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New York Pro Giants Flatten College All-Stars, 12 to 2 PROSSCORETWCE Linton Will Bring Light, Veteran Squad to Bismarck Friday Night THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1936 rT ON PASS PLAYS AS 'N.D. NATIONAL GUARD RIFLE COLLEGANSFUMBLE TEAM IS ITH AT “WILL AVERAGE 140 "Wins Fourth ‘Title Flashy Danowski to Burnett! Combination Spells Defeat | for Bierman’s Boys 1 PLAY IN GIANT TERRITORY Collegians Get Within Striking | Distance 7 Times, But | Can't Score | New York, Sepi. 9.—\)—Dale Bur- | nett, former pride of the Kansas prairies, and big Ed Danowski. who used to carry the mail for Fordham, | have taken care of the college-profes- | sional football argument for 1936. With their New York Giant mates | opening the door for them, the two; flashy backfield hands applied the! clincher to the pro side of the argu-j AT CAME PERRY POUNDS PER MAN, Four from State Earn Indi | HAVE 7 LETTERMEN | dual Honors in Firing at National Matches ! = ‘Hanna Drills Demons on De- ' North Dakota's national guard! A . rifle team placed eleventh in the| fense in Preparation for Roumanian team matches at the na- iy tional matches in Camp Perry. Ohio, Season's Opener |it was announced Wednesday by Ad- jjutant General Frayne Baker. | The guardsmen stood fourth among | national guard teams entered in this ; match and were only one point under |the score earned by the marine corps | team, he said. ; Four marksmen from this state \have earned awards in various indi- | vidual matches held through Sept. 5, ‘ Baker stated. | ‘These included R. K, Sandager of | Lisbon in the R.O.T.C. division who Linton high school will bring 4 |light but experienced team to Bis- | marck Friday night for the game with the Demons under Hughes field flood- lights, the season’s opener for both squads, Seven lettermen are on the squad of 17 which Coach J. D. Moriarty | will take with him, but the starting {11 will average no more than 140 pounds per man. Veterans are Dobler. quarterback; Vetter and Bosch, tackles; Captain {toss Labor Day to Washburn by the ment before 30,555 fans at the Polo Grounds last night by defeating the} college all-stars 12 to 2, the largest margin of triumph since the college- | pro series started two years ago. | As their all-star rivals fumbled} away precious chances and out- smarted themselves with costly man-| euvers, Danowski twice threw uner-| ring passes to Burnett for the win-| ning touchdowns. Passes for Touchdown In the second period. he crossed up the all-stars by dropping back to the; 10-yard stripe in enemy territory and | throwing a bullet-like peg to Burnett | for the first touchdown of the game. Midway in the fourth period, he t { ed another perfect pass to his star) receiver that was good for 32 yards and the clinching touchdown. In addition, Burnett, product of Emporia State Teachi college. ' broke up several piays while Danow- | ski directed the Giants in superb, fashion and booted long, accurate) kicks that upset the strategy of the) stars. | The all-stars, favored because of | Baldwin Loses Bismarck Capitol Club Wins 6-5 | ; won a bronze medal in the coast guard trophy match, scoring 95 out {of a possible 100 points with rapid} | firing of 10 shots kneeling or sitting; jat 200 yards and 10 shots prone from a standing position at 300 yards. 1 | Another bronze medal went to J, W. Aitken of Overly in the civilian group. | | Firing in the navy trophy match, 2 | Shots at 200 yards, slow fire, standing; Joe Hicstand (above) of Hillsboro, | for a score of 89 out of 100, In the ©, won his fourth championsiip | same group Arnold Peterson of Lealj of the 1936 Grand American trap. | won a bronze medal for Leech cup! Eneo sat vandal /aiG 58 he cracked | match firing. scoring 99 of 105 with} aicdee Sear i aE | seven shots at 800, 900 and 1.000 yards, | record CEE CEE ee) ioe At Sle i 4 ses Prot | Corporal Ellis E. Thompson of Fair- years, (Aszociated Press Proto) _/ ried national guardsman. also earned | a bronze medal. Shooting in the; | members’ trophy match, 10 shots at} | 600 yards, prone, he scored 47 of 50) | points. i 2 Over Week-end | Seis ae dUp | New York, Sept. 9.—(#)—Here's a! ich (A Sunday; Underwood Victors ; their seven-all tie against the Detroit) Labor Day little football dope for the fans who| Lions, 1935 national league cham-| a ee just can’t wait: There will be 26 pions, at Chicago last week, spent } rae former high school captains on the most of their time in Giant territory.| p.1%°,,, (nfcats were handed the | oitet ame squad which siarts work They easily outplayed the profession-'tahor Day week-end by the Capi-|tomorrow ... and Elmer Layden is als but fumbles, mental lapses and @/ 10) club of Bismarck and by Under- | moaning louder than any other coach superior Giant line spelled defeat. | Millner Blocks Punt Instead of the four or five touch- i downs they might have scored they } had to be content with a second-|were about equally divided. Baldwin period Pees tallied (when ey RDS cot 10 off Bowers, Bismarck mounds-| coming on successive week-ends. . ai Eta ae eekrennces mae the man. while the Capital Citians got) Sports Editor Rodger Pippen comes, . AS PUNE, 9 off A. Dutt. Bowers got better| right out in the Baltimore News and ball coming through the end zone. So furious and yet fruitless was the lies they reached the Giants’ 35, 25, } 23, 18, 15, eight and even three. yard | lines without pushing the ball over. The big chance, offered when Mill- ner blocked and recovered Danowski’s punt on the Giant 20 in the third period gave the stars their biggest chance of the night. With Alfonse | (Tuffy) Leemans of George Wash-| ington doing most of the ground; gaining, they ploughed through to the, enemy three-yard stripe. But, with a! touchdown in sight, they suddenly | changed their tactics for a lateral], passing game and were stopped cold. The collegians were on the eight- yard line, changing from groun- | ining line charges again, when the) game ended. fessionals a clear edge over the all- | stars in five games played. two Of niting honors for the winners with |@ home run, a double, and two singles in six times at bat by rings on the mound for the victors, | getting a pair of doubles. which have been won by the pros as against one loss and two ties Grid Team’s Success Depends on Tobacco Annapolis. Md., Sept. 9.—(#)—The cutlook for the St. John’s college foot- ball team is all tied up with the to-| bacco crop on Spriggs Sands’ farm. | If it's a good crop, Sands will be back in scinool, the only varsity guard returning to the team: if not, the equad will have to struggle along with- | outhim. . Right now. the crop prospects are reported doubtful. jt KUSS WINS | Minneapolis, Sept. 9—(7)--A vastly | improved Otto Kuss, 28-pound youngster from Pine City, Minn., tossed Tommy Marvin, 215, of Colum- ‘bia, Tenn., after 31 minutes, 18 seconds of their wrestling match Tuesday | wood. 6-5, Sunday, and Underwood trounced | a | support, 7 4 : | mates all-star attack, that on separate sal-| powers struck out 19 men and Dutt \9. {urys and Dutt got the same number \for Baldwin. fifth and seventh innings. staged a nice rally in the eighth and ' Reds blast them twice Sunday while |Chicaze nin rames, after tallying one run/ ; Tey j inlitheelntije Whey collected! two) in |tse ee: cach of the final innings, just falling short of tying up the game, Underwood the fourth inning. holding Baldwin to seven hits, and younded Casper 7 Last night's victory gave the pro- Wounded Casper and Dutt, Baldwin | le: ing doubles champion, and Ed Owens, a newcomer. in the country. .. All Navy needs is! center. A good on? will be the hero jof the Navy. . . The Fordham card is; crowded with “breathers” with St.| Mary's, Pitt, Purdue and Georgia! Bismarck nosed out Baldwin hem 9-4 the following day. Hitiing honors in the first game however, were guilty as Dutt’s team-j} of seven errors, suggests it would be a lot better if) the colleges would openly hire their gridders, announce the salaries paid {them and quit trying to kid the pub- | lie. Same old Dodgers. Van Mungo; | whiffs 14, but the Dodgers lose, 4-1. ‘ Did you ever see such a ball nine... Bismarck scored three runs in the! jooks as if the Cards blew their last | Baldwin | chance for the flag when they let the | “Gillen, left fielder, led Bismarck at he plate with three hits in four | .. Race! ‘ing men all agree Trainer Hirsch! Jacobs has a potential big money | | winner in the seven-year-old action | | which grabbed the Aqueduct handicap | *!} Saturday. . . Greenwood, Miss., is all} jset to give Glenn Hardin, the Olym-| |pic hurdling star, a big reception on! {his arrival home... Red Cagle, the| old Army football star, is selling in- | surance here . . . he has ambitions to| become a big time referee... Harry | Balsamo, th middleweight threat. | likes to shoot craps next to knocking | some cove's head off. | Fred Perry grins and walks away | when you ask him about turning pro. | . . Col, Jake Ruppert is expected to call Joe McCarthy any day now and offer him a new contract at consid- | Baldwin's game with Underwood he following day was not as clo: stablished a safe lead Underwood used three pitchers in Johnson, shortstop, captured the He was followed Gogstetter, who went five in- Baldwin's first sacker, Lenihan, got bree of his team’s seven hits. He was the only Baldwin player to con- {erably more than the $30,000 per Jo? football team. rect for more than one safe blow. ——, | Two Mandan Men is drawing down. . . The most watch- ;ed football coach in the country this j year will be Carl Snavely of Cornell. In Tennis Finals | SOX PURCHASE 2 MILLERS | Boston, Sept. 9.—(#)—The Boston! pes ae Aiea Two Mandan men, one a defendingj Red Sox have announced purchase of; | champion, played in-a drizzling rain! Pitcher Arch McKain and Outfielder! Tuesday to advance into the fi of the Missouri Slope tennis tourna- ment ls} Fabian Gaffke from Minneapolis of; the American Association. | Gaffke. they said. would join the: Sox at Chicago Thursday, while Mc-| Kain, a left-hander, will join the team during spring training. They are William Russell. defend- Russell defeated Gordon Nashold of Bill Daly, end; and Kremer, Coon and Leuwer, either ends or backs. i Linton will therefore have experi- enced men in the flank positions and in the backfield. but will be green| through the center of the line. With nearly two weeks of offensive drill behind them, Coach Glenn Han- jj; na’s squad began concentrating on defensive play this week in prepara- tion for the Linton encounter Fri-| day. Hanna scheduled hard scrimmage sessions for both Wednesday and Thursday. as his boys are in good: physical shape. i Expected to start against Linton is this lineup: Bowers and Clausnitzer, ends; Munroe and Rishworth, tack- les; Bowman and Little, guards; Mc- Donald, center; Welch, right half; Kallenberger, left half; Murray, full- back; and Penner, quarterback. Among the first-string substitutes | who will also see action are Smith and Dawson, backs; Koch, tackle; Cook, end; and Jordan, guard. Because his squad is so lacking, in experience, Hanna does not expect‘ to the substitute freely unless Linton opposition is weak. The | Standings (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE 1 New York St. Louis shicago. Pittsburgh Cincinnati Boston Brooklyn... Philadelphia AMERICAN LEAGU B We York New Detroit Cleveland Washington . Botton St. Louis Philadelphia. NORTHERN 1 Jamestown g! u Claire nipe Fargo-Moorhead « Wausau. ee Superior Crookston . Duluth . MORRiS WON'T TRY OUT Detroit, Sept. 9.—(/P}—Coach Geo.! (Potsy) Clark said Wednesday that:| Glenn Morris, the Olympic decath- Jon champion, apparently had aband-| cned a plan to try out for a place on Clark's Detroit Lions professional i Bill Stewart, National league um- pire who referees hockey games dur- j;same: ladstone AB RH POA E! Lessig teal 10 OP e4l 8) 40 013 0 0 Martin, 4o0200 Herald, 491003 lardinger MNO Lean) Helblin 30) Oy, 6h) Seibe 200 6 0 a} 1990 0 of 1490000 Totals 2 4.93.96. 6 Grove Giants RHPOAE d, if 2100 0 on, 2b ey Ue heh \Serome,’ rf 34 1 ¢ 0 Stoller, cf . 129 02 Ds) LeM 1090 0 1-2 0 0 0 es 0 2| 9 3 shel 0 3 0 ashburn AB RH PO A E| Shearer, ss -6 2 4 0 1 O} Schweizer, c Meh ee Holton, 1b decigas’ ne co Martin, 2b . Hip eea aee0| Carr. If 0 4) 10:0) Franks, rf 60010 Weible, 3b Ui ee Toes Ree) h 423° 8000 12000 +4510 16 27 2| AB RH POA E roe fy tie Wy 2 asa Ba 2 o) 401000 4002 2 0) j LeMay, ss bebo Ds er} Slater. 3b. p . 020 4 ol Engels, rf 01000 Davidson, 1b oo 90 2 Smith, ¢ 9112 10 S| Flanders, p, 00 6 ) Totals 28 6 Score by innings: Washburn .......... 009 042 031—10 Grove Giants 000 100 on1— 2 Batteries: Washburn—Ulrich and Schweizer: Giants—Flanders, Slater {Jesse Owens (twice), Archie Williams, | Lose Over Holiday’ End Season With Victory Over | Gladstone, 10-2, Loss to Washburn, 2-10 The Grove Giants ended their sea-| son over the week-end with a 10-2 victory over Gladstone Sunday and a same score. Flanders turned in a remarkable mound performance for the Giants! Sunday, striking out 18 Gladstone players and granting only four hits. | Hardinger, Gladstone pitcher, fanned 10, but granted 16 hits. The next day Washburn shelled Flanders from the mound in the sixth’ inning and hit his relief hurler, Slater, for cight more safe blows in the remaining frames, Ulrich,| Washburn pitcher, held the hard-hit- | ting Giants to eight safeties. The box score, Giants-Gladstone Gladstone 2; Grove Giants 10 als eo! Svore by i ladstone 200 000 n00— 2 ants seveees 002 043 10x—10 Batteries: Gladstone—Hardinger, C.| Baar; -Giants—Flanders, Summa Home runs—Jerome left on bases—Gladstone stolen bas i o and} on balls off Flanders 1. off Hardinger | burn 10; Grove Giants 20 | R O! and Smith Summary plays—Johnson to LeMay idson; home run— Martin; left Washburn 6, Giants Washburn 5, Giants h 8, off Glan-| ders 5 , off Slater 8 in hit by pitched ball —LeMay by ch; struck out by Ulrich & by Flanders 8, by Slater 3; | umpires rnold and Towers, Names of Olympic winners are be- ing carved on the towers of the Ber- lin stadium. The first four names on the right-hand tower are of Negroes: ond John Woodruff. Chief Paris, Indian boxer, whose real name is Sequoia Green Feather, doesn't sit down between rounds. He ing the winter, says his summertime job is easier. stands up and inhales a fresh supply cf oxygen. | climb of the New York Giants, Jimmy | win the flag. 1: hit by pitel —Helbling by Flanders; LeMay, Davidson 2, by | ame. Hardinger; umpires -- Arnold and| With the National League complete- Kuntz. ily quiet, the pace-setting Giants had Grove Giants Win, [WHITE SOX CLINCH SECOND WITH 7 to 5 WIN OVER TIGERS Only Game Played Tuesday; Yanks Need One Victory for Pennant (By the Associated Press) Although the American League 1s ready to take the pennant out of its winter wrappings, dust it off and award it to the Yankees, more atten- tion is being paid the White Sox these days. The Yanks may settle the matter of winning the flag before nightfall as they need only one more victory to clinch and camaccomplish that as they open their final western tour at Cleveland against the Indians, one of their two surviving rivals. With all due respect to the Yankee power, however, and the astonishing | ey EE SES eS TUESDAY'S STARS Zeke Bonura, White Sox — His double and single drove in three runs in 7-5 win over Tigers. Dykes’ Chicagoans probably will go down as the big surprise of the 1936 pennant chases. They have made the experts look sick by climbing into the| first division and staying there, and} they threaten to top all comers ex- cept the Yanks themselves. Cop Second Place The Sox, hampered by injuries and hard luck much of the season, made their stab at second place by bowling over the Tigers, 7-5, in the only game scheduled on the major league front. That gave them sole possession of the runner-up spot and preserved their one chance in ten thousand to The defeat wiped out that possibil- j ity for the Tigers and their last math- ematical chance of catching up on the Yanks, dropping them into a three-way tie for third place with the; idle Indians and Senators. | The White Sox landed on Elden} Auker and Red Phillips for six runs in the first frame to sew up the ball a chance to rest up in preparation for the invasion of the western contend- ers, the first of which, the Reds, pull; into town Wednesday for a double- header. Five games in front of the second-place Cardinals, the Giants are banking on their long home stand and the schedule breaks to shoot them into the National League title, thus producing the first “subway ser- ies” between the New York clubs in. 13 years. Bill Terry apparently is serious about retiring this time. In the last few weeks he’s bought up Johnny Mc- Carthy and Les Powers from the Ne- wark and Baltimore International League clubs, respectively. Both are first basemen . . . which means Sam- bo Leslie will have to fight for his job next year. AMERICAN LEAGUE Sox Second Chicago—The White Sox took pos- session of second place by trouncing the Tigers 7-5. RHE Detroit .........101 000 201— 5 16 1! Chicago . 610 000 OOx— 711 1 Auker, Phillips and Myatt; Cain and Sewell. Fargo, Wausau Tied For 4th in Northern St. Paul, Sept. 9.—(4)—Fargo- Moorhead and Wausau, engaged in « hot battle for fourth place in the Northern League and a chance to get into the circuit playoffs next Mon- day, were all even Wednesday as the results of game outcomes yesterday. Fargo-Moorhead, a game ahead of Wausau before the start of yester- Jamestown Tuesday after Don Lar- son, also of Jamestown, had default- ed. Russell and Owens plan to meet Toots Mondt, manager of Dave Le- vin, wrestler, claims an air-travel rec- ord. In a little more than 30 days, ight. | in the finals in a day or two. Monat flew 33,000 miles. Our Boarding House With Major Hoopie GZ "GF NOURE TH’ Bic MY WORD/ MADE Gi ME PRESIDENT OF THE OWLS CLUB/ HAR-R-RUMPH ~- Hs WHY, IT 1S INDEED A GREAT HONOR TO BE ELECTED TO SUCH AN EXALTED OFFICE —~ EGAD, 1 AM MOVED DEEPLY BY SUCH A SHOWER OF CONFIDENCE ANID POPULARITY / BAT FLEW OUT GRUNT AROUND HERE, Now, MAJOR! we FIGGERED YOU WERE TH’ MAN WHO COULD SAVE TH’ CLUB—~TH’ BACK RENT IS PILING UP LIKE A TIN CAN DUMP AT A SUMMER HOTEL—~AN’ WHEN TH’ TREASURER OPENED “TH’ CASH BOX LAST NIGHT, A MADE IT ferently. That’s why each 2 UNANIMOUS! B SNUFFY GOT TH! SHERIFF T'PHONE His VOTE IN around 50 pipefuls. That { Albert has a special bite-1 ROY HAWKINS liked Prince Albert from the very start. ‘‘The first time I opened one of those big red tins, I found P. A. a VOTE FOR pleasant surprise, ” he says. “‘What aroma! YOURSELF AndI noticed that the flakesareshapeddif- burns slower and cooler and lasts longer. Each of those big red economy tins holds areal saving.” TAKES OUT ALL STING AND HARSHNESS “TOBACCO experts will tell assures mildness and gets rid of ness,’’ remarks Alex P. A. pipeful that Prince rocess that harsh- TIN, PRINCE TONTYTY BYFTTT TY OY? PIPE SMOKERS, HERE’S A NO-RISK OFFER THAT’S TOO GOOD Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don’t find it the mel- lowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with t the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any time within a month from this DAVEMYRICK rollstasty date, and we will refund full purchase price, plus cigarettes with Prince Al- (Signed) R..J. Reynolds Tobacce Company, North Carolina CE ALBERT Sets New Record in Toronto Swim Swimming through five miles of 60-degree water in 2 hours 7 minutes 9 seconds, Frank Pritchard, of Buffalo, set a new record in the Toronto marathon swim to defeat a field of 60 distance and sprint natators. Here Pritchard is shown climb- ing aboard the finish line float at the end of his Lake Ontario dip. day's contest with Jamestown lost by a 7-6 count, as their Wisconsin rival dumped the second place Eau Claire nine, 8-6. In the Shaughnessy playoffs start- ing next Monday the first and third teams and second and fourth will engage in a seven game scries and will be followed by a similar “series between the winners of the two. In other games yesterday Duluth dampened Superior’s hopes of get- ting into the playoffs by defeating their head of the lakes rival, 10-7, as Crookston defeated Winnipeg, 5-: = © Major League Leaders By the Associated Press) ° NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — P. Waner, Pirates, Medwick, Cardinals, .363. Runs—J, Martin, Cardinals, 11; Ott, Giants, 107. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 200; Dem- aree, Cubs, 188. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 30; Berger, Bees, 23, Pitching — Hubbell, Giants, 22-6; Lucas, Pirates, 12-4, AMERICAN LEAGUE’ Batting — Averill, Indians, .374; App- ling, White Sox, .371. Runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 150; Geh- ringer, Tigers, 129. Runs batted in — Trosky, Indians, 132; Gehrig, Yankees, and Foxx, Red Sox, 129. Hits—Averill, Indians, 204; Gehringer, Tigers, 201. Home runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 43; Foxx, Red Sox, 37. Pitching — Hadley, Yankees, Pearson, Yankees, 17-6, 365; 12-4; PIPE LOVERS AGREE THIS TOBACCO IS “THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE” ree ee Tg TTT TES ! 1 Fights Last Night RA. HAS PLENTY OF HONEST -TO- A. A. Playoffs Get Under Way Today Milwaukee Meets Kansas City, St. Paul Meets Indianapolis in Openers Chicago, Sept. 9.—(#)—The Mil- waukee Brewers, new champions of the American Association, go after additional diamond honors tonight as they meet Kansas City in the start of playoffs which will lead to a “little world serics” with the International league titicholders. Kansas City finished third in the regular season campaign. The Blues and Brewers play tonight and tomor- row night in Milwaukee, and the next three games, if all are necessary in _» the four best out of seven series, will be played in Milwaukee Monday night. St. Paul, which finished second, was host to Indianapolis this afternoon in the start of their similar series. Two more afternoon games will be played Thursday and Friday, with the teams idle Saturday, play being resumed Sunday. If additional games are nec- essary they will be played in Indian- apolis starting Monday night. The surviving teams will play later in another seven-game serics, with the winner meeting the winner of the International league playoffs. (By the Associated Press) Los Angeles—Lee Ramage, 190, Ca San Diego, Calif, outpointed Frank Kowsey, 173, Powder River, Mont., (10). New York—Solly Krieger, 163'2, Brooklyn, knocked out Ralph Chung, 163, New Orleans, (7). New York — Harry Balsamo, 15912, New York, knocked out Al Rossi, 162, Newark, J, (2). Elizabeth, N. J.—Danny Kop- klick, 145, New York, outpointed Seaborn Ashley, 157, Bayonne, (6). Strangler Lewis, the wrestler, took off 40 pounds in a recent training grind. oi Custodians of the Cellar! : : ALREADY LOOKING forward to ' next year's pennant fight, few ie big league owners plan changes in managership. However, Casey Stengel and Rogers Hornsby, of the Dodgers and Browns respec- tively, seem certain to look for new pastures! a \ LOOKING FOR smart new shoes to wear for back-to-school events? 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