The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 8, 1936, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ati i Ml : ; National DIMAGGIO SUFFERS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1986_ s Are Jubilant Despite All-Star SEVEREST ONE-DAY SLUMP OF CAREER California Recruit Misses Two of Three Chances in Field, Goes Hitless PAID GATE ONLY 25,534 Dizzy Dean Cets Credit for First Senior Loop Victory in Four Years Boston, July 8.—(#)—Echoes of the biggest financial and freshman flops in the four-year history of the all- star ball game failed Wednesday to deprive National Leaguers of their jubilation over turning back the “Americans for the first time. Paced by the great Dizzy Dean and Carl Hubbell, then plucked from dan- ger by the strong right arm of Lon- nie Warneke, the Nationals capital- ized their superior pitching to squeeze out a 4-3 decision under extraordin- ary circumstances before a crowd that occupied little more than half of the étands at National League field. Led by Manager Charlie Grimm of the Chicago Cubs, the Nationals won because they forced the “breaks,” cap- italized opportunities and on the whole played smarter baseball. The favored Americans lost because their celebrated “murders’ row” was handcuffed by rival pitchers and, sad to relate, because their sensational rookie outfielder, Joe DiMaggio of the Yankees, picked the occasion to ex- perience his worst one-day slump since he flashed across the star-clus- tered big league sky. Gets ‘Bronx Cheer’ Rookie Joe came to Boston to get the “Bronx cheer” for the first time in his life. Whether suffering from the jitters or just not having “much luck,” as he ruefully expressed it, DiMaggio flopped with as resound- ing a note as the attendance. The California recruit had three |, chances in the field and missed two|chaiked up victories over the Nash- Finch and Sheil Gas clubs, respect- ively, in the two league games played | Tuesday night. ist. Paul of them. Charitable scorers charged him with only one error, but his mis- plays figured in each of the National Leaguers’ scoring rallies. Up five times, against the superb |out during the Shell Gas-Schiitz Beer | I” pitching of Dean, Hubbell and War- neke, DiMaggio failed to get the ball 15. Each outfit. sc out of the infield even once. be He left seven men on bases, cap- Pi ping the climax of his dismal day by Mike Ibach and Chris Balzer led the Pet lining out with the bases full in the}ig nit attack for the winners while! Fargo-Moorhead 330221600 | Velva ABR H Po A 6 League Tuesday to pull up to within seventh, to end the one scoring splurge mi) Smith paced the losers at the | Hau Claire . 35 ‘593 |Kirklie, If... 5 1 1 0 0 0/3% games of first place. of the Americans, and popping out in plate 7 japon 29 537|Senechal, rf... 5 1 1 2 O 1{| The Jimmies inaugurated a new | Winnipeg . 2 9 ial aan with the tying run on)" ‘4 three-run rally in the fourth in-| Superior eae ae a ve eer ee aed ined ning overcame an early Nash-Finch} Wausau ete Cee teen ye en _ p Fargo “The breaks were simply against|i.oq and paved the way for a 726 | Duluth pee Seles “5 0 2 6 0 1,head and Eau Claire, in first and sec- t kid,” said American Leaguers. Wietor foe the Three-Way Inn, No| crocuston 19 345 | Frazer, 2b 4 1 2 3 2 Olond place, were dropping their con- “His line drive to Leo Durocher in| pox Sore is available for this game. | NATIONAL LEAGUE S BG fo) ne) wel ee the seventh had basehit written all!" "the city League, a 9-9 shutout | é wo LG sae Sas ‘4 % ® *° ° "| Duluth turned back the Bears, 7-4, over it, but it happened to be directly victory registered by the Co; olin Mot- St, Louis - 48 28 Totals 41 #7 11 24 9 8 |and Winnipeg nosed out the Twins, ine fielder’s hands” ors ten over the fea guecleadiog ©. H! Pittsburgh : ee Grove Giants ABR H PO A E/4-3. Gate Only 25,534 Will ag: Fpsatlin auEECARieRaneny tHe ingntie. 38°33 Hubbard, If 5 2 8 0 ©: 0| In the fourth game, Wausau won Instead of an anticipated sell-out} org Ae ere The eae masa ew York 3908 a ee ae oa 21 from Supeiror, 10-4, crowd of 42,000 at the old wigwam, : i heares | Boston . 34 41 . 7 5 2 2 0 0 (0 —_——_————_ now the “Bee-hive,” the paid attend-/¢¢ Monday night With tne eae tee | Brooke os aNjbemes reo 321 8 8 81ND, Legion Tourney ance numbered exactly 25.534. Al-|Pretecting an. umpire’s decision with- : “(Bava te. 2 0 8 af 0 ol ge though the weather was perfect, and nad ‘Midas AE ies cereale | AMERICAN LEAGUE Dee ee ae OOM Aa de Set July 31 to Aug. 2 the attraction unusual, the gate re-| aventh inning. The box scores: | New York peer er | Flanders. p Bi AS ahr Out 7a == ceipts were little more than $20.00]. ap ROH PO AB Detrcit 41 33.584] Moore. p © 8 © 9% 1 | Grand Forks, July 8—(?)—The state and expenses consumed well over half) 5° ier, 3b is 0. 2), ae Oe. 7 ae Totals 36 10 9 27 11 7|Junior Legion baseball tournament the amount taken in. F. Hummel, 2b 3 0 ye Bt 39 37 |__ Score by innings will be held here July 31 and Aug. 1 From all indications, steps will be| A. Jundt, r By C0 42h OR Ghlbagon se isuso eae. | Se Neva, oo £800) 000) B0=— tana 2, it was decided Tuesday night taken by the club owners to guard/S Goetz ss 93 0 9 2 7 &) philadetpnia 2448 eC horonamer en ae) xT s jby the Grand Forks post of the against a similar debacle peloreate Werte eh 1. 25 Du 0 Rohe OReE Souen 2347 3291 Giants 8). stolen bases—Hubbard, | American Legion. 1937 all-star game is held in Wash-| Essert, c 1 0° 6 1 9 0, —--—~—-—-!Johnson, Jerome, LeM Slater,| Previously, the tournament has | Dizzy ington, under American League aus-|M- Hummel. p 2 9 2 1 9 OD camueison, ss. 4 3 2 3: 9 1|Elanders: sacrifices: “Davidson: 40u- |yeen held ip Bismarck, but a5 a sec- Pioes. Rojuncet i 9 6 4 0 gla Neibauer, p 5 2 3 8 2 1/0ne"to “Davidson; bite off Rorvig 9 [tional tournament will be held there i cea Dea aoe only ane asia Teen hap pes a Cleveland, 1b A 4 1 4 A Sin 5 innings, off Flanders 4 in H 13 this year, the state tournament was atsmen in his three-inning perform- pials ae ‘G. Balzer, If... 5 2 3 2 0 2{ innings, off Moore 2 in.1 2-3 tunings: loffered to the Grand Forks post. oo sates first Mele i here. ob Le Oe 2 een oa SON Ai Lie Sy cont © vig, oft Flanders 2: hit. by pitcher— HERRON 45 MEP ALAT, ia ¢ spectators saw Columbia ul B, Jacobson, r ae ae ae ae 39 16 «19 31 48 Si eMay. Moore by Rorvig; passed balls! Minneapolis, July 8—(#)— ler= Gehr: ring J. Falconer, ¢ Dd; Den ; oe Cranston 2, Smith 1, Umpires: Pe- into ide right fleld sta ace is first { Sentickenme’r ‘: eae ee: AB R H PO A E|terson and Bell. ron of Minneapolis, medalist last year, ight field stands for his first | 7’ ccnneider, rf oO ak. Ot Be ee ae ae ee cae 1 I captured that honor again Tuesday and only basehit in four all-star] im “Manney, ss D0 Ode hy a0 eet . LADY GOLDIE WINS in the state auateur golf tournament Py diy “Warneke. come to. the|Finseean, 1b Meee 8, i 3 5 § 0 of Fargo, July 8—Taking first in|With » 145 total for the 36 holes of s the weakenin Curt ‘Davis i, Schnelder. p Be 20. 38F 5 2 3 1 © Oyall three heats, Lady Goldie, 3rd, qualifying play hree strokes ahead of *Tefty Bob Grove Sager with 2. 9 Sadie, ee a cf i 2 5 4 9 o[owned by O. H. Collins of Miller, 8. fe pee cant - ae we c ; 2 5 18 Fortenbery, rt D., won the 2:28 pace on Tuesday's] fending 3 5 the, detest, but sored mt Fane y innings Wate eo an, al area program at the North Dakota |round of 71 with his 77 of Monday - oe ree 8 001 242 sackets 3a is io 30 12 7 |state fair. In the 2:20 trot, Calumet for 148 to be runner-up, ee Tene : Summ e—Copelin’s| score by innings: 2 Fearless, owned by J. B, Reynolds of ps, wets. Schlitz Beer .. 332 030 5—16|Kansas City, took the first heat, Fourth-Round Softball Sohneders thr Shell Gas .... ++ 006 004 5—15| placed second in the second and third i Failen A d Bonneldsret poummary: Left ‘on base—Schiits |in the third, T : ° eer 6, Shell Gas 5; stolen bases— Schedules Announce Goets; hits off M. Humm Christopher. M. Balzer. “Samuelson, facia gana ala waae ST MPS pasate S, .. Schneider is i A PINS A. Fourth round diamondball sched-|nings: struck out by L. Schneider 6,| three base hits—L. Cleveland, A. Nel: Ha ules of the City and Commercial Leagues, which open next Monday |p night, were announced Wednesday by Eddie Spriggs, WPA recreational |S: assistant. ‘ ‘There are no regularly scheduled games for the balance of this week but Clement Kelley, chairman of the Association’s board of managers, has urged that teams use the days for makeup games. ‘The schedule follows: (Diamond No. 1 is the east high school dia- mond; No. 2 in the south Sixteenth St. diamond and diamond No. 3 is the forth Sixteenth St. diamond): CITY LEAGUE July 13—Copelin vs. Paramount, diamond 3; Will's (open date); K.C.’s ‘va, Chevrolet, diamond 2. July 15—K. C.’s vs. Will's, diamond 3; Chevrolet vs. Paramount diamond 1; Copelin (open date). July 20—Chevrolet vs. Copelin, dia- mond 3; K. C.’s (open date); Will’s vs. Paramount, diamond 2. July 22— Paramount (open date); K. C.’s vs. Copelin, diamond 1; Will’s vs. > diamond 2. July 27 — Chevrolet (open date); ‘Will's vs. Copelin, diamond 1; K. C.’s vs, Paramount, 2. COMMERCIAL LEAGUE THREE-WAY INN, SCHLITZ BEER ‘TEAMS WIN IN COMMERCIAL Copelin Motors 9-0 Shutout A total of 29 base hits were belted | Columbus 42 anapolis 49 f eapo! 2 game which the latter team won, 16-| Minneapolis .. fa ed five runs in| Toledo 5 46 by M. Hummel 0; L. Schneider 6, off M. N. A M Balzer, rf... 6 Elbert Root (left), representing the Detroit Athletic club, scored 123.69 place in the Olympic tryout final in high board diving at Chicago. Frank Kurth (center) of Los Angeles was second and Mar- points to win fir shall Wayne (right), ef Miami, third. (Associated Press Photo) Victory Over 0. H. Wills | Accepted by Board Standings (By the Associated Presa) Inn and Schlitz Beer Three-Way ams in the Commercial League, Milwaukee Louisville NORTHERN LEAGUE Ww L venth-inning assaults on opposing itchers. M. Balzer, Alex Neibauer, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w P Pair of Triumphs) cats VALLEY GITY Penitentiary Club Trounces Fort Rice, 11-2; Downs Velva, 10-7 ‘The Grove Giants, state peniten- | Capital Citians Have Heavy Schedule Lined Up, Be- tiary baseball team, chalked up two ginning July 19 victories over the week-end, defeating Fort Rice, 11-2, Saturday in an In- dependence Day feature and then downing Velva, 10-7; Sunday. A definite decision to continue oper- Heavy hitting enabled the Giants marcel team, at to pile up a good lead in the early ait deta aap 14, ae announced innings of the Saturday game and/here wednesday following a confer- they coasted along while the visitors |ence of the board of directors of the were tallying once in the third and/pismarck Baseball Association and again in the ninth inning. Manager Babe Mohn. held Velva scoreless for seven innings /keep the Capital City club alive arose but in the eighth, the Velva stickers | Monday following the announcement unloosed a barrage of seven hits which |of the dissolution of the Valley City seored seven runs and tied the count./team, one of Bismarck’s strongest The Giants had scored five runs|rivals for North Dakota semi-pro hon- in the first two innings and were tak-|ors, and the Acme Colored Giants. ing things easy when the Velva nine] The chief difficulty encountered broke loose with the rally that almost jin keeping the organization together won the game. In their last time at|is in securing suitable opponents, for bat the Giants pushed over three runs |the heavy-hitting local nine and with for the victory. The box scores: Valley City definitely out of the pic- Mohn announced that at present he had no games scheduled for the next 12 days and in lieu of this a salary agreement was reached with the play- ers to cover the inactive period. However, negotiations are under way to bring one of several strong traveling teams here in the near fu- ture and Mohn expected to have an announcement of this game in the next day or two. Beginning July 19, the Capital Cit- ians have a heavy schedule of games both at home and away. Davidson, 1b . Fort Rice AB R H PO A £,ture, the board was faced with mak- Gartner, 3b... 4 © © 1 © 1/ing a decision on whether to continue FRebenitsch, ¢ 5 0 1 7 2 6| Because of the trouble of securing Schoonow, p . 4 1 2 0 2 O!capable foes for the national semi- LRebenitsch,1b5 0 3 11 © 2l\pro champions, attendance at home Seana tt oe 8 ate > {games here has fallen far below what Balkowitsch, 1f 4 9 © 3 0 0{& team of its calibre merits. — — — — — —| At the meeting methods of improv- Totals .... 42 2 13 24 8 5/ing the attendance were discussed and Grove Giants AB R PO A E/various suggestions of the board mem- Ta eRe § $ Qibers were considered. Among them Jerome, 3b... 5 2 3 2 o|was the appointment of a publicity Stoller, c sie Tl 9 2 O|director and W. 8. Ayers was chosen LeMay, rf... 5 9 0 6S! for this work. Slater, ss a bead ae 51 61 358 1 0 CoB aed 1 1 7 nd eryrrepereererel Sloomus ee 4] | on1— 2 o2x—11 Winning pitcher—Moore, losing _pitcher—Schoono left on ce 15, Gi : stolen 000 Bendish, two base hits—Le- Krug; home runs = sO! double plays—Moore to Stoller to Davidson, L. Rebenitsch unassisted: hits off Schoonow 14 in & innings, off Moore 11 in 6 innings, off Wilson 2 in 2 innings; struck out by : | Jimmies Shave Full Game Off Lead Edge St. Paul, July 8.—(%)—Jamestown ganied a game on the first and sec- ond place teams in the Northern choonow 1; y ilson by Schoonow: pass: ‘ed balls—Stoller 2, Rebenitsch 3. Um- pires—P. Rebenitsch and Arnold. 9 | Moore 1 on balls off) bauer; Rome runs—M. Balzer ummel 3. Um-| Balzer 1, M. bach 1; hits off fin chlitz Beer A hristop'r, 2-3b 3 0 2) off Neibauer 6, off Papacek 4, 9 0. pire: John Roerich. Nei- | bauer 19 in 7 innings, off Papacek 19 6 2-3 innings; struck out by Nei- E bauer 3, by Papacek 1; bases on Palle aioe Minneapolis, July 8.—(#)—Duke Levin, Jamaica, Long Island, claimant of the world’s heavyweight wrestling championship, showed title class in throwing Tommy Marvin after 24 minutes: in a bout Tuesday nit By I. S. Klein PROFESSOR & POOCHEL HAS BEEN HONORED SCIENCE MASTERS ALL—~BY LIGHTING THE HENHOUSE THAT NOT ONLY Vee EVES, TO INCREASE THE OuTPUT OF HONEY Our Boarding House With Major Hoople THE MUST BY THE DURING THE WINTER nave ACADEMY OF MONTHS, THE EGG nes, SCIENCE FOR CROP WAS DOUBLED—~ HIVES. HIS SUCCESSFUL |) BURBANK PRODUCED: EXPERIMENT , . NUT st A PAPER jungle ot indeehiog near IN| CROSSIN« HELL —L NOW AM oO! Or, CORN WHI? AY INTHE THROES OF nen See POTATOES, AND }) SOLVING A WAY TO PRODUCING JC PUT THE BEE ON POTATOES AN 13-HOUR DAY, Bere nie! i 1922. FORCES DISCUSSION In the Sunday game, the Giants} The question of whether or not to FINALISTS IN OLYMPIC HIGH DIVING |Groye Giants Win DISBANDING OR ACME | HELEN WINS THREE WOMEN’s TITLES Helen Stephens, of William Woods college, Mo., won three championships —discus, shot put and 100 meter dash—at the women’s national A. A. U.° meet and Olympic tryouts at Providence, R. |. She Is shown here getting off a mighty throw in the discus. She won the event with a distance or 121 feet 6/2 Inches. (Associated Press Photo) ieeztent| [CREAT] LOOSEN GRIP AND SLOW DOWN he’d send the American Leaguers away from the beehive bowlegged and he did... Too bad young Joe De Maggio had to flop along i a) With the attend- while some hard- hearted Beantown fans were going around referring to} HA the Red Sox as the ON BACKSWING IF YOU'RE TIGHTENING UP that extra x) fooled some of the Amer- = ican Leaguers with @ flat curve in batting practice ... that may have been the tip-off on what was coming ... Al Schacht’s solo burlesque of the Schmeling-Louis knockout is his funniest stunt in years... Al simply wowed ‘em. Casey Stengel was dashing around checking to see if Van Mungo was still here... “I was afraid he might ve jumped the team,” said Casey... wonder why all those fellows who've been trying to buy Van don’t think enough of him to start him?” Lou Gehrig’s face was red when Dean plucked him off first . “You fellows should do your sleeping at night,” hollered the great man as ‘Columbia Lou began the long march back to the dugout. . . Lou’s homer in the seventh was his first hit in four all-star games. . . but it gives him an average of a single a game... reli le & a\ Q@NEA By ART KRENZ (NEA Service Golf Writer) A number of shots are bound to as a matter of course, and do not your shots get. smoothly. body missed Pepper Martin, the of any baseball party. One of the reasons the crowd was the smallest ever was because Boston fans have been hearing for a week the game. was a sell-out... Baseball men are calling Judge W. G. Bramham, Minor League czar, and Joe Carr, his promotion‘ man, “the touchdown twins” for their fine work in bringing the minors out of the doldrums .. . owner Tom Yaw- key took time out between autograph- ing score cards to inform all and sun- dry that Joe Cronin’s job is safe for next year... Ditto Eddie Collins. Boston scribes say the millionaire Sox owner frequently disguises him- self in a gym shirt and munches pea- (By the Associated Press) other game this season. bration . . . Monday night thieves their hotel room robbed them made good the loss The pay the freight ”-,, mending’ othe mouth atter the final put-out, OUT OUR WAY haywire in a round of golf; take them them tie you into a bundle of nerves. It is when the going becomes tough that tension creeps into the golf swing; the harder you try, the worse Whén you find yourself tightening up, loosen your grip on the club. Too .| great a pressure will cause the mus- cles on the forearms and shoulders to become tense. Slow down the back- swing, and sweep more easily and New York—Aldo Spoldi, 136, slowly it is doubtful if he'll play an- Sam Breadon and Branch Rickey, president and vice president of the Cards, had a double cause for cele- more than $600 . . . Tuesday the hotel Big Lon War- hula in the bleachers with the bovs|te0° purocher iissed him amack on Financial Flop *. Decision Made to Keep Bismarck’s National Semi-Pro Champions Together Fette Wins 16th Game for Saints Apostles’ Star Hurler Is Sold to Boston Bees for 1937 Delivery Chicago, July 8—()}—St. Paul will miss Lou Fette next year, but it’s mained only a game behind the lead- ing Milwaukee Brewers. Joe Hauser, who hit 69 homers for ‘an Association record in 1933, had two circuit blows and Spencer Harris one as the Minneapolis Millers beat In- dianapolis, 9-3. Reg Grabowski al- lowed the Indians 10 hits in winning his sixth game of the season. The Millers scored three runs in the open- ing inning and three more in the ott victory es the Baints, walloped jc as Columbus, 13-3. Columbus ..... 000 000 101 2 9 3 St. Paul ..... » 0220 41 2ax—13 15 0 Ryba, Stout and Owen; Fette and rr. Kels Wallop Tribe Minneapolis—Joe Hauser hit two home runs to lead the Millers to a 9-8 triumph, over Indianapolis. Indianapo! Kansas City—Phil Page bested Dan Boone in a pitching duel as Kansas City defeated Toledo, 3-2. Toledo ........ 001 001 000— 3 6 3 Kansas City .. 000 012 00x— 310 2 Boone and Tresh; Page and Breese. Brewers Triumph i sary Detext the Colonels, ar i innings leat the 3-11, Louisville .... 500 00 061 0—11 16 1 Milwaukee .. 105 302 000 1—12 15 2 Demoissey, Peterson Hamilton, Hatter, Braxton and Detor. go let All at Sea! A PARTY fishing in the Gulf stream, off the New game. fish seldom seen north the tropics! in of "HATTERS: CLOTHIERS *FURNISHERS BISMIARCK NOD

Other pages from this issue: