The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1934, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1934 Dean Brothers Hang Up Two Wins; Cut Giants Lead to 3 1-2 Games Millers, Red Birds Open Association | TIGERS FACE YANKS AFTER INCREASING LEAD 1052 MARGIN Dodgers Hammer Third-Place Cubs Into Submission With Double Triumph | REDS BEAT BRAVES TWICE White Sox Take Twin Bill From | Boston; Athletics Turn Back Browns (By The Associated Press) ‘The Cardinals toox ‘tiumphant I leave of New York Monday with a in four games ig Giants and only a 3'2 game margin to make up in the National League pennant race. At the same time the Yankees ad- vanced on Detroit for another “cru- cial” four-game tilt with the realiza- tion that they would have to do at Jeast as well as the Cards to get back into the American League scrap. After dividing the first two games, the Cards swept the boards Sunday while a crowd of 62,573, the largest the Polo Grounds has ever held, look- ed on. Manager Frisch carried out his threat to make the Giants think there was a cloud of Deans around them by sending Dizzy in to gain his 26th victo: to 3, in the opener, then following with Brother Paul, who gave only six hits in an eleven inning duel with Carl Hubbell to win 3 to 1. The Cards had to come from behind! each time to win, taking the opencr on a four run rally in the seventh. Jim Collins’ 33rd circuit swat tied the second game in the seventh and Pepper Martin started the winning rally with a four-base hit. | Dodgers Cop Doubleherder The Dodgers hammered the third- Place Cubs into submission twice, 11 to 6 and & to 4, with an attack that netted 30 hits. Meanwhile the Tigers increased their lead to 5% games with a brilliant 2| to 1 victory over Washington while the Yanks yielded, 5 to 2, to the In- dians and Mel Harder, who granted only five hits. The Tigers couldn't do any real hitting, touching Monte Weaver for just three blows, but they got the odd run to sweep the series! with daring base running. After Ray| Hayworth reached second on a hit and an error in the eighth, Herman} Clifton ran for him and raced all the} way home while Jo-Jo White was being tossed out at first. Three other bargain bills on the day's program resulted in clean! sweeps. The cellar-holding Reds and White Sox triumphed at the expense! of two Boston clubs. The Reds beat the Braves 2-1 and 5-2 when Paul; Derringer allowed four hits and Rookie Beryl Richmond and Si John- son five. George Earnshaw’s two-hit elbowing gave the White Sox a 2-1 triumph over the Rei Hose and they went on to belt out a second decis- fon 12 to 10. The seventh-place Athletics got 00d pitching to turn back the Browns twice, 2 to 1 and 2 to 0 behind Sugar Cain and Johnny Marcum although they got only three hits off Dick Coffman and Paul Andrews in the afterpiece. The Pittsburgh-Phillies double bill was permanently rained out. Deans Beat Giants Twice First game— RHE St Louis . + 0000004015 9 0! good New York + 010130000—3 7 1|° , J. Dean, Carleton and DeLancey; Parmelee, Smith, Schumacher, Luque and Mancuso. Second game— RHE st Louis 000 000 10002—3 8 0 New York .... 00100060000—1 6 1 (Eleven innings) P. Dean and Davis; Hubbell and Dodgers Win Doubleheader First game— HE R 200 000022 6 14 1 Chicago Brooklyn + 203212 01x—11 19 0 Weaver, t, Wiedemeyer and O'Farrell, Phelps; Benge and Lopez. game— RHE Lee and Hartnett; Clark, Zachary and Berres. Reds Down Braves First game— RHE Cincinnati . 200 000 000—2 11 0 Boston . 000000010—1 4 2 Derringer and Lombardi; Rhem, Smith and Hogan, Spohrer. id game— RHE Cincinnati 001000040—5 10 1 Boston . 000110000—2 5 0 Richmond, inson and Manion, Lombardi; Cantwell and Spohrer. Pittsburgh-Philadelphia, postponed, rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Drop Senators RHE Washington . 000000010—-1 6 2 + Detroit ... 000000 11x—2 3 2 Weaver and Bolton, Phillips; Bridges and Hayworth, Cochrane, Indians Humble Yanks RHE! 0010000012 5 1/ . 000 020 30x—5 10 2 Broaca, Van Atta, Deshong, McFay- den and Jorgens; Harder and Brenzel. 6 Louis Marcum’ and Hayes; Coffman and|. White Sox Annex Two 010011 100—4 14 1]. . 030 002 00x—5 11 2!, T ADVISE THAT WE FIRST ATTEMPT TO MAKE A SETTLEMENT WITH YOUR BROTHER, OUT OF COURT / TLL TELL HI MINE ~~1F YER M THAT You" ANY HE BALKS, THEN HIM FOR #75,000/ . ‘LITTLE CALLED ‘OUTSTANDING’ _ AMATEUR GOLFER SINCE JONES Crushing Triumph Over Gold-! man Was Companion Piece to British Victory New York, Sept. 17.—()—The out- standing amateur golfer since Bobby Jones, and a youth upon whose head the championship crown may rest for some time to come—that’s what they ere calling William Lawson Little, Jr., and with plenty of reason for doing i : The 24-year-old Stanford university student, who has the burly build of a full-back and the “killer instinct” of a Dempsey, stands astride the ama- teur ranks for 1934 like a young Colossus. Little's crushing triumph Saturday over the Texas metal worker, David (Spec) Goldman, of Dallas, by the lopsided margin of 8 and 7 in the final round of the U. 8. Amateur Golf tournament was a compz%ion piece to his 14 and 13 victory over James Wal- lace, the Scotch carpenter, at Prest- wick in the British amateur last May. wt YOU'RE tn TELLING ME Oscar Melillo started something a couple of years back when he gave spinach credit for making a ball play- er out of him. Now Monte Weaver, Senators’ hurler, says spin- ach is his favorite dish » « but it doesn’t seem to be doing him much . Everyone of.the Tigers’ infield- ers has played every game on the schedule this year . . . They're go- {ng to bet on the Agua Caliente Open golf tournament in February . . . and one-tenth of the money wagered in the mutuels will be distributed among the players -. . . and the oth- er 90 per cent to holders of winning tickets. . . . Pitt is ballyhooing a sophomore gridder named Eddie Spotovich this year + . and that ballyhooing is putting Eddie on the spot—where the body will be found after he plays against Minnesota, | Southern California and Nebraska. ‘ This is Dan McGugin’s 3ist year as grid mentor at Vanderbilt + Seems to be a lifetime job there . . A young third sacker named Cotton Bohl has been signed by Nash- ville of the Southern loop . Good thing his last name isn’t ._. . Babe Didrikson is said to earn $833 a month pitching for the House of David baseball nine. OUT OUR WAY Weevil THAT PAPER? wuy, “THAT PAPER Is IN THERE TO STOP UP TH’ CRACKS, SO TH' WEEDS WON'T SPILL wiht! ' Wien Atle, ty lh 4 » First game— i RHE Boston . 100000 000—1 2 0 Chicago 0000100012 8 0 Welch and Leggett; Earnshaw and . RHE 000 53! 010-10 9 1 + 210 70002x—12 17 4 johnson, Waiberg, Mer- R. Ferrell; Tietje, i a tp ttee iW sure Nees a blliyy 1996 ey ned Senne e121 ce PAH V7 ue wanes 1 Ross-M’Larnin Go Scheduled Tonight Ribeiro th New York, Sept. 17—(7)—It seems there were two men—Bar- ney Ross and Jimmy McLarnin— whose attempt to settle their world’s welterweight champion- ship argument has developed into an astounding series of postpone- ments. Timidly Promoter Mike Jacobs announces it will be held Monday night—15 ‘rounds in Madison Square Garden bowl—but what the customers want to know is whether Mike has been able to do anything with the weather. | | ° MR. WAGGLESNAK—~YEH- $25,000 WILL PARTLY SQUARE TH GREAT WRONG DID ME/~CMON, WELL WILL CONSIDER $25,000 GO OVER TO TH’ HOUSE AS SATISFACTORY DAMAGES FOR SELLING YOUR GOLD NOW, BEFORE SUPPER- ITLL GET HIM SO WELL GO TO COURT AND SUE) WORRIED, HELL LOSE HIS APPETITE,AN’ 1 WON*T HAVE ANY Five Lettermen Back For Fessenden Squad Fessenden, N. D., Sept. 15.—(P)— Immediate prospects for a winning football team at Fessenden high school are rather weak, but Head Coach Ernest Kotchian wears a happy smile as he points his team at the distant start of the 1935 season. Compared with last year’s team the | outlook ig, “not so good because we lost most of last year’s letter and heavier mer,” he said. “Considering the material of outside towns our! boys will have a hard year. “But the new material,” he ex- Plained, ‘will gradually work in and by’ the end of the season we will have & winning team for next year.” There ate nine prospects from which Kotchian will select players to fill in six vacancies on the first, team. Five lettermtn holding the other posi- tions aré Captain Glen Weihemuiller, 159 poung guard; Ralpn Mehous, 183, tackle; and Norman Neuenschwan- jder, 147, Leland Pepple, 155, Ted Thornton, 148, backs. Best prospects are Elmer Ruele, jeenter; Elmer Severson and John | Hughes, ends; Bert Smith and Orval | Kanwischer, guard; Merlin Mannel and Edgar Lechner, tackles; William Pepple and James Cook, backfield. Fessenden’s nine game schedule opened with a game at Sykeston Fri- day. The remainder of the schedule: September 21, New Rockford here; Sept. 28, Drake there; Oct. 5, Rugby there; Oct. 12, Indians here; Oct. 19, |Harvey here; Oct. 26, Maddock here; |November 2. Carrington here; Nov- ember 21, Harvey there. ie Wns se . WHY MOTHERS GET GRay _——<—<—<——$—$—_ {THATLLE BE OKAY, PUT IT UPTO HIM COMPETITION | Oeandinds ‘(By The Associated Press) NATIONAL aL Pet. 88 «453 = 624 8 (56 600 80 (58 580 1 61 S51 68 «67 (504 61 7 42 Philadelphia 5085 370 Cincinnati . 50 -88C««362. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww LsPet. Detroit .. 92 (49 852 New York 8 «655 B13 Cleveland . 7% 65 6539 Boston . 70 a 496 8t. Louis . 63 7 450 Washington 61 78 | 439 Philadelphia 6 7 435 Ohicago .. 51 87) 370 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (Final Standing) Ww LsPet. Minneapolis ....... 8 6 570 Columbus . - 8 68 556 Milwaukee + 8 7 539 Louisville - B hg 513 Indianapolis - 7 % 507 ledo .. - 68 8 AT St. Paul - 67 8 444 Kansas City + 6 88 425 rf Devils Lake Crushes Langdon Eleven, 47-0 Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 17.—(P)— Deyils Lake high school gridders flashed deception and power in crush- ing Langdon, 47 to 0, in the season’s Opener under the floodlights here Friday night, as the Satans ran up nine first downs to two for Langdon. From the opening kickoff when Bill Burckhard, all-state fullback, car- ried the ball eighty yards for a touch- down to a closing whistle, the show was all Devils Lake, with two young reserves carrying the burden of scor- ing through three quarters, Burck- hard Once and Captain Gordie Den- nis twice in one quarter of play. Reserve backs Pete Peterson and Allen Edmunds stole the show for the final periods, as Peterson scored twice on line plays, Edmunds intercepted a pass and ran 35 yards to score and took Peterson’s twenty yard heave in the ffhal period, racing fifty yards to @ touchdown. Burckhard dropkicked three points, a pass was good for one, and Bill Benjamin plunged the other. The chief Langdon scoring threat came through the air but they only advanced inside the Lake thirty yard stripe once. By Williams THAT PAPER IS IN THERE TO HOODWINK ME! I'M PAYIN' YOU FIFTY CENTS A BUSHEL FOR WEEDS, NOT PAPER! SHOW ME THE CRACKS IN THAT BASKET. ae eee 2VNLLIAMS euimune on O17 OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern illinois Rated as Darkhorse Entry In Big Ten Chase Zuppke Has Virtually Same Squad That Turned in Upset Last Season Champaign, 2, Scps. SF When Bob Zuppke will go so far as t> promise “the best of them a game,” put it down in your hat that Illinois is going to be tough on the football field this fall. The wily Illini coach lost the Big Ten championship by only two poipts last season after one of the most surprising campaigns in his brilliant coaching career. This season, forti- fied with more experience and a great pair of backfield aces in Beynon and Lindberg, Zuppke says: “Tilinois will have largely the same personnel as last year with the light- est line in the conference again. Our boys are not up to big ten standards physically end must make up for this by alertness, smartness and gameness @s they did last’ year. “They will be more experienced. With Baynon passing and Lindberg punting and also throwing, this phase of our game should be superior. We are not talking champio. Ips down here, but I think we will be able to give the best of them a game.” The schedule: Sept. 29, Bradley here; Oct. 6, Washington university at St. Louis; Oct. 13, Ohio state here; Oct. 27, at Michigan; Nov. 3, Army here; Nov. 10, at Northwestern; Nov. 17, at Wisconsin; Nov. 24, at Chicago. Green Bay Packers Defeat Philadelphia Chicago, Sept. 17—(#)—The Nation- al Professional League champion Chi- vago Bears, still irked at being held to a scoreless draw by the college stars a couple of weeks ago, will open their 1934 campaign against the Green Bay Packers next Sunday. Green Bay defeated Philadelphia, 19 to 6, Sunday at Green Bay. Pittsburgh, which defeated Cincin- nati, 13 to 0, in the opening game of the season a week ago, bowed to Bos- ton, 7 to 0. ‘The New York Giants defeated the Rose Bowl Lions, 19 to 6, in an ex- hibition game at Paterson, N. the Chicago Cards opened wit! to 0 victory over the Chicago Tigers, an independent pro outfit. The Brooklyn Dodgers were held to @ scoreless tie by the Shenandoah, Pa., Presidents in ‘in-soaked exhibition. Dickinson Midgets Down Alumni, 8-0 Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 17.—()— "| Dickinson high school Midgets had their first real football workout of the season by taking on the Alumni Friday following cancellation of the scheduled Dickinson-Beulah contest. The Midgets scored an 8 to 0 victory over the Alumni. On a pass, Robertson to Kunde, the Midgets scored a touchdown in the first quarter, but failed for the extra tally. A safety in the third quarter brought an additional three points. The Sentinel Butte-Dickinson game, set for next Saturday, also has been cancelled, and arrangements made to take on St. Mary's of Bismarck here for that date. ! Hettinger Will Have Light Football Team Hettinger, N. ‘D. Sept. 1.—P)— The lightest football squad in years is drilling at Hettinger high school under the direction of Coach B. F. id. An entirely new backfield must be developed for the eleven with Clifford Smith, Joris Wigen, and Joe Clement expected to fit into the arrangements. Six other lettermen are Lars Overby, Lester Henstrand, Clarence White, George Abelseth, Dale Quickstad and Elmer Sangsland. Other: good prospects who should develop to make the team a good one toward the end of the season are Fletcher Mitchell, three-year man at Lisbon; Ferrell Wilson, Magnus John- gon, Donald Tatro, Jack Vinkel, Ed Sangsland, Bill Amsden, Paul and Maurice Stensland, Roger Wilhelm, Everett Sigmund, Carleton Austad. Gopher Grid Coach Remains Pessimistic Minneapolis, Sept: 17.—(4)—Coach Bernie Bierman, very methodical man, started his clockwork Gopher foot- ball practice again Monday as per- haps the only man around ready to argue that Minnesota is not so good as it looks to be. That is, viewing the Gophers as main contenders for the Big Ten pen- nant. Monday he set them to their second day’s drill of the new season, mean- time sprinkling handfuls of salt on In This Corner . . . By Art Krenz DUBLINSKY WILL DO-SKI GINES TONY CANZONERI ANOTHER CHANCE; AND CHALLENGES THE BARNEY Rog-JIMMY MSLARNIN WINNER... FARGO-MOORHEAD TWINS BEAT IN THIRD GAME|,: Rallies Produce One-Sided| Jimmies’ Conference BLUES, 18-5, Triumph in Northern League Title Series Fargo, N. D., Sept. 17.—(#)—The Fargo-Moorhead Twins put on a hit- ting barrage which routed Art (Red) Braga, their conqueror of the first game of the Northern League playoff series at Superior last Wednesday, and carried off an 18 to 5 dec! lover the Blues here Sunday. The Twins drove Braga to cover in the fifth with nobody out, and con- tinued on Walter Maslowski, young southpaw, registering seven runs off him in the eighth. The Twins batted around in the third and eighth. Bill Zuber, ace right hander, limit- ed the Blues to four hits until the final inning, when two doubles and @ pass netted a pair of runs after the ‘Twins were safely in front. The victory gave the Twins a lead of two games to one in the seven- game series to be continued here to- The box score: tS) juperior Goldfine, cf . Huntbatch, 2b Benda, c ... Cichosz, 3b ... Larson, 1b .. erry a aes] CHoreKrooony Cromoroconn st Covanmonnng wmnonocomopy cocoon Honom Maslowski, p Totals . Fargo-Moorhead Feille, rf .. Kuppich, If ... Kop! 2: obonSwone NOM MH OWOOD seeeee 002— 5. Summaries: Runs batted in—Gold- fine 2, Larson 2, Feille, Kup- pich, Kopko 3, Koch 3, Shilling 5, Stuart 2, Zuber. re ee ee Braga, Benda, Larsbn, uber, ‘Stuart, Feille. Home runs—Goldfine, Kuppich, Shilling 2, bases—Kopko, the kind words of critics, impressed | by the debut performance of Minne- sota Saturday. LN 1 Yesterday’s Stars | OO (By The Associated Press) Mel Harder, Indians—Limited Yan- kees to five hits, made two singles and scored twice. Frank Frisch and Pepper Martin, |! Cardinals—Frisch batted in winning runs in first game with Giants; Mar- ty lth inning homer decided sec- Tommy Bridges, Tigers—Limited Senators to six hits and one unearn- ed run, Tony Cuccinello, Dodgers—Led as- sault on Cubs with six hits. Merrit Cain and Bob Johnson, Athletics—Former gave Browns five hits in opener; latter batted in both runs in second victory. Paul Derringer, Beryl Richmond and Si Johnson, Reds—Held Braves to nine hits in doubleheader. Jack Hayes, White Sox—Made three bits in each game against Red Sox. © Shilling to Stuart. Bases on balls— Zuber 2. » Hi lowski (Kuppich). out by Braga 2, Masiowski 4, Zuber 10. Hits off Braga 12 hits, 9 runs in 4 (none out in fifth); Maslowski—8 hits, 9 Magicians Vanquish Model High Gridders Title Hopes Dimmed Jamestown, N. D.; Sept. 17.—(P)}— Contrary to first expectations that he would have another conference win- ner in his 1934 Jamestown college football team, Coach Al Cassell reports his machine will be of only “mediocre calibre.” Jamestown anticipated registration of Harold Westby, and -Robert Ing- stad, star performers on the James- town high school team last fall, at the local college, but they have decided to enter another school. Their loss together with the decision by Bob Edick, outstanding Jimmy lineman, to leave the college, put the dimmers on ‘@ bright outlook. “At the beginning of the workouts, which started two weeks ago, I saw another conference winner,” the men- tor admitted. “But when I learned that Edick, Westby, and Ingstad would not be with the Jimmie squad, and I can see only a mediocre team.” There are 35 aspirants. They in- clude 13 lettermen: Hall of Star! weather, R. Reslock, Devils Lake, Ca} tain Roberts, Lakota; Pet Jamestown; Chamberlain, Sykeston; Schlickenmeyer, Bismarck; Bauer, Valley City; R. Enge, Bismarck; and Huey, Jamestown, linesmen; Sphauer, Jamestown, Agre, Bismarck, Thunem, Bowman, and Delange, Marmarth, backs, Among those with previous experi- ence as reserves are Hutchinson, Tut- tle; Kellogg, Hettinger; Russell, New Rockford, linesmen; Manney, Bis- marck; Webber, Cleveland, and Young, Michigan, backs. Cassell doés not expect many back- field worries, although that depart- ment will be lacking reserve strength, but he will have an inexperienced line except for Captain Roberts at center who is out with a back injury. Tpe team will average about 170 bounds, light, for a college group. The schedule: Sept. 21, Moorhead Teachers here; Sept. 27, Augustana college here; Oct. 5, Manitoba Uni- versity there; Oct. 12, Dickinson Teachers there; Oct. 20, Minot Teach- ers here, (homecoming); Oct. 26, Wahpeton State Science there; Nov. 1 Valley City Teachers ‘there; Nov. 10 or 12, Mayville Teachers here. The Moorhead, Augustana, Manitoba, and Valley City tilts are night games. Playoff Series at Mill City Tuesday Colonels Squeeze Indians Out of Fourth Place Bonus Money: With Double Win Chicago, Sept. 17—(#)—The - play= off series for the of the American Association, the winner of which will meet the victor of the ternational League post season elim: nations, will open Tuesday between the same teams that met for the 1933 title, the Minneapolis Millers and Columbus Red -Birds. The regular season closed Sunday, with Minneapolis, Columbus, Mil- waukee, Louisville and Indianapolis in the money, under the league’s bonus Plan. The Millers landed at the head of the general standing as well as in Possession of the western division ed tines while the Red Birds top- the eastern division and finished second to the Millers in the general lineup. Columbus . defeated Minneapolis, games to two, last year and went on to conquer Buffalo of the Inter- oa, League in the “Little World s.” The first three games of the play- off will be played at Minneapolis, with the remainder, until either has won four games, at Columbus. Columbus closed its schedule Sun- 8two4. of a doubleheader, and being held to a 1-all tie in the 12-in- ning second game. The victory gave the seventh place Saints the Inter- City series, 11 victories to 8 Phil Todt, St. Paul’s first baseman, round- Louisville's Colonels squeezed In- dianapolis out of the fourth place bonus money by trimming the Indians twice, 7 to 6 and 13 to 0. Milwaukee rounded out its cam- paign in third place, with two victor- jes over Kansas City 4 to 3, and 7 to 1. Saints Drop Millers (First Game) RHE Minneapolis .... 010 010 000-2 6 2 St. Paul . - 100 100 10x—3 5 1 Chaplin, Starr and Hargrave; ‘Thomas and Fenner. (Second Game) RHE ‘Minneapolis 001 000 000 000—1 6 0 St. Paul ... 090 000 001 000—1 7 1 (Called end 12th, 6 o'clock law). Indianapolis ... 020 000 103-6 7 1 + 000 310 003—7 10 4 le. Weinert, Logan, Chamberlain, RE ++ 000 000 000-0 4 4 500 102 O5x—13 17 1 011 000 101-4 8 2 000 003 14x—8 14 1 ley. ae (By The Associated Press) (Including Yesterday's Games) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—P. Waner, Pirates, .358; Terry, Giants, .346. Runs—Ott, Giants, 112; P. wWaner, Pirates, 108. Bene. Waner, Pirates, 197; Terry, Angi Pitching—J. Dean, Hoyt, Pirates, 14-5. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers, 355. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 126; Wer- ber, Red Sox, 125. 3 Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, 196; Geh- rig,’ Yankees, 194, Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 46; Foxx, Athletics, 41. Pitching—Gomez, Yankees, 25-4; Rowe, Tigers, 23-6. The sun’s diameter is 109.1 times the diameter of our earth. The ceremonial dancers of Africa have been known to whirl 100 revolu- tions without a stop. Bismarck St. Mary’s TUESDAY NIGHT Sept. 18 HUGHES FIELD 8p. m. Be Dressy and Comfortable Your Girl Friend Likes It <2 be os

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