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ROWE'S 12TH INNING TRIUMPH IS ONE OF HISTORY'S GREATEST Bengal Ace Recovers After Shaky Start to Set Down 22 Men in Order CLUBS MOVE TO ST. LOUIS Tommy Bridges Will Hurl for Tigers in Third Game at Sportsman's Park St. Louis. Oct. 5—(7)—To _ para- phrase the chant of Mi. Kipling. it Was the Gunga Deans Friday, the Deans, Deans, Deans, and the bloom- in’, blawstin’ blighters can't get in there any too soon if the swash- buckling St. Louis Cardinals are to regain the upper hand in this blood pounding duel with the Detroit Tigers for baseball's world championship. Paul (Gunga) Dean it was, Li'l Frisch Calls on Paul HAWKEYE - INDIANA, WILDCAT- IOWA BATTLES OPEN BIG TEN Brother Dean, the freshman, to whom Frankie Frisch turned for aid and comfort as the Cardinals ral- ed for the second phase and the third game of the world series on the home grounds of Sportsman's park, &t. Louis. ‘Meet the Missus,’ Says ‘Dizzy’ Dean St. Louis, Oct. 5.—)—It's time you meet Pat—she’s the third member of the St. Louis Card- inals’ hearalded Dean act. She is the balance wheel be- tween the sublime and the ridic- ulous. She babys Dizzy, mothers Paul and handles the contracts “because eomebody -has to know something about it.” she is Mrs. Jerome Herman “Dizzy” Dean, nee Patricia Nash of Gulfport, Miss, “I don't know anything about baseball strategy. That's Dizzy’s business. But I do know how the money is to be got and what to do with it.” Thus Mrs, Dean sums up her contribution to the part- nership. ‘The Tigers, wild cats again over- night, chose the curve ball wizard, ‘Tommy Bridges, to carry on the as- tcundingly grand pitching work of Lynwood (Schoolboy) Rowe that Pulled them up to evens in the series Thursday. ‘The situation Friday was one that weil mitts. the attention of the Deans, Deaus, Deans, and it is more than likely that if the 22-year old &choolboy from Eldorado, Ark., has more of what he showed Thursday in his system, and the Cards can't do any better by such a grand old warrior as Wild Bill Hallahan than did, then the cry of Dean, Dean, is merely the announcer reeling the St. Louis starting pitchers the remainder of the conflict. ‘Bchoolboy’ Sensational Once he recovered from a shaky start, the 6 foot, 4 inch schoolboy turned in one of the most amazing performances in all world series his- tory as he outlasted unlucky Halla- han and went on to win 3 to 2 in 12 innings the victory that brought De- troit back, and made a hero of old Goose Goslin. If the mastery the schoolboy dis- from the third inning through the 12th, setting 22 men down in order, allowing only one hit in the ast nine innings, has punctured their balloon, that fact can’t be hidden long. The Cards belted Rowe for six hits in the first three innings, scored two runs, and might have scored more if Goslin hadn’t nipped the final rally in the third with a beautiful peg to the plate. Hallahan allowed only four, and three of them flukes at that, until the lid blew off in the ninth, taking him with it from the game, and a pinch hitter, Gerald ‘Walker, tied the score with a single after he should have been out. Fox’s Double Scores Rogell The Tigers scored their first run, for instance, on Bill Rogell’s fly that got caught in the wind and dropped out of Ernie Orsatti’s reach in the ca, followed by a double by Pete off lor In the ninth, with the score still 2 te 1 in his favor, Hallahan was touched for a single by Fox to start the inning, and Rowe's sacrifice sent the runner to second. Gerald Walker batted for Jo Jo White and immediately popped a high fly half ‘way between home plate and first base, that fell foul. Walker got another chance, and boomed a single to center that scored Fox with the tying run, | Bill Walker, another southpaw, took over the burden there. The only| hit St. Louis got after the third was Pepper Martin's double to center in the 1th. Will hung on until he walked Charlie Gehringer and Hank Greenberg with one out in the 12th, whereupon old Goslin, pumped a@ single to center and the! Tigers were back in the series, Friday's starting lineup: Detroit (A) &t. Louis (N) White, cf THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1984. Dean to Put Ca rds Ahead in World Series Collins Slides Into Home During First Series Game | Here is “Ripper Jim” Collins of the St. Louis Cardinals as he slid into home plate in the third inning of the first world series game at Detroit which the Cards won 8 to 3. Detroit came back behind their pitching ace, “Schoolboy” Rowe, to capture a long overtime struggle in the second game when “Goose” Goslin singled sharply to score Gehringer with the winning run in the twelfth. Relative Strength of High School Grid Teams to Be Tested This Week Bismarck Meots cende: i: ART LASKY, STEVE HAMAS OPEN not-Fargo, Laker-Blue Jay Contests Featured By the Associated Press) Undefeated high school football teams find their ranks thinning and the competition growing a little keener as gridiron season takes a firmer hold on North Dakota. Games this week-end will have a more decisive bearing on the relative strength of the state's outstanding elevens, New York, Oct. 5—(#)—The busi- ness of building up a heavyweight |championship fight for next summer which will be attractive enough to the Public to justify the outlay of cash begins Friday night with the opening of the new winter season in Madison Square Garden. Art Lasky, the big boy from Min- At the top of the list without a set- |NeaPolis, and Steve Hamas, who’stili back in three encounters are Grand Forks, Dickinson, Lidgerwood and New Rockford. Also undefeated in three tilts, but having a record mar-/ red by one tie are Croshy, Fargo, and | Jamestown. The two came winners are Lakota, Mandan, Washburn and Williston. Williston’s Coyotes, who carried off high scoring honors by a 66 to 0 vic- tory over Watford City in the sea- to Grafton. {is remembered as the greatest all- jaround athlete ever produced at Penn HEAVY ELIMINATION PROGRAM | State college, will clash in the indoor | curtain raiser, a ten-round affair. Later in the year two former heavy- | weight champions, Primo Carnera and Max Schmeling, and Jack Peterson, | promising English heavyweight, will be tossed into the lists. When the winter program is finished the Garden management hopes to have discovered a worthy challenger for Max Baer’s title. Advance predictions are that a crowd of 15,000 will pay about $50,000 to see Friday night's affray. season tilt to Grand Forks but will face the Forkers this week-end in a return engagement. Friday Glendive, Mcnt., at Bismarck. Reeder at Bowman. Cooperstown at Carrington. St. James Academy, Grand Forks, at Larimore. Minot college high at Williston. The standing, as compiled from available complete returns: oO. TTP. TP. son's opener, outdid themselves last} Carson at Elgin. ; Team— wou week in a 75 to 0 win against Ray| Jamestown at Devils Lake. ‘Bismarck... 1 1 135 7 to pile up a total of 142 points while; Edgcley at Lisbon. Bowbells . 2 1 044 2 holding the opponents scoreless. The| Fessenden at Rugby. (Bowman i O43 @ closest contender was Lakota with Washburn at Garrison. ‘Crosby .. 2 0 153 «0 95, and also maintaining an un-| Hatton at Portland. Devils Lake... 2 1 0 75 19 crossed goal line. Mandan:at dickinson, | Dickinson 3.0 068 0 Besides Williston and Lakota, epee at aemoiml. | Bégeley 1 0 03 oO teams boasting an uncrossed goal Led tier |Fargo .. 2 0 1.51 19 include Bowman, Crosby, Dickinson,| Yituvood at Mine |Grafton 1 1 019 19 Edgeley and New Rockford. ven Le ‘Grand Forks.. 3 0 0 52 2 As a result of past games, the Dick- | al be t He las, 8. D. |Hazen........ 0 3 © 0 32 inson-Mandan contest will share the) Snango St cee 2 0 14 «6 spotlight of interest along with the ish - Vale. des 2 0 0 95 0 Jamestown-Devils Lake, Minot-Fargo,| Hillsboro at Valley Clcy. 3 0 O8f 6 Grand Forks-Grafton and Glendive,| Washburm at Garrisox. 2,0 02% 6 Mont.-Bismarck matches, Eades ne ; Lo Oo, is Dickinson, fresh from a 27-0 vic-| Hope tit Minot v.00... 2 1 0 16 12 tory over Glendive is determined to Saturday 'Monango..... 0 2 0 0 54 grab off a greater share of glory by! Bowbells at Mohall. {New Rockford. 3 0 0 ‘55 0 turning back the Mandan Braves who| Sherwood at. Crosby. Page °... 1 0 0 13 7 last week conquered Bismarck. James-| Minot at Fargo. 1 o 11 12 town was favored to beat Devils} Grand Forks at Grafton. 2 1 0 330 «2F Lake as the result of the lakers loss} New Rockford at Harvey. 2 0 O 3% 12 Grafton lost an early| Stanley at Watford City. » 2 0 O14 0 a . OUT OUR WAY By Williams | — Ni we \\ GOOD SUFFRIN GOSH HE GITS A_ BRAN’ IEW SUIT, AN' BEFORE HE EVEN GITS IT ON, IT LOOKS LIKE HIM, Women’s Amateur iGolf Meet Goes Into Semi-Finals! Mrs. Hill Paired With Dorothy Traung; Virginia Van Wie Meets firs. Vare Mrs. Opal Hill; Kansas City veteran, teed off Monday in the qualifying round of the women’s national golt championship, someone asked her what she thought of Virginia Van Wie's chances of retaining the title this week. “Virginia will have to beat me first,” she said. The prospects of Mrs. Hill making true that statement appeared excep- tionally bright Friday as she and three others engaged in the semi-finals. Collett Vare of Philadelphia met Vir- ginia Van Wie. | Martin Goes on | - | 4 Base Theft Diet St. Louis, Oct. 5.—(#)—Beware: Michey Cochrane sew up your Pockets; lock up your mask and shin guards! Pepper Martin, the “wild hoss of the Osage” is eating apples again. It was while the Cardinal spe- cial train was rolling southward and the Cardinals were trying to comfort “Wild Bill” Hallahan over the breaks of the second world series game that Pepper divulged the secret of his base stealing ex- Ploits, which robbed Mickey blind three years ago when he was bat- tling the Cards in Athletic regi- mentals, “Apples, that’s it!” shouted Pep- per. “I want apples. I ate a fleck, of apples three years ago and felt like running around the moon. Hey, porter! Get me a plate of ‘em. That's my base stealing diet.” Brantford Jockey Rides Race Winners t. 5.—(P)—Mrs, Dodge New York, Oct. Sloane's Ten 10 days at Norfolk, Va., in February, 1798. NOTRE-DAME PLAYS TEXAS UNIVERSITY INFIRST ENCOUNTER Nebraska Cornhuskers, Invade Minneapolis to Test High- ly-Rated Gophers YALE MEETS COLUMBIA Purdue Tackles Rice Institute; Minois Takes on Wash- ington University Vernon Oech’s Dad Was Gopher Guard Stellar Performance of Beach Boy Recalls Days When His Father Played , Minneapolis, Oct. 5.— When Sig Harris of the coaching staff, first saw Vernon Oech, sophomore guard on the 1934 Minnesota football team, playing with the freshmen on old Northrop Field last fall his mind went back to another more than 30 Chicago, Oct. 5—(®—While Notre Dame opens what Irish alumni, both real and synthetic, hope will be an- other golden football era, the Western Conference will let loose with two ma- jor blasts Saturday. Notre Dame will open its first sea- son under Coach Elmer Layden against the University of Texas Long- | horns. Iowa, rated as one of the top bracket elevens in the Big Ten, will meet Northwestern, and Indiana's Hoosiers will meet Ohio State at Co- lumbus. Of hardly less importance will be Minnesota's battle against Nebraska at Minneapolis, and Michigan’s first | ¥- appearance of the season, in its an- nual squabble with Michigan state| ‘he college at Ann Arbor. Purdue opens its campaign by entertaining Rice In- stitute ‘at Lafayette, Illinois plays Washington University at St. Louis, |e and Wisconsin makes ts bow against Marquette at Madison. Towa, a veteran aggregation, rates an edge. The Ohio State-Indiana battle rates as a toss-up. Minnesota probably will get a ter- rific battle from Nebraska, but the other Big Ten teams figure to check in with victories, The Nebraska con- test, however, probably will demon- strate just how good the highly cried up Gophers are this season. WRITERS GIVE HAWKEYES, YALE, GOPHERS AN EDGE New York, Oct. 5.—()—Stealing a Philadelphia, Oct, 5.—(#)—When ; leaf from the recent America’s Cup [yachting serles, football prognostica- tors hoisted the red flag of protest “Too tough,” they cried, scanned the list of Friday and Satur- day games. But that fact failed to Prevent them from foisting their se- lections upon an unsuspecting public. Absolutely without guarantee of any sort, here's the way the teams line up so far as this corner can see: Northwestern - Iowa: Iowa's fleet and skillful backfield may give the Hawkeyes the edge. Yale-Columbia: Yale gets the call Mrs. Hill was paired with Dorothy} here. Traung, 20-year-old San Francisco} Vanderbilt-Georgia Tech: Vander- girl, while in the other match Glenna! bilt slightly favored. Southern California - Washington ite: Southern California, Tulane-Auburn: Tulane. Notre Dame-Texas: Elmer Layden ‘snares his first West Virginia-Pitt: It’s suicide to bet against Pitt when the Panthers Play an eastern team. Minnesota-Nebraska: Subject to change without notice, doubt is here- by expressed that the Cornhuskers Ohio’ State-Indiana: ‘The ballot teads “Ohio State.” Michigan-Michigan State: The Big champions should win. a Purdue-Rice: Purdue is the choice. Wisconsin-Marquette: Wisconsin is Iilinois-Washington University: A scheduled warm-up for the Illini. One hundred inches of snow fell in NOW "THAT YOU HAVES335, 1. AM OFFERING YOU AN EXCEPTIONAL HOW WOULD YOU LIKE To INVEST THE opening of high school, delayed until this week by construction of a new schoolhouse, has been somewhat of a handicap for Lloyd starts the football ‘best prospects he has ever had. from Larimore’s coaching wing since they were in Players are seniors. Saturday in a home game against St. Other there, Oct. 19, Cooperstown there, St Bae ‘SCHOOLBOY’S FEAT PUTS HIM _ AMONG WORLD SERIES GIANTS Records Fail to Show Any Nine« Inning Performance Su- perior to Rowe's &t. Louis, Oct. 5.—(%}—Lynwood (Schoolboy) Rowe stands Friday alongside the pitching Giants - of world series history, towering. as mightily and casting as big a shadow Now across the chances of the St, Louis Cardinals as Jerome (Dizzy) Dean did in his jungletown debut two days ago. The world series record books fail to show any nine-inning stretch of pitching, over a 30-year span, superior to the blazing finish of the 22-year old, 6 foot 4 inch boy from Eldorado, Ark., who mowed down the Cardinals from the fourth to the 12th inning, days | allowing a ‘one hit, facing only not a single base on balls during the entire game: ‘The nearest comparisons to Rowe's spectacular feat, in his world series debut, were the feats of big Ed Ruel- back, old right-hander of the Later Oech played with Minnesota teams in 1904-05 and after his gradu- ation left his home town of Winona, ag and entered business at Beach, ‘Last year, Harris, who has been on Minnesota Cubs, Herb Pennock of the 1927 New York Yankees, and George Earn- shaw of the Athletics. Ruelbach scored a one-hit victory over the Chicago White Sox in. the 1906 series within the regulation nine innings. Equals Pennock's Record Pennock pitched no-hit, no-man- reach-first-base ball for the first seven innings of a game against the Pittsburgh Pirates seven years ago. The Yankee southpaw retired 22 batsmen in succession before yielding the first hit, a mark that Rowe equalled when he set the Card- inals down in order Thursday at De- troit from the fourth to the tenth, inclusive, then retired the first bats- ‘man to face him in the 11th inning hefore being belted for a double by Pepper Martin. There have been other renowned Pitching exploits throughout world series annals, studded as it is with the masterpieces of Christy Mathew- son, Jack Coombs, Babe Adams, (Mordecai Brown, Babe Ruth, Waite Hoyt, Grover Cleveland Alexander, Burleigh Grimes and Walter John- son—to call the roll of cnly the most famous—but none ever has finished ‘@ winning game with more class than Rowe. to add his name to that long lst of football “M” men and to play the same position that his father did. It's no wonder that he’s fighting to keep that first team berth and playing heads up football. AMERICAN ALL-STARS DEFEAT NORTHERN CLUB AT FORX, 5-1 Football Delayed At Larimore High Larimore N. D., Oct. 5.—The late Jarman as he season with the Graduation took only three men high school 1933 football team, leaving 10 veterans who have been under Jarman’s the eighth grade. Seven of the 10 Larimore will open its schedule of Grand games are Oct. 12, Langdon 2 here and Novem- 1, Cavalier here. fe MONEY IN A, DONT Whitehill, Thomas Pitch; Pinky s, Athletics, Hits Home Run H Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 5.—(@)— Earl Mack's American League Alle Stars beat a picked league team 5 to 1 in an exhibition baseball game before 1,000 fans here Thursday. John (Lefty) Vanusek, Big Leaguers @ hit in the three innings he worked. Pinky Higgins, Athletics, third baseman, hit s home run. Earl Whitehill and Tommy Thomas, Wash- ington hurlers, set the home club down with three hits, but two of them, singles by Skeets Ebnet and George Treadwell, produced a run in the third inning. Score: American League 000201011-5 9 1 Northern League 001000000—1 3 2 Whitehill, Thomas and Sewell, Moss, Vanusek, Stratton. Lanied and Treadwell. YEH~SUMPIN WHERE NOU DO ALL TH’ LIGHT THINKIN’ AN’ I DOTH *Y HEAVY LIFTIN, T SPOsE! FORGET, 1 WENT IN - American League All-Stars vs. Bismarck Ea: STRONG INFLUENCE Bismarck Baseball Park | 2:30 P.M, Sat, Oct. 6 | TRWILLIAMS © 190s 0v mca sence. me. 1-5, ford, N. D., jockey, brought home three more winners at Rockingham 4Park to overshadow the victory of Lillian White's Marsh Step in the Cocoanut Claiming handicap. Peters won with Cancel in the second, Blind Rock in the fifth and Grand Union in the seventh. Each was strongly Played. Give your compost heap a flat top with a depression in the center so it: will catch rain and help in decomposi- tion. Cards and Tigers Arrive in St. Louis St. Louis, Oct. 5.—(#)—The 8t. Louis Cardinals came back home Friday from their world series wars in Detroit to get a rousing recep- tion from hundreds of sleepy-eyed | SEE VENTURE WITH s THAT BUSINESS WITH You ler, Roger Game, Suis earl tae meee, '. & Sewell, Bo sald ‘Hartnett, - ‘a rg, Mon eaver, les mas an MEANS WEALTH ‘¢—— WHEN 1 MENTION THE FLY NETS, TO CORNER TH MARKET, BECAUSE YOU SAID TH ALSTOMOBILE WOULD BE A FLOP / Jimmy Foxx, Bill Dickey, Heinie Manush, Ralph Kress, Bin, Mil abby