The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 14, 1927, Page 6

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PAGE SIX “CUBS MAKING | BID FOR FANE; GRIN STARS Score 6-2 Win Over Giants, While White Sox Slump— Saints Beat Indians (By the As With the White rily in the to drive » top of the National making A winn. | them to d the pace to nine ¢ st victory the Giants rious attack led by the Cubs helped themselves he quickest wins of the y e taking little mor half to play. Taylor Caught Wh First of the to lor caught t New York clul 1 from v » for t transferr in a si of the but smack and team was un when they run the thi 1. aghington has been a * White Sox before and shutting nts 10 to 0, f win the violent | their | of the win i PRELIMS BEGIN INU, 8. OPEN; ! JONES ENTERED ‘72 Holes of Competition Against ‘Old Man Par’ Await Golfing Stars i} | | | j Oakmont, Pa., June 14.—(AP) | —With more than half the field reported for the first 18 holes of | the national open golf champion- | whip here late today, Harry Hampton of Memphis, Tenn., went into the lead when he turned in a card of 73. Hampton shot a par 37 going out and came home in 36, one under par. Finding ‘many varieties of trouble after a flashy getaway, | Bobby Jones, the defending title- holder, wound up with a 76, four | ove? par. Harry Cooper of Sacramento, Calif., finishing a few minutes behind Jones, scored 74, two strokes helow the champion. | Cooper, like Jones, needed 39 to act home after going out in 35, | two under par. Ockmont, Pa., June 14—U)—Over a long, long trail, growing harder as it goes along, some 160 golfers started on a quest leading to gold or honor. or both, as the preliminaries leading to the crowning of the open golf champion of the United States tion against ‘old man par,’ a mythi cal but. important golf personage, who gives no quarter and asks none, ¢ Dunn, Rawlins. ames Foulis. oe Lloyd.” Fred Herd. Willie Smith. 1900--Harry Vardon. . 1901—Willie Anderson, Lawrence Auchterlonie, Willie Anderson, Willie Anderson, Mi ee ee = | Willie Anderson, the wings of five home runs 4 ‘1 1 | JOSEPH LA FONTAINE AND PRINCESS NAN-SON-CH-BAL-YA ‘Aleck Rosa, other hits. Names not quite so fa- i cg 5 aS Fred McLeod. miliar as those of Ruth and Gehrig Indiay $ will yun in t's most ambitions marathon, from 1909—George Sargent. | were in the home run column, This) San sco over the, sceni Redwood highway to Grant's Pass, 1910—Aleck Smith. i ime it w: schal (2); Lazerri,| Oregon, a distance of 480 miles. The phote Joseph La 1911—J. J. MeDermott. | Dugan and Collins. The Athletics) Fontaine, a member of the ‘Tolowa tribe Sineees AR 1912—J. J. McDermott. ' Bethe upgrade with there ie the race while kneeling at the feet of » (Mountain 1913—Francis Ouimet. | king by nosing out Detroit, 7| Flower) after that tribe decided to enter the ma Prizes rang- bem tlds Aree While St, Louis displaced the] ing downwards from $1,000 are offered. The will start June 14 i Chie Evans, | at the top of the second dic at San Francisco. Mt 490i" Not held | by beating the Red Sox, 2 two on the chin from the Brookly es came k in em-} nse of their sue leader- beating the Robins 4 to 3. counted xth with hip by Paul Waner, the newlywed, i for two of the runs in the a homer with a mate on ba The Louisville Colonels nosed out Minneapolis 3 to 2 yesterday when First Baseman Kelly of the Millers muffed Shannon's pop fly bling Ellis to score the winning marker, ints Beat Indians Home run sluggers displayed con- erable activity in the 1i to 7 vi aints over the Indians. St. swamped their opponents! under 16 hits, which included three howers and three doubles, while Tn- dianapolis turned in nine hits, with} a homer and a double in the string.( The victory gave the Saints thre them games out of four and allowe the to go ahead of the Indians in rl pennant race. Old Man is renewed. And | Rain interferred with the meeting] while you hear and read ¢ oft of the Brewers and Mudhens at To-|the drubbing of Old Man Par on this) ledo. course and th: h or the Columbus forced the Blues tolother, you hi " where | ravel 12 innings to gain a 7 to 6)the stubbor victory. The Senators tied the count |suceumb in the ninth but in the 12th Howard|Great Bri mby and Hauser to put across the winning marker. Hauser knocked In Canad. the fine Hamilton] hhis second homer in as many games.|course in Old Man Par ence} The fielding of F au and took a beating his own featured the game. SCORES WIN, Blanks Team, 6 to 0—Wilson, i Schweizer Are Stai Washburn, N. D., June 14—(Special to the Tribune)—Playing a good,; steady game of ball, the Washburn/ baseball team blanked the Mandan’ Shop-craft team, 6 to 0, in a hard-| fought game played at the Wildwood {Lake ball park Sunday afternoon, Good pitching on the part of Wi gon, on the mound for Washburn,' together with good support and good| batting on the part of his teammates, netted Washburn’s victory. pitching for Mandan, although he! struck out 10 men, was unable to hold the Washburnites to less than 13 hits, sufficiently bunched to net) h-t tnom civ scores. Hae Wilson: had a big day, allowing) omy six scauered nits and striking ‘ut eight men. He also made a single! and a two base hit and scored two! runs. Schweizer, catching for Wash-; ‘burn, also played a good game. His throws to second were exceptionally | and, when base- runners at-| tempted to st second on him, he} threw them out by over 10 feet. | oe Box Score The box score: = H 3 AB aeeeoen 8s. ee . Bayler, rf. ....+--- Carvell, 1b, . ., Behweizer, ¢ ‘Robinson, 3b. ....- blikenmeyer. cf. eucons Eee el wonmocoren Blrweoneworaet S| feooomcor> ze el “OLD MAN PAR’ + Chicago Cub, helped|standard co when the Boehm, |¢. |four times eroeorocoo™ 3! or tie him? STILL ALIVE, KEELER SAYS: truggle For Low Scores to Be Renwed at Tourney, With Par Remote very. ye ps Of i nnial in the w f, the per between the best golfer long route of the Canadian late J Open Dougl holes with in a national open championship. Evans Tops Li But the low mark in G , held joint! twick and Bobby And in this e id Evans, with a score of 286 Minikahda course near Minn at the top. Gene Sara 268 at Skokie in the ng Jim h 289 Columbia Count », Washington in 1921, the only other to United States open championship with a score better than 290, Indeed the U Red Book discloses the fa nly thr other players ever have broken 290. that fixture. Jock Hutchi 1916 shot a card of at da to be runner-up to Chi Bobby Jones Black tied at 289 as co: ‘0 Sarazen at Skokie. ni else has been under 290 for the hole bout with Old Man Par in tie United States open championghip. Not One of 6 Wins And of this gallant sextet, not one has beaten or tied that steady old chap who never gets down in gle putt and never takes three; who never shoots a birdie ut you, nor in- curs a buzzard. Not one: of the Six Musketeers ha: alled Old) Man Par over the long route. Minikahda, Columbia, Skokie — all were ranked a strict par of 70, and 70 amounts to 280. So even the brilliant Chick, in the top place today, was half a dozen strokes off the traditional opponent in his record bout at Minikahda.’ Sarazen was two strokes a round back of the old fellow at Skokie; and Jim Barnes was two and a quarter strokes, though Barnes and. Sarazen and Evans each had ‘one round that beat Old Man Par—for one round. And now we have Oakmeént, , and as the 1927 open championship be- \gins—and who will beat him there, Is Harder No one, T {severe today. Four times 72 is 288. championship. eonnens S| menaccoSe-3. Bl ourown e| ceescoocooen Ps Bl eeceotowe +> 4 and ya Basi 3 h. S| Ooo i i i Ob MRonoo™ | gerous contender, also Old Man Par stands on the first tee think. The Oakmont par today is 72. But it used to be 74. And the course is longer and more And that has been beaten but once and tied but twice in our American And then on courses which were shorter and simpler than the great spread at Oakmont, with Not held, Walter Hagen. Edward Ray. Jim Barnes Gene Sarazen, 9 Bobby Jones. 1924-1 i} Walker. 1925-—Willie McFarlane, 1926—-Bobby Jones. a modest kmont. hip possibilities in. this open golf tournament contains names of three well known vet- the of whose shadows have frequent-| lay in wait for the best golfer: R a E 1 the title gateway U and Great Br Renee 3 1 | five or six campaign ‘dat. the end was S| eee eis: (i) 15 0 \r E Cruickshank, the sation for the rocky road to lankenship, Jacobs and Crouse; |w Leo Diegel, the former De- attain the objective,| Crowder and Ruel troit caddie; and Bill Mchthorn, the| represented by golf's most dazzling —_—— husky Chicagoan, smile. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Other stars have equalled their] More than 100 professionals, in- Rg b E | perfor in sheer stroking, but| cluding nine of Great Rritain’s lead-| Minneapolis . 2 8 1 ‘tter fate, “Bobby Jones, al-| ing lights, outnumbered the dozen Louisville .... 8 9 0 the top, has twice been a| #mateurs in the competition, Wilson and Gowdy; Koob, Friday vie ter Hagen, another dan-| One amateur was feared more than| and McMullen, ’ reached| ®ny professional. Bobby Jones, At While | lanta law student, whosholds the cup, went out to defend the titleswith a npetitive spirit that has caused hig name to be mentioned first in every discussion. The Oakmont course, lengthened to 7,965 yards, was declared by experts ito be exacting and eminently fair, rewarding richly the long straight wooden shots, coupled with accurate irons, but exacting a heavy penalty for those who forget the straight and narrow path leading to the green., FAST BOATS - WILL ENTER has two oceasions, mounted the peak in nite the high caliber of their play for season after season, Cruick r Mehlhorn always hi J just outside the champio: . Ties With Jones nk upproached nearest to premier crown when he nished in a tie with Jones four years ago, only to lose the play-off to the Atlantan. The following year he fourth, x strokes back of Cy Walker. "Mehihorn only once in the last five rs has fa ed to place among th rst ten, Last year he was third after being fifteenth in 1925, He was fourth in 1922, but his card was only two strokes higher than that of the mpion, Sarzen, He was eighth in 923 and third in 1 Diege! looked Mike a winner in 1920 losing out in the final rourd to| Ray ee ‘ Riana by a single| Je always has been in the a pt in 1924, when he drop-|Seventy Craft Expected to to twenty-fifth. hed fifth. A Fast Climber The new name to the list of cham- Last year he) Enter Annual Mississippi Valley Affair pions also may be earved by youth- 1 blades e Tr ee ee Houston, Tex, June 14.—(P)— Seventy of the fastest small craft in North America are expected to enter the afinual regatta of the Mississippi A Jalley Power Boat Association, a ‘netgthoring eugene, miso has. bean oc Comparauine are beme saple ty ja persistent contender, finishing | “qommodate, 10,000. visitor oN, fifth in 1 third in 1925 and sixth) youn, will, make Snuston the abine, last year. Like Diegel, he slumped in| ,.°. . a) 1 . T fe ODIES Meter PING. to twentieth position, | tive of its annual cruise. The equiv- ie sition.| ntent of five carloads of competing IN TOURNEY heve been entered from Canada and New Orleans Woman Heads, negotiations are under way for the entry of A ne from England. Qualifiers in First Femi- nine Golf Event has been climbing steadily. fifteenth in 1924, e! and was second a ar ago—| Main Events Twelve main events will be run. zht trophies and_ $3,000 in cash prizes are offered, The regatta will be held on the bay 30 miles. from Houston, where the $200,000 club- house of the Houston Yacht Club is just being completed. Dixie Baby, owned by L, A. Layne of this city, which was first in the 725 class at Louisville, Ky., last ear, is one of the entrants: An- other is the Helen M. IV, owned by Kansas City, Kans., June 14.—(P)— Playing one ‘stroke’ over women’s par for the Blue Hills course here, Miss Marion Turpie, city champion of New Orleans and former southern titleholder, today headed the 32 feminine entries to qualify in the irst annual women’s trans-Missis- sippi golf tournament, Miss Turpie ibi was staged on-a water-soaked course nd her 82 for the 18 holes was four Jerry Mitchell of Houston holder of the world’s record in the same class. The record was made at the Louisville regatta last year, al- though Dixie Baby won the race. ‘Helen M,’ to Enter Another entrant is Hoosier Boy, owned by J. W. Whitlock of Rising Sun, Ind,, holder of the Webb trophy the hydroplane class. It was at Louisville that the Helen M. IV THE BISMARCK TRIBUN apt tcaiiemt {¢@——_______—_- || Pennant Progress | |S eg W. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION “We vl. Pet. Toledo . lv 612 Milwaukee . . 23 558 Minneapolis : 24 556 | Kansas 26 CO | St. Paul 29 AT | Indianapolis . 28 AT2 | Louisville . BL . 34 | Columbus | | Games Toda: Minneapolis at. Louisville, Milwaukee at Toledo. | St. Paul at Indianapolis. Kansas City at Columbus, NATIONAL LEAGUE w. L | Pittsburgh 32 17 Chicago 31 19 St. Louis 280 «20 few York 26 24 | Brooklyn . 25 31 Boston 25 Ph elphia 28 | Cincinnati 34 | Games Today | New York at Chicago. | Boston at Cincinnati. |. Philadelphia at St. Louis. Brooklyn at Pittsburg! AMERICAN ' New York Chicago. | Philadelphi Washington . Detroit ¥ St. Louis Cleveland Boston 8 0, 1 1 AW 260 Chicago at Washington, St Others not scheduled >| representatives oF | Yesterday’s Games | waukes merch — NATIONAL sh ht A E 0 0 i | i ow York . hicago simmons, Henry d Hartnett. Others postponed, rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE R Ls E Cleveland .. 1 : York 1} Shaute, Ka’ and! Autry; Pennoe! | R H FE St. Louis os 0h Bogton 0 5 1 Vangilder and Schang; Wingfield, Harris and Hoffman, R H &§F Detroit ‘ O28 4 Philadelphia . oe aa oe Holloway and Woodall; Walberg, Grove and Cochrane. R H E St. Paul ... iL 16 3 Indianapolis ia 9 1 Heimach and Gaston; Boone, Speece, Swetonic and Snyder. R a E Kansas City 7 18 3 ‘Columbus ... 6 u 2 (11 innings) Oldham, Oden, Warmouth and Shinault; Biemiller and Ferrell. Milwaukee at Toledo, postponed, rain. WESTERN LEAGUE Open date, 480 Mile Race to Be Run in Oregon San Francisco, June 14.—(#)—With race officials in every county be- tween here and the Oregon ling ready to see that rules are.observed, 11 Indians today were matched for a 480-mile highway marathon be- tween here and Grant’s' Pass, Ore. The race was scheduled to start at 10_o’clock. Eight Karooks, representing the Oregon cavemen, a Grant’s Pass or- ganization, entered the race, while three Zunis from New Mexico were entered to represent the California end of the marathon, ihe official limit for the race is. 15 days, but race officials expect the Indians to beat that time by at least five days. The prize totals nearly $3,000, with $1,000 as first prize. ———_—_—— . Work done by any machine can now by registered by. the electograph, a new device which shows on a rib- Louis at Boston. i NEWRECORD A AES ET OMA EESTI These extra stripes} ana Kentuck: |were removed in 1818. | ifought under a flag of 20-stars. . | Had 34 Stars Then { The Civil War began under a flag (of 84 atars and ended under a flag | of 36 stars, West Virginia and Neva- hood during the struggle. ~ 1! S45 Tho Spanish-American War was fought under ® flag of 45 sturs, and the World War under a flag of 48 jatara, | Runs From Milwaukee to Chi-!' the ttag was first raised at sea by Jol ig in Ports - cago, Making Trip in Nine- | john Paul Jones in Portsmouth Har. bor July 4, 1777. teen, One-half Hours It first Went around the world on the ship Columbia, which left Boston me jin September, 17ez, und returned to thiea ; ‘ [that port in August, 1790, ris sage hase 14.--(P—Levi Web|" "Te Wan first called Old Glory. by ster, better known as Chief Tall/Capt, William Driver, commander Feather, completed the first non-stop {of the brig Charles Daggert Milwaukee to Chicago marathon to- vessel set out for a vo day at 7:37 a. m., central standard | South Pacific in 1881, time, and won oats, 32 Minutes, si seconds, and; LYING FIELDS evious time of NEAR NEW YORK hours made by Hatch, 10 years ago, according to those in charge of hati (Continued from page one) is to be given the colonel by the the run. Hatch, however, did not fin- lish without a stop. | After treatment by trainers and aj city of New York at the Commodore | tonight, Cardinal Hayes will say the in- physician after he had fatlen into the |ares of friends at the run's end, his ; condition was said to be good. vocation at the dinner for the boy was suffering from exhaustion, nerv-; Whom he met yesterday with this He ous reaction and bruised feet, | welcome: r : I greet you as the first and finest First in 5 Years ; American boy of the day. God bless | The race s his first in five ears. He made it, he said, to show; taunting friends in Green Bay, his | home, that | runner you, and God bless your mother. . Ap te $3 still Miers |. Even during hig retreat last night forty year old Oneida} toj suburban Long Island, whece a good as present day| was a dinner and reeeption guest of Tall Feather way aj Clarence H. MacKay, président of the of reputation ,Postal. Telegraph ‘company, Lind- i |bergh could not escape the greetings. o the offi-| Throughottt the ride of an hour s family, and|Harbor Hill, where the MacKay of Fred Yahr, Mil-|tate is located, Lindbergh traveled nt, who offered the|# royal road of trib Hundreds prize. \of thousands in the city and in Long jIsland towns lined the roadways for |a glimpse of him. When Colonel Lindbergh and his mother returned early today to the Frazee home on the 11th floor of an exclusive Park avenue apartment house, the aviator was tired from the excitement of the most spectacu- lar day New York has known since the armistice was signed. The 500 acre MacKay estate, where the Prince of Wales was a guest dur- ing his last visit to the city, was transformed into a land for the reception of the young IS HUNG UP wner Drives Car Aéross Continent and Back Again tinental trip was just one less than seven days. The entire distance covered on this trip was 6,721 miles. Miller was ac- companied in his gruelling ordeal by J. E. Wieber ‘of Portland, Ore. W. Gerard, former ambassador to ther man was able to sleep| Germany, where included in the list more than a Tew minutes at a time| of guests. Mrs. Irving Berlin, during the week and their only nour-| daughter of Mr. MacKay, or Mr. ‘ishment was black coffee and orange| Berlin, did not attend. juice carried in thermos bottles, sup-| The reception was at the end of a plemented by an occasional brick of| day of unparalleled tribute. Never ice cream picked up at filling stations under orders wired ahead. In spite of lack of sleep and inadequate food, both Miller and Wieber were in ex- cellent physical condition on their! arrival in Los Angeles, apart: from the loss of 2 few pounds of weight. “I knew by experience just what speed and stamina I must have t cross the continent in reeord time,” Miller said. “I felt confident I was getting them, but never did I dream there was such a car as the Chrysler. I have never seen its qual. “The trip was a wonderfu testimon- fal to the sturdiness of the materials Chrysler builds into his cars and the unequalled quality of Chrysler manufacturing methods. For speed. performance, durability, ease of handling and comfort of riding 1 don’t believe the Chrysler has its equal on earth. Our phaeton had ab- solutely no mechanical trouble throughout the whole trip and in the face of the terrific punishment, it needed no adjustments of any kind when it was inspected after we reached Los Angeles.” The Real Story of the U-S. Flag ** (Continued from page one) pointed star pattern, and so the flag was made with five-pointed stars. It was three weeks after Mrs. Ross received her order that Congress ap- proved the flag she had made. Later, they pajd her 14 pounds sterling— about $40—to make some more. These ‘are but a few of the bits of litte-known history akout the United States flag. There are many others. No two wars in which the United States has engaged have ever been fought under, the same flag. The Betsy Ross flag ‘received its baptism of fire at Fort Stanwyx, N. Y., August 2, 1777, some six weeks after it had been officially adopted, but it was little -used during the Revolution. ‘The war of 1812 was fought under a flag of 15 stripes and 15 stars, two minute| Mrs, Elbert H. Gary, Thomas W. La- mont, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Iselin, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Drexel Bid- dle, J. Pierpont Morgan, Colonel and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, and James bon of paper exactly what work the machine does and when it stops. pushed Hoosier Boy to a new. rec- ord and bettered 61 miles an hour. The Helen M. IV will make a bid for the trophy this year. The Mississippi Valley Power Association is a national tion. commodore of the ub, is president. strokes under Mrs. Miriam Burns Horn of Kansas:City, who placed sec- ond. Mrs, O. 8, Hill of Kansas City, defending champion, was third with an 88, Miss Virginia Pep of Louis, municipal and district title | holder, was fourth with an 89, Men’s par is 92. ‘The tournament will continue throughout the week with the cham- nionship round scheduled Saturday. Electric’ steaming irons, with o ter reservoir and tiny holes in its 7,000 rs, hey'll be shootin championship. ° ‘knocked is in this field, too; tht golfing world, But I'd i \ a yards and its 250 furrowed P at him in this| R. Freichville, by. Jones has EA. over the impartial old fel-| Mrs, Ralph Little, low in a practice round of 67, two} Lower bracket: years ago before the national ama-| Minneapolis, teur champions at Oakmont. Bob-| Safford, and the Fee Pairings bers Ll Rar Nr iss Doro! HBR Pin ve, Mme R sas City, U ardue, Hibbii k. ‘yop, Mo., vs. Min i Mrs. Prank, datteay, Minn., A. E. Minneapolis. steam are now being prod is said this device obviates the of dampening clothes before i i, Roat Bee di at ahis. Sire patel lenry Falk o! is city, past Houston Yacht bi ‘ ironing surface for the emergence of: stripes having been added after the admission to statehood of Vermont 3 that | age to the} cked by his|and 20 minutes from New York to j vertiable fairy-{ TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1927 did a hero aes oe Yor! (4 oe ute —shower aper from windows— in’ sucl Saluine. Never was there such a noise. The din of whistles of boats was appreciated if millions who_listefed in on the radio. fe tos Three Million at Celebration The entire line of Lindbergh's route up Broadway and Fifth avenue was packed solid with humanity from the curbstones to the boarded win- dows of business establishments. Most estimates of the welcoming throng. were around 3,000,000. More than 2,000 men and 109 trucks of the street cleaning depart- ment followed the Lindbergh page- ant, sweeping up thousands of tons of paper that had been shed as con- fetti on the parade. Approximately 5,000 cubic yards of paper had been ‘ywept up before sundown and work- iors continued their labors to get New York clean before today ended. T” Fights Tonight \e———__—+______* (By The Associated Press) Boston—Tommy Freenan, Hot | Springs, Ark., defeated Joe Simonich, ‘utte, Mont, (10). Billy Murphy, Lowell, beat Jack Zivie, Pittsburgh (10), Al Webster, Butte, Mont., ‘scored a technical a ak over Bob (a), Low 5 tand New York—Pal | outpointed Frankie \ Brooklyn, ‘exas (6). Raltimore--Bobby _ Garcia, Balti- more, knocked out Johnny Ceccoli, Scranton, Pa., (1). Jersey City, N. Trek (Testin Pilkinton, New Yor! my Britt, Californ’ outpointed J (2), Fights Tonight Los! Augoles—Johnny Vacca v Newsboy Brown (10). i pasoneld eS aan Seca | Notice to members of th Isaac Walton League—Call a? 'Erbe’s Barber Shop for, your ;membership card andi button. l Too Much “Acid?” Excess Uric Acid Gives Rise to Many Unpleasant Troubles. excess of uric acid is pri- in Unprecedented Time flyer and his mother. marily due to fe ‘kidney ac- * ah Di tinguished Gucata fetothroope ene this toxic 5 ‘ ile scores of private detectives makes its pres- A new round trip transcontinental; and Nassau county ipeaen: kept prey cobs mesa automobile record was hung uu Tues-| strangers from entering the grounds, a tired, languid fe and, |day, June 7, when a Chrysler Imper-| Colonel Lindbergh and his mother pol nding waret teres tial “80” phaeton driven by its owner,| were honored by 200 persons distin- headache. That L. B. Miller, arrived in Los Angeles | guished in society, finance and other oe ater a trip across the continent and| Feapects, ke stare prpenn ol hack again John W. Davis, D. ti ~ trees hoa The time. for the double transcon-| inee for president in 1924, Mr. and | Passage of secretions. Thou- ‘ pi pl

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