Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
6 ae i Minot Ama FROSAKER WINDS UP STATE TOURNAMENT WITH HANDICAP WIN Dr. J. R. Pence and Miss Celia| Glassner Were Victors in Other Events MORE THAN 40 WERE HERE Sisseton, S. D., Amateur and Minneapolis Professional Are High Scorers With G. H. Frosaker breaking 94/ out of 10Q targets to win the North! Dakota handicap championship Tuesday afternoon, Minot’s amateur nimrods made a clean sweep of the 36th annual state trapshooting tourn- ament here. Dr. J, R. Pence, Minot, won the state singles and doubles champion- ship, the all-around state champion- ship, and the trophy awarded by F. E. Brooks, Duluth, Minn., to the North Dakota resident who is high on all targets of the state tourna- Miss Celia Glassner, also of Minot, successfully defended her state wom- en's singles championship. day afternoon won the state profes-| sional ing 94 clay pigeons, while L. C. by beating the Phillies 6 to 3. carnpbel oe 91. Giants downed Pittsburgh 6 to 2.} This gave Secord the all-around state Brooklyn dropped a game behind its professional championship, his score, three rivals as the Reds took a 5 to! 4 decision with a ninth-inning dans | Scores by inning: Minot, scored only Campbell, being 371 to 368 for the Minot pro. Trophies Are Awarded The Brooks trophy and the Ama- teur Trapshooting association troph- ies for the state singles, doubles, and! Pht handicap champions and the ladies’ state singles champion were awarded to the Minot trio shortly after the’ ¢ shooting Tuesday at the close of the three-day tourney. Pence and Frosaker also won the|! Dupont trophy, awarded to the, doubles champion, and the state) handicap badge, respectively, each to be held one year. Dr. Pence, having won the Brooks} petroit trophy in 1929, must win it but once! Bos more to gain permanent possession of the silver cup. Hi High scores for the all-around state championship included: Pence, 369 J. W. Enger, 368; J. W. Guthrie, Bis: marck, 363; W. H. Lenneville, Di inson, 361; Ray including the state shooting and scores ing, include: Pence, 5 Guthrie, 546; Stair, 5: saker, 540. .. Wilson High Amateur J. E. Wilson, Sisseton, S. D., not] ( eligible for the North Dakota cham- pionships because he is not a resi- dent of this state, won the all-! around championship among the amateurs of the registered shoot.| His total score was 555. Earle Dona-| hue, Minneapolis, made the high all-) around score among the profession-| als in the tournament, his count be-| ing 389. ' Enger, 547 ; and Fro-|© in the tournament, which was staged y. by the North Dakota Sportsmen's as- | Hi sociation, with the Bismarck Gun H. club as host. The 1932 tournament Ri will be conducted in Fargo. tie resulted in the various events. Scores in the 16- to 23-yard rise handicap championship follow: Amateurs Guthrie, Bismarck Si Bismarck Brooks, tle r, Minot + . Pence, neville, . Dickinson uskey Stenmare Professionals Philadelphia Washington New York Cleveland St. Louis . B NATIONS St. Louis : Ghicago Brooklyn . Boston . Pittsbu! “Philadelphia ‘Cincinnati AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | St. Paul .. 61 41 | 598 Louisville 50 Columbus DAY'S RESULTS aa 6; St, Louis, 3. 3. us, 3. “Bhltager 14: Now. York, 13, Cleveland, 1- ie Bouon 6 a oeiesaatt Broo! —_— ment. shaw, battle against the St. Louis Cardinals | H. E. Secord, Grand Forks, Tues-/ but lost, 1 to 0. handicap cham pionship,!Hemsley, the Cubs held second piace and Berry Batting —I More than 40 nimrods participated) mons, Ath One of the unusual features of the 41: ; tournament here was that not one|,,! lost BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1931 | ;Red Sox Star Has Hit 47 Dou-| | bles While Yankee Has Stolen 41 Bases | | | (By The Associated Press) A couple rising stars of the Amer- ican League may or may not surpass | jthe records they seem to be aiming} ‘at, but while Earl Webb of the Red} {Sox and Ben Chapman of the Yan-} |kees are shooting for new marks in | two base hits and in stolen bases they jare proving helpful to their teams. | |. Webb clouted two doubles Tuesday | jto bring his total for the season up |to 47. To Tuesday's pair, Webb added | |two singles for a perfect day at bat! |which made him one of the big fac- |tors in Boston's 8 to 1 triumph over the Tigers Stolen base No. 41 by Chapman was} of little assistance to the Yanks when the Chicago White Sox staged an/ eighth inning uprising that drove, three Yankee pitchers to cover, netted | 11 runs and won the game 14 to 12 after the Yanks had gained a 12-3 lead. ' Al Simmons was the big part of the show at Philadelphia where the Ath- letics maintained their 11-game lead over Washington by downing St/ Louis, 6 to 3. Simmons started the winning rally in the eighth with his 15th homer of the season and gave| Bob Grove, who had relieved Earn- his 2ist pitching victory.; Washington beat Cleveland 8 to 1. | The Braves put up another great/ Aided by home runs by Blair ant The} | First Across in Ocean Yacht Race Webb And Chapman Seeking Honors|\/(T0RSBINGHHITS IN EIGHTH AND NINTH Lefty Klein Allows Visitors But Eight Hits and Strikes Out Eight -Men HAYS AND LEITZ PLAY WELL Classy Fielding Play of Sioux City, la., Club Too Much for Local Nine Taking advantage of the breaks, jthe colored Van Dyke baseball nine of Sioux City, Ia., scored four runs in |the last two innings Tuesday evening to defeat Bismarck 7 to 4 in one of jthe best baseball games staged here this season. The bearded visitors played classy baseball to rob Bismarck men of clouts that looked like certain hits cften, On one occasion the colored boys deprived Bismarck of what ap- Dorade, pictured above, slipped into| the Atlantic i qi the harbor at P Gays after leaving Newport, vessel, owned and sailed by Olin J. The first of ten tiny yachts to cross peared like two sure runs when they h ‘hite yawl-rigged outh, England, 17 R. I. The , transatlantic race. Stephens of Scarsdale, N. Y., aver- aged 198 miles a day for the lasteight} “Bismarck hit the ball often and days of the daring voyage. The Do-j hard but founé it difficult to get the rade had a time allowance of 46] pellet through the infielders. hours over the scratch boat in the MERC | Athletics Win t. Louis ngough; tee tits 20 1 Brewer Fans, Who Had Ex- . pected a Lot, See Team Lose | sii Pair to Leaders Dick Sad Sam Pitches Well | ‘eveland . 100 000-—1 6 of Washington’ 2. )"110 05001x—8 8 1 pnally and Whitehill a er: Haines Winx e ves + 600-000 000 3 1f 10 ¢ hictwo .... 20. Col nd’ “McCurdy “Reds Win in Ninth Ee eROUL 1003 010 O01 ton and Lom- | nd Sukeforth, r F (By the Associated Pi Cneluding games of AMERICAN Home r uth, Yankees, olen bases—Chapman, hnson, Tigers, 27. h e, Athletics, won 21, » Senators,’ won 10 Yankees, | gt i ai st NATIONA Batting —c Reds, .3 , 84; English! innings. tt; Jones! Chicago, July 29.—(#}—St. MH, , jonly is using Milwaukee to boost its 18 {lead in the American Association bu: Lisenbee /is making it unpleasant for Marty! Berghammer, manager of the Brew- | Milwaukee is a great baseball city, 1\ particularly when the team is win-| ,a (Hing. Great things were expected! |from the collection of former major jleague stars and promising young- jSters this season, and the Wolves be- | gan to howl when the Brewers slipped | down and almost out of the race.| Berghamer, being the manager, has | 0 | been the target. | The Saints whipped Milwaukee from Leo: |Monday, and Tuesday came right |again—knocked out hi 1|back and won a double-header, 6 to|the squared circle. 041 and 13 to 5. | SAINTS MAKE IT UNPLEASANT FOR MILWAUKEE NIN E’S PILOT} | | | | | pulled a great covering up act follow- ing an overthrow. Lefty Klein pitched great ball for the Elks outfit, granting only eight hits and striking out eight men. Hicks of the visiting aggregation al- lowed six hits and whiffed three Cap- ital City men. Hollins played a great jgame at second for the victors, al- though he was guilty of two errors. George “Baldy” Hays, outfielder, and Sergeant “Swede” Leitz, shortstop, Second ¢ ‘olumbus: Ir al Paul not Retzlaff, Louisville held its own in the race ‘fighter from Spain, by defeating Toledo. 8 to 7, in 10/ away Kansas City rallied 2ER re UE ir eae Pa Pe - Paul . lwaukee . is nsas City | Brillheart, | grave; 8 Colonels Win in 10th j Toledo . 11 Me Waner, | Lou Osborn. s, won 5, ines, Card won 8, lost | (A0-HO-ee-HO- FoR I AM 3%; THE COOK AND ‘YCAPTAIN BOLD OF THe GOOD SHIP ~ N-Bby Columbus Indianapolis OZ Z gu | ores by innings: Game 000 006 000—6 11 0 00 002 040 0101 1211007 000 01 1 Campbell, Ash and Desautels; C: gros and Angley. 9 1{most LAS and Har: gaa |! 100 010 and Mar Yen=" among the competitors. : SANE ~ Witt You PLUG UP “THAT Moose CALLING! =~ I HOPE You “TAKE A HEADER STO “TH” LAKE AM’ GET YOUR BELLOWS FILLED WHH WATER ! wT DONT KNOW WHETHER I MADE -TH’ MISTAKE OF BRINGING No, OR THAT DUG OF SUGAR-BEET WINE ALONG! me 000 010 000—1 0.000 000— 2 owski and Hinkle; W e, Mat Osa Is 30th Knockout Victim of N. Dy Battler Charley Retzlaff Ends New York Fight in Third Round With Hard Right TWO STARS GONE The National Amateur golf cham-}Wooledge. | pionship to be staged at Chicago late | Tronnes, Bill Fuller, Marvin Doherty, | jin August will miss for the first time,all of Fargo, and Read Wooledge, an- 14° 1/in many years the familiar faces of;other blossoming champion, 2| Bobby Jones and George Von Elm|Minot. 3 New York, July 29.—()—Charley iP lanky right-hand walloper'! mard, N. D., has done it, Holl opponent kat His 30th victim was Mateo Osa, the | als whom he put! ae in the third round Tuesday | jsiun for | night with a crippling right hand up- | | | Fourteen thousand saw Retzlaff, one | Nits Gran ; the series at one victory each. of the finest young heavyweight pros- Columbus and Indianapolis divided | 28 double-header, the Red Birds win-| for two rounds with ri ning the first game. 6 to 4, and thei before finishing him ; Sim-; Indians scoring a 2 to 1 triumph in a/ third. utr, |Pitehing battle. | 80 pects in the business, hammer Osa|%, innin i igsts to the chin | bases on ball in 2:30 of the The North Dakota battler was 2|/making his second metropolitan ap- 1 |Pearance and he was so eager to| el-|please that when Osa still showed! jfight as the bell ended the first| 314 1/round, he willingly slugged through; Fargo, N. D., July 29—(4)—North of the intermission with the | Dakota's tennis forces will begin the Jon-| Spaniard while the referee and other annual warfare for state champion- officials leaped into the ring and/ship honors Saturday wth prospects 2/tried to halt the battling. The bell was almost ready for the enduring tart of the second, however, before through the final. 7 ithe warriors could be separated. | Played well for the local crew. 0} The Van Dykes opened the scoring with two runs in the fourth inning on two successive hits and an error. The Elks jumped to the lead in the sev- enth, counting three times on two walks and two bingles. The colored {boys sewed up victory in the eighth and ninth, when they bunched five of their evening's allotment of eight bingles. The box score: 1 Bis ABRH POAE ; 5 0 19 0 0 2) 3.) ie -40113 21 4a 4 pos a te eases ee ae a, ae, {ave eae s.24° 0. 4.34 Hays, ef . 8. % 4.45 4 Totals + 33.4 627 8 4 $e0e@4s1 £3.23 2:29 4 2 Boe 4 2600 4 ‘ #8 4 22.8 = 4 133 2 4 o4i1 oy Whitworth, 4 o10 ds | Tota 8 4) a ‘| a 7 en bases, Atkins, V. iflces, Holland, Whit- Lenaburg, Hicks; hit off Hicks 6 in 9 innings; Klein 8, by Hicks off Klein 0, off Hi ley, Jelinek. Scorer, struck « 3. Umpires, shi B, Hummel. North Dakota’s Net War Opens Saturday lof the keenest competition in years from the first round | Warner McNair, defending cham- pion of Fargo, must face such formid- able youths as Phil Wooledge, Hal} George McHose, Hans from Grand Forks will enter its usual strong contenders, all experienced in state tournament competition. They include Harold James, Bill Elton, Ole Bridston, M. Muus, E. Dahland and Bob Moore. From Jamestown are entered C. L. Robertson, Bernard Wiest and B. Hayes. Jack Thompson, Fessenden, W. A. Dickerson, Lakota, Henry Blais: dell, Devils Lake, Kenneth Dale, Mar- marth, A. Seymour, Valley City, and ‘Leu Blaisdell, Minot, are a few of the other dangerous championship threats. A j Oklahomans Advance In Tennis Tourney Minneapolis, July 29.—()—Two Oklahoma City players advanced to the fourth round of the northwestern tennis tournament at the Deephaven courts Tuesday while a third fell by the wayside. Charles Davis, Oklahoma City, de- feated John Adams, Minneapolis, 7-5. and 6-1, while a fellow - townsman, Lowe Runkel, eliminated Henry Adams, of this city, 6-2, 6-3, in third round matches. The third Oklahoman, George Frederickson, was defeated by Henry Yutzy, Minneapolis city champion, 15-13, 3-6, 8-6. In another match, Winston Newell, Minneapolis, won from Howard Sis- TOSCORE FOUR RUNS jthree runs, including winning coun- teur Nimrods Make Clean Sweep in Johnston, Marston, Ouimet, and Evans Will Play in Amateur (By The Associated Press) Bobby Jones won't be around to de- fend his title when the national ama- teur golf championship starts at the Beverly Country club in Chicago Aug. 31 but five other one-time rulers of the Simon pures will be ready to ac- cept re-election. r The amateur district qualifying rounds throughout the nation Tues- day provoked few surprises and gave Harrison R. (Jimmy) Johnston, St. Paul, Max R. Marston, Philadelphia, Jesse Guilford and Francis Ouimet, | Boston, and Chick Evans, Chicago, a chance to show they're still around. And four runners-up for the title also will be among those present at Chicago at least until the second 36- hole qualifying test, Aug. 31 and Sept. | 1, cuts the field of 152 to 32 for match pl Qualifiers include Eugene Ho- mans, beaten by Jones in the finals last year; Dr. Oscar F. Willing, Port- land, Ore., second to Johnston in 1929; Watts Gunn, runner-up to Jones in 1925; and T. Philip Perkins, former British amateur king and loser to Jones in 1928 finals. . Hiking Soldiers Win 14-13 Tilt at Dawson Dawson, N. D., July 29.—To break the steady program of marching, eat- ing, and swimming while on their an- nual 125-mile hike, members of Com- pany I, Fourth Infantry, Fort Lin- coln, played the Dawson baseball nine here, the doughboys winning a 14 to 13 verdict. The game was arranged by Captain H. A. Tonnesen, Company I com- mander, following failure of a post team to be organized for the game. Private Wargo pitched for the Sol- diers, with Sergeant Harper behind the bat. This battery was relieved in the sixth frame by Conrad and Ot- terback. A return game is scheduled for the Fort Lincoln diamond in Bismarck Sunday, Aug. 9. YESTM@RDAY'S ST S (By The Associated Press) YESTERDAY's STARS (key) Bob Fothergill, White Sox—Hit home run, triple and two doubles against Yankees. Horace Lisenbee, Red Sox—Held Tigers to three hits for 8-1 victory. ‘Tony Cuccinello, Reds —Batted in Guilford, | =————_— COLORED VAN DYKES BEAT BISMARCK 7 to 4 IN GREAT GAME Trapshoot Meet *}- Five Former Amateur Champs Qualify Didn’t Watch His Overhead life of @ Calgary, Alberta, rancher. | Speaking of riding for a fall, there; The camera ca are plenty of ups and downs in the| buster recent Calgary stampede. ught one broncho- in an off moment during the THREE CALIFORNIA NET STARS AND SOUTHERNER ARE WINNER John Doeg to Battle Jack Tid- ball; Ellsworth Vines Faces Cliff Sutter singles in the 44th annual Seabright invitation tennis tournament Wed- nesday. John Hope Doeg, the national champion, Ellsworth Vines, Pasadena, and Jack Tidball, Los Angeles, were the Californians. The lone south- erner was Cliff Sutter, New Orleans. Although carried to three sets by Bryan Grant, Jr., Atlanta, Tuesday. Doeg ruled a slight favorite over Tid- ball, 19-year-old University of Cali- fornia. sophomore Wednesday. . The Vines-Sutter match was regarded as something of a toss-up. Doeg won over Grant only after a bitter struggle, 2-6, 7-5, 6-2, while ter, against Brooklyn. bye. 2 piece suits by Hart Schat that sold for $25 and ‘19 gel, Eveleth, Minn, 8-6, 6-3. tast 0GHD (By the Associated site te eine a a teo Ona. Spain (3); Steve Hamas, 12 Roonaan a Fe Dixie Weave VaSSar. _ Bergeson’S | | The sales in this store are sales you can trust. Original price tickets—1931 price quotations—the Hart Schaffner & Marx label—Satisfaction or money back. “Adios” Sale|. * Adios is just an old Spanish custom; We're saying good bye to Summer suits. ffner & Marx $30—Now 50 { Athletic Underwear Mangin of Newark. Sutter beat back Keith Gledhill, intercollegiate cham- pion from Santa Barbara, Calif., 6-3, |3-6, 6-1 and Vines defeated Wilbur |F. Coen, Jr., Kansas City, 6-4, 4-6, 6-0, ;,,The women’s singles had reached 4 | bd quarter-final round with Mrs, N Seabright, N, J., July 29.—(—|Helen Wills Moody, San Francisco, Three Californians and @ southemer |20¢ Helen Jacobs, Berkeley, Calif., i ’g|favored to meet in the finals. Mrs, filled the semi-final brackets of men’s Moody defeated Virginia Ricey Bos- jton, Tuesday, cobs eliminated Mianne Palfrey, Bos- ton, 6-0, 7-5, . Minneapolis North Stillwater, The North Side Post of Minneapolis for the second consecutive year won the junior American Legion baseball title of the state by defeating Wi- nona, 14 to 13, The team will 1epre- Tidball surprised the experts with a sent Minnesota in the regional Legion 4-6, 8-6, 8-6 triumph over Gregory S. | tournament. their way of saying good all of our Spring and Hart Schaffner & Marx $40, $45, $50 Spring and Summer suits. Some with knickers. No approvals—No charges—Extra charge for alteratic-: % Shirts Sizes 14 to 17. Group one values to $2.45 $1.39 Group Two values to $2.95 $1.95 Neckwear Group One regular $1 ties 69c Group Two values to $2 $1.19 $2.25 and $1.95 values Regular $1 garments 6-0, 6-1 while Miss Ja- Again Junior Champ Minn, July 2.—(7— Now Fa GOLF SOX $1.39 79c