The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 5, 1937, Page 10

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aaeteen mmr — 1000 Spectators Line Pool, Watch Feature of Bargain Day Celebration 23 SEPARATE EVENTS Nickie Barbie and Laura Ells- worth Outstanding Among Older Contestants Approximately 1,000 spectators lined the banks of the municipal swim- ming pool Wednesday evening and watched nearly 300 boys and girls of essorted sizes compete for medals in 13 swimming and 10 diving con- tests. The water carnival was one of the final events on the Barbecue Bar- gain day program. Among the more mature boy swim- mers, Nickie Barbie, John Peterson, Bill Neal, and Warren Kraft stood out. Barbie collected two firsts, one . Second, two thirds and one fourth. Peterson placed first in one event, second in another, and third in a third. Bill Neal collected two firsts and a third while Warren Kraft an- mexed a pair of seconds and a fourth. Among the older girl swimmers, Laura Ellsworth was outstanding, col- lecting a pair of firsts and two sec- onds. Patty Thomas, with a first, a third, and a fourth, Mary Logan with @ second, a third, and a fourth, Bev- erly Stadler with a first and two sec- onds, and Flossie Cohenour with a first and a third also lugged home a good share of the spoils. The results: Swimming Girls back-stroke, 20 yards: first, Flossie Cohenour; second, Laura Ellsworth; third, Patty Thomas, fourth, Mary Logan. Boys, 10 and under, 10-yard dash: first, Richard Merrill; second, James Hechtner; third, Bill Bement; fourth, Bob Guness. Boys, 11 and 12 years, 20-yard dash: first, Spencer Boise; second Richard Schneider; third, Jock Mc- Coy; fourth, Junior Bauer. Girls, 13 and 14, 20-yard dash: first, Patty Thomas; second, Gret- chen Schneider; third, Flossie Cohen- our; fourth, Pearl Porter. Girls, 11 and 12, 20-yard dash: first, Jackie Parks; second, Elizabeth Geiermann; third, Evelyn Snyder; fourth, Laverne Morganthaler. Boys, free-for-all, 40-yard breast- stroke: first, John Peterson; second, Warren Kraft; third, Bill Neal; fourth Nickie Barbie. Girls, 10 and under, 10-yard dash: first, Jane Hall; second, Marcia Lam- vert; third, Emerelli Jordan; fourth, Edna Rose. Boys, 15 and 16, 40-yard dash: first, Bill Neal; second, Nickie Barbie; third Douglas Hayes; fourth, John Geiermann, Girls, free-for-all, 40-yard dash: first, Laura Ellsworth; second, Mada Eppler; third, Sarah Cleveland Woodworth; fourth, Patty Thomas, Girls, 15 and 16, 40-yard dash: first, Patty Thomas; second, Beverly Stad- ler; third, Lyla Bryndelson; fourth, Mary Ellen McCary. Boys, 13 and 14, 20-yard dash: first, Jerry Neal; second, Bob Schoregge; cag Edgar Rose; fourth, Bernard Boys, free-for-all, 40-yard dash: first, Bill Neal; second, Bill Tillotson; third, Nickie Barbie; fourth, War- Ten Kraft. Boys, underwater swim, 60 yards: 25a Barbie; second, Warren raft; , John Peterson; Asle Lewis. ere Diving Boys, 10 and under, 3 dives: first, Jack Weidelt; second, Eldon Koon; Douglas Dunahay; fourth, Donald Erickson. . a Boys, 15 and 16, 4 dives: first, Nickie Barbie; second, Wayne Weber: third, Charles Posz; fourth, : eeeoseaburg. % Eee ys, 13 and 14, 3 dives: first, wil- mer Martineson; second, Bill Geer. mann; third, Jerry Neal; fourth, Ed Rose. Boys, 11 and 12, 3 dives: first, Roy Logan; second, Eddie Schmidt; third, Jimmy Kiley; fourth, Jock McCoy. Girls, 11 and 12, 3 dives: first, Eve- oe end: Beverly A , Jackie Parks; for % Virginia Lambert. sii aoe Pits 14, 3 dives: verly ler; second, Mary Logan; third, Lyla Bryndelson; fourth, Mary Ellen McGary. Boys, free-for-all, 5 dives: first, Paul maces iihereeed John Peter- son; 5 ie Barbie; Wayne Weber. pees dives: first, first, ea 0 Hae under, 3 Elizal > second, Jane Hall; third, Marcia Lambert; fourth, Edna Girls, free-for-all, 5 dives: fi Laura Ellsworth; ae second, Beverly Stadler; third, Mary Logan; fourth, Sarah Cleveland Woodworth. ‘ Girls, 15 and 16, 4 dives: first, Doris Fevold; second, Jean Harr! Famous Garden Now In Jacobs’ Control New York, Aug. 5—(?)—The varied destinies of the cauliflower industry passed Thursday from the grip of Madison Square Garden which had held them since the reign of Tex Rickard, to Mike Jacobs, the man who parlayed a Brown Bomber and a Punch into the dictatorship of the fight game. Jacobs, in leasing for two seasons and next and outdoor fights at the bow! in 1938 and 1939. ake Hamlin Man Friday.” ees an tocr our ok ive names tn 300 Compete in Water Carnival $< ___—_—_——_——* | Blondy Back probably be Morgan Jones. Bud An- drews may also see some mound duty. Wilton’s battery is unknown. Red Birds Knock Blondy Ryan, who drifted into the minors after being the tele- graphing star of the New York Giants’ 1933 pennant drive, is back with his old teammates— bought from Milwaukee to plug the gap creaNd by Dick Bar- tell’s injury-enforced absence. ¢—______________» | MAJOR LEAGUE | | LEADERS | a AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Travis, Senators, 384; Geh- 1 rig, Yankees, .376. Runs—DiMaggio, Yankees, 98; Rolfe, Yankees, 90. Hits—DiMaggio, Yankees, 137; Bell, Browns, 136. Home Runs—DiMaggio, Yankees, 32; Foxx, Red ‘Sox, 28. Pitching — Murphy, Yankees, 10. Ruffing, Yankees, 14-3. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Medwick, Cardinals, 403; Hartnett, Cubs, 392. Runs—Medwick, Cardinals, 81; Ga- lan, Cubs, 77. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, , Waner, Pirates, 141. Home Runs—Ott, Giants, 22; wick, Cardinals, 21. Pitching—Fette, ‘ Bees, ton, Cubs, 9-3. 149; P. Med- 13-3; Carle- RESORTERS’ TOURNEY OPENS Alexandria, Minn., Aug. 5. — (®) — Maurice Cain of Wahpeton, N. D., and a colorful array of championship contenders, Thursday were to play here. &t. Trail talking again. American Legion junior baseball an opportunity to size up the Bismarck’s Columbus Now on Top in Ding- forget in a hurry their last look this season at Columbus’ slugging twins, Enos Slaughter and John Rizzo. final appearance of the campaign in the Millers’ crashing out four hits apiece, big blasts in a 5-0 victory which put the Red Birds back on top in the American association, Slaughter belted out a home run, triple and @ pair of singles, while Rizzo col- scramble for the ground by bowing to St. Paul, 5-2, in their final game of the series, Colonels defeated Kansas City 4-3, in a night game, the only other contest on the schedule, Toledo . St. Paul Grabowski and Dickey. RHE Louisville .... 010 000 201-4 7 2 Kansas City ... 000 100 020— 312 0 hofer; Breuer, Moore and Breese. Team of Bismarck Boys Plays Wilton Youngsters Here Park Board Squad From Junior High Is Local Entry in Game Tonight Tonight at at the local ball park a baseball team from the Jun- jor High School league, one of the boys’ leagues sponsored by the Bis marck park board, will play a team of boys from Wilton. The players are approximately be- tween 12 and 14 years of age. The game will give followers of squad’s prospects for the next two or three years, as most of the players are likely candidates for the junior team, according to C. W. Leifur, city recreational director for the park board, Starting pitcher for Bismarck will Kels Out of Lead Dong A. A. Battle With 5-0 Win (By The Associated Press) Minneapolis fans probably won't Enos and John celebrated their park Wednesday by the lected a triple and three one-basers, Toledo, the third member of the leadership, lost Although outhit, 12 to 7, Louisville’s Saints Beat Hens RH 000 000 020-2 9 001 002 11x— 5 14 2 Reiber; Coombs and “Columbus Blanks Millers H 100 020 200— 5 14 + 000 000 000— 0 5 Chambers and Crouch; Wagner, ot Cohen E 1 0 Colonels Beat Blues Peterson, Bass and Berres, Ring- _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1987 ence, Baseball Standings Service Electric Wallops Hi-Hat; 57-Taxils Winner Beats Sweet Shop, 12-9 Wed- hesday; Blackstone Downs Elks, 9-5 North Dakota Entry Plays S. D. Semi-Pro Champs in 2nd Game Lead; Play in Black Hills City BISMARCK DATES CHANGED Series Resumed Here Saturday; Sunday, Monday Con- test Certain Women’s D-Ball ~ Meet to Be Held First Missouri Slope Tourney Will Take Place Aug. 15 in City EXPECT OVER 20 ENTRIES Will Be Played on New Field; Must Enter by Aug. 11 at 6P.M. Greased Beauty Tommy O’Leary Makes Hole-in-1 It runs in the family. Freckle-faced, 11-year-old Tommy O'Leary, son of Tom O'Leary, veteran pro at the muni- cipal golf course, scored @ hole- in-one on the 135-yard ninth hole of the municipal layout Wednes- day morning. if Young O'Leary wasn’t playing in any foursome, but two caddies standing by the green saw the ball trickle into the cup. He used a No. 5 iron, ‘The elder O'Leary made the third hole-in-one of his golfing career on the same hole . this Service Electric walloped Hi-Hat 15-8, 57-Taxi beat the Sweet Shop 12-9, and Blackstone downed the Elks 9-5 in Commercial epardhgecaay ball games Wednesday Carlisle, on the mound for Service Electric in the first contest, held the Hi-Hat to 3 hits for North Dakota's entrant in the re- gional semi-pro playoff, Northgate, and Lead, 8. D., were to meet in Lead Thursday in the second game of their five-game series to determine the regional ‘winner and the sister Missouri Slope women’s softball tour- nament in Bismarck Sunday, Aug. 15. The tournament is being sponsored by the Bismarck Women’s Softball association and the Burleigh County four tries for the best plate perform- states’ sepeneeniaave it the national ering, ‘ance of any of the three contests, WPA recreation department. ies penis e ” : Sp eaer : bls ag Pectin ‘The summaries: Count clul HE 8) it by the vermont eto ceo | Cist"Z sn atin a ie PUES ere ee fee having annexed an 8-2 victory in the| Salem 5 years ago. 33 123 the association committee by Aug. series opener at Watertown ‘Tuesday.| Young Tom, brother of one 20 11 at 6 p.m. Friday the two teams will be ou| state golf champion and cousin of ae sent ‘All games will be played on the the road trom Lead to ‘ another, shoots between 90 and 3 i bis new 4-diamond field north of Hugher Saturday night Bismarck . Zand fe the pe Se gabe ee ) Williams Declares | ti le — ry | Peet will be played at 6:15 p. m. ia Totals 33:12 7 H t 0 P Relati vy t | sunday su raaname zt oy +3! Defender Victory tage, TMH oe Rese | m. 315, H P ithe series is’ a besi 3-out-of-5 2 wei 7 una a H ‘Alssandris, Va—Chas, (obo) x! 5 - cruz but ine tus name bare sere! “Seems Inevitable Teeatia out Sat ib ee teeta ext Gy runs—Griffin, Care rick, Smith; left on base—57-Taxi 4, Sweet ac 3; hits off Smith in innings, off Griffin 6 in 7 innin, struck out by Smith 0, by Griffin ¢: off Smith 1, off Grittin 3; winnin pitcher—Griffin; losing pitcher—Smith; mo! Freddie Steele in Washington, has come to the conclusion that what's his is his'n. No more sup- porting poor relations for the Hobo. “Hobo took a sizeable chunk of his Steele fight purse,” said Manager Harry Groves, “and bought his father a truck. That's the end. Hobo's been giving relations all he makes, From now on he keeps it all.” Lew Fonseca, former major league star and now baseball movie director, says the New York Yankees are the greatest team he has ever seen. of the support Bismrack is to play out the entire 5 games in view Preparing to give them. British Challenger’s Cause Held Hopeless as 4th Yacht Race Begins eit | 3 HE where played—Dia- No. 2; date—Aug. 4, 1937. Um- Ray Lenihan. Scorer: Bob u ag e iy Hi-Hat Mann’ vening, Bismarck fans have been urged to decorate cars and join the parade, and also to support the three-game championship series with their pres- cup races of 1937 may as well be written into the record books now as another tri- umph for the United States’ defender. Endeavour II, seventh chalk Watts Iss Vanderbilt's thrice-victorious Burck’t r 3 OrMrsesneee oi Hewoumonnnd (By the Associated Press) | Hoonnoccoott Ranger with no one willing to wager Tow Patty Berg Reaches [norm or srecias EXECUTION NATIONAL LEAGUE a Chinese copper that T. 0. M. Totals 34 11 15 = is sate fi et| wits Bl Bop coud take ihe four| stray UNH, 4, Be Gopher Quarter-tinelt) sores 9 <a Sar Bs! b: oF forecl ‘e and sale ente: the 22nd day of July, A. D. 1937, tion in the District Court of Bur- County, Fourth Judicial District State of North Dakota, where- id Bank of Saint Corporate, is Plaintiff, Nords straight victories now necessary to| Hi-Hat 040 000 4— 8 aan Garner arene "a Rete Ban Even those who thought Sopwith|Garske, Manning 2B. Reft 2, A. 438 | might win "Thursday coneesed thls | PASE irefash ieee, belief was predicated more upon sym-| Hat 5, Service Electric 4; double plays Bee ar talEe ee eek eins |Hagclimen cal ince” teins ett cats than upon faith in Endeavour's ability | tisie 4 in 7 innings; struck’ oot by bat Salone the fleet Ranger ore ee Hy Felman Ae Castt ba: 2 aisneeiar pores outls: winning’ pitenerC Bien ei sm on in Peat | tnownoconed . SSsassase on quarter finalists determined in Wed-|Undersiened, | Sheriff of | Bur nesday's 18-hole Tas Aneel ores Dublio aber aes front door of gig aetlip l Meg S hy M day, thet certain Rail Magnate Tells of Political Contributions kota, wi yed- 5 jate—Aug. 4, ppointed, will sell at Flaig: Scorer: J, B British hopes or whet the appetites of the betting gentry. Budweiser, Molly’s SSSseseu.N sessesser Baee? skessEee? e: 10 cularly described si The North Binlf of the Sect Halt (26), orp rrts owott enwoscooHnll go. Sees 55 A —— (N%4N%) of Section Twenty-six their qualifying rounds in the 1éth| YANK PITCHER’S EAR HURT ar Service Station Win Washington, Aug, 5—5—Robert R.| Township One Hundred Forty-one annual Resorters’ golf tournament| New York, Aug. 4.—(?)—Pat Ma- 47 —— ‘Young, who recentiy bought control | {7' wa ‘the. Fite Principal Mesias lone, veteran pitcher of the New 48 Budweiser downed Morley Electric of the vast Van Sweringen railway |containing One Hundred Sixty (160) York Yankees, was rushed to a hos- 50 6 straight games and Molly's Service empire, told senate investigators that Acres, more or less, according to the Louis.—Dizzy Dean still feels | pital (St. Elizabeth) with a iacerated 54 510! station defeated the Lucas Oil com-| Elks he contributed $15,000 to the Demo-|Tauch therot earyety Beeres OF, 8 the effects of Earl Averill’s drive that | right ear Wednesday after being hit 54 486 pany 4 games to 2 in the city horse- 7 D cratic national committee “entirely ald judgment and bounded off his left foot in the all-| by a batted ball during practice pre- 64 396 | shoe league Tuesday night. . ; home | out of my own personal funds.” in “ail to the sum of star game. Dean limps so perceptibly | ceding the game with the Chicago 4 390! Welliver of Budweiser was t on base—Elks Zee donation, he testified, had “no | $1528.68, St abiataeereae, tpereon, from that he is being called “Peg-leg.” White Sox. e ieee PTE aermsl 11! connection” with ‘business he had|cruing costs of sale Ee pet struck out by F. Humm 2, by Brooke peoaing befort several federal agen-| Dated July ae re Anstrom, on off F, Hummel 2, off 5 : it : = TWIN WIN OVER TRIBE PULLS i 3 Bese Ban EO ate me ne mmm rn |,, , BMG Re core 2 ee entre aea aig “ANC: | way commitice that two solicitors for Geo, F. Shafer, ns) RED SOX CLOSE TO 2ND PLACE) ===. sf ana SR aie ao aver PEP Bee Jamestown: “a ATL hi ————— Superior ... 37 4648 CROWLEY VACATIONING Citation Hearing Petition For Letters Winnj . 38 40437 Escanabe, Mich—Jimmy Crowley, | ssiq “want tions f Adminti Bae ‘ 4 -| the ninth broke up the game and gave Weibel, 336 3m Fordham football coach, is vacation- they * eg one cal STATE or NORTH DAHOTA, Coun- Slipping Chicago's 1Jthe yanks a.10-9 win, thelr third Alleghany and Chesapeake corpora-|+,"or Burleigh ss 5 a win, ing here at the home of his wife’s!tions” the system's chief holding | °33° COUNTY'COURT, Before Hon. L Game: Giants Cut Cubs’ | crates: tovsed the’ Yanks ieagwe| Colts Play Regardless ye __, |companies CPT eaNeE ean maeta of Un ° Cary “I refused to give it to them,” Young in the er of the Estate o: re Lead to 6 lead to eight full games. | Of Franchise Decision | Fights Last Night | deciared,, stressing his _ contention Gnaries Dares their aS3 ——<——$ ____ 5 no violat Petitioner, League deficit to six games back of 5 — — The A : fireap orang actors Bar teeta polis, Aug. 5. — () — Th (By the Associated Pree) | Corrupt practices act Mary Jensen, Ole’ J. Dahl, Charles ‘That big money that Tom Yawkey |The Cubs lost # 2-1 heartbreaker Lge org meg yer FCA Will Be Lenient arn of thas Dann ay, Bec threw inte, the Betton ted aoity | Letty Lamaster and the Phillies, mo i 4 enien to-wit, Leonard Lee, “Sienty ‘Lee. Georgia, ° ey 5 The Dodgérs pummeled the Pirates, TA ante ana Detrolt—Roscce Toles, 194, Ve- With Debtors in N. D. Tes; anautinin Hedys sere In fect, it’s shouting so Ioud it's] 10-7, he Cardinals put on e ninth-| day when ney, temumphed over te| ‘Teens victory was re- | trolt, and Arture Godoy, of Chile, —_ J.B French, = 1 pace-settlers second ” P— dente. diaciiad tices ete Seat eae 7-6. The Tigers walloped the Ath-' day, 5-1. Ported in Wednesday's Tribune. Sone): :, Willtston, ee of North Dakota to the How long it can continue remains to be seen, but if past performances are any indication, the Sox will keep on surging until their series next week with the New York Yankee slaughter- ers, who are now coasting along on an eight-game. lead. Then they'll go quietly back to sleep for a time, usual. ‘WEDNESDAY’S STARS Johnny Moore, Phillies—Hit homer for winning run to beat Cubs 3-1. Jake Powell and Bill Dickey, Yankees—Former’s single in ninth with bases full drove in winning run to whip White Sox 10-9; Dickey hit homer with bases loaded, his second in two days. Frankie Frisch and Ducky Med- wick, Cardinals — Frisch’s single in 9th with bases loaded sent across tying runs in 7-6’ win over Bees; Medwick hit four doubles. Buddy Hassett, Dodgers — Hit homer and double, driving in four runs in 11-7 win over Athletics. Jimmy Foxx and Joe Cronin, Red Sox—Foxx hit homer in each game and Cronin drove in three runs with double and triple in nightcap in doubleheader win over Indians. Harry Gumbert, Giants — Fan- ned four and allowed seven hits to beat Reds 4-3. Harry Davis, Browns—His triple He bases loaded beat Senators They started out their successful current home stand by topping the Browns in two out of three. Then they knocked the ears off the Tigers in three games and tied a fourth. At present they’re working on the Indians with the same success. They made it three straight over the Tribe Wednes- day with a doubleheader win, 8-6 and 6-5, as Foxx belted homers No. 27 and 23. Trail Sox 1 Game This twin win left them just a game back of the second-place White Sox, who learned first-hand again from the homer specialists, the Yanks, that there's no comeback for a circuit clout. Bill Dickey belted one with the bases loaded and Lou Gehrig hammered his letics, 11-7, and the Browns beat the Senators, 5-3. NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Nose Out Reds New York....... ott,| for the Jamestown baseball club be- Fitzsimmons, Henshaw, and Phelps; Brandt, Bowman, Wea- ver, Bauers, Tobin, Swift and Todd. Phillies Lindsey R Philadelphia ...010 100 000— 2 11 Chicago ........000 001 000—1 7 LaMaster and Atwood; French and Hartnett, Bottarni. Boston ... St. Louis. Fette, Bush and Mueller; Weiland, Harrell, Blake, Ryba and Owen. AMERICAN LEAGUE Yanks Eke Out Win Kennedy, Brown and Sewell; Pear- son, Hadley, Wicker, Murphy and Dickey. Wyatt, 5 Ostermueller and Desautels. Tigers Wallop A’s At [Wednesday morning. Washington, Usher Burdick, Williston, N. D., said We the Farm Credit Admini- Crookston finally broke through ednesday stration assured him it would show med Responden with a victory over Eau Olaire, 4-2, 0! ‘You and eacl you a hereb; cited and required to a) 4 ear before and the two clubs are now tied for as much leniency as possible to FCA|{e County Court of the County of third place. In other games, James- EDDIE BRIET. Zz e e e debtors in North Dakota areas faced| of ies tonnes judge ef sald Count, town selene Superior, ae x ie with crop loss. Ou ae ge ere ie the cy of Bis- ; in sal 1 E 6-4, Baseball Scribes Are Rated ; an anne eure Sane pile the 25th day of August A\D> 1997, at the hour of ten o'clock in the fore- noon of that day, to show cause, if any you have, why Chas, T. Sta! of the City of Bismarck, Burleigh Coun- ty, North Dakota, should a Pointed administrator of the estate of Lars J. Dahl, deceased, late of the City of Volga, County of Brookings and State of South Dakota, and that said Lars J. Dahl was at the time of his death a resident of the City of Volga. County of Brookings, State of South Dakota. Let service be made of this citation as required by law. igppted this ard day of August A. D. “I have given up all responsibility Homeliest Sports Writers consideration will be given as war- ranted by the FCA. ‘The farm credit adminstration’s announcement followed an appeal for help received by Burdick Wednesday from individuals and organizations at Leeds, N. D. The curriculum of the Topeka senior high school includes a course in the history of living religions. ee cause of the lack of support by the fans,” A. J. Breitbach, manager of the Jamestown team had announced “I feel that it is impossible for me to give it further financial support and have informed Herman White, ‘ THE RING, SPORTING By the Court: St. Paul Team Wins _ HEADQUARTERS, ON FIFTH | “"*” 1c parien Gopher Legion Title STREET is air-conditioned. |osanv, G83 foit* County court. —— if will enjoy the good food Attorneys for the Peiitioner, surroundings. Bist ae 3 performance and except for an error, preceded by two walks and a hit man in the fourth inning had a shutout. The St. Paul team We take this means of saying “Thank you” for visit- ing the new Blackstone Club during our opening at our new quarters, We appreciate your coming. We're glad you liked it. We hope you come again and come often. F. L. Loomis, V. E. Kielty, Props. THE NEW 5 Blackstone Club | 520 5th St. i f E " weight, who E 13 Hildebrand Hemsley; DeShong, ‘23rd before a single by Jake Powell in| Cohen and Millies. \, I

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