The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 20, 1935, 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, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1935 BROOKLYN SHATTERS) CARDINALS’ 14-CAME VICTORY STREAK, 3-0 Warneke Outpitches Schu- macher as Cubs Down Giants; Pirates Win TIGERS SLASH YANKS’ LEAD Bengals Defeat Red Sox; Browns Upset New York; Nelson Blanks Phillies (By the Associated Press) There are a lot of indications that the second division clubs may say the last word about the National League pennant race this season and one of them—Brooklyn—has just spoken in rather decisive tones. ‘The Dodgers, battling to hold fifth place which they regained a few days ago by trimming Pittsburgh four games running, stepped out Friday and shattered the Cardinals’ great winning streak which was promising to carry Frankie Frisch’s boys right up to the top. ‘The Cards’ fourteen successive vic- tories, the best string of the season, didn’t worry the Dodgers a bit as ‘Johnny Babich set the Cardinal clouters down with five hits while his teammates batted out a 3-0 vic- ‘The Cardinals had a thorough let- down in addition to their weak hit- ting. They made two costly errors to Jet one run score and Bill Walker let the Dodgers bunch their blows for the other two. ‘The Giants also were beaten, 9-3 by the Cubs, and kept their lead at four games. Lon Warneke beat them when he outpitched Hal Schumacher for seven innings and put Chicago ahead by batting in two runs and scoring ‘one. Then when Frank Gabler re- placed Schumacher in the eighth the Cubs batted clear around. The Braves ied the Pirates going into the last inning, then went down 6-5 before a three-run rally. ‘The slashed the Yankees’ American League lead to a half game. ‘The a smacked down the Red Sox, 9-7. St. Louis upset the Yanks for the| PICs. second time, 7-6. Emmet Nelson of Cincinnati blank- ed the Phillies to win, 3-0. Vernon Kennedy of the White Sox sued a 7-2 victory over Washington. Th Cleveland - Athletics game was put over for a doubleheader today. Z NATIONAL LEAGUE Pirates Nose Out Braves RHE Boston ... -001 002 110— 5 13 2 Pittsburgh -010 011 003— 6 13 1 Betts, Cantwell and Hogan; Lucas, doyt, Bush and Grace. Reds Blank Phillies Philadelphia ....000 000 000— ‘Dincinnati .....000 000 03x— Johnson, Jorgens and Todd; Nelsoi and Lombardi. Cubs Trounce Giants AMERICAN LEAGUE White Sox Cop Opener HRE +010 111 201— 7 13 0 :.000 100 100-2 5 2 Kennedy and Sewell; Hayes, Rus- sell, Pettit and Bolton. Whip Yanks RHE 231 000 010— 7 11 1 010 050 00O— 6 10 1 Andrews, Knott and Hemsley; Gomez, Brown, Ae mre Deehone,,, Miephy Tigers Beat Red Sox Bridges, Hogsctt, auters Rowe and i» Rowe an Dochrane; Ostermueller, Wilson, oe kett, Cascarella and R. Ferrell. cere at Philadelphia to be UE 2y’ OR L (By the Associated Press) ( Leading Batters—Johnson, Athletics, 348; Vosmik, Indians, .345. Ri , Tigers, 15; Green- berg, Tigers, 12, Hits — Cramer, Athletics, 117; Geh- 117. ons, White Sox, 10-3, NATIONAL LEAGUE Leading Batters — Vaughan, Pirates, 384; Medwick, Cardinals, 368. Ripe Macwick, Cards, Ott, Giants, ECOAD—~ WONDER, \E ANYONE OUR BOARDING HOUSE HEARD MEVELL, |! WHEN ONE OF MY BEES STUNG ME ©2--UM-HOPE NEIGHBOR, BAXTER DIDNT OF ALL PEOPLE! SS RAT (T/~WONDER HOW LONG IT WILL TAVE FOR THE SWELLING OF © MY NOSE 10 GO DOWN? CANT GO IN THE HOUSE THIS WAN, AND FACE THEIR RIBALD' SESTING IauMm-mM-MIGHT SAY (TS A WEN —HM-M~ HARDLY-—THEY DONT OCCUR ON THE SHNOZ2Le pada —~ NOSE !—FAW—~ THE CALL FOR DINNER WILL BE Ze ANY. MINUTE, ae FIRING OVER KELLER Holes with Cooper, Walsh, Kaiser in Second EXPERTS PREDICT RECORD Leader Scores Seven Birdies Coming Home Five Under Perfect Figures , July 20.—()—Par, hall- mark of perfection in golf, was worth about as much as last year’s reputa- tion in the $5,000 St. Paul open cham- pionship Saturday. As the field, a record breaker for class and numbers, stepped out in pursuit of Ray Mangrum of Los Ang- eles, in the second round of the Ta-| hole championship battle, the scor- ing pace was so fast over the per- fectly conditioned Keller public course that par was good only for a 14th place tie. Mangrum, armed with a red hot putter that he used only 26 times, routed par by five blows on his first round tour Friday, but all he got for his brilliant effort was a one-stroke lead over his closest pursuers. Three Are Deadlocked “Lighthorse” Harry Cooper and Frank Walsh of Chicago, and Bill 8t. Paul, LENORE KIGHT SETS THO NEW . STANDARDS IN SWIMMING MEET Anne Govednik jovednik of Chisholm, Minn., Beaten by Katherine Rawls of Miami New York, July 20.—()—One chunky lady from Homestead, Pa., 22-year-old Lenore Kight, stood out Saturday as the surest bet Uncle Sam has for the women’s distance swimming events in the 1936 Olym- Miss Kight seems certain to dup- licate her sensational performance of 1934, when she won three free style distance titles. Already Miss Kight has won the mile and the 440-yard free style, breaking her own previous records in both. She clipped about 13 sec- onds off the mile mark, and Friday came from behind to set a new Am- erican standard of 5 minutes, 32.5 seconds for the quarter, 1.1 seconds better than her old record. “Two champions fell by the wayside Friday. In between Miss Kight’s storming B| fom behind to beat Mary Lou Petty, El ot Seattle, by 20 yards, in the stretch of the 440, Katherine Rawls, Miami Beach's all-around champion, dis- posed of Anne Govednik, of Chis- holm, Minn., in the 220-yard breast stroke championship. The Kompa sisters, Elizabeth and Erna, of New York, took over the back stroke title . |picture, smothering the 1934 cham- Pie: Alice Bridges, of Whitinsville, ler Govednik finished third to Miss Rawls and Dorothy Schiller, of Chicago, and Miss Bridges, never @ contender, wound up a poor fourth ‘NATIONAL LEAGUE New York. Pair of Red Bird St. Louis Wins Cuts Millers’ |=" Lead to 3 Games |zuisé Indians Make It Two Straight Over Brewers; Blues Turn Back Colonels New York. Detroit Chicago, July 20.—(#)—Two first hand demonstrations of how much Columbus has improved since they last tangled, had the Minneapolis Millers a little groggy Saturday. . Not only were the Millers shocked by two consecutive decisive defeats! minneapolis .. bl ry id by the Red Birds, but their hold on! indianapolis 5039 the American Association leadership| columbus .. 49 «39 had dropped to three games over In-|ariwaukee . 46 42 dianapolis and three and one-half over Columbus. Columbus picked on the prize of a re the Miller pitching corps, Walter 28. 59 Tauscher, and Rosy Ryan Friday for an 8-2 victory. Tauscher, held the birds to three hits in six innings be- fore removed for a pinch batsman while Columbus was leading, 3-2, Ryan was punched for four hits and five runs in the eighth. Indianapolis, matching Columbus’ sizzling pace, retained its half game advantage over the Red Birds. by making it two straight over Milwau- kee, 4-2 in a night game. Louisville outhit Kansas City, 19-18, but the Blues made better use of NORTHERN LEAGUE F-Moorhead CH anrannegd wmoavonont Friday's Results NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS Kaiser, Louisville pro, rushed in be- hind him with 68's. All told, 13 play- ers broke par while the field, gen- erally, was so tightly bunched for \the final 54 hole drive that 72 of the 1 1€§ starters were parked within 10 strokes, 67 to 77. .|. The other par busters were Ky Laf- foon, Chicago, 69; Henry Picard, the “Hershey Hurricane,” Gene Kunes, Philadelphia; Bunny Torpey, Kansas City, and Pat Sawyer, Minneapolis amateur, all tie at 70; and a trio of 11 shooters from Chicago—Tommy Armour, Eddie Loos and Horton Smith, and Joe Brown, Des Moines. Tied for 14th place with perfect golf were five professionals—Byron Nelson, Ridgewood, N. J.; Denny Shute, Chicago; Leo Diegel, Philadel- phia; Ralph Stonehouse, Indiana- polis, and Sammy Belfore, a dark ‘horse from Duluth, Minn., who usual- ly makes one big splurge in every show he enters. See Danger to Mark The scoring was so slow that some of the experts figured that the "yeas low for the tournament's five years of play—278 by Horton Smith in 1931 .|—was endangered. Johnny Revolta, National Open champion from Pitts- burgh, and three members of the Japanese pro golf team, Toichro Toda, Jack Yasuda and Seisul Chinn, were bracketed at 73. ‘was out in 33 and back in 34, Walsh's round was the more re- markable as he needed 33 puts for his 68, Richard Arlen of movie fame fail- led to crowd the hero’s bench with .667;his golf game, scoring an 85, but he .546|was the man of the tournament, help- .546|ing swell the crowd to 4,000, a rec- 500/ord for a Friday. 100] After Saturday's 18 holes, the field “o00]will be reduced to the low 64 and ties, for the final 36 holes Sunday. Field Bunched for Second ‘e Walter Hagen, Sam Parks, Jr., new | Beer, lss Mangrum scored seven birdies. He Pa No-Run Game in Blanking Capital Chevrolet STANDINGS Hee Roo O. H. Will's, Paramount Theatre, Knights of Columbus and Nash-Finch teams won opening games third round of the city diamondball league Friday night. Adam Brown pitched a no-hit, no- run game for Paramount and shut out the Capital Chevrolet, 10-0. Brown showed complete mastery over the Paramount hitters with his brilliant exhibition. He collected five strike- outs and failed to issue a single base on balls. Led by Fiagg and Winslow, the Paramount stickers collected 10 hits off D. Brown which coupled with four Chevrolet errors paved the way for the one-sided victory. In a ‘Knights of Columbus walloped the ‘Transients, 28-11. Boespflug, Wetch, Goetz, Meyers and Zahn led the 22- hit attack on Big Ted Meinhover, transient chucker. The K. C.’s scored in every inning but the third and topped off the conquest with a six- Tur outburst in the seventh. 10-0, hurling of Hummel who fanned six opposing batters and failed to issue a base on balls. Goetz, McGuiness, Martin and R. Jundt were the big guns in the winners’ attack. Rallying in the fifth and sixth in- nings, Nash-Finch turned back A. W. Lucas’, 9-3. Larry Schneider, Nash- Finch hurler, set down the store team with two scattered hits which coupled with three errors accounted for a like number of runs. The vic- tors got nine safe blows off Hagen and capitalized on five Lucas errors to sew up the victory. O’Brien’s, defending champions, and Robertson’s, a second tourna- ment team of the city league, will en- ter the Minot invitational tourna- ment Sunday. ‘The box scores: KC— Boespflug, Ss on Wetch, 2b .... Goetz, ras-cf-c .. Meyers, 1b-p ab Zl avnanwauanan Kelley, c-ib Kwako, if . in the |Score free-hitting contest the|Hagen, p Herr, . gts! Brown Pitches .No-Hit, Pasties Iss Summary: Stolen bases: A. Jundt, sacrifices, A. Jundt; McGuiness; double or triple plays, A. Newbauer to Overman; hits off Hum- mel 4 in 7 innings; off Neibauer 14 in 7 innings; struck out by Hummel 6; by Neibauer 7; bases on balls off Neibauer 5’ Umpire A. Anderson; Scorer A. Anderson. A. W. Lucas— Wooledge Eliminated In S. Sioux Falls, 8. D., July 20.—(P)— Lawrence Nelson and Robert Under- wood of Los Angeles won the junior doubles championship at the South Dakota open defeating g Marvin Wachman and Don Leavens of Milwaukee, 6-0, 6-2. Leavens then trimmed Wachman in the junior singles semi-finals 6-0, 5-7, 8-6, to meet ais doubles teammate, Underwood, for the title Saturday. Previously Leavens won from Phil Wooledge of Fargo, N. D., 6-2, 6-3. Dr. W. F. Widen and Ray Morgan Underwood Dodgers Are Maki ing Things Difficult for First Division Clubs RAY MANGRUM LEADS ST. PAUL OPEN FIELD WITH BLISTERING 67 13 PLAYERS BETTER /Will’s, Paramount, K.C., Nash-Finch PAR IN FIRST ROUND | Win. Opening Third - Round Games i ¢$ SICOOK WILL LAUNCH =<] STATE GOLF CROWN i222) DEFENSE AT MINOT whose wizardry has carried him to five championships in the last six years, North Dakota's golfers were assembling here Satur- day for the 21st annual tournament of the state golf association, getting under way Sunday morning at the Minot Country club. The course is in excellent condition as the result of heavy rains, Cook was to arrive here Saturday, joining expert shotmakers from other cities who are already on the scene and prepared to launch the 36-hole qualifier, from which 32 players will emerge for the title race ending Thursday. Among the entrants are Vern Gal- laher of Fargo, only player to dis- lodge Cook in a half dozen having turned the trick in 1933. Oth- ers back in the running after making unsuccessful bids in 1934 are William Kostelecky, Jr., of Dickinson, winner of the medal last year; Billy Sundahl, youthful Jamestown threat, and Neil \Croonquist, another of the Capital City aces. Winnie Lee of Minot, northwest North Dakota champion; Louis An- derson of New Rockford, central N. D. titleholder; Herman Dahl, Her- man Nitsch and James Slattery of Minot; Fred Cummer, Jr., Martin Everson and Donald Slayton of Far- go; Raymond Holt of Sanish and many other well known golfers were entered Saturday. First pairings for the qualifying round are to be made at noon, ‘Winter rules will be in effect for the tourney, it was decided at a meet- ing of association and country club officials. .| First round matches of 18 holes arc scheduled Monday morning, leaving the afternoon open for social rounds. Second and third | round battles are pac for Tuesday, with the 36-hole .| semi-finals coming Wednesday. The rau will be decided Thurs- "The annual business meeting of the association and @ stag party will be held at the country club Monday night. Bismarck Trims Jimmies, 8 to 1 two base hits; tg no ra re im com a9 00 00 owrorescooceg, ecoeccoHooronm ape! lonwmoonmmonmy wl Sl howmoconmooum ws! Rel osmoccccoomt al commoconoconm Bo t D. Net Tourney tennis eons PSY.D, Barney Morris Pitches Locals To Victory Under Flood- lights at Winnipeg Behind Barney Morris, number two pitcher of the local mound staff, the Bismarck baseball team defeated “|in the backstroke test. *. were rained out. 9; New York 3. os. j 10 6— Schmidt was on the mound F-M Twins Stretch a atacas wus Se tami, Chicago, July 20-—(e)—With but | Transient a 0 for the Stutsman county crew. The Lead to Two Games RHE two days of voting left, only two play-| Summary: Stolen bases — Banks,| A bounty of $2 has been placed on|two teams return to North Dakota jai Minneapolis ... 002 000 000-2 9 3 AMERICAN LEAGUE ers, Irvine (Cotton) Warburton of|Moore. Sacrifice — Beer. base |coral and rattlesnakes at Clearwater, |Sunday for two Rasa: at Jamestown St. Paul, July 20—(#)—Fargo-|Columbus ..... 100 020 05x—8 7 1| Chicago 7; Washington 2. Southern California, and Stan Kostka|hits—Meyers. Three base hits—Boesp- | Fis. before cooming here Tuesday. Moorhead stretched its lead over the} Tauscher, Ryan and Hargrave;| St. Louis G New York 6. of Minnesota, had apparently safe| flung, Meinhover, Kelly. Home runs second place Winnipeg Maroons to|Tinning and Ogrodowski. Detroit 9; Boston 7. leads Saturday in the college all star|—Wetch, Goetz, Meyers, Zahn, Mein- two full’ games Saturday by virtue of — football poll. hover. Double play—Wetch to Kelley e i its 5-2 conquest of Duluth Friday. Indiana AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kostka, the huge Gopher fullback,|to Meyers. -Hits—off Meinhover 22 Me 1Cca. enius Chet Hady of the Eau Claire Bears RHE lis 2. led. Izzy ‘Weinstock. of Pittsburgh, by|in 7 innings; off Zahn 3 in 4 innings; Ka the first half champion Maroons Lerten sees mn ooo oa] A : 14,923 votes—04,326 to 79,403. War- atten Meyers 2 in 3 ree Sak oe ive hits in whitewashing them 4-0. diana} ae 4 ‘3 burton’s 87,642 gave him a margin Meinhover 4; Zahn 6; $ Superior boosted its average above| Poll, Hamlin and ‘Rensa; Gallivan eg of 11,748 over Miller Munjas of Pitts-|Meyers 1. Bases on balls—oft Mein- HORIZONTAL _Answer to Preview Perio 1! Fontes. : the 500 mark by winning from Grand |#"4 Riddle. NORTHERN LEAGUE burgh, who had 75,804, in the quar-|hover 1; off Zahn 6; off Meyers 2.|' 1 Doctor who Te Forks 5 to 2, while in a battle of tail Blues Trounce Colonels Fargo-Moorhead 5; Duluth 2. terback battle. Umpire—Schlosser. ‘Koch. discovered & 19 Mineral enders, Crookston won its first game RH E| Eau Claire 4; Winnipeg 0. The other contests were still very <a chemical oe 5} in 10 starts, defeating Brainerd 6 to 5.| Kansas City .. 412 101 022—13 18 2] Superior 5; Grand Forks 2. much alive. Frank Larson of Min-| Paramount— ABRHE remedy for 213.1416. For the Muskies it was their eighth | Louisville . 040 211 001— 9 19 4] Crookston 6; brainerd 5. nesota, led Don Hutson of Alabama, 5 2100 disease. 22 Truthtul ASERIEDY Joss. Page, Moore and Madjeski; ‘Sewell, ———_—_ 99,633 to 96,827, at end. Bill Lee, Ala- 211 1) a rittte devil. 23 iniquity. The loss dropped the Colts from|Nekola, -Lecomte and Ringhofer,| A shortage of Bartlett pears is an-|babma tackle, was 156 votes ahead of 4000 12 Train of at- 24 Light hor fourth to sixth place behind Superior | Thompson. ticipated this year by Pacific coast|Phil Bengtson of Minnesota—08,328|E. 3110 tendants. Stiledcal one, and Eau Claire in fourth. St. Paul at Toledo, postponed, rain. |farmers, to 98,172—and Jim Barber of the Uni- 3130 a anon 0| 13 Father. 27 Wing. Hee iery was 8 ee 170 Ol 14 Because 2% He was — OUT OUR WAY By Williams | |'"Regis Monahan of Obio State, top- 41 1 0; 16 Railrosd. by birth. ped the guards with 99,187, only 795 3210 i dacey BIPIA INI Bese lump. ad of Charles Mucha of Wash- 2010 cil reTTINIGIE ESN TRLAIN IRIE IN IG! : NO-VOUIRE WRONG! \( YEH, BUT \THATAINTSO) | ABRG OF OMSiIl Bevan of Minnecota, = 2S) is solitary. 35 Woods. THAT AIN'T NO EFFORT \e Maw Have |\DUMB! THE following with 93,271. Jack Robinson, 2910 8 1} 80 Monkey. a Male. VERTICAL 36 Branches. HH 'EM, |WORLD MGHT ABRHE @2 Expectation. 43 Tree. 1 Wind in- + 38 Swamp rabbit - TO 3 0.0 1! 28Chore. 45 Heavenly body. steument. >. #0 Derived from : 300 1 25 Scoria. 47 Wen. Wine ee Te 3001 29 Poem. 48 Cougar. #1 Officer's civil- - 3 0 0 0| 30 Pastry. 50 Stories. 3 Above. ¥ fan dress. | ~ 2000 21 To make a lace §2 Lie. 94 To corrode. * *" 42 He won the 2000 De. 63 Fortified work. Bin this ne — brite, 2000 Northeast. 54 Most segacious 6 Right. 44Glory. t 4 2000 = Ventilating 86 Newspaper 7 Mouth ye 46 Mrerareen tree 2001 department 8 Within, ' Saal (BT Nesative. head. 9 Remedy. 200 Maar otf 6&8He gained § 10 Bird. aie — Medwick, Cards, 123; Terry, Giants, 117. Home eee Giants, 21; Cojlins, Pitcher — Pestle Giants, Castleman, Giants, 8-2. Western Golf Meet Reaches Se Semi-Finals Colorado Springs Colo., Suly 20—P) Four expert shotmakers, to whom 10-2; El erononmm mn nD 8) wn munmonomunnd El meomnmmmooot 81 wmoonmmnonmaunmel BS] aanmnwwran Kostka, Warburton their blows and won their night game, 13-9, St. Paul and Teledo| Eycspureh é: Bowon 6. Cincinnati 3; Philadelphia 0. winning Wooledge yesterday, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4. ERWS | counwooocontt wl rococo OHHOOOM fameasa | 4 rt) Witticiam. — (pl). od ABB See Pt | NS & ian oS2e Demaray Outpoints Rothier of Chicago Dick Demaray, rugged Bismarck southpaw and claimant to the North- west welterweight crown, decisioned Rothier of Chicago at Sioux City Friday night and Ernie Hether- ington, @ second member of Isham | Sweet Hall’s fight stable here, outpointed Lew Bartell, alsv of Chicago. “Wild Bill” Hasselstrom lost a decision to & South Dakota neavyweight. TIES COURSE RECORD i CONS eT SEL B\i Rei I Wool, Worsted. Sut Suits AlLw “$19.50 Alex Rosen and Bro. Bismarck

Other pages from this issue: