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6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. AONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1931 Bismarck, Minot and Mandan Golfers Reach Slope Quarter-Finals -|- 67 ENTRANTS FROM BISMARCK GIRL LOSES TO MINNEAPOLIS WOMAN AT BEMIDJI NINE CITIES IN K. D. Paul Cook, Defending Cham- pion, Medalist with 77 Scored in Strong Wind FINAL TO BE PLAYED TODAY Capital City Man Driving) Champ; Bismarck, Minot | Men Tie at Short Game Golfers from Bismarck, Minot, and Mandan Monday forenoon began play in the quarter-finals of the) fourth annual Missouri Slope golf) tournament over the Bismarck Coun- try club course. Semi-finals and finals in the tour- nament, which began Sunday morn- ing, were to be played this afternoon. | Paul T. Cook, Bismarck, North Da- kota and Missouri Slope champion! for the last three years, grabbed me-| dalist honors Sunday morning when he scored a 40-37—77 despite a high wind, which continued throughout the day. Sixty-seven shotmakers from B marek, Mandan, Minot, Halliday, Ne Salem, Dickinson, Underwood, Wil- ton, and Linton entered the tourna- ment here. Driving three balls into the teeth of a northwest wind for a total dis- tance of 615 yards. O. V. Bowman, Bismarck, Sunday evening won the! tournament driving contest. Dr. Russell Gates, Minot, and Carl A. Heupel, Bismarck, tied for first place in the approaching and putting con- test, each canning his three balls in|} eight strokes. Entrants in the tournament were entertained at the annual tourna- ment picnic on the course Sunday eve- ning. Survivors in the flight were paired in the quarter-| finals as follows: Cook vs. Gates; Heupel vs. Dr. L. G. Power, Minot; S. S. Hagen, Bismarck, vs. Leonard, Bismarck; and Neil Croon-} quist, Bismarck, vs. E. A. Eingletary, | Mandan. Finals in all flights and consola-| tions were to be completed this after- noon. Sunday qualifying scores and match results follow: (QUALIFYIN championship} | Lefty Klein Pitches Effectively To Get 7 to 4 Verdict Over Wild Glenn Having defeated the Grove Giants, penitentiary baseball team, 7 to 4! Sunday, nine Monday had a right to claim the city championship. Lefty Klein’s effective twirling and timely hitting by the Elks outfit led to their victory after the prison men jumped off to a 2 to 0 lead in the first jthree innings. Klein allowed only eight hits and struck out 13 Grove Giants. Glenn, Grove moundsman, was touched for 13 hits and was wild at times, walking six Elks. Glenn, however, was effec- tive in the pinches, retiring his op- ponents on three different occasions when they had the bases loaded. Fourteen Elks died on the bags. Bunching three hits and taking ad- vantage of Glenn’s wildness, the Elks scored four runs in the sixth frame to clinch the .ontest. From this point on Klein settled down to tight pitching and the Giants were unable; to score again. Becker, of the Elks team, was walk-j ed four times. The box score: Bismarck E. I ww2owe> orale Bjornson Thnson, Wells, ' hristians Score by innings + 000 E. W.| ver: 1, Hagen hell, umpires, B Hummel. Shipley; scorer, Than, Bismarck 6 5 |Ray Joos, Bismarck Istrup, Bisma erson, Wilton ton ‘, Ralph Kk Fleck, Bis Richard Kra | Wenzel, 9 up ted O. C, Croonquist, 4 i and 1, ted Moses, 2 ‘om ‘Tunell, 3 up. s 6 and 5. cil Croonquist eliminated Lipp, & and 4 Singletary won from Dorfler, 1 up. FIRST ROUND Fox won from Hi ."Bowman eliminated Hauser, Henderson defeated 4 and 2. all, SECON: HT F RTM FLIGHT First Round er won from Wiegman, 1 up. ising won from Trimble, default, , 1 Up. 4 a e, rdetaule Nippert, 6 and 5. Rawlings won from LaRose, de: fault, SEVENTH FLIGHT Final Round Joos won from Dickman by default. -OUR BOARDING HOUSE Y'KNOW WHAT KEEPS ME {FROME GOIN’, DOWN/ , TOI CLAIM® OUR: LOAD, Bismarck's Elks-sponsored | ,|Indianapolis vy winning both games. 9}st. Paul ¥| Louisville . John Prudhomme Hopes to Set New | Association Mark (4 Saint Pitcher Has Won 11 | Straight Games and Seeks H To Extend His String W: | Chicago, Aug. 24.—(P) Prudhomme, one of St. Paul's pitzh- ing aces, is out gunning for the American Association record for con- secutive victories. Prudhomme Monday had a string of {1 straight triumphs and still has N five games to win before equaling the j{ league mark set by Hall of St. Paul in 1915, but with the support of what is almost certain to become a cham- pionship club, has an excellent chance of reaching his goal. Pi Ci in the second game of a double-head- | i. er with Louisville. He chalked up aj 13 to 2 decision. The Saints added two iat more games to their advantage over |‘7, Indianapolis suffered a relapse over | the week-end and dropped three games to Minneapolis. Kansas City won the first game Sunday, 8 to 7, and stood off a closing rally by Co- lumbus to win the second 9 to 7. Art Ruble produced the big punches to help Minneapolis to its pair of vic- tories over the Indians. He got a homer in the first game, driving in three runs, and in the second got four hits, including another brace of homers, to drive in eight runs. The Millers won the first game 8 to 7 and slugged out 18 hits for a 15 to 5 tri- umph in the afterpiece. Merton Nelson, serving twice as re- lief hurler, was ‘credited with both of Milwaukee's victories over Toledo. In the first game he was credited with a 10 to 7 decision, and got into the sec- ond battle long enough to chalk up a9 to 7 win. Scores by innings: Saints Nose Out Pair RH + 000 000 001-1 5 Tt TI 000 110 00x—2 7 0 Deberry and Thompson, Shea; Mur- phy and Snyder. RHE 100 000 010—2 8 3 St. Paul . 000 011 001—3 10 0 Hatter, Mays ‘and Shea, Thompson; Prudhomme and F ‘Clugging Millers Win Tre J Indianapolis 000 510 190-7 13 1 Minneapolis 020 020 40x—8 10 1 Campbell, Morrell and Riddle; Hen- sick, Benton, Walsh, Miller and Har- grave. (s Louisville E HE 003 100 10— 5 15 0 Minneapolis 030 Ox 18 0 (Called Sunday law). Horne, Morrell and Riddie; Brill- heart and Griffin. ‘Toledo In Beaten TWICE Indianapolis R E 5 102 002 002— 718 1 Milwauke 000 003 52x—10 12 2 Ryan, Tate and Henline; Jonnard, Nelson, Gearin and Manion HE s+ 202 102 0007 15 0 221 11x—9 15 Vangilder, Bachman, Rabb, Eissler and DeVormer; Knott, Nelson, Polli and Crouch. Blues Win Doubleheader + 100 100 203—7 16 + 200 321 00x—8 14 2 Littlejohn and Desautels; ‘Swift and Peters. HE Columbus .. 100 100 20%—7 13 0 Kansas City... 210 321 00x—9 142 ‘Ach, Miller ‘and’ Hinkle; Holley, Swift'and Peters. Toledo Toledo ....... Milwaukee "2/72 101 Colu c Ka YESTMRDAY’S s-T Ss (By The Associated Press) Dick Coffman, Browns, and Waite Hoyt, Athletics— former held A’s to three hits to beat Grove, 1-0, in first game of double-header; latter gave four hits to take second 10-0. Chicky Hafey and Paul Derringer, Cardinals—Hafey batted eight runs, hitting two homers, as Cards beat Braves 16-1 in first game. Derringer gave five hits in 11 innings as Jim Bottomley’s homer won second 1-0. Joe Cronin, Senators—Hit homer in seventh to beat Tigers 6-5. Babe Ruth, Yankees — Hit 36th By Ahern | New dohnny | Cleveland St. Boston . Chicago Detroit . St. home run of season as Yanks won two from White Sox. J HOW ES (| ae.) Philadelphia. ashington York . Loui NATIONAL LEAGUE, Louis, 44 York *hicage Brooklyn Boston. ttsburgh Philadelphia. incinnati .... Prudhomme scored No. 11 Sunday | >t. ouisville plumbus inneapolis oledo ... SUNDAY’S RESULTS American 1. Cleveland 4; Boston Washington New York, 10,'9: ¢ 1. St Louis 1, 0; infiadelphia’ 0, 10, National League St. Louis 16, 1; Boston 1, 0 (second 11 innings). “Brooklyn 5, 93 Pittsburgh 4, 4. Chicago-New ‘York, postponed, rain. Others not scheduled. Sinneapotie ‘a, 13; ndlandpolis 7, 6 econd game eight’ innings). Milwaukee 10, 9; Toledo %, 7. Kansas City 8, 9; Columbus 7, 7. Elks Defeat Giants in All-City Game j PLAY IN MEET HERE NADINE O'LEARY I§ DEFEATED 2 UP BY “MRS. K. DICKINSON Bill Fowler, Fargo, Wins Men’s Tournament, Beating . Minneapolis Man BOTH FINALS HARD-FOUGHT Capital City Lass Made Great Rally to Win First Round Match 2 and 1 Bemidji, Minn., Aug. 24.—(/)—Bill Fowler, Fargo, former University of Minnesota Big Ten golfing star and holder of the Birchmont title in 1929, regained the laurels in the sixth an- nual Birchmont international tour- nament Sunday, defeating D. V. Ankeny, Minneapolis, 3 and 1, in a| hard-fought, par-cracking 18-hole round. After being all even at the ena of nine holes, with each winning two. holes and going only two strokes over, par 35, both shot par-breaking golf on the first five holes of the secona nine, Fowler scoring four birdies and Fowler out . Ankeny out . Par In: Victory String Stopped at 16 When Dick Coffman Beats Athletics 1-0 (By The Associated Press) The St. Louis Browns have de- Prived Lefty Grove, the A’s southpaw rand of a chance to.set a new Amer- ican League record. Grove won 16 successive games, tie- ing the mark set in 1912 by Smoky Joe Wood and Walter Johnon, before he ran into the Browns and Dick Coffman Sunday in the first game of @ double-header. He pitched another good game, giving only seven hits and one run, the result of a misjudged ball which went for a double in the third inning, but Coffman was a little better. The St. Louis hurler accom- plished a feat no other American League pitcher has done this season, Ankeny ...... 444 344 56 To reach the final round, Fowler defeated L. C. Sorlein, Fargo, the de- fending champion, 3 and 2 in the semi-finals and Ankeny won from J. B. Bridston, Grand Forks, 3 and 2. Mrs. Kenneth Dickinson, Minneapo- lis, became champion of the women's division when she defeated Nadine O'Leary, Bismarck, North Dakota state women’s champion and medal- ist in the Birchmont international, 2 up in a match carried to the 18th green. Each had medal score of 89, six strokes over ladies’ par. Miss O'Leary won seven out of the last eight holes Saturday afternoon 2 up and 1 to play. down at the end of the first nine, the Bismarck shotmaker made a 40 on Fowler In CEN VINE the second nine, three under women's par for the course. to defeat Isabel Baer, Bemidji star,| W: After being five| Petro! when he held the champions to three} hits and gave them their first shutout of the year. ‘The second game was more like the usual thing when the Athletics play. Waite Hoyt held the Browns to four hits while the A’s pounded out 17 to win 10 to 0. The Yankees took two games from the White Sox. The largest crowd that ever say a ball game in Chicago, 52,000, turned out to see the Yanks win 10.19 4 and 9 to 1. A seven-run rally, aided by Babe Ruth’s 36th home run, settled the first contest. Cleveland's Indians lost to the Bos- ton Red Sox 4 to 3. The Reds finally were eliminated mathematically as well as actually from the National League pennant race when the St. Louis Cardinals took two games from the Braves and Placed themselves 34% games ahead of the last place team with 32 games to go for the Cards and 33 for the Reds. Cincinnati, with the Phillies, had an open date. An 18-hit attack won the first game for St. Louis 16 to 1. The second went 1l-innings before Jim Bottomley dropped a home run into the bleach- ers to give St. Louis a 1 to 0 victory. Brooklyn also won two games, stag- ing two late rallies against Pittsburgh and winning a 5-4 count each time. Scores by innings: AMERI Clevel: N LEAGUE Rallies to Win R = O12 000 000—3 id + 001 002 001—4 Ayden and Berry; Gonnally H Roston . 2 ‘Senators Eke Out Win HE ‘ashington ... 203 000 100—6 9 0 Hts ss 011 120 000—5 11 0 Burke, Crowder, Spencer; Whitehiil, Bridges and ks Beat C! New York Chicago . ++ 070 210 000—10 13 000 200 002— 4 13 Lefty Grove Deprived of New Record Ruffing, Wells and Dickey; Frasier Moore and Grube. R E ‘New York + 203 210 200-9 iu 1 Chicago . 2 010 000 000—1 1 Rhodes, Wells and’ Dickey: Moore and Grubs jrowns, Athletics 8; HE Epiateiphin 24,000,000 0005 5 O Louis ...... 000 000 000— 0 4 0 Styrove and’ Cochrane; Coffman and Bengough. Eniladelphia +. 000 024 ooh zi Fi St. Louis . 0 ‘Hoyt and Heving: ‘Stewart, stiles, Kimsey and Ferrell. EB 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE Cards Down Braves Twice HE St Louis 004 025 500—16 18 0 Boston 000 100 000— 1 8 4 Johnson “and Wilson, Gonzales; Frankhouse, Hald Cantwell, Cun- ningham and Spohrer. 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