The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 28, 1936, Page 10

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antral SAREE ONLY UNDEFEATED TEAM AT WICHITA Slugging North Dakotans Pound 4 Southern Hurl- ers for 15 Hits SMITH WINS 4TH GAME Spectacular Fielding Helps Churchill's Crew in March Toward Title Wichita, Aug. 28. (Special) —Bis- marck went marching through Geor- gia last night. The slugging national champions shelled a battery of four Buford pitchers for 15 hits in a spectacular 8-5 victory that knocked the south- erners, till last night the only unde- feated team left in the tournament, fiom the preferred list. The North Dakota squad will take up their march toward a second title tonight at 8 o'clock, against the - Duncan, Okla., team, according to Me earliest reports. Every man that plays ball against the southerners deserved credit for the contest. Smith Wins Fourth Hilton Smith entered the fray in the third inning when Ted Radcliff who started on the mound for Bis- marck, had been touched for three hits and an equal number of runs. The dusky star then chalked up his fourth national tournament victory in as many starts by holding the Bu- ford batters to four hits and two runs in six and one-third innings. Although the box score shows Bis- marck guilty of four misplays, the team gave Smith. real support. Mass- | long and a par 4, calls for an accurate ! mann, at second, made three spectac- ular stops for putouts, two of which he turned into double plays with! Slefka covering second. Tate Makes Great Catches In center field, Tate made great running catches of two drives which robbed southern batsmen of hits. Lyle, playing left field, turned what would have been scored a hit into the last putout of the game when he ran hard after Baer's smash and caught it in @ running dive that sent him sprawling on‘the ground. Desiderato, apparently indifferent to who was in the mound for the Georgia champions, got a single off each of three pitchers and a double off the fourth in four times at bat to chalk up a perfect day at the plate. Close behind him were Troupe and Lyle. Troupe poled out two doubles and a single in four tries, and Lyle connected for two singles and a hard triple in the same number of at- Leary Playing Though Hurt Net let a groin injury keep him from slamming out a pair of two-baggers ing a bang-up game at first. Shipley, Buford second accounted for two of the southerners’ } and two of their runs, Buford scored in the first, third,| end eight innings. Bismarck’s win-! gretfully declined the city’s invitation | ning total was piled up in the first.) to hold over the team, at New York's seventh | expense, until the Manhattan arrives} second, third, fourth, and frames. The national champions’ biggest | Thursday. handicap during the rest of the tour: | nament is their weakened pitching staff. Two of tion this last week. Mi from water on the knee. and Trent has been made sick by the Wichita water. Smith Fuilfills Promise This leaves of the ace moundsmen only Hilton Smith, who has already pitched twice this week, and has four of Bismrack’s six victories to his credit. Smith has already fulfilled a Promise he made before he left Bis-; marck, that he would win four games at Wichita. Also on the sick list is Al Leary, , who is suffering from a groin injury. The dependable first baseman, who has been playing brillant baseball in the national tournament, went the entire nine innings against Buford last night, however. Despite injuries Churchill is confident of victory. In @ telegram to Bismarck, dispatched immediately after the game, he said: “We are going in tomorrow night to win out. Call my boy. Tell him wi will bring home the bacon for him.” HUGE CROWD FOLLOWS GAME IN BISMARCK A crowd that overflowed onto the sidewalk and into the Grand Pacific hotel next door heard a play-by-play account of the game in the State Recreation parlors last night. As fast as the story of Bismarck’s vic- tory came in over a special leased wire from Wichita, it was read to the assembled fans by D. E. Shipley, vet- | eran Bismarck announcer and um- pire. Vern Dresbach, manager of the State Recreation, will again bring Bismarck fans a play-by-play ac- count of the game tonight, and has invited every local rooter to be pres- The box score The box score: Bismarck AB R H PO A E Massmann, 2b. 5 1 1 3 3 1 Desiderato, 3b 4 2 $ 1 2 0 EY AER Ce aa BO 0.06 07.0) Pat ke ENT eee eee Uae Beth Oe 0s le | agg oe De Oe Os Bs) 6 Lyle, if *.. Sst ae ale les ga Slefka, ss «aha nei es Tap Fae] Totals .... 36 8 15 27 13 4 Buford AB RH PO A E 7 oO 6 2 2 0 pice 8h ae Bee er, c Taig WR eae eae Ei Baxter, 1! (tiles be Baas (ee a Willette, ib... 4 0 1 9 3 0 u Ro Meee a eS ceey ® hey rt WARS Tce Grex | 2 Bed Sake eg as ele 4 ie eee Sees Gee 9:8 Re Re i 9 0 1 0 0 10 0 0 o 1 5 7 4% 1303 ES 121 100 two base hits—Shipley, Desiderato, os Lia joy, Hal se Machi’ Sind 223 Innings, | His weight stays behind the ball as it} tempts. { |En Route to New York, Aug. 28.—(/P)| duced a possibility Al Leary, who has been hitting the! —The main squad of 239 Semenioan| er raiato tales ball all over the lot at Wichita, did! olympic athletes, officials and coach- baseman. | tion, and also | pass i r i y pass up the opening for a big family eS cet : made two of their three errors. |scrap sometime during the winter. | Sollese) cead Dalla, willinoi ne a the hurlers Churchill was: committee at Quarantine, where the counting heavily on, Ted Trent and! ship is due at 6 p. m. (EST) tonight. Barney Morris, have been out of ac-| is suffering | of soveral critics have pointed defi- to his team, | 2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUN FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1936 Bismarck Is Brilliant in 8-5 Victory Over Buford, Georgia. : CHANPSKNOCK OFF [Philly Victory Puts Chicago in Second-Place Tie With Cardinals (Unknown Likel | > ry | To Win Handicap | 'None of Favorites Who Line Up The Standings TED LUTHER'S ACCURACY WITH! (NomTHERN TEAGUE. 14-OUNCE DRIVER LEADS |_—«*fr': Trapshoot Classic Has 4 4 TO GOLF TITLES | Ever Come Through | Fat cisire ah Winn; eeeee 8 50 By ART KRENZ | a Fargorieothea 5 i (NEA Service Golf Writer) | Vandalia, O., Aug. 28.—(—Amer- | Superi ‘hit Ted Luther's favorite club is a 14-/ ica's ace trapshooters offered Friday.| 03") ae jounce driver that is 44 inches long. | their greatest show—the 100 target| Duluth eat “It aided me in winning the Ohio| Grand American Handicap—on Van-| . kk Bs Open and a shot I made with it was’ dalia’s quarter-mile firing line, but| ee ee aT worth $1,000, for it enabled me to tie| the betting was odds-on that some! New York is j Felix Serafin in the 1935 Hershey} unknown would play the leading role.| St. Louis + 72 50 Open and defeat him in the playoff,” Never in the histery of the big/ Chicago a at | | wind-up event of the Grand Ameri-! Boston Lat 64 | | can week has a favorite won. [ese es Ly MH oh a tw (Brooklyn... H |; | |The last two champions, L. | philadelphia * 410079 faa] j Dana of Derrick City, Pa. and J. B. Royall cf Tallahassee, Fla., made the | grade on their first trips to the! - | “grand.” | aevelanar ces Dana, 1934 champion, is on hand j Detroit for another try, but Royall, the Pore | ne, se ida railway conductor who won @ yea) foston 6. ‘ago in a shoot-off with Sam Vance of St. Louis .... +! Tillsonburg, Canada, was prevented! Philadelphia (eae returning by the illness of his| AMERICAN Association Ernest L. Hawkins of Fort Wayne,; a, cteeeeeee 86 53 Ind., a club room operator and bridge! S°"535,C1F +: | expert, copped the preliminary with] Indianapolis . | 97 of 100 from the 2l-yard mark, | Minneapolis | Joe Hiestand of Hillsboro, ©., who| Columbus - J has won four titles this week, was re-| Toledo .. ! garded as a threat to annex the Grand, but was handicapped by fir-| ing from the 25-yard line, while many | QNEA ommemne. he the other shooters were as oe) as 16 yards. says Luti tail professional of the Hiestand Mahoning Country Club of Girard,} doubles title Ohio. | beating the field by three targets as | “The $1,000 shot came on the; he turned in a score of 96 out of 100 leighth hole of the final round of the | to tie the record se tin 1917 by C. B.| Hershey Open. This hole, 315 yards| Platt of Bridgeton, N. J. AMERICA, “SWING CLUBHEAD THROUGH TWABD THE OBUECTIVE? SAYS TED LUTHER. Sports Round-Up| By EDDIE BRIETZ added the national to his list Thursday, New York, Aug. 28.—(#)—There isn’t a harder loser in baseball than Col. Jake Ruppert, owner of the Yan- kees . . . The other day. young Horace Stoneham of the Giants went to the stadium to discuss world series arrangements « He found Col. ¥ | Ruppert worrying his head off about Intact Tuesday |= 19 to 1 lend che Yanks hd plled up tee shot to hit 50 yards of fairway in! re front of the green, I not only hit this! All-Stars Will Be small target but put the ball close} enough to the green that my second | called for a short chip. I scored a| birdie 3 and finished with a 7 | Off the tee, Luther plays the ball! from a position well off the left foot. I . « . The Cunnel leaned over to | Horace and said: “You know, I'd feel a lot more comfortable if the boys struck, and the clubhead keeps go-‘ . ing on through toward the objective.{ 0 Geal Post Location, ' Dead Ball Rule Olympic Squad to | Decline Invitation Arriving Athletes Do Not Accept New York’s Offer to Stay Over {more runs.” . . . Incidentally, the visit gave Horace a good load of the Yankee power. Max Butcher, the Dodger pitcher, hails from Man, W. Va. . . . Tony Canzoneri may get a crack at Barney against the Detrolt Lions at Soldier | ROSS tnls fall... Mike Jacobs. who Field Tuesday night in the third an-| months, hasn’t given up the idea. .. nual all star football battle, will bei me one ‘man Jesse Owens listens to np Ri a lio ; (and no questions asked) is Bill Ro- When the team was named in @ 0 | incon, the Negro tap dancer . . « tion-wide vote, it was stipulated that There may be another Purvis doing the first eleven should start against ithe Lions. However, injuries to Bill | Ove for dest old Puedus Rett —_———_————- ‘Shakespeare of Notre Dame and | ei" isn ‘sophomore halfback pros- Aboard 8. S. President Roosevelt.i Keith Topping, Stanford ae pe pect named Charles . . . He is no front would have to be altered. a oe ee ee Shakespeare has recovered, and Top: aeacsipt recent years. eee eis , rai! i. es has decided to pass up New York's ping, in the hospital for treatment of | (he Yanks nor the Glants are accept invitation to stay over a week after) an infected cut on his right leg, was a tha dix. years Obs McCarthy iw its arrival tonight for a civic recep-| to be released, ready for duty, Friday. 3 8 4 hte imanaged the Yanks they've never The game will be played with the | finished lower than second place .. . goal posts on the goal line, and the Glad to see some of the boys giving ; Beau Bell of the Browns a little pub- licity . . . He's one of the season's prime youngsters, but had two strikes on him, so far as recognition is con- cerned, by being with a loser . . . If you feel that Lou Ambers has a chance to lift Tony Canzoneri’s light- weight crown next Thursday night, | you can get all sorts of fancy prices in any of the Broadway spots ... - Watch the Chicago Cardinals in the national professional football league jnext fall . . . They'll be the young- est team in the loop and mebbe the best. Chicago, Aug. 28—(#)—The eleven men named by the fans to start . But there's no indication they will lef The Olympic committee Friday re- | o1 —two congessions made by the all star coaching staff. Coach Bernie | Bierman cf Minnesota, head of the college staff, asked that college rules be observed, but Potsy Clark of the Lions insisted that his team be given the same concessions regarding the goal posts and the dead ball rule as ere accorded the Chicago Bears, ho met the all stars of 1934 and 1935. Win Puts Jimmies 14-Game From Lead St. Paul, Aug. 28.—()—A two-hit with another batch of athletes next} The committee expressed willing- ness to meet the mayor's reception Meantime the outspoken comments {nitely to an internal battle in the | Olympic organization. It’s almost | certain the Eleanor Holm Jarrett case sand the dropping of two Jewish isprinters, Sam Stoller and Marty | Glickman, from the 400 meter relay i team, will be thrashed out among the ‘Who was the National League man- ager who socked Pepper Martin for pitching performance by Ralph Waldo] blowing sneeze powder in the visiting which resulted in his third consecutive| club's dressing room at St. Louis? shutout victory, Friday had enabled|. . . Bill Terry, who swears he'll not | officials. Jamestown to climb within a half| play a game in 1937, is expected to 1 e : game of first place in the tight Nor-| open negotiations soon for Ripper || Fights Last Night | | thern eague baseball duel. Collins of the Cards . . . with le - erneas Jamestown's sluggers who have been| Johnny Mize doing so well, the Cards By the Asscciated Press) | yt staging a spirited rally in late weeks | _New Yerk—Baby Casanova, 129, | to climb steadily up the loop stand- —_—_—_——_ | Mexico, stopped Freddie Foran, | ings, battered out 16 hits behind) INFIELDER REJOINS SAINTS 12%, New York, (1), Waldo for a 12-0 defeat of Wausau,! St. Paul, Aug. 28.—(?)—Joe Rezotko, as the leading Eau Claire team was/ rookie utility infielder with St. Paul held to a 3-3 tie game by Fargo-Moor- | of the American Association last year, | head in a contest called at the end/ will rejoin the Saints here Saturday. n-| of nine innings because of darkness. | He has been with Portsmouth of the innings, Winnipeg won its third straight| Middle Atlantic league. game from Superior 8-1 to strengthen In repairing the famous Verdun | 8 1-3 innings, | its hold on third place. Rain caused fortifications, workmen constantly come across live shells. John-| Postponement of the Duluth-Crooks- Our Boarding House With Major Hoople | ton game. are willing to let Collins go. | smith 4 4 Bassett 5 In| 3 inning, Nix | Bass 1 rs teynolds, Buseh, Umpires: jsonand Pal ee i i I | cmon { vost YOUR ANCHOR, ~ YOUVE BEEN Ez i BERTHED NTHAT &B DRY-DOCK S'LONG YOUR SEAMS ARE WE'RE SHAKING THE WIDE OPEN SPACES, WHERE A MEAL 1S A MEAL AND NOT “CHUCK” ——~YOU'VE GOT HALF AN HOUR TO STUFF YOUR ALLIGATOR We JUST WHEN #7 1 AM BROKEN OPENING ~~ WIDE WITH THE INDIAN TO SADDLE, WERE SAILING } RELICS THAT YOU DUG AND AM ABOUT | IN & PRAIRIE - UP DOWN AT THE ToTRY My SCHOONER, SKILL UPON THE FOR HOOPLE HaRFOR / pug Sat cs! FOURTH TIME, 1-0 9 “28 iCubs, With 5 Straight Wins, Are | ATT Hes still a case of “ nailed the American League pennant 336{and the Chicago champs are digging S| League bunting. Bierman Concedes Pros Point} would go out and get two or three lof the season, it’s still anybody's ball Millers Annexing Home Run Record Minneapolis on Verge of Ob- serving Old Custom With 189 Already By SARAN BEINLE ‘Mr. ‘and Mrs. Conrad Heib and ‘family were visitors at the Fred Ben- der, Sr., home Sunday. Norman Hall called at the Heinle BOSTON NOSES OUT ST, LOUIS INVALDS home . Mr. and Mrs, A. H. Heinle and sons, Richard and Junior, were visit- Chicago, Aug. 26.—(#)—Obeerving an old custom, the Minneapolis Mil- lers are on the verge of winning the home run championship of the Am- erican. Association for the 17th time— and with a new record. Jack Winsett of the Columbus Red Birds, is the leading contender for the individual homer title with his total of 48 to date, but the Millers as ® group, had 189, only two shy of their league record set last year. Mil- waukee was a remote second with 144, while Columbus had 128. Earl Browne Thursday had slug- ged out 32 of Minneapolis’ home runs, with Joe bea Rd es ; Association record of , oo second with 29. Acting the invalid is Louisville defeated the Toledo Mud} Tesort of one whose Hens in both ends of a night double- . in valid. ously. ; header, 9 to 6 and 4 to 2. { Sterling a | Picked to Overhaul Weak- ening Giants (By the Associated Press) The big league baseball campaign heads into its last month Friday, and y your money and take your choice” on the chances of @ subway series in New York or & Yankees-Cubs classic for the big prize. While the Yankees have just about dr., visited at the John Neuharth, 8, home Sunday evening. nes Mr. and Mrs. te their flagpole, the galloping Giants in for a finish fight for the National THURSDAY'S STARS Johnny Broaca, Yankees—Held Browns to three hits. Roy Henshaw, Cubs—Called in from bull-pen, he shut Phillies out with six hits. Randall Gumpert, No other games were played. St. Paul and Minneapolis were rained out and other teams were not scheduled. Kreg Louisville Takes Two cular muscles, filled eee lemme rag ne Tuts in first |) toledo—Louisville beat Toledo By SHIRLEY STEWART with fluld, which is absorbed into Water, Pies twice in a night doubleheader, 9-6 the system as needed. Lloyd Waner, Pirates—His ninth- inning single drove in two runs in 6-3 win over Dodgers. Danny MacFayden, Bees, and Roy Parmelee, Cardinals—Former pitched four-hit victory; Parmelee hurled hitless ball for seven in- nings, allowed but three hits in ten frames, and lost. Hal Trosky, Indians—His ninth inning homer brought Indians from behind against Senators. Tommy Bridges, Tigers—Stopped Red Sox with four hits. Amelda McCluskey spent Tuesday RH E!night with her nts, Mr. an if i 310 108 090-9 18 fl waancian. wom 040 000 020—6 10 1 5 : Miss Beryle Sherman is here on an jompson; Cohen, Cat-| extended visit. E Mrs. Elder Elness and Frankie 1 1a Elcampbell left Monday morning for + 000 021 1-4 10 2 ngrs, ‘Eines’ home at Monango, N. D. 100 000 1-2 60) ages, Lee and sons George, (Seven innings by agreement) Keith and Stanley, left Sunday for Sete and Ringhofer; Hare and/visit in Colorado and Idaho. ce ae Cox Loses to Roby a few days with At Detroit Lakes |xcoster at wing. Light from the Great Nebula of Andromeda must travel 803,000 years to reach the earth’s telescopes. The light which is now reaching us from the nebula originated a long time be- fore history was recorded on earth. Although Bill Terry’s crew is three games in the lead at the moment and short-odd shot to come through as a climax to the greatest winning rush Miss Caroline Beyer is visiting for Mr. and Mrs, Al/ Mr. and Mrs. James Riley spent the | week-end in Grand Forks and vicin- ; Virgil Roby, Minneapolis, the defend- | ity. | ing champion, advanced to the quar-| Norman Hanson is spending a few; ter-finals of the Pine to Palm golf|days on the farm of his grandparents, | tournament as other favorites fell by|Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hall. | the wayside in first round matches.|_ Mrs. Roy Hanson and daughter Do- , Clashing in the quarter-finals Fri-|lores spent Wednesday at the Chavin | day are Roby vs. Bill Kostelecky,|Belile home. Dickinson, N. D.; Vern Gallaher,|, Mrs. Vernice Sherman is moving Fargo, vs. Gordon Gunderson, Moor- into the house formerly occupied by head; Don Carman, Pasadena, Calif.,| Mr. and Mrs. Oast Prince and family. vs, Frank Rhame, Minneapolis and C. 8. Bick, Jr., Jamestown, N. D., vs. Bob Gammon, 8t. Paul. Detroit Lakes, Minn., Aug. 28.—(®)— game, particularly because, (1) the Giants have been getting the breaks, and those things can’t last forever, and (2) the Cub pitching is back in form and they're battling on their home lot. - (Cubs in Form Again ‘That the hurling of the Cub elbow- ers is tops again has been demon- strated since their return home. ‘They've won five straight, winding up with a 1-0 decision over the Phillies yesterday as wee Roy Henshaw, re- called from the bull-pen exile, pitched flavor into their beer ..z They’ve had three gener- a six-hitter, his first victory since Mera end 3: Gallaher beat Gla 'bee: ations of continuous family pay: yon, Owatonna, 3 and 2; Gunderson brewing experience! The win boosted the Chicago crew into a tie for second place with the crippled Cardinals who bowed to the Bees for the fourth straight time, 1-0. Roy Parmelee pitched no-hit ball for seven innings, and allowed but three hits altogether, only to lose when Joe Coscarat’s triple broke up the duel between himself and Danny MacFay- Gen in the tenth inning. Giants Rained Out Even the weather man seemed to have signed up on the Giants’ side, raining out the last game of the Cin- cinnati series to give them a day off when the whole outfit showed signs ot weakening under the boiling west- ern heat, The Yanks maintained their 12%- game edge in the American League by knocking off the Browns, 7-1, behind Jchnny Broaca’s three-hit pitching, while the second place Cleveland In- dians had to go ten innings to over- come the Senators, 10-9. Connie Mack, an expert on pulling them out of the hat, uncovered a “boy wonder” possibility in 18-year-old Randal? Gumpert, recent high-school graduate from upstate Pennsylvania, Who mowed down the White Sox with two hits to give the Athletics a 5-2 win in his first big league start. Tommy Bridges chalked up his 18th hurling victory, pitching a four-hit, saree for the Tigers over the Red \ Wro Van Mungo ran into his customary ia s. nae “HATTERS: bi Hedin atten tone re we lost CLOTHIERS *FURNISHERS to the Pirates, 6-3. Cubs, 16-5 snaneumnetenmnnen STUDENTS Here’s a Buy New Revised Edition Webster’s Practical DICTIONARY A Reg. $1.00 upset Ernotte Hiller, Crookston, 3 and 2; Carmen nosed out John Buck, Detroit Lakes, 1 up; Rhame downed Ray Hockaday, Hutchinson, Kas.. 4, and 3; Buck eliminated Wally Taft, Minneapolis, 1 up in 19 and Gammon scored a 81 -win over Al Rindy, Grand Forks, North Dakote champion, 2 up. Semi-finals and finals will be play- ed Saturday. Major League THE CLEVELAND Indians are one of the fortunate teams with & brilliant rookie to depend on. The name: Bob Feller .. . start- ing his first game for Cleveland, fanned 15 batters—a rare accom- plishment for ANY pitcher! ; Geh- 3; Geh- ringer, Tigers, 122. Hits—Averill, Indians, 190; Gehringer, Tigers, 185, Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 40; Yankees, 11-3; Trosky, Indians, 36. Pitching — Hadley, Kennedy, White Sox, 18-6, NATIONAL LEAGUE Nash-Finch Company | iach Com q Announcement The American Billiard and Bowling Parlors located at 118 Sth St. and ROSEN - NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh Wins Pittsburgh—Pittsburgh defe Brooklyn 6-; Brooklyn 001 010 13x—6 10 1 Mungo and Phelps, Berres; Weaver Blanton and Todd. Chicago Wins, 1-0 Chicago—Chicago nosed out Phil- adelphia 1-0. RHE Philadelphia ... 000 000 000-0 6 0 Chicago .. ++ 000 010 OOx—1 10 1 Johnson, Kowalik and Atwood; Henshaw and Hartnett. Boston Noses Out St. Louis &t. Louis—Coscarart’s triple, sending Cuccinello home, gave Boston a 1-0 win over St. Lo RHE 000 000 000 1-1 3 0 000 000 000 0-0 4 2 MacFayden and Lopez; Parmelee and Davis, Ogrodowski. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Is Victor New York—Holding St. Louis to three hits, New York won, 7-1. 8t. Louis 000 000 010-1 3 1 New York ..... 122 002 00x—7 14 0 tt, Kimberlin and Giuliani, Broaca and Dickey. ‘i Gumpert Downs Chicage Philadelphia—Gumpert pitched two-hit ball as Philadelphia Sei 000 000 002-2 2 1 201 100 Olx—5 10 1 John Engen returned with Mr. and Mrs. Romeo Bailey from Bismarck ‘Tuesday to spend a few days visiting. Business callers in Bismarck Satur- Christ and Edward An ra i ik : FER - i BF ; Fy Fell: ie il BE al i Z ha é EE Bene RHE Cleveland ... 020 010 182 1-10 12 lem Whitehill, Newsom, Washington . 002 022 120 0— 9 15 1) Cohen and Bolton.

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