The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 20, 1934, Page 6

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| Golfers to Start R THE BISMARCK T! b, TUESDAY, 1984 | ORNGALS HOPE 1) |LARIMORE ELIMINATES FAIRMOUNT | HAVE LOCAL COURSE | oun BoarDINc HousE IN SHAPE FOR PLAY Grounds, Tournament and Club House Committees Ap- pointed at Meeting FEES SAME AS LAST YEAR Family Membership Tickets, $20; Men, $15; Women, $10; Juveniles, $5 Golf play at the Bismarck Country club will officially begin April 1, weather permitting, Dr. R. W. Hen- @erson, president, announces. Club Officers believe the links would be in first class shape for play at that time. ‘The opening date was decided upon sf a meeting of the members last ‘Thursday. Although play on the course d mot begin officially until April, loca mashie wielders have been taking ad- vantage of the mild wi: days in the last months and have spent quite some time chasing the little white ball about the grounds at the ciub. Playing fees will be the same this} year as last, officials said; member- ship fees to men, $15 per player: for ‘women, $10; and for juveniles, membership for any two pI one family is again set at $21 member golfers will be charged 50 cents for 18 consecutive holes on Sun- days, Saturdays and holidays; 40 cents on other days. | The club has retained the services! of Tom O'Leary, professional. Appoint Committees Members of the grounds commit- tee, appointed at Thursday's meeting, are contemplating changes for sev- eral of the greens. but they did not nnounce Specifically what their pro-j| gram would be. The committee com-| prises Dr. G. R. Lipp, chairman, and J. P. Wagner and S. S. Hagen. W. H. Moore was renamed ground keeper. The house committee, which has charge of the club house and of so- cial activities, includes J. I. Roop, and Dr. R. F. Krause. The tournament committee, in charge of the annual Missouri Slope tournament and local golf meets, is composed of F. E. Tunell, Paul Cook, T J. Burke, Henry Jones and C. E. Ligon. Members of the woman's tourna- ment committee are Mrs. George Ma- reney, chairman, Mrs, C. E. Ligon and Anne Hulbert Peterson. Club officers are Dr. Henderson, and S A, Olsness, vice president, and A. A. Mayor, secretary-treasurer. The board of directors include George Ma- roney, A. W. Mundy, and C. B. Little. Little was absent from Thursday's meeting. University Mat Coach Challenges Promoter & Ann Arbor, Mich., March 20.—(7)—| A pro-amateur wrestling controv featuring Nick Londes et al, vs. Clif- ford Keene et al, warmed to a healthy glow Tuesday. The hubbub started when Keene, eoach of the University of Michigan ‘wrestling team, invited the public to come out to Ann Arbor to see some “real wrestling at the national in- tercollegiate matches this week.” Keene’s annouucement grieved Londes, Detroit wrestling promoter, ‘who forthwith proposed that Keene eend four of his best collegians! against Ray Steele, who is due to @rapple with Londes in Detroit Friday wight. Londes said he would give the uni- wersity $1,000 if Steele couldn't throw all four “or even eight” of Coach Keene’s collegiate wrestlers. Keene replied that amateur rules! prohibit collegiate athletes meeting Professionals but added that he “could throw Nicholas the best day he ever paw.” Tilden-Vines Team to Play Gledhill, Chapin Baltimore, March 20.—()—The ‘touring American-French tennis quar- tet came to the parting of ways Tues- Gay after bringing to a close here a tour which carried them to ten prin- cipal cities of the east and middle- west, The American pair, William T. Til- den, 2d, and Elisworth Vines, will take The French combination of the re- tour, Henri Cochet and Martin will be joined by Vincent Rich- ards, former professional champion, end Bruce Barnes for an itinerary through the south and middlewest. Kirkwood, start Tuesday @ golfing trail that will take them far corners of the earth. They year’s tour covering more than Ye UY Wp Zi BOOTHBY ! IT IN A CORNER ON TH HALL STAIRS CARPET! YOU SAID YOU HAD GOLD, WITH BUT ITS (eR fe Ss. Augusta Tournament to Deter- mine If Bobby Jones Can Still Lead Field Augusta, Ga, March 20.—()— Champions, former champions and those who would be named among golfdom’s great are entered in the masters’ invitation tournament which begins here Thursday. The first. official announcement of the entry list shows fourteen amateurs and forty seven professionals are def- initely entered in the tournament. Bobby Jones will be making his first competitive appearance since his grand slam of goif's titles. Playing with Jones will be George T. Dunlap of Pinehurst, the present United tates amateur champion and C. Ross Somerville of Toronto, Canada, the 1932 amateur champion. Others entered in the tournament include: Amateurs: Ralph Redmond of St. Petersburg, Fla., southern champion, Charles Yates, of Atlanta; John Daw- son of Chicago; Gus Moreland of Dal- las; Jack Munger of Dallas; Jesse W. Sweetser of New York. Professionals: Billy Burke of Cleve- land; Harry E. Cooper of Chicago; Wiffy Cox of Brooklyn; Tom Creavy of Albany, N. Y.; Bobby Cruickshank of Richmond; Leo Diegel of Philadel- phia; Mortie Dutra of Detroit; John- ny Farrell of Chicago; Charles Lacey of Lakeville, L. I.; Ky Laffoon of Denver; Phil Perkins of Willoughby, Ohio; John Revolta of Milwaukee; Paul Runyan of White Plains, N. Y.; Denny Shite of Philadelphia; Horton Smith of New York; MacDonald Smith of Nashville, Craig Wood of Deal, N. J. RENTNER TURNS PRO Ranks of pro football have enlisted another famous college player. He is Pug Rentner, former Northwestern backfield ace, reported to be signec by the Boston Redskins. It’s never difficult to get acquaint- ed with a persen who owns a dog.— Somerset. Maugham, British author. HERE“ FOUND Zj\ THAT COLLAR BLSTTON Gf NAAT YOU LOST, MR \T SO LONG, THOUGHT, IT WAS GONNA BE AH,LAD,T WILL WAS ‘AD BAD LUCK A DIAMOND IN IT~ ONLY BRASS | “REWARD YOU WITH ASHILUNG! [VE WORN “THAT COLLAR BUTTON FOR 32 YEARS, AND TVE WITHOUT IT+LAST NIGHT T By Ahern OVD IT DIDNT FIND tr, ESGAD! UM-WHEN T Wade WITH THE FRENCH LEGION, AT SID- AB-HABEL, THE COLONEL LOST A SEED PEARL FROM ARING, AND 1 FOUND IT— LIST OF REGIONAL CHAMPION TEAMS Quints Prepare for Class B Tournament at Valley City Friday, Saturday THAT SA EIGHT FIVES ARE ENTERED State Title-Holder Nosed Out in Final’ Quarter Play in Battle at Fargo rene ital E Stanford Youth Javelin Tosser Johnny Mottram Unable to Earn Freshman Numerals; Now Holds Titles (By NEA Service) Palo Alto, Calif. March 20.—The greatest. javelin. pitcher in American history now is competing for the Stanford university track team. Robert Lyman (Dink) Templeton, tempestuous Cardinal mentor, who has given the track world such cham- pions as Ben Eastman, Bill Miller, Eric Krenz, Harlow Rothert, Henri LaBorde, John Lyman, Ross Nichols, and Emerson (Bud) Spencer, now of- fers his first king of the javelin. Johnny Mottram is the boy's name. He never went out for athletics until his last year at Mission High, San Francisco. He tried out with the Stanford frosh team in 1932, but could not win his numeral. Johnny thought he was a runner. Templeton told him he was a javelin tosser. With only two weeks’ training, Mot- tram entered the Long Beach relays. Using a borrowed javelin, he hurled the spear more than 200 feet six con- secutive times, in all three qualifying and three final efforts. Four were beyond 210 feet and his winning throw was 215 feet 4% inches. In winning the event, 21-year-old Mottram defeated Malcolm Metcalf, 1932 Intercollegiate A. A. A. A. and National A. A. U. champion from Dartmouth, holder of the I. C. 4-A record of 218 feet 10% inches and a star in the Olympic games. Mottram, who has Finnish blood flowing through his veins, has copied the technique of putting the back muscles instead of the shoulder mus- cles behind the throw, as practiced by Matti Jarvinen, Finland's world cham- |Pion. Templeton believes the boy will be doing 240 feet before long. Never fear, the bars the govern- ment is going to lift against import- ed liquor are not the kind you lean on at 2:30 in the morning. | our ouR WAY LISSEN HERE, WORRY WART! WHY DO YoU ALWAYS PILE SO MUCH MORE ONTO YOUR PLATE THAN YOU CAN sot Nodak Trackmen Begin Practices in __Preparation for Important Meets MANY OF GOLFDOM’S GREAT IN _|witenter drake, vakota Retays MASTER'S INVITATIONAL MEET and North Central and Marquette Meets Grand Forks, N. D., March 20.—| The members of the University of North Dakota track squad, anxious to| retain their North Central Confer- ence championship, have commenced) training for the ensuing season. The Sioux team will be entered in) the Drake Relays, Dakota Relays, North Central Conference meet, and the Marquette Intercollegiate meet, as well as a number of dual meets, arrangements for which are tentative. Four members of last year’s team who scored 17 points in the confer-| 5 ence meet have finished their varsity, competition. Roy Pearson, winner of going wild. the mile and two mile races; Roy!" gyummary: Mosher, first in the 880-yard run; | peirmount (14) Larry Knauf, third in the 100-yard| nurtee, f ... dash; and Art Vandal, third in thelrerm,'¢ . two mile event were instrumental in the Sioux’ successes last season. However, the Nodaks still can pre- sent some formidable competition. In. the dashes they reign supreme be- cause of Ralph Pierce, LaMoure, holder of the 100 and 220 yard cham- pionships. Pierce’s 09.8 in the cen- tury and his 21.8 in the 220 have yet, last year. The behemoth Ted Meinhover, Bis- marck, 6 feet 7 inches tall, holds the North Central conference shotput rec- ord, 45 feet 7 inches, and won the dis- cus throw event last year with a heave of 145 feet 4% inches, an effort niet inches short of the conference ‘The Sioux made a clean sweep of the broad jump event last season, with Johnny Bacon, Cando; Wayne Hill, Ellendale; and Sid Iverson, Grand Forks; finishing 1-2-3. Hill won a ssonerd Place in the low hurdles as well. From last year’s freshman ranks| come three cinder stars. George Fait,| Wel Fingal; and Vernon Weaver, Devils| In the Lake, are ten second men in the 100,| ski, Interna’ while Lloyd Murphy, Bismarck, holds| O’Shocker, the North Dakota state high school} mint Pole. vault record. CAGE COACH I8 GOLF PRO A former basketball coach of the University of Nebraska, Charles Black, is now a golf pro at Alton, Tl. By Williams fe z*? z H : i of ee. ay 4 Es iG i Seg Hi £ i ; HE z z A sd H i I i i i 2 is EB I HAFTA GIT IT HIGH, KIN SEE WHUT T™ EAT'N: FF egular Play at Bismarck Country Club April 1 IN 16-14 CAGE CONTEST COMPLETES [Lively Ball Will Not Affect Giants’ CAE Repeat Chances Manager Terry Says New Phils’ Boss and Board The Philadelphia Nationals rapidly are rounding into shape for the 1934 pennant chase, under the hand of their new boss, Jimmy Wilson, former Cardinals’ catcher. Here is Jimmy, center, with two of his advisers and coaches, Hans Lobert, left, and Dick Spalding, as they talked things over at the Winter Haven. Fla., training camp. Steals, Errors and Home Runs From the Training Camp Fronts ON ACCOUNT OF RAIN LOOK FOR RUN Fort Myers, Fla., March 20.—(7)— ‘Winter Haven, Fla.—The Phil- Philadelphia Athletics meet the} lies are off to Bradentown Tues- Dodgers Tuesday with hopes| day, looking for that run in their “grapefruit league” series, Hav- ing been blanked in two games with major league opponents and prevented from playing the Co- lumbus Red Birds Monday by rain, they tackle the St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday. VOLLEY BALL OUT OF FAVOR Biloxi, Miss—There is considerable strife in the Washington Senators training camp, but all the trouble is about volley ball and not the business for which the players were hired. SCHEDULE TWO GAMES Lakeland, Fla.—The Detroit Ti- gers are due for some of the hard- est practice sessions of the spring training grind this week, with games scheduled with the House of David team and the Athletics. é BRAVES MEAN BUSINESS St. Petersburg, Fla. — The Braves meet the Yanks again Tues- day and the tribesmen say they mean business this time. BUCKY WALTERS GRACEFUL Sarasota, Fla—Manager Harris of the Red Sox says Bucky Wal- ters is the most pleasant surprise of the camp, to date, “he’s as graceful a fielder at that tough third base position as anyone I can recall,” says Harris. CUBS MEET PIRATES Los Angeles — Chicago's Cubs, suc- Hal) cessful in their first three exhibition St. Loutsans| games, faced a member of their own here Wednesday, so the Rajah or-| league, the Pittsburgh Pirates, in the dered another long batting drill Tues- day. —— opening of a four-game series Tues- day. Champions Must Train, Too Bill Terry's Giants can't rest on their world series laurels won last year—so here are several of the boys going through their spring ‘training paces at Miami Beach, Fla. Above Boss Terry is ‘showing Rookies Al-Cuccinello. Dutch Prather, Harlan McClen- don, and Clyde leman how to handle a bat. lower left is Al Cuceinello, rookie inflelder, whose brother, Tony, plays second for Brooklyn; and lower right ts Frank Healey. rookte catcher who may get @ chance {f Gus Mancuso’s typhoid has any lingering National Club Baseball Strate- gist Unable to Sit Still for Interview Terry, who succeeded the late Napoleon, was not comfortable either. He is a man of action, more may ook the better. was ret answer 8 few questions, ard he gave his replies in s quiet, calm voice that was convincing. ek k “would the lively ball make difference in the chances of Terrymen to repeat?” he was ask “T am pretty sure not,” was Ply. “We have a better ball year than the one that won Averages all over the up with a lively ball (he looked at it in his hand, pressing the seams hard fingers) and why shouldn’t ours 80 up, too?” “but take a slugging team lke Pirates. The lively ball ought to help the Pirates more than the other clubs, because they will hit it more often ne ts 80 farther. Won't that ving in more runs and sist” win for the “The Pirates will be duc! keg he calmly replied. “Of cores there got Lucas to help their pitching, which fell down last year, but we've im- Proved @ lot in pitching, too. Our Pitching experienced by reason of a winning year and a world series, Pitching will mean a whole lot this year, that I'm worrying “It's the Cubs about. There’s a team that will be up there fight: teow ishting us all the way, I ee * “And the Cardinals? Some a. ne Cards are the best-bal- ance am in th i tas a @ league,” I “I figure the Cardinals ahead of elit ede Rone Teadily replied. y'll have better pitchin; they had last year, too." saniaiy “But, getting back to the Giants— meny of the victories last year were won by one run. Would one run mean a lot with the lively ball?” was the next query. Bill Terry was becoming impatient. He shifted on paany the bench and finally “Let’s stand up, I can think ter on my feet.” a4 So we stood and he answer to the last one: rie league?)” And he had the answer! “After we're into the ball game, I can tell better about that,” he back. “I know we'll play them their own kind of game . og better at it than ‘ell slug with them or bunt, as pel ware. demands. ie American League was Posed to be a slugging a livelier ball than ours, but Grove and @ couple of others got al that ball pretty well. You didn’ tice so many box car numbers in scores when Grove was pitching.” ** & 3 i i é age A me wat Ue! fe egik 8 g 5 i is H i He i } i g 5 i 8 i ae i i

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