The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1932, Page 6

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ores see ~— 3 reves Saant na ae PHS aS — oa NAO TOME ‘ THE BISMARCY TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1982 & —— ation’s Leading Professionals Seek P. G. A. Crown at St. Paul ° 103 OF ANgRCAS [TO STAGE SECOND ANNUAL LABOR DAY HORSESHOE MEET HERE GREATEST GOLFERS ||_ouR BOARDING HoUSE By Ahern | craicrpay |Solons Start Drive for Second Place PLAYING FOR TITLE 7 CONTESTANTS FROM THROUGHOUT SLOPE WW OH THATS IT, 1S IT? Now, You're NOT Gy Washington Contingent Hopes SX 7} You'RE TAKING TH’ CUE GONNA GRUNT AN* Y par ALL to Salvage Job For Walter fess A, GROWL OUTOF IT |Z! IGHT, Johnson, Club Mentor Sarazen and Diegel Only Pro- yon ae aes aa 8 rats TIME /— Do T ”3 DRAT iT 7 EXPECTED 10 ENTER d fessionals of Note Not | MORATORIUM ON DEBTS GET MY $Id BUT You" HACE Corset itera tae iis in Tournament Nou OWE US ~AN’ Now PEACEFULLY ~ Ofe COULD AT rumor that their manager is in active paeeteenien anes YoU WANT A CANCELLATION | § WILL AN OSTEOPATH rg hag ME | Ole Syvrud of Mandan, 1931] danger of losing his Job st the close ‘ ET HALE OF SYouTe wit i i e cd drt COOPER AMONG FAVORITES a andar pnd ma TAMING TH" STATEMENT ype Rae fie oon ae Waller Johiea ——— fo) cK Ov ~To BE r a lot of good. In winning 11 of their last 14 | games, the Senators at least have gained a rehearing for the “Big Train,” and if they sustain that clip up to the last day it is doubtful Owner Clark Griffith would give fur- ther thought to a change of pilots. Up to the time they began their onslaught on the western clubs, the Senators had made a disappointing race of it. Picked to finish at or {near the top, they barely were cling- ing to the first division a fortnight ago. Those on the inside confidently predicted Bucky Harris would be back next season to manage the club he KNOTS OUT OF You AFTER I 2E= FINISH NINE BUCKS TO ME, OF THAT $200 You J WON ON A HORSE 2) Tom Creavy, Defending Cham- i pion, Exempted From ARRANGE JUNIOR FLIGHT Qualifying Round : Qualifying Rounds For Bis-! marck and Mandan Con- testants Start Sunday St. Paul, Aug. 30.—(4)—Golf's long- est marathon, the annual Professional Golfers’ association championship, | moved into its first lap Tuesday with | 103 of America’s stars struggling to win 21 lanes that lead toward the throne room. Only one pro had his place won and | Contestants from throughout the Missouri Slope are expected to enter the second annual Bismarck Labor that was the defending champion Day horseshoe tournament here Sept.| led to two flags and one world cham- Tom Creavy of Alb; N. Y.. an 5, it was announced Tuesday by John | pionship. Right now, however, it automatic qualifier. All the others. ! W. Reel, city recreational director. | looks like Harris will remain at De- among them far more tamed marks- Ole Syvrud of Mandan, 1931 cham- | troit. men of golf, were confronted with a Pion, will defend his championship.| By defeating the St. Louis Browns 36-hole qualifying test that 72 had to won at the tourney last year. Monday, 7 to 6, in 13 innings while lose. O. N. Nordlund, George A. Middel- ; Philadelphia was dividing a double- Except for Gene Sarazen and Leo steadt, H. P. Erickson and D. E. Wel-| header with Detroit, the Senators i Diezel. who failed to qualify in the liver make up the committee on ar- | climbed within five and half games of metropolitan test, virtually every rangements. - | second place. If they catch the A’s prof al of note was in the bie Contestants from Bismarck and | and land the runner-up berth, John- over the Kei course and one Mandan will be required to finish | son will need to make no apologies to the ultimate winner in championship | when contract time rolls around. - The Yankees stepped a little fur- Sas qualifying play by 6 p. m. Sunday, 6 holes, six-day while other entries will be given un- | Gor wim in | | be was as cood as another (ee) = ke jtil 11 a. m, Monday morning to fin-; ther ahead of the field by trimming E ked among THE RRNETe REG. U. 8, PAT. ore. \\ ish preliminary matches. | Chicago twice, 10 to 3, and 4 to 3. t x { was somewhat 93: SERVICE, IC. The tournament will be played on | Lefty Gomez breezed to his 22nd vic- ove y such veterans as) its ig ~~~ jthe courts recently constructed at the | tory in the first game, but Charley I v Cooper of Chi corner of Main Avenue and Third! Ruffing had a close scrape before |Seedmen Capture cago, Canadthn open champion and St. | chalking up No, 16 in the nightcap. winner of the $10.900 St. Paul onen| In qualifying rounds each player| The Athletics staged a six-run rall; ever tho same Koller lavout in 1930; will pitch 100 shoes, 50 on each of {in the eighth round to beat Detroit Walter Hagen of Detroit, five times chamrion of the P. G. A. event and so determined to add another that he | came on the s a day ahead of | time for practice; Tommy sour of Detroit, master iron shet maker: Billy | Burke of Greenwich, Conn.. 1931 na- | tional open champion. and a host. of It is important to start the back- Swing correctly, to be in a position at the top of the swing to deliver AT THiS STAGE OF two different courts. Contestants with the best eight qualifying scores will be placed in the championship flight and will compete for the tour- ney championship. Other flights will be composed of eight players each. Round-robin matches will be played in all flights. | First Honors in Circuit Batting, | | Five Players Get Marks of .500 | in the first, 8 to 3, but the Tigers ; came back to win the second game, 10 jto 7, with a three-run outburst in the ninth. Although they made only five hits off Rhodes and McNaughton, the Cleveland Indians cashed in on 12 passes to defeat the Boston Red Sox, It's a long time between fishing trips for President Hoover and he didn’t lose a minute enjoying his favorite sport during a fishing cruise on Chesapeake bay. The day this picture was made he caught 15 fish, one of them a three-foot trout. Seated behind the President is Secre- tary Hyde, one of the cabinet’s better-known anglers. On the right is rvice man. (Associated Press Photo) onions ie the downward blow in the most effi- ‘ ia : A junior flight, 6 to 3. Earl Averill w five free} Moments, has been aching for years} outclass Schmeling as a boxer. others including, Horton Smith. 0° manner THE BACKSWING or Better in Second Bracket |penesit ot bezinness, wil be staged | trips seca: ade to get a punch at Sehmeling. “That] auickey, too, hits harder than the ner of the St. Paul of ast ie ’ vei st be i hie 5 é 1 . ti fellow,” he ins “is made for me. ' Denny Shute, runner-up to Creavy in! ,,he Go this the weight must be be- THE WEIGHT nh of D-Ball Loop Saturday, Reel said. National League turnstiles were] Ti 0"" dee num Teuton with a left hook, particularly | Prizes will be awarded to winners of all flights. | Players who are expected to com- pete this year include: J. W. Bur- chard, Dickinson; Marvin Russell, Flasher; William Renden. Mandan; idle for the day. Only one game was scheduled, between Boston and Pitts- burgh, and that was erased by wet grounds. ne the championship in 1930, and J: ny Farrell, Paul Runvan. John G en, Olin Dutra, Ed Dudley, Al Wat- rous and Joe Turncsa. Cooper probably stood out as the niy a left smash to the body that Schmel- ing particularly detests. If there is any weak link in the Schmeling ar- mor, the two fights with Sharkey have proven that it is inability to stand ALREADY HAS / “7 EN SHIFTED f y in a position to swing against the ball, not strike down on it in a choppy | action, | In the correct swing. the shift of| weight to the right foot is impera-) On the basis of Schmeling’s show- ing in defeat by Jack Sharkey, Mickey may do just that. Watching Schmeling, with youth, strength, punching power, stamina all First honors for team hitting in , the second bracket of play in the city jcommercial D-ball circuit went to ANO Tae Body HAS oUST STARTED AMERICAN LEAGUE bigeest favorite of the group, not tive. This action is more ea: > TURN the 0. H. Will Seedmen, who hit}/e "Dp. ’ cuiver, Dicki J Yanks Win Twin Bill en his side but absolutely going to|up under body punishment. Walker on the streneth of his game, now at trolied it the order is a cshiftcturn”| TO TUR {safely 135 times in 391 trips to the }Rouman, Flasher amd ered tau New York—The New York Yankees | waste as he fought the most dodder- | revels in that sort of milling. tops, but because of his ability to ner than a ‘4 for in the} iplate for an average of .343, accord-| yandan, ’ |won both ends of a bargain bill from | ing, spiritless battle of any heavy- play the Keller course iter © -@ balance is destroyed. | Peli statistics kept by Balzer Hum-|" wore than 50 were entered in the ona) White Sox, 10 to 3, and 4 to| weight champion in defense of a tot- mina” 7 ; -—————- The “shift-turn” pulls the elub| mel, official league scorer. tournament last year. - tering title, the conviction grew that Perfect At Traps Runner-up honors went to the G. P. Eat Shop with an average of .325} | While the Trojans were in third place ; with a mark of 323, i , Five players hit .500 or better to pace the field for honors in the indi- | First Game R HE) champion Chicago... 001 011 000-3 9 1 ( 5 New York. 001 106 11x—10 14 0 | Schmeling lacks the spark that Blues Clip Wing ues ip s Jones, Gallivan and Grube; Gomez lifts a true champion to the greatest f Bi dM d jand Dickey. heights of his career when the need of Bird Mound Ace, ions ine the young Teuton never will be a real | MYR ugue (By The Associated Press) ;for such . | UE a | vidual swat department. Dale Brown | Rit Enema domo ae eee : odsers, 364: V. IE Rata jWas at the head of the list with a Chicago... 000 010 020-3 13 jing, his powers scarcely disturbed { Davis, Phillies, .351. I HE Y American Association mark of 545. The Goetz brothers pew NOTH 020 100 Ox perry failing to do more than make ges- Runs—Klein, Phillies, 138; O'Doul, Milwaukee, 11 |were next in line, Sebastian batting ‘Bud Parmelee Beaten By Kan. |, Chamberlain. Faber and Berry; tires through the last five rounds | Dodeers, 104. STAND Indianapolis, 12, |for a 526 average while Mike was in NE aie Ruffing and Dickey. Pees ee se sore i Bee : Fie cans=tile! s, 33: Ott, St. Paul, 7; Lo . 4. third place with .517. sas City; Tribe Sets Down iti & . ee Oe Kansas ‘City, 7; Columbus, 0. Eddie Spriggs was the only hitter hid . ‘ie Tigers, A’s Divide {tired, worn Sharkey, a one-eyed old Stolen Klein, Phillies, 20 AMERICAN LEAGUE \ _— going to bat more than 30 times, who Millers in Slugfest |_ Philadelphia—The Tigers rallied to man who seemed certain to crumple Stolen ba: lein, S, 20; A) as Eau finished above thie 600 aaark. iscore three runs in the ninth inning | before a really determined onslaught. Frisch, Cardinals, 1 a ee a Ls al ‘Team and individual averages are ‘0 beat Philadelphia, 10 to 7, in the | Pitching—Warnek Cubs, 19-5; Philed + x ok 3 ai : |second game of a double-header after | NEVER QUITS Swetonic, Pirates, 11-5. nol ates a 2 ; | Chicago, Aug. 30—(P)—After win- ithe A’s won the first, 8 to 3, Walker, twice a titleholder, has the : LEAGUE eae - iM : , |ning eleven straight games for the| First Game | spark of a champion. Getting off the ae Aihteties, ase, Cleveland. a 388 EF : Lae ‘ Columbus Red Birds since joining the | R | floor, hea tiie iinost sdanmeteneieae® Ruth, : Bea : rr : club in the middle of the season, Bud Detroit... 000 300 900— 3 \rior in the world. He doesn’t seem Runs—Foxx, Athletics, 127; Sim- Chicago 86 312; LAST IGHT Mee : Parmele finally has been stopped. ladelphia 000 000 26x— 8 | reall . x, Ath | i ell: re Rs ee | Sorrell, Uhle and Hayworth; Earn-;Teally to start fighting until he has mons, Athletics, 120. Boston 92 281! lh i ae The husky righthander tried to! saw and Cochrane. i jbeen badly stung. Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 47;| (By The Associated Press) {Company A’. »/make it an even dozen in @ row in a! Second Game | He handled a bigger, stronger Ruth, Yankees, 39. ? Ee NATIONAL LEAGU Davenport, Ia.—Gorilla Jones, EE ogee y |night game at Kansas City Monday | H E/ Sharkey with ease to get a 15-round Stolen bases—Chapman, Yankees, Chicago . 73 5 Akron, O., outpointed Kid Leo- | AB Hits Pet. night, but didn't even come colse. The|Detroit.... 013 210 003-10 15 1!draw last summer. Schmeling, by 3; Walker, Tigers, 20. Pittsburgh 1 6 Philadeiphia 100 111 030— 7 14 Whitehill and Hayworth; Walberg; | Rommell and Madjeski. Blues sent Pistol Pete Flower, a for- Brows comparison, will be the smallest heavyweight Mickey has ever tackled. The Teuton will weight about 189, as nard, East Moline, Ill, (10); Billy Thompson, Waterloo, Ia., knock- ed out Jack Miller, Chicago, (2). Pitching—Allen, Yankees, mer Red Bird to the mound and Pete Gomez, Yankees, 22-6. ‘|pitched so effectively Columbus got only four hits and took a 7 to 0 shel-| | usual, less than 20 pounds o—____ Sioux City, Ia—Glen ‘Lehr 500 | Tae | Nose Out Browns wari mt yy - A cking. Parmelee and his S501 Yesterday’s Stars {| /Ne%,Xo" Waterloo, Ta., ouipointed Cari “At |phil Weinert, gave nine hits and the |g, Wasuington— Washington defeated | Walker at 170, Although Mickey always has been | | Cincinnati a . the St. Louis Browns in a 13-innin; ° atti Wie Cina s (hs Beeline Nels +438 |Blues made the most of their pro-|game, 7 to 6. is | halled as a free-swinging belter, he| Fred 8, Tomlin, Glassboro, N. J., (By The Associated Press) __ AMERIC. Clinch, Pittsburgn. 16) yet : duction. R H_ E/never has been really appreciated as| professional, broke 200 targets at Oral Hildebrand, Indians—Scatter- : Minneapolis 6 Laue, Mar men Bikte ONE Slene! | By losing, Columbus lost an oppor- | St. Louis— {@ boxer, As a welterweight, Mickey| a 16-yard rise to win the open ed Red Sox's nine hits and won, 6-3,;Columbus id 4 Coe GBA Eadie tott . : {ja , tunity to take up a game on Minne-} ae 000 002 O11 0-6 16 2jwas as clever and knowing as any| championship at the grand Amer. i ' fisorge Earnshaw, Athletics. and | dlanapolis, cea 64 on Pieneinnin, 0) ene ‘juz |@polis, which lost a savage slugging aii a 012 011 1—7 17 1/2 the contenders, and he had noj| lean trapshoot tourney at Vandalia, Billy Rhiel, Tigers—Former stopped | ilwaakee © ee ee to) match to Indianapolis, 15 to 12. The) stewart rand’ Ferelly Markerry, | Touble out-spearing as skillful a foc-| Ohio, with a perfect score. (Asso. Tigers with five hits in first game; !Toledo .. ql ‘496| Ivy Paul Andrews, young Boston | f Palnns sheer ted Py the situation to | crowder, ‘McAffee, and Spencer, Bert, |™an as old Jack Britton. He will] ciated Press Photo) latter collected home run, double and | Louisville . 83 (399 | Red Sox hurler, wires his mother in| Il. Falconer’ the extent MOVIN ip A Wate On MADE, - - - Se single in nightcap. St. Paul .. 86 372 \J. Schwahn Columbus in the battle for second | oa Dora, Ala., every time he wins a game. | M. | place. Tribe Trims Boston Indianapolis lambasted Ray Phelps,| _Boston—The visiting Cleveland I Pete Donohue and Hi Vandenberg for |dians defeated the Boston team, 6 1/21 hits which were good for 39 bases, |3 RH g |but had to squirm somewhat at the ) finish to stop a Miller rally. Minne- igieveland. 401 900 109 § 7 | 2Polis collected six runs in the sixth) Hilderbrand, and Myatt; Rhodes |and four in the eighth, and had the |and McNaughton, Tate. bases loaded in the ninth. George Smith, a recruit righthander, stopped NATIONAL LEAGUE Vernon Gomez and Charley Rut-| fing, Yankees—Pitched Yankees to two victories over White Sox. Sam West and John Kerr, Senators | i —Their singles in 12th led to defeat of Browns. 4 | MONDAY’S RESULTS American League New York, 10-7; Chicago, 3-3. Philadelphia, Detroit, 3-10. Washington, 7; St. Louis, 6. Cleveland, 6; Boston, 3. r The Brooklyn Dodgers won only | J. seven out of their first 19 games with |! the Phillies this season. \i in- to E | 0 Ice crystals, sometimes 18 inches s across, are found in caves in the Ural mountains. They are said to be the largest in the word. National League The state of Texas is as large as/ | No games played. i 212 Rhode Islands. Boston-Pittsburgh, d, rain, OUT OUR WAY By Williams | i re se 1 pat however, before they | oy ped im iy ft, Dosen rai |B Helwig . Milwaukee reclaimed fifth place by|* —gQuraom ap ARNTG@ © aan: defeating Toledo, 11 to 5. | SPORT SLANTS Russell Van Atta accounted for his, MY GAWSH, A_HOSS ?\ /You FELLOWS NeEON'T BE 1th victory of the season as St, Pal By ALAN GOULD | Boys , ‘THer's ARE Yur - |/ CastING ANY OF YouR a aa ag | The toy bulldog, chunky Mickey AxHoss! SHORE ? BARC ABD ATME BECAUSE Brewers Take Hens | Waiees mie ga We Hane oer | s € ITS A CITY AVE SOU DOING SOMETHING Milwaukee—The Brewers defeated ver hol aveal Be > EGS, avons ee ak AROUND HERE BESIDE SITTING ieraateon i } Toledo, 11 to 5. in the series opener, | Otherwise lcking Max Schmeling in/ HOSS! An’ “1M AEN, ON A HORSE. -~ TLL TELL You Hh Genres: SA Serene EOE BE in | genie EL IRE ue ! * i f garden on Long Islant ~ 19, mi i A MAN ON IT, CAUSE — ONE THING ~— IF THIS COWBOYING 1 Toledo.... 101 110 0U—5 13 2/ not be as difficult as it would appear BUSINESS EVER GOES ON THE Milwaukee 402 011 30x—11 14 0 | at first sight. H ROCKS, YOU CAN THANK ME. 1 i,twogood and Lawson, O'Neill;; ‘There's something about Walker THAT YOU KNOW How To DO : Caldwell and Young. ;that never fails to stir the imagina-| by ‘tion of the faithful. He craves ex-j itement and pleasure outside the Minneapolis — Indianapolis . i the league leading Millers 19 to 12. jting, and he always manages to find | R E both, if they're anywhere available | Indianapolis 052 122 030—15 21 1, Within the same state. But once that ‘Minneapolis 010 016 040—12 17 1, first gong bangs, he’s all fighter. To- (| Bolen, Vangilder, Smith and Ang- | Gay he stands alone in the fight game | , ley; Phelps, Donohue, Vandenberg, | as the one combination of indomit- | Hill and Richards. {able courage, experience, punchihg » Paul » Paul defeated Louis- | i WHAT MICKEY WANTED ee tc tth Me fitst of a four |” Mickey, in both his light and heavy game series with seventh place in the American Association at stake. Indians Beat Millers ne ee 2 tee Svinte tent] Sets rie neler setet Seer" tetosorr ists] A LUTTLE SOMETHING BESIDES Phone That Want-Ad NOW ate Secbcactes con a1 If you have an apartment or a room arck Special School District No. 1, wrote Phone 32 Columbus. 000 000 authorized to establish and main- 7 3 4 L, elan 9 | RHE NOTICE OF SPECIAL for rent, a used car to sell, or a radio hf + Thorpe : Page ‘id an ee i HI SCHOOL ELECTION to exchange, place a want ad in The B. Fi rald . i ‘d” Oe: G Papecek [a Bee corse Bnd Bbarpe, rice, | ee ger eer lye chet ‘Tribune. ‘No matter what your want A FA ae pee Bee Penner 1932 an election will be held at Me- ad requirements may be—The Bis- 7 6 Blues Blank Birds NODA ta Blemuvcke Special Sehool Dia? marck ‘ LH agri erage ret is City defeat { trict) ‘No. 4, County of Burleigh, State Tribune want ad will deliver vA he <4 ed the olumbus Red of North Dakota, for the purpose of results, Our ad-taker will hel; i Moers 22°. of ff a'night gate, ts 0. | SRETRNG ong uawiog giastige dies 8 9 4 3 Kansas City 302 002 00x—7 9 0/tain, in conjunction with the high Ll. Bigler . 0} Parmelee, Weinert and Healy; | school of trict, a department J. Roehrici": wine and CO V+) ot Junior college work tovconsint, of THE BISMARCK it Tp gel than two years of work bi yond a fo pop- | the po due | a.m. a res year high school cours will be opened at 9 o'clock nd ‘closed ut 4 o'clock p. m,, of Sesser mn rccree comm cee TRIBUNE WANT-ADS Among Asiaties there is still a ular bellet that earthquakes ay. dat Bismarck, N. D., this 26th of August A. D, ‘1932, | | By Order of the Board of Education, . Bismarck Spectal School District Ne ‘on. rée- _ > HICHARD PENWARDE: ‘Sarough college. | THE STRANGE ANIMAL

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