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THE BISMARCK TRIBU. THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1935 -GNCNNAT! ROOKIE HURLERS WIN FIRST RANK ASSIGNMENTS Work of Hollingsworth, Schott and Herrman Buoy Pitch- ing Prospects | our BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ; FAW Jump. EGAD, BONS, \F, INSTEAD OF A HORSE RACE, IT WAS TO BEA ACCORDING To MCNULTY, THAT HORSE OF YOURS WOULD BE AN: ALGO-RAN, ON A MERRY-GO-ROUND! —~HE SAYS WHEN HIS HORSE RACES YOURS,HELL HAVE HIS JOCKEY CARRY A TOWROPE To Toss BACK YACHT RACE, T WOULD BE VERY MUCH CONCERNED} her» | YOUTHFUL MANAGER ENTHUSIASTIC OVER HITTING OF ROOKIES Powell and Sington Ready to Help Out Manush, Schulte, Stone in Outfield CATCHERS SHOW PROMISE FIRST BASE IS PROBLEM Yo ee Dees He MUCH CONCERN | CAN PULL apie velo WINDY MCNULTY | Kid’ Infield Finds Kampouris IN TH LAST FURLONG! AT THE HELM! at Second, Myers at Short, WEH Riggs at Third ‘Tampa, Fla, March = 28.—(4—In sharp but interesting contrast to the Boston Braves’ dramatic experiment with glorified age, just across the bay, the Cincinnati Reds are conceutrat- ing almost exclusively on the develop- ment of youthful baseball talent of the Grade “A” or “AA” variety, with an ear to the ground and an eye for the future. ‘The Reds will find it extremely dif- ficult to fight their way out of the National League cellar, while chey have been kic around for the past | four years, desp.te the new spirit and enthusiasm generated under the lead- | ership of Charlie Dressen. The work of Al Hollingsworth and | Gene Schott, both obtained from ‘ \] | IS IN FOR ronto, and Leroy Herrman, | hander who wcn 27 games for San ALOTOF |= | Francisco last season, has been suf- \ | ficiently note-worthy to clinch regular HORSE RIBBING, jobs for them and buoy the pitching prospects. wt tovaniesates' DEMONS AVERAGE 25 POINTS 27: a EACH GAME IN CAGE SEASON Groomed for Race! Derringer, Si Johnson, Danny Mac- | auntet ic board, A. C. Berg and H. Fayden, Tony Freitas and Bennie Frey, will have to hustle to keep from jSorsdahl Is Leading Scorer! yurpny With 121 Points, Check Schwartz is a graduate of Bismarck | | * Irish Sweepstakes Winners Will | Be Known After Grand National Friday being elbowed out of the list of start- ing pitchers. Mize Is Problem ‘The one problem stili unsolved by ; | fee : high school where he won letters in Sai Tr to nanaie the remiss of Statistics Reveals Trectoall, beseelball amd’ (track 1He fi s & played center on the basketball squad. irst base job, ——_ ple : end on the footbail team and placed | ——__—__— gut Mize is tumed back, the veteran] Averaging 25 points a game. the firs, one sear in. the high jump at| London, Eng., March 28.—uP—with Tit Bottomley will be restored to ac-| Bismarck high school basketball te8™ the state track and field mect held) distibution of more than eight million ‘The Reds are satisfied with the rest | opponents. 420, a check of the figures |*" Ao eh dollars hinging on the outcome, of their kid inticid, including Alex! revealed ‘Thursday. aie eau ss twenty-seven horses, five of them Kampouris at second base. the sen-| Ollie Sorsdahl was leading scorer Al G 1 t dcachicam snares iment ahvoun whee sational Billy Myers at short and Lew |for the season with 121 points with (AAL@MA GIES WUIMT | ee Sicoute thursday in prepara Riggs on third, with Tony Piet and|Captain Billy Owens next in lins/ ° |tion for the grand national steeple- Gordon Slade as utility men. with 109. Neil Croonquist_ garnered W; C Hon WPS chase at Aintree Prida ‘The outfield will combine experi-|85 points for third; “Peck” McGuiness ins Lage 0 tie arise tedtieanine: lanob events ence and the team’ main hopes of jhad 50, Buddy Beall 31, Johnny Cam- batting punch with Chick Hafey in/eron 22, Leon Doerner 17, Bud Kanz 5 A . 5 tt Sam Byra in center and’ the|and Vernon Hedstrom, 12 apiece and|O@feat Wing in Championship Rochester rookie, Ival Goodman, in|Bob Peterson 6. | Game for Consolidated right. Harlin Sool and Adam Comor-| Letter winners will be chosen from | Jae 23 sky will be in reserve {these ten players as soon as a check j High School Title only about $20.000, but to the 14 hold- ers of the tickets on the winner in the Irish Hospital Sweepstakes will go more than $150,000 each. Those holding tickets on the second and squad will be! in addtiion to! Measles; Moore's Charley Horse Is Worse He Bill Campbell, now recovered trom /of the records ean be made to de- ees eee eels ap influenza. looks fit and capable of |termine the number of games cach | Pies gears oS ee: = sharing the backstopping with Ernie play participated in. Letters wil SE ea ar ane seated = wi oe ig ee ied when players have suc-|#itis won the championship of the| Dorothy Paget's Golden Miller. Inst Lombardi, a bocming hit eed Ota tele seein te: lfirst Burleich county concolidated| Year's winner and top-weight of the Pals ne... work, Se-| irl basketball tournament dofeating| field with the assignment of 175 Cc | d G t | ietve com thenticd to 18. in the final game. pounds; John Hay Whitney's Amer- Fripp: le lants leanne ina aris eeand (ean quint turned] ican-owned Thomond 2nd, third in dahl wno has quit school to go to e. 22 to 14; Arena andj the 1934 running; and F. E. Peek’s G t bad B d Br k Graduating seniors are Owens, {Sterling's first string tied with Arena, Tapinoise. a lightly weighted, French- e a rea $e om Cameron, Doerner and} Winning in the playoff, 18 to 14. and| bred jumper. jKanz, leaving Coach Roy MeLecd {Driscoll turned back Menoken, 26 to 5 aa \with ‘the task of moulding his nest (7, in the first round. _ |Saints Lead Twin City Stout's Ailment ee as year’s team from four players hay-| Second conn came panne sg Hockey Playoff Series jing first team experience and a size-| Scoring a 33 lo victory over the! lable list of reserves up from the 2 |aterling second team, Sterling con- 2 | squad. {quering Menoken, 69 to 9; Arena de-| St. Paul, March 28.—()—St. Paul The Demons won 13 of their games|feating Driscoll. 21 to 15; Sterling's took a two game to one lead in ithe -— land suffered six t team beating McKenzie, 69 to 14; /Central League hockey playoffs Menoken outscoring McKenzie, and defeating Minneapolis here Wednes: Driscoll downing the Sterling second day night. 4-3, and advanced to a led Press) lwhich came in the stats tournament | ew York Giants'|at the hands of Devils Lake and Mi-| (By the Associ Mobile, Ala—Thr erippies are having their troubles./not. A summary of the season: team, 47 to 26. pesition where it can clinch [the Mel Ott, who had a sore right heel) Demons , Linton—26. The championship phy was pre-| champiorShip by winning the next hit himself on the toe with a bat-| Demons—30, Williston—16. sented to Elsie Eide, captain of the game at Minneapolis Priday night. ted ball; Joe Moore's charley horse; Demons—18, Valley City—33. Arena team. Three con tive vie-| The play, pushed into high speed at Was aggravated Wednesday. when he, Demons—25, Jamestown—10, tories will give a scheol nanent the very outsnt when Emory Hanson got in front of a hed ball, and; Demons—18, Valley City—31 possession of the trophy, Wing took scored on a combination play ajfter Allyn Stout, his ailment having been| Demons—18, Saints—14 second place, Driscoll, third: Ster- less than a minute end a half of play, diagnosed as German measles, has} Demons—20, Mandan—19 ling second team, fourth: Sterling continued at e@ torrid pace until the iand a half of professional experience, {what the Old Fox might do. Grif- \fith’s only regret is that he had but|closed the 1933 campaign with an one son-in-law, Joe Cronin, to sell to) American League average of .340. Travis hit .319 in 1934, despite a beaning by Thornton Lee of the In- dians in early May that put him out for several weeks, and a leg injury knows a ball player when he sees one, | suffered later. Rookie Gardeners Can Hit But Travis im't the only player Harris has in camp over whom he can wax joyful. He has a couple of rookie outfielders who can clout the apple in big league fashion. me is Jake Powell, who hit 356 with Albany last season, and the other is Fred Sington, the former Al- abama All-America football player, who compiled an average of .326 with Joe Kuhel to Take Over First, Buddy Myer, Second and Lyn Lary, Short Biloxi, Miss, March 28.—(NEA)-- “Joe Engel certainly can dig ‘em up.” remarked Bucky Harris, as the rangy Cecil Travis shot a three-base hit in- to right field. Harris, happy in his new-old assign- ment as manager of the Washington Americans, says the 22-year-old Tra- vis is just ca:ching up with major league pitching. “And when Travig does catcn up with it, what a shellacking it is going to take.” smiles Harris. “If Travis j pulls consistentiy, he'll be a .400 hit- ter.” Yes, Joe Engel certainly can dig em up. Not yct 21, and with only a season Travis beat Ossie Bluege, one of the finest third basemen in baseball, out of his job with the Senators. Engel paid Kid Elberfield $200 for Travis in the spring of 1931. Clark Griffith asserts that he wouldn't take $125,000 for the young Georgian now, but there's never any way of telling the Boston Red Sox at $250,000 a crack. But getting back to Joe Engel — “My Pop Choe” certainly can dig ‘em up. The Washington scout not only but has the happy faculty of being on the ground when one arrives. i} Engel stumbled into Elberfield's; baseball school at Atlanta four years ago on the morning that a gangling | kid in blue overalls and tennis shoes hopped off an old truck and sought! admittance, His name was Cecil Travis and he came from the cotton fields around Riverdale, Ga. Hits Three Homeruns Travis didn’t have to be in uniform to look like a ball player. He hit three home runs in his blue overalls and tennis shoes the first day, and became the property of the Chatta- nooga club of the Southern Associa- }tion. of which Engel finds time to be ipresident while carrying on his foxy foraging. Engel sent Travis to the Newport, Tenn., club, a member of a semi-pro-| fessional circuit, with which the cot-; ton picker hit .430. Travis reported to the Chattanooga club in Septem- ber, and compiled an average of .410 jfor its remaining games. Travis helped bat Chattanooga to a Southern Association pennant with 'a mark of .362 in 1932. Cecil trained with the Senators at Biloxi in 1933, and hit .352 when re- turned to Chattanooga. Washington 1¢called Travis in mid- season of that pennant-winning year, and in the first big league game the young man ever saw he made five hits in five times a5 bat against Oral Hil- debrand, star of the Cleveland In- dians. Travis has been Washington's No, 1 third sacker ever since. He HE LOOKS KIND OF GUILTY ABOUT SOMETHING? THOSE SPLASHES LOUD FOR SUCH LuTTLE— WELL, MORE LIKE BIG ROCKS ING 1.M. REG... PAT. OFF. ©1925 av aA sevice, we. SAY—LOOK ME RIGHT IN THE eve! OID YOu THROW THOSE KITTENS IN THE CREEK, AS 2 TOLO YOU~—OR DID — HIOE THEM A_BUSH, OR SOMETHING? SOU'VE GOT A GUILTY LOOK ! ‘Reds Concentrating on Development of Youthful Baseball Talent. BUCKY HARRIS PICKS TRA VIS T TO STAR IN SENATOR LINEUP - OUT OUR WAY By Williams r WHY WOULON! I LOOK GUILTY? TH! FAMILY MURDERER! WHUT DO YOU WANT ME To DO— BACK ue NOTCHES the same club. outfield duties, can turn the trick. Birmingham. handers. from impressive. Both youngsters are pretty sure to stick around to help out Manush, Fred Schulte, and Johnny Stone with The infield will be made up of Joe Kuhel at first, if his ankle, broken last year, is sound; Buddy Myer at second, and Lyn Lary at short. Lary jhas a big task to fill in replacing Joe Cronin, but he has assured Harris Cliff Bolton's job as catcher ie codengered by. Jim Hol | SEVEN Taylor Cagers brook, and Jack Redmond, # couple of rookies. The former comes from Chattanooga and the latter from cic ct ene aes Whitehill, ace of the staff; Stewart, Leon Pettit, a rookie, Ray|named at Taylor high school follow- Prim, and Bob Burke, left-handers; |ing @ season in which the local quint Bumps Hadley, obtained from the|sulfered only one setback. Browns, Monte Weaver, Jack Russell, and Al Thomas, right-|Ingold, Gabe, Helmer, Fuchs, Erb- been severed from the squad until) Demons--27, Dickinson—26 first. team, fifth; Menoken, sixth and, Millers scored their final marker with he recovers. | Demons—32, Giendive—21 McKenzie, sevent |the final session three-quarters gone. a | Demons—23, Dickinson—20 u Orlando, Fi2.—Now that it's ton! Demons—18, Minot—27. late to do anything. the Dodgers have} Jamestown—9 Right in the Sewer , Wahpeton—29. . Mandan—26. Demons—24, Saints—15. Demons—27, Dickinson—18. Demons—39, Saints—19. Demons—33, Devils Lake—37. Demons—19, Minoit—30. Imps’ Record Is Good | Revealing some fine material which | j will be pressed into service when the | call is sounded for the first basketball | | Practice next year, the Imps, Bis- | Chattanooga, Tenn.—Connie Mack's | Marck high scheol reserves, outscored | Athletics meet Chattanooga Thurs- | their. opponents in 10 of the 16 games | in their tour of the southern | Played. goatore. southern | "Bob ‘Tavis was the leading scorer for the Imps with 66 points as the Demon second team piled up 290) Be eee she croniy an, mil with 57, Raymond Yeasley counted 47, | A Et oer tee |John Abbott 29, James’ Burckhard Se rhuoiay'» For on Friday |25 Elferd Elofson 24, Melvin Peterson Lefty Grove, the Red Sox enigma, 19, Arlen Schultz and Lester Kelly, | will he Phillies here, i | two each. Two other members of the ano. S here, in @ re-| Troy squad were Bob Brandenburg jana Jack Bowers, The season's summary: Imps 26, Hebron 6. Imps 20, Wilton 22. Imps 11, Hebron 8. Imps 20, Papooses 11 Imps 18, Steele 8. Imps 25, Saints 10. Imps 12, Dawson 25. Imps 21, Steele 16. Imps 15, Wilton 10. Imps 19, Hazelton 21. Imps 24, Dewson 20. | | : begun to wonder how got out of the Natic: ager Casey Stengel agree to a waiver and Business Man- ager Bob Quinn, who revealed that! Brooklyn had refused to waive on Malone last winter, said he didn't know how it happened. Both agreed the big hurler might have come in} handy had he been claimed from St. | Loui Pat Malon x Sarasota, Fla—The Red Sox eal Bradenton, Fla—A month ago the | Cardinals were the cockiest team in baseball; Thursday they were the most subdued. Detroit put the fin- ishing touches to deflating their ego, falling on the Deans for 13 hits and a 13 to 8 victory Wednesday. Biloxi, Miss—The Washington Senators were packing Thursday for a barnstorming tour be- fore entering the season's serious aren wars. Imps 23, Hazelton 21 Imps 10, Papooses 16. Imps 15, Saints 20. Imps 8, State Training School 25. Phoenix, Ariz—Al Simmons, who hasn't failed to hit .300 or better in @ regulation season since he came up American Jeague, is on his way Comet Cagers Elect Schwartz Co-Captain Mayville, N. D, March 28—August Schwartz of Bismarck and Joe Aasen of Hatton were ches2n co-captains of HORIZONTAL 1 Largest exist- ing land ani- mal pictured here. $ Istand of Asia [5 i at where these [9 anit EMPERORS INIA animals are * found. Fi ASS (2 Stir. 13 Wattle tree. TLL ‘5 Snaky fish. folo| 16 Greedy. ISTE ME (1 1 17 Drips as a IE IR IOI faucet. 18 Observes. 38 To accomplish. 20 To rent. 39 Preposition. 21 Defensive head 40 Like. coverings. 42 Peak. 23 To undermine. 45 Iniquity. 24 Myself. 47 Therefor. 25 Postscript. 49 Melody. 27-To contract. 51 Station. 30 Garret. 53 To carry. 33 Tidy. 55 Jail compart- 34 Pertaining to ment. air. 56 Pope's scarf. 35 Proprietor. 37 Stopping 58 Higher. device. 59 Trade. PIATRA 4 ie Alpe J OP mola! D IRIE AME a} ALBION 4 DIE E PEN INID} 5 Talented. 6 Christmas carol, 7 Street car. 8 Girdle. 9 Aye. 10 Dregs. 57 Scalp covering 11 Olive ‘shrub. 14 To piece out. 16 White beasts PCCRELCET <a PCO CN \ i dS \ai are partial _ 19Only the In- dian —— is trained. 21 Pronoun. 22 Mineral spring 24 Muffled. 26 To commence 28 Modern. 29 Food containe’ 31 Beverage. 32 To annoy. 36 To decay. 37 Curse. 40 Region. 41 Threshold. 43 Smell. 44 By. 45 Song for one voice. 46 Small para- graph. 47To fy. 48 Auditory. 49 To perform 50 Every. 52 Moccasin. 53 Definite article. Ed Linke, Defend Title Against Schmel- ing in Europe follow, HEAVYWEIGHT FIGHT SITUATION S22 2.0" > The one setback came in the first GROWS INCREASINGLY COMPLEX |2trsensnen iney were sete by the runners-up, Minot Model high. Taylor scored 561 points during the Latest Rumors Say Baer Will|%#50" ‘© their opponents combined total of 304. New York, March 28—()}—A flock | Thursday night to talk some more about where, when and against whom of more or less conflicting stories! ne win def 4 added a little more confusion Thurs- a day to the heavyweight boxing situa- tion, ‘which slrendy hes become too) i ©. ane complicated for most fight fans to coebeth at the by tb aniline hate The electroc-chemical impulses by messages from been found to travel at the rate of According to one story negotiations | 400 feet a second. between Walter Rothenberg, Germany | qx Promoter, and Ancil ager of Schmeling in Europe this summer. Meanwhile Jimmy Braddock, left} by the Garden, | signed with Mike Jacobs’ Twentieth | He probably jout of consideration Century Sporting club. Hoffman, man- champion Max Baer, had to the point where Roth- enberg’s representative was on his way to New York with contracts that would give Baer $250,000 to meet Max BEFORE SUCH A SMOOTH SHAVING BLADE will be matched with the winner of the Primo Carnera-Joe Louis fight FI ge a gg (Special to the Tribune) Earl} Taylor, N. Seven basketball Given Letter Awards PROBAK JUNIOR D. March 28.—()— lettermen were Lettermen named are Halvorson, stroesser and Hutchinson. Three of Prim is likely to be returned to the|these, Gabe, Helmer and Hutchinson, minors, as his record with the Sen- | Will be lost by graduation leaving four ators and Albany last season was far|cagers as a nucleus for the 1935-36 it. Taylor annexed two trophies nll ing the season, Pec ssad patos bgt ls and in the Slope Conf PERRY FUNERAL HOME Offers Convenience