The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1931, Page 6

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NOE sceke x REL ONTS RAE ROR SH TOMI 6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1937 Bismarck Will Be Mecca for North Dakota Golfers | SLOPE TOURNAMENT WILLBE CONDUCTED Lou Gehrig in 1,000 Consecutive Tilts SUNDAY AND MONDAY’ JUST “EVERS TO rae = Paul Cook, State and Slope | Champion Last Three Years, To Defend Title BURKE IN GENERAL CHARGE { | ! Large Delegations Expected) From Minot, Dickinson, Mandan and Wilton Bismarck this week-end will be North Dakota's golfing mecca as) shotmakers from all parts of the state | gather here for the fourth annual| Missouri Slope tournament. The tourney will be conducted over) the Bismarck Country Club course} Sunday and Monday, with Assistant! Attorney General Thomas Burke in| general charge. | Entries, which will be accepted up| until the time the tournament begins, may be sent to either Burke or Fred} Tunell, secretary of the local club. | An 18-hole qualifying round will} begin at 8 o'clock Sunday morning) — and all qualifiers must be in by 1 p. saa eet: ASSOCIATION SLUGGERS SWAT Sere i cewomte'oc| 36 EXTRA BASE HITS TUESDAY sap rm a Associated Press Photo Johnny Evers, middleman of the famous double play combi “Tinker to Evers to Chance” of the Chicago Cubs of another gene a pauses in his work as scout for the Botton Braves to lay a wreath on the grave of Frank Chance, the one-time Peerless Leader, at Los Ange‘es. matches in the championship flight) will be over 18 holes. | Match play in the various flights| will begin Sunday afternoon and will) ' be completed Monday afternoon. ‘Mil B | h A ivertrmmnenvareng content wiles. ost Ui “acd eula rranges be conducted at 5 p. m. Sunday and! Hurlers for 21 Hits to : hing and puttin ; ei B b ll T centest is seheduled, “The tourna; Win 17-4Decision - DaseDall Lourney ment picnic will be held at 7:30! peed peepee ocioek Sunday evening. | Chicago, Aug. 19.—()}—If there are Paul T. Cook, state champion for any of the old “rabbit” style of base- the last three years, is defending’ pails left in the American Association, champion in the Bismarck tourney,’ they must have gotten out a batch of | having won all three previous meets'them Tuesday when the athletes here. | Slammed out 36 extra base hits. | Large delegations of entrants are) ‘The long distance clouts included expected from Minot, Dickinson,! nine home runs, two by Tom Angley , aa oe Ante muna omtinees real. Indianapolis; seven triples. with! possibly four, of the strongest basc- NeW Schleicher of Minneapolis getting tn Geet New Salem, Hebron, Glen Ullin, Fort) ‘st. Paul showed Indianaoplis a it-|here Sunday. Kates, Fessenden, Jamestown, Fargo, 'tle something about rousing finishes |" New England, Washburn, and Beu- Devils Lake, Valley City, Linton, and|by scoring seven runs in the ninth in-|1ah already have made definite plans ae eee rte eeoay cand ZeP"\ning for a 14 to 7 victory. The vie- to play and Dickinson is seriously resentatives to the capital city event. tory gave the Saints a 2 to 1 edge in considering entering the affatr. Prete ie cece vied '2|the series, and a lead of ten tull| d pie =| games over the second-place Indians. | pets } ton Gee day and all amateur golfers who de-\ "The big hitting demonstration of ‘cr io mm wih the cine ean fee i invited to participate in the) the day was provided by Minneapolis Beulah at'3:30 p.m. If Dickinson in Its second game with Louisville. enters, there Wi a Suitable prizes will be offered to! after talking the first game 10 to 8.|Smr tise De Maree seven Berea. | Se Watious sllghts and/the “aillers. blasted three Colonel! mach club. claims a. champlonship aes: (hurlers for 21 hits in the second game in iis respective district, Washburn [oon at to4. | New England having won 16 Claude Jonnard, veteran Milwaukee | games each and Beulah 24, southpaw, turned in the best heaving |” six hundred fans saw Lemmon, 8. performance. holding Columbus top. defeat Beulah here leet Sunday five hits while the rest of the Brewers | and an even larger erowd is expected won an 8 to 2 victory. Hest Sunday. Toledo bunched 11 hits in the last [four innings to defeat Kansas City, \7 to 5. Score by innings Miller Sluggers Win Two land, and Possibly Dickin- son to Be Entrants Beulah, N. D., Aug. 19.—Three, and | | | | | ~{threatened Boston's { Beulah, Washburn, New Eng-'.. Temporary plans called for a game} {after 11 innings saw his team go down jthe St. j2 triumph. place when they pounded out a 14 lcni |_ The Seattle baseball club of the Yanks and Washington Love| Tuesday; Braves and Pi- rates Are Winners (By The Associated Press) Henry Louis Gehrig has played in 1,000 consecutive games for the Yanks and has not given a sign of weaken- ing. Only two players in the major leagues ever have beaten that mark.| Everett Scott took part in 1,307 games for the Boston Red Sox and the Yan- kees from 1916 to 1925 and Joe Se- well, now a Yank, played 1,103 for Cleveland. Gehrig failed to get a hit Tuesday in five attempts against Earl White- hill and Tom Bridges of Detroit and to a 5-4 defeat before the last place team of the American Legaue. It was a nip-and-tuck contest in which a home run by Charley Ruffing, Yan- kee pitcher, put the New Yorkers ahead in the ninth only to have the Tigers tie the count and win out two innings later. Oniy one other American League game was played Tuesday and in it Louis Browns turned on Washington's Senators after three straight defeats and pulled out a 4 to The Boston Braves likewise made a comeback to win one of the National League's two games. After dropping four straight to the Chicago Cubs, they staged a ninth inning rally be- hind the fine pitching of Fred Frank- heuse and downed Chicago 3 to 2. The Pittsburgh Pirates, although they lost their series to the Phillies, hold on fifth to 5 triumph in the final game. Chuck Klein hit his 28th and 29th home runs. Other teams in both major leagues had an open date. Score by innings: AMERICAN 1 Detroit Wins . 000 300 001 OF jomez and Dick s Whitehill, Bridges bowski Browns Win Final Game re . 000 011 000— 003.010 00x—4 10 Brown and Spen- nd’ Bengough Surdy, Con- Frankhouse Tames Cubs 001 001 000. 000 010 101—3 11 artnett; Frankhouse | A polo club is being formed in Rome by Senator Count Gallanga Stuart, former president of the Royal | Italian Automobile club. On the com-|{ mittee is the Duke of Spoleto, an ard-; ent polo player. Pacific Coast league, which ended the 1929 and 1930 seasons in the red, has! enjoyed a prosperous season this year. ‘WOOLEDGES BEATEN IN STATE TENNIS DOUBLES TOURNAMENT Boston .. Chicago". Detroit .. N. St Louis Chicago New York Brooklyn 1 5 mas. 3 Boston’ . |gard rmer 3 Pittsburg! Brews Take Odd Game Philadelphia u r is Cincinnati 2 1368 | Milwaukee Columbus + 00 600 04 000 031 21x—7 1 and Peters; DAY'S ST Ss et (By The Associated Press) Saints Rally t .|_ Ralph Kress, Browns— His double 1 © \in third drove in two runs that beat 1 | Senators, 4-2. r.| Charley Gehringer, Tigers — His |fourth hit of game, a double, drove in 900 013 301 2 000 001 001 Manion, . Vanatta and ", Horne, nith a | In the six years that Howard Jones! Fred Frankhouse, Riestcen Ueanee | has coached University of Southern| Cubs to five hits to win, 3-2. ‘ew York 411 innings). | California football teams the Trojans) Paul Waner, Pirates—Clouted Phil- Ph Pep baprtigh Fatt gd have won 54 games, lost nine and/ly pitching for five hits to aid in 14-5 } ly Pittsburgh 14; Philadelphia 5, j tied two. i Victory. Boston hicagu 2 American Association wash eeet*«* | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern Milwaukee 8: Columbus 2 | St. Paul 14; Indianapolis ‘ L DONT KNowW WHETHER I WAS DREAMIN” LAST NIGHT OR HAD -TH’ WITCHES, BUT I THOUGHT I HEARD SOMEBODY . WALKIN” AROUND any Pe QUTSIDE ! ~~ iT a Newsboy Brown, SOUNDED LIKE “THERE WAS MORE ma, THAN ONE GUY! ¥ a SOME “TRAMPS THINKING THE COTTAGE IS EMPTY {~~ EGAD, OF US ~ 50 WE HAVE NOTHING “Ta FEAR ~~ You, KEELER, AND SNUFFY CAN DO THE BATTLING, WHILE I WouULD DIRECT “THE MANEUVERS’ Indianapolis — Jackie Syracuse, N. ¥~. knocked ou ty McHale, Cleveland (2); Kepy, Detroit, outpointed ‘Onborn, nd (8). (By the Associated Press) (including games of Aug. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Simmons, Athletics, Ruth, Yankees, ,.377. Ru hrig, Yankees, 120; Ruth, ™ ees, 108. its-Simmons, Athletics, 174; Geh- ‘Yankees, 158. ee runs—Ruth, Yank apeeel, Yankees, 50. Fankeee, 32, ‘Athletics, won 24, rs, Senators, won 14, NAL LEAGUE ag ey ag A Klein, pulilles, rane 5. | Winning run against Yankees in 11th. | Braves — Held | THERE ARE FOUR } Warner M'Nair and Bill Fuller, Fargo Pair, Advance To Final Round | Fargo, ‘N. D., Aug. 19.—(4)—Warner |McNair and Bill Fuller, Fargo, will |meet Hans Tronnes and George Mc- | Hose, Fargo, the defending champion- \ship pair, for the North Dakota state | doubles tennis title as a result of a | long match they won from Phil Wool- edge, Fargo, and Read Wooledge, Mi- not, 7-9, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5. The final probably will be played |next week. Marvin Doherty and Johnny Myron, Fargo, will meet Wed- nesday for the North Dakota boys’ singles championship. jother for the third lafter a year's retirement has caught ‘ smiling Jimmy has been content to’ 3 | ing. >| With that deadly left hook that later 1 | again. TO MEET THURSDAY FOR THIRD TIME IN LAST BIGHT MONTHS North Dakotan and Irishman Are Among Best Drawing Cards in Business BOUT TO OPEN ABOUT 9 P. M. Billy Gave Foe Bad Beating in First Mix but Lost Sec- ond to Jimmy New York, Aug. 19.—()—Fighters who fight are a rather scarce article in this day and age but boxing fol- lowers will have a chance to see two of that ilk in the same ring at the Yankee Stadium Thursday night. when Jimmy McLarnin and Billy Petrolle square off against one an- time in eight months. | McLarnin long has been one of the! best drawing cards in the business while Petrolle’s sensational comeback. the public fancy. The wolf has absolutely no show around Petrolle’s door for he is re- puted to be worth something like $100,000. He fights because he likes to and that characteristic has been a bit disconcerting to some of his ri- vals in the past. McLarnin, in his many engage- ments here, has fought only one real- ly bad fight—a return match with Ray Miller. The rest of the time throw leather from first to last al- though it must be admitted he show- ed considerable respect for Petrolle's punching prowess in their last meet- But he hardly could be blamed for that. He took the worst beating he ever suffered from “Fargo Billy” when they met for the first time in| the Garden last November. Petrolle, stopped Justo Suarez’s winning Streak, handed McLarnin a sound drubbing and twice had him on the verge of a knockout. | A few months later they clashed: This time McLarnin fought’ @ carefully planned battle. ‘Sticking to his left hand almost exclusively, Jimmy stopped Petrolle’s mad rushes, to close quarters and easily out- pointed him. Jimmy never gave; Billy a chance to get started, stab-} bing him off balance with jarring| lefts and shooting over an occasional | right when the occasion presented it-| self. Thursday's battle is slated for 10! rounds but both have issued warlike statements to the effect it will be re-| This Week-End PETROLLE, M’LARNIN PLEASE CROWDS BECAUSE THEY FIGHT | Benny Comes Back —By Pap e ANS IS ALREADY ~ ae Ae. OuT oF THe LING FOR SIK YEARS = WHAT CAN HE HORE To AccOneLict aT 3S 44 FOR WEEKS ‘HE PHWAS BEEN SECRETLY - pais TRAINING: ‘All Rights Reserved Uy The Associated Palfreys Surprise Women Net Stars markable if the duel goes half that distance. The bout will start about 9pm. (E58. T) 2 Grove Might Tie | ° Chicago, Aug. 19.—(#)—Robert Moses Grove, the world champion Athletics’ great lefthander, Wed- nesday was down to face the White Sox in an effort to equal the American League record of 16 straight pitching victories. Of Grove's 24 triumphs this season, the last 15 have come in a row, and another today would tie the record set in 1912 by Joe Wood of Bosto.. and equaled the same season by Walter Johnson of Washington. The modern major league rec- ord is 19 straight by Rube Mar- quard of the New York Giants, another southpaw, in 1912. Pitching Record H fuitiidichectrams. avid HMM - MAYBE GUST! BEEN So LONG SINCE 4 I SWUNG “TH? DUKES, I FoRGoT TH” FEEL QOF A FIST BUTTERIN’ 2S A CHIN Pw BUT LET 7EM COME IN, Aw’ TLL KNacK "EM SO COLD ~THEY7LL SWEAT ICE-CUBES! ——) i i Mh i Sarah Eliminates Marjorie Glad- man Van Ryn; Mianne Very Nearly Wins Forest Hills, N. ¥., Aug. 19.—(P)— The monotonous regularity with which play has followed form so far in the women’s national tennis cham- Pionships has beer. rudely interrupted by the Palfrey sisters, Sarah and Mi- anne, of Sharon. Mass. Sarah, the younger of the two sis- ters, sprang the one real upset of the tournament Tuesday when she elim- inated the sixth seeded player, Mrs. Marjorie Gladman Van Ryn in the second round 1-6, 8-6, 6-1. Mianne came within two points of accom- Plishing the elimination of the vet- eran British star, Mrs. Dorothy C. Shepherd-Barron. As it was the Sharon girl finally bowed to her older rival's superior steadiness, 6-1, 3-6, 5-7. The only other seeded star to suffer There'll Be Something New Tomorrow elimination - was Marjorie Morrill, Dedham, Mass., who strained a mus= cle in her back and was forced to de- fault after she had spilt two sets with Alice Francis, Orange, N. J. All the other favorites advanced, including Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, Helen Jacobs, Betty Nuthall and Phyllis Mudford. Mrs. Moody en- countered surprising opposition from Mary Greef, young Kansas City star, who went down, 6-2, 6-3; Miss Jacobs trounced Virginia Rice, 6-0, 6-2; Miss Nuthall eliminated Clara Greenspan, New York, 6-4, 6-0; and Miss Mudford pe out Cecella Riegel, Philadelphia, 6-1, 6-1. ATHLETES BECOME PRESIDENTS Sixty former college athletic heroes are now presidents of colleges and universities in the United States. Seventeen lettermen will report for football uniforms at Tulane at the opening of the 1931 seaso! Every time you feel like muttering “There’s nothing new under the sun,” take up your daily paper and read through the advertisements. Chances are, you'll change your mind. Here’s a new wrinkle in sanitary plumbing .... there’s a new kind of carpet that should have been thought of long ago. washing delicate fabrics. here’s a decidedly better way of These things concern you intimately—they affect your life and the manner in which you live it. They are new things under the sun. And advertisements are the arms with which they reach out and touch you. Read the ad- , vertisements regularly. There’ll be something new to- morrow ....and the day after... and the day. after that. Something you wouldn’t want to miss, ee

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