The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 12, 1937, Page 8

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i i { | i i } | * . and Averill, Indians, 39. QUARTET OF PROS WITH SUBPAR 140°S ; PACE CRACK FIELD Thomson, Dudley, Walsh, Gul- - dahl Take Lead in Friday’s 18-Hole Play BILL KOSTELECKY GETS 165 Strafaci, Sawyer, Cooper, Snead Follow Two Strokes Over Leaders Birmingham, Mich., June 12—(7)— Golfdom hoped to crown the new American operi champion Saturday, with a burst of par-cracking fire- works, but so many heirs apparent were on hand that there was a good chance the coronation would be de- layed until Sunday. Sixty-five of the nation’s sharp- shooters teed off for the 36-hole stretch which completes the regula- tion 72-hole test. They survived the two-day scoring spree that elimin- ated 101 of the original starters. Ten ,Par-breakers were grouped in two sections, only two shots apart, in a wide open scramble for the laurels ‘won a year ago at Baltusrol by Tony Manero. Thomson Among Leaders Leading the chase for Manero's crown, along with a crack at Tony’s record 282 total, were a quartet of professional siege guns, comprising Jimmy Thomson of Shawnee-On- Delaware, Pa., big Ed Dudley of Philadelphia, and Frank Walsh and Ralph Guldah! of Chicago, all with subpar totals of 140 at the half way mark, As @ prelude to the final barrage, ‘Thompson Friday fired a 66 that beat par by six shots, clipped three senators off the Oakland Hills com- petitive record, and equalled the all- time low for a single round in the open championship. Guldahl, on his way to @ second round 69, shot the outgoing half in 32 for another rec- ‘Two strokes off the pace, at 142, were Frankie Strafaci, the 2l-year- old publinks star from Brooklyn, Pat Sawyer, Minneapolis pro, and the pre-tournament choices, Harry Cooper of Chicago and Slammin’ Sam Snead, the West Virginian who burned up the winter circuit. ] Also under par, with 143, were Johnny Goodman, the Omaha ama- teur who won the open in 1933, and Vic Ghezzi of Deal, N .J., who pro- vided one of the “picture shots” Fri- day by. sinking » 60-foot putt with ® mud-covered ball on the 16th, or “lake -hole.” William Kostelecky, Dickinson, N. D, amateur had a score of 80-85-165. American Golf Star To Play British Pro New York, June 12.—()—George Jacobus, president of the Professional Golfers association, Friday received cabled confirmation from England of & world championship 72-hole match between Henry Cotton, crack British’ Pro, and an American representative yet to be selected by the P. G. A. executive committee, The itch play basis, contest, on a ma! will be held right after the U. 8.- British Ryder Cup team matches, scheduled for Southport, England, on June 20 and 30. The News of the ‘World is putting up a prize of £500) 62,500). | MAJOR LEAGUE __ LEADERS } Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Gehrig, Yankees, 383; > Tigers, .382, » Tigers, 49; Lary 3 Tee Off For Last had a fingernail grip on the Amer- were the big factors in St. Paul’s vic- tory over the Mudhens. The Saints scoted their first run without the aid of a hit in the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1987 36 Holes of PGA {SERVICE ELECTRIC, HY HAT, TAXI CLUBS ARE LOSERS FRIDAY Mote Points Way for Restaurant: + Team With Six ‘Hits ‘in Seven Tries Sewell Called Out in Close Play WHITEHEAD ADDS FOURTH WIN f Baseball Standings i (By The Associated Press) Gets Two Homers as Yanks Drub Browns 10-0 Hi Es? 5 2 é EEE league—and, right now, as “ 4 who came back.": ‘Two years ago, when Johnny 608/ to the big time from Texas, 568/ regarded as an outstanding 535| prospect. He started off well .455} but finally wound up with a 452) erage, 13 wins and the H 19 18 16 Tried Everywhere © Luke Sewell, Chicago White Sox/in the American League pennant catcher, was out by a step in this/ race. Gehrig is shown pulling away] B: action photo from the “crucial” series} from first base after the putout. New| M between the two teams for leadership] York won the game, 10 to 3. MILLERS GRAB ASSOCIATION .560|8tep of every other club in the 551 managers, 4ti| in the change of uniform will do I'm here to trade him.” FRIDAY’S STARS LEAD WITH WIN OVER BIRDS]! |: 2 GB) smote tes ee in shutting out Browns, 10-0. + Zeke Bonura, White Sox— Hit homer, two doubles and single, by innings— ne Kels Outslug Columbus to Get 11-8 Victory as Saints Upset Mudhens Biacksto1 a ++ 202 011 3— 9 Service Electric ...... 100 010 1— 3 Carlisle, Garden Asks New Hearing for Suit é ganization Will Sue ‘Every- one Involved’ Errors—! er, Strong 2; two. pipes ‘ickenheti driving in five runs in 14-8 vice tory. over Senators. ig Wally Moses, Athietics—His two homers led way to 11-3 win over Indians. : Gerry Walker, Tigers—Hit homer with mate on base in 6-5 victory over Red Sox. ot oo | Bismarck Boys Win | From Mandan Team Anton “Dusky” Schneider cHalked Up the first no-hit game ever cre- @ited to a Bismarck American Le- i, ton bai Electric 5; dou- to Colliton to 2 in 3 (By The Associated Press) Donie Bush's Minneapolis Millers ican Association leadership Saturday, marking the second change of own- ership in two days for the top posi- tion. ‘The Millers moved into the lead ler 2, off Brooks 2; winning pitcher —Brooks; “losing ‘pitcher—Carlisie; umpire—Meinhover; scorekee; H. Asselstine. Chicago, June fat boy with a ten-foot pole. Cleve- 12 —(@)— Unper- E Ta Square E eens, ABH by Colby 3; 4, off Colby, Smith; losing pire—John Fia! hardt. Swt Shop AB R rides ev acban, while ‘Toledo, Vehich|turbed over the focing oc § 1 9 Banas, gion team pitcher when he pitched). n4 could have had him for Oral ousted Milwaukee from first place|Garden corporation's intention of |i Rael cois nee eal ety coe ite teteden maites, i wic- | uildebrand; he was offered to De- suing everyone Ve F > Tes, , ° * Ba PC cer as ite Heavyweisht Champion "James J. £3 1 Boggs, ? + “ole ere team, here Tmuraday. | OM fon Unie Maat ae ‘3 nger Joe 0 , ators and even the landed in second place whee, Mil [inemet bests taise maneuvere ie ere 10 Legion TAB ¥,P0|Atnletce, But. so far as they. were the runneru; t by losing to In-|Saturday for their 15-round battle 3 3 Rui 1 © @ Ric'son, ss 3 2 9! concerned, it was strictly no dice. dishapolis, 9 to-8, in an Ii-inning|at Comiskey park June 22. yo eget ; °8 1 6] Came the start of this season, and night game. Col John Reed Kilpatrick, the] rotais 628 3 TS i 0 0 2.11] Whitehead was not in condition to barn Pound Macon Garden's president, said Friday that| Kos'ky, 2 0 8 9 Ol pitch. Dykes had to suspend him Minneapolis pounded Max Macon : Opp, rrt 3 0 Aen ft > Slwithout pay. That did it, Next to for all but one of ite meats oe ; Totals YW ky, ab i. 4 4 Ascher p32 : , going halted re Mey Sie pay fattle, Belve Bean, who started for|regard his contract to: meet MaX|swect hop vn fa7 714 15-1 Fo Ee a ee Pent contd hit Soe —_ as the Millers, also was hit hard, ylield-|Schmeling” and) announced that a) Taxi 67 + 4b 428 Tp arse) Fries” ” Sek'on, rf0 0 ol went to work and reported himself ing 13 hits before going out of ac-|motion 7 nd Mace tgn oa wie) Two-base hityKonltsky, Mote ij] Totals 1@ 0 14 Scott, rf 0 0 Olready after 1¢ days. Se ee Saag ean ate ieee EL ote te Be Se cael a enough to contribute a double and | asked. Sweet Shop 8, Taxi rare eee Maebut and whipped the Red: eox Emon Gen ane rates Mancow nie heen bal [rare Sanne je Creede | Bimarce Leglon #2 $11 |IoFten innings," ewe than a west oo ¥ nings, . ye the vietory with which Charley Wee" itie, in which it lost the firet. two|siruck out by Smith, by ‘trecide's| ,, Store —nbnng ii Olson 1: three-liater, he let the Indians with itolen ‘bases|/One run, and then blanked th 5; _sacrifices—Bismarck ings, off Gailegher tin 3 innings, nings, er . oft Gelger @-in'? innings; struck out |time he went the full nine innings by. ‘ epetneiaee i by Gallag-/as he at the Washington Sen- off Schneider &, off 'G: ators, 14-8. he: victory was He Geiger 1. eleventh for the Sox in their last twelve games and boosted them back Cardinal Farmhands rounds, would make no difference as far as the Braddock-Louls bout is concerned, that .“it would go on, just as be : The champion, who showed spirit. the third, and counted |and punching power in « brisk. box- ‘one in the eighth by|ing drill at his Grand.Beach, Mich., .jcamp Friday, planned another stiff workout with the gloves Saturday. F Louls was given: surprise 15- round boxing assignment against five| B sparring partners Saturday, after resting Friday. ® Winnipeg Wins Again From Duluth, 3 to 2 Minneapolis, June 12—()—Winni-| | ‘Two peg Saturday boasted one of the 14, 0 longest winning streaks of the cur-|Goets to Baldwin, Go aldwin; rent Northern, League season, seven | 017° sty acca e tna. 4-3 ingle eat i -3 innings, 13 ta wetory over he scond Dace] Sst"PSTickePnaet eS atk night. |atuth Dukes. by B. Watts 1: bases’ on’ balls off That Winnipeg victory, incdentally,| wetermn” & off. 3 Watts 12, oft B. spoiled Duluth’s chances of gaining} man; lo: BBS pitcher—J, the league top as ‘Crookston, in first pire; -Ray Lenihan; Place, also succumbed by a 8 to 2 : margin to Superior. Eau Claire won its fourth straight winning itcher—Ytreeide; um- g;-scorer—Bob Burck- Hi Hat (AB Man'ng, rf 4 G Pap, r 3 into second place in the American i Although Whitehead was hit hard, Cheer Club Officials), Atnoush Whitehead was hit hard, hit barrage the White Sox exploded, with Zeke Bonura connecting for a homer, two doubles and s single and driving in five runs. 2. The win kept the Sox just a game off the American League ‘pace as set by the Yankees, who clubbed out 17 hits to blank the helpless St. Louis Pro- | Browns 10-0, behind Charley the Red Ruffing’s five-hit throwing. Joe Di- Maggio continued his recent slug- ging with two homers, Vee cor © pesrneoet @ 460 0 encoot eee ron, lt Vic'man, p Totals 3110 2° Totals Score by innings— Elks . 4 07 10 401 2—16 1: + 002 220 1— 7 10 At Portsmouth, O., Johnny Maher, 21-year-old Atlantan, fanned 12 bat- Cl ser wicuncuce ts ae] Heloise Martin Weds Drake Football Star Chicago, June 12.—() — Heloise | gers Martin, 20, former Drake (Des Moines, Iowa) university co-ed and Broadway dancer, whose photographs Hite—Walker, Tigers, 74; Greenberg, | Toledo .. 6 to 2 over Jamestown. Don “Red” in @ shower recently caused » campus Rewe are pope eo oe seaation, Saturday was the bride of NAsigWie wekeee Home runs—Greenberg, Tigers, 15; ; team to two as fausau clul Ernest F. Bergman, Jr. LEA DiMaggio, Yankees, tt : iano Linton; Herring, Cot! won'¢ to 2. ‘The bridegroom, a 21-year-old| All games postponed. ) Yankees, and Blues Win Pair Jamestown battles.Eau Claire again — Whitehead, Cubs, 4-0. Saturday, while Fargo-Moorhead will AMERICAN LEAGUE be at Wausau. - Yanks Win NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘Vaughan, » a Reds, 381. Runs — Galan, Cubs, 40; Medwick, . Cardinals, 38. His—Medwick, Cardinals, and Pirates 66. runs—Bartell, Giants, 11; Med- Cardinals, 10. Pilchine—Brvant, Cubs, 4-0; Hubbell, Giants, 8-2. New York. St. Louis. By Williams WITH THE STIRRUPS \ OUT OUR WAY TED DOWN, A BiG SWELL 2 FORK SADDLE; AND. HIM’ _ KNEE-DEBP IN THE SAND, y NOW WHAT'LL YOU BET i i -—-——__________-_4 | Fights Last Night {| Mane RHE Indianapolis. 005 011 010 01— 9 15 3 Milwaukee ..100 000 232 00— 8 13 2 sah a innings) ips, McLaughlin, Johnson and Paarl Kimball, Winegarner and 75 Distance Runners Enter AAU Marathon Game Officials Meet Washington, June 12. — (>) — Mel In Sioux City, 8. D. Porter, representing the Millrose peered Club nee York, was the orite among distance runners entered Saturday in the National AAU marathon championship. Porter, recognized as one of the na- tlon’s best long distance competitors, never has won the marathon. Two other Millrose athletes, Fred Ward Sioux Falls, June 12—QJ—Game ‘and fish commissioners of eight mid- western states met here Saturday to formulate recommendations see i i : cle ourney Saturday ~ Blackstone Club, Sweet Shop, Elks. Softball Teams Are Winners TO UNBROKEN VICTORY CHAIN . Stops Senators 14-8; DiMaggio fi A Hi same lost. t : a He peddied Johnny at the door- Joop. “Whitehead,” he told his rival ». “is one of the standouts 5 league, if not in baseball, but 34 ere’s something wrong, Maybe @ ves the trick, But the others wouldn't touch the 4 § i OR NOT A PNY EAS 18 SOL/O"7 UKE THAT AT YOU TO SINK COWN, BLT SAND” WITH SHARP CORNERS FORMS fa ee CARRIES HIS MATE'S ARSUNDS ON HIS BACK. UNTIL THEY, HATCH. CURIOUSLY, Christ actually was born several years B. C, . t+» “before the birth of Christ.” This paradox js the result of an error made in connecting the birth of Christ with the disputed date of a victory of Emperor Augustus. Rizzo’s .409 Mark Tops A.A. Batsmen Max Macon Chalks Up 10 Vic- tories Against 3 Defeats to ‘ Lead-Hurlers ~ ae ae eee ‘STORIES IN F °° | STAMPS BY 1. 8. KLEIN Chicago, June 12—()—Johnny Risso, Columbus’ slugging young outfielder, is fashioning a big build- up for himself ss = candidate for a job with the St. Louis Cardinals next year—or perhaps sooner. The Rid Bird thumper, who grab- bed the American Association batting 'OR the fifth time, in 1802, the territory of Louisiana hed | FE times at bat. In second place was!’ changed hands, 40 years. after. another Columbus outtieldgy, Earl! Spain had taken the district from Slaughter, who boosted his 91 France. Now Napoleon was pre-’ pared to colonize the New World.’ But he was sorely in need of money due :to his costly European diana) Cooke, - |; campaigns, and claims of Ameri’ Nt 'a6ts Fred. Berger, indians| cans in the territory, apolis, .351; Sherlock, In Paris, Robert R. Livingston, 344; Gil English, Kansas City, .243;| famous lawyer who had helped Joe Morrissey, Gt. Paul, 340; Ralph| draft the Declaration of Indepen- Kress, Minneapolis, .333. - dence and New York state’s cone stitution, was United States minise ter. President Jefferson asked him to negotiate for the purchase ee ean Mone roe to ai v! On April 30, 1803, Louisiana ° ‘was bought for $11,250,000 in cash and assumption of France's debts to - Americans, . estimated at $3,750,000. : F In 1904, on the centennial of £ this vastly profitable purchase, the United States issued four stamps, the one-cent portraying Living- ston, the two-cent Jefferson, the three-cent Monroe and the ten- The Minneapolis pair, Reynolds and Kress, held six of the individual leadershi them. Kress was the home run’ pace-setter with 15 round-trippers, had driven in 55 runs i] ; E & f : Bi to fed-|q cent, a map of the United States: showing the new territory. y U. 5.1904 Loutsiana Purchase issue ; Any of four values erage, increasing it to .318, first place. Milwaukee continued to| show the way in field with » mark, and Columbus lead. in double plays with 63. : Langer Will Dedicate (Copyright, 1987, NEA Service, tne.) Memorial Courthouse) eran cnurch at Roundup, Dickinton, N, June, 12. Uf) = Soumir’s Dew £200,000 (court | emily Inst. week, leaving work here SPORTSMEN With all the rain, with lakes | full of water; you'll need a this fi For beau- tiful ideal for land or water, see BOB AUNE Phone 205 or 1963 INTERNATIONA TRUCKS

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