The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 24, 1934, Page 6

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le An Inde F Published THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1934 ~igers as second =i 15 UP ON CARDS, S=ceIVIDING TWIN BIL, Daily weanly Weekly ‘by Winning Doubleheader years “yep (DIANS BEAT WHITE SOX ——=nators leml es TeeSgaas Alunafter pounding out a 9-7 decision over that tie Reds and remained 2': games in the rind. e Indians Win Two rule is “ay Cleveland Indians, the only than rity, pat nak “ Jevelsed his 30th homer. itual Orie: ‘Thtie when darkness fell shortly after! cous’ Pete Susko knotted the count with a! out: un me th: Uti is ™m SES STAB BISesr esses . 9 BREE TASRUS YRASEW BORRESSESHBRSSeR AYSSEZE. ail by kotsikees Reduce Detroit’s Lead From Red Sox Trounce Athletics, Second Game Ends in Tie; Cubs Drop Pirates (By The Associated Press) The Detroit Tigers have reached the stage of the American League pennant race where they can be tied but not beaten Monday. By dividing a double header with the Browns Sunday, winning the sec- ond game 2 to 1 behind Al Crowder's steadiness after Buck Newson had outpitched Schoolboy Rowe to take the opener 4 to 3, the Tigers reached! the spot where one more victory out of five games or one Yankee loss in six would settle the argument. They got there even though the Yanks took two close decisions from the Red Sox, 1-0 and 5-4, to clip a game off the Tiger lead. The Giants continued their strug- gle to reach the end of the National League campaign before the Cardin- als woud overhaul them with no gain or loss resulting from Sunday's bar-|- gain bills. Both contenders split even. : The Giants beat Boston 8-0 in the opener on Roy Parmelee’s four-hit pitching then dropped an 11-inning afterpiece 4-3. The Cards also took a 4-3 defeat in their second game that to show any real profit from les, tay’s long array of two-ply bills, grunced the White Sox twice, 2-1 and -1, as Monte Pearson and Ralph Inegarner allowed the hose only 15 hits for the day and Earl Averill sock- Washington took one game from the Athletics 2 to 1 in a hurling duel} between Monte Weaver and Sugar! ‘Cain but the second wound up in a 5-5 ninth-inning tripper. Playing the day's only single game, the Cubs turned back the Pirates 3-2 when Chuck Klein belted his 20th four-bagger and his first in a couple of months for the winning tally. The defeat returned the Bucs to fifth place a half game behind Boston. i The Phillies and Dodgers split an overtime twin bill, Philadelphia go- ing 13 innings to take the first game 4-2 and Brooklyn winning the second in seven frames, 7-2, with the aid of @ five-run outburst in the fifth. NATIONAL LEAGUE Braves, Giants Divide RHE + 100000 340—8 12 0 .. + 0000000000 4 0 Parmelee and Mancuso; Cantwell, Frankhouse, Smith, Brown and Ho- gen, Spohrer. Second game— RHE New York .... 00010011000—3 13 1 Boston ...... 000000300014 6 4 Hubbell, Bowman and Danning; Brandt, Betts and Hogan. Cards Split With Reds R seeeee 000 140 103—9 16 1/ +++ 000040 003—7 11 2 Hallahan, Haines, J. Dean and DeLancey, Davis; Frey, Richmond, Johnson, Kleinhans and Lombardi. RHE + 0011000013 8 4 000 1010024 8 0 an and DeLancey; and Lombardi. H B/S8eregation, We are playing a hard! Cubs Defeat Pirates RHE Chicago . + 010001 100-3 6 0 Pittsburgh + 000100010—2 6 2 ‘Weaver and Hartnett; Gwift and Padden, Grace. Dodgers Win, Lose RHE First game— Philadelphia 000101 00000024 15 0 Brooklyn .. 1001000000000—2 11 2 Collins, C. Davis and Holden, Todd; ‘Mungo, Babich and Lopez. Second game— Philadelphia Blanton, RHE + 1010000-2 6 0 Brooklyn .. ; 010150x—7 8 0 Johnson, A. Moore and Todd; Leonard and Berries. AMERICAN LZAGUE Browns Split RHE 003 000000—-3 4 0 200016 10x—4 11 1 rane; Newsom and RHE 100 000 010—2 12 1 000 100000—1 10 0 Crowder Hayworth; Blae- holder and Hemsley. Yanks Win Twin Bill First game Boston . . New Yark 010.000 00x—1 10 0 Rhodes and R. Ferrell; Gomez and Second game— RHE sereeee 00004000004 6 0 +e» 0100110101—5 12 0 ao ) Hockette and Leggett; Ruffing and Jorgens, Taylor. ‘ial Indians Wallop White Sox game— RH First E Cleveland - 000010010—-2 7 0 Chicago . + 0000000011 8 0 oo and Berg; Kennedy and RA - 000001 400—5 11 2 Meee "ns! renzel; » Geving and Caithamer. Senators Drop Athletics EGAD ~AFTER YOu TWO DUMMIES HEAR THIS YOU'D BETTER HURRY BACK TO THE WAX MUSEUM HEH—~ HI | OUR BOARDING HOUSE . “YES /~ANB You ! TO ME/ WELL You GOING TO. SUE ME‘? a =— JAKE |~SHAKE YOUR FAT HEAD, 2 TO CLEAR YOUR EARS /—~so 1 SOLD YOUR GOLD MINE, EH? DIDNT YOU GIVE ME THE DEED TO YOUR MINE, FOR #50 ?°— SIGNATURE TO THE DEED —~ TRANSFERRING THE PROPERTY HOW COULD I SELLTHE MINE, \F NOU DIDN'T SIGN THE DEED OVER TO MES SO YOU'RE : By Ahern AFFIXED YOUR SIMPLETON, SSS, Ss Even Association Playoff Ser-| ies With Red Birds by Winning Sunday i Columbus, O., Sept. 24—()—The play-off for the American Association | flag was in a deadlock Monday, Min- | neapolis and Columbus each having | won two games. The rival skippers} were all set to toss their star mounds- men into the gap under the lights | Monday night in an attempt to gain! the edge for the drive down the stretch. | A pinch home run with the bases | loaded put the Millers back in the} series Sunday with a 5 to 2 victory. With the sacks loaded in the sev- enth, Manager Bush reached into the bench and produced Ernie Smith, utility infielder, to bat for Chaplin. Smith pounded a homer into the left field bleachers, Alabama to Defend Conference Honors Tuscaloosa, Ala., Sept. 24—()— j; The University of Alabama's pros- | Pects for a successful defense of its; southeastern conference title are not as bright as they have been pic- tured, in the opinion of Coach Frank Thomas. “We will have a good team,” he says, “but hardly a championship; schedule, but we will be in there] fighting all the way.” Thomas says he will continue to use the Notre Dame offense, with a few variations, as he goes about his task of rebuilding a starting eleven from a squad riddled by the grad- uation of 11 seniors, including seven regulars of the championship team cf 1933. “We have good replacements for these men,” the mild mannered pilot | Points out, “with the exception of the guard positions.” Millard (Dixie) Howell, a great kicker and a fine ball carrier, is the only regular of the backfield on hand. The Crimson tide’s schedule: Sept. 29—Howard at Tuscaloosa. Oct. 6—Sewanee at Montgomery (Night). Oct. 13—Mississippi State at Tus- caloosa. Birming- Oct. ham. Nov. 3—Kentucky at Lexington. Nov. 10—Clemson at Tuscaloosa. 17—Georgia Tech at Atlanta. 29—Vanderbilt at Birming- 20—Tennessee at Nov. Nov. ham. Major Schools Open Football Schedules New York, Sept. 24.—(4)—The sport deck will need to be cleared of all extraneous matter this week for the football season will deseend upon the Public with full force, The Friday-Saturday slate, of | course, is dominated by warm-up con- | tests for most major schools, but the | competitive element has not been en- | tirely overlooked, In the East, the Pitt Panthers open against Washington & Jefferson. Pop Warner's Temple Owls meet an in- tersectional foe, Virginia Poly; Du- quesne plays West Virginia, and Buck- hell tackles Davis & Elkins, The service schools, Army and Navy, play Washburn and William & Mary, respectively. The southeastern conference sched- ule will get under way with the meet- ing of Vanderbilt and Mississippi State, while the Duke-Virginia Mili- tary clash will mark opening hostil- ities in the southern conference. Six members of the “Big Ten” con- ference will make their season debuts, with Northwestern drawing Marquette as a first-game opponent, RHE and Gewell; Cain and « Weaver. Bisyes, ae First Waanlgion 200.000 000—5 7 0 “37.100 000000—1 8 Second Game— RHE Washington ..... 2001000015 0 Philadelphia ... 000102200—5 11 1 Russell, Thomas and Phillips; Diet- GIVES MILLERS TRIUMPH, 5-2 Ky Laffoon Breaks All Course Records Wayland, Mass., Sept. 24.—(P)— Golf's “nervous wreck,” Ky Laf- foon of Denver, has just won him- self $450 on the fairways and greens of the Sandy Burr club course. Declaring at the ouiset of the eastern open tournament that he was so nervous from being over- golfed that he couldn't hold his Putter straight, Laffoon proceed- ed to tear the course apart with successive pounds of 68-73-65-69 for a 72-hole total of 275 that broke all records for the event. Six Big Ten Schools Play Games Saturday Chicago, Sept. 24.—()—The pres- |Sure was increased Monday in big ten football camps, particularly in the six sectors where actual warfare will oc- cur next Saturday. While Michigan, the defending champion; Ohio State, Purdue and Wisconsin wait until Oct. 6 for their opening battles, the rest of the league will get down to business against more or less serious opposition this week. Of the latter six, only Northwestern and Indiana appear to have anything seperennne serious trouble ahead of em. The Wildcats will tackle Marquette jat Evanston. Indiana will meet Ohio University, while Illinois opens against Bradley. Chicago meets Carroll col- lege; Minnesota will work out on North Dakota State, and Iowa plays South Dakota University. N.D.A.C. Game Opens Gopher Grid Schedule Minneapolis, Sept. 24.—(4)—Soon to hit the campaign trail, the Univer- sity of Minnesota football warriors go back into training Monday, their sec- ond week of it, with Coach Bernie Bierman insisting on better daily per- formances. Actual combat arrives next Satur- day with the Gophers playing host to North Dakota State as the opener of the eight game schedule. The Gopher coaches seek to impress the gridders that the engagement warrants close attention to make sure the Bison won't surprise the Maroon and Gold. [ our WE HAD THAT IN SCHOOL , TOO, nal 1 Just SORT WHY~UH-- rich, Mahaffey, Cascarella and Hayes. FORGET, NOW— LET ME SEE—AH— Bears to Victory \Chicago Pros Triumph Over Green Bay Packers; De- troit Lions Triumph Chicago, Sept. 24—(#)—The famous jlast period punch and Jack Maders’ |deadly toe, prime factors in the Chi- cago Bear's drive to the 1932 and 1933 national professional football league championships, apparently still are in Great working order. The Bears opened their league cam- paign Sunday with a 2¢ to 10 triumph over the Green Bay Packers at Green Bay, and 14 of their points were packed up in the last quarter by Big Bronko Nagurski. Manders contrib- uted six points with a 24-yard place kick and three points after touch- down. The Detroit Lions, formerly the Portsmouth, O., Spartans, also open- ed with a victory, conquering Harry Newman and the New York Giants, 9| to 0, at Detroit. A brilliant 102-yard run on the opening kickoff by Doug Russell, late of Kansas State college, started Chi- | cago’s other entrant in the league, the | Cardinals, to a 9 to’ 0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds before 6,000 fans at Dayton, O. Wilton Eleven Beats Turtle Lake Outfit (Special Tribune Service) Turtle Lake, Sept. 24—A powerful gridiron squad from Wilton over- ceme the Turtle Lake eleven at Turtle Lake Friday by a score of) Jy to 0. N Although outweighed man for man the scraping Turtle Lake team pushed the ball deep into their op- ponents territory three times only to lose theit scoring chances through | two fumbles and an intercepted pass. | Wilton scored early in the first quarter. On the next kickoff Turtle | Lake took the ball to the nine-yard line but lost the ball on a fumble. | The second quarter saw both teams fighting at midfield. Wilton scored touchdowns again in the third and fourth periods. With | a few minutes remaining of the game, | Wilton pushed the ball inside of the| Trojan 10-yard stripe only to be re- BRITISH CHALLENGER RACE AGAIN MONDAY Duel Stands at Two Victories Apiece as Result of Race Court’s Action SOPWITH CLAIMS FOUL Insists That Rainbow Twice Nearly Ran Him Down in Saturday's Event + (By The Associated Press) Newport, R. 1., Sept. 24—(#)—The yachting world seethed Monday to the full seeting limits of yachting decor- um, for T. O. M. Sopwith’s protest inad been tossed right out of court, the America’s Cup duel was officially even at two victories each for Britain’s Endeavour and the defending Rain- bow, and everyone was arguing all over the place. o Sopwith’s big blue sloop and the snow white defender had to go out again for the start at 10:40 a. m. (EST) of the fifth race of the series. From here in it is every man for himself. The situation was brought about by the race committee's refusal even to entertain Sopwith’s protest that Rain- bow twice fouled his boat in the fourth race Vanderbilt won Saturday by one minute, 15 seconds, t even the series. The committee decided that the Englishman didn’t abide by the cup racing rules himself by failing to break out his protest flag until three hours after he claimed the first foul took place, and two hours after the second. The cup racing rules say that the protest flag must fly “promptly.” Sopwith’s complaint was that Rain- bow nearly ran him down twice Sat- urday, forcing him to luff each time the start and at the windward mark. committee said nothing whatsoever. F-M Twins Win Two Fargo, N. D., Sept. 24—(#)—The Fargo-Moorhead Twins, 1934 North- ern League champions, batted out a double conquest of the Lincoln Links, Nebraska state league champions, in 8 doubleheader here Sunday, by 9-3 and 3-1. The nightcap was called in the sixth because of rain. Home runs decided both games, the Twins knocking from the park to take the opener, while two were counted in the second game. First Game RHE Lincoln ........ 000 300 000—3 9 1 Fargo-Moorhead 030 020 40x—9 12 1 Potter and Warren; Kardow and Crompton. Second Game RHE Lincoln ........ +. 1 000-1 6 1 Fargo-Moorhead 020 Olx—3 4 2 Seats and Warren; Suche and Crompton. Early Season Injuries Trouble Coyote Coach Williston, N. D., Sept. 24—(?)—Nu- merous early season injuries have cropped out in practice sessions of the 1934 football squad at Williston high |school, but the Coyotes are hopeful ithe injuries will mend quickly. Considerable new material turned out. Those among the newcomers showing promise at this stage of the season are Doherty, Hogan, Marshall, O. Dwyer, J. Dwyer, Bruegger, Himler, Neilson, H. Swanson, Hougen, Svend- sen, Check and Pond. They are being groomed for vacant positions around the lettermen, Vohs, Nelson, Ditsworth, Bell, Swanson, Mc- |Grath and Wegley. Coach Joe Cutting had planned to fill an open date Oct. 6th with Glen- dive, Mont., but it was necessary to Pulsed by @ stone-wall defense, Turtle Lake plays Washburn next Friday. i THIS JUNK THAT IT ANT IS STUCK, RIGHT Now! PA'S HAD IT, AN! No KIN REMEMBER? SHE'S_HAD ! schedule some other teams and efforts are being made to arrange a contest with Minot Model high school. OUR WAY By Williams | THERE You Are! THAT PROVES MY IDEE OF, WHUT’S TH! USE OF STUDYIN’ ALL JUST THE SAME, YOU'RE GOING THRU HE LOOKS LIKE HE'D LIKE TO PUNCH ME ONE WHENEVER T AST HIM A PROBLEM OF HOME WORK CUP DEFENDER AND From Lincoln Nine} turn the celebrated Dean Saints’ Running Attack Stop- ped by Heavier Forward Wall of Winners St. Mary's was defeated by the eer gridiron machine Saturday, 28 to 0. j The Saint’s running attack was stopped by the heavier forward wall of the Dickinson eleven, making only one first down. Coach Meinhover instructed his charges to take to the air in the sec- ond half, but only one pass was com- Pleted for a gain of 10 yards and two were intercepted. Dickinson scored their first touch- down when Tuma, Midget halfback, ran 55 yards around end in the first quarter. The Saints held the Midgets score- less in the second quarter but in the third a 65-yard march brought an- other touchdown after Tuma had in- tercepted a pass from Tommy Lee, jSaints fullback. Two more touch- downs were added in the fourth on passes from Robertson to Kunde. Dickinson completed five passes, Robertson doing the tossing and Kunde and Agnew receiving. No Overconfidence In Giant Quarters New York Club Fighting to/ Stave Off Closing Rush of Cardinals New York, Sept. 24—(#)—Providing their stagger plan of operations keep them at the top of the National League this week and stands off the closing rush of the Cardinals, the New York Giants will have no chance whatever to develop overconfidence for a world championship battle with and lose vital distance koth before | Detroit's Tigers, Not only has the whole complexion As to the justice of these claims the |Of the baseball situation shifted with startling rapidity within the past fort- night but it is conceivable St. Louis may yet overhaul the world cham- pions, pluck its fifth pennant out of e fire in a nine-year period and brothers loose,. with their rifle-shot delivery, upon the battling Bengals. The Giants have blown the better Part of a seven-game lead and all chance to coast home comfortably. The pressure still is on and they may be back on their heels, even if they finally win, much as the Pittsburgh Pirates were in 1927. The one note of cheer for the strug- gling Giants is that their pitching staff has neither collapsed nor weak- ened under the closing strain. | The Tigers, moving ‘comfortably to- ward their first pennant in 25 years, will have every opportunity to con- serve their resources and develop their strategy for a winning start in the first two games of the world series on home grounds Oct. 3 and 4. Hazen Grid Prospects Fair’, Says Mentor Hazen, N. D., Sept. 24:—(#)—Seven lettermen graduated from Hazen high school but the football team has fair prospects. Rapid improvement has been noted in the 1934 squad, Coach M. C. Olson said, Lettermen are Ernest Seiszler, tackle, Siegfried von der Linden, cen- ter, John Gruntham, Max. Edlestein, Otto Frandrick, backs. Newcomers are Joe Schwartz, Emil Goetz, Simon Link, Edwin Richenberg, John Moses, Donald Brooks, Sam Edlestein. An alumni aggregation sone’: back the Hazen regulars by a 13 to 0 score in the opening game. The remainder of the schedule: Sept. 21, Hazen at Stanton; Sept. 28, St. Mary's, Bis- marck, at Hazen; Oct. 5, Stanton at Hazen; Oct. 12, Beulah at Hazen; and Oct. 19, Hazen at Beulah. (By The Associated Press) (including Sunday's Games) NATIONAL LEAGUE tting—P. Waner, Pirates, .359; Terry, Giants, 354. Runs—P. Waner, Pirates, 119; Ott, Giants, 118. Hits—P. Waner, Pirates, 210; Terry, Giants, 206. Home i t, Giants, 35; Collins, 355. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 128; Wer- ber, Red Sox, 126, Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, 207; Geh- rig, Yankees, 201. > Yankees, 47; Home Foxx, Athletics, 43. Pitching—Gomez, Yankees, 26-5; Rowe, Tigers, 24-7. ! Football Results | (a 4 Brigham Young 20; Montana State ‘Bt Paul Luther 0; Eau Claire Teachers 48. wee Teachers 18; Virginia Jun- 0. Stevens Point Teachers 7; St. Cloud achers 6, Te i ee Falls Teachers 31; Macalester &t. Mary's, Winona, 27; Stout Instl- tute 0, Bemidji Teachers 0; St. John’s Uni- g i z Teachers 0. Dakota Wesleyan 0; Springfield Southern Normal 0. Minot Teachers 45; Bottineau For- estry 0. Eveleth Junior 7; Duluth Junior 6. Veteran baseball observer believe the Pittsburgh Pirates got a real find when they re- cently bought Aubrey Epps, above, Birmingham’s brilliant young Southern League catch- er. Epps, generally considered the best rookie-in the leay is hitting around .310 — and that without the new major league lively ball. Crandinds -AMERICAN LEAGUE wis Club— Pct. Detroit ... 97 52 651 New York .... 91 57 615 Cleveland . 82. «BT Boston 72 75 490 Philadel 6 79 451 St. Louis . He Chicago .... L_sPet. 56 624 57 610 63 566 72 503 2 500 80 = 452 87 383. Cincinnati .. 52 84 356 TT YOU'RE Wt TELLING ME The next time Bill Terry says the Tigers will be pushovers for his Giants, let him remember last year +.» when every expert picked the Senators to push over his: outfit. John Henry Lewis, the west negro fighter who holds a couple of cleah decisions over Maxie Rosen- bloom, can’t get a fight with a top- notcher because he's too good. ... Harry Stuhidreher expects his Villa Nova outfit to stop a lot of good eastern elevens this year ... and add more glory to the name of Stuhl- Greher.... Greb was just the ring rame that light-heavy. ... It was Harry's real ti |... Alabama’s grid hopes have been revived this year by Joe Riley . . . a triple-threat soph- omore back ... who is expected to be @s great as Millard Howell.... Du- quesne is expecting a lot from this fellow Art Stutt ... the guy who got his ndme in the paper a great deal last year as a backfield man who hustled places.... The Dukes like him for an All-America berth. Battle Scarred Battle scars aren't always pro- duced by bullets as this national guardeman can testify. The in- juries that mar his face were in- flicted by the barrage of rocks with which rioting textile workers at Saylesville, R. 1, routed troops. Sannin sons angie PIRATE PRIZE Only Four 1933 . Baseball Berths Carl Hubbell Dropped From List of Stalwarts; Gehring- er Most Popular =~ New York, Sept. 24.—()—The all- star major league baseball cast has been shaken up s0 1934 developments that only four a votes. The pilot of the Giants, Bill Terry, grabbed second place with 19. Foxx received only two votes for first and four for third base. Most popular man in the 1934 poll is Gehringer. king secondsacker of who received &ll but two Shortstop, Jackson, Ginats.. 36 Outfield, Mel Ott, Giants.... 50 Outfield, P. Waner, Pirates.. 45 Outfield, Simmons, White Sox 38 Catcher, Cochrane, Tigers ... Pirates 15); outfielders, Averill, In- dians (20), Manush, Senators, (22), and Joe Moore, Giants (10); catch. ers, Hartnett, Cubs (18), and Lopez, Dodgers (2); pitchers, Hubbell, Giants (21); Schumacher, Giants (6), and Warneke, Cubs (2). Linton High Downs - Wishek Eleven, 21-0 Wishek, 21 to 0 Saturday. Harold Dobler, star left half for Linton, scored two touchdowns on pesses from Lauinger while E. Fleet, right end, scored the other touch- down on Dobler added touchdown lne-smashi King Levinsky Meets. Italian Trial-Horse New York, Sept. 24.—(#)—King Le- vinsky returns to the ring this week fe save boxing fans from utter bort- lom. ‘The king meets Salvatore Ruggir- ello, Italian trial-horse, in a ten-round bout at Milwaukee Friday night. _ ‘The best offering in the New York district is a return ten rounder at Ebbets Field Wednesday night be- tween Tony (By The Associated Press) Bill Terry, Giants—Led attack on Braves with six hits. dim Weaver, Cubs—Limited Pirates to six hits, Buck Newsom, Browns, and Goose Goslin, Tigers—Newsom held Tigers to four hits in opener; Goslin drove an winning tun in second game. Cincinnati pitching for three hits in €ach game. London's residents spend spend $300,000,- 000 annually on “slimming” and other beauty treatments, i Need Only One Triumph to Clinch American League Pennant SSESe WTC PEMAIN TWO ENDEA VOUR PILOT’S PROTEST OVERRULED BY RACE COMMITTEE DICKINSON MIDGETS TRIUMPH OVER ST. MARY’S ELEVEN, 28.0| All-Stars Retain ”? ) >

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