The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 12, 1927, Page 6

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PAGE SIX BASE RUNNING AIDS IN WINS FOR 2 TEAMS Harris Steals Home in Tenth to Help Senators Beat Indians. 3 to 2 YANKEES DRUB_ TIGERS Athletics Make It Three Out of Four From St. Louis— Saints Win y The nnin Associated’ Pr won two Washington | n the 10th inning and and enabled the $ win their sigth straight the Ind 316 2. Bill Bs: very in the ninth won With the gore ti g Barrett s to third w nd came home while stend juggled the ball. anks Drub Tigers Yankees drubbed the Detroit 5 in the last of the six game Lou ¢ ig went into a tie with Babe Ruth for the home run leadership by slamming the ball out of the park in the seventh in t Collins started the Yan It in the fifth with a home ing the Hug for five not in form o the Yankee and saved the The Tigers 8 to ser men runs. pounded Lil Wa y' ga The Athletics hopped on Elam Van gilder for 1 hits and made it thre out of four from Bee ni dtave dnck Quinn out In: the second but Johnson allowed only three hits in five innings until re lieved by Joc Pate, Cobb ot three hits including a home ran with one man on base. Li tle Lovcrg in National 1 veland Alex ainst Phila- Schuble, the Cardinals? op, handled 11 without he league leading Cubs were rained out at Boston. Other teams were not scheduled, ain stopped the contest between Toledo and the Brewers at kee in the third innin, team had crossed the plate. saints Win Home run clouting by Roettger and Shealy paved the w for St. Paul's 7 to 4 victory over Louisville, giving the Saints their third straight from the Colonels. In addition to slamming for the cir a broke up a budding Loui: 3 in the ninth inning by striking out Wilkinson and E Funk led the attack for the ints with three hits, two of which were triples. Minneapolis made it two out of three from the Indians by nosing out a 5 to 4 victory. Ferdie Schupp of the Indians pitched effectivel erratic: support by his team: the MM@ers chalk up three unear tallies. Holke of the Indians second perfect day with the willow by polling two doubles and a single . in three times at bat. The Columbus Senators launched a icious attack against three Kansas ity flingers to win, 7 to 5. Rehg, with a double and three singles, led the 17-hit attack of Columbus. ————_———__—__—_* | Yesterday’s Games : o———_——_ o NATIONAL LEAGHE Re St. Louis ........ Philadelphia. Weta Alexander und Snyder; Pruett and Wilson. iH ' Chicago—Boston postponed, grounds. wet Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE . R H New York eae Byte E 8 2 0 r, ‘ollins; Stoner, Boston ... Chicago .. McFayden, Harfiss and Hartley, Hoffman: Blankenship, Jacobs, Con- nally, McCurdy and Crouse. R ‘ashington 3 leveland 2 8) Hadley, Feet fanaa; éye, Grant and L. Sewell, Brilnaephia At Louis .. juinn, Johnson,’ Pate and Fox, Per- Vangilder and Schang. - AMERICAN Usa 4 Buck- SWIMMING SIMPLIFIED By James A. Lee Athletic Director, Cleveland (Ohio) Athletic Club LEARN TO FLOAT ON WATER IN STARTING TO SWIM Showing how to practice gliding. | ‘The photograph at top shows the | correct form in gliding, and the | phctograph on the s position to take to shove off. ees in swimming, wi ry on the surface inj prone ion, teaches the correct position for swimming the crawl. k to any upright | affords a resting one foot. Bend one leg ing cther at pool side. ard from the waist, head near arface with arms thrust forward at s down and hands touching. a deep breath is taken, push off with upraised foot and to full length. The body should! ?! form a straight line from fingers to toes. Hold this It you need air lift the hea surfa place for at knee, re aStoop for leng as ‘po: or , press downward with le. ‘¢ stepping forward. hod result in a glide} a vew Di Jes, try moving the legs up and down alternately so that as one ri the other dreps. Keep legs straight but r laxed. ep feet peinted pigeon toed. Make movements rather fast, in an e thrash, Don’t let the fect lift the water. When you perfect the leg movements, try the arms. forward, Don’t try to do too much at first, but. per' fection of this exer althcugh one ma , should result in the ability to a few yards after the first lesson. TOMORROW: = Arms in crawl stroke. Thrash them | George Von Elm Favored to Retain National Title Truculent Blond Amateur Has Swell Chance to Repeat’ When Minneapolis Meet Comes ’Round in August— Is Real Fighter PCa eS a ame eee He’s a Fighter (BY JIMMY POW , | New York, July 12.—(NEA)—Our truculent blond national ateur golf champion, the lad with the face of a swank Prus hauptman—oh, yes, it Von Elm—has what the boys would quaintly term a swell chance to repea He will defend his title in the; st competition of the event the Minikahda Club,} A Bs i George Von Elm , The Utah Tiger (who has made Los Angeles _ his r ase of operations) is tickled the prospect of competing at Mini- kahda, the 1927 battleground. It was! here that a brother westerner, debon- hi And heres wh to hold onto his national amateur golf title when he plays in the thirty-first competition of the event August 22 to 28 at. the Minikahda club of Minneapolis, tT Penrant Progress a AMERICAN ASROCIATION the peer n the ho ou can think of iron player among the am: s than Chick Evans, it_must he George V Bo i ‘ons with a punch and poi ly associated only with ers sionals, Von Elm’s motto is “go get ’em Like Marshal Foch, he believes ndianapoli Columbus ame of the Links| Louisville a fighter’s game. almost as much to perfection of tech- sobriquet, 54 in Match play Brazen nerve be desired as nique. And now take a squint at the r peaters in national amateur cham- pionships: Walter Travis, Jerry Travers and Chick Evans were cocky, determined fellows. Travers was the “dour, ‘grim, relentless type. High] pittsburgh trung, tautly-keyed Travers was ee ae HghOets tab: blbett of agdifferent type. t Stee Tork Won Title Once Brooklyn . He once eel into a champion- ship at Garden City, L. 1, qualifying by the bare margin of one stroke, and then went on to win-the title. He threw away his woodens to do it. Ali he needed was a stout driving. iron, a mashie, a putter and a swig of good Scotch whisky. His fighting spirit did the rest, Von. Elm. has Games Today Indianapolis at Minneapolis. Louisville at St. Paul. Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas City. NATIONAL LEAGUE Ww. L . Chicago St. Louis at Philadelphia. nati at New York. eee los at Brooklyn. Chicago at Boston. been. marked for 3] great things on the links. The man is so obviously a golfer. His cocky ion hasn’t made him pop-|New York certain opponents who lack Washington. that quality. 1| aggressive, too.domineering and action. it’ Von Ein h shots and, better. still, the abilit: bring them off under pressure. kneed‘ opponents usually re: mt ou ; hersatal ‘personality. Timid match port ; M vie vers pee been frightened by Von cH "8 Logie aah narisupe he has mellow -a' trifle- witha! 5 tive Boston at St, Louis. x acum Pt ne Philadelphia at Chicago, GAVE ‘Columbia ae the le shows the tretch | i George Von Elm has a good chance THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Gehrig and Ruth Again in * ‘te For Home Run Leadershi TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1927 p + ro Dempsey Perfects Defense se Agains S ESS ks Ye Sharkey’ s Left | Jones, “MacFarlane j | i | | | | | Keeler Tells How Two Played 72 Holes Even at Worces- ter—and Then Willie Won: Bebby Tried Desperate Battle to Break Tie in 1925 Open Pitch Shot BY o. Of the Ass ! When the open golf i in that by Jones, a farlane, the {pr quired ‘golf t BS is all jof 72 holes. At Worce {round of ‘th iw to lay iple of what ssional, t r the fi ttle an open championship i off, and W stories o championships are told y be sure that the story of not be overlooked, for it famous tie between Bob- and Willie Mac- cled Tackahoe 36 holes were re- t time in American square at the completion ter, in 1925, Jones came ‘\with a rush after a terrible start, a 78, and ‘went. from thirty- water level,' sixth place to tenth, then to fourth,| tie in first place with they started. the lie gave an exam- he might accomplish by jholing a putt of 70 feet—I paced it joff--for a b jHe got sank a {up a stroke the first I rounds agreed in that gives him | If Bobby k,| Bobby got a great -Yard pitch for a birdie both arms and lower one leg like'3 after two loose shots and picked irdie 3 on the third hole. down, in fact, and break when he at No, 14, That tied for round: as Willie, sinking his long putts with amazing regular- ity, missed a six-footer for the title at the home green. spent the Bobby's room and we the providential break —ulmost the first Bobby ever had jhad in a major competition -— had ‘another chance at the], intermission between | When they ‘started round, in a blazing o'clock I heard championship. the afternoon temperature, about Bobby say to Wil “The papers say it’s 105 in the we seit thas to stay in the shade’ Does Better And Bobby went on in beautiful urn 4 strokes up on Willie, beginning to be sorry for pedagogical professional, touched off a deuce on the ‘een, and another at the where Bobby took a bad nd when Bobby trying with a ken ambition to get home in 2 on the Igng, dogleg, fifteenth, lost his last stroke and was square, I be- cay to see the handwriting on the wal Then, at the final hole, Bobby tried a desperately close pitch\to hit ut the front of the small green and the tall, when h jtenth 4 well on, but 40 feet past the pin, [The pitch was two feet short. The rolled back into a deep bunker. Willie won a great and deserved vic- tory, in 108 holes—the longest Amer- ican’ open championship, DEMPSEY GETS GOOD DUCKING Falls in Water ‘as Déeck \Col- lapses on Arrival to Start N. Y. Mzrathon Swim Hague, N. Y., July* 12— (>) — dent that nearly proved serious roll up by the hole, after Willie, was | | crowd the Jack hieb finally: furnishe | bie about 5,000 spectators wit! first laugh of the day, greete Dem; ’s arrival here. to start the Lake George 24-mile swimming mara- thon today. Just. as the. former heavyweight champion stepped, from the steam- boat that had conveyed him up the lake, a crowd rushed to greet him and the flooring of the wharf col- lapsed. Down went Dempsey and his party, and, amid the seomasl of about 100 persons in two feet of wa- ter, Jack disappeared. From ‘the center of the mob ap- peared Lea, Flynn, -Dempsey“s mana- ger, with his white flannel tipisers all wet. Jack came next, ageing a woman from the heap, afi iis gray suit and white shoes were focks Nobody, Injured .. Everyone escaped with no hore than a wetting to the waist, with the exception of Jerry Luvadis, trainer of the former titleholder. Jerry was last from the muddle, and as fast, as he scrambled up the broken boards, he fell back again. Perfect weather conditions under a cloudless sky and warm sun greeted the 149 entries as they lined up for the $10,060 pull in the icy waters of this inland basin. ly | Fights Last Night | (Sy idan ieee 2 cr York—Le ‘Wash., won a techn! Willie Walker, Cokew, Brook lippines, (10, ilippines, ( Paterson, N. J.—Paul Cavalier, Paterson, scored a technical knock- out bie Jack Darnell, Washington, » C., C1). West New. York, N. J.—Jimmy Crit, California, shaded Billy White, Jersey City, (12). Fights Tonight Chicago—Sammy Baker, New York, vs. Mushy Callahan, junior welter- weight champion, Los Angeles, (10) Stanislaus Loayza, Chile, vs, Spug Meyers, Pocatello, (10); Fidel La- barba, flyweight champion, vs, Pal Moore, Chicago bantam, (10); Ignacio msi, , Aberfeen, ical knockout over New York (3). Jackie in, beat Pat Colombo, Fernandez, Filipino, vs. Joe Lucas,: Detroit, (10). ‘BOXERS TRYING POR COMEBACK Wills Meets Uzcudun in 15- rounder Tomorrow—Car- pentier May Box Walker New vit July 12.—(P)\—Hoping to regain some of the prestige he lost 1@st October by his decisive beat- ing at the hands of Jack Sharkey, Harry Wills will climb into the ring at Ebbets Field tomorrow night for & 16 yound contest with Pawino Uzcudun, the Spanish woodchopper. The battle marks the first of three bie heavyweight attractions of the summer, but unlike the Dempsey- Sharkey elimination “contest next week and the championship tilt in September, it holds little in store for either participant. Wills, past his prime, and Uzcudun, dropped from consideration by Tex Rickard, figure to share in the receipts on a Percentage basis. ‘Wills is something of a favorite. The giant Harlem negro says his| small hands, which often gave him | trouble, have been greatly improved activity—but at 35, an advanced age pugilistically, the brown panther will be faced by a rugged boxer nine years his junior and many believe that Wills will have to knock the basque flat on his buck to win. MAY BATTLE W. GEORGES’ MANAGER @ SAYS Paris, July 12.—()—F rane camps, manager of Georges Carpen- tier, told the newspaper L’Auto that negotiations have been opened for a bout between the French boxer and Mickey Walker of New Jersey, who recently retained the middleweight championship of the world by knock- ing out Tommy Milligan of Scotland the 10th round of a bout in Lon- don. Deseamps said he received pro- posals from Charles B. Cochran, Brit- ish promoter, for a fight betw American and French boxers, agreed to discuss condition by a nine month lay off from ring} HAS WORKOUT EACH MORNING WITH PARTNER: Secrecy Surrounds Ex- Champ’s Practice—Results ‘ Successful, Is Report Saratoga Lake, N. Y., July 12.—UP) —Jnck Dempsey has been up to something at his college very deep in the woods, a mile from the lake shore training headquarters —— and now the secret is out. | Every morning Dave Shade, jmiddleweight pal from California, jsteals from the camp just after |dawn and meets Jack in the hay field {back of the college. There, with (Trainer Jerry Luvadis, the pair hold [a secret workout for 30 minutes be- fore Jack takes to the road for a five mile run. During that time they practic: just two moves—-and on the result of Jack's secret drill may depend the faim of his comeback » engagement with Jack Sharkey in Yankee Sta- dium July 21. Try Move Often Dave, possessor of one of the fast- est left jabs in the fistie game, shoots that hand inte Demps head, ‘The former champion catches the blow on his right glove, and h almost the same motion shi left to Shade’s body. Then they try the move again and again. The workouts at dawn have been going on for a week now in anticipa- tion of the rifle-like ieft hand Shar- key has employed so successfully. Jack in the coming fight expects to see even more left jabs than Gene Tunney threw his way in winning the championship last fall, But Dempsey also plans to be ready for such an attack with a defense and offense that comprise Ittle more, than a single movement. ‘ Jack's % “ the preference for Camels, For Camel, made.of .supremely blended to a mellowness, mildness - od individenlity of tense chit hepond tndecte: ing of imitation, « If you don’t yet know ite satisfyiiig stood oma ie veehaletng oxen: Cigarettes, all, because by the greatest number of smokers iis conejo bes cigurcte,

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