The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1935, Page 10

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| Cubs, Tigers Pick Fistic ‘Crown P ‘OD SERIES RECALLS | DAYS OF BASEBALL'S EARLIER IMMORTALS Cobb, Evers, Jennings, Tinker, Replaced by Rowe, Warn- | eke, Cochrane, Grimm FIRST GAME AT DETROIT Million Dollar Gate Would Net] Winning Players $5,000 Each, Losers $3,000 scsi ees 4 Detroit, Oct. 1.—UP)—Lynwood | (Schoolboy) Rowe, the tall tower of Arkansas, burning them in against Jean Lon Warneke, pride of the Ozarks; scrappy Mickey Cochrane master-minding against Happy Char-} ley Grimm——it’s a far cry back to: the Tigers of Hughie Jennings and! ‘Ty Cobb, the Cubs of Frank Chance. | Johnny Evers, Joe Tinker, and the great three-fingered Mordecai Brown. | They pick .up again Wednesday.! these 1935 models. where the legend- | ary Tigers and Cubs of 1907 and 1908! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, Up World Series Strife After 27 Years rince’ —4 Likely to See Action in Series Opener Woolworth, Will Teams Win First Trundlers Beaten; Sched- ule Announced menced Monday night League. Capital Cafe. three games for a total of 547. {from the Coman Cabin Camp team. winners. in three games for the losers. Scores: Woolworth 124-' | City League Tilts Capitol Cafe and Coman Cabin O. H. Will and Weolworth bowling teams won first games as play com- in the City Shubert led the way with games of | 150, 168 and 223 for a three-game total of 541 as the Nursery team cap- tured two of of three games fromsthe Brown was high man on both teams with 181, 142, 224 in Rallying after dropping the first game, the Five dnd Dime Store rep- resentatives took the last two games {Gochnen with games of 165, 210 and 169, a total of 544, was high for the Slomker toppled 498 maples « 167-182-156— 505 -183— 456 LOUIS MAY FIND NO | FURTHER WORLDS 10 “CONQUER IN FUTURE Nothing in Braddock’s Record to Put Him in Class With Brown Bomber New York, Oct, 1.—()—Whither the Brown Bomber? Like Alexander the Great at 29, he may grieve that there are no more worlds for hime to conquer, At 21, Joe Louis, the Belting Ben- edict, can glance disdainfully from his perch in the corner, arms stretch- ed out on’ the ropes, and ask: “Where is the opposition?” Three times in a row the Svelte Slugger has battered the best the in exorable pugilisiic fates dropped into . {the ring to face him. Two were former champions, one hard to reach because of his clumsy maneuvers and his gigantic height, but when reached, toppled and was counted out; the other, more durable, ibut with no defense against a piston- like left, went down in a bloody grim- ace. The third asked that the slaugh- UESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1935 , Overshadowing All Rivals, Menaces King’s Reign Playing Last Year in Big Ten Big Ten Will Have First Night Game Illini, Gophers, Badgers Get | Hard Workouts After Un- 1 impressive Starts Chicago, Oct. 1—()—If there is anything tricky about preparing & football team for a night game, Lynn Waldorf of Northwestern’ has an. ledge over Noble Kizer of Purdue. Waldorf, in his first season at iM. elevens for after dark footbell battles on numerous occasions. Kizer will polish up his Boilermakers for the first “Owl” game in Big Ten his- \tory with only the experience gained Jin head coaching the all-star squad for its game with the Chicago Bears in 1934. Michigan, which opens against Michigan State Saturday, Iowa and Chicago, got by with easy workouts | Monday, but the other squads put in \hard links. Illinois, smarting over jthe 6 to 0 defeat by Ohio university. scrimmaged until after dark. At Minrfesota Bernie Bierman experi- mented with shifts in his lineup fol- Northwestern, drilled Oklahoma A. &. - lowing his eleven's unsatisfactory left off their world series battling Jus Giza’ 126-112-156 394| ter be stopped. GORE vaphiict North: Dakota (HAGE: 27 years ago Gochnen . + 165-210-169— 544 Levinsky, Carnera, Baer— Dr, C. W. Spears made drastic re- Paint Contrast Cavelti ... « 128-150-178— 456| The fists that battered down Primo visions in Wisconsin's varsity and he Teeing off on the green of Navin See eee epeeriote ourn veey Ottis Ceevoo On | sought to eliminate poor blocking and Field for the first of are games here, 710-803-842—2365 |Max Baer tule the heavy-welght realm faulty execution of plays which con- they paint by contrast a brilliant. pic- Coman Cabin Camp Poe aan Halk HGR ome ae ARO tributed to a 13 to 6 defeat by South ture of the changes that have come Coman ... + 145-141-143— 429] 5 8 ateat, J Mer di mt Pp at Dakota State. Two sophomore backs, over baseball and its annual fall ex-| Nelson 148-176-137— 461 mt caret inert ded secede A | | Bill Dileo and George Miller, played travaganza in the course of the last} Roerrick 161-132-162— 455 | ol @ ae iat td “shel ot Meee: i j impressively as the Indiana varsity quarter-century. Slomker 185-176-137— 498 TavBRey AUHiiee BIBHE Chaves ing | Walloped the freshmen in Heal There will be, in all probability, Dummy Tat-113-158— 02 | 5 tpok “en Oarabiay seatilbk His Lester Lindberg, 180-pound University of Illinois halfback, has Ql against, Contre eRranRORy. some 48,700 semi-hysterical faithful.) 763-737-735—2235 |!umbering prey, solving the awkward} gun his final year of Big Ten competition. One of the most accumte ‘| “Onig state's varsity had an off all the park will hold. in the half ambling of his ponderous opponent| kick the conference. he also is a sharp passer and a gooc plunger. 4.” “rouine to keep the reserves Un- acres of temporary bleachers seats, s i and then bringing him down. Baer| (Asscciated Press Photo) lay, failing to keep the r the doubledecked stands that mark Capitol Cafe had’ dond thit, cob Hae saonm At Tit ;der control in a defensive scrimmage. the capitol of the baseball, if not the Probable pitching choices of the two rival managers for the first Davis ++ 196-167-190— 523) "57, took on Baer, and the Pugilis- {The second-stringers, handling Ken- entire sports world, at the moment. World Series game in Detroit Wednesday will be Tommy Bridges Klein . 125 148-169— 442 tig Pierrot, one at “eve aise: oolpenl d Di ° ° tucky plays adroitly, got away for Yet the total attendance in 1908 when for the Tigers and Lon Warneke for the Cubs. Charley Grimm {Brown 181-142-294-— EAT | Fe as therein Te ever ENOWn awale uni istrii ution ‘several touchdowns. the Cubs won in five games, was only} announced definitely Tuesday that he would use the great Chicago Dummy 146-155-128 420 O° ve first time his cnagaiticent ports oun a p 62,232. right-hander in the first game but Mickey Cochrane is apparently Huss . ++ 112-168-170— 450 Bierman Experiments With Blocking Backs Minneapolis, Oct. 1—(#)—A couple , of rookies, and little fellows at that, seemed to be the boys that Bernie Bierman is pinning his faith on right now to solve his Igy: backfield prob- lem for Minnesota—better blocking. Monday he moved little Bill Math- eny, weighing about 155 pounds, to the spot that Julius Alfonse has been ___|form had touched canvas; then he -780-881—: went down again. The third time he} Be Ae es stayed down—the first time in his O. 1. Will {career that he had been counted out. 141-155-128— 424; “Against Mincing Max, James J. ++ 150-168-223— 541) Braddock left-handed his way to the 171-171-167— 509} title through 15 weary rounds. To ++ 158-187-155— 500) reach this shot the erstwhile steve-| ++ 188-167-165— 520/dore had left-jabbed Art Lasky ~— jthrough 15 wearing rounds, The conclusion is inevitable: there is nothing in Braddock’s record that can put him in a class with the Tawny Terror from Detroit who mar- ried his sweetheart two hours before his engagement in the Yankee Stad- ium and left. her for a moment to jmassacre Max. Nothing? Braddock Has Courage One thing cannot be dismissed. In the annals of the ring it is what fight followers have paid homage to, from the earliest days to the era of) Dempsey. It is courage, heart, the will to win that makes a battered, bloody figure stretched out on the canvas get up and start over again, {face to the foe, fists to the foeman's jface. And in that one respect Braddock may stand alongside Sullivan and Dempsey; without so much as a “by your leave.” As long as he is in there, Braddock will be sticking out that left of his and standing toe-to-toe. The heavy- weight champion of the world, scal- ing 195 pounds, is no bigegr than his heart. : But when that match comes—the Cinderella Man versus the Detroit Dynamiter—the man who left the re- lief rolls to win a crown, against the most dangerous contender a champion has had to face—the ruler of the pug- It's almost certain to hit the $1,000,- 000 mark again, following the example of another great Detroit pride, Joe Louis, set in the Yankee Stadium in New York a week azo with Max Baer, hapless party of the second prize; fighting part. Million Dollar Gate | This million dollar gate will net the} winning players better than $5,000 each, and the losers more than $3,000} apiece, yet the Cubs of 1908 drew down only $1,317 each for the victor's « share and the Tigers had to be con- tent with a paltry $870, almost as/ much as an athlete wants today for undecided between starting Bridges or his No. 1 hurler, Schoolboy Rowe. GOULD PICKS CUBS TO DEFEAT TIGERS ON MOMENTUM, YOUTH World Series Facts (By the Associated Press) Contenders — Detroit Tigers, American League champions, and Er ti Chicago Cubs, National League et. 1) I hree more || | . Reeiisc(or hlsname by a ghost welter.| 4. 0e% gassiabiel reasons, not ees | | gchguete = Mibeey-Goentans, | Old timers. through the blur of ex-| <ariiy confined to the baseball “dops”|| petroit; Charley Grimm, Chicago. citement and the new enthusiasm.| oy succulent statistics, it is this writ-!| Schedule of games—-October 2 might see out there the infield of the | ers hellef that the Chicago Cubs will'| and 3, Navin Field, Detroit; Octo- 1907 Cubs who beat the Tigers four|heat the Detroit Tigers in a six-|| her 4° 5, and 6,- Wrigley” Field, | times and tled once and licked them| game world series. || Chicago:’ October 7 and 8 Detroit, four out, of five in 1998. Tt is fairly well known by now that|| Postponed games to be played off There was the peerless Chance of jhe Cubs are the “hottest” team in)| in scheduled city. Four victories | i | (By the Asseciated Press) Rapped by Darling Chief Says Fish and Game Are ‘Forgotten Men’ in Fed- eral Expenditures F. Hummel Shubert New York—Hank Greenberg of the | Tigers, who has a Yankee Stadium ‘complex, had his best day with the bat there after lying awake-all night worrying about it .... he got three jout of four .... and on Friday the 13th, too .... the next.night Hank got 13 hours sleep, then fanned five coe Sel unable to fill thus far. Matheny When choosing your champion |suffered a sprained ankle that may world’s series fans, don't forget Messrs./keep him on the sidelines for a few Guy Morrison and David Halman|days, so now Bierman is expected to they blew in Tuesday from far |shift Rudy Gmiiro to the right half- ay Panama and immediately head- ) back post. ed for Detroit .... ;. Andy Uram has been moved back Watch Lloyd Cardwell of Nebraska | to left half where he seems to func- this season .... he looks like the|tion best. best back in the Big Six and maybe; Before Matheny went out with a in the midwest .... bad ankle in Monday's scrimmage he el put on the block that enable The Cards deserve a hand for sign- | Roscoe to get free for a lore is no recognition in the handling of|ing Frankle Frisch for another year|turn of a kickoff. Gmitro, stubby the four billion dollar fund of wild|.--. Bob Zuppke is starting his 23rd ‘and dependable, also has been show- life—birds and fish—as a national| Season as coach at Illinois .... \ing up better than some of his big- responsibility. ger mates in this respect, “They couldn't have said that we| Cub Fans Get Ducats | Alfonse, wio takes his eligibility didn't ask for enough money. Each . © o_| test this week, has been sorely missed project was prepared to provide maxi- After All-Night Vigil thus far. A ball carrier who aver- mum man-hours of labor. Later, to Be ae Chicago, Oct. 1—(#)—A thousand aged 85 yards last season, Alfonse bring the program within the realm never has been deficient in clearing of possibilities, the list of projects|or ntore fans who wanted world ser-|the way for his mates, cither, was cut down over and again until|ies reservations bad enough to stay| Mental attitude, according to Bier- the total cost was about $10,000,000. | up all night out in the open, arose;man, will tell the tale against Ne- “and today, the wild life program| from cots, crates, garbage pails and| braska. will get nothing. even the sidewalk Tuesday morning “Out of this $4,800,000,000 they!to do cash and carry business at couldn't find a thin dime for this| Wrigley Field ticket booths. cause. If it hadn’t been for a little| It was a long, chilly night of wait- money I got by robbing congress,|ing, but most of the standers in line there would be no funds available to) Were equipped with blankets, food, to- bacco and other things intended to carry out any program this year.” Darling said $2,000,000 would have! help the time pass more quickly. ‘Washington, Oct. 1—(4)—Bitter re- | fections of J. N. (Ding) Darling, chief lof the bureau of biological survey, toward his wild life protection proj- ects Tuesday characterized fish an game as “forgotten men” in govern- ment expenditures. Applications for projects running up to $100,000,000, then reduced to $10,000,000 Darling said, were ignored by handlers of the $4,800,000,00 works relief fund. He said President Roo- sevelt had advised him the survey's projects would have a part in the fund. “What has happened,” Darling said, “indicates to me that officially there | 808-848-838—2494 The balance of the first half of the City League scheduie was announced by D. C. Huss, secretary-treasurer. Regular bowling nights are Mondays and Tuesdays. The schedule follows: Tuesday, Oct. 1 Town Talk Cafe Kleins. Gamble Robinson vs. Robertsons. Monday, Oct. 7 Kleins vs. Robertsons. Town Talk vs. Gamble Robinson. Tuesday, Oct. 8 Capitol Cafe vs. Woolworths. O. H. Will vs. Coman Cabin Camp. Monday, Oct. 14 Town Talk ys. Woolworths. Will Co. vs. Robertsons. ‘Tuesday, Oct. 15 Gamble Rebinson vs. Coman Cabin. Capitol Cafe vs. Kleins. Monday, Oct. 21 Coman Cabin Kleins. Gamble Robinson vs. Capitol Cafe. Tuesday, Oct. 2; Writer Believes ‘Lon Warneke! Will Give Chicago Edge in Pitching By ALAN GOULD that day at first, Johnny Evers play-|either major league, fresh from a 21-|| for one team needed to decide ing second and Harry Steinfeldt at! game winning streak and booming to- || series. third, with Joe Tinker at short. ward the big show under terrific im- Starting time—all games begin petus. ') at 1:30 p. m. Eastern Standard son bvclet ghiashome With their streak ended, they may || Time in Detroit; Central Standard In big Gabby Hartnett’s place be-lne over-due for a reaction, but they, | Time in Chicago. | hind the plate in this series played} aian’t let down until they crushed the!! Capacity of parks—Detroit 48,- the great Johnny Kling in the old|jact resistance of the celebrated gas’ | 700; Chicago 51,000. days and he caught three fingered) nouse gang in St. Louis and knocked}! Betting odds—Detroit 7 to 10; | Brown, Ed Reulbach and Orval’ out the incredible Deans. '| Chicago 11 to 10. ©. H. Will Co. vs. Town Talk Cafe. Overall. Secondly, Chicago has a remarkably|| Radio—Broadcast over national || Robertsons vs. Woolworths. On the Tiger side Is the dim pic-| young, aggressive club that is geared! | hookups (CBS and NBC) daily. . Monday, Oct. 28 ture of the immortal Ty Cobb, clout-\ for high-speed. It’s an outfit that) Gamble Robinsons vs. O. H. Will. ing Sam Crawford, Davey Jones, play-| might crack under pressure but it Woolworths vs. Kleins, ing the outfield, of Wild Bill Donovan | gidn't against tougher opposition than Tuesday, Oct. 29 Pitching with Eddie Summers in re-| anything the American League could Coman Cabin vs. Robertsons. serve. In many of the old timer's eye) offer the Tigers. Town Talk vs. Capitol Cafe. there will be the phantoms of Claude Marked Contrast ‘Monday, Nov. 4 Rossman at first base, tough old Ger-| 1 short, the Cubs act more like a Capitol Cafe vs. Coman Cabin. many Schaefer at second. Bill Cough-| college football team than an, ag- Robertsons vs. Town Talk Cafe. lin at third and Charley O'Leary|gregation of professional ball play- Tuesday, Noy. 5 Toaming about shortstop. edge. Warneke was the best right- hander in either major league at the finish. 225,000 Fingerlings Distributed in N. D. ee ee Twenty-two Michigan State collége footballers were called into service prior to formal opening of autumnal Seasoning to serve as teams “A” and “B” for Coach Charley Bachman’s Jecture and annual rules interpreta- tion meeting, ss 4 ilistic realm will enter the ring the | p fficient to c tt a few of| The opening of the wickets ended ers, Their attitude is in marked con-| Woolworths vs. O. H. Will. een sufficl oO carry out a few o! a SS ae Only one link with those days when| trast to that of the more experienced| APproximately 225,000 fingerlings} sieins vs. Gamble Robinsons. underdog. the projects regarded as immediately|® 28-hour vigil for the number one} France has inaugurated an enorm- Jenning’s famous “Eee-yah" roared! but less agile Tigers. have been distrjputed recently. in! Monday, Nov. 11 This tells the story: necessary. ; unitam Gus Swanson, Edwin Brum- ous program of aircraft moderniza- tion, and plans to call on a large number of aeronautical reservists for training this summer. $950 Joe Louis: Max Baer, KO, 4 rounds. James J. Braddock: Max Baer, decision, 15 rounds. Rife, LaFournaise Captain Wop Team Wahpeton, N. D., Oct. 1.—(?}—Har- vey Rife and Joe LaFournaise, full- back and tackle respectively, are co- across the field remains in the pic-| ‘They will enter the series with the| North Dakota Lakes to replenish ture. George Moriarity, who took over! same psychological advantage that/|fishlite, A. I. Peterson, state game third base for the Tigers immediately | swept the 1906 White Sox, the famous jand fish commissioner, said Tuesday. after the 1908 series, is one of the Am-| “hitless wonders,” and the youthful} The department is distributing two erican League umpires assigned to|1910 Athletics to victory over the |carloads of about 70,000 fingerlings the series. | great Chicago Cubs of Frank Chance’s |received from the federal bureau of —_——_———_ | day; that carried the miraculous Bos- | fisheries at La Crosse, Wis., most Hunk Anderson, coaching at North) ton Braves of 1914 to a sweep over |crappies, sunfish and ba: in addi- Carolina State college, has a bona) the Athletics, and marked the drama- |tion 155,000 fingerlings have been fide cowboy on his football squad, tic triumph of the 1933 New York:|transplanted in the state. . Everett Robinson, who hails from) Giants, spurred on by Blondy Ryan,| Lakes in which the recent ship- Wallace, Ida., and says he has “rode | over the Washington Senators. ment gf. young fish are being placed | mett and John Peterson, Chicagoans, and Robert Sinclair of Chesterton, Ind., staked out their claims at 4 a. m. Monday, an hour or so ahead of a man and wife who declined go iden- tify themselves. All these patient souls were in line for box seats at $19.80 for strips of three, and grandstand seats at $16.50 the set. _ The wait ‘wasn’t anywhere’ near over the “line” in front of the win- Woolworths vs. Gamble Robinson. Kleins vs O. H. Will. Tuesday, Nov. 12 Robertsons vs. Capitol Cafe. Coman Cabin vs. Town Talk Cafe. Monday, Nov. 18 Gamble Robinsons vs. Robertsons. Kleins vs. Town Talk Cafe. Tuesday, Nov. 19 Coman Cabin vs. Woolworths. Capitol Cafe vs. O. H. Will. Monday, Nov. 25 lettermen, John Hermes, Orland | Butcher and Verne Augustine, all backfield men, Winner of one game, and tied in another, Wahpeton resumes its cam- paign against Breckenridge, Minn., \this week-end with a fair outlook although the team is light and “very green,” said Coach Marty Engh. Players in addition to the veterans are Bob Callan, James Schwarzrock, the range.” ‘The cowboy was a fresh-| Finally, it is this writer's view that include Metigoshe, Upsilon, Gordon,| Coman Cabin vs. O. H. Will. Captains of the Walipelan. Bigh schopol | bamisnos | en: Lana Pals arenes Gam Maete: e811 Diese. cae DOWN man at Notre Dame and went along|lanky Lonnie Warneke, Arkansas | Jarvis; Wood, Strawberry, Brush, Ar-] Woolworths vs. Capitol Cafe. oe Peeae tere 160-pounders tels, Kenneth Butcher, Leroy Hau-| became the “oldest settler” by taking with Anderson when he left his alma; rival of the celebrated Schoolboy | rowwood, Crystal Springs, and . the ‘Tuesday, Nov. 26 Wahpeton’s eleven has three other saver ‘nd Norman ‘Smith. his stand Sept. 19. mater. | Rowe, will give the Cubs a pitching |Sheyenne’ ard Maple Rivers, Gamble Robinson vs. Town Talk. pe wed Robertsons vs. Kleins. Monday, Dec. 2 Kleins vs. Capitol Cafe, Coman Cabin vs. Gamble Robinson. Tuesday, Dec. 3 Robertsons vs. O. H. Will. Woolworth vs. Tawn Talk. Monday, Dec. 9 Woolworths vs, Robertsons. Town Talk Cafe vs. O. H. Will. Tuesday, Dec. 10 Capitol Cafe vs. Gamble Robinson. Kleins vs. Coman Cabin. Monday, Dec. 16 Capitol Cafe vs. Town Talk Cafe. JACOBYS BARBEP Robertsons vs. Coman Cabin. Tuesday, Dec. 17 Kleins vs. Woolworth. Pe s . O. H. Will vs. Gamble Robinson. ay v i Monday, Dec. 23 Gamble Robinson vs. Kleins. O. H. Will vs. Woolworths, Tuesday, Dec. 24 Town Talk vs. Robertsons. Coman Cabin vs. Capitol Cafe. 4 4 Monday, Dec. 30- v 4 mB + ‘own Talk vs. Coman Cabin. K ‘ ; : Capitol Cafe vs. Robertsons. G Tuesday, O. H. Will vs. Kleins. 7 Gamble Robinson vs. Woolworth. Fights Last Night $1.00 PER WEEK INSTALLS THIS NEW 1936 PHILCO in time for the QUT OUR WAY By Williams a OUR BOARDING HOUSE ite i SHORE —ILL KEEP YORE MONEY FER YOU WHILE WERE IN TOWN HOW MUCH \S HERE? AN! THAT REMINDS ME-T GoT TO HUNT UP STIFFY, To = KEEP Pld FER EGAD-“1S THAT ALL YOU CAN SEE IN THE CREATURE ‘2 A NICE MEAL OF FROG LEGS, FRIED IN BUTTER !—~HMF ¢ +ALL YOU THINK IS IN TERMS OF EATING I-FIE |-—A PRIZE CHAMPION SUMPING FROG, AND YOU'D PUT IT IN THE SKILLET I -~~UMP~INDEED, MY STOUT FELLOW, HES YOURS FORSFIOO, IF YOU CRAVE ONE SET OF FRIED FROG ‘LEGS FOR YOUR APPETITE I, EVEN IF HE COULD DO TH GREAT LAKES IN FIVE GUMPS,1 STILL SAY HES Sust A 50¢ ORDER ON TOAST TO ME, INCLUDING S's Yj UE [ (By the Associated Press) Holyoke, Mass.—Jerry .Ferran- outpointed do, 138, Jersey City, MUSIC Co, Philo 417 Brosdway Phone 163 Phone 162 for Demonstration ; HEROES ARE MADE -N

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