The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1936, Page 6

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BURNS CRASHES OUT HOMER AS DETROIT DEFEATS TRIBE, 8-3 Ott’s Circuit Smash Enables Giants to Win Slugfest From Phillies CHISOX WALLOP BROWNS Bees Break Ninth-Inning Dead- lock for 2-1 Victory Over Dodgers (By the Associated Press) ‘Things are looking a bit brighter in the camp of the champion Detroit Tigers. Harried by early-season injuries and form reversals, the Tigers have had a tough time of it thus far but there is reason Tuesday for Mickey Cochrane to contemplate with a little more hope the gruelling days of sum- mer when, Mickey asserts, the team with class and endurance will step out in front. Two bal) players, Tommy Bridges and Irving Burns, are the reasons for the new bit of optimism. Bridges, a mainstay of the pitching staff last season, had three defeats and only one victory to his credit until Mon- day's game with the Cleveland In- dians when he came into his own to Pitch five-hit ball and win, 8-3. MONDAY'S STARS Mel Ott, Giants—His homer with two on in the ninth gave Giants a 13-12 win over the Phillies. Tiny Chaplin, Bees—Won his first victory of the year, shuting out Dodgers until the ninth and winning 2-1. Tommy Bridges, Tigers—Pitched five-hit game against Indians to win, 8-3. John Whitehead and Dixie Walker, White Sox—Former held Browns to five hits, latter led team’s attack with two doubles and threee singles and base on balls in seven times up. Burns Belts Homer Burns, a weakling at bat since he) jumped from a substitute berth with) the Browns to fill the important shoes of Hank Greenberg, the Tiger first; baseman who suffered a broken wrist, showed his first burst of power with the club, getting a home run and a single in four trips to the plate. The victory enabled the Tigers to climb back into the first division as they unleashed batting power all down the line. The Phillies took advantage of the short right field fence at Baker field to drive out five home runs but the Giants also took advantage of it in the ninth to land the blow that gave}; them a 13-12 victory. Ott Breaks Up Game Mel Ott, who drove in a total of]. eight runs altogether, banged the payoff homer in the last inning with: + two on, two out, and the Giants trail-/ * Ing by two runs. The Chicago White Sox rode a bar- rage of 22 hits, eight for extra bases, to a 19-6 triumph over the St. Louis} . Browns. It was the 13th straight defeat for Rogers Hornsby’s team. The Brooklyn Dodgers, held score- Jess for eight innings, tied the score with the Boston Bees in the first half of the ninth and then lost the game when the Bees scored again in their half for a 2-1 victory. In an exhibition game, the Red Sox downed the Pirates, seven runs in the seventh inning. NATIONAL LEAGUE Bees Beat Dodgers Boston—The Bees won a tight itchers’ battle from Brooklyn, 2-1. R HE + 000 000 OO1—1 7 2 000 000 101-2 6 1 Baker and Berres; id Lopez. Giants Win Slugfest Philadelphia—The Giants won a slugging match from Philadelphia 13- RHE New York. 004 103 203-13 15 0 Philadelp’e 201 231 300-12 16 2 Smith, Coffman, Hubbell, Gumbert, Gabler and Mancuso; Walter, John- | gon, Passeau and Wilson. * Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Victors Detroit—The Tigers scored five uns in the fourth to beat Cleveland 8-3. RHE ‘Cleveland.. 001 000 002-3 5 2 Detroit .. 010 520 OOx—8 13 2 Allen, Winegarner, Galehouse and Pytlak, Becker; Bridges and Coch- rane. Pale Hose Triumph ‘®t. Louis—The White Sox pounded | out 22 hits to wallop St. Louis 19-6. RH E O .- 102 700 027-19 22 1 Louis... 400 001 010-6 5 0 11-6, scoring} ) E j itehead and Sewell; Mahaffey, agbeers, Caldwell, Van Atte, Meola | and Hemsley. '-M Twins Chalk Up _ Third Straight Win THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ‘TURSDAY, MAY 12, 1936 Travis Makes Flying Slide Cecil Travis, Senator shortstop, is shown as he made a wild dive for a throw as Cooke, Boston outfielder, made a safe slide Into second base during the game at Washington which the Senators won 12 to 9. (Associated Press Photo) Midgets Capture Cinder Path Title Spehr, Tanberg of Dickinson, Walery of Gladstone Win Major Honors Dickinson, N. D., May 12.—Winning seven each of first, second and third places, Coach Charles Denton's Dick- inson high school Midgets won team honors in the track and field meet held here Saturday. Spehr and Tanberg in the field events and Duck and Allen in the running events accounted for the Midgets’ seven firsts. Spehr won the shot put, the discus and the javelin while Tanberg took the high jump and the pole vault. Walery of Gladstone won the 100 and 220-yard dash events in the fast times of 10.3 and 22. sec. respectively; Art Helbling of St. Mary's took the broad jump with a leap of 20 ft., 4'2 inches and Rubick of Dickinson Model high won the half mile in 2 The summary: min., 11.7 sec. Shot Put—i Wal Dickin second, Burda, h st, Wa Froehlich, Dickinson al {|New York.......... 17 (By the Associated Press) NORTHERN LEAGUE Ww Fargo-Moorhead ... Jamestown Wausau Superior Winnipeg . Eau Claire. Crookston. Duluth .... fee Results Monday Fargo-Moorhead 12; Superior Jamestown 13; Eau Claire 2. Others postponed. NATIONAL LEAGUE : w L St. Louis.. SH Renwne Hwewwonnol 4 7 Pittsburgh 129 Chicago .. 12 10 New York. 12 10 Cincinnati u 13 Boston . - 10 12 Philadelphia » 10 pty Brooklyn ... 14 ee) Results Monday Boston 2; Brooklyn 1. Others not scheduled. E AMERICAN LEAGU: Ww Boston . -1 Cleveland oa 2| Detroit . _u ek. Diekin stone; thir Time —Dickinson. Time Fights Last Night | peer eens: NReUene 7 (By the Associated Press) Washington, D. C.—Petey Sar- ron, 125':, Birmingham, Als., out- pointed Freddie Miller, 126, Cin- cinnati, world featherweight champion, (5), won title; Meyer Rowan, 135, Washington, knocked out Andy Buny, 137, Los Angeles, (4). San Francisco—Johnny Di Sopa, 134, Sacramento, Calif., outpoint- “1 8t. Louis. . . Chicago .. + 107 ;| Washington » Philadelphia 8 3 Results Monday leveland 3. * Chicago 19; St. Louis 6. Others not scheduled. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION wiu S| Ise, Paul... coal 4 Kansas City. - 4 7 Milwaukee . » 16 8 Minneapolis + 2B 9 Louisville - 10 16 Indianapolis - 6 13 Columbus oo AD - 5 17 Results Monday St. Paul 3; Louisville 2. Columbus 10; Kansas City 3. Toledo 11; Minneapolis 10. Milwaukee 10; Indianapolis 9. (6). Chicago—Edwin Waling, 128%, Detroit, outpointed Dave Barry, 128%, Springfield, Ill, (8). low zero, Fahrenheit. New York 13; Philadelphia 12. Salt is used in freezing ice cream because salt, when added to the ice, gives a temperature of 21 degrees be- Saints Have Close Call With Colonels Fette Wins Sixth Straight as Apostles Triumph 3-2 in Eleventh Chicago, May 12.—(4)—The St. Paul Saints, and the fans who are backing them to win the American Associa- tion title, have their fingers crossed Tuesday. The Saints won their 16th straight game Monday, but they had a close call in their 11-inning duel with the Louisville Colonels. With the score tied at 2-all going into the last of the 11th, Jackie Warner, Saints’ second baseman, cracked a double to score a mate who had walked, giving the league leaders a 3-2 decision. Lou Fette, St. Paul right hander, won his sixth straight game, besting ,|dim Peterson in a fine pitching bat- tle. The Saints now are five games short of tying the circuit consecutive victory streak made by Milwaukee in 1926. Kansas City took a 10-3 beating from Columbus as the winners scored all of their runs in the final three in- nings. Milwaukee went into a virtual second place tie with Kansas City by defeating Indianapolis in 11 innings, 10-9. Toledo also came from behind to \win, beating the champion Minneap- olis Millers 11-10 in a free hitting game. The Hens rallied for four runs in the ninth. Saints Win 16th St. Paul—The Saints won their 16th straight game, defeating Louisville 3-2 in 11 innings. RHE Louisville ....000 100 010 00— 2 9 1 St. Paul. 000 002 000 02— 3 7 0 (11 innings) Peterson, Marrow and Thompson, Ringhofer; Fette and Pasek. Red Birds Trounce Blues Pct.| Kansas City—Rallying in the 7th 1,000 | 88d 8th, Columbus won from Kansas “67 | City 10-3. RH ‘600| Columbus .. ‘400 | Kansas City.... 400|. Fisher and Owen, Clark; Vance, ‘333 | Moore and Madjeski. (333 ___ Hens Turn Back Kels ‘000|__ Minneapolis — Toledo won from Minneapolis 11-10. RHE 11, | Toledo 004 200 104-11 16 3 * {Minneapolis ....015 700 021—10 14 0 Sullivan, Cohen and Linton; Ryan, Grabowski, Tauscher and George. Brewers Nose Out Tribe Pct.|__ Milwaukee—The Brewers nosed out 667 | Indianapolos 10-9 in 11 ga ‘a tae Indianapolis .600 000 002 0I— 9 10 1 545 | Milwaukee ..000 034 010 02—10 16 3 458 (11 innings) '455| Bolen, Turner, Gallivan and Rid- ‘400 |dle; Hamlin and Smith. Baldwin Turns Back + 000 000 451—10 17 0 -110 100 000— 311 1 Wing, N. D., May 12—E. Harvey, Wing hurler, allowed only four hits Pct. | while his teammates were nicking two 708 | Baldwin pitchers for nine, but the 680| visitors played tight baseball in the 625 | clutches and emerged with a 4-2 vic- -500| tory. Ben Casper and Elvin Dutt di- 500 / vided the Baldwin mound duties and 481) chalked up 15 strikeouts. The sum- “130 | mary: | Wing AB J. Mueller, © . Olson, If... Bill Olson, 1b R. Jacobson, 2h Kremene 5 X. HIM, rf. ; Lem, 3b... Pet.| BR: Sedevic, cf . 8401. Harvey, p : 667 652 591) Baldwin R. Stotz, aw) soc--seweem w| so555---52 PO 10 A 2 | ows--aee we] Sl Totals .... "3181 Becker 316| Lenihan, 1b. 4 ‘arnum, If . abe If engnur, at Mecoll, 3 G, David, Winmill, rf . Casper, p - Dutt, + 4 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 27 al sHoosusseuy al oo-sus-55> wloore-o-ssez Totals 36 Summary: 1, Krem, Bill Olson, L. 4 innings, Harvey 4 in 9 7. Umpir Olaf Lem. During the Middle Ages, Poetry contests. Our Boarding House With Major Hoople Zz EVERY SPRING HE PLANTS *@ZA BLIND ADREAM PLOT/ LAST YEAR, WHILE GAZING AT A DOOR-; KNOB, HE GREW A WATER- MELON SO BIG, HE COULD ¥ GROUND WITH ELECTRICITY, 4 ZB, PLANT GROWTH 1SSTIMULATED NEW THEORY HACK~ LAFF TAP IT WITH A {4 MAN COULD TELL TH’ SEASONS BY USTENING TO HIM—IN ¥ TH! SPRING, HE A BAMBOO POLE ~~ IN TH! SUMMER, HE SWIMS ‘TH! ENGUSH CHANNEL—~INI TH! FALL, HE SHOOTS WHITE ELEPHANTS! IN. INDIA, AND IN TH! WINTER, HE SKIS DOWN ° E|nard Johnson, fi 4) else... Just as well, = too. . . Jimmy is Wing Ball Club, 4-3}|{} Roped wl osssonc0048 2] oss545+59% Optimism Invades Tiger Camp As Bridges Recovers Little, Diegel, Kirkwood Fail to Qualify for U. S. Open Tourney BX-AMATEUR CHAMP HOLES AT HARTFORD Lead Respective Districts in Competition (By the Associated Press) Lawson Little, the stocky shot- teur golf championships, among the missing when the National Open play begins in June 36 holes. ghost after posting an 81 for the first round. make an appearance at Portland, Ore. Johnny Goodman of Omaha,’one of the best amateurs in the country, led the qualifiers in the Omaha district mour finished in that order at Chi- cago with 143 and 145, respectively. Perry, who walked in ahead of the of 69-69—138, JOHNSON AND KELLER WIN AT MINNEAPOLIS Minneapolis, club in Minneapolis and Len Matt- son, Keller club, St. Paul, will repre- sent this section in the United States @ result of qualifying trials held at the Golden Valley course here, John- son shot 76-71—147 and Mattson had 74-74—148, Both are professionals. Fourteen pros and three amateurs competed. ‘New York, May 12.—()—Mrs. Jim- my McLarnin has made up her mind that means there'll be no re- turn bout with Tony Canzoneri, or anyone body seems to know it except Jimmy. . . The best judge of baseball talent in the country is Joe Mc- Carthy of the Yanks. +. . Way back in March Joe said he'd show them a few MeLarnin things if Gehrig, Gomez, Chapman and Dickey had normal years. . . And is he? ... Notre Dame has its Bill Shakespeare and Marquette its James Finimore Cooper. . . You'll see a lot of James Fenimore at end next season. . . Oscar Eckhardt of the Dodgers says the greatest difference between the Pacific Coast League and the Na- tional is the infielding. .. A funny speech from the guy who led the coast loop in batting but can hit only @ puny .190 for the Dodgers. . . Did Oscar omit the pitching comparison because he can’t see the National League brand? Raymond (Bear) Wolf falls heir OE: p Runs batted in L. Krem oA Tod. Cane, 20 San Meamcten, | 5010" and! wit valpase nite Farnum; hits off Casper 2 in 2 innings, Dutt 4 in innings; strikeouts—Harvey 10, Casper 8, Dutt French ladies of repute employed their own poets and entered them in periodical case they wouldn’t be so quick to saddle all the blame on the pitcher. .. BUDWEISER Now 15c No Charge for the Bottle Clever Southpaw, Verging Goodman, Revolta, Armour Pikes ey, ‘Tuesday in spite of a cut above his left eye, his only momento of the furious 15-rounder in which he out- pointed Freddie Miller to win the world’s featherweight championship. Find sd than a dozen years of maker who was a double winner of) knocks, the ex-newsboy from .|Birmingham, Als., Poth the British and American ®m8- round the end of his fistic rainbow. Three times he had been whippatl by Miller, the clever southpaw who Playing at Hartford, Conn., Monday |W0n the crown three years ago from the long-driving Little failed to/Tommy Paul, but Monday night the clinch one of the eight New England |stocky berths as he carded 77-75—152 for the |busssaw flailing, swarmed over Miller, ran up an early lead on points and Other players who have carvedjcame within an eyelash of scoring s niches for themselves in the golfing|knockout in the 13th and 15th rounds. world also went down, however. Leo! More than 23,000 persons saw the Diegel, with 154, just missed at New-|fight. The gate was around $40,000, ton Square, Pa., where Joe Kirkwood,|with Miller getting $10,000 and Sar- the trick shot artist, gave up the/ron $1,500. Se , - » aceite, Campbel the former coe-Jaramillo Stops Pc ue an Sioux City, Ia., May 12.—Jolting Joe and Johnny Revolte and Tommy Ar-} Jaramillo of Denver knocked out Dick | Pitching—Benge, Bees, 4-0; Demaray of Bismarck in the fourth The best score for the 36 hole play! pout “of m fight card here Monday was turned in by an amateur, Sam night. Both are welterweights, Two progra: Batting—Sullivan, field at Birmingham, Ale., with a cafd| in crews SWild bil” novceletron: or| Ferrell; Red point Sammy open golf tournament June 4 to 6 as! They are featherweights. Syrian Swarms Over on Knockout 12.—(#)—Petey derk Syrian, could smile Monday night 28-year-old fighter with his ete Barron Major League Leaders ton, 3rd. cu (By the Associated Press| NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Terry, Giants, .538; baker, Pirates, .432. Giants, 23; Hits—Moore, Cubs, 38. Giants, 39; Demaray Giants, 5. Gum- bert, Giants, 2-0. AMERICAN LEAGUE Sox, .407. er, Tigers, and Dickey, Yankees, and R. Fer- Tell, Red Sox, 35. Home Runs—Foxx, Red Sox, 8; Dickey, Yankees, 7. Pitching—Blaeholder, Indians, 3-0; | ( 1st; Genske, . ‘Time 10. maree, | 1st; Murra: Lge *) Stanton, 3rd. Ti! Home Runs—Klein, Cubs, and Ott, sat Late, penton ne Bank ton, 3rd, Distanc High Jump—Fandrich, Hazen, 15: brag Cards, |Mounts, Beulah, Krau 3-0; ‘Walker, '|Stanton, tied for 2nd. in. 880 Yard Run—Foste: Thompson, Beula’ Indians, 436; R.jton, 3rd. T as: Pie oR ee att Bismarck and ly “Kid” Miller of | Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 29; Gehring- anit. Sioux City fought each other on even Began ee terms for six rounds and Rusty Gram-| Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, 37; Gehrig ling of Bismarck and Lee Bacca of Th May 12.—(®)—Gun-| Denver traded blows for a like num- of the Bloomington ber of rounds with the same result. In the other six-round match, Jackie Rogers of Bismarck easily out- ited Shot _Put—Fandrich, ee tid 2 SARRON, VICTOR OVER MILLER, |Beulah Tracksters SHOOTS 152 FOR: 36 oe etd Win Mercer Title Fandrich of Hazen Scores 23 Points for Individual Hon- ors in Meet h—Mounts, Beula’ n, 2nd; Gentz, Si Mounts, Boulah, Inds Gente, Seance by . nts, Cuyler,| 3ra, Height 11'ft 4 inches: 440 Yard Dash—Thompson, Beu! y+ Beulah, 2nd; Transeth, me 69, Hazen, 2nd; Heihn, Stan- 40 ft, 2 in, Hazen, Gentz, Height 5 ft. 1 r, Beulah, ist; 2nd; Gents, Stan- mn st; Fos- iter, Hazen, 3rd. Hazen, 1s! papneeth, Stanto. Musco of Omaha.| Broaca, Yankees, and Phelps, White |"°irazen, 2nd, (Genske, Link, Krause, Sox, 2-0. Suits him 1007 from | morning till night— ONE OF THE BOYS snapped Mr. A. C. Elfman, the building contractor, loading up his pipe. His favorite tobacco shows up right plainly. “I favor a mild, soothing tobacco,” says Mr. Elfman. “Prince Albert suits me 100%. That must be due to P.A.’s ‘no-bite’ process and the special ‘crimp cut.’” é TRY THIS PRINCELY TOBACCO AT OUR RISK ‘Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don't find it the mellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE Fandrich). A PIPE WRENCH-\| THAT'S CRAZY/ BUT GO AHEAD ~ TVE GOT To GET IT OPEN! OPENIN' ff WITH 4 PIPE WRENCH AINT HALF AS. GOOFY AS PUTTIN! WELL, WE CERTAINLY PS WILL NEED 'T, NOW? SSS SSE SSS T-RANLLIAMS £12,

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