The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 5, 1931, Page 6

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cnexanseveme eee ti THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1931 eae ance RIA TE HAVE GOOD CHANCE 10 RETAIN CROWNS Bill Fowler of Fargo Is Regard- ed as Champion’s Most Dangerous Adversary NADINE IN SEMI-FINALS) | Women Champion's Stellar Per- formance at Grand Forks Makes Her Heavy Favorite Indications Wednesday were that) Bismarck would retain at least one| and possibly two of its state golfing championships, held by Paul Cook| and Nadine O'Leary, respectively. Cook disposed of his first opponent in match play Tuesday after captur- ing me cessive year to maintain a pace that) hhas made him state champion since 1929. Wednesday he battles Ed Cox, fellow townsman, for the right to con- dinue in the meet. Cook and Bill Fowler of Fargo con- tinue as favorites, with the champion given a slight edge over his arch rival by virtue of his performance in medal! play. Miss O'Leary, who meets Mrs. W.! H. Schulz of Grand Forks in the) semi-finals of the women’s MISFIT PLAYERS HELP NEW TEAM _IN PEN TEXAS GIRL SETS WORLD 80-METER HURDLE RECORD ‘Associated Presa Mildred “Babe” Didrikson, 19 (extreme right), of Dallas, Tex., winning the 80‘meter high hurdle and making a new world record for the event by breaking the tape in 12 seconds flat in the women's national A. A. U. track and field games at Jersey City, N. J. Miss Didriks a month ago, also won the baseball throw and running broad jump championships. son, who learned to hurdle only state | t tournament. continues to be a heavy |New favorite, periority over the rest of the field st soston She has shown marked su- |« peeane sous and there appears to be little doubt! (iicaso that she will successfully defend her | Detroit championship. The only obstacle in her path appears to be her compara- tive inexperience and the fact that | \ tournament |; « | She will meet veteran players in the final matches. Cook will probably be called upon | to meet several golfers no older than| | himself if he gets to the finals. I the title flight, four youths who have not yet reached voting age, advanced ‘to the second round, two of them strangers in golfing news. The only exception where youths| |, under 21 failed to triumph was where | \ they were forced to eliminate each other. In this meeting, the youthful ‘Vern Gallagher of Fargo, who fell be- taste Sap Leadsin Public Links Tourney Arthur Sato, San Francisco, i Shoots “8 Gott Over ng Rosenbloom to Risk Title in Paul Keller Course St. Paul, Minn. Aug. Japanese from the Ferry district of San Francisco, Arthur Sato, led the sharp-shooters of America’s public courses Wednesday as the tussle for is {medalist and team honors in the an- 90 nual national public links golf cham- | S° | pionship moved into its final 18-hole lround over the wind-swept Keller |club stretch. | Sato moved in front of the proces- jsion of 179 starters Tuesday by tour- ing the championship course with the | poxing busi Train in Night Clubs New York, Aug. 5. jance gave him a two-shot lead in the race for medalist honors and it|the | shoved his San Francisco teammates | four strokes ahead in the battle for|pe the defending champion; \the Warren G. Harding trophy, em-/| 4 || team supremacy of the nation. pound crown for a lo Two shots behind the little son of} g 0 | Nippon, a 115-pound giant of the fair-| second best. >| ways, came a trio of public course | les Albertus. Philadelphia; The odds favor Maxie at 6 to 5. The close, sm 131| David Mitchell of Indianapolis. and! o¢ New York night clubs has put'ing one in the second, Chicago's Maxie Cubs, refusing to let the Giants gain! | art Nutting of Loui (a3 Each had| Rosenbloom in fine fettle. |74's. FORMER BROOKLYN MEN DOING BETTER WITH OTHER CLUBS Now Bill Hunnefield Joins Ranks by Starring in Emergency for New York Giants CARDINALS BEAT PIRATES Explode Buccaneers’ String of Scoreless Innings by Big Rallies as Meine Errs (By The Associated Press) | | One of the big problems in major | jleague baseball is found in the “mis- ifit” players—men who don’t do well |with one team or have no real place on it but who often become great players when sent to another club. Two Brooklyn castoffs, Harvey| |Hendrick and Jake Flowers, who were Brooklyn Bout Slapsie Maxie and His Challen- ger Are Known as Playboys; merely good but not particularly use- ful utility players with the Robins, have attracted wide attention this} \scason by their performances since/ being traded. Hendrick, a regular with Cincinnati, is one of the Nation- al League's leading batsmen and Flowers, sent to St. Louis for the ; Waiver price, has proved almost in- (®)—Two young valuable as a substitute for Frisch men who take life in general and the and Gelbert. . pay | in particular a trifle’ jonly par 72 of the day. His perform- | tightly will battle 15 rounds in Ebbets up in Bill Hunnefield, who had @ va- ,, | Dlematic of the national public links | Slattery has been challenging for the hole left by the injury of Hughie iW ways has succeeded in coming out’ fore Cook @ year ago, triumphed over ‘ Les Stern of Valley City, 6 and 4.| Stern holds the Valley City invita-| * tional and the southeastern North} ,, Dakota titles. he 4 ‘Tommy Hellander, a kid of 15.) New Yo K n sounded a warning note for futures’ Ih if not for this season when he upset the veteran H. H. Wooledge of Fargo, Chicage, 95 | way, Seattle, and Barney Lucas | Bob Gourla: | Philadelphi: Trailing by a shot came E within chooting distance of the prized | ou medal—Charles Delsanter, Cleveland, | Seattle; Mike Surmiak, | er Charles Ferrera, San| Realizing apparently that he can't | Francisco, and Fred Gordon of Santa/go on forever— é |fights so often he never bothers to.an inch in their struggle for second | Green-| train, He has been known to fre-!placc, took a double-header from the ; Los| quent gymnasiums but usually it hes humble Cincinnati Reds by scores of ngeles. Five others had 76's to keep|been to watch somebody else work'4 to 2 and 7 to 3. The Reds finally a broke into the scoring in the sixth in- Slaticry, another playboy, has tak- ‘ning of the fi less innings, but their’ losing streak went to six straight games. n the fight a bit more scriously. been fighting Another such player has cropped t game after 46 run- St. Pittsburgh ran its string of shut- incinnati ss... shi Pittsburgh - 2 and 1. Hellander is making his debut | as a tournament golfer. | He was accompanied by another | young Fargoan, not entirely a new- comer, but who is making his first | bid for a title—Jack Hilber, 17, who eliminated another youngster, Fred Cummer, Jr. | The fourth youth to advance a round is no stranger, and the one up victory of Dick Fowler of Fargo over | L. J. Stranahan, one of Fargo’s golf- ing old-guard, was not unexpected. Woman Tennis Star Rejects Appointment “i::;:, Yankees, 30;|hind with 318's. Other team scores | snake Rath, man, Yankees,|ieluded Indianapolis, 319; Philadel- | New York, Aug. 5—(P)—The with-|43°'fannson, Tigers 398” “"*°°* | phia, 320; Detroit, 321; Portland, Ore r id é d nsons THEE, 28 icc. won 22,1991 Little Rock, Ark. 322; Minneap-| Y ES T DAY’S @rawal of Mrs. Marion Zinderstein} MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Pitching lost 2; M | Monica. isince 1921—"Slat. \defending titleholder found himself] perate attempt. to get in shape. jin a rather tight spot as the second!” Slapsie Max 118-hole skirmis! |round -opened. Wingate needed even wind up with a 78. A stirring fight was in prospect for lthe Harding trophy. Trailing Sato and his San Francisco teammates at the start of the final 18-hole round 1929. Slattery won their first bout Gehrig, Yankeos, 1075 1 ue four-man total of 317; and Louisville | decision. 1615 | and Stanta Monica. Calif., right be-| Athletics, ies; Marber has worked out! Bob Wingate of Jacksonville, Fla..| faithfully for some weeks in a des-! and Slattery are foos of the qualifying | of old. In fact their feud has been | v renewed annually since 1925 with the |the exceptional break of a startling | single exception of 1928. They made deuce on the 18th hole, a par five, tolup for this lapse by meeting twice in In’ tional league program. Vic \Frasier’s pitching enabled the | poston ¥ Chicago White Sox to gain an even; Philadelphia . | Brandt and Spohrer; Benge and Da- | scems lappear to slide back and forth giv-) 1925 and repeated in 1926 and 1927. In 1929 they broke even but in 1930 j when Rosenbloom held the 175-pound; k with Detroit in their “cellar’ See Bewbudlli Zour stintsiaway wiMiAeenan Glattacy wan eaten, odie elnco eee | jessup apparently has paved the way) | for the selection of Mrs. John Van" Ryn as a member of the American) Wightman cup tennis team which! clashes with Great Britain at Forest) @ Hills Friday and Saturday. a Mrs. Jessup, whose comeback has been one of the highlights of the cur-| Ph rent season, was named to the team ion Monday but decided Tuesday she! yler, Cubs, could not accapet. | Comorosky Frisch, ¢ Phillies, 90; abs, 78. i , Pirates, 143; Klein, tardinals, won 9, 10, lost 3. | | { | The Wilmington, | | Del., veteran said her withdrawal was| “y ‘due in part to an old illness and inj lost 2; B: part to her own belief that some other | player might be of greater aid to the| Saratoga Ready for American team. . ‘A short time after Mrs. Jessup's} Race Season Opening ‘withdrawal had been announced, | ‘Mrs. Van Ryn, the former Marjorie} Saratoga Springs, N. Y., Aug. 5.— Gladman, defeated the British Wight- |p sere on the fringe of the Adiron- man cup team captain, Mrs. Dorothy | si ! ©. Shepherd-Barron, in straight sets,|@ek mountains, King Thoroughbred 6-2, 6-4, to win the singles cham-| begins a 27-day reign Thursday with pionship of the Maidstone invitation|the opening of the racing season at d4ournament. |the historic Saratoga course. | Saratoga’s greatness is built largely DROPPED THREE TITLES on the fact that the leading stables re- Of four major championships in serve their best horses for competition football, basketball, baseball and track|in the famous Olf stakes or bring won by Southern California in 1929-|those campaigners, which already! 30, only the track honors were re-|have made their mark in the sea- tained during the 1930-31 school year.|son’s racing, to the rich fixtures in Washington State swiped the foot-|the best of condition. Before the ball laurels, California took basket-|last race is run, September 5, about ball honors and Stanford won the $500,000 will have been distributed in baseball pennant. |39 stakes and other races. . | - Gets Tumble from the Champ | - + lolis, 323; Pittsburgh, 324, and Brook- i} Cuyler | & ‘mer from the comparative comfort, ‘Walker is dead game. , defending titleholder, 326. tym defending titleholder, 328. ’ "SPORT SLANTS | —__—4 By ALAN GOULD I asked Gene Tunney for his slant’ on the heavyweight fracas, which hej watched with much interest this sum-} of the ringside with his friends. 3 “I should say that events demon- strate Max Schmeling to be a first) class fighter, entitled to recognition as champion,” he remarked, after surveying the Walker-Sharkey pro- ceedings. “Schmeling may never be sensational’ but he is an excellent vorkman, possessed of a fine short} unch and sufficient stamina to car- ry him along at an improved pace. “Sharkey has shown nothing t warrant the belief he will ever be champion. He lacks inspiration.) Carnera?! Why comment on him?” if si SHARKEY MAY BE A MIRAGE | ‘Schmeling, on the basis of his fine | performance against Stribling and his’ | unquestioned improvement, would! have had no great difficulty turnin the tables on the Sharkey that lock: ed so ineffective against the former) middleweight champion. ‘The Ger-/ man is gamer, smarter and a better puncher than the Bostonian. ! It is a trifle repetitious to remark) that Sharkey has put his future be- hind him by slipshod ringwork. He has done this, seemingly, so often in the past five years or whenever real opportunity beckoned, that the boys; are beginning to suspect he stays in the picture by the manipulation of; | mirrors, t | There were many who took up the cudgels for Sharkey after he lost on @ knockout to Jack Dempsey while claiming foul. Nevertheless that fight was the turning point in the sailor's | career. He has never been as con- sistently good since then as he was in the bouts leading up to the Demp-} sey match. Perhaps, after all. the old man mauler DID take something | Tigers’ nine hits to win rates to seven hits and won 7-1. Hurley for two home runs and three five runs. | Sherdel, Braves—Former gave Braves six hits in first game, latter scattered Phillies’ eight in second for even break on day. ;home run, (header. er, manager and owner, has started umpiring in the Texas league. Dykes’ Grip Is All Wrong—But Can He Peg That Ball? ST S (By The Associated Press) Vic Frasier, White Sox — Scattered Jess Haines, Cardinals—Held Pi-| Vince Barton, Cubs—Battered Red | ingles in double header, driving in Ray Benge, Phillies, and Willie Travis Jackson, Giants —Clouted triple, double and two jingles against Robins in double- Jim Galloway, former baseball play- with a loud crash. Henry Meine, try- runs in two innings to win 7 to 1. = ‘The Phillies and the Boston Braves |“ split the third twin-bill on the Na- series, Rain halted the battle be-~ tween Cleveland and St Louis while an off day. Louisville's striving to remain in the first division of the American Association, now is causing Manager Allan Sothoron as much worry as trying to keep up with St. Paul did a} month ago. | The Colonels, defending the title, went into the lead early in the season’ and appeared to be a good bet to re-; tain the championship, something, that has not been accomplished since | another Louisville club did it in 1925.} St. Paul grabbed the lead and has: steadily incrased its margin, while the | Colonels have slipped back until now they are tied with Kansas City for! fourth place, with an even .500 per- centage. The Blues Tuesday dragged Louis- ville into the tie by winning the opener of the series, 10 to 1. St. Paul whacked up a double- header with Toledo, taking a 7 to 0! licking in the opener, but hammering out a 12 to 2 victory in the nightcap. A ninth inning drive good for two runs gave Columbus a 4 to 3 victory over Minneapolis. Milwaukee and out innings to 45 then saw it broken and Grace, | Vance, Quinn “and Lopez; W and Hogan. vis. | Boston... ‘the other Amcrican Leagus teams had; Philadephia :..1:100 001 000—2 8 \ | aul Cook And Nadine O’Leary Are Favorites in State To irneys BISMARCK GOLFERS ee NANT SCRAMBLES ss ARE GOING ,IN' MY HACK A CSTIAGE ON LAKE SakALOO ~~ 50,\F You CAN MANAGE A FADE- oT ON -TH®, BrereR-HALF, fHAVE You 4% COME # ALONG f ~~ “THINK RYOU (CANS WE'D LIKE “To MAKEItT Q OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern Q EGAD, BLESS You ,M20GAN, 1 AM ALL ALONE {THE MADAM, WENT 0 | CHICAGO [+ BY DOVE, How SOK; DO WE'LEAVE 2 ° we HAW -~ I'D EVEN ENDOY BEING ADRIFT ON A RAFT | el ql a A IN. MID-OCEAN WITH You DOLLY } ROGERS * AND KNAVES, DRAT Nou ! HEH-tHEH - HEH: ficid, Brooklyn, Wednesday night for ried career with the Chicago White|tdianapolis also broke even in'a| Sherdel and Bool; Dudley, Collins rld’s lightweight championship.'Sox, Cleveland Indians and Boston double-heade! and Davis. Maxie Resenbloom, of Harlem, will Braves before he landed with the New a = Jimmy, York Giants. Hunnefield has fitted) AMERICAN pION Slattery of Buffalo, the challenger.’ nicely into the Giant machine in the|Hetroi, Buc at Kc At “4 “A Minneapolis 00—3 8 Frasier and Grube; Hogsett, Bridges | Columbus 000 200 002—4 12 fg time but’ Critz. and Hayworth, Brillheart ish and Griffin; Eck- Hunnefield did his share toward|,,(leveland at St. Louls—postponed, |ert, Campbell and Hinkle, Desutels New York’s double victory over the| Others not scheduled. Hens chien i nak ames 3 Brooklyn Robins Tuesday by driving | St. Paul -filled atmosphere in one run in the first game and scor- NATIONAL LEAGUE Toledo Cubs Win Two Nichol First Game 000 001100—2 7 1 go :-002 020 00x—4 13 1 Cards Stop Pi Louis 000 CY) Milwa Poll Gian Two + +100 000 001 York 010 020 00 Phillies, Braves Split First Game 000 000 002- 000 020 10 u Second and Devorme Indianapolis Cvengros and HE’S FLOWING RUNNER | Observers of Ben Eastman’s per- |fect running form point out that the! § 2 lanky Stanford quarter and hafif-miler | “poi 102 000-4 10 0 ing him freedom of stride and cost- 1\ing him no loss of balance and energy. New York, » Pera (8) Second Game r 4 ‘St. Paul 410014 011 0 fenton Sukeforth; Bush and | Tole : 00 200 5 Hemsley. Pi er; Ryan and ork, outpointed | Second Game Henline. (8): Primo Cincinnati +++. 000 000 030-3 11 0 Colonels Take Licking opped Roberto Chicago X-—~—7.12 2 City ....140500000—10 9 1) Frey, Lucas Sweetland ville “......001000000— 1 3 1 and Hartnett. i Holley, and Padden; Hatter, Will- bg Iola, By) \~ ‘. 5 jams an hea, NL JM idget Wole ed John= 19) and Baxter, Loutx- ling for his third straight shutout vic-| Brooklyn . tory over the Cardinals, made an er- aa sas ae P pe inted orgle Stokes, ror in the sixth inning and the leauge] »,ons and Hogan. nStiey, Nelson” and Manion; Hali, champions broke through for seven Second Game Smith and Riddle. BALL TEAM SEES COUNTRY The House of David baseball team expects to cover about 25,000 miles in |fulfilling its baseball schedule of night contests under are lights, the plant for which is transported from town to town by a fleet of trucks and operated by 15 electrical engi- neers, to have no hip swing; his hips| town, ficiency instead of ex- haustion. The Classified pages of The Bismarck Tribune is the greatest ren- tal medium in the city and thereon you see the best locations that are available on all sides of the The smart landlord, the know- ing home-hunter concentrate their ef- forts ‘on this medium. WANT ADS E BISMARCK TRIBUNE Simplify your house-hunting ef- forts ... practice ef- Phone 32

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