The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 31, 1936, Page 10

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_THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 81, 1936 Bismarck Trounces Cando, 10-4, Behind Nicky Schneider _- Kennedy Hurls 10th Straight Victory As Chisox Conquer Athletics DICKINSON WILL BE CAPITAL CITY CLUB'S POE IN FIRST ROUND Mandan - Forx, Fargo - Minot, | Hankinson-Harvey Games Slated Friday BOWERS IS HITTING STAR} Injured Local Twirler Holds, Losers Hitless in Last Six Innings Grand Forks, N. D., July 31—(Pi— Bismarck eliminated Cando from the North Dakota state junior baseball tournament here Thursday night by scoring a well-earned 10-4 victory, thus gaining passage into the eights and the right to meet Dickinson in a first round game Friday. { Nicky Schneider, Bismarck hurler. | settled down after a poor start and| after the third inning had Cando helpless. Cando took a two-run lead in the first frame, went behind two when Bismarck netted four in a wild third inning, then tied the score in the last half of the same frame. Schneider bore down, however, and) held Cando hitless for the remaining innings while his mates found the batting range and pounded out an} easy win, Bowers, with four hits, in-} cluding a triple, three runs scored and four batted in, was the hitting star for the winners. Coach Themar Simle and Manager K. W. Simons of the Bismarck team Gebated for some time before final! seitling on Schneider, who was in-| jured in an automobile accident Mon-! day, as their starting hurler, but the little fellow came through with a| masterful performance leaving the) Capital Citians with three starting hurlers for the rest of the tourna- ment. Schneider will take his regular Place behind the bat for the rest of the games. Mandan was pitted against Grand Forks in the opening ¢! of the! first round Friday morning with Far-| go playing Minot in the ond open- | ing game. games | Hankinson will engage y andj Dickinson will play Bisme Semi-finals are schedul and the champions! played Sunday afternoon score of Thursday's game sei In the afternoon AB R innings & runs & Norton. son. T Turner Rinaiine Two Closest Calls Unguided Flight Over Australia, Race at Cleveland Brought Big Thrills “When you fly so long at a fixed speed in a definite direction and then} do not reach your destination, you're in trouble,” Colonel Roscoe Turner said Friday. The speeding colonel, holder of the trans-continental airplane record, who arrived here Thursday in the interests of a safety on the highways campaign, was describing what he termed his two “closest calls” in the air. | Turner said he suffered hours of excruciating worry when flying from London to Australia a few years ago. Having lost bearings when radio con- nections played out, Turner said he and his co-pilot, unable to travel by stars, spent hours of worry over Australia before finding their air- port and landing, with their motors running out of gas while they were coasting <2 a stop. Turner said he was afraid to land in a river he spotted because of croco- diles and that the jungle below was out of the question. Radio communi- cation was re-established in the nick of time he said. Turner's other “close call” was dur- ing the last national air races at Cleveland. Coasting at 275 miles an hour with his race virtually won and just one lap remaining, his motor caught on fire. Losing the $7,500 money was nothing, he said, |frames. Tribe Turns Back | Leading Brewers Millers Defeat Red Birds, 10-5; Blues Shellack Colonels, | 10-2 | | Chicago, July 31.—()—The Mil-| waukee Brewers clung to their Ameri-| can Association leadership Friday but it was a little slimmer as the result of Thursday night's tilt with the In-| dianapolis Indians, The tribe whipped the Brewers, 7-6, Phil Page winning a duel with! Luke Hamlin in which each hurler | allowed 11 hits. The Brewers, how ever, committed four errors to one for the victors. In another night game Minneapolis | defeated Columbus, 10-5 with a five-) run burst in the seventh and eighth! Kansas City whipped Louis- | ville, 10-2, Vance holding the Col- onels to eight hits as the Blues ccl-| lected 13 safeties. St. Paul and Toledo will play the| game they had scheduled at a later| | date. Ne Blues Trouncé Colonels | Louisville — Kansas City pushed | Louisville deeper into the cellar with a 10-2 victory. | RH E! Kansas City 302 023 000-10 13 2 Louisville.. 010 000 OO1-2 8 2 Vance and Madjeski; Marrow, Bass, Tising and Thompson. | Kels Wallop Red Birds | Columbus—Minneapolis turned in a} 10-5 win over Columbus under the lights. | RH E Minneapolis 003 011 320—10 12 11 Columbus. 000 320 000-5 11 4! Bean, McKain and Hargrave, George; Macon, Potter, Ryba and Chervinko. Indians Victors Indianapolis—Indianapolis defzat- | : ed Milwaukee 7-6 in a night game. R H £ Milwaukee. 200 010 012-6 11 4) Indianapolis 040 012 00x—7 11 1/ Hamlin, Johnson and Detore; Page| and Riddle. St. Paul at Toledo, postponed. (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) (By the Associated Presa) NORTHERN LEAGUE 8 13 | 0 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION WW Se ee i LEWIS WHIPS GA! Pittsburgh, July 31.—(#)—Light | Lewis, of Pittsburgh, won a unanimous | decision over Al Gainer, Negro slug-/| ger from New Haven, Conn., in a 12-/ Thursday night. Lewis, 178%, closed with a rush to win the last four rounds to overcome an early lead pil- ed up by Gainer, who weighed 177. A crowd of 17,118 paid $35,000 to see the battle. | » | toss (HALF MILLION WILL ATTEND _ ELEVENTH OLYMPIAD OPENING Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, July 31.—(@)—There ts; consternation in Minnesota ... the idea | staging aj championship; most extraordinary circumstances ever prize fight on the | marking the world’s biggest athletic e | Minnesota Goph-!Oimpiad will be launched Saturday ers are booked to Washington | at Seattle... of same day play Paul “must” »dack Sharkey Madison Squ: Garden the well | ram, including youth demonstra- known razzberr: tions, ceremonies at the grave of the! 7 i eq | unknown soldier, the arrival of the! First sign of fall: Bager-eyed| Oiympic torch bearer from Greece, men on W. 49th street with a! about 4,500 athletes, from 53 nations ; football under his arm... King} wij) hear Rudolph Ismayr, Bavarian evinsky says he wants just one more weight lifter and Olympic middle- ight with Joe Louis ... Did he say| weicht champion, take the Olympic fight? {oath in their behalf. Bill McGinty at Spring Lake, N. J., isn’t the only one eu pie shoot golf | 1,200 newspapermen from all parts of Bill Curtis, pro at the Valley Country club at Decatur, par 36 course at were up in front S, and Bill set a lan- by moonlight. . . Ala., night... with flas tern on eac! shot a 41 on a Pe. °| tee to swing by. Look for Warren Giles of Rochester | to do a tops job as president cf the | quent appeal before the international Olympic committee by the Finnish | representatives for a return of the; International League. . . Casey was 45, games— so far this season. . to the body. . a right to the jaw, Bierman, Layden Lead All-Star Coaches Poll! Chicago, July 31—(4)—Bernie Bier- a and Elmer Layden; gers from all over the world. + into a virtual tie ip Friday in the poll ” a staff of coaches to direct vid stars in £ Field the 1 against the Detroit ier counting thre third one. collegiate en stars who he 1925 to an Shaughnessy, Chicago, 38,680; Chio State, 24,289. Jamestown Continues | Spurt Toward Lead St. Paul, July 31—(4)—Jamestown | Bismarck continued its spurt toward overtaking |inson, Bi in the Northern Winnipe: league leader Friday as the abating. Jamestown defeated the Winnipeg sday for the second round non-title bout at Forbes field | straight time, 6-4. The Jimmies t’ Maroons Thu advanced into a second place tie with Valley City, Grand Forks, and other Fargo-Moorhead which dropped yes- cities. terday’s encounter to Crookston, 7-3. | In other games Eau Claire whipped begin at 9:30 a. m. Sunday to be fol- Wausau Superior, 16-4, and umphed over Duluth, 13-6, Minneapolis and! "Cc St. sports bes don’t know what to do with, assign- | ments at the ex- treme corners of the continent ... They are giving . That was \quite a party the Baseball Writers; id for Casey Stengel last night. Lou Gehrig isn’t the only iron man .. Third Sacker Red played in 271 consecutive in 1934, 149 in 1935 and 97 .. Jack Sharkey {says he'll stop Joe Louis with a left .. Max Schmeling used Layden led in points, 46,801, with es 4 the Minnesota mentor having 45,620.|in 1932. The women of Nippon and are naming three coaches in|the Dutch girls will bid strongly for of preference, with first choice|the women’s aquatic honors, while points, second two and The four coaches with the Pet. ‘greatest point totals will handle the The contest ends Lynn Northwestern, 32,519; Fran-| embattled |cf Mandan, will be among the head- heavyweight champion John Henry pennant fight showed no signs of Full Day’s Mass Demonstration to Be Climaxed by Oath of Athletes Berlin, July 31.—(#)—Under the show, the games of the eleventh by the best mass demonstration Nazi {Germahy can produce for the occa-! n. ‘lcs? to a half million persons in- cluding a capacity gathering of 100,- {000 at the main stadium and 325-acre reich sportsfield, probably will see} land hear the ceremonies leading to \the formal opening by Adolf Hitler at 4p. m. (10 a. m. eastern standard time). As the climax of a full day’s pro- 1,200 Scribes Present Feted on the event of the games, the world heard Dr. Paul Joseph | Goebbels, minister of propaganda, de- liver a remarkably frank speech de- nying any propaganda motives were connected with the games, yet decry- | jing the critical stories about the “New Germany” spread outside by “emi- grants.” This “sales talk” followed an elo- games to the spartan simplicity of their origin, minus so much flag wav- ing. “We wouldn’t attempt to compete with Germany in flags and dinners,” said Erik Frenchkell, mayor of Hels- ingfors, in presenting the case of his 1940 games. The decision was up to the I. 0. C. Friday. U. S. to Defend Title The athletes will be welcomed to the center of the stage Sunday, with America opening its defense of the track and field championship and honors in 55 events against challen- The United States will defend Olympic team titles in eight branches: Men's and women’s track and field, women’s swimming, rowing, ; boxing, h-as-catch-can wrestling, equestrian sports and yachting. Japan is formidably equipped to defend the men’s swimming title won the Americans will be handicapped by the ouster of Eleanor Holm Jarrett and an epidemic of minor ills. Mandan Tourney Draws Big Field ne | State’s Outstanding Shotmak- ers Expected to Compete in Event Sunday : Mandan, N. D., July 31—(4)—Some of the finest golfers in the state will jcompete here Sunday in the annual tational tournament on Mandan’'s unicipal course. Neil Crcorquist, Paul Cook, Tom Lawless and Jimmy Slattery all of Bill Kostelecky, Jr., Digk- Sundahl, Jamestown and G. A. Steinbrueck and Ernest Percy liners in the tourney expected to set a fast pace. According to expectations, more than 100 golfers will compete from Bismarck, Jamestown, Fargo, Minot, Qualifying rounds of nine holes will tri- lowed by first round matches in flights of eight. i | TO TWIRL THE BATON AS DEFTLY AS WHEN L WAS MA3OR-DOMO, TOTHE KINGS GUARDS, AT prize compared to the trouble in landing without injuring any of the 100,000 spectators. How he finally gained eltitude to glide to a safe though hot landing, with a cloud of smoke en- veloping him, provided exciting ex- planaton for his interested auditors. — | Fights Last Night Pittebargh—John Henry Lewis, re (By the Associated Press) POMP, POMP-~I'M BREAKING MY HAND IN, TO LEAD THE SECOND WARD MARCHING AND CHOWDER CLUB,ON THEIR ANNUAL PICNIC AT DUFFY'S GROVE, EGAD! wWiTH A LITTLE PRACTICE, I WILL BE ABLE Our Boarding House With Major Hoople I SUPPOSE, ON REVIEW, YOU MARCHED PAST THE KING ON YOUR HANDS, USING YOUR A HE CAN SPIN \T ALMOST AS FAST AS HE CAN Twist city against the bid of Tokyo for the; RAMPAGING INDIANS CLIP LEADING YANKS EDGE 10 72 GAMES) Cubs Margin Shaved to Single Game as Giants Triumph Behind Hubbell (By the Associated Press) In a year that has the pitching boys yelling for help, baseball's “for- gotten man,” Vernon. (no-hit) Ken- ‘nedy, isn’t finding any trouble keep- ing the places. . While such mound masters as Dizzy Dean, Carl Hubbell and Schoolboy Rowe have been taking the lion’s share of the headline glory with their heavy swingers in their THURSDAY’S STARS Jim Winford, Cardinals — Held Brooklyn to four hits. Charley Gehringer, Tigers — His two-run homer enabled Tigers to come from behind for win over Yanks. Vernon Kennedy, White Sox— Limited Athletics to nine hits for tenth straight win. Hal Trosky, Indians — Hit two homers in 11-8 victory over Sen- ators. Carl Hubbell, Giants — Stopped Cubs with seven hits. Mace Brown, Pirates — Let Bees down with two hits in seven-in- ning relief trick. Wild Bill Hallahan, Reds, and Jimmy Wilson, Phillies — Former pitched eight-hit shutout in win- ning doubleheader opener; Wil- son’s double and two singles led way to nightcap victory. Al Thomas, Browns — Held Red Sox to eight hits for 4-3 win. hurling antics, the ex-Oklahoma City ace has been steadily winning ball games, until, with Thursday's 7-4 tri- umph over the Athletics, he had a string of ten straight. His victory string has played a second division choice into a very prominent first division outfit. They held onto fourth place Thursday de- spite the Tigers’ bid with a 5-4, ten- inning decision over the league-lead- large part in boosting the White Sox: from a pre-season, no-better-than- | ond game in four days against Mur-|' derers’ Row, tightened up after a shaky start, and lasted the whole day. Cleveland’s red hot Indians, with Hal Trosky smashing two of five homers, won their fifth straight bat- tle, 11-8, from the Washington Sen- ators, to clip the Yankees’ pace-set- ting edge to 7% games. The Chicago Cubs’ National league lead was shaved to a single game when the fast-moving Giants made it two straight over the champions, winning, 3-1, behind Hubbell’s seven- hit pitching. The second-place Cardinals wal- loped the Dodgers, 7-0, with Rookie Jim Winford allowing but four hits. The St. Louis Browns pulled a game and a half out of the American league over the Red Sox, 4-3, The Pittsburgh Pirates outlasted the Boston Bees for 11 innings and pulled out a 5-3 victory, while the Phillies managed a split in a double- header with the Reds, winning the cellar with their second straight win) Ri Major League i Leaders (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Medwick, Cardinals, .361; Demaree, Cubs, .355; Runs—J. Martin, Cardinals, 88; Suhr, ing Pirates, 77. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 141; Jen- sen, Pirates, 135. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 21; Camilli, Phillies, 19. Pitching—Gumbert, Giants, 9-2; Lu- cas, Pirates, 8-2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Gehrig, Yankees, 381; Rad- cliff, White Sox, 378. juns—Gehrig, Yankees, 122; ringer, Tigers, 98. Hits—Averill, Indians, 147; Trosky, Indians, 143, Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 32; Foxx, = Sox, and Trosky, In- ins, 29. Geh- nightcap 5-3 after Bill Hallahan shut them out 5-0 in the opener, tching—Hadley, Yankees, 8-1; Ken- nedy, White Sox, ‘14-4, | | { ing Yankees. - VITAMIN D*. Sa Aaa HING = to health. SCHLITZ - DISTRIBUTED BY the beer with Sunshine \MINe> BAT cracks... a ball sings . . . and high in the air.a shortstop leaps to make the catch. It took extra energy to make that play ... the kind of reserve energy that is brought to you in sparkling, invigorating SCHLITZ—the beer with SUNSHINE This precious element of buoyancy and invigoration adds more Jasting benefits— gives new meaning to summer refreshment! Modern living; clothing; hours spent indoors or in the shade—rob us of sunshine benefits even in mid-sum- mer. SCHLITZ in brown bottles or cans gives you the SUNSHINE VITAMIN D so important to health and ‘ vigor —plus the tangy, old-time SCHLITZ flavor and bouquet safeguarded by PRECISE ENZYME CONTROL— and at no increase in price. Enjoy SCHLITZ every day—a cooling, refreshing toast % Each 12-ounce bottle or can of SCHLITZ contains 100U S P X - Units of Sunshine Vitamin D. SCHLITZ brewer's yeast contains the pro-chiamie Debi 1 ead direct the alr rat ae ef the sun.to form Vitamin D. (Protected by U.S. Letters Patent.) Jos. ScHLITZ BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wise. WANTED To Buy Scrap Iron and Bones. Come and See Us. “Northern” Hide & Fur Co. Brick Bldg., 9th and Front, Bismarck, N. Dak. Missouri Slope: Dist. Co Dosen Wins, Wooledge Loses in Valley Meet Fargo, N. D., July 31—(#)—The Red So ai tele tana eect tered the tion Friday after players frock. Crconstan, Detroit Lakes and Fargo took open- matches. Charles (Bud) Dosen of Fargo, seeded No. 3, defeated Clarence Ber- gum of Crookston. Gene Panzer of Crookston upset Bill Stewart of Far- g0, 6-4, 6-4, and Bill Reed of Detroit Lakes advanced over Hal Wooledge of Fargo, 0-6, 6-3, 6-4. ZUPPKE’S WIFE DIES Muskegon, Mich. July 31.—(%)— Mrs. Robert Zuppke, 63, wife of the University of Illinois football coach, died in a hospital here early Friday after a prolonged illness, The Personal Touch! MICKEY COCHRANE, back with his Tigers after a complete rest, is making drastic changes in the lineup. Mickey says his team is playing uninspired ball—so he’s ene new inspiration him- se] WANT new inspiration on what should be worn? Visit our smart, modern store for men... Here you'll find an com- plete, varied selection of men’s suits and furnishings ... a group you won’t hesitate to select from. Why wait? NOW is the time! CLOTHIERS *FURNISHERS BISMARCK, N.D 815 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. - PHONE 128 ea y ~9h

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