The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 22, 1935, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1935 BSWARCK GOLFER | STROKES BRILLIANT {AT WN, EVENT ‘Grand Forks Youth Finishes Second After Leading Field at 27-Hole Mark i MATCH PLAY IS STARTED: Everson and Clayton of Fargo and Sundah! of Jamestown Tied for Third Minot, July 22—(#)—Master of woods and irons, Paul Cook, of Bis- marck, set out Monday at the Minot Country Club to defend his state golf title, which he has won five times in six years, after winning the medal in the 36 hole qualifier Sunday. It was the fifth time Cook had been medal- | ist of the state tournament. Relinquishing the medal honors to Cook after holding them for two con- secutive years, William Kostelecky, Jr., of Dickinson, trailed the cham- pion’s 147 by nine strokes. Cook was only three strokes over par in the 36 holes. Leading Cook by one stroke at the end of 27 holes as a result of a bril- Nant 34 on his second round, two strokes under par, the youthful Ken- neth Rolf of Grand Forks could not stand the pace in the final round and came in with a 42 for a total of 151. Three Players in Van Martin Everson, Fargo, Billy Sun- dahl, Jr. Jamestown, and D. Slay- ton, Fargo, each trailed Rolf by one stroke. Cook’s score by holes which won him the medal award follow, compared with par: Par 544 344 354— 36 Cook out 544 354 354— 37 Cook in 645 353 254— 37 Cook out 644 244 354— 36 Cook in 542 444 354 -37—147 Rolf’s score by holes follows: Rolf out 644 344 354— 37 Rolf in 535 343 344— 34 Rolf out 544 444 463— 38 Rolf in | Paul Cook, Defending Champion, Wins M ae | OUR BOARDING H be OUSE By Avorn NARROW MARGINS Lh © 1998 BY NEA SERVICE, ING. T.M. C3 EH °P-—THE BEES 60? ER-UM—~BY THAT, YOU, AH —MEAN-~AH-~IN OTHER WORDS—-THAT THE BEES col OR TO COME DIRECTLY TO THE POINT, IT AM To DISPOSE OF THE BEES~ —AIS THAT ITO wig veer. one bit ane aS i ils Lake, 186; Bob Applegate, Minot, j 188; Ray Campbell, Minot, 186; W. P.| Ridley, Fargo, 187; M. Benum, Minot, 188; O. C, Croonquist, Bismarck, 188; M. Swartz, New Rockford, 188; Ivar Krog, Portland, 189; L. Beardsley, New Rockford, 189; Otto Ellison, Mi- not, 189; Dr. H. J. Weier, Dickinson, 190; O. L, Short, Valley City, 190; Hugh Lane, Fargo, 191; G. Tsoum- pas, Grand Forks, 197. Third Flight Dr. R. C. Lang, Minot, 199. In the championship flight the 32 557 354 364— 42—151 | contestants were paired as follows for A year ago Kostleckey won the me-!the first 18 holes of match play Mon- dal at the Fargo Country Club with a! day: total of 155. Cook vs. Lawless, Hauge vs. Holler, With ideal playing weather pre-/Neil Croonquist vs. Cummer, Lee vs. vailing, 65. players qualified, 32 of/Slayton, Dahl vs. Dr. L. G. Power, them going into the championship flight which will be narrowed to 16) contestants in 18 hole matches Mon-|sundahl vs. Adams, Scofield vs. Kos- | day. The other flights were made up|telecky, Jr. of 16 players, with Dr. R. C. Lang of|yett vs. North vs. Dr. Robinson, Slattery vs. Blatherwick, Nitsch vs. Everson, R. Power vs. Holt, Bar- lagher, Gallagher vs. Minot the sole. entry in the third] aten, Rev. Hanson vs. L. Anderson, flight. Minot Wins Team Title The Minot Country Club quintet won the team play with a total of 806.|are Dr. Pence vs. Oller, Patterson vs. | fellowed by Fargo's Edgewood team} with 832, Bismarck 833 and Riverside of Minot, 837. Members of the win-|sr, Dr, Henderson vs. Hoffman, Wes- | ring team were Dr. Russell Gates, ‘Winnie Lee, Herman Dahl, Charles Anderson and Raymond C. Dobson. | The Edgewood team was composed | of Fred Cummer, Martin Everson, Don Slayton, Bob Larson and Hugh Lane, Bismarck, Paul Cook, Tom! Lawless, Neil Croonquist, Dr. Hender- son and O. C. Croonquist, and River- side, Herman Nitsch, Ray Holt, Lane Scofield, Lee Oller and J. C. Hunt. Three sectional champions, Billy Sundahl, south eastern titlist, Louis Anderson, New Rockford, central ‘North Dakota champion, and Winnie Lee, Minot, wearer of the northwest crown, all qualified in the champion- ship flight. Cook, by winning the medal for the fifth time, has set up a record that will be hard to beat. Runner- up to him in the number of times he has won this honor is T. B. Hull of Fargo, thrice possessor, and John Reuter, low townsman, thas won it twice. Bismarck Qualifies Three In the championship flight Minot thas 12 representatives, followed by Fargo with four, Bismarck and Grand Forks each with three, Devils young Kostelecky, Lake two and Jamestown, Dickinson,|: ; * New Rockford, Rugby, Sanish, La- Moure, Van Hook and Portland each with one. Qualifying scores follow, grouped into the flights in which the play- ers placed: Championship Flight Paul Cook, Bismarck, 147; K. Rolf, ‘Grand Forks, 151; M. Everson, Fargo, 152; Billy Sundahl, Jamestown, 152; D. Slayton, Fargo, 152; V. Gallagher, Farge, 154; Herman Dahl, Minot, 155; W. J. Gallagher, Devils Lake, 155; E. O. North, Grand Forks, 156; W. Kostelecky, Jr., Dickinson, 156; Louis Anderson, New Rockford, 156; Neil Croonquist, Bismarck, 156; Dr. Rus- sell Gates, Minot, 157; J. M. Slat- tery, Minot, 157; O. Hague, Rugby, 158; R. L. Holt, Sanish, 161; AN! THAT MAGAZINE 1S YOUR Charles Anderson, Minot, 161; T. F. BOOK OF TICKITS—YOU'RE GONNA Lawless, Bismarck, 161; Herman GIMME ONE — THAT'S Ir! Now, Nitsch, Minot, 161; Paul Adams, La- ‘Moure, 164; Winnie Lee, Minot, 164; H. Allen, Grand Forks, 165; Fred Cummer, Fargo, 165; Dr. L. G. Pow- er, Minot, 165; James Barrett, Devils Lake, 165; Rev. N. E. Hanson, Minot, 166; Dr. Ward Robinson, Minot, 168; Lane Scofield, Minot, 168; R. C. Dob- son, Minot, 169; R. Blatherwick, Van Hook, .169; C. L. Holler, Minot, 169; A. Power, Portland, 170. First Flight F. Berndt, Minot, 171; Dr. R. Ww. Pence, Minot, 171; Gordon Westlie, Minot, 172; J. E. Gaffney, Fargo, 172; Charles Finkle, Fargo, 172; Bob Lar- " son, Fargo, 172; A. 8. Shriner, Valley City, 1738; Lee Oller, Minot, 173; Henry Hoffman, Fargo, 173; R. W. Palda, Minot, 174; J. C. Hunt, Minot, | 174; W. Kostelecky, Sr., Dickinson, ’ 196;; R. A. Patterson, Rugby, 176; Don , Bismarck. 177: Dr. B. Dickinson, who, like his fel-|. . . Dr. Gates vs. Dobson, C. Anderson vs. Rolf. In_the first flight the matchings Finkle, Shriner vs. Dr. Nierling, Hunt vs. Gaffney, Larson vs. Kostelecky, tle vs. Bowman, Palda vs. Berndt. In the second flight the pairings are Corby vs. Applegate, Dr. Weir vs. Ridley; Swartz vs. Lane, Beardsley vs. Campbell, O’Brien vs. Krog, Tscumpas ys. Benum, O. C. Croonquist vs. Short, Ellison vs. Troyer. m YOURE TELLING ME Jack Peterson, the Welsh Scandin- avian, threatens to come to the United Braddock . . . but he’s just threat- ening, understand . . . George Sis- Browns, alma mater of his daddy. New York may build a $1,000,- 000 municipal sports . donnny Whitehead, early-sea- er’s stride is 7 feet 7 inches . . who yet has to win a game . . Lee has dropped five in a quintet of starts. . . He was born on a Fri- day, the 13th! . . . Eulace Peacock’s four victories over Jesse Owens are attributed to the fact that the Tem- start than the Ohio State lad. OUT OUR WAY LOCAL NINE ENDS ROAD TRIP, PLAYS JIMMIES HERE TUESDAY’ Capital Citians Run Roughshod Over Red Sox Sunday, Wing Nine Downs States and lick the tar out of Jimmy} ler, Jr., son of the former famous first sacker, is a six-foot-two pitcher, and recently had a workout with the stadium on Randall's Island, in the East river. son phenom pitcher of the White Sox, must learn to field his position better before he becomes a star of| the first magnitude, experts declare | The average length of a sprint- ; Lefty Lee, Indian pitcher, is the only starting hurler in the American loop) Winning 11-4 Victors in five out of eight games and with one erding in a tie on its most recent road trip, the Bismarck baseball team remained at Jamestown Monday for another contest with the Red Sox before returning here Tues- team. |shod over the Jimmies Sunday, win- ‘ning 11-4, behind the effective pitch- ing of Satchel Paige and Barney Morris. Paige started on the mound for Bismarck opposing Ray Starr, form- erly of the Minneapolis Millers, and the score stood 3-2 in the locals’ fa- vor when the two mound cases were taken out in the fourth in favor of Barney Morris and Ed Brady. A resumption of the Paige-Starr feud will be seen here starting at 6:30 ip. m., Tuesday, the first appearance of the Bismarck squad on the home lot since a week ago Sunday. Ed Hendee of Fairbanks, Iowa, made his first debut at first base for the locals against the Stutsman coun- ty crew Sunday and responded with a home run and two singles. Hendee was brought here from the New York- Pennsylvania League where he batted consistently over the .300 mark. Saturday night at Winnipeg with ; Paige and Chuck Bates on the mound, Bismarck trounced Jamestown, 12-8, to take a two-game lead in the cur- |rent inter-city series, fans will have their first chance to see the Capital City club in action for over a week and Manager Neil Churchill is hoping for a large turn- out at Tuesday night’s game. The team will leave again Wedriesday for an invasion of South Dakota and will not appear again at the local park until sometime next week. The University of California at Los Angeles crew scored its first victory in the consolation race of the 1935 na- .|tional intercollegiate sprint regatta at Long Beach. George Grantham, former first basé- day for a home game with the same} The Capital City nine ran rough-' Bismarck and Missouri Slope sports | Capitol Club, 6-5 Two-Run Rally in Ninth Over- comes Early Local's Lead at Wing Sunday Scoring two runs in a ninth inning) |rally, the Wing baseball team defeated the Capitol club, 6-5 in a hotly con- tested game played at Wing Sunday. ‘The Capitols took an early lead but the Wing nine tied it up at four-all in the seventh. The Capitols pushed a run across in the eighth but in the ninth were held scoreless while Wing counted twice on singles by Kremen- etsky and Hill and a double by Simicir. Features of the game were a slash- ing home run by George Kremenetsky, the longest ever hit on the Wing dia- mond, and the consistent stick work of Kollman and J. Monaghan. The box score: Wing L. Krem’sky, |J. Muller, ¢ N. Hill, cf .. ‘Wm. Olson, eee G. Krem’sky, 3b .. dJefson, ss ... Simicir, lf . Finn, rf . G. Lytle, p . B, Olson, p . R. Johnson . > ow a a 3 2b HPO VoORaAOA Ran SOOM UNNOROM Soooo COO OHHm CHOsHOHOHON COCKE EEE DD Gray, c ase Mergitroyde, cf . La Rue, rf... . J. Monaghan, 3b .. P. Monaghan, 2b .. Kolpacoff, p ~ Wilson, 1b i Becker, ss Kallman, rf Score by innings: Capitols . Wing . o 8 8 ° « R 101 200 010—5 001 001 202—6 Joe McCarthy, signed for two more jyears by the Yankees, had only one SEPARATE MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Bengals Only One-Half Game| Back of M’Carthy Clan Af- ter Losing to Bosox edalist Honors at Minot YANKEES- TIGERS, GIANTS-CARDINALS MEET IN CRUCIAL SERIES Head Coach and Two Assistants CUBS BEAT GIANTS TWICE; St. Louis Trims Leaders’ Edge With Double Victory Over Dodgers (By the Associated Press) I If the big league schedule makers had known in-advance what was go- ing to happen, they couldn’t have ar- ranged it much better than in bring- ing together the St. Louis Cardinals land New York Giants in one big ser- ies starting Monday and the Detroit Tigers and New York Yankees in} another. Detroit climbed into a virtual tie with the Yanks Saturday, then slipped back a half game Sunday when New York broke even in a doubleheader with St. Louis. The Tigers, after smacking Lefty Grove around, finally went down 7-6 before the Red Sox. The Cards slashed away at the! Giants’ lead with a double victory over Brooklyn, 13 to 7 and 7 to 5, and finally cut it to 1% games when Chi- cago knocked off the Giants in a doubleheader, 5 to 4 and 11 to 5. The Cards attracted the largest! home crowd of the season, 25,000. They smacked out 29 hits in two games, winning the second on a four- run burst in the eighth after Dizzy Dean had been belted to cover. The Yankees, still unable to hit St. Louis pitching, took the opener of their bargain bill 2 to 0, They yielded 2 to 1 in the tenth inning of the af- terpiece. Chicago’s White Sox bowed over the Senators 4 to 2. The Phillies blanked Cincinnati twice, 4 to 0 and 2 to 0. Pittsburgh shut out the Braves 7 to 0. Cleveland rallied to turn back the Athletics 6 to 4. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cubs Drop Giants First Game— New York....022 000 000 00— 4 11 Chicago .....011 010 100 0I— 5 10 1 (11 innings) os P RHE Root and Hartnett. Second Game— man for the Pittsburgh Pirates now is playing in the Timber League in Washington state. club in all his years of managing, fin- ish out of the first division. Louisville finished fifth in the American asso- ciation under Marse Joe, ple Negro sprinter is quicker at the Sacramento elevens won both the jsenior and junior California state |soccer championships in 1935. KEEPS FROM GITTN 4 Porter Corby, Valley City, 182; C. A. ‘Troyer, Rugby, 185; Joe O'Brien, Dev- All-Wool Worsted Suits Single and Double-Breasted "$19.50 Alex Rosen and Bro. “pilarg Bismarck NOW, YOU'RE A TOUGH MOTORCYCLE COP AN' You GOT ME STOPPED AT TH'CURS, T WANT TO SHOW YOU HOW SHE JAIL, WITH HER EYES AND A KIND OF COOING!SHE DOES IT LIKE THIS — NOWWATCHS BOO HEL AF TICKITS, ERIN =~ Crewmen of the University of Cal- ifornia at Los Angeles travel 60 miles daily to and from practice rows. By Williams BOO-H- H-HOO-00—~ THAT'S TH' KIND OF MOTHER L'VE GOT, ~W000-00-Hoo- ! PIN' HIM TO MAKE COL OF ME, I'M NOT BLIND—L CAN SEE— BLUB—YAWP., Will Be Elected During Next Two Weeks , July 22.—()—The makeup of football fandom’s choice of an All- America college squad to meet the Chi Bears under the lights at Soldier Field August 29 will be an- nounced tonight. On the squad for the second annual all star battle will be four each of ends, tackles, guards and halfbacks, and pairs of centers, quarterbacks and fullbacks, all seniors on last year’s university and college elevens. In ad- dition a dozen or more stars, who fail to record big popular votes, but are rec- ommended by coaches and officials, will be invited to bring the squad up to full strength for scrimmages and to provide insurance against injuries. ‘The two weeks of voting closed at midnight Sunday night. During the next two weeks a head coach and two assistants will be “elected” by the fans to prepare the squad for its bat- tle with the powerful professional eleven. ‘The standing of the leaders at each position Monday, not including the final 24 hours of voting, was: Ends—Don Hutson, Alabama, 122,- 358; Frank Larson, Minnesota, 120,- 782; Lester Borden, Fordham, 105,- 276; Ray Fuqua, Southern Methodist, 103,457. Tackles—Bill Lee, Alabama, 121,893; Phil Bengtson, Minnesota, 119,438; Jim Barber, San Francisco, 107,271; Jim Steen, Syracuse, 101,547; George Maddox, Kansas State, 100,982. Guards — Regis Monahan, Ohio State, 123,146; Charles Mucha, Wash- ington, 119,758; Bill Bevan, Minne- sota, 113,262; Rocco Schiralli, Notre Dame, 104,837. Centers — Jack Robinson, Notre Dame, 107,944; George Shotwell, Pittsburgh, 102,618; Elwood Kalbaugh, Princeton, 93,524. Quarterbacks — Irvin Warburton, Southern California, 100,582; Jack q| Beynon, Illinols, 91,477; Miller Mun- Jas, Pittsburgh, 88,815, Halfbacks—Duane Purvis, Purdue, ; 114,562; Dixie Howell, Alabama, 108,- Hubbell and Danning; Carleton, |257°" pug Lund, Minnesota, 92,854; Bill R H E£/Shepherd, Western Maryland, 88,613; Minneapolis Ends Eastern Trip Still Two Games Ahead Millers, Red Birds day's Doubleheader; In- dians Down Brewers Chicago, July 22.—(4)—The Minne- apolis Millers said farewell to the eastern half of the American Associa- | tion Monday, leading the league by two games, the remainder of a five- game margin Donie Bush’s men boasted when they left home July 5. The Millers were at Milwaukee ‘Monday. ‘The Millers won Saturday, 16-1, and after dropping the first game of Sun- day’s doubleheader, 5-4 in 12 innings, closed the series by outpointing the hustling Redbirds, 8-7, in the second game. Indianapolis spent Saturday and Sunday making it five straight over Milwaukee. The Indians took Satur- day’s tussle, 9-7, and scored two close victories over the Brewers Sunday, 5-4 and 4-3, Kansas City won three games from Louisville. The Blues took Saturday’s encounter 10-4, and in the first game of the Sunday doubleheader, won 17-5. ‘The second game went to Kansas City, 5-4, 8t. Paul and Toledo put in a weird weekend. The Mudhens took the long- est game of the season—19 innings— Saturday night and early Sunday morning, 7-6. St. Paul won the first game of the Sabbath double bill, 9-7, but they were tied at 13-13, when dark- ness halted the second battle at the end of the ninth. Indians Cop Pair First Game— Indianapolis ....' Braxton, Hamlin and Rensa; Tur- ner and Riddle. Second Game— Milwaukee . Indianapolis (Called 6 o'clock law) Torres and Detore; Sprinz, Riddle. Blues Take Two First Game— Kansas City.....120 721 400—17 26 1 Louisville .......200 011 010— 5 13 2 Struss, Smith and Madjeski; Mar- tow, Bliss, Lecompte, Sewell and Ringhofer. Second Game— Kansas City. 000 002 3— 412 1 Louisville ... -.300 001 0— 411 2 (Called end 7th, allow Louisville to catch train). Pullerton, Smith and Madjeski; Peterson and Thompson. : Millers, Red Birds Divide First Game— RHE Minneapolis ..010020100000— 4 7 2 Columbus 001 011 100001— 5 17 2 2 innings) Kolp, Ryan and Hargrave; Klinger and Ogrodowski. Second Game— RHE Minneapolis ....100 100 240— 815 3 Columbus ......: 201 020 020— 713 1 Perrin, Ryan, Tauscher, Galehouse and Leitz, Hargrave; Ryba, Sundra, Chambers, Mooney and Klinger. Saints Win, Tie First Game— St. Paul....+ Toledo . Stratton, RHE RHE RHE +004 000 032— 9 14 1 010 000 051— 713 2 Rigney and Fenner; Giuliani; Thomas, Bowler and Gar- bark. RHE New York (000 000 050— 5 2 1 Hela Melinkovich, Notre Dame, Chicago . 000 302 06x—11 panded Stout, Smith, Chagnon and Dan- eae aes a Kostka, Minnesota, ning; Lee, Warneke and O'Dea. 93814. zy Weinstock, Pittsburgh, Phillies Blank Reds Twice c 4 First Game— THE Philadelphia . Snare ae? tt] STANDINGS Davis and Todd; Derri . ZL PANE NN and Erickson. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Second Game— RHE Won Lost Pet. Philadelphia . 8 1)Minneapolis . 5638596 Cincinnati 5 3/Indianapolis . 53 39S «B76 Bowman and Todd; Hollingsworth, | columbus 50 41 549 Nelson and Lombardi. 47 420 (5B 46 45 505 Pirates Shut Out Braves 42 45483. 390049 443 Boston .. 28 62 311 Pittsbugh Brandt logan; Swift and Pad- AMERICAN LEAGUE den. Won Lost Pet. New York 50 31617 Cards Rout Dodgers Detroit . 52 34 605 First Game— R H E|Chicago . 45 35 ° «563 Brooklyn -020 002 012— 7 11 3 | Boston . 44 41 518 St. Louis. -230 040 40x—13 15 0)Cleveland 4 40 «506 Munns, Vance, Mungo and Phelps; | Philadelphia 36 44 450 Haines, P. Ccllins and Delancey,| Washington 49 424 Davis, St. Louis .... 56317 Second Game— RHE Brooklyn 003 020 000— 5 12 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis. -002 010 04x— 714 1 Won Lost Pet. Leonard, Clark, Heusser, Babich|New York.......... 53 28 654 and Lopez; J. Dean, Walker and De-/St. Louis . wee 52 30634 lancey, Davis. Chicago ... 51 a“ 600 eee Pittsburgh 46 41 529 AMERICAN LEAGUE Brooklyn . 38° 44463. White Sox Win Cincinnati 309004753, Philade!phii 36 47 434 21 652d Ly NORTHERN LEAGUE and Bolton, Holbrook. LsPct. Yanks, Browns Split 3m First Game— R 5 615 St. Louis... 6 600 New York. ‘ 7 462 Walkup, Van Atta and Hemsley; 2 429 Broaca and Dickey. 8 200 Second Game— 11.063 St. Louis. 001 000 000 1— 211 1 New York.....010 000 0000—1 9 1 Saturday's Results 0 innings) 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE Knott, Van Atta, Coffman and} Chicago 7; New York 2. Hemsley; Tamulis and Dickey. Bosox Defeat Tigers joston . > Bridges and Hayworth; Cochrane; Grove and R. Ferrell. Harder Bests A.’s Cleveland Philadelphia .... Harder, Hudlin and Phillips; Blae- holder, Dietrich, Turbeville and Richards, MAJOR LEAGUE RS AMERICAN LEAGUE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis 16; Columbus 1. Kansas City 4; Louisville 4. NORTHERN LEAGUE Superior 5; Grand Forks 3. Winnipeg 3; Eau Claire 2. Kight, Rawls Annex Five Women’s Titles New York, July 22—(—Uncle Sam can rest easy as far as the Olym- pic situation among women swim- 349; |Kight of Homestead, Pa., and Kath- erine Rawls of Miami! Beach, Fis. uns—Gehringer, Tigers 77; Green-| Between them, in the national berg, Tigers 73. championships concluded Sunday in Hits—Cramer, Athletics 123; Geh-|the Manhattan Beach pool, they ac- ringer, Tigers 121. counted for five of the nine indivi- NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘Batting—Vaughan, Pirates 396; Med- wick, Cardinals .374. Runs—M Cardinals 75; Giants 74. Giants 125. and mile championships. took the Govednik of Minn., and did not defend her low Home Runs—Ott, Giants 22; J. Col-| board: diving title. : lins, Cards, Berger, Braves 18. Pitching—Castieman, Parmelee, Giants 10-3. ESN RRR REAR NETNAMES APR ae Miss Kight finished the half mile mark of 11:412. account darkness) Stine, Rigney, Grimes, Mills, Fette, ‘Trow and Fenner; Giuliani; Walsh, Sullivan, Lawson and Laskowski. YEST@RDAY'S sT Ss (By the Associated Press) man, with five hits in last eight in- nings to win opener; Herman batted in four runs with four hits, Wes Ferrell, Red Sox—Wal- loped pinch home run with two on base in ninth. Bill Swift, Pirates—Shut out Braves with four hits and knock- ed in two runs, Tony Piet, White Sox—Led at- tack on Senators with three hits, including homer. Pepper Martin and Joe Med- wick, Cardinals—Martin scored four runs in first victory over Dodgers; Medwick made four straight hits in second. Hal Trosky, Indians—Drove in three runs in triumph over Ath- letics, Johnny Broaca, Yankees, and Julius Solters, Browns—Broaca pitched two-hit shutout in open- Solters drove in both St. Twins Retain Margin, Divide Doubleheader July 22.—(P)—Fargo- mar- Miss Rawls, another certain Olym-|gin at the top of the Northern League pic aspirant, retained her 300 meters |by splitting a doubleheader with Du- Ott,| individual medley record, 220: Hits—Medwick, Cardinals 128; Terry,|from St. Paul, Moorhead Twins retained their luth Sunday. The Twins the second, Winnipeg defeating ‘Colts, 5-4, le Sun- Logan and| won the but the Dukes copped 8. walloped Eau Claire, 15-4. Brainerd moved out of the cellar by Crookston, 11-9. Superior Giants - 8-2;]in 11:34, compared with Helene Mad-|nosed out the Greater, Grand Forks ison’s recognized Harry Cooper Wins St. Paul Open Championship, $1,200 jALL-STAR GRID POLL CLOSES; SQUAD WILL BE NAMED SOON Prize Money Chicago Star Smashes Par by 17 Strokes in Greatest Massed Scoring Spree st. Paul, July 22—()—nH Cooper has emerged from his private Le mine of golf again with a record strike. The Chicago star led probably the Sreatest massed scoring spree rd golf history Sunday to win the St. Paul open championship and $1,200 first ‘prize money with a record 72-hole total of 271 blows. The score smashed par by 17 strokes and the tournament record by seven shots. His dazzling score, framed by suc- cessive rounds of 68-67-68-68—271, over the Keller course gave him the cham- pionship by a four stroke margin over Horton Smith of Chicago and clear domination of the St. Paul show. In five starts in the tournament, “Light- horse” Harry has won two firsts, tied for and lost another, and won a total Cf $6,933.33 in prize money. Keller Course Subdued His four rounds were the finest he ever has put together over a par 72 course that was subdued so completely by a field that 44 sub-par rounds were scored during the three days of shoot- ing by a field that almost duplicated that witch competed in the recent national open at Oakmont. Incident- ally, the new national open title holder, Sam Parks, was swamped by the par shelling, finishing far out of the money with 309, Cooper's score, while his lowest and one of the best in competition on a par 72 course, still was five strokes Short of the record set at the Park Hill open at Denver last year by Ky Laf- foon of Chicago, who posted a 266, Horton ith Is Second Smith, whose tournament record of 278 was smashed by Cooper, was under Par on every round and only got second. His successive rounds were ‘71-68-68-68—275, good for $750.. Bill Kaiser of Louisville won third place with a 279, nine blows under par, and got $550. Other low scorers and their prize winnings were: Frank Walsh, Chicago, 68-73-71-71 —283—$430. Pat Sawyer, Minneapolis, who won the amateur medal by tying Walsh baer rounds of 70-75-70-68—283. 'y Mangrum, Los Angeles, 67-69- ‘15-73—284 and Denny Shute, Chicago, ‘72-71-72-69—284. Shute and Mangum won $325 each. For the first time, the tournament made its expenses, insuring its con- tinuance in 1936. Local FERA Team Defeats M’Kenzie Claire David With Home Run, Two Doubles Leads Attack in 15-14 Victory The Bismarck FERA team won a free-hitting contest from McKenzie, 15-14, at McKenzie Sunday. Starting with a rush the FERA club counted four times in the first in- ning but McKenzie brought the score to 5-3 in the third and went on a bat- ting spree in the sixth to score five runs and pull up within one run of the local nine. Both teams scored three runs in the seventh and each added one more in the ninth. Marc Eidsmoe started on the mound for the FERA club but was relieved by Bon Finstead in the ninth. Eidsmoe allowed 12 hits and fanned seven while Finstead held the McKenzie nine hit- less in the last inning. Play on both teams was ragged with the FERA outfit committing 10. errors and the McKenzie team seven. Claire David with a home run and two singles in six times at bat, William Hughes, Oliver Torkelson and Art David, each with three for six, led the FERA nine’s attack. The box score: FERA Bismarck— AB R Hughes, ss Woods, ¢ Finstead, David, 1b MAARARABAR CHOnnommon 2 ng 8 09 09 ms co Bo BD 08 It conworSeonedg OMOOHOMENMD eCooOoNOoNNNDE a 8 oy a o - 3 = Ss Hanaamaraae COCOH MORONS, COCO OMMHOME no = we i) ° a da “ 132 301-15 025 301—14 Summary: ig pitcher Eids- moe, losing pitcher T. Coons; left on base, FERA 10; McKenzie 3; two base hits, Hughes 1, Woods 1, Eidsmoe 1, Art David 1, D, Hughes 2; three base hits, Claire David 1; Hits off Eidsmoe 11 in 8 innings; off T. Coons 13 in five innings; off C. Coons 11 in four innings; struck out by Eidsmoe 7; by Finstead 1; by T. Coons 1; by C. Coons 3; bases on balls off Eidsmoe 1; hit by pitcher Eidsmoe 3: C. Coons 1; Umpire, Ed st, 21-Year-Old Atlanta Youth Wins Western Colorado Springs, Colo., J aa (Calling himselt “doggone Yuces> Charlie Yates, 21-year-old long hit- ter from Atlanta, held the western amateur golf championship today af- ter three years of trying for it, He shot steadier golf than his opponent, Rodney Bliss of Omaha and former- ly of Cornell university, to win the 36-hole title match, § ‘and 3, here ee ese tarp sensi

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