The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 8, 1934, Page 6

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6 THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1934 ~ Bridges Conquers Elder Dean; Tigers Win Fifth Series Tilt, 3-1 COUNTRY’S MAJOR GRID TEAMS PREPARE FOR SECOND GAMES. } _, 8 Aner | STARTTING UPSETS ROWE AND HALLAHAN’ PROBIBLE PITCHING SELECTIONS NOND AY Odds Have Now Switched to Tigers to Win First World Pennant in 25 Years DETROIT BATS RING OUT Tempers Frayed Along Cardinal Line as Detroit Ace Hum- bles Heavy Artillery Detroit, Oct. 8—(#)—There was no laughter on the suhny shores of the Mississippi Monday, no dancing on Al levies, no smiling faces in the streets, for the mighty Dizzy Dean had done to St. Louis what the famed Casey did to Mudville, and the world series fate of the Cardinals rested on the waning strength of little Bill Halla- han. It was the crafty old-timer, the un- lucky victim of a superlative Lynwood «Schoolboy) Rowe in the second game, to whom Frankie Frisch and all the National League faithful thrned in their hour of desperation as the series moved back to Detroit for decision with the Americans 3 to 2 in command for the first time and Rowe back on! the Tiger firing line for the sixth game. Into the background for this day,|~ as they had rocketed to series fame, ‘went Jerome Herman and to a lesser extent Li'l Brother Paul, though there ‘was a slight possibiliity that Frisch might change his mind before game time at 1:30 p. m. (EST) and gamoie with the swift young right hander as Mickey Cochrane, against the advice of the veteran strategists, gambled Sunday and won with Tommy Bridges. Paul Dean beat the Tigers last Fri- day. The odds Monday stood 7 to 5 thet Rowe again would beat Hallahan as he did in the second game. The odds are 9 to 5 now that the ‘Tigers will win out finally in the first world series Detroit has seen in 25 years. Since Mickey Cochrane lifted Goose Goslin from fifth to fourth in the batting array, Bill Rogell from sixth to fifth, and dropped Young’ ‘Hank Greenberg, who was pressing, {rem fourth to sixth, the Tigers have looked like an entirely different tearm. Frisch Razzes Diszy ‘Tempers were frayed all along the Cardinal line, much as though the feeling lurked that they'd tossed in their best, been beaten back on the defensive, and the game was up. Frisch stormed into the clubhouse Sunday after Bridges had conquered Dizzy 3 to 1 before a crowd of 38,536, one of the greatest ever to see a game in St. Louis, and glared down at the beaten man, sitting by his locker, his head in his hands. “Nice game you pitched, you blankety, blank, blank,” he snarled and Dizzy never moved. The baffled big fellow, who was a national hero after the opener, complained later of a headache that grew as the game pro- gressed, probably the result of being hit on the head by Bill Rogell's throw @aturday when Frisch sent him in as @ pinch runner for Virgil Davis. Bill Delancey, 22-year old Cardinai eatcher who has caught brilliant ball 60: far, was raging. A run in with Brick Owens, American League um- pire who was calling the balls and strikes yesterday, may cost him a $200 fine, if Commissioner Landis upholds the arbiter’s action. Bill hit a high fly onto the roof of the right field pavilion with two out and none on in the seventh for a homer, the only run off Bridges as the slender curver, his control perfect, allowed only seven hits, walked none, struck out seven, and got into grave difficulties only in the ninth. Jo Jo White Sensational Frisch had singled to right to start the uprising against the tiring Tiger in the Cards’ final chance. Joe Med- wick hit such a mighty blast to deep- est center field that Jo Jo White must have run almost 75 yards, all but out of sight, to pluck it off the wall. Then Jim Collins came through ‘with the longest single of the series, a@ blow that bounced off tho right field screen and chased Frisch to third, providing the. perfect setting for Delancey, the next ‘batter, a honie zun hero after striking out his first two times at bat. But Owens called him out on strikes again, and Delancey howled his indig- nation. The argument became so heat- and that Brick finally told him he was fined $50. “Make it a hundred,” yelled Delan- ey. “All right,” said Brick. “It’s a hun- “Make it two hundred,” screamed Delancey. . “All right,” said Brick, “It’s two hundred.” The rally ended with pinch hitter Orsatti forcing Collins. Dean, with his head aching and lacking control, wasn't the man he was on the opening day. A walk to Greenberg, and Pete Fox's double to right center in the second, which Chick Fullis handled poorly, brought the Tigers one run. Charlie hringer opened the final two-run rally in the fifth with a home run over right field roof. FPullis, substi- for Ernie Orsatti, in center, let ; safety. The probable starting lineup: St. Louls (N) Detroit (A) ‘Martin, 3b ite, cf Rothrock, rf Cochrane, ¢ Frisch, 2b Gehringer, 2b Medwick, ct Goslin, If Collins, 1b Rogell, ss Delancey, ¢ Greenberg, 1b Orsatti, cf Owen, 3b , 68 Fox, rf Rowe, p Umpires: Klem (N) plate; Geisel (A) first bese; Reardon (N) second; Ovens (A) third. i cet | OUR BOARDING HOUSE or a THE OPPORTUNITY 1 AM OFFERING YOU,TO INVEST #300 IN THE VENTURE WITH ME, |S THIS—<THE BIRTHDAYe CAKE CANDLE BUSINESS / —~UM—~GO AHEAD, LAUGH = TLL WAIT UNTIL YOU ARE THRU-' —~THEN T WILL READ You THIS PAGE OF STATISTICS THAT T HAVE PREPARED,ON THE AMOUNT OF BIRTHDAY CAKE CANDLES USED DAILY, No TO THI AND You WILL BE ASTOUNDED / . Hi 934 BY HEA SERVIC iS} DID YOU GET THEM CURTAIN RINGS UNDER YOUR EYES FROM STAYIN’ UP NIGHTS, FIGURIN’ OUT WAYS TO SLIP TH’ NOOSE OVER MY$300%— WELL,GO ON-<READ SAD,TO KEEP A STRAIGHT FACE hy ty UZ GYPSY DREAM ME, AN’ TLL BE INKING OF SOMETHING my 4 4 YW CARDS HAVE THEMSELVES TO | Sioux Grid Eleven BLAME FOR SERIES STANDING Downs .D.U. 21 Fielding Jitters, That Beset Tig- ers in First Game, Con- tracted by St. Louis Detroit, Oct. 8—(P)—It'’s an old baseball custom to blame it on the “breaks of the game.” World series history has been filled with costly in- cidents such as the muff by Fred Snodgrass that cost Christy Mathew- son and the Giants their chance for triumph in 1912 or the episode of Hank Gowdy’s tripping over his mask in the last inning of the 1924 battle, paving the way for the Senators to score the decisive run for the great Walter Johnson. It’s all part.of the percentage and the “payoff” but the St. Louis Cardi- nals Monday, within one game of los- ing the world championship that seemed so surely in their grasp a few days ago, believe they are the victims of the worst collection of “breaks” in memory, regardless of the fact they have no one to blame but themselves. The truth seems to be that the Na- tional League champions contracted the same sort of fielding jitters that the Tigers shook off after their first game defeet. Or that, finally, they are suffering a reaction from the strain of their sensational last month drive to the pennant. Looking back now, the Cards can point to the fact that but for a mis- judged flyball that dropped for a seratch doublé in center and that mixup that allowed a pop fly to drop untouched along the first base line they would have beaten Schoolboy Rowe in the second game and had three straight victories instead of a 2 to 1 lead. But for two mishandled chances by Chick Fullis Sunday in centerfield, Dizzy Dean would have had an opportunity to battle Tommy Bridges into extra innings with the count only 1-1 for the regulation route, instead of being beaten 3 to 1. Seldom before has a world series produced so many reversals of form. At the outset, the Tiger infield—“the battalion of death”—looked like the four Marx brothers in a comedy act. They came down to earth as sud- denly as they had blown up, playing errorless ball in two of the next four games. Pepper Martin broke loose with old- time vigor to help the Cardinals cap- ture the third game behind Paul Dean but the series hero of 1931 did a back flip and came up with three errors the next afternoon, tying the record for misplays at third base. OUT OUR WAY es | FOOTBALL SCORES mga oei001 Lidgerwocd 50; Milnor 6. St. Mary's (Bismerck) 21; Beulah 0. Grand Forks 6; Grafton 2. Bismarck 12; Glendive, Mont., 0. Devils Lake 20; Jamestown 6. Dickinson 7; Mandan 2. Ray 6; Kenmare 33. Crosby 26; Sherwood 0. Rugby 6; Fessenden 0. Mahnomen 12; Casselton 0. Oakes 15; La Moure 12. Carrington 6; Jamestown Junior High 6 (tie). Valley City 19; Hillsboro 0. New Rockford 20; Harvey 0. Fargo 13; Minot 0. North Central Conference North Dakota Uni. 21; South Da- kota U. 0. Morningside 13; South Dakota State 6. Middlewest Minnesota 20; Nebraska 0. Wisconsin 3; Marquette 0. Ohio State 33; Indiana 0. Michigan State 16; Michigan 0. Rice Institute 14; Purdue 0. Towa 20; Northwestern 7. Illinois 12; Washington (St. Louis) 7. St. Mary’s 6; Gustavus Adolphus 0. Hamline 45; Augsburg 7. Macalester 7; St. Olaf 7. Wahpeton Science 19; Teachers 0. Valley City Teachers 0; Dickinson Teachers 0. Ellendale Normal 6; Aberdeen Nor- mal seconds 0. Carleton 22; Rigon 0. Concordia 33; Winnipeg 27. Moorhead Teachers 26; Winona 0. Mayville East Princeton 75; Amherst 0. Navy 21; Virginia 6. Army 41; Davidson 0, Columbia 12; Yale 6. Dartmouth 32; Vermont 0. Harvard 12; Bates 0. Carnegie Tech 13; Miami 7. Pitt 27; West Virginia 6. Far West 8t. Mary's 7; California 0, Washington State 19; California 0. Southern Methodist 14; Louisiana State 14. Stanford 17; Oregon State 0. Southern Well, one good thing that came out of going off the gold standard was that it afforded a means of catching the Lindbergh ransom suspect. Elusive Sophomore Star Leads Nodaks to Victory; Pass- ing Works Well Vermillion, 8. D., Oct. 8—(P)—A gallant but outplayed band of Uni- versity of South Dakota Coyotes went down to defeat before the University of North Dakota Saturday, 21 to 0. ‘The game uncovered an elusive new backfield star among Jack West's pu- Pils in the person of Campbell, whose offensive work was the principal cog in the machinery from the north. The Sioux overrode the Coyote defense to enable the Nodaks to score touch- downs in the first, second and fourth quarters. Jack Charbonneau's accur- ate toe added the extra points by Place kicks, South Dakota made its first threat in the early part of the game. Chappy O'Connor on the first play after the kickoff reeled off 50 yards and the ball was on North Dakota's 20-yard line, but the Coyotes were forced to punt. Shortly afterward O'Connor's punt was partially blocked and costly off- side penalties on South Dakota, cou- pled with Charbonneau’s and Camp- bell’s runs, the ball was carried to the Coyotes’ 10-yard stripe from where Campbell went around right end without a hand being laid on him for the first touchdown. Opening the second quarter with a display of offensive power, North Da- kota made short work of scoring. Kupcinet went over and Charbonneau Kicked the extra point. Again the Coyotes threatered in the third quar- ter after holding the invaders on their own 6-yard line. Isley recovered a fumble and O'Connor's pass to Isley was good but, with the ball on the North Dakota 12-yard line and 2 minutes to play in the quarter, they lacked the scor- ing punch and North Dakota took the ball on downs. The South Dakotans had rather the best of the play in the third quarter i but to no avail as Campbell's end run- ning and clever forward passing on the part of Charbonneau to Falgren ‘accounted for the final marker, with Charbonneau finally scoring the touchdown and adding the extra point by place kicking. And then there is Harry Hopkins. Well, he can make $10 do less in serv- ling the needy than any man I know lin public office—Senator L. J. Dick- inson of Iowa. : By Williams MA, WE'RE OuT OF BREAD~ WE HAVEN'T A- BIT— GOLLY, we've GOT TO HAVE BREAD FOR SUPPER. yy 7. 089. U.& Par. oer. BUT 1M MAKING MUFFINS FOR SUPPER, AND FOR BREAKFAST WE'LL HAVE PANCAKES, so— ~ BREAK HOME @ ts It SHE'S’ WORRYIN’ SHE'S OUTA GUM, ER “THIS WEEK'S ISSUE OF MUSHY MURDERS Is OUT— Jy My WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY ———¢ THANK You! THANKS, EVER, _SO_MUCH,FER GIVIN' ME A PER ONCE, IN THIS IN'T Abou — SUMPN ‘THAT SHE NEEDS, WHILE I'M AFTER SUMPN WE DON'T NEED — ME, TH FAMI TRUCK ad ms TRwiLiams © 1936 By mea sevice. mc. 10°38) MARK OPENING OF Ramblers, Downed by Texas, Meet Purdue; Michigan State Routes Wolverines PENN, CORNELL BEATEN Pittsburgh-Southern California Joust Tops Intersectional Play This Week New York, Oct. 8—()—If football can produce anotHer series of exciting upsets such as amazed a palpitating public last Saturday, the country’s stadia won’t be half large enough to hold the prospective customers. However the experts may feel about such items as Notre Dame’s defeat by Texas; Michigan’s rout by Michigan State; Purdue's walloping by Rice, and the downfall of such eastetn standbys as Penn and Cornell, the fact re- mains that such surprises add tre- mendously to Mr. John H. Fan’s in- terest. There is plenty of dynamite, concealed and otherwise, in this week’s Slate which, by sections, lines up this way: Middle west~Notre Dame and Pur- due will try to assuage their injured feelings in a battle at South Bend. Chicago and Michigan and Illinois ‘and Ohio State are the big ten confer- ence pairings. Iowa, victor over North- western, tangles wit. Nebraska, beat- en by Minnesota. Missouri and Iowa State open big six conference com- Petition. Vanderbilt tangles with the University of Cincinnati, badly beat- en by Kentucky. Tulsa, victor over Kansas, plays Texas Christian. Pitt Meets Southern Cal East—Pitt’s joust with Southern California tops the card despite the Trojan’s defeat by Washington State. Other intersectional .duels involve Columbia and Virginia Military; Army and Drake; Navy and Maryland; Tem- ple and Indiana, and West Virginia and Washington & Lee. Yale, beaten by Columbia, faces Penn. Far west—Stanford’s tussle with Northwestern tops a program marked otherwise by conference games. Wash- ington State, conqueror of Southern California, meets Gonzaga. South—Duke will seek to avenge last year’s costly defeat by Georgia Tech while Kentucky plays Clemson“ and Georgia meets North Carolina. Southwest—Arkansas, victor over Texas Christian in the first confer- ence game, takes on Baylor next. Rocky Mountain—Five conference games are on the card headed by the Utah-Brigham Young and Denver- Colorado Aggies duels. Colorado Teachers and Colorado University, Western State and Colorado Mines, and Wyoming and Montana State are he others. BIG TEN PREPARES FOR SECOND ROUND Chicago, Oct. 8—(#)—Somewhat groggy from opening game defeats for Michigan and Purdue, the big ten Monday waded into preparation for another tough set of gridiron assign- ments Saturday. The mighty Wolverines, sole owners or shareholders of the conference title, for the past four years, took their first beating since 1915 from Michigan State, 16 to 0, and Purdue, attempting to operate without Duane Purvis, fell before Rice Institute of Houston, Tex- as, 14 to 0. The other shocker for the neighborhood was Notre Dame's 7 to 6 defeat by the University of Texas. Two conference games head up Sat- urday’s biil. Ohio, victor by 33 to 0 over Indiana Saturday, will meet Illi- nois at Champaign, and Michigan will hit the comeback trail against Chi- cago at Stagg Field. Notre Dame will stage the second of their current series at South Bend. Wildcats Battle Stanford Northwestern, beaten by Iowa Sat- urday, 20 to 7, will journey to Palo Alto, Calif. to battle Stanford, Iowa will meet Nebraska's Cornhuskers at Lincoln, and Indiana will meet Pop Warner's Temple outfit at Philadel- Phia, Wisconsin entertains South Dakota State at Madison, and Min- nesota will be idle until a week from Saturday when Pittsburgh will be met in the east. Illinois encountered unexpected stiff resistance from W: Univer- sity, but won by 12 to 7. Wisconsin gained all kinds of ground against Marquette, but it took a placekick in the last 10 seconds by Mario Pacetti| to give the Badgers a 3 to 0 victory. Minnesota also wasted a lot of yard- age, but used enougr to pile up a 20. to 0 triumph over Nebraska. In ad- dition to all-American Pug Lund, the Gophers showed up with another fine back, Stan Kostka, who scored two touchdowns. Wildcats Triumph FOOTBALL SEASON But for White's lone tally in the last inning, Pitcher Paul Dean of St. Louis would have had a world series shutout to his credit. White is shown in above photo, crossing the plate, with Catcher Mickey Coch- rane waiting for the throw after Gehringer had tripled to center, scoring the Tiger outfielder. Miss Van Wie Wins National Golf Title New York, Oct, 8--(#)—The out- standing woman athlete of 1934—Vir- ginia Van Wie or Helen Jacobs? Miss Van Wiz won the national golf championship Saturday for the third successive year, to tie Miss Jacobs’ record in the national tennis cham- pionships. Miss Van Wie became the fourth “three-time winner” in the 38-year history of the golf championship when she overcame the plodding and per- sistent Dorothy Traung of San Fran- cisco, two up and one to play, over the slow and squashy Whitemarsh Valley Country club course. Lidgerwood Eleven Beats Milnor, 50-6 Lidgerwood, N. D., Oct. 8—(P)—A 50 to 6 victory over Milnor high school gave Lidgerwood football team its fourth consecutive win of the season. Favored by a high wind, Lidgerwood scored 27 points in the first quarter. Lidgerwood tallied a lone touchdown in the second quarter after Coach L. G. May had substituted reserves. Lidgerwood added six points in the second period and 17 more in the last quarter, Slaby, Peterick and Wallock were the scoring men for. Lidgerwood. Mund, 195-pound fullback, was Mil- nor’s dependable ground gainer and stopped many of Lidgerwood's scoring plays. Savages, Vikings in Scoreless Deadlock D. 8. Played to a scoreless tie in a bitterly fought game here Saturday. Two at- tempts at placezicks by the Savages failed. During the last half the Sav- Oct. Savage full, punted into the grave- putting the ball on the l-yard line. The Viking line held and Gronlie, half, kicked out of dan- F srever, Viking tackle, intercepted a pass late in the second and ran 45 ards to the Dickinson 18 yard stripe where Carney nailed him. The Vik- ings drove the ball to within 5 yards of the goal but the threat was halted by a fumble recovered by Bennett, Savage tackle. Three times in the last half Savage threats failed. Over Mayville, 19-0| Beach High Downs Wehpeton, N. D., Oct. 6—()—|' Wahpeton Science school defeated an inexperienced Mayville State Teach- ers college eleven, 19 to 0, in a North Dakota Intercollegiate conference football game here Saturday. A series of line smashes put the ball in scoring position in the second quar- iter, and Kahl broke through for the touchdown. He scored a third Wahpe- ton counter in this period on a 19- yard run, *One of the game's features was a punt by Kahl that traveled 70 yards and rolled out of bounds on Mayville s l-yard line. Captain Luckason, Dor- nacker and Campagna were outstand- ing in the Comet line, while Aasen and Dwyer carried the brunt of their \backfield duty. Marvin Kahl, Ni n, Jones and ‘Smith were most effective in the Wild- cat line, while Nutter, Bute, Melvin Kahl and Bauer played well in the backfield, “Wibaux, Mont., 6-0 ‘Wibaux, Mont., Oct. 8—In a hard fought football game here Friday, played under the handicap of a severe wind, Beach high school scored its second win of the season by defeating Wibaux threatened to score in the fourth quarter, when they made it first down on the Beach 8 yard line. At this’ point the Beach line tightened and Beach took the ball on their own _. |tWo yard line and Jones punted out of danger. The balance of the game was bai Played’ in Wibaux territory and. the|double game ended with Beach in possession of the ball on the Wibaux 25 yard line. The lineups: ‘ Beach Wibaux D. Gilman re G. Walcott E. Nelson rt Harick M. Ramstad re Bruski E. Schmidt c Dale G. Fakler ig Setera G. Carlson It Zabroski R. Purvis je Sokaloski R. Jones th Popiel D. Miller rh Larson A. Gilman qb, Walcott C. Stecker fb Seubert Substitutions: Beach—E. Kukowski for Stecker, E. Carlson for Schmidt, Stecker for E. Carlson, Perkins for Fakler, and Schmidt for Stecker. Wi- baux—Manning for Walcott. The Beach schedule for the balance of the season is as follows: Oct. 10 Baker at Baker, Oct. 19, Belfield at Belfield, Oct. 26, Sentinel Butte at Sentinel Butte, Nov. 3, Dickinson at Dickinson, and Nov. 10, Wibaux at Beach (tentative). Chicago Bears Win From Brooklyn, 21-7 Chicago, Oct. 8.—()—Rounding out a strenuous schedule of three games in eight days, the Chicago Bears, bat- tling Detroit for the leadership of the National Football League's western division, will meet Pittsburgh Wed- nesday night, and the home town rivals, the Cardinals, next Sunday. The Bears started their busy right,| Al days Sunday with a 21-7 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers at Brooklyn, but they failed to gain in the western race as Detroit nipped the Green Bay Packers, 3-0, at Green Bay. The Giants won a 16-13 decision over Boston's Redskins. Pittsburgh took a 9-7 victory over Philadelphia's Eagles. The Cardinals downed the Cincin- nati Reds, 10-0. New Rockford Wins Fourth Game in Row Harvey, N. D., Oct. 8.—(#)—The New Rockford high school football team ran its string of victories to four for the season by winning from Harvey, 20 to 0, here Saturday. The Rockets scored one touchdown in each of the three first quarters. McQuillan, left half, on an end play ran 50 yards for the first counter. Skjonsby, fullback, plunged through on an off-guard play for the second. He, counted likewise in the third quar- ter fromthe 2-yard line after Widener had intercepted a Harvey pass on the Rockets’ 15-yard line and ran 83 yards before he was downed, Harvey threatened several times, once being stopped on the 2-yard line. Harvey and Carrington will meet at Carrington this week-end with the Rockets playing the Lynx from Coop- erstown at New Rockford. RUGBY BEATS FESSENDEN _ Rugby, N. D., Oct. 8—(P)—After getting inside the last 10-yards three ostly | times the first two quarters, Rugby high school finally mustered the punch in the third period to score a 6-0 vic- tory over Fesscnden. Rugby plays ‘Leeds here next Friday. COBBERS DOWN CANADIANS ‘Winnipeg, Oct. 8—(P)—In a hard- fought game displaying a wide and varied serial attack, Concordia col- lege footballers from Moorhead eked out a 33-27 victory over the Winni- Pegs, western Canada champions, in the first of a two-game exhibition schedule here Saturday. North Dakota Semi-Professional Club: _Humbles American All-Stars Here, 11-3 | White Scores Tigers Only Run in Ninth Radcliffe Limits Big Leaguers to Eight Safe Blows; Hancock Hits Homer Earl Mack’s American League All- Stars fell off their pinnacle of major , league in the eyes of over® 1,500 spectators that thronged the lo- cal baseball park Sat afternoon and watched “! ed Jamestown hurling ace, picked club from four North Dakota cities humble the All-Stars by a count of 11 to 3. : Radcliffe limited the big leaguers to eight safe blows and didn't permit the visitors to score until the ninth in- ning when, after walking Al Schact, formerly of the Ws Senat Higgins, sacker of the Athletics, drove a home- Tun over the left field wall. The heavy-clubbing all-state nine got to Earl Whitehill, Senator left- hander, for three hits in the three frames he was on the mound and at- tacked his successors, Rube Walberg of the Boston Red Sox, Roger Cramer and Foxx of the Athletics for an ad- ditional eight hits. Star Lefty Brown, Jamestown’s dusky hurler playing in center field, turned in the day's outstanding fielding per- formance, all over the outer garden and taking several of his catches after long runs. He was close- ly pressed by Art Hancock of the Val- ley City club who made five putouts and three assists without an error. The North Dakotans representing Bismarck started the fireworks in their turn at bat in the first inning. Foster was walked but was forced out centerfield that was good for three bases and a bad throw to third per- mitted him to score behind Haley. In the secone inning Radcliffe hit safely, went to second on Wessel’s single, took third on a pass ball and came home when Hopkins muffed je box score: Bismarck (11) ABRHPOAE Foster, 2b ..... -3 21220 Brown, cf . -420400 Haley, 3b . ~#412200 Hancock, ss 5325 3:0 Davis, 1b 5 11600 Radcliffe, p ........4 13 12.0 Wessels, rf -401100 Morlan, If . -400200 Anderson, c ........4 12 41 0 Totals ........37 111127 8 0 All-Stars (3) Cramer, cf, p......3 00110 -311231 401100 311620 #4121062 401100 402230 200600 200100 100000 100200 100111 32 3 82410 4 000 000 003— 3 210 040 O4x—11 Left on bases— All-Stars 5, Bismarck 6; sacrifices—Foster; two-base hits— Radcliffe; three-base hits—Hancock; home runs—Hancock, Higgins; double or triple plays—Foxx to Hopkins to Foxx, Hancock to Foster to Davis, Radcliffe to Anderson to Davis; hits off Radcliffe 8 in 9 innings, off White- 3 Radcliffe 3, by Whitehill 3, by Wal- berg 3, by Foxx 1; wild pitches— Whitehill, Walberg; hit by pitcher— Wessels by Walberg; passed balls— Sewell 2; umpires—Moran and Cayou. Series Heroes Not in Baseball’s ‘Who’s Who’ En Route with Tigers to Detroit, Oct. 8.—(#)—A Louis Ashley, an in- quisitive pullman porter from way down in East Point, La. another sralletown boy in the city, started it “‘Scuse me, suh, but I see’d the Press on your button and I wants to know about this heah world series,” Louis broke in, interrupting a baseball experts as the Tiger rolled back to Detroit - 4

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