The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 2, 1937, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1937 | Slingin’ Sam Baugh Heaves 20- Yard Pass to Give Stars 6-0 Win Over Pro Champs _ Tinsley Dashes 28 Yards After Catching Toss for Win- ning Touchdown Chicago, Sept. 2 —(?)— Samuel Adrian Baugh——' in’ Sam” of Texas Christian university—is all the football player anybody ever said he i was, as the pro- pion Green Bay Packers will arise}. en masse to at- test. The Packers had heard about) Baugh, but they) had to wait until Wednesday night} at Soldier Field, with a thrilled H throng of 75,560 fans looking on = ‘ mw to get it first | TINSLEY hand, They be- came the first professional team to take a beating from an all star gol- lege aggregation, and it was Baugh who was the number one hero of the collegians’ 6-0 triumph. The former Texas Christian ace was expecied to give Green Bay's Arnie Herber quite a battle at pass- | ing, but he wound up by outshining his professional rival at throwing the football when the blue chips were down, and did a lot of other things besides. Early in the first period, Baugh, di- rector of the, battle plan laid out by oach Charles E. (Gus) Dorais of the University of Detroit, head of the all star board of strategy, started the one successful thrust of the night, by ® quick kick over the Packer goal line. The return boot by Clarke Hin- kle, the Packers‘ great fullback, went out of bounds on the collegians’ 48- yard line. Baugh called two running plays, then electrified the huge crowd by uncorking the payoff pass of the game, a 20-yard shot to Gaynell Tinsley, Louisiana State's All-Amer- fica end. Tinsley caught the ball 28 yards from the Packer goal, executed | @ neat change of pace to leave Hank Bruder clawing air, and raced to the touchdown. Terry to Be Highest Paid Baseball Pilot New York, Sept. 2.—(7)—Win or lose in his current bid to pilot the New York Giants to their third Na- tional League pennant in five sea- sons, Memphis Bill Terry will be baseball's highest-paid manager, in} 1938. He will be, that is, unless his neigh- boring rival, Joe McCarthy of the world champion Yankees, gets his stipend substantially increased as a reward for present and pending ac- complishments. McCarthy now is getting $35,000 a year to Terry's $27,500 but under the terms of a new five-year contract, ef- fective next season, the pilot of the Giants will, it is believed, be paid $40,- 000 annually. The only managerial salaries be- Ueved to have topped this amount ‘were those paid to Connie Mack of the Athletics and ‘Terry's predecessor, John J. McGraw, at the height of boom times. Tops for a player was Babe Ruth's $80,000. Under his new contract, Terry will become general manager of the Giants, besides continuing to direct the club on the field. In order to insure cross-fertiliza- tion, a great many flowers ripen their stamens and pistils at differ- ent times. Some ripen their stamens first, while other species ripen the 8 pistils first. ‘The word bombast, denoting that which is pompous and conceited, tomes from the name of Theophras- tus Bombast Paracelsus, an experi- menter in medicines, who lived in the 16th century. | INSURANCE 4x0 BONDS T FLOOR DAK-NAT'L BANK BLOG PHONE 1660 - BISMARCK | CONSULT YOUR AGENT OR | 8ROXER AS YOU WOULD Your 3 DOCTOR OR LAWYER New York, Sept. 2—(?)—Max Schmeling is convinced the crowd controlling Joe Louis is freezing him cut of a return match because they fessional cham - |e, afraid he'll lick Joe Louis again |City Saturday night... d romp off with the title... Thus knocking them out of a lot of gravy . Max will return any day now with his own ideas of American sportsmanship and fair play ... Baron Gottfried von Cramm not only will add a lot of tone to the national singles tennis championships at For- est Hills, but he’s liable to win the singles... If not, why is Don Budge ro better than an even money choice? Lou Gehrig, the gay ‘ iron man of the § Yankees, picked up two checks this week, but hurled ‘em both back at the pit- cher ... He ap- peared as a “pro- fessor” at Colum- : bia university's baseball school and was reward- ed with a check. : . .. He returned it, saying he was a Columbia man and happy to ap- pear gratis... Louis Lou received another check from his redio sponsor for the broadcast on which the slugger pulled his well- known boner by naming the wrong breakfast food ... He returned this cne, also. . . The sponsor returned the check with a letter saying every ball player is entitled to three strikes —so this time Lou banked it. Too bad they overlooked John Henry Louis, the light heavyweight king (and real champ) with present- ing the champions at the Yankee stadium Monday night ... Bill Terry's new contract puts him ahead of | Walter St. Denis . Schmeling Sure Louis Crowd Is Freezing Him Out of Crack at Title —Says Eddie Brietz. [Mickey Cochran in the managerial selary race Tommy Farr begins ‘his theatrical “career” with a rou- |tme on the steel pier at Atlantic “Dodgers set 'to take hand in National league flag |race,” says a New York headline... hk yeah? ... What's this about Col. |E. R. Bradley starting a nag whose name didn’t begin with “B” on the jlast day at Saratoga? The hoss was | Airegia. j,,Coaches Miles Creighton and Phil \Handler of the Chicago football |Cardinals are going strong for south- |West conference material this year . , + Eleven stars from that territory are getting trials... Lou Gehrig has Three Leaders in Hot A. A. Flag Race Turn in Triumphs Red Birds Take Double Bill to Retain One Game Lead Over Toledo Club Chicago, Sept. 2—(#)—It's begin- ning to look as though the American Association’s dizzy three-way pen- nant battle among Columbus, Toledo and Minneapolis, will not be settled until the last game of the regular schedule is over Sept. 12. The Red Birds were still on top Thursday, following a doubleheader victory over Indianapolis Wednesday night, but Toledo, was only a game behind, and Minneapolis, which split a pair with Kansas City, was only & half-game back of the Mudhens. Columbus emerged with an 11 to 0 shutout. Potter gave up nine hits in the second game, which the Red Birds won, 8 to 4. Toledo staged two big assaults on Louisville pitching to gain 10 to 6, and 15 to 6 decisions. In the first game, the Mudhens clipped two Col- onel hurlers for 14 hits. bit 20 homers with the bags loaded— five this season .. . Harry Markson, |boxing expert of the Bronx home news, goes into the 20th century organiza- tion as assistant to publicity chief + Can’t always go by a name, gents A hoss named Saparoo won his second in a row at Detroit yesterday and paid $14.80... Somebody asked Tommy Farr what he thought of Joe Louis’ punches... “If I'd seen ‘em coming,” replied the Welshman, “I wouldn’t have got in the way of ‘em you bet.” Charlie Goldman of Syracuse will buy the contract of lightweight cham- pion Lou Ambers when Lou’s man- ager Al Weill, goes into the hippo- ¢rome as matchmaker this month ... Out in Emporia, Kansas, there is a baseball team known as the “Ban Johnsons,” named after the man who organized the American league . . . Alberto Lovell, the Argentine Indian, who has been doing all right on the coast, is headed east to try his luck . ., Like Gene Tuney, Tommy Farr reads the classics and can quote Shakespeare like nobody's business ... Gus Greenlee says his boy, John Henry Lewis, will fight Joe Lewis for an Irish sweep-stakes ticket. Will’s Team Beats City League Title Trounces Toggery Ten 8 to 4 for Second Victory in Play- Off Series Scoring four runs in the last inning, Will's seedstore team Thursday clinched possession of the City league softball title with an 8 to 4 triumph over Klein's their second in the play- off series. Will’s agggregation walked off with first honors in the first half of the season’s play and Klein’s was the winner of the second half. The first game of the playoff series went to the Will's sluggers 5 to 2. Joe Zahn limited Klein’s to three bingles while his mates took full ad- vantage of five off the offerings of Emil Martin, on the mound for the losers, to score their winning runs. Wetch cracked out a two base hit for the winners and McGuinness, playing with Kleins, got the only other ex- tra-base sock of the day, also a two- bagger. Five miscues in the field con- tributed to the defeat of the Klein's outfit. The summary: Klein's AB Mote, cf 2 Burch’t eas'y rss M’Gui's 3b Benser, r LaRue, If Beaud’n 1b 1 Assel'e Iss 2 Jordan rf 2 Martin, p 0 Totals 16 Score by innings: Klein's Will's . 202 04—8 Errors. stine, Burch- ardt, Benser 2, Yeasley; two base hits —Wetch, McGuiness; struck out by Zahn 8, by Martin 8; winning pitcher —Zahn; losing pitcher—Martin; date —9-1-37. Umpire: Hedstrom. Blades of corn grew on the backs of sheep in Nebraska during last year’s dust storms, The wool became pack- ed with top soil and grains of feed corn. Eventual rains and the body heat of the sheep caused the corn to sprout. Will's Peterson | coscc ono al HosHoccomny Sleusceceneny Totals 23 210 302 Klein’s to Clinch | | cosHonm tote ———————_—____—_—_________ | Fights Last Night | FO (By the Associated Press) Washington — Lightweight Champion Lou Ambers, 13543, Herkimer, N. Y., out pointed Howard Scott, 138, Washington, (10. nontitle); Joey Archibald, 122, Providence, R. 1. stopped Hd Marcient, 126, Montreal, (6). Hartford, Conn. — Sixto Esco- bar, 122, Puerto Rico, world bantamweight champion, knocked out Eddie Reed, 12214, Hartford, (8), (non-title). Oakland, Calif. — Dale Sparr, 159, Olathe, Colo., outpointed Joe Mueller, Cincinnati, (8). Defending Champ Paces Golf Field 64 Survivors Swing Into Match Play in Western Open Meet at Los Angeles Los Angeles, Sept. 2 —(P}— The western antateur golf championship swung into match play Thursday. Pacing the field of 64 survivors were Charles Yates of Atlanta, and Paul Leslie, Louisiana state, defend- ing champion. ao Wednesday fired a sizzling This was four under par, which gave him a lead of four strokes over Bob Servis, former amateur cham- Minneapolis blasted out 18 hits against two Kansas City pitchers, concentrating most of its punch in the eighth inning when 10 runs were rushed over, to win the first game, 18 to 12, The Blues, however, bunched 12 safeties off Belve Bean for a 6 to 5 decision in the other contest. St. Paul and Milwaukee went to ex- tremes in sharing a doubleheader. The Saints took the opener, 1 to 0, behind Babe Phelps’ five-hit hurling, while the Brewers thumped out 18 hits for a 15 to 9 victory. St. Paul... ‘ Pressnell and Helf; Phelps and Fenner. Second Game— RHE Milwaukee 003 047 001—15 18 0 St. Paul... -000 000 054— 9 11 0 Johnson, Winegarner and Brenzel; Welch, Gliatto and Fenner, Brissman. Millers Split With Blues First Game— RH Kansas City..200 2003 5 0-12 18 1 Minneapolis .013 301 0(10)x—18 21 2 Kleinhans, Moore, Branch, Pie- chota, Stine, Gibbs and Breese, Hartje; Tauscher, Pettit, Baker, Gra- bowski and Peacock. Second Game— ipo} (Called end 8th—darkness) Breuer, Moore and Hartje; Bean and Dickey. Birds Win Two First Game— Columbus 103 102 022—11 13 Indianapolis .... 000— 0 9 Chambers and Crouch; Page a Lewis. Second Game— RH Columbus ......042 001 000— 8 9 Indianapolis ....000 000 013— 4 9 2 Potter and Crouch, Grube; Cran- dall and J. Riddle Hens Take Pair First Night Game— Toledo .. 022 100 140—10 14 1 Louisville . 040 020 000— 612 5 Trout and Reiber; Marrow, Terry and Berres. Second Night Game— RHE Toledo .. -500 201 7-15 16 0 Louisville . .020 0310-6 9 4 (Seven innings by agreement) (7 innings) Marberry and Frankovich; Bass, Shaffer, Demoisey, Rutherford, Terry and Ringhoffer. % RH —— || MAJOR LEAGUE | | LEADERS a) (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Medwick, Cardinals, 393; P. Waner, Pirates, 376. Runs—Medwick, Cardinals, 96; Ga- lan, Cubs, 91. Hits — Medwick, Cardinals, 192; P. Waner, Pirates. 183. Home runs — Ott, Giants, 29; Med- pion of Ohio. The rugged Dayton vouth was the only other player in the field who could beat standard figures for 36 holes. Servis put a 69 Wednesday to his 72 on the opening day for 141. Wil- ford Wehrle, Racine, Wis. was third with 143. Yates, headin gthe lower bracket as @ result of the numerical draw, drew a tough match-play opponent in Tommy Goodwin of New York, al- though 17 strokes separated them in the medal play. * Leslie’s opponent was to be selected from the dozen who still were dead- locked at 154 when darkness halted the playoff at the second tee. Chick Evans, Chicago, eight times a winner of this crown, faced Allan Ellis of Boston and Ray Billows, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., runnerup in the national championship last week, drew Claire Goodwin of Oakland, The body of Emperor Frederick the Great was not embalmed because of his expressed wish. Two regimental surgeons bathed the body and pre- pared it for interment. wick, Cardinals, 28. - Pitching—Root, Cubs, 12-4; Hubbell, Giants, 17-6, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Gehringer, Tigers, 386; Gehrig, Yankees, .370. Runs — DiMaggio, Yankees, 121; Greenberg, Tigers, 115. Hits—DiMaggio, Yankees, 174; Wal- ker, Tigers, 171. . Home runs—DiMaggio, Yankees, 38; | Foxx, Red Sox, 33. Pitching — Lawson, Tigers, and Ruff- ing, Yankees, 17-4, The Right Way TO CLEAN A WATCH moving part. what we do for $1.25 or $1.50. Come in and watch. 0. J. WEIST Jeweler 415 Broadway Come to the Tavern for luscious - STEAKS and delicious |Win Puts Terrymen Back in Two-Point Lead; Ott Gets 29th Circuit Clout By BILL BONT (Associated Press Sports Writer) The National league inter-sectional series that were supposed to prove so much of the answer to the still- present question, “who's going to cop the pennant?” end Thursday. But as far as any decisive settle- ment of the issue is concerned, every- thing is as clear ag the morning's coffee grounds. The Giants, back on top by those same two percentage points that separated them from the Cubs on Tuesday night, planned to send Harry Gumbert against the Card- inals in the final engagement of their series that stands deadlocked one-all as the result of the Ter- rymen’s 7-3 win Wednesday. The Cubs, drub- bed by the Dod- gers in the sec- ond encounter of MEL OTT their three-game set, 6-4, pinned their hope son Bill Lee in their sea- son’s farewell-bidding appearance in the world series—to the East. Giants Stronger at Home If anything has been decided dur- ing this last week, is that the Giants are stronger at home the Cubs on the road. But this was evi- dent before all the fuss and feathers started flying—and besides, the posi- tions will be reversed when the Gi- ants invade the west for the last time twelve days from now. This morning, the figures read: Ww L Pct New York ........ 72 47605. Chicago .. 73, 48 603 'WEDNESDAY’S STARS Mel Ott and Hal Schumacher, Giante—Former’s homer with two on clinched 7-3, defeat of Card- inals; latter blanked Cards in seven of nine innings, gave nine hits. Lefty Grove, Red Sox—Fanned four in six innings while pitching 5-hit, 2-0 triumph over Boston Red Sox. Wally Moses, -Athletics—Homer with two on brought A’s out of cel- lar with 5-2 victory over Browns. hitter in winning opener, 5-1; lat- ter held Reds to eight hits and drove in clinching \runs as Bees won, 4-1, Earl Grace, Phillies—Eight-in- ning four-bagger with man on broke tie and stopped Pirates, 5-3, Max Butcher, ‘Two-in- ning relief job stopped Cubs, 6-4. Hal Trosky and Denny Gale- house, Indians—Former led ten- hit attack with three ‘singles and scored two runs; latter held Yanks to seven hits in 4-2 victory. Wes Ferrell, Senators—Blanked Tigers for first seven innings and allowed five hits in 8-2 triumph. The Giants profited Wednesday from another neat pitching job by Hal Schumacher and Mel Ott’s 29th homer that put him one up on Ducky Medwick to celebrate the an- nouncement of Boss Bill Terry's new five-year contract. - That drubbing by the Giants dropped the Cards 7% games off the pace, while the once-threatening Pirates, losing their seventh straight to the Phils by 5-3, now are eleven That’s the same margin that con- tinues to split the American League- Yanks from the Tigers. Denny Galehouse of the Indians stopped the Ruppert riot squad with seven hits, 4-2, but at the same time the Tigers were bowing 8-2, to some very fine elbowing by Wes Ferrell and hard hitting by the other Senators. In the National league the Bees and Reds swapped good pitching, Paul checking Boston, 2-1, on six hits, and Lou Fette returning hp pears for the Bees, 4-1,-on eight, Rain stopped the Red Sox double- header, but not before Lefty Grove had won a six-inning, 2-0, shutout. The Athletics sneaked out of the cellar and dropped the Browns in by trimming them, 5-2. ss NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Divide With Boston First Game Cincinnati .. 100 310 000— Boston ..... 000 100 000— Derringer and Lombardi; son, Bush and Mueller. Second Game Cincinnati .. 000 010 000— 1 Boston. + 010 003 00x— 4 Schott, R. Davis, Grissom Campbell; Fette and Lopez. Giants Trip Cards RHE St. Louls .... 200 001 000—3 9 0 New York .. 003 310 00x—7 14 3 Warneke, Ryba and Owen; Schu- macher and Danning. Dodgers Beat Cubs RHE Chicago .... 000 100030—4 11 2 Brooklyn ... 000 000 42x— 6 10 1 Davis, Shoun and Hartnett, O'Dea; Henshaw, Butcher and Phelps. Phillies Down Bucs R Pittsburgh .. 100 000 200— 3 Philadelphia 001 020 02x— 5 Bauers, Weaver and Todd; Passeat and Grace. AMERICAN LEAGUE Bosox Win RHE Boston .. + 001 001—2 4 0 Chicago . 000 00-0 5 2 (Game called end 6th, rain; second, postponed. Grove and Desautels; Dietrich and Shea, Rensa- A’s Dump Browns R H Philadelphia . 000 100 310— 5 9 St. Louis ... 010 000 100— 2 10 Williams and Brucker; Hildebrand, an HE Tat 81 ju Washington . 300 001 108— 8 15 0 Detroit 000 000 011-2 5 0 W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell; Mc- Laughlin, Wade, Russell and York. Tribe Tops Yanks RHE New York .. 010000010—-2 7 0 Cleveland ... 000 201 10x— 4 10 1 Wicker and Dickey; Galehouse and Pytiak, Giants, Tag Cards 7 to 3 to Throw Pennant Chase Wide Open Again; Cubs Drop Game to Dodgers, 6 to 45: Stitch in Time | |G - Cae Johnny Allen has been pitching sensational ball since recovery from early season appendicitis operation and may pitch the Cleveland Indians into a first di- vision berth. Rodeo to Open in Badlands Sept. 11 Medora, N. D, Sept. 2 —7— Bringing the Missouri Slope rodeo season to a close, a two-day riding, roping and bulldogging event will be staged at the Old Custer Trail ranch, opening Sept. 11. Arrangements for the rodeo are being made by Ed Tetley and R. 8. Johnson, Billings county ranchers. | HOTEL CHICAGO ANL SALLE ge, | Baseball Standings | aT | (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE w L New York 47 AMERICAN LEAGUE wok New York .. c Detroit . 605 561 556 508 470 322 317 Cleveland Washington Philadelphia &t. Louis .. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w Pet. 583 576 yi 522 Columbus Toledo Minneapolis Duluth .... ¥F-Moorhead Eau Claire Crookston . Winnipeg Jamestown Superior ‘Wausau . He Saws Straight to the Line Full-flavored Glenmore Bour- bon is the werts of expert whie- key makers. It’s full value. You’!l go for len: Hlenmore Olenmore KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY INVENTION TAKES TERRORS OUT OF BLOWOUTS See tres on speeding cers ripped te pieces by railroad spikes—biown wide open by dynamite caps. See these cars keep on going without swerving « single inch! See them hold the roed, slowing down to @ safe, sure, straight line stop with the tire still inflated—on the amazing new Goodyear LifeGuerd Tube thet mikes the worst blowout es hermless es @ slow leak! Don't miss It— yeu won't belleve your eyes! GOODYEAR LIFEGUARD’ TUBES YOU CAN’T BUY BETTER PROTECTION TO SAVE YOUR LIFE! BISMARCK AMAZING SAFETY — DEMONSTRATION @ Games of chance may be all right in their Place — but why risk your money when you ‘buy razcr blades! Ask your dealer for Probak Jt-—produced by the world’s largest manu- factures cf razor blades. Here is known Quality —2 couble-edge blade that gives you cone excellent snave after another —and sells Bt 4 for 10¢! Ack"your deales for a package of Probak Jr. blades today. ON AIRPORT ROAD MIDWAY BETWEEN BISMARCK & AIRPORT TIME: 2:00 P. M. ---- FRIDAY ---- SEPT. 3 el CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, Inc. 122 Main Avenue Bismarck, N. Dak. 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