The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1934, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1934 LOCAL RIGHTHANDER LIMITS WESTERNERS | TO THREE SAFETIES Five-run Attack in the Opening Stanza Gives Bismarck Early ee and oe STEWART cLOUTs HOMER Lefty Kemp Nicked for Eight Safeties; Hahn Turns in Stel- lar Performance FIFTY-SIX VICTIMS Won Lost Tied Pct. Bismarck .. 56 O18 3 757 Scoring the second shutout in a row over a team that gave them no end of trouble earlier in the season, Bismarck downed the classy Beulah Miners, 7 to 0, Sunday at the local ball park, It was an identical five-run rally to the one that put the Dickinson Cow- boys in a bad light Friday, that gave the Capital Citians their big advan- tage in the Sunday contest. Thé locals added another brace of runs in the third and Frank Stewart limited the Miner stickers to three seattered hits over the nine-' inning | route, The former Beulah hurler al-} Jowed his old teammates only one base on balls and retired two opposing bat- ters on strikeouts, To top off his performance, Pitcher Stewart belted a long home run over the right field fence as the locals nicked Lefty Kemp for eight hits. Kemp, nevertheless, struck out 12 Bismarck sluggers and pitched good ball after that bad first inning. Score Runs Early Bismarck's and hitting ace got his four base clout in the first inning after Massmann started out with a single and Hahn was walked. Fisher hit a single scor- ing Massmann and Troupe advanced Hahn to third with a fly to deep cen- terfield. Hahn scored on Haley's single and then Stewart poled out his towering drive bringing Haley and Fisher home ahead of him. In the third Troupe started the trouble by cracking out a sharp single and went to third when Haley hit safely and Kerbs erred in right field. ‘Troupe scored on a passed ball and Haley romped home from third on Schroeder's misplay. From that point on the game went without further scoring. Stewart, aid- ed by some fine fielding, was never in trouble while Kemp was touched for only two more singles during the remainder of the game. Hahn Stars Hahn turned in a good day's work fat second base, handling six chances without an error and starting a fast double play in the sixth. He topped off his performance by scooping up a/ hot grounder near the second sack in the eighth and whirled to throw Weber out at first, robbing the Beulah batter of a hit. Wessels at first was the standout man in the Beulah defense accepting 12 chances without a boot and snar- ‘ng a foul over his head near the grandstand in the fourth inning. Thronson contributed a nice running vatch of Massman’s fly in the sixth. Troupe and Haley with two hits/ apiece and Stewart with his home run were the leading Bismarck stickers. Malloy, Weber and Kemp were credited with hits for the Miners. The box score: Beulah— Malloy, cf .. Weber, 3b . Kerbs, rf ... Thronson, If ... Wessels, 1b ... Schroeder, 2b . Anderson, c .. AB R HPO V. Stewart, ss . Kemp, p ecoooocoe HoooooorH worocooNoy mann, Hahn. Home runs: F. Double plays: Hahn to Massmann to McCarney. Hits of Kemp eight in nine innings; off Stewart three in nine innings. Struck out by Kemp 12; by Stewart 2. Bases on balls off Kemp 4; off Stewart 1. Hit by pitcher Pisher by Kemp. Passed balls Ander- eon. Time of game 1.40. Umpires Cayou, Tepabers, MAJOR LEA LEAGUE (By the WER: S, (Including Yesterday's Games) AMERICAN ISAOUE Batting—Gehrig, ‘ankees, .363; Manush, Senators, .362. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers and Wer- ber, Red Sox, 114. re eee, Yankees, 174; Wer- ber, Red Sox, 172. Home Foxx, Athletics, 38. Pitching—Gomez, Rowe, Tigers, 20-4. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—P. Waner, Pirates, 366; Giants, .365. » Yankees, 42; Yankees, 22-3; Ter- Col- ap OE Giants, 10-6; 3, Dean, Cardinals, 22-6. right-handed pitching | eCooHKooKroom rMoooooCCOmN Capital Citians and Frank Stewart Humble Beulah Miners, 7-0 — AND PUT (Rvioenmiy \ THE MASOR’ MOPPED uP / WELL, BROTHER SAPS, HERE WE ARE, LEFT WITH FOUR BITS/ TAKE \T DOWN, CHARLEY, inn HOTEL SAFE, BEFORE THAT HOOPLE MUG 3 COMES BACK AN WINS WOOO TO f IT OFF US IN A SPELLING YOU DID A IT IN THE WHITTLE , Beats s Mandan, 5 With Victory Sunday | resentatives Sunday. opening stanza. the fifth to pull abreast. jTuns in the sixth gave Bismarck jtying the ‘ore. marck. losers, The box score: Bismarck CCC Al |Naylor, 3b .. - | McPhail, 2b . Sooper, rf . | Rubish, cf Durkee, If . Wiest, ¢ ‘Roberts, ss Clark, 1b .. (Robinson, p “Dyke, 1b ‘*Lisky, p .. 3 CORORDHOCONND OR BaHooHone Onensseeeunld Totals Mandan CCC Wanner, c Ewing, p Baker, lb . Youny, If Tobias, ss . Summers, cf Volk, 3b . Hedman, 2b . Sailer, rf .. “Schiff, 1b 2 & ° g S re a Totals) so... ce a= sae 34 8 16 30 Score by innings— Bismarck CCC ..... ;Mandan CCC ... Bismarck's CCC camp 2768 advanced | to the third round of the state base- | hall tournament with a hard-earned | | Crookston Pulls Even 5 to 4 victory over the Mandan | Heavy hitting of Durkee and Mc- |£plit even with Superior. Phail for the Bismarck club tallied | and Eau Claire battled to a 1 to 1 jfour runs that meant victory for Bis- ‘deadlock in their second game, the + 102 002 00x—-5! +++ 100 020 100—4/ cohol from natural Summary: Errors—Ewing 1, Baker | been developed in Canada. Lombardi. x} OUT OUR WAY ; Williams ‘Harold Dobler, Linton Youth, Takes Golf Trophy Championship on Sunday Local CCC Team ib Tobias aay . Durkee 1, ‘Wiest 2, Rob- 2, Rob-| jerts 1, Clark 2, Robinson 1; stolen bases—McPhail 3, Cooper 1, Durkee 1, Wanner 2; sacrifices—Naylor; two- jbase hits—Wanner; three-base hits— Young, Dyke; hits off Robinson 8 in Is innings; off Ewing 9 in 9 innings; Bismarck SAGvanodertd Advances to Third off Lisky 0 in 1 inning; struck out Round of State Tournament by Robinson 10; by Ewing 5; by Lisky \23 bases on balls off Robinson 2; off |Ewing 3; off Lisky 0; wild pitches— | Robinson 1, Ewing 1; hit by pitcher— |Baker; time of game—2:30; umpires —McKinney and Wurst. With Fargo-Moorhead St. Paul, Each team counted once in al In the third Bis- |marck took a two-run lead only to, Monday was tied for the Northern {have the Mandan nine tally twice in| Two mor Aug. 27— 27.—()—Crookston League lead with Fargo as the result of Sunday's games. Crookston won its first game from aj lead which they held despite the Man- | Eau Claire, 3 to 2, in 11 innings, to dan rally which fell one run short of |sain the tie with the Twins at the |top of the loop, as Fargo-Moorhead Crookston | contest being called at the end of the Robinson was on the mound for | tifth because of the 6 o'clock law. Bismarck and Ewing hurled for the| Superior beat Fargo-Moorhead, 5 to |3, in the first game, but the Twins came back with a 10 to 0 victory in R/| the finale, 0! In the only other scheduled con- 2| test, Greater Grand Forks walloped 1| Duluth, 14 to 10. Magar rer fea corsage, | Yesterday’s Stars ; 1 (By the Associated Press) 0| Charley Gehringer, Tigers—His 0} tenth inning double drove in winning l/run against Athletics. 0| Oral Hildebrand, Indians, and Fritz | Ostermueller, Red Sox—Former pitch- 5 ed seven-hit seven strikeout first game. latter bested harder to win second. 2, Lou Gehrig, Yankees—Hit three 1 homers and single against White Sox, 0 knocking in four runs. 0| Lon Warneke, Cubs—Limited 0) Giants to three hits, giving no walks. 0, George Blaeholder and Harland 0| Clift, Browns—Former held Senators 0| to two hits in opener; latter made 1) four hits in nightcap. 0 Mark Koenig. Reds—Hit triple, two —| doubles and single in doubleheader | ¢. 4| against Phillies. A process for making industrial al- gas waste has NO— YOu POOR Ki JUNK YARD OF OUR TELLING HIM ‘WHAT THINGS YOU MADE, SAVE Your FOLKS SWELL PIECE OF PICKING, DUKE, WHEN Nou PUT TH FINGER ON By Ahern SAY ~ HOW ARE WE GONNAY HURDLE TH’ HOTEL BILL, NOW? THEY'LL KEEP US ON TH LEASH, HERE, FOR SIX MONTHS, PAYING (T OFF IN DISHWATER! ‘Defeats James Slattery of Bis- marck on 11th Green; George Moses Medalist, Harold Dobler, youthful Linton golfer, defeated James Slattery, Bis- marck, 1 up in 11 holes, to win the first annual Trophy tournament at the public course Sunday. Dobler went to the finals after a brilliant battle with Doc Jaynes of Bismarck which the Linton golfer won on the 12th green. Slattery eliminat- ed Gordon Gray of Wilton, 1 up, in the first round. George Moses of Bismarck was tournament medalist with a brilliant 36 over the difficult nine-hole layout. Peter Verduin defeated E. B. Klein, 1 up, to capture first flight honors. Ernest Elness took the consolation prize. Championship of the second flight went to M. C. Seamer of Fort Lincoln who downed Carl Martin, 1 up. Irwin E. West of Fort Lincoln won the con- solation award, In the third flight Lillis O'Neal of Wilton beat Paul Faber, 3 up, and John Ehrmantraut captured the con- solation award. Thirty-one golfers were entered in presented to champions, runners-up and consolation winners in every flight. DOUBLES’ CHAMPS ARRIVE Rye, N. ¥. Aug. 27.—(#)—The somewhat placid proceedings in the eastern grass courts tennis champion- ships should take a livelier turn Mon- day with the arrival upon the scene of George Lott and Lester Stoefen, fresh from their triumphs at Ger- mantown where they retained the na- | Chicago tional doubles title. GRIMM TO CONTINUE Chicago, Aug. 27.—(#)—Regardless of where the Chicago Cubs finish in the National League race this season, Charlie Grimm will again manage the club in 1935. (By the Associated Pree) Tamburg, Germany.—Max Schmeling, 198, Germany, stop- Pad Walter Neusel, 198, Germany (9). GE GJ TO MAKE A LAWN, GREAT TO ‘MONEY EN YOU WERE A KIDS GOOD OL’ WHE! THERE'S YOUR DAYS— BUT WHERE ARE You? the tournament and trophies were |second clash. \ Fights Last Night | {_Fights Last Night | CUBS BEHIND WARNEKE, WALLOP LEAGUE LEADING GIANTS OUR BOARDING HOUSE St. M Football Squad Reports OE HD er Aad Practice Under Meinhover CHICAGO WIN, 7-1} _Keeps the Cubs Up There Dodgers Hold Cardinals to Even Break In Doubleheader; Tig- ers Win in 10th New Coach Will Have Seven Lettermen Around Which to Build 1934 Team Answering the call of Ted Meinhov. er who succeeded “Baldy” Hays as coach, some thirty-odd candidates for the St. Mary’s gridiron squad were ta report Monday for uniforms and their first light workout, og aie ar soe ee fu e St. "8 school when Hays resigned to accept a posi- Bins Sarde site ee, aac we YANKS WIN DOUBLEHEADER Browns Take Twin Bill From Senators; Indians, Red Sox Divide; Reds Triumph (By the Associated Press) Bill Terry hurt a few feelings in Brooklyn last winter when he asked, as a wise crack, if the Dodgers still were in the National League. Now he must be thankful they are. The Dodgers knocked off Chicago twice and nearly made it three straight last week while the Giants were strug- gling with St. Louis and that is the principal reason why Terry's club re- mained 5% games ahead after taking a 7-1 drubbing Sunday in the opener of a highly important series in Chi- cago. An overflow crowd of 43,000 saw the Cubs open their pennant bid behind the three-hit pitching of Lonnie War- neke. Manager Charley Grimm, who! had just received a vote of confidence from the management in the renewal of his contract for 1935, led the at- tack with a double and two singles {for a perfect day at bat and drove jin the first two runs. Two hits by Mel Ott and one by Travis Jackson were the only blows Warneke allowed in winning his 17th game of the season The Dodgers kept the Cardinals from registering any important gain by holding the third-place club to an even break in a doubleheader. Brook- lyn won the opener, 11-5. St. Louis came back to pound Les Munns for a ‘1-2 decision. Gehrig Belts Homers Lou Gehrig's three home runs and the Yankee pitching that went with them to give New York a double vic- tory over Chicago, 9-5 and 2-0, were the high spots of the American League Program although the Tigers pulled their favorite stunt of coming from behind to win from the Athletics in 10 innings, 7-6. After the score had been tied three times, Detroit beat the A’s in the 10th on the last of eight walks granted by Bill Dietrich and a double by Charley Gehringer. The St. Louis Browns spurted into fifth-place tie with Washington in he junior circuit by winning both games, 3-0 92d 9-5. George Blaehold- er pitched a two-hit masterpiece in the opener and Jack Knott blanked the Senators for eight more innings before they scored all their runs in the ninth. Cleveland and Boston broke even in their third-place struggle; the Indians winning the opener, 3-2, as Oral Hildebrand bested Wes Ferrell on the hill and the Red Sox pounded Mel Harder for a 5-2 decision in the Some of the classiest flinging ever to come off the right flipper of Guy Bush, above, is being breezed past National League b: ters by the Mississippi Mudcat this year. The Cubs’ mound star has been the strength of the staff so far, and the factor that has kept Grimm's boys right on the heels of the Giants. Bush is fourth io National League standings. PETTIBONE DEFEATS GIANTS, FOR MYTHICAL STATE TITLE George Daniels, Winning Hurler, Allows Seven Hits and Strikes Out 15 Colonels Pass Indians for Sec- Plans Bouts in America With} ond Place in Association's Eye Toward Championship Eastern Division Battle With Baer Pettibone counted four times in the fifth inning and was never stopped after that, as they downed the Grove Giants, state penitentiary nine, 11 to 3, Sunday at the prison ball park. ‘The game had been previously an- nounced as the state championship battle of non-salaried independent ball teams. George Daniels, strikeout artist, was too much for the Giants. Fifteen Giants were set down by the strike- out route, while getting seven hits,|‘urned his attention Monday to the Daniels fanned seven Giants in order | United States and the possibility of a ma during the last half of the game and ac championship match with Max scoreless jaer, ica for seven|'""The Black Uhlan of the Rhine The Giants scored twice in the first |¢merged from comparative > inning and once in the second on a/Scurity Sunday to batter down Wal- “squeeze” play. Smith pitching for|ter Neusel, blond Teuton youngster, ( Hamburg, Germany, Aug. 27.—(#)— Undisputed kingpin of German heavy- ‘weights once more, Max Schmeling the prison held Pettibone scoreless|in @ savage bout fought before more a the fit , than 100,000 spectators, until the fifth inning, when four runs chmelig’s victory. skied on : technical knockout when Neusel fail- valk and two ite followed bag; led to answer the bell for the ninth round, carried with it the German heavyweight title. Much more impor- tant was the effect it might have on |Schmeling’s chances of getting a shot at the world title. Schmeling plans to sail for the United States next ‘month and undoubtedly will figure in negotiations designed to find an op- Ponent for Baer’s first title defense Cincinnati’s Reds trimmed the Phil- lies twice, doing it for the second time this season, 2-1 and 6-5. Paul Der- ringer pitched a six-hit game in the opener while Tony Piet’s eighth-in- ning double decided the afterpiece. The Braves took an 8-5 decision from Pittsburgh. NATIONAL LEAGUE Warneke Checks Giants RHE - 000 000 100-1 3 3 fee. New York . next summer, 010 202 20x—7 10 0 ABRE Schmeling won the heavyweight RE . Fitzsimmons, Bowman and Man- 14 championship on a foul from Jack M 3 3 cuso, Danning; Warneke and Hart- 21 ‘Sharkey in 1930 and lost it by deci- nett. 34 sion two years later. Braves Down Pirates 13 Max fought a heady fight against RHE 20 Neusel, the youngster who had cam- Boston .. 001 120 400—8 11 0 14 80 successfully in the United Pittsburgh . 100 400 000-5 11 2 01 ores se last veer Schmeling open- Frankhouse, Mangum, Cantwell and 00 ed up cuts on Neusel's face as early Hogan, Spohrer; Lucas, Smith, Hoyt, 11 ‘as the second round, ripped Birkofer and Grace. oo ony over me. Sipivers nave ebb eye in the —s Repamered ear. at his 115 in the first rounds, Schmeling weighed 1938 _peands: roorenesce ol owmoomoonmny | mommmnonco i wescenecses Zl awomenenne Sl aanwsacana RleoSomawwoe 81 moor o800g 12 00 Neusel 198, 10 01 02 _ RHE o1 ¢ jhe Philadelphia ... 011 010 200-5 10 1 00 , ° Cincinnati ..... 201 100 02x—6 11 1 00 Collins, Johnson and Wilson; Stout, 10 | Freitas, Frey and Manion, Lombardi. 01 Dodgers, Cards Split —-— : Mat Cae) ne 31 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE HB gales 601 000 103—11 14 0! pe, 1. Le WA . Louis ..... 300 200 000— 5 10 1 3 ee Mungo, Leonard and Lopez, Carle- ; 1 «50 587 ton, Vance, Haines, Mooeny and De- 62 «58517 llancey. (Second Game) 2 = Brooklyn ..... 001 000 100-2 11 2 St. Louls |..... 101 001 40x—7 14 01g on ae and Berres; Hallahan and LEAGUE 0 42 AMERICAN LEAGUE . 2 2 63 87 «| 525 4 61 513 54 ry ry “ BREN? EERE 4 s esoeess a8 & | SRRLesnses Asseeseac li de “f i i senuamensh i : RSSEBSRR? 5 o

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