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BORGIAN CONTINUE AVORITE TO RETAN “MET CHANPIONSHP yobby and Gene Each Score) wel : 145, or One Over Par, for | % 36Holes on Course c } SEVERAL CASUALTIES LISTED | Pe | garrison R. ‘Jimmy’ Johnston, | Ph St. Paul, in Group of 8 4 Breaking 150 "4 By ALA Pebble Beach, Calif | lie boys have come ying trenches a trifle buffeted “S$ @ man-to-man battle from now ; Y, for the amateur golf champion- E fhip of the United |. Pebble Boach by ene Homans, who t © medal Ponors with totals of 145, one over , in the $6-hole qualifying ski ish, the 31 survivors were paired for 1c elimination match play today. EYwo 18-hole rounds faced the re- | Niced field of title contestants which £¥ nightfall will be abrupt! ed h a select eight for the quarter nals tomorrow over the 46-holc te. GOULD Sept. 4 Jones Stil! Faverite 2 Although outplayed first by a col- Mise boy from the University of ornia at Los Angeles, Gibson Dun- Bip, on the opening day of the qual- ing competition. and then held to! ven terms after 36 holes by another Foftegian, Eugene V. Homans of ton, Bobby Jones began the ®hain struggle for the defense of his! without any shift in the odds | My his favor. The champion drew the | Young Omaha Johnny Good- | han, who qualified with 157, for his irst round opponent, with the pros- set that he would be called on in afternoon to battle the long-dri 1 | | | | | | Pretty, and Swimmer, Too Elcaror McKim Helps Disprove Belief That Women Swim- mers Must Be Large be a champion swimmer, it seems to be necessary to resemble a whale. Here is a champion who doesn't look a bit like a sea-horse. but might be taken for one of the nymphs in Father Neptune's court. « | McKim, of Balboa, Panama. and she holds the mile championship at | nant far above any mere race a:tcr | 1 aienapolis 24 minutes 49 3-5 seconds. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1929 : CUBS NEED 16 WINS, | PHILADELPHIA TEN, TO CLINCH BUNTINGS | George Earnshaw Is First Hurl- er to Win Twenty Games; Yanks Are Submerged By WILLIAM J. CHIPMAN beyond the doubts of even the most ers, the Cubs and the Athletics now turn to a pursuit of the mathematical certainty through the stretch. The case should not be long. i A survey of the standing of the Phillips Finl rday of as dramatic a qu round as was ever witnessed. © Homans, the studious looking son Wf a former famous Princeton foot- ‘Mall player, was bracketed with Fay ®6olema in Cyril Tol- the British champion, and Eddie d of New York, holder of the Can- idian title who was forced to play- Wf for the right to continue in the , ment. Another star attraction Mivolved George Von Elm, Detroit, pion in 1926, and Chandler Egan. Aedford, Ore., title holder in 1904-05. i Many Casualties Listed As the qualifying round was con- | luded, the score board only bihowed a succession of narrow escapes Facor a good share of the favorites, but | <i easualty list that included such con- pleuous ormer champion Penn Outfit Will Be Chick E Philadelphia, Sept. 4— Somerville, names as Ross ® itle holders; and three ex-holders of Nhe western amateur title—Don Stein if Seattle; Frank Kolp of Portland ‘band Keefe Carter of Oklahoma Ci! lof 6 Was a day of spectacular _per- urormances, from the early round of 233 by Homans that put him up to the Ror to stay until Jones and Dunlap come east this fall! Franklin field. Lou Young, crafty head tithe late afternoon with the champion 4 away from his youthful Cal- fornia rival. Jones, slipping five strokes off his Monday score, seemed ofan at worried by the failure of j¢Calamity Jane” to roll ‘em in on the but otherwise there was not Now Lou is going in weapons. for him to be concerned about 3 Harrison R. (Jimmy) Johnston, St. an?aul, with 149, was in the group of paight that succeeded in breaking 150. ce “Woman Makes 4 We're going in for wider a short chunky fellow, ’ ia Female Angler [23 Bests 76 Tarpon in Thrill- ke” ing Sea Fights Hy of good backs, mess up ge, Me, Som A ana cet of the ran 4 7 to their ees. We'll hi E ‘ways of deep-water angling. Mi a " L. Wilson of Philadhiphia is | “elo ® center. dited here with the record for con- ts in a single season's battles with da’s gamest fish, the tarpon. Wilson is the ranking woman |? of a small band of veteran | n who invade Florida each! and summer in quest of tarpon. | Stone, stage star, joined th2 ts of the stiver-scale anglers this | +, while recuperating from the in- | received in an airplane crasn | 2 | (By The Associated Kuh, Beynton, Texas, (3). bine”) ‘April 41 lought a los- | for nine holes of play. i |. Ray, Dickinson . Dambly, | i Pry ; i an gr rae te ri Hl il 7 menfegratans= & i anes | : | ep holiday engagement gave the A's a} Lou Young, Curly-Headed Men- ‘Robots Slug Until) record of eames (ron and Oy rte with Just two more to be decided. | cay ae oe Is Knocked Out “20:75, , 225, 22 anuw 27 | sought, gave him the honor of being /Milwaukee .. : 4 { the first major leaguer to reach that ; Minneapolis { tor, Plans Strong and De- | ceptive Quaker Team | OPEKUN-TO SUCCEED SCULL | After Stanford for Variety, Power and Speed ‘ sylvania. will have something a_ bit | an@ Don Carrick. former Canadian | out of the ordinary to offer Califor- | nia when the Golden Bears of the wi to battle the Quakers in one of the biggest inter- | sectional football duels of the year on | For several years now, curly-headed Penn's uniformly fine elevens, Inished their nip and tuck tussle in! gone farther than any other football leader in the east. in the development of deceptiop in his running attack. strength along with his deception and a wider variety of plays and offensive | “The time has come,” Lou 5 couple strength and deception foundation of Penn's attack. year my running attack was top ‘This year I'm taking the power, speed, and deception. have the men this season. ag lateral pass. We'll have some great, eC0! t {backs this fall, with Walter Opeki ia | | place of the great Paul Scull. kun has every thing. Another excep- tional fellow is Dick Gentle. “Center is our big worry. An er- ratic pivot man can demoralize a set. throw the entire attack ou! gi by shooting the ball into the faces PENNSYLVANIA LAYS PLANS Modeled | Penn coach of has for more use of the filling the Ope- plays, and instead of ye to de- {prayer of the boxing fan for fighters} Last | , | means of controls. records. | | When George Earnshaw finally ' Columbus = speared his 20th victory at Philadel- nag 37a phia yesterday by 10 to 2, with the | yeni 5783 Yankees on the receiving end, he~ placed his team just 14 and one half | FOR CALIFORNIA INVASION i=": 2n sacs : | the season's series against the cham- - .— —— pions, as the third straight in sive | nies City 7 7 4 Murray. vis and Angley; Polli ren z | figure this season. Pugilistic Mechanical Men Can: Deliver Eight Different Blows | with the Senators on top by 10 to | | at the finish. i i All of the National league clubs; | spent the day recuperating from the ; Pasadena, Calif., Sept. 4.—(Pi—The | effects of an active holiday. ! has been answered | men who box each other with blows twice as heavy as those produced by their human counterpart | Alabama Foothall Coach Says; W. J. Veronda, a teacher of science at the Southwestern Military Acad Southern Teams Employ emy, conceived the fighters, who con- ‘ Pass Best tinur their battle without bother of ‘ rounds until a knockout is scored. ie Neither will they “lose their head”; Tuscaloosa, Ala., Sept. 4—(P}—No in the heat. of the fray. Each robot,| less an authority than Wallace Wade. is capable of eight. separate move- ; football coach of Alabama, says that ments singly or simultaneously, and | spring football practice is the salva- the control of their actions is notjtion of the gridiron game in the premeditated. Instead it. as actuated | southern states. by an ingeniously constructed me-; “Football in the south now ts rec- chanical brain. | ognized as being on a par with the Briefly, the brain is a hollow fiber | rest of the country,” says Wade, “and sphere with internal electrical con- | I attribute this to the longer periods tacts. A steel ball moves freely as/of pre-season practice which schools the body sways in the progress of its in other parts of the country cannot movements, touching these contacts! enjoy on account of the weather. resulting in impulses which are trans-| “We can not compcte with the mitted to clectromagnet muscles. The | eastern, middle western and Pacific | rest of the action is brought about by | coast schools without it. We can't | ‘compete with them in numbers and 1 “The robots are made of steel tub- | therefore we can't get the finished ing and aluminum castings, fashioned | material they do. much as the human skeleton. Dressed , “It is foolish to think that a school like men, they talk to each other with ; With an enrollment of 2,500 can com- hoarse robotian language during the | pete with one having a student body fight. | of 12,000. The only way for the south ‘When one of the mechanical men | to maintain its present standing is is hit squarely on the chin and again | to take advantage of the weather and ‘on the chest, it falls to the floor. The | Work harder and longer than its {count of ten is unnecessary. ; Tivals.”” | Coach Wade thinks the south 1s o——_—_—_———_ .—— 9} ’ Fights Last Night || Pres)” Jersey City, N. J.—Arthur De New York, knocked out Joc New York.—Pete Nebo, Tampa, Fla., and Sid Terriss, New York, Dale, Decatur, IIL; Phil O'Dowd, Columbus, 0., (8). pounds Golfers in Lincoln Park, Chicago, } bucking mule papeenied, beneath | often wait six hours before teeing off | pearing in semi-windup bouts these {20 Nimrods Compete in Shoot Here | Scor:3 made in the singles, handicap and doubles events Bismarck: | an Cha Taber day egeeed oe aes During a three-game series with the | more adept in the use of forward ‘New York Giants more than 85,000 | Passes than any other section. persons paid their way into Cubs’ ‘Teams in the south and middle west. park at Chicago. take more chances, but those in the —— ig ogee are losing their conserv- | Blue Larkspur, by hurting his leg 948m, he says. |in a workout at Saratoga Springs, |, Coach Wade believes that the in- ‘lost a chance to become the h Meryem hang cep = ‘inner among America’s southern football is making. Notre (NE Dame Lyre are sprinkled every- | Rogers Hornsby is having a hard | where. thern coaches are appesr- , time getting his batting average up pl gi ey fella rh to his high mark of 1928 when h ee leader or runncrup most of the coaching staffs are being employed. time. | Strangler Lewis, deposed as heavy- | weight champion, doesn’t mind ap- An optimist Fite baldt ded | | man who listens to hair- | days, raising stories Handicap Doubles 44x50 15x24 PENNANTS, R ris, Carroll’ and Heving. (Associated Press Sports Writer) |New York .. . With the two pennant races settled | Philadelphia # hopeful Pirate and Yankee support-|fEarnshaw and Cochrane. ! "The Red Sox and the Senators ,Menemy: Pate, Ferguson and Kenna. ea i played a spirited game at Boston, |MeMullen. | Runs—Gehringer, Tigers ‘The answer has come from the, Bi H | (Pets throat. of pugilistic robots, mechanical | eal r ng e Pp | : Second-Place Saints Can Make Things Interesting by Walloping Blues AMERICAN LEAGUE { 95 Standings ie waged Are Settled Beyond og ee wnsifon tost Fol MILLERS BEAT BREWERS: | Doubts of Most Hopeful |New york 4 «54 1878) — } | Yank, Pirate'Eans {Se tous, $32 Home Run by Ivy Griffin With | ees ca a . a One Man on Base Brings [LESS THAN 30 GAMES LEFT Chicas ace Mitwaukee Defeat By PAUL R. MICKELSON & . Chicago, Sept. 4.—?}—“Bubbles” 16 1 Hargrave's ambitious St. Paul clan 10 1 Must be reading Pirate books. and Tate; Mor- . 10 Pipgras, Sherid, Hoyt and Dickey; Others not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Stan ‘ clubs shows that the Cubs need 16! on Lost Pet. - | victories and the Athletics 11 to as-ichicago .. 361 | eee ee aaa te sure another Chicago-Philadelphia | pittsburgh 73 «53 5709/8 cacti eaane SnUTON. } world's series even in the face of @/New York ~ 63 «59 «(538 aay ae stant was fuayes | possible clean sweep by the runner-up } gst, Louis 61 63 482 in the hickey teoy yemenay but it clubs. The Mackmen have 23 more |Brooklyn . 58 68 «460 was one of the best thrillers of the games to play and the Bruins 27. Philadelphia 57 70449 | season and was between Minneapolis Neither of the coming champions {Cincinnati ........ 53 74 417] Seaeon, and was besmees, Neutieapen| should require more than 10 days Or | Boston ic 77 ~— 389, Bre into the ninth inning ‘two weeks at the most to settle the | eee oe cay wae extinguished | argument. It is the first time in| Games Yesterday | teawenee ene Tene to tale te tend. many years that both races have Open date. | But the bat of Pinch Hitter Ivy Grif- been in line for such early decision debiininal ‘fin saved the Millers. With one man Bs ————— nthe, same season ck nor Joc Mc-| AMERICAN ASSOCIATION on base and two out, Ivy lashed out a You see quite a few pictures of women swimmers, but somehow. in order to | Carthy is disturbed greatly over the | ‘Won Lost aa sho Aid atieenvanette, 1 neg | question of winning 100 games. Both | kansas City ....... 93 47 | ok feat the Brewer at- would like to do it. And both still |g: paul ..... $3 56 pee re tomar ne a en She is Eleanor | may, but each puts the winning pen- | yinneapolis 76 «64 a single in five trips to the plate. 64 6 - 2 oan Eddelman, Templae and ba Ba —Foxx. Athletics, 373. Stolen 4 Others not scheduled. a Pitehing—Grove, Athletics, won 19, Few Like This Fellow antes Joe Gardner, varsity quarterback of seston smith had a card of 307 in the Georgetown university team, W8S | 140 1998 national open, 13 strokes be- | at ay | ° e e one of five students awarded a testi- | who will “mix it up” all of the ~w.|Wade Thinks Dixie ==" by the president for excel-; lence in studies. He had an average z SAINT PAUL COPIES PIRATES ; BY TROUNCING LOOP LEADERS| Seventh Net Title ones and Homans Deadlocked for Medal Honors at Pebble Beach LEADERS IN MAJORS SEEK ECORDS UNNECESSARY Bill Tilden Seeks | eight Americans and Six For- eigners Seeded; Nine of Them Oraw Byes Boy Ball Players __ Seek World Title: New York, Sept. Buffalo and New Orleans Nines for the nation, men’ pif! ae juled to start at Forest Hills ’, Clash in American Legion Tourney Series was announced today by the United : States Lawn Tennis association. with weve 4 the ‘seeded lst wNiabiy eo yers in . Ninet; = Louisville, Ky. Sept. 4—(#—Eigh- trants will contend for the title which teen boy Il players, the eldest ‘Henri Cochet has abandoned, nine- Lg i Bn victors te whieh Core in each half drew byes, leaving of elimina‘ games in wi 52 players to engage 1: more than 350,000 boys took part, take |matches. oe the fild at 2 p. m. central time today | Nine of the 14 seeded players drew in the opening game of the three byes. The seeded lst follows: Upper game “Junior World Series” spon- | half—William T. Tilden, If, John Van sored by the American Legion. Ryn, Grange; John Doeg., Santa The Buffalo, N. Y.. team. winner in| Monica: Berkeley Bell. Dallas; Henry the divisional contest at Washington. |w. Austin, England; Tamio Abe, Ja- represents the eastern portion of the pan, and German Upman. Cuba. country, and the White Sox of New Lower half—George Lott, Chicago: Orleans, winners at Colorado Spirngs, Gregory Mangin, Newark; Frederick the west. \Mereur, Bethlehem, Pa.; Francis T. eae ep nes Sore |Hunter, New York; and E. R. Avory, account! over @ John 8. Oliff, Ne - national radio hook up. he enetan tapers Lea San STE Seeking his seventh title after fail- Well, That's Better Than 500 = ing to win since 1925, the inimitable The University of California base- Tilden, at the top of the upper half, ‘ball team won six games and lost jdrew a bye for the first round, and 1 ‘ne |six ona tour through Japan. And scheduled to meet Donald Strachan won six and lost four in Hawaii. The! of Philadelphia and Princeton in the squad was gone 12 weeks. second Meet cd schedule of play SUMP as for Saturda: : Bobby Jones will be playing his ame first golf on the west coast when he The Cardinals on their second road starts out at the national amateur trip this year won only seven out of at Pebble Beach in September. 22 games. Joe Tinker to Return to Baseball; Backs Cubs to Win National Pennant and became the season's sensation. | ...on the court its F <a ... in a cigarett ~ “A BACT is moce powerfel than twenty texts.” Two puffs tell more of s cigarette’s ‘Teste musts LAS soa taste chan of the fellows who played with me. yet I think they were not quite on a Out for eight years, a third of the par with the lads of today.” said Joe. ” | s today take baseball as a game is over next day. just does. In my much about the with our wives bad day.” on the Cub '0T which won world cham- . 1, don’ ing | Evers, now with that is a better business prospect.” | the Boston Braves, was at second and After watching the. it con- Frank Chance at first. Chance is ‘tending Cubs of today, Tinker thought | dead. They set a record for double they would win the National league | plays that stood until last year when bunting. ; Cincinnati broke it. | “They have pitchers and hitters! “Cincinnati broke it by standing and such a combination is not to be ‘back on the grass. When we were - found in any other club. Whether | hustling the ball around, we had to they can down the Athletics in the | play in closer. If they had slammed ‘world series is something else again. ‘the ball then as they do now, we't ee ee ae 3” ” » -