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1 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1935 sciaeasiiaieataaammampamuaaisisg Potter, GRAMLING FOULS RITCHIE, JUDGES CALL BOUT EVEN Bat McDaniels Scores Techni- cal Knockout Over Lee Thomoson in Third LARSON OUTPOINTS MORAN] Herman Deathridge Kayoes Ted) Hall With Left Hand Punch to Side of Head Decisions “Wild Bili’ Hasselstrom, Bis- marck drew with Ernic Potter, Fort Lincoln, (19). Rusty Gramling. Bismarck, drew with “Tuffy” Ritchic, Steele, «). Bat McDaniels, Bismarck, won on a technical knockout from Lee Thompson, Dawson, (3). Swede Larson, Jamestown. out- pointed Billy Moran, Billings, a. Herman Deathridge. Fort coln, knocked out Ted Hall, Bis- marck, (2). “Wild Bill” Hasselstrom, leading lo- eal heavyweight, and Ernie Potter, Fort Lincoln titleholder, fought ten bristling rounds to a draw in the headline bout of the Bismarck Boxing association's card here Thursday night. The semi-windup also ended even. Rusty Gramling, stablemate of Ha: ik {/ © 1935 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M. REG. U. selstrom’s, clearly outpointed “Tuffy” Ritchie of Steele but the judges ruled | the Capital City welterweight had | fouled seven times du the four} rounds and calied the bo aw: | The Fort Lincoln soldier reversed! his tactics in Thu affair andj the result, was bett n on either} of two previous meetings with the} aggressive local scrapper. | Losing two decisions whea he wad- ed in and slugged it out with Hassel-} sirom, Potter stayed away during} "Thursday's bout. kept a long left hand! continually in Hasselstrom’s face and piled up enough points to get an even | ‘break in the judges’ decision despite | ‘Wild Bill's forcing the fight all the} way and having the better of the in-| fighting. } Hasselstrom At Loss Hasselstrom, a little mys' Potter's waiting tactics. was at a loss ‘as how to open up on the soldier and OUR BOARDING HOUSE ______Bv Abo=n [Ian AND MEDWICK NOW, HOLD ON A SECOND, MARTHA~ GIVE ME A CHANCE TO EXPLAIN, BEFORE YOU START TH ARTILLERY !-~1 TELL YOU, L SAW TH NAG MENULTY IS GOING TO | RACE AGAINST TH MASORS HORSE, AN TH ONLY SPEED LEFT IN IT MIGHT BE IN ITS HIDE FOR BASEBALL COVERS !~— —~LOOK—~TM BETTING $100 ~—TH GANG, HERE, ARE BETTING HSO APIECE- SO—WAIT, NOW—NO VASE HEAVING: You ,Now J MY SMELLING SAUTS | PAT. OFF. # -19- EDS HAND SEE TH NEW HAT ON Hasselstrom Draw in Bristling T LOWLY-RATED RE HAUSER’S TWO SINGLES ENABLE MILLERS TO BEAT SAINTS, 75, Old Style Lager Colonels Sweep Series; Red Birds and Brewers Triumph Chicago, April 19—(4—For a fel- low whose baseball career apparently was ended by a shattered kneecap late last season, Joe Hauser, Minne- apolis' “Unser Choe,” is a pretty live- iy cripple. failed to hit for the Millers. Thurs- | day he contributed a pair of singles Louisville .... land Braxton, 6-1. Milwaukee . Kansas City Braxton and Rensa; Fullerton and Gaston. Colonels Take Third Toledo — The Louisville Colonels | Conquer Hens to Kansas City by winning behind Gar-| Northwest Bell, Bowlers Triumph RHE, .000 003 012— 6 10 1° 000 000 100— 1 7 1/Wonder Loaf and South Side|Louis a 1-0 triumph over the Cubs. Teams Beaten in Commer- cial League Matches | Northwestern Bell Telephone trund- made a clean steep of their series | jers took two out of three games from the first four rounds were tame affairs /as Minneapolis defeate? St. Paul 7-5. Toledo .. compared to the previous encounters | when both slugged steadily from the opening gong. Opening up in the fifth, Potter fol- lowed his left jabs with a couple of long rights that found their mark end Hascelstrom's nose was bleedi freely at the end of the round, Wi Fill took the sixth by a wide margin! and opened up 2 cut over Ernie's left eye just before the round ended. During the last four rounds there was more of the give-and-take that erized their previous meetin sther could hurt the other bad- 5 were about even me stand against | punching power of Cramling but tired raptdly in’ the) second round and lost the last tio) en wide margins. The Steele scrap- per was reeling badly at the final bell but continued to stay on his feet and occasionally jolted Gramling with| hard rights. McDaniels Kayoes Thompson Bat McDaniels, formeriy of Wilton ut recently added to Isham Hall's stable, took a lot of punishment from) the long left. arm of Lee Thompson of | Dawson before he finally got in close| enough to put the Dawson fighter out! of commission in the third round. ‘Thompson went down for a nine| count in that round but managed to! get up on his feet and was ready to] carry on the bout. when his seconds| ¢ threw in the towel Swede Larson of Jamestown kept Billy Moran of Billings at bay with his superior reach and had the Mon- tana fighter swinging wildly at the air during a good portion of their bout. Moran, whenever he could get close, used a heavy body attack with telling effect. Larson took the bout on a good margin. Herman Deathridge of Fort Lincoln utilized a nice right hand in whip- ping Ted Hall of Bismarck. Wait- §ng for his opportunities, Deathridge finally clipped Hall with a hard left longside the head as Hall came out of a clinch in the second round ‘The Bismarck boy went down and ‘was counted out. Jim and George Bounds of Fort Lincoln fought in the four-round. no-decision curtain raiser. Referees were Mel Engle, Schaefer and Freddy Batcher. Red D. E. Bhipley did the announcing. Judges | Captain John) were Frank Barnes, Lytle and Carl Nelson. oF | Yesterday’s Stars | ° (By the Associated Press) Paul Dean and Joe Medwick, Cardinals—Dean blanked Cubs with eight hits. Medwick hit homer for 1-0 victory. Gerald Walker, Tigers — Hit double and two singles against {for St for its first victory of the young American Association season. A decade ago, Hauser’s major league career was virtually ended | when he cracked a kneecap during | spring training with the Philadelphia! Columbus — Columbus pounded out | Athletics. The leg continued to both- er him and finally he went back to apolis Indians. | the minors. H His biggest season was 1933 when he clouted the pitching for 69 homers. Last rear he was far in the lead for Association homerun honors when he uffered a fracture of the other knee- cap in a game at Kansas City. Tn the season opener he got a single in three times at bat, one of four hits off St. Paul's Lou Fette. He was stopped Wednesday, but got the range again Thursday, Walter Tauscher. the league's leading hurler last sea- son, outpitched Charles Barnabe, Howard Milis and Grimes. Boken, Norman and MeWilliams hit homers Paul. Louisville swept its series with Toledo and moved to the top with three straight victories by slugging three Mudhen pitchers for an 11-5 decision. ‘The champion Columbus Red Birds scored a run in each of the first five innings and added three more in the seventh to defeat Indianapolis 8-5. Garland Braxton kept seven hits well spread out as Milwaukee made it two in a row over Kansas City, j-1 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Millers Finally Win St. Paul—Minneapolis finally broke into the win column. defeating St. Paul 7-5 behind the effective pitching of Walter Tauscher RHE Minneapolis 230 000 O11— 7 7 1 St. Paul 200 000 192 5 9 2 Tauscher and Hargrave, Barnabee, Mills, Grimes and Fenner, Giuliani. Brewers Sweep Series Kansas City—The Milwaukee Brew- ers swept the opening series from OUT OUR WAY White Sox, batted in two runs and stole base. Adolph Camilli, Phillies—Clout- ed two homers in triumph over Brooklyn, driving in four runs. Leon Pettit, Senators—Fanned Jimmie Foxx and Bob Johnson in ninth to protect 6-5 edge over dim Bottomley, Reds—Led at- ty A hee Nee Bass and Thompson; Doljack, Bu- | chanan, Walsh and Susce. RHE 042 000 005—11 13 1 mercial League matches rolled Thurs- | His famous home run bat hasn't with the Mudhens by taking the third ied by !sounded off yet, but neither has he |game by a 11-5 score. | She Wonler Rost team and ‘the Old Style Lager five annexed two games from the South Side bowlers in Com- 000 103 100-5 10 2 aay night. Red Birds Drop Indians an easy 8: Indianapolis Columbus ... Turner. W STANDINGS "= oo AMERICAN ASSOCIA’ w Louisville Milwaukee . Minneapolis . Kansas City Toledo .... NATIONAL Boston . Cincinnati Philadelphia Chicago .... St. Louis . Brooklyn Pittsburgh . New York ++, 020 020 100--- 5 13 111 110 300— 8 12 0! Led by Jerry Harnish with counts of 159, 179 and 201 for a total of 539. the Telephone team were successful in knocking the Wonder Loaf aggre- gation out of first place in the league. Langford slammed the maples for vietory over the Indian-' counts of 173, 210 and 142, « total of RHE! 525, to pace the losers. | Erickson cotlected counts of 192, | 168 and 191 for a three-game total of 551 to lead the Old Style Lager team . Page and Sprinz:/to victories in the first and third Mooney. Rvba and Ogrodowski. i THE ecteeee écecLaosee | TION AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww L Cleveland .... ‘Washington Boston Chicago .. Philadelphia Detroit .... New York . :8t. Louis jgames while Frank Hummel with | scores of 185, 207 and 198. a total of | 590, was high man for the South- je x 170 494 149 471 167 408 142 525 « 182 131 156 469 ‘787 «(796 784 2367 Old Style Lager sees - 195 169 116 480 95 336 191 551 160 379 116 380 184 552 500| F. Hummel. 333 000 Totals... By Williams PACE CARDS IN 1-0 VICTORY OVER CUBS Phillies Go Ten Innings to De- feat Dodgers, 10-9; Sena- tors Drop Athletics YANKS BEAT RED SOX, 4-0 Tigers Edge Out White Sox, 5-4, When Tietje Walks Home Winning Tally (By the Associated Press) Cincinnati's Reds, to whom the ex- perts almost unanimously awarded the ca berth in the National League this season, were only a step from first place Friday. The hustling aggregation of young- jsters assembled by Chuck Dressen and Larry MacPhail, and the veterans who are fighting hard to hold their jobs, blasted out their second victory in three starts against Pittsburgh 9-4 Thursday. wii other win- ners in the senior circuit, except Bos- ton, lost. The Reds jumped into an early lead when Jim Weaver uncorked a wild pitch with the corners crammed in the second. Then they out eight hits in the fifth and sixth rounds for five runs that put the game on ice, Altogether, they got 14 hits off five pitchers. Jim Bottomley, and Sammy Byrd, former American Leaguer, led jthe parade with three blows each. the middle of the standing as the = and Phillies reversed op- ening-day decisions. The world series heroes, Paul Dean and Joe (Ducky) Medwick, gave 8t. Brother Paul hurled an eight-hit shutout in a keen duel with Larry French, and Medwick belted a home- run in the sixth for the only run, The Phils had to go ten innings to gain a 10-9 decision over Brooklyn in ‘a home run carnival which saw seven blows, two by Dolph Camilli, sail out jof the “bandbox” park. The seventh, launched by George Watkins, tied the score in the ninth. The Senators rang up their second straight victory in the American many days, 6-5. Husky hitting by the ‘Bump Hadley and Cliff Bolton, did most of the damage. Yanks Turn Tables + The Yankees turned the tables on ‘Boston and knocked the Red Sox off the peak with a 4-0 triumph. Johnny ‘Broaca. Yale's leading contribution to major league ball, granted only eight hits in a duel with Fred Ostermueller, ‘who weakened toward the finish. Detroit's champion Tigers evened the count against Chicago, winning 5-4 largely because of the wildness 2 of the Sox’ pitchers. Joe Vance, who followed Les Tietke on the hill, hand- led Manager Mickey Cochrane the twelfth walk with the bases loaded in the ninth to force home the odd run. The Indians and Braves remained undefeated with one victory apiece as cold weather forced the postponement. of their games with the Browns and Giants, respectively. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh—Cincinnatt’s_rejuvenat- ed Redlegs pounded five Pirate hurl- ers hard. taking their second straight victory from Pittsburgh, 8-4. St. Louis Cardinals a 1-0 decision over Chicago. St. Louis. iladelphia—, single in the tenth ————————— | 2 10-9 vietory ver en-Round Headline Bout PIRATES SECOND STRAIGHT DEFEAT, 9-4 Cinder Path Aces Set for i — A |Host of Spike-Shod Athietes| Improved Bluebeard May Run Big Race in Will Seek New Records in New Col 13th Annual Meet Rain-washed atmosphere @ firm cinder beg Friday welcomed the vanguard of a thousand spike-shod bent upon record-breaking \- —<—CUC sas rel The carnival management set to Test. the fears expressed by jfrom distant places that swirling dust storms might handicap their stars and added the testimonial of Glenn Cun- eae ee come cae After sprinting 440 yards at a fast clip in the final tuneup for his eight-furling race against a ‘and @ pacing relay team, everything was and that, barring a resumption of rain, records were likely to be altered a Z fi l af Red Sox Lefthander Ready to Work Every Three Days This Season, He Avers NOTICE TO CREDITO! IN_THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Daniel Johnson, Deceased. Fi if a? fi H i Notice ts hereby @ersigned, Harr; administrator o! | et ze Ww ip of Gi in the County of Burleigh State of North Dakota, deci the creditors of, and all ing claims against said dec exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six months after the first publication of this not! te tt rato idence st and the east half of the north west quarter of section 28 in township 143 north, of range 79 west of the fifth principal meridian in Burleigh Coun- ty, North Dakota, or to the Judge of iY County Court of Burleigh Coun- ty, North Dakota, at his office in the Burleigh Count; North Dakota Court House in the city of Bismarck in sald Burleigh County. You are hereby further notified that Hon, I. C. Davies, Judge of the Coun- ty Court within and for the County of rl th, and State of North Da- kota, has fixed the 29th day of Oct- ober, A. D. 1935, at the hour of two o'clock in th ternoon of that day, at the Court Rooms of said Court in the said Court House in the city of irek in said County and Stat ime and place fo eflF f i d 3 iz iit AT i] 8 8 g | i i oo 1 Johnson, have been duly and regular- by nted as hereinbefore provid- ssbated this 2nd day of April, A. D. i Harry N. Johnson, as the administrator of th al tate of Daniel Johnson, Notice ts hereby given that 1 will Geo. M. Regie” con te net be fer avy 'y~ of said administrator, marck, N. Dak. fication on the 12th day pu said proudly, 4/5-13-19. A. D. 1935. PEOPLE LIKE BETTER THINGS VER look over the various kinds of printed matter that frequently come to your desk and classify them into things you are interested in, things you are not? Sure you have—we all do. y If you will consider the problem a bit, you will agree that the pieces which do in- terest you and hold your attention are better fet eee catemnen . . . tolier antes Your own advertising matter, Mr. Reader, has to compete for attention with many other pieces . . . not all competitive with your business, but competitive for the customer’s attention. And so with your own printing—to get attention, be equally effective, it must have the look and feel of character and quality. BISMARCK TRIBUNE JOB DEPARTMENT BOM SEL TELNAES SERRE YES ET IRRES SPSTSOS LET IL LILES EE SNE SLE EOL T IEE TE INE ELIT INS TIRE ETE GERD LOWEST LEON OUGEB OSH FIRE