The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 16, 1929, Page 8

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Paul Cook Outclasses Competition and Par to Win Tournam JAMES BARRETT IS DEFEATED 6 AND 4 BY LOCAL SHOOTER} Cook Makes Two Eagles and Seven Birdies ment; Par Never Wins in Tourna- NIMMO WINS CONSOLATION Stangebye, Kelly, Brown, Gard- ner, Irick and Mann Are { Flight Champions Shooting four birdies to score an- | other 33 on the first nine and one be- | low par on the first five holes of the second nine yesterday afternoon, Paul | Cook, Bismarck’s youthful golfing sharpshooter, put Old Man Par and three finalist competitors to shame to retain his title as Missouri Slope golf champion. Cook competed with three finalists in the final round of the second an- nual Missouri Slope tournament held here. His opponents were James Barrett, Minot; Eric A. Thorberg, Bis- marck; and Harry Kneeshaw, Minot. Cook defeated Barrett 6 up and 4 to play, Thorberg 11 up in 14 holes, and Kneeshaw 8 up in 9 holes Tourney winners were | Championship—Cook. — champion; | William K. Nimmo, Devils Lake, con- solation. First Flight—Dr. T. L. Stangebye, New England, champion; L. Thompson, Mandan. consolation. Second Flight—William Kelly, Far- 0, champion; Harry Rubin, Bis- marck, consolation. Third Flight—H. E. Brown. Dickin- son, champion; Jack Guger, Bismarck, consolation. Fourth Flight—Dr. Gardner, Dick- inson, champion; Don Nichols, Man- dan, consolation. Fifth Plight—Ralph Irick, Bismarck, champion; Bob Conger, Bismarck, | consolation. Sixth Flight—Fred W. Mann, cham- pion. In winning his third successive tournament of the current season, Cook played remarkable golf, not bowing to Old Man Par once. scor- ing two eagles, seven birdies, and los- ing only one hole to Barrett and two to Nimmo. From the third hole yesterday, it ‘was apparent that the championship field would be outclassed by the youth. He made birdies on the third, fourth, and fifth holes to take a lead of three up on Barrett and at the end of the first nine held a six up advantage on the Minot star. It was just a question of time on the second nine. Barrett made a birdie three on the fourth but Cook ended things with a birdie four on the fifth. Cook should have set a new course record of 32 strokesfor the first nine. but failed by inches on a putt on the * eighth green which would have given | him a birdie four. Bismarck’s star will not enter any | tournaments until the state tourna- ment at Devils Lake in August. Yesterday : <ternoon's results follow: ‘CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT The scores: 1 { Consolation: William K. Nimmo, Devils Lake, defeated Lewis Kostlecky, Dickinson, 1 up in 20 holes. . FIRST FLIGHT "Second Round Dr. T. L. Siangebye, New England, defeated Hugo Littig, Dickinson. Henry Jones, Bismarck, defeated C. E._Dorfler, Mandan. Final: St2ngebye defeated Jones. Consolation J. P. Cain, Dickinson, defeated H. Bill:gmeier, Goodrich. L. G. Thompson, Mandan, defeated Heaton, Dickinson. Thompson defeated Cain. SECOND FLIGHT Second Round Bismarck, Klein, defeated | Final: Kelly defeated Klein. Ce onsolation Harry Rubin, Bismarck, defeated E. J. Heising. Bismarck. Gregg, Fargo, won from C. A. Heu- pel, Bismarck, default. Rubin defeated Gregg. ‘ THIRD FLIGHT ’ _ HE. Brown, Dickinson, defeated W. E. Spann, Bismarck. | Kenneth Noble, Mott, won from Ly- “mat Baker, Bismarck, default. + Final: Brown defeated Nobie. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE,. TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1929 ‘ ent en, BISMARCK AND MANDAN JUNIORS PLAY FOR TOURNAMENT RIGHT | Suspended by A. A. U., Swimmer Turns Pro | The “heavy hand of the A. A. U.” was not so heavy for Martha Norelius, Olympic record-breaker who recently was suspended indefinitely by the amateur organization because she “appeared in exhibitions with professional B Miss Norelius replied to the suspension by announcing that Ren and the amateur organization loses swimmers.” she will join the professional ranks, thereby an outstanding star. Miss Norelius will enter the Wrigley Marathon at Toronto this year and compete for prizes which total $50,000. Miss Norelius is shown above, right, with Helen Meany, fancy diving champion, who also was suspended by the A. A. U. for the same reason. The picture was taken recently after the two girls had completed a round of golf at the Tamarack Country club, Greenwich, Conn. FALL OF CARDINALS MAY GO DOWN AS STRANGEST OF ALL e For Two Months They Were in Thick of It; Now They’re Near Second Division LOSE ANOTHER YESTERDAY Cubs Chop Half Game From Lead of Pirates by Winning Two From Phillies By HERBERT W. BARKER (Associated Press Sports Writer) Here and there on the pages of baseball history are recorded the dra- matic collapses of powerful baseball machines but the fall of the St. Louis Cardinals, National league champions in 1928, threatens to go down in the books as one of the strangest and Most unexpected of all form reversals. For two months the Cards were in the thick of the pennant chase. Then. they fell apart. : In the short space of a month the Cards have dropped from a position as a leading contender for the cham- Pionship to a dogfight with Brooklyn to stay out of the second vision. Southworth's crew lost ground to the Dodgers yesterday, bowing to the New York Giants, 7 to 2, while the Robins were turning back the Cincin- nati Reds, 4 to 2. The second place Chicago Cubs shaved a half game off Pittsburgh's lead by downing the Phillies in both ends of a double bill, 9 to 6 and 7 to 6. Chuck Klein hit his 24th, 25th and 26th home runs during the double bill to assume major league leadership in this department. Hack Wilson got his 23rd homer in the first game. An error by George Sisler enabled the Pirates to beat the Boston Braves, 5 to 4 in 11 innings and stretch their winning streak to eight in a row. The Yankees picked up half a game on the Athletics by beating Detroit, 7 to 6, able the A's were splitting a double bill with Cleveland. Babe Ruth's 20th homer of the year in the ninth inning gave the Yanks their win at Detroit. Cleveland si gged Ehmke, Romane! | Ge e and Yerkes to take the firs JULY 1) (By The Prees) Batting—Herman, Robins, .202. pe (INCLUDING GAMES Associated ° ‘Fights Last Night © ° (By The Associated Press) Boston—Ernie Schaaf, Boston, knocked out Jack Gagnon, Bos- ton, (6). New York—Sammy Dorfman, New York, stopped Petey Mack, Jersey City, (6). Toronto—Steve Rocco, Toronto, outpointed Phil Tobias, New York, (10). Grand Rapids, Mich. — George Godfrey, Leiperville, Pa., stopped Ralph Smith, San Francisco, (2). State’s Nimrods Elect Minot for Shoot Next Year Frank Ray, Dickinson, Wins the President's Trophy and First Singles Half (Tribune Special Service) Dickinson, N. Dak., July 16.—Minot was chosen the scene of next year’s annual trap shooting tournament of the North Dakota Sportsmen's asso- ciation at a meeting of the association here last night in connection with the annual three-day shoot of the organ- ization. ~ The tournament closes this after- noon, Frank Ray, Dickinson, and Dr. J. R. Pence, Minot, defending champion, each broke 95 targets of a possible 100 to tie for first place in the first half of the singles championship yesterday afternoon. Krieger, Redfield, 8. Dak., winner of the 25 pairs doubles Sunday with a 46 score, crowded the two leaders in the singles champion- ship yesterday. He broke 94 birds. The next five, al h STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS. AMERICAN LEAGUE Standin; Philadelphia New York . St. Louis Detroit .. z Cleveland . 4 Washington ... 30 48 385, Chicago . 55.353 Boston 58 301 Games Yesterday First Game: R RO: Philadelphia . 5 7 1 Cleveland 8 15. 2 Ehmke, Rommel, Yerkes and Coch- rane; Perkins; Ferrell and L. Sewell, Hartley. Second Game. R H E Philadelphia . 4 M1 Z Cleveland .. co @ 7 1 Earnshaw and Cochrane; Miljus and L. Sewell, Hartley. R H E Washington .,....... 2 8 1 Chicago ... 7 5 3 0 Marberry, Liska and Tate; Walsh and Berg. R H E New York . Tae 14 3 Detroit .. 6 9 0 Sherid, Heimach and Dickey; Car- roll and Phillips. CONTEST SCHEDULED FOR BISMARCK PARK TOMORROW EVENING Title; Mandan Best in Fifth District STATE MEET TO BE AT MINOT Bismarck Beat Wilton, McClus- ky, Linton; Mandan Beat Dickinson, Stanton Legion junior baseball teams ment at Minot July 22-24. Bismarck nine. ning. R H E Boston 3 7 1 St. Louis 10 16 1 MacFayden, Bayne, Carroll. Dob- ens, Bradley and Berry, A. Gaston; Stewart and Ferrell. NATIONAL. LEAGUE Standings Won Lost Pct. Pittsburgh . 52 26666 Chicago . 49-28 636 New York 49 36576 St. Louis oO 42 488 rooklyn. 37 42 468 Philadelphi 32 48 -400 ston, 32 50 390 Cincinnati . 30 49380 Games Yesterday First Gai R H E| Chicago . 9 12 0 Philadelphia . a 15 3 Bush and Tay Schulte; Benge, McGraw and Lerian, Davis. Second Game. R H E Chicago ... 7 8 0 Philadelphia . ws 6 nN 1 Blake, Nehf, Root and Taylor; Roy, Collins, Elliott, McGraw, Sweetland and Davis. R H E St. Louis .. 2 7 1) New York . ae ie | ean | Sherdel an ilson; Scott and O'Farrell. i | Re ee} Cincinnati . 2 4 0 Brooklyn .. _ 4 8 0 Kolp. Ehrhardt and Gooch, Suke- forth; Clark and Picinich. R H E} Pittsburgh 5 7 1| Boston coe AL 3! (1 innings) | Meine and Hargreaves; Brandt and | Spohrer. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Standin; Pet. Kansas City . 875 St. Paul ... 605 Minneapolis . 583 Indianapolis . 482 Louisville 463 Columbus 430 Toledo 383 Milwaukee . 360 H E Columbus 20 «3 2 Milwaukee A oe 3 Jablonowski and Shinault; Cobb, Eddelman, Buvid and McMenemy, ‘Young. R H Toledo .. oe . 4 7 Kansas City . »- 9 13 M¢Quillan and Hayworth; Nelson and Angley. Others not scheduled. E 1 0 ‘|Latonia Event to |< Be Worth $60,000 ee New York, July 16—(#)—The La- tonia championshi; wl ecocee oo oe wl eoomcconecemal cocroconnnom | base; J. Spriggs, first base; L. Brown, eliminated Ashley and Steele. ing Stanton. The Morton county Saturday afternoon. Eddy Agre and Dale Brown proba- bly will make up the battery for Bis- marck while Magilki and Brunelle are likely Mandan starters. The rest of the lineups may look like this: Bismarck—Ahlen, second left fiel joetz, center field; N. Agre, third base; Wristen, shortstop; and Tait, right field; Mandan—Dahiquist, center field; Schwartz, left field; Fit- teter, second base; L. Dietrich, right field; Saunders, shortstop; Fleck, third base; Boehm, first base. Bismarck has defeated Mandan in two carly season games. Dickinson Rifle Team Is Beaten Williston Sharpshooters Take Stark County Sextet Into Camp in Match (Tribune Special Service) Dickinson, N. D., July 16.—Co. E The Rotary Cubs and the Mandan |by hiting safely six tii youngsters will clash in the titular /at bat, batted in five Game at the city athletic field, Bis-/five himself. marck, at 6:30 o'clock Wednesday eve-|matched those of Bruno Haas, of St. KANSAS CITY INCREASES ITS LEAD OVER Lynn Nelson, Fargoan Pitching for Blues, Maintains Lead by Beating Toledo . | Capital City Has Fourth District] COLUMBUS CRUSHES BREWS Tony Cuccinello Equals League Record, Hitting Safely in Six Attempts By WILLIAM A. WEEKES Chicago, July 16.—(#)— Kansas City’s lead over St.Paul in the Amer- ican championship drive today was five and one-half games, the Blues yesterday turning in a victory over Toledo while the Saints were idle. While the Blues were trimming the Bismarck and Mandan American |Mudhens, 9 to 4, the Columbus Sen- will jators were improving have to fight it out for the right to/and collective batting averages at the enter the state championship tourna-jexpense of Miss Florence Killilea’s their individual luckless Milwaukee Brewers. Colum- This was announced today by John | bus pounded three Brewer hurlers for G. Karasiewicz, athletic director of |23 hits and a 20 to 1 victory, with Lloyd Spetz post and manager of the /Tony Cuccinello leading the assault. Cuccinello equaled a league record runs and scored The performance Paul, in 1925, and Jimmy Zinn of The Cubs won the championship | Kansas City, in 1926. The Senator of the fourth district Sunday by de-|shortstop included a home run and a feating Linton 13 to 7 at the Emmons | double in his collection, for a total of | sweepstakes county city. Bismarck had beaten /10 bases. Wilton and McClusky in preliminary| Milwaukee's lone run was the re- tournament games and Linton had |sult of Eddie Pick’s home run in the|time was 2:52 2-5. seventh inning. Pete Jablonowski, Mandan won the championship of |Columbus hurler, held the Brewers to the fifth district Sunday by defeat- | six hits. Nelson gave Toledo seven hits, fair- youngsters had trimmed Dickitison |1y well spaced, while the Blues raked McQuillan for 13, to help increase the Kansas City lead in the race. Minneapolis was to get into action today with Louisville as the opposi- tion while the threatening Saints were to entertain Indianapolis. Pop Salesman Has $100,000. Fortune San Antonio, Tex. July 16.—(7)— “Julius,” whose thundering plea, “Don't you ever get thirst-ee?” is fa- miliar to thousands of players and ‘|fans, probably has hawked his last bottle of pop. Few persons know that Julius boasts a last name, although his given name has been a by-word in San An- tonio for 20 years, His sur-name is Myer. Likewise few know he has laid away a fortune estimated at $100,000, as well as providing education for several children, through his assorted occupations. IDLE SAINT PAUL most of Julius’ pep. As a result this born showman has appeared in public only a few times this season. Julius came to San Antonio on a stretcher a comparatively young man, for the express purpose of dying. He improved sufficiently to mount a horse, and conceived the idea of be- coming the town crier. Every day, rain or shine, Julius rode his pony, Placards suspended and a megaphone bellowing merits of various products. ‘That outdoor life changed Julius into a strapping fellow. Now he is quit- ting. |Collins Sets New | State Auto Mark Twice in 1:03; Breaks Own Mark Made at Fargo Grand Forks, N. D., July 16.—(?)— Circles Grand Forks Race Track/ Tom Loughran Is Favored to Beat Jimmy Braddock Challenger for Light Heavy- weight Championship Has Dynamite in His Right New York, July 16—()—James J, Braddock’s attempt to lift the light heavyweight crown off Tommy Lough- Tan's brow this week furnishes metro- Politan follower; of the fistic industry with their first real championship bout since last September when Andre Routis beat Tony Canzoneri for the featherweight titie. The battle of the left jab and streight right—Loughran and Brad- dock—is set for 15 rounds at the Yankee stadium Thursday night. The advance dope favors Loughran to outpoint the challenger, current odds being around 2 to 1. Braddock, however, packs enough dynamite in his right arm to laugh at odds. If he can pierce Loughran’s guard, and that is not easy, there will be a new light heavyweight champion. A new automobile dirt track record for North Dakota was on the record books today. es in six times} Emory Collins 1928 Canadian auto| Harry dirt champion broke the old mark yesterday by circling the oval twice} in 1:03 at the fairgrounds. His time was one-fifth of a second faster than the record he set at Fargo last week. Collins also won the Flickertail with George Guttu, Forks, won the consolation race. The 8Seattle Stars | Injured in Week Seattle, Wash., July 16—(7)—In one week the Seattle Indians of the Pa- cific coast league had this kind of luck: Bill Steinecke, catcher, suf- fered a broken thumb; Charlie Wade, outfielder, broken toe; Fred Muller, third baseman, sprained ankle; Chick Ellsworth, shortstop, strained foot ligament; Kyle Graham, pitcher, kink in neck; Harry Taylor, first baseman, infected finger; Andy House, pitcher, sore arm; Frank Cox, catcher, “under the weather.” The bat boy held up in fine shape. RUBE STILL GOING Twenty-one years in baseball, Rube Benton of Minneapolis is still pitching winning ball. He is the Jack Quinn of the American association. AT MICHIGAN 29 YEARS Pielding H. Yost, director of inter- collegiate athletics at the University of Michigan, has been at the school for 29 years. He was active head foot- A long siege of illness has taken ball coach for a quarter of a century. Rene de Vos, Belgian middleweight; and Dave Shade, California veteran, are to meet eo the semifinal and Ebbet Freeport slugger, matches punches with Izzy Grove, East. Side :uiddleweight, in another ged 4 iumbert Fugazy has arranged card at Ebbets field Wednesday night: that may take some of the bloom’ over the Yankee stadium affair. He Grand Forks, third. J. Walter, Grand has matched Victorio Campolo, six” feet seven and one-half inch Argen- tine puncher, with Arthur Dekuh, big” Italian, in the feature bout of 10: rounds. Angus Snyder, heavy-hitting Kansas City prospect, battles Jack’ Renault, Canadian star, in the semi-’ final, and Jack Roper ts to-clash with “One Punch” Leo Williams, New York negro. The metropolitan district also will see Kid Chocolate in action, the Cu- ban featherweight flash meeting Mil+ ton Cohen in a 10-~ounder at the’ Rockaway Playland stadium Fridi Pete Nebo and Harry Blitman, fe erweights, furnish the chief attraction * at the Queensboro stadium tomorrow night. LEHIGH IS HAPPY Not a single varsity letter man was: lost to the 1929 football squad at Les high university through failure in scholastic work. Not only d:: every: letter man pass, but less than half a: dc_2n out of a squad of 100 candidates went through on probation. HOUSETOPS AT $1 During a recent series between the Yankees and Athletics in Philadelphia. the roofs cf the two-! brick: houses outside the low right field fence were invisible under a mass of- humanity. The owners charge $1 for the seats and reap a nice “overhead” Profit on the season. rifle team of Williston invaded Dick- inson Sunday for the first U. 8. rifle Competition match ever held here and carried off first honors by shooting 1,130 to Co. K's 1,111. Sgt. Rufus B. Lee, Co. K, Dickin- son, won high honors for the day by scoring 234 out of a possible 250. Sgt. Harold Barker, Co. —, stood a close second with two points less. He was the only man in the contest who shot @ perfect score on the 200-yard rapid fire prone, with 50 points out of as many shots. Co. E team members shot at 200- yard range, id fire, from stand- ing to prone with an average for the five men of 49 points each out of a Possible 50. Without Sgt. Vernon L. ‘*hompson of Co. K, high point man of the 164th Infantry during the annual encamp- ment at Camp Grafton recently, Co. K scored within three points of their Tecord there of 1.114 which won them first honors at the camp. A return shoot has been arranged for August 18 at Williston. Individual scores were: | SREB Bi sepia SEER8 St. Paul, July 16—()}—A of students from the University of Mine F553 qu i F { HE NRY GEORGE Try. HENRY GEORGE-you will never find a better use for 5¢ e See anand

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