The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 14, 1935, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1935 BENGAL STAR BESTS |88 PROS, 20 AMATEURS QUALIFY FOR NATIONAL OPEN TOURNEY - GOMEZ AND MALONE |Construction of 18-Hole Municipal GOLFERS ENCOUNTER :Y ~, HANGING UP 3-0 WIN Course Is Started by FERA Labor ROUBLE IN PARRING Of werinio,t eouent ti Mason's “V7 ONE Tune tm. 7 4) HORGE FORY200—~ AN IT CHANGED GONNA BuY ME, JZ t ; ] —— ! = sors ; Meee ite Walleye Heme. [N2*k of Proparing Alternate THE <c N.D. Prep, College| CHAMPIONSHIP LINKS tmte'se en ore | STANDINGS ‘ge gual G HIG NAME TO LUCKY SAKE !—YEH, WHEN WE GITS IN Five Hits, Wallops Home Track Meets Set IN PUBLICITY I<TLL DYE HIS HAIR FROM % PIANO ACCORDIAN, BAY TO BLONDE~YEH ~MAKE HIM A PLATINUM BLONDE I-THATS COLOSSAL! Number Six Green Direct- ALL FLASHED UP IN MIRRORS AN PEARL, g AN TLL GET HIM. A SENSATIONAL BUILD-UR / TH PAY DIRT, AM A Run for Victory ed by Tom O’Lear: SOCIAT " » RRDIN Sa sana ty ayy nt ate ag WHY, KID, WHEN TTUBN HIM LOOSE on 3 WIF MAH NAME ON, C*RDINALS DEFEAT SIANTS : nay University Will Be Host to State) Campbell, Melhorn Fail to THEM CHICAGO TRACKS THIS SUMMER, 7 \T,IN RHINESTONES ! Bic BAe Dat ie 8 636 = Athletes at Grand Forks Weather Test YOu AN’ ME | ibs’ Brilliant Defense Tur 8 619 Bane ‘ ‘ a ee This Week-End San ds Hels 5S SLL LS ee 13380 pee OMANGER FORMER TITLISTS SURVIVE weeeue Wins Fifth Contest on the present number siz fairway is_ 18 308 Grand Forks, N. D., May 14—(?)}— Semen ere given a chance to ect started, - 7 OM 292 fede et ne Seon MacFarlane, Farrell, Hagen ON OUR ! Final plans for the new 18-hole ake rack anc eld +champio. ips and y ” y J (By the Associated Press) links were appproved last week by the AMERICAN LEAGUE the second annual state intercol-} @ooq Wood, McSpad- WALLETS Lynwood (Schoolbov) Rowe's pet committce in charge of this phase of Ww L Pet. ‘egiates will be staged simultaneous- ioodman, ” Pp stoges, it appears, still are the New the expansion program, headed by C.|ChICag0 -.......00 it 6 .700 ly this week by the University of den, Make Grade York Yankees, |B, Little as chairman, Cleveland 2 5 7 North Dakota athletic department in The Schoolboy hasn't been getting) In order to make room for the 18-| Boston, ..- 12-8 tt its beautiful Memorial Stadium, erate along so well this season, but Mickey|hole layout without reducing the|NeW Yor! : i i 3 3 Preliminaries of both college and| New York, May 14.—()—There was Cochrane, manager of the chamnion yardage, the course has been extended 5 ede Ss oe a high school track tournaments are |new evidence Tuesday that the Oak- ‘ Detroit Tigers tossed him in there!to the south of the present number a. ie ite 5 14 953 Scheduled for friday afternoon at 2:30 mont Country Club course will be Monday against the invading Yan-|six fairway and grass is being seeded Piuodelphia BP ae ‘and the finals for Saturday afternoon |one large headache for competitors Kees, and Rowe responded with alon the ploughed land there. It is ex- Seat at the same hour. in the National Open Golf champion- brilliant performance that reminded|pected to be in readiness for play NATIONAL LE AGUE In addition to the track meet, state |ship starting June 6. Tiger fans of his sensational 1934/next spring, L . Pet, Champlonships in golf and tennis for} Simultaneously with 23 other dis- pit . Six to Be Abandoned § 77 Poth college and high school athletes |tricts, the Pittsburgh sectional qual- Arrayed against Vernon Gomez,! as soon as the alternate green, 8 636 Will be held, C. A. West, Sioux athletic | ifying round for the open was played Yankee star, Rowe held the New! number 14 in the 18-hole layout, has Chica; 12 1 ‘e32. director, announced Saturday. over Oakmont Monday and s0 | Yorkers to four singles and shut|/been constructed number six will be|st, Teuls tay ois as Men’s Singles in Tennis tough was the course that nobody a : | them out, 3-0. abandoned to permit the alterations Pittsburgh s “i 1 13 ‘45g _ Tennis will be confined to men’s could break 150 for the 36-hole medal ZZ, eo, j Rowe, who won 24 games for the to go forward without interrupting | cincinnati 13 409 singles, with the high school tourna-|play test and a 73 was the best in- “a4 / ‘Tigers a year ago, beating the Yan- daily play on course. The alternate | Boston o 14 "300 ment starting Friday morning on the|dividual round of the day. The last 0a LONG AND | Kees five times in a row, has had green will be socated near the pump, Philadelphia 13 ‘9g7 University courts. College play opens qualifier in that section, Bob Graham z a GOOD 1! all kinds of trouble getting started|hattway between the tee and t he x ° -“S" Friday afternoon at the same place.|of Pittsburgh, got in with rounds of : : UK, | this campaign. He had only won one green on the number six hole. NORTHERN LEAGUE The high school golf tournament is | 80-82—162. yy SAKE i] | game, in a relief role, and lost three.|~ ‘Total yardage on the proposed 18- Ww L set for Saturday morning on the] All told the section rounds on 24 : Ss -= : pitching only one complete game up| noje layout will be more than double | Superior 3 © 1.000 Municipal course, while the collegians | courses produced 108 qualifiers for the fs 78 ao, D 5-14 ] ‘until the Yankees came to town. the present nine-hole links. The out- | Winnipeg Be, 3 0 ‘00 Will meet that afternoon at the Coun-|open—88 professionals and 20 ama- ~ a = 4 i Against his pet “cousins,” however, going nine will be 3,095 yards and the| Brainerd 2 1 ‘667 tty club. Eighteen holes of medal|teurs. The Chicago district test, post- SETA EE - i Rowe was invincible. Red Rolfe beat incoming nine will be 3,015 yards. The |Crookston 1 1 4 play for both individual and team|poned a week because of torrential Jonge Leo Mastel, Max Mastel and M. Wold, out s bunt in the sixth and got to/present nine holes have a yardage 1 2 ‘333 Championships is the program for|rains, will qualify 14 more next Mon-| ff J} ts to eren while the receiving end will be taken MA OR LEAGUE } third on Lou Gehrig's single but Tony} o¢ 3910, Par on the course will be 72, 1 2 7333 each tournament, day. With 40 players exempt from by Leo Klein and Pius Mastel. ; | oe hit into @ double play to!39 for each nine , 0 1 00 | Entries tea) college in North !the preliminary trials, the total field Dakota Loo Flag In the outfield, the Strasburg nine LEADERS 1 e only chance the Yankees (000 Dakota, inclu: e university, arejat Oakmont thus will . Joe Bossart, Ray Lipp, matt Mon- had to score. ie ly tees allay Stel) ud . 000 expected to make the college track} Although most of the favorites came r Pp Bat a4 end Pius and Max Mastel. Ignatius Wold is manager of the club and has J. M. Klein as his assistant. Scorekeepers of the Dakota League announced Tuesday by G. H. Hernett, president of the league, are Ignatus ‘Wald, Strasburg, Howard Forrest, Ashley, and George A. Anderson, Wishek, Conrad Wald, Zeeland; and Schwartz, Linton. Injury to Richards professional, is airecting the construc- tion of the new greens and the plant- ing of the grass on the new ground. Appropriated for the construction was $3,600 for relief labor to do all the work under the direction of O'Leary and Gordon Moore, county relief director. Landscaping Planned Landscaping of the area = the day’s only other rounding the clubhouse Scone Woe Ferrell american | planned. Beds will be dug this year t. Louis Browns to five hits and|®%4 flowers and shrubs planted next -walloped a home run in the seventh | 5Pring, 8. W. Corwin, a member of the (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Vaughan, Pirates, .422; J. Moore, Phillies, .355. Runs — Medwick, Cardinals, 21; Vaughan, Pirates, 20. Hits—Vaughan, Pirates, 38; L. Ware ner, Pirates, 52. Home runs — Ott, Giants, 8; John Phillies, and Joe Moore, Giants, 7. i Pitching — Parmelee, Giants, 4-0; 1, Leffty Gomez Beaten The Tigers got to Gomez for one Tun in the first on a walk, Gerald Walker's single and Charley Gen-| ringer’s long fly. They picked up another on Walker's home run in the sixth and scored one off Pat Malone ‘in the eighth on a double by Geh- and a single by Hank Green- meet an outstanding event. Listed among the competing schools are North Dakota Agricultural college, Attendance Fall Off ° ° e eerie eae ‘Wahpeton School As of Science, Ellendale Normal and In- mm sociation 3c: and Valley City, Mayville, ee and Dickinson Teachers col- i . ing leges. Red Birds Take 10-3 Beating Prep Field Uncertain From Brewers in Only ‘The high school field is uncertain but is expected to be as big and as Game Played Monday strong as last year. Unfavorable weather has nampered track training this season throughout the state. In through in fine style, there were some leaders who failed to make the Strasburg Set for 1935 Pen- gi raveriies Eliminated nant Chase; League Score- keepers Are Named Two former national amateur champions, Max Marston at Phila- delphia and 8. Davidson Hejron at Pittsburgh, were among those elimin- ated, as were the big ten stars, John- ny Fischer at Cincinnati and Chuck Kocsis at Detroit and the two-time Canadian amateur champion, Scotty’ Campbell at Seattle. Jack Munger was eliminated at Greensboro. (Speciat to The Tribune) Strasburg, N. D., May 14.—Fea- turing a crop of young stars with plenty of hitting ability, the Straus- burg nine is to defend the Dakota League baseball champion- i to account for the’Boston Red Sox’ :2-1 triumph, park board, said Tuesday. i ES special inducement to golfers to A full schedule in the National] ‘#Ke out season memberships was an- nounced by Corwin. Provision was made by the board to allow the golf- eileen is Chicago, May 14—(*)—The smiles on the faces of American Association club owners, caused by ofa big improvement in attendance fig- ures, were beginning to fade Tuesday. ship this season. Opening games in the Dakota League were to have been played Sunday with Wishek entertaining the pennant winners on their home addition, several meets have been cancelled because of cold and rain. Because many of the meets which were to have been preliminaries were The New York district took its toll of such professionals as Bill Meh!- horn, Clarence Clark, William Klein, Johnny Kinder and Joe Ezar. Halts Tennis Career New York, May 14—()—Vincent| ’ tennis-playing days are season ‘rained out, other entry arrangements Sey ds the shiver reper iy poe have been made, West said. Fargo weather dreams for a while. Con-|n0sed out Mohall by seven points to tinued lack of cooperation from the|Win the 1934 championship. ‘The Cass elements, however, have started to/County outfit is regarded as strong exact toll. The weather owned the|this year, and other promising teams clubs a total of 44 games, which must /®re expected from Bowbells and be made up largely in doubleheaders,| Grafton. Rain and cold weather prevented all University carried off first place in but one of the Monday's series open-|the state college meet last year, but Among the successful bidders, how- ever, were four former open cham- pions—Willie MacFarlane and Johnny Farrell at New York; Walter Hagen at Detroit, and the Omaha amateur, Johnny Goodman, in his home town district, Stars Survive First Test Other prominent qualifiers included Craig Wood, Vic Ghezzi, Walter grounds and Zeeland playing Linton at Linton. Ashley, the fifth member of the league, had an open date. Back in the league fight with all members of last season’s squad except their regular starting pitcher, the Strasburg nine is out to win its sec- ond consecutive title. Battling for regular starting berths in the infield are Lee Felgal, hard- sweep. Leo Durocher’s tenth inning|¢tS Who desire it, to pay for their sea- over. ‘thome run broke up a great pitching |50 tickets in two installments. The duel at New York between Carl Hub-| first half is to be paid in cash and bell of the Giants and Bill Walker| the ae Eanes shee i ilk a 3-2 sinless ate Yardage and par of the new 18-hole : Walker Allows Six Hits layout will be: Walker allowed only six hits andj Outsoing Nine might have had a shutout had he Hole— ‘The former Davis Cup player, professional since 1926, suffered Home runs—Foxx, Athletics, 8; John- son, Athletics, and Bonura, White Pitching — Whitehead, White Sox, 5-0; Hudlin, Indians, 3-0. “The Golden Pear,” historic hotel he/in the Landstrasse of ment competition for him. . Still_in ‘a hospital at Bronx- ville, Richards philosophically ac- cepted the situation. “The ulna bone is smashed,” ~Par Strokes Distance district of Vienna, been able to take care of Joe Moore ers, Valley City Teachers are favorites in| xozak, and the former midwestern|hitting first baseman; J. J. Baum-|said, pointing to his bandaged right/is being demolished to make room. who clouted two home runs to keep “ hee Columbus muffed a chance of mov-|the college division this spring. amateur star, Rudy Knepper, at New| gartner, Jr.; M. Wold, Ludy Erck, Leo|arm. “There was triple fracture|s modern building. The famed hotel the Giants in the game. Hubbell also 212 yards ing up on the fourth-place Milwaukee'g______"""_""_"_"_"""""—~_|vork; Charley Yates, intercollegiate| Kraft, Connie Kraft, Ray Bichler and| above the wrist and there can never|and restaurant dates back to 1701; ‘was in good form but was nicked for 273 yards club, taking a 10-3 beating from the if Cards, in Weak 4th, ||sn2mpion. st ‘Atlanta; Al Watrous at/Stubb Monger. be any: rotating motion in the wrist] Beethoven was among its famous sal runs in the ‘frst, and sixth, ly dae Brewers. Steve Larkin tightened up ards, In Wea! Ny ||Detroit; the Turnesa, brothers, Joe.) Pitching duties will be carried by again.” guests, - after a wobbly inning and com- i imi a professional, and Willie, an amateur, eee la pesegereny 378 yards ates a Re ie ne om| Remain Optimistic ||+> E at Boston; Fay Coleman at Los An- geles; Ted Longworth at Seattle; Maurice McCarthy, former Walker cup player, at Cleveland; Tony Manero at Greensboro; 327 yards ‘The seven-hit pitching of young Bill Lee plus a brilliant defense car- Tied the Chicago Cubs to a 3-2 tri- umph over the Brooklyn Dodgers who found their second place lead over the Cubs cut to four percentage charged against him. He gave three of the four blows in the first inning, when Columbus did all its scoring. One of the hits was a home run by Bud Bassett with a man on. Brewers Triumph j@ | New York, May 14.—()—You never would guess from visiting with those St. Louis Cardinals down in the dugout that the world champions are running a weak Sleansanone points, ae 4) sattwaukee —- Milwaukee won from| fourth in the National League. . Cy Bisnton stopped the Philltes with| !2 {| columbus by # score of 10 to 3, Lar-| “Tt too early to say anything four hits for his fifth victory in six 4{kin, Milwaukee pitcher, allowed the yet,” ventured Manager Frankie , starts as the Pittsburgh Pirates 3|Red Birds 4 hits. Frisch cautiously, “but we better ene ees a el Tee: Large 4 HE ae get too far back, that's s cag @ ves ve aoees-800 000 00—3 4 3 ich.” Bis ee cttw, 9 4] Sduaee rv Sao] bg oe Cran ot ae FRAME BETTER THINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE 6), Santee eae ne *) the “augout was honored by a |HENDRY AND JOmNtON ff. Pirates Humble Phillies 5 fe: visit from the league president, ay 14—(P)}—Jock Philadelphia—Pittsburgh hammer- Kansas Cit; tponed,| Ford C. Frick. He was met by {victory Monday” while Cy Blanton aaa re | none fete ses fonday, while Cy Blanton e ‘icine: ject of National umpires, Jet the Phils down with four ‘hits Pirates Beat Colts; Tndlanspolis at Bt. Paul posiponed,| Tt seems that Bil Stewart, um- aver ‘Waner hit homers for the Pirates. Move Up to Fourth|™ Fetused to allow Burgess White. Oakmanh Piro at the town and R head to take first as a hit bats- 000 002 440-10 15 1 man, although the balk broke one of his fingers in three places. The argument revolved about Stewart's expectorating on the wound to heal it, and then slap- Louisville st Minneapolis, poned, cold. ‘Winnipeg marked up its third straight victory to share the top rung with Su- perior, which also has won three and lost none. The Maroons defeated] ping $25 fines on Leo Durocher Fargo-Moorhead, which has yet to| and Mike Gonzales for protesting. win its first game, 6-2. The - Brainerd-Superior tilt was] Scientists have found that the rained out, while wet grounds forced | growth rate of chicks increases as cancellation of the Duluth-Eau Claire|the temperature in which they are post-, country club where the qualification trials were held Monday, carded a 16-74—150 to lead a, dozen players. Johnson carded 77-74—151. St... Paul, May 14.—()—Crookston, Blanton and Grace; Bivin, Johnson,| Northern League campaign, jumped ‘Wilson. from sixth to fourth place in the printed matter that frequently come to your desk and classify them into things you are interested in, things you are not? Sure you have—we all do. Fn look. over the various kinds of New York — A home run in the|¥Forks, 4-2 in a well-played contest, tenth inning gave the St. Louis Car- | displaced their opponents at the bot- dinals a 3 to 2 win over the New|tom of the first division and pushed York Giants. Joe Moore hit two|the Forks team into a tle with Du- ‘home runs for the Giants. luth for fifth. YESTMRDAY'S sT Ss R HE) (In the only other game played, |game, raised decreases, (By the Associated Press) If you will consider the problem a bit, Siow York. .101 000 000 O= 2 6 0 Sephy ee Cubs -—_Golred you will agree that the pieces which do in- Walker and Davis; Hubbell and OUT OUR WAY ' By Williams ie aie ae aia terest ypu and hold your attention are better j WAITT TLL COME Z Hoy Papa aaa erye irs than average in appearance . . . better print- GIT A BISCUIT, MYSELF! Lynn Rowe, Tigers — blanked ing. : 'T TOSS ANY MORE— Yankees with four singles, . Your own advertising matter, Mr. Reader, has to compete for attention with many other pieces . , . not all competitive with your business, but competitive for the customer’s attention. ‘Wes Ferrell, Red Sox—Limited Browns to five hits and won own with aome run. Cy Blanton, Pirates—Rung up fifth victory, holding Phils to four hits. Si Johnson Reds — Stopped Braves with five hits. | Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) Chicago — Henry Hook, 121%, Indianapolis, outpointed Johnny Gaudes, 120, Milwaukee, (8). Milt Aron, 140%, Dubuque, Iowa, out- Scotty McLean, 140, Dav- I CAN'T KETCH VERY GOOD, AN! LOOK AT TH! HOLES WERE MAKIN! BACK HERE. I'S DANGEROUS FER HOSSES. And so with your own printing—to get attention, be equally effective, it must have the look and feel of character and quality. cago, (10). Des Moines — Davey Day, 135, knocked ‘out Ernie Rat- BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘> Freddie At- ( kkinson, 144, Minneapolis, out- i pointed Caddy Casey, 143, St. JoB DEPARTMENT Paul, (6). THE PRAIRIE DOG TOWN.

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