppor-|Philadelphia 100 000 001-2 9 tunity.to cop it. Her opponent in the|St. Louis.. 302 002 O0x—17 10 0 ter-final engagements find Helen|¢¢. champion, against Elizabeth Ryan; Sarah Pal- {threatening weather. trey of Brookline, Mass, against Freda| Detroit at New York, postponed and Tigers Final Day: Teams Will End ‘Crucial’ Serieg dust as It Opened—With Twin Bill Goubleheader. The big difference is that the Yanks are one more game to the bad, 5% behind the League leaders, and no such turnout as Tuesday's 80,006 throng is expected. Both the battered Yankees and their rivals welcomed the day Thurs- Joe McCarthy and his club. ; “They haven’t clinched the pen- Mant yet,” was McCarthy’s comment. Along with the Yankee-Tiger game, the entire American program and the leading encounter in the na- tional league involving the league- leading Giants and the Pirates, gave way to the weather. Cubs Fail to Gain The senior circuit, however, man- aged to get through five games with a minimum of alternations in the stand- ing. The second-place Cubs failed to gain on the Giants when they split a doubleheader with Boston, the first game 3-2 in ten dropping the second 6 to 1. dinals, although they twice defeated eight hits in the second clash while the Braves got to Bill Guy Bush for a four-run burst in the fifth to settle the game. other innings to score aix runs while . Allyn Stout blanked the til the final frame. NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Humble Dodgers RHE. Brooklyn .. 000 000 00I—1 8 1 ti . 330. 200 OOx— 8 13 1 Carroll, Zachary and ;» Ber- Tes; Stout and Lombardi, E Cubs, Braves Split (First Game) RHE Boston ... 1000100000—-2 7 0 Chicago ... 000010 0011-3 7 1. (10 innings) = Frankhouse. Brandt and Spohrer; ‘Warneke, Bush and Hartnett : (Second game) ¥ E Boston .... 001 040 010-6 8 1 (Chicago .. 000 000 10—1 8 0% Rhem and Hogan; W. Lee, Bush,” Tinning, Root and Hartnett. ee Cards Win * 20-year old Briton, has burst out un-{St. Louis.. 100 011000 01-4 8 04 expectedly as a definite threat to the| E. Moore, ; home-bred players in the Unitd States|Todd; Carleton, Haines and V. Davis,” Hansen, Johnson and Delancey. i (Second Game) . R a ri P. Collins, A. Moore and J. Wilson; Babcock, the sun-tanned star from |Walker and Delancey. New York at Pittsburgh, postponed, With the Stammers-Babcock match |Fain. Chicago at Philadelphia, postponed, . ‘wet-grounds. St. Louis at | Boston, League Leading Red Birds Have Two Tough Series Away From Home Park \7 Chicago, Aug. 17—(#)—The Ameri- Vines ... who is doing more talk- ing for himslf, now that he is a pro player... . Nick Lukats, Notre Dame halfback who was graduated Wisconsin club's entry tional American tournament at | Qesrciings AMERICAN ASSOCIATION wih Columbus Cd can Association’s final western stand of the season opened '. Minneapolis in the west, and Indian: spolis of the east, apparently favored by the schedule in the battle for the division leaderships. . Columbus, 1933 champion and win- i : EEE? have been stilled and Detroit 330; Ladd, 158, Hot . baseball fans. slowly are re- ce knocked out Soldier Shirley, gaining their heart Patsy, ®. whose bellowings at the last Pet.; Avalon, Catalins world .serles in Washington, $4 Q 138, brought @ request from Pre: 45 508) N. M. and Mark Dias, “dent Roosevelt that he be moved 46. 586] drew (6). 7 a fas. fae away, has been ordered . 2 rey y the Detroit American League j ETTES lower management to do his roaring 3 4z| CIGAR sw. Be. "i in whispers or stay away from 4% 7 prices in Bismarck. Navin Field. 4a «381| + HALL’S DRUG STORE