The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 21, 1931, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1931 Battle-Scarred Petrolle Loses ‘Rubber’ Decision to M’Larnin PINK-FACED JIMMY ED BRANDT BECOMES ONE OF BEST SOUTHPAWS IN NATIONAL, WINS ALL BUTTWO (“our BoarpinG House By Ahern ||HANOC UD 4@TH WIN Hazen Will Be Tennis Tourney Host ROUNDS IN BATTLE OR YEAR DEREATING [Benny Leonard, Then and Now | bina Str Wate Da BUGS IN 40 INNINGS New York Giants Win Full Game First Annual North Line Open Meet Will Be Held Satur- ‘ day and Sunday "Pon MY WORD, KEELER, ha te £ NES SIR ~ QUARTS fac WHAT'S “THIS 2~~ peuce & GET A FLAG AN” WE’LL TAKE ME IF IT DoESNT CLAIM “THESE IN “TH? NAME Look “76 ME LIKE BURLAP _OF QUEEN ISABELLA / a | SACKS GF ~~ GREAT ~~ WELL ~+ WHERE D'yau} CAESAR ~~ How CAME FIGURE “THEY CAME 4 sively before Mild Crowd In New York Hazen, N. D., Aug. 21.—Hazen’s Tennis club will be host here Satur- day and Sunday to the first annual North Line open tennis tournament. Men entrants will be divided into BILLY STILL HAS COURAGE Victor Takes Advantage of Seven-Pound Margin and Youth in 10-Rounder New York, Aug. 21.—(#)—The clan of McLarnin could rest easy Friday so far as the threat of battle-scarred little Billy Petrolle, the one-time Fargo Express, is concerned. Chunky, pink-faced Jimmy Mc- Larnin, the pride and joy of the clan, settled the matter quite convincingly Thursday night before a small and only mildly aroused crowd at the Yankee stadium. Jimmy whipped and battered Petrolle so decisively, in 10 rounds, that it became quite mo- notonous before the formality of rais- ing the glove by the referee. This was McLarnin'’s second straight triumph over Petrolle. It was by far the more decisive of the two and althogether wiped out the stigma attached to the McLarnin escutcheon by the slugging Jimmy absorbed one night at Madison Square Garden last winter from Billy. Petrolle Floored Self Before receiving the unanimous de- cision, McLarnin did everything but put Billy on the floor. Petrolle man- aged this himself, on one occasion in the fifth round when he fell flat from the force of a wild swing that com- pletely missed its target. McLarnin hasn't the dynamite in his right hand any longer. He seems to favor it since sustaining an injury. At least a dozen times he landed it flush on Petrolle’s chin without put- ting the tough Dakotan down. Jimmy tried hard in the sixth, seventh and eighth rounds, to land the old hay- maker. Petrolle was bleeding and but withstood the best his rival threw at him. Billy sagged bad-| ly in the eighth but came back in the last two rounds with a courageous flurry. Boxing Was Exceptional Seldom has McLarnin given a better exhibition of all-around boxing. Through the first half of the fight, he jabbed Petrolle dizzy with hi spearing left, started a swelling of Billy's right eye, and cut his mouth. By the sixth, Petrolle was in bad shape, bleeding profusely but rallying gamely enough to make McLarnin wary. By the ninth Billy’s right eye was tightly closed. McLarnin was much too strong, fast and clever for Petrolle. Jimmy had a seven-pound pull in the weights, scaling 146 to Billy's 139, and used it to good advantage. Petrolle’s best rounds were the third and fifth. He held McLarnin even on points in these two, landing effective- ly to the head and body. He cut Jimmy's lip in the fifth. McLarnin carried the remaining eight rounds by good-sized margins. He was sel- dom in danger from Petrolle’s crouch- ing lunges, and gave the crowd his old somersault after the final round. Philadelphia Washington ... New Yor! Cleveland St. Louis Boston Chicago .. Detroit NATIO? St. Louis Pittsburgh Philadelphi Cincinnati Milwaukee Louisville Columbus . THURSDAY'S RESULTS American League New York 7; St. Louis 4. Ceveland 10; Washington & Chicago 11: Philadelphia 6, Deteolt 7; Boston 2.4; Pittsbursh 1, 5 (first game 10 innings). Brooklyn Au eam. my New York 3. i 1. Douls-Phitadelphia postponed, American Association ‘Open date. THEY -ftO BE ALONGSIDE OF “THE COTTAGE 2 —~ HERE FROM 2 ~~ SAY aw [Le BET “THis SHACK IS BEING wes FoR A ‘Nadine O’Leary Begins Play in Bemidji Tourney Bismarck Lass, State Champion Last Two Years, to Qualify Today Miss Nadine O'Leary, Bismarck, North Dakota women’s golfing cham- pion, today was to play her qualifying round in the women’s branch of the sixth annual Birchmont International golf tournament at Bemidji, Minn. The Bismarck lass, who won the state championship twice in her only two tournaments, had a score of 92 for 18 holes, the best scored in the qualifying rounds Thursday, to shoot at. Mrs. Leigh Simms, Minneapolis, turned in the low women’s score Thursday. Match play in the men’s and wom- en’s divisions will begin Saturday. More than half of the more than 200 entrants expected played qualifying rounds Thursday and the remainder of the field was touring the course to- day. Conway Bolstad, Minneapolis, led the men qualifiers Thursday with a 75. Other scores included: J. H. Reuttel, Grand Forks, 42-55— 97. we D. McIntyre, Grand Forks, 41- We ‘A. Mcintyre, Grand Forks, 50- 451 ;|51—101. Mrs. W. A. McIntyre, Grand Forks, 51-51—102. ‘| Johnston Heads Amateur Golfers St. Paul Shotmaker Seeded No. 1 for National Amateur Tournament New York, Aug. 21.—(?)—In the ab- sence of Bobby Jones and George Von Elm, the United States Golf associa- tion has nominated Harrison R. John- ston, St. Paul, at the top of the seed- ed list for the national amateur golf championship starting Aug. 31 at the Beverly Country club, Chicago. The first 10 follow: No, 1—Harrison R. Johnston, 8t | Paul. No. be ad Homans, Englewood, 3—T. Phillip Perkins, New York. 4—Johnny Goodman, Omaha, No, No, Neb. a 5—Charles Seaver, Los reries io. No, "New . &—George J. Voigt, New York. fap ih Oscar Willing, Portland, 10 Gieree T. Dunlap, Jr, New|" Of these, only eight will be seeded |rwo American and Two British| Performers Expected In Semifinals | Forest Hills, N. ¥., Aug. 21.—(P)— Four Californians “and as many Britons were left for the quarter-final round of the women's national tennis championships Friday. The survivors included all of the four top-seeded players, Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, San Francisco, and Hel- en Jacobs, Berkeley, Calif. and Phyl- lis Mudford and Betty Nuthall of Great Britain. The seeding as orig- inally made when the field of 64 started play on Monday forecast a semi-final round involving Mrs. Moody and Miss Mudford in the up- per half and Miss Jacobs and Miss| Nuthall in the lower. Most experts expected that lineup after quarter- final round matches today. All but three of the quarter-final brackets had been filled Wednesday in the program abbreviated by rain and Thursday Mrs. Shepherd-Barro! Miss ‘Mudford and Miss Jacobs aif gained places in the round before the semi-finals. Visitors May Use Local Golf Course All Day Saturday Entrants in Tournament Will Have Opportunity to Prac- tice on Course Out-of-town golfers who will par-| ticipate in the fourth annual Missourt | Slope tournament here Sunday and Monday will have an’ opportunity to accustom themselves to the Bismarck | Country club course all day Saturday. | Saturday has been designated prac: tice day for the benefit of visiting | golfers who have never played the| hilly course, according to Fred Tunell, secretary. Though entries are trickling in sowie officials of the tournament ex- pect a large entry field. Entries may | be filed with Assistant Attorney Gen- eral Thomas Burke, who is general | manfger of the tourney, or Tunell up! until the starting time of the meet. | An 18-hole qualifying round is on} the schedule for Sunday morning | jand match play will come Sunday, afternoon and Monday. (By the Associated Ss ess) neluding games of Aug. 20) AMER! LEAGUE Athletics, .335; Gehrig, Yankees, 122; Ruth, 1 "ilie-~slmmons, Athletics, 174; Geh- | . Yankees, 160. tome. Laap oer Gehri Yankees, ‘Stolen bases. Ooiehing Grover’ ative cching—Grove, letica, wor 5, Jost 31 Mahattey, Riise 88m EF jost 2. Batting—Simmons, 2 71. Yankees, hiapman, Yankees, ATIO} Batti ‘Klein, Phillies, 102; Terry, ite— Kiein, Phillies, L. Waner, Pi- gane--islein, Phiitias, 39; Ott, (MAJOR LEAGUE i |¥. Ferderer, aa NAL LEAGEE ig, Davis, Binion, 54; Terry, 0: Will and Dairy D-Ball Teams Tie Again WOMEN’S TENNIS TOURNEY FOLLOWING EXPECTATIONS: Must Play Third Time to Decide Issue; Tod Potter Wins Ninth Victory STANDINGS Won Lost Pet. G. P. Eat Shop....... 11 3 186 Bismarck Dairy o 9 750} Oo. H. Will .... ow 9 3 Northwestern Bell .. z 546 Company A .... 3 231 Capital Laundry ...,. 1 With Pitcher Tod Potter winning) his ninth game in 10 starts, the G. P. Eat Shop entry Thursday evening} had little trouble in defeating the lowly Capital Laundry entry 22 to 7 in their postponed battle in the Bis- marck Diamondball league. But the O. H. Will and Bismarck Dairy teams must play a third time to come to a decision in their makeup contest. These two teams tied at 10- jall in their seven-inning Thursday engagement after playing to a 3-3 deadlock Monday evening in six in- nings. The game Thursday evening was called because of darkness. The milkmen outhit the seedmen 15 to 13 but eight errros proved cost- ly. The dairy team scored four times in their half cf the seventh to as- sume 2 10 to 8 lead but the Will ten scored twice in the last half to knot the score. ‘The chefs collected 14 hits, most of them being for extra bases and in- cluding four homers, while Potter re- the laundrymen to 11 scat- bingles. Box scores: Capital Laundry (7) W Kiesel, 3b . ~ B. Larson, 2b ¢ ©. MeCorrie, ¢ A. Neibauer, Knoll, 1b . Bina,’ it . Baldwin, ¢ P. Neibauer, p” r. Lee, rss Agre, rf. Danrot, rf os >" ebouebelamusaaworeab™ Allen, cf . Goetz, 1b ¢ Spriggs, If Dohn, 3b Potter, Ro’ © Betteys feckSvecuctne| Socucusconnk IMESSLL oauLol cecuesounents Totals Score by | Capital Laundry . 114 010 0— 7 11 GP, Hat Shop. 123 925 x—22 14 Summ: Sacrifices, E. Bigler; homeru: Spriggs 2, Allen, it Dohn, 2-base hits, Bigler, M. Goet: Spriggs, M. Dohn, ‘A Neibauer, P. Ne auer; ‘hits off P. Neibauer 14 in 6 nnings; off F, Potter 11 in 7 innings; struck out by P. Neibauer 3; by F. Potter 2; ba n balls off 'P. bauer 6 Potter 0; “Baldy” Hays; scorer, J, Warner, i * 3 = Ferm el onccnoscential cuscosccounll ©. HE. Will (10) 5 lconer, Ifo Hauser, 3b Diehl, 2b Brown, p Dohn, ¢ Herschle! |. Murray, orn 3. Schwahn, , Blunt, rt 5 wor: Phnson, cf Ashmore, rs: W. Johnson, 2b & Bleenbise, Is B, Miller, 4 W. Burkhart, rf Ferderer, C |. Cowan, If a Siecrsassehel Lanccteans PS udatioe tes Til mrrorsne eves mowtds | masts omtoro mone! 041 001 4—10 15 240 200 2-10 13 bi Rite, Hi. Falcone J. seuweks, B. ‘Miller, Ws Burkhart; home runs, C. miceabe ht Burkhart, J. ere: B, Miller to ait ‘Forderass ry Dane nite, Fae a] coomounnnctial cooncouonott omar use, Braves, won BasesFriseh, Cardinals, 17; { Cardinals, won| BY A H. Falconer; hits off Bm Hummel 13 SA Brown z Behnelder: scorer 5. Hummels 2] Pittsburgh Beating Cincinnati As Cubs Lose RUTH, GEHRIG HIT HOMERS Washington Loses Third Straight; Athletics Are Beaten Severely (By The Associated Press) Ed Brandt, who has been pitching for the Boston Braves for several sea- sons without even threatening the 500 mark in the averages, not only has surpassed all his own hurling marks this year but has made himself one of the best southpaws in the Na- tional League. Brandt turned in his 16th victory of the year Thursday when the Braves downed the Pittsburgh Pi- rates, 2 to 1, in the 10-inning first game of a double-header. He has lost eight contests, giving him an av- erage of .667, which only Bill Walker of New York has beaten among the league's left handers. A year ago | Brandt could win only four games out of 22, The Pirates came back strong against Bill Sherdel in the second game and won 5 to 4 as Pie Traynor drove in three runs. What gaining was done in the Na- tional League Thursday went to the credit of the New York Giants. Some timely hitting behind Carl Hubbell, with Fred Leach’s homer as a climax, gave New York a 3 to 1 victory over Larry Benton and the Cincinnati Reds. This triumph put the Giants @ full game ahead of the defeated Chicago Cubs and eight and one-half behind the league-leading St. Louis jCardinals, who were rained out in Philadelphia. The Cubs could make no headway against Watson Clark of Brooklyn until the ninth inning and by that | time Brooklyn had come through with ‘an eighth-inning rally against Char- ley Root that netted them four runs and a 4 to 1 victory. Earl Averill, Cleveland slugger, crashed his 27th home run of the year as the Indians made it three straight over Washington's second place Sen- ators by a 10 to 8 count in the Amer- ican League. This defeat, the fourth in succes- sion, left Washington only three and one-half games ahead of the New York Yankees, who used the home run route to a 7-3 victory over St. Louis. Lou Gehrig hit his 33rd of the year, then Joe Sewell hit for the circuit, and finally Babe Ruth crashed out his 34th four-bagger with the bases full in the ninth inning to pro- vide the winning margin. Vernon Gomez gave the Browns only one hit in eight innings then weakened with the first Yankee -hut out of the year in sight. The Chicago White Sox won their third game in 17 starts against the {Philadelphia Athletics by pounding Waite Hoyt and Eddie Rommel for 19 hits. The final count was 11 to 6 against the world’s champions, giving the Sox another tie for sixth place with the Boston Red Sox. Boston dropped # 7 to 2 decision to Detroit as Art Herring's pitching kept them helpless. Scores by innings: AMERICAN LEAGUE Yankees Defeat Browns New York . St. Louis . RHE + 000 120 004—7 11 1 ss.s2. 000 000 003—3 5 2 Gomez and Dickey; Gray, Hebert and Ferrell. Senators Beaten Again 000 041 O20— 8 9 Cleveland ...: 000 040 41x—10 17 Marberry, Fischer and Spencer; Harder, Connally and Myatt. Champions Are Clubbea 5 HE 010 028 000— "6 5 00 51 20e—1t 18 4 Washington two classes: junior, including youths under 17 years of age; and senior. ‘Women will be placed in one class, Singles and doubles play for boin men and women are on the program. ‘\ Drawings will be made by a special committee Saturday morning. Semifinals and finals and consola- / tion matches will be held Sunday. Entrants are requested to file their entries with the secretary of the Hazen club. Suitable prizes will ba awarded in each division, Capital Funeral Parlors Jos. W. Tschumperlin Pro Years ago @ skinny little Jewish kid from New York’s Bronx sought physical Pp. development, fame and fortune in the prize ring. He found them all. today a fat, middle-aged man is in his piace, seeking the same things. He may find them again, but the wise ones say he won't. Benny. You looked good as lightweight champion (left above) 10 years ago. But today (right above) you don’t look so hot, But 208 Main Avenue Licensed Embalmer Anyhow, here's luck, Phone—Day or Night—23 Demonstrated They Are as Good A Team Traveling as They Are at Home Chicago, Aug. 21—(?)—Having dem- onstrated they are a road team of championship caliber, St. Paul's league-leading Saints were at home Friday to enjoy a long stand. ‘The Saints, minus the big bat and fielding ability of first baseman Oscar Roettger, took the road for 26 games and there were some who said they could not maintain the terrific clip they set at home. The result of the journey through the other cities of the American Association proved that Lefty Leifield’s band can take care of itself anywhere in the league. They won 19 games and lost seven, for a percentage of .731—excellent at home or anywhere else. The swing around the loop also served to squelch various presump- tive movements by other clubs. Meine and Phillips; Sherdel, ningham and Bool. Brooklyn Downs Chicago 000 000 001—1 000 000 04x—4 3 Root and’ ‘Hartnett; Clark, quinn and Lopez Ney York Wins Another ++ 000 000 910-1 9 : 000 002 01x. Sukeforth; ‘Hubbell ani Chicago Brooklyn Cincinnati New York Benton ai Hogan Alabama Poly will play its first in- tersectional football game in eight years this season against Wisconsin, 1” Stickler Solution | PIN YOUR FAITH TO el and Cochrane, Hev- ing? icmas, Frasier and Tate Detroit Defeats Bosox RHE Boston 000 010 001-2 9 2 Detroit - 401 000 02x—7 13 2 Lisenbee, Morris, McLaughlin and Berry; Herring and Hayworth, NATIONAL LEAGUE Braves, Pira' Pittsburgh -. 000 000 001 01 000 000 010 1-2 er,” ‘Osborne, Swetonic Phillip; Brandt and Spohrer, Bool. 200 001 200—5 11 Boston .. 102 000 010—4 1: True Malt and Choicest Hops. It’s Dependable. LAT LEADING STORES} LEAGUE-LEADING SAINT CLUB WON 19 OF 26 GAMES ON ROAD Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optonietrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533. Bismarck, N. Dak, St. Paul Friday faced Louisville in the opener and a four-game series, with Indianapolis due next for four games. Columbus, Toledo, Minneap- Olis, Milwaukee and Kansas City will follow in order, all for four-game sets. During the jaunt St. Paul increased its margin over second place from eight games to 10, depression” proof” Clothes “Taylor - Made” Custom start off at. 921.50 $45.00 and go no higher than For Style, Quality and Real Honest Values We Recommend “Taylor-Made” Custom Clothes O’BRIEN’S RAREST, 415 Broadway, 'Tbought, - that ART METAL SAFE’ vital business records. Place them Siren Arr "AL SAFE. Then, if you are away— you can rest assured that traveling—' alee eee will come through the fiercest fires unscathed, AABTAL 20 Ot RA! records ART Ma preg ty Dp today ‘The Bismarck Tribune Exclusive Agents BISMARCK, N. D. Art Natal STEEL Office Equipment, Safes and Files / / \ ceORKO Seam = i * -9Z20P OP DOP Y QREORSSPOPe HOB yer

Other pages from this issue: