The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 25, 1934, Page 6

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“— i ' { i | | - their world series rivals would be the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1984 6 — Tigers Win American DETROMCLIBWINS CUR BOARDING House WELL, JAKE THIS BEING PICKLING SEASON, WE HEAR THE MASOR WRAPPED: A BAY LEAF AROUND YOUR NOSE, AN’ PUT YOU ON THY SHELF !~YEH ~WE HEARD HE RIPPED TH’ STITCHING OUT OF YOUR LAWSUIT \\. ANY STUFFED IT IN TH an OL RAG BAG! FIRST LEAGUE FLAG IN LAST 25 YEARS John Marena. §& hander, Humes New Yor. With Five-Hit Feat CARDINALS GAIN ON GIANTS Dodgers Topple Phillies Twice; Athletics Take Twin Bill From Senators (By the Associated Press) | For the first time in 25 years, the Detroit Tigers have wor the Ameri- can League pennant but whether New York Giants or the St. Louis Cardinals none could say Tuesday. The idle Tigers “backed” into the flag Monday when the New York Yankees were shut cut by John Marena, a Boston Red Sox rookie right hander and thus lost their last mathematical chance of overhauling Detroit in the race to the wire. Marena pitched five hit ball. Developments in the National League served to indicate that if the world champion Giants are to -win| again they'll have to co so on their own behalf. They'll get scant help from the Cardinals. While the Giants were idle, the Cards beat down the Chicago Cubs, 3-1, and headed for home only two gemes out of first place. With the season ending Sunday, the Giants have four games yet to play—two with the Phillies Tuesday and Wed- nesday and two with Brooklyn Sat- urday and Sunday, all at the Polo grounds. Cardinals Have Six Left The Cardinals still have six on their slate, two with Pittsburgh Tues- day and Wednesday end four with Cincinnati on the last four days of the season, also all at home. If the Giants win all four of their games, they will take the pennant no matter what St. Louis accom- plishes. If they win three while the Cards capture six, the race will end iu a tie and a special series of three games will be necessary to decide the league champion. Any combination of New York victories and St. Louis defeats which adds to four will auto- matically give the Giants the flag. The Cards won from the Cubs Monday by virtue of Bill Walker's) seven-hit pitching and tmely hitting! by Pepper Martin and Leo Durocher. In the only other major league en- gagements of the day, Brooklyn toppled the Phillies twice, 5-3 and 16-1, and the Athletics tripped Wash. ington twice, 5-4 and 3-0. Jimmy Foxx hit his 44th homer in the first game. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cards Trounce Cubs RHE St. Louis « 002 000 001-3 11 1 Chicago . +000 000 001-1 7 1 Walker and Delancey; Lee and Hartnett. Dodgers Win Two (First Game) RHE Philadelphia ... 000 020 001—3 12 3 Brooklyn ...... 000 101 012-5 10 2 A. Moore and Holden; Munns and (econd Game) RHE Philadelphia .. 000 000 100-1 4 1 Brooklyn ..... 400 015 00x—10 13 2 Hansen, Grabowski, Walters and ‘Todd; Beck and Millies, (Only games scheduled). AMERICAN LEAGUE Red Sox Blank Yanks nee + 121 000 001-5 7 1 + 000 000 000-0 4 3 R. Ferrell; Murphy Warneke, RHE ‘Washington 000 400 000—4 11 0 iphia .. 012 O01 O1x—5 10 2 Diggs and Sewell; Marcum, Caster ‘and Hayes. (Second Game) RHE fashington 000 000-0 2 0 we e+, 000 Philadelphia .. 000 000 03x—3 6 0 Armbrust, Thomas and Phillips; Dietrich and Hayes. (Only games scheduled). Polo Series to Be Resumed on Tuesday Westbury, N. Y., Sept. 25.—(7)— Already two weeks behind schedule, polo stars of the east and west hoped to outsmart the weather man long enough to play the second game of the intersectional series at Meadow Brook Tuesday. The third game, if neces- sary, will be played Saturday, weather ‘permitting. Beaten 10-8 in surprising fashion ‘by the eastern youngsters in the first game, the west rearranged its lineup for the second fray. — 1 Fights Last Night + OO (By The Associated Press) Philadelphia — Petey Saaron, 127%, Birmingham, Ala. out- pointed Banny Bass, 129%, Phil- adelphia, (10); Paul Piorrone, 160, Cleveland, stopped Jackie Aldare, 159, Brooklyn, N. Y., (4); Eddie Hogan, 220, Waterbury, Conn, stopped Georgia Neron, 230, Chi- cago, (4); Bobby Pacho, 137, Los Angeles, outpointed Tony Falco, 140, Philadelphia, (10), \s { i | PAT. Detroit Manager Is Emotional | While New York Leader Is All Business , Detroit, Sept. 25.—Could Bill Terry | have won a pennant with the Detroit Tigers and Mickey Cochrane with the New York Giants? The answer to this question will | give you an insight into the 1934 flag chases and why these clubs copped | the glue. The makeup and style of | each club are a reflection of the| methods and personalities of the/ managers. Every player will tell you | that a club makes its manager, but does it? Terry took a sixth place club in 1932 and walked away with the world championship the following year. From under a .500 percentage by ten games to the top of the dodge in one year and no flash in the pan—re- beating in 1934: that's Terry's record. In thé depths of the dreaded sec- ond division, Cochrane finds the De- troit outfit, losing mors games than it won in 1933, and takes full strides, with no expert prophecies to help him in his sleepless nights, past the rejuvenated Red Sox, the vigorous | and up and coming Indians, the brow- | beating Yankees, and the luckless champion Senators. | In 1933, Terry took on Gus Man- | cuso, up to that time one of the most | uninspiring catching figures in the! sport; Blondy Ryan, who hit in the | early 200s and who telegraphed, “We , can’t lose!” and @ couple of other fel- | lows to make it a 23-man ball club, so} as to meet the rules, and comes out of the boiling water the No. 1 man of the national pastime. Top Tiger Finds Way Cochrane adds Goose Goslin, ad- judged on his last pins by the shrewd Clark Griffith, to a mediocre and un- inspired infield, and a spotty pitching staff, and becomes the prize manager of the American League. Now then, did all these Giants and | Tigers come overnight on their own? Are they clubs of nine collectively, rather than individual stars spotted together, and all clicking at once? Or are Terry and Cochrane the in- tangible ingredients that the French chef mixes in the Brussels sprouts to make you smack your lips? But for Cochrane, Schoolboy Rowe may have been home at El Dorado, Ark., nursing a grievance and a sore arm he said he had last spring. ‘You never heard any wails of woe from Bob Grove or Big Meat Earn- shaw when Mickey was handling them in Philadelphia, but Connie Mack oc- cupied the driver's seat, and every- body else had to shove over. In the afterglow, Cochrane shows that he oa the shining light on the directing end. Whoever heard of Eldon Auker in the same breath with first-flight flingers? Tommy Bridges was a flash here and there, with a second di- vision complex ever since he joined the Bengals because he was associated with them. Now the little southerner ‘Planting W ore | tf GIANTS AND TIGERS SHOWING PLAYING STYLE OF MANAGERS whole process like the Chinaman who tells you that the Japanese can come over, but that they’ll all be Chinese a little later. It will all come out in the backyard wash. Cold percentages speak louder than the rash impulsive brow-beater urges on. Joe Moore and Mel Ott throw out the boys trying to stretch singles without looking impressive in the act. Ott cocks his leg and manufacturers a home run, and Terry just as meth- odically hits one to left centerfield-for three bases. Cochrane and Terry both reach home, but by different routes—Coch- rane with a whip, horns on his big ears and hell sparks shooting out of them, Terry sits in an easy chair, Peruses a while, thinks a little hard, and brings on some fellow you never thought of to perfect the machine. He admits he’s pulling the strings. ‘Whoever you go with, you're hitch- ing your wagon to a star—either by Tocket or by rocking chair. Rugby High Eleven, Alumni in Deadlock Rugby, N. D., Sept. 25.—(?)—Rug- by high school opened its gridiron ‘schedule with a 6 to 6 tie against an alumni eleven. The alumni partially blocked a {punt and then marched down the field for a touchdown. Rugby’s regu- lars tallied late in the game, inter- cepting an alumni toss and then com- pleted a pass on their own. Tae | DEGREES ABOVE TORRID = HE SAID YOU KNEW THAT You SIGNED TH DEED OF TH MINE OVER TO Him, BUT YOU TRIED TO PUT TH* CROW ON HIM WITH A ‘BLUFF LAWSUIT! BEFORE | LEAVING TH SPRINGBOARD, INTO A STEIN OF LAGER, HE SAID YOU WERE SMART, UNTIL IT CAME TO KNOWING SOMETHING -~AN’ THAT TH ONLY THING YOU SHINED IN_AT SCHOOL WAS ‘BLUE SERGE — “EO \S J [= 9-25 OR LEAGUE (By The Associated Press) (Including Sunday's Games) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Gehrig, Yankees, .360; Gehringer, ‘Tigers, .355. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 128; Wer- ber, Red Sox, 126. Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, 207; Geh- rig, Yankees, 203. Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 47; Foxx, Athletics, 44, Pitching—Gomez, Yankees, Rowe, Tigers, 24-7. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—P. Waner, Pirates, .359; Terry, Giants, 354. Runs—P. Waner, Pirates, 119; Ott, Giants, 118. Hits—P. Waner, Pirates, 210; Terry, Giants, 208. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 35; Collins, Cardjnals, 34, Pitching—J. Dean, Cardinals, 27-8; ; Walker, Cardinals, 11-4. o—. —_—__—_-—_————— Yesterday’s Stars (By The Associated Press) Pepper Martin and Leo Durocher, fe in runs that defeated Cubs 3 to J, former sending two in with home run. Johnny Marena, Red Sox—His four-hit pitching eliminated Yanks from American League race. Walter Beck, Dodgers—Held Phil- lies to four hits in nightcap to give Dodgers clean sweep doubleheader. Jimmy Foxx, and Bob Johnson, Athletics—Drove out home runs to whip Senators twice. of Russian Olive Trees For Game Bird Feed Recommended Beach, N. D., Sept. 25.—Planting of @ liberal number of Russian olive trees in the 100-mile wide shelter belt Project proposed by the federal gov- ernment in North Dakota is recom- mended as a boon to game birds by Dr. H. L. Rice of Beach, former mem- ber of the state game and fish com- mission. Dr. Rice, in emphasizing that “the planting of Russian olive trees will create a veritable paradise for game birds,” has urged sportsmen of the state and the Greater North Dakota association to back his rec- ommendations, The seeds of the Russian. Olive grow high on the tree. Birds, are es- Pecially fond of the seeds which grow high enough so that even when the snow is deep this feed is available. OUTOUR WAY By Williams | down. YOU SHORE MUST GIT URE OUT A LOT O! PLEAS © THEM OU! INDIAN RELICS, ‘TO PACK THAT OL! CORN 48 a 20-game luminary. Mickey's Spirit Carries Now get Charley Gehringer and Marvin Owen, who don't even talk when addressed to spit fire, when Mickey's spirit reflects a pennant chance; Greenberg to never say die even with two out in the ninth; Bill Rogell to hit and field as well as he always said he could; Pete Fox and Jo-Jo White to fly across the green- sward and menace and tease at the Plate, peeking at pitchers like a tan- talizing fly on @ cow's broad side; there you have a portrait of Gordon Stanley Cochrane. Of course, you must have the older and astute Firpo Marberry as a bal- ance wheel and add Alvin Crowder ‘or an emergency, but it is Cochrane, the human rocket, who is now shoot- ing high through the sratosphere to Chicago—Billy Miller, 146, Mil- waukee, outpointed Billy Celebron, 148, Rockford, Il., (8); Frankie Mirabel, 123%, Argo, Ill, outpoint- ed Freddie Gravelle, 124, Kanka- kee, Ill., (6); Tony Mandell, 148%, Rockford, Il, outpointed Sy Babler, 149, Milwaukee, (4). Jersey City, N. J—Joey Ferran- do, Ashtabula, Ohio, outpointed Teddy Loder, Keansburg, (10); lightweights. Miami, Fla—Benny Odell, 183, » N. Y¥., knocked out tad Johnson, 171, of Atlanta, ; BB aga scea re ee Scarlet, 159, Springs, outpointed Paul Ladd, Faye » Ark, (10), what the experts called for him the unattainable moun. Watching the Giants play is like inspecting the latest Swiss movement in a watch. You must remove the crystal to see it work. Here is per- fection of movement, If Carl Hubbell doesn't win, it is because it wasn’t in the books, No Ballyhoo for Terry Terry wants no sparks, no genius. He wants journeymen players who | Mt into his scheme. He doesn’t seek miracle men who climb up to the top of the rope, or saw women in half without rhyme or reason. If Stoney Jackson doesn't hit in the tying and winning runs in the last half of the ninth, Terry looks at the GRINDIN! OUTFIT. EIGHTEEN MILES, 4 Dr. Rice learned how popular Rus- sian olive trees are with game birds when he interviewed Howard Stock- well, who lives @ few miles from Beach, to find what kept so many game birds about his place. Stock- well teld him it was the tiny olives on the half-mile row of Russian olive trees which form a windbreak on one}. side of the farm. Since learning the secret Dr. Rice has planted many of the trees. He says @ tree will reach the height of|his fan-dance bride, Roxanne Car- | mine, nee Golda Glickman, has found nearly three feet in a five-year per- fod. Dr. Rice feels that sportsmen of Down in Russia Navy Craft Lands at Leningrad, Approximately 650 Miles From Start Moscow, Sept. 25.—(P)—Ten con- testants for the Gordon Bennett cup, coveted prize of free balloonists, were reported down Tuesday, six of them in Russia. Others of the 16 balloons which started from Warsaw Sunday pos- sibly were drifting eastward over central Russia. The American navy balloon and that of the Buffalo Courier Express, only entries from the United States, were safely down on Soviet territory near the Estonian boundai ry. Lts. C. H. Kendall and H. T. Or- ville of the navy craft were taken to Leningrad by Russian military offi- cials at the request of the American embassy and were expected here Tuesday. The fliers landed Monday near the Estonian border. (Leningrad is approximately 650 statute miles from Warsaw). Balloonists from the Buffalo entry, George Hineman and Milford BR Vanik, ‘were in Gdov, Russia, near where they landed Tuesday. (Gdov is about 530 statute miles from War- saw.) Crisler Afraid of Over-Contidence Princeton’s Unbeaten Tigers of 1933 Face Stronger Teams, Says Coach Princeton, N. J. Sept. 25—(7)— Along with the rest of the coaching gentry, young Fritz Crisler, who came out of the west to rejuvenate Prince- ton football, sings a mournful tune, but for the life of them his fellow Coaches can’t see why. Crisler's 1933 Tiger team was un- beaten and untied. Most of it is back again and for the spots that must be filled, Crisler has one of the great- est array of reserves in Princeton history. Friends and foes of the Tigers are unable to see how they can drop a gig this season, but listen to Cris- e “If we are to have a season as suc- cessful as last, we must have a team 20 per cent stronger for three rea- sons: “1, Every one of our opponents is “2. All will be gunning for Prince- ton because of last year’s record. “3. The danger of the squad be- coming overconfident following the 1933 carnival.” The big task at Princeton right now is to see that overconfidence does not get a toe hold on the squad. Princeton's schedule: Oct. 6, Amherst; Oct. 13, Williams; Oct. 20, Ws & Lee; Oct. 27, Cornell; Nov. 3, Harvard at Cam- bridge; Nov. 10, Lehigh; Nov. 17, ‘Yale; Nov. 24, Dartmouth. Bowman Bulldogs Beat Rhame High Team, 6-0 Bowman, N. D., Sept. 24.—(?)—Bow- man’s bulldogs defeated Rhame high school 6 to 0 in the opening game of the southwest conference. Bowman reached the Rhame one- yard line twice only to be stopped by the end of a period. The score fin- ‘ally came on @ pass to Thuman Ly- ford,, Bowman fullback. Captain Bjorklund, Bowman, guard, starred. Levinsky’s Fan-Dance Bride Seeks Divorce Chicago, Sept. 25—(#)—The whirl- wind romance of King Levinsky and its way to the divorce court. Charging cruelty, the bride tossed the state can help with the problem! in the towel Monday after five short of winter feeding of game birds by | weeks of married life. In her suit for planting a few Russian olives at the| divorce against Harris Krakow, the head of coulees or near waterholes| heavyweight pugilist’s right name, she and feeding grounds of prairie chick- ens. MANY A SQUAW GOT ON, HER BACK FROM charged that he struck her on the face Saturday. A ANY MODERN, EDUCATED FELLER WOULD LET IT PUT A HAM ON HIS BACK. YUH KNOW, PEOPLE DIDN’ Pennant As Rookie Blanks Yanks at Boston By Ahern ||U, S. Entrants in (Millers Take Lead in Association Balloon Race Are Playoff With 10-8 Victory Monday You can lead a horse to a fence, Just something to took at. Which Handy Hunter Gets Out of Hand in mid-air alone instead of aboard the back of Weary River. but once in a while he thinks {t's explains why Miss Hope Gimbel is Her spill occurred during the judging of the handy bunters class at the North Shore Horse Show. Stony Brook, L. 1. SPEED, BATTING POWER, ROWE, COCHRANE BRING TIGERS FLAG Detroit’s Forceful Leader Will Start Rowe in First Series Game ° New York, Sept. 25—(7)—A num- ber of circumstances have combined to lift the Detroit Tigers to the Am- erican League peak after a 25-year interval but the four salient factors contributing’ to their dramatic vic- tory as well as to their world series hopes can be listed as speed, batting power concentrated in an iron-man infield, the forceful leadership of Mickey Cochrane and the pitching skill of Schoolboy Rowe. For speculative purposes you can compere these assets with the pitch- ing, outfield power, defense and) shrewd leadership of the Giants by Bill Terry or the -all-around driving power, speed and Dean brothers’ pitching combination of Frank Frisch’s St. Louis Cardinals, still in hot pursuit of the world champions down the National League stretch. Without either Cochrane or Rowe, it is safe to say Detroit would have been lucky to land a place in the first division. Rowe's heroic pitching in his first full Big League year has won him Cochrane's designation as the start- ing Tiger flinger in the opening game of the world’s series, Oct. 3, at Navin Field, Detroit. The young giant from El Dorado, Ark., willl likely be pitted against Carl Hubbell, ace southpaw of the Giants and one of the greatest “money pitchers” the game has developed in modern times. Should the Cardinals overtake the Giants, undoubtedly Rowe would find himself arrayed against Jerome (Dizzy) Dean. Washburn Defeats | Underwood, 7 to 6) (Special Tribune Service) Washburn, N. D., Sept. 25.—(?)— Washburn high school’s football team downed Underwood 7 to 6, in the opening game for both teams Friday. Underwood took the lead early in the game after a steady march down the field that began when a Washburn back fumbled on the 40-yard line. They failed to convert the point after the touch- For three quarters the Washburn line was unable to stop the driving attack of the Underwood backs but staved off further scoring until the last period when Stevens, Washburn back, broke away and raced 80 yards for a touchdown. Fisher's kick’ for the extra point was good. Mijogdalen, ‘and all is the lightest in the McLean County leagug, their title chances are any- thing’ but “black.” Perry’s Name Linked With Professionalism Tuesday after his third consecutive victory in the Pacific southwest cham- Pionship. While the brilliant British Davis cup star was noncommittal the get $100,000 for a series of tennis shorts, such as Bobby Jones made on golf. He polished off} Lester Stoefen, American cup player, and wesld’s doubles champion, 10-8, 6-4, 6-3 in ‘Twelve per cent of the driving li- censes issued in England are held by women; yet of the drivers concerned in accident only # per cent were women, ‘The center of attraction at the To- ronto centennial relics exhibition was Seong Rainbow Favored to Keep America’s Cup Newport, R. I. Sept. 25.—(#)—Bar- ring an accident or a reversal in form on the part of either the defender or the challenger, the New York Yacht club should be privileged this evening, to lock the America’s cup away in its vault until another challenger takes up the quest. As Rainbow, Harold 8. Vanderbilt's | defender, and Endeavour, T. O, M. Sophwith’s British challenger, pre- pared to face the starting line Tues- day for what may be the last time, even the most loyal supporters of the invader thought very little of her chances. Monday she suffered her third straight defeat, by four minutes, the largest margin of the series. Prev- iously, she won the first two races of) the four oud of seven contest. Un- less she is able to lead Rainbow home Tuesday she may just as well sail on| up the bay to Bristol for her jury rig) with which to make the passage back’ to Englan C - | 8 group of old vehicles which included gas buggies 1902, | dating back to Donie Bush Will Start sess Petty in Sixth Game Against Red Birds Columbus, O., Sept. 25.—(—Donie Bush, crafty skipper of the Minne- me Ace ince to clinch the erican flag Tuesday night in the playoff with Columbus, and will place his faith in the si left arm of Jess Petty, who has been Pitching in these baseball wars for fight their way back with the rampaging Mille: Monday night the on two Columbus hur! & nine-run lead in the first four in- nings, and then halted the Birds they threatened to get out ‘The final count was 10 to 8. tory gave the Millers a 3-2 edge the series. 5 s § Tauscher, Shaute and Harfrave; Greer, Cross, Teachout and O'Dea, Angley. OS SO f ‘Tigers, Next World | 1 Champs’—Cochrane | $e Detroit, Sept. 23.—()—Mickey Cochrane, who gave his longshot Detroit Tigers a hustling ride down the stretch from July to Septem- ber to beat out the favored Yankees in the American League pennant race, 1s hoping and thinking Tues- day that Detroit will be the next world’s champion. = “Now we can play cut the string without any mental hazards,” he said as he gathered in his’ 8 board for the world series. “We will Go into the series ready to fight eitHer the Giants or the Cardinals to the last out. “I hope and think we will be the next world champions.” ¢ Cochrane's young band of players whom he led to Detroit’s first pen- nant in 25 years in his first season as @ manager, were trying to pick the winner at the Fairgrounds race track when the news of the Boston shut- w Le Pet. out came. coal ae 4 3 ety Cochrane's plans for the next week lew York . ea include a little less work for some of Cleveland . 7% «(ST S80 his regulars, and @ close study each Boston .. > a 2 459 night of the nip-and-tuck race be- aes aaa “6s 82 44g | “Wem New York and &t. Louis in the “h anirigtos eae 43s National League. Chicago ... - 51 95 * ‘ chats Beach Gridders Turn NATIONAL LEAGUE | Back Belfield, 27-0 New York (ai ie (Special Tribune Service) * oo be taa|. Beach, N. D., Sept. 25.—In the first 23 (72 ‘503 | football game of the season for both Semaine "72 72 ‘500| teams the local high school eleven de- (i “68 80 459 feated Belfield, 27 to 0. Pailedeionia ’ 54 489 «378 Neonat scored & pepsi early ae Cincinnati .. a ai) feed faker ppt eggs ceh try for the extra point. The balance of the first half was fought on even terms with Belfield threatening to score in the second quarter by bring- ing the ball to the Beach 4-yard line. The locals added two more touch- downs in the third quarter and one in the fourth. Jones was outstanding for Beach and Bolts for Belfield. ‘The summary: Beach Pos. Belfield R. Purvis le R. Hecker T. Vanvig It I. Ingman E. Schmidt lg C. Christianson G. Carlson c R. Richter R. Perkins ™ C. Snow E. Nelson rt N. Haverluck .D. Gilman re E. Kolberg A. Gilman qb B. Barrow R. Jones If Kordoney D. Miller th L. Buckman C. Knezevich fb J. Bolts Substitutions: Beach—G. Fakler for Purvis, Ramstad for Vanvig, Purvis for Knezevich, Hanavold for Miller, R. Jones for A. ‘Tornow for Perkins, E. Carlson for G. Carlson, ONVENIENCE... COMFORT...ECON On the main traffic artery to. and from the Worlds Fair Grounds. Close to every. thing worthwhile in Chicaga A the Worlds Fair descriptive booklet — free, on request. Bellmont for Kakler, Geyer for D. Gilma Kowaleski for Nelson. Write today for CENTURY OF PROGRESS’ WORLD'S FAIR RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED NOW/ CLARK ST. NEAR JACKSON BLVD.

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