The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 12, 1917, 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)

sea scoop STOCKIN THE CUB REPORTER THE NEW BATHING SUIT LAW IS INTERESTING - SAYS LADIES’ BLOUSE AND BLOOMERS MAY BE |} 7 WORN WITH OR WITH OUT - CLOSE FITTIN’ARM -OR ITS KNITS Y 4 } < COMPLY ING WITH TH’ ANS ONE PIECE UITS MAY BE WORN -AND IT SAYS (0ST GIRLS ARE GoiNG— VO TH’ KNIT suits! SHSHTOOPISHEOOOSD % AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, a SHEHOT OTH OSCOCO OOS Club— I. Indianapolis St. Paul .. Columbus . Minneapolis Toledo Milwaukee GAMES WEDNESDAY. Indianapolis, 4-7; Columbus, Toledo, 8-1; Louisville, 2-6. | Kansas City at Milwaukee—rain. St. Paul at Minneapolis—not sched- uled. . GAMES FRIDAY. Milwaukee at Toledo. Kansas City at Columbus. Minneapolis at Louisville. St. Paul at Indianapolis. HOF 999999099000 oe AMERICAN LEAGUE. Og ORPESTCESHSEOOCOCOO OE Club— W. Le Pet. Boston .........+ seen AT 28 6287 Chicago .. 48 29 623 Cleveland . c New York 34 Detroit. . 7 39 Washington . 2 42 St: Louis! | 4.658049 Philadelphia 27 46 GAMES WEDNESDAY. Washington at Cleveland. Club— RHE. Cleveland 3.62 Washington ..., ede 30. Batteries—Covaleskie and O'Neill; Gallia, Shaw and Ainsmith. Boston at Detroit. Club— R.H. EB. Detroit 01.0 Boston ... irseeyete ol kU iad Batteries—Dauss and: Stanage; Ruth and Thomas, Agnew. Philadelphia at St. Louis, Club— R.H.E St. Louis... ~510 1 Philadelphia . 13.15 1 ‘Batteries—Koob, Wright, Molineaux, Martin, Hail, Park and Severeid; Mey- ers, Seibold and Chance. GAMES FRIDAY. Washington at Cleveland. Philadelphia at St. Louis. New York at Chicago. Boston at Detroit. OOO PEE EDGE EOD OD oy NATIONAL LEAGUE. o SCHOHOOHOHEH OOOO OO Club— Ww I. New York ...... 23 Philadelphia 38° 30 Chicago 43°37 St. Louis . 40° 35 Cincinnati 42° 40 Brooklyn . 38. Pittsburgh 8 39 ALS Boston . 40 412 GAMES WEDNESDAY. All games postponed because of rain. GAMES FRIDAY. Pittsburgh at ‘Brooklyn. Cincinnati at (New York, Chicago at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Boston, NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE BY ADVERTISE. MENT. The notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage, made, execut- ed and delivered by Simon Harris, a widower, mortgagor, to Alonzo Thompson, mortgagee, dated the 7th day of November, 1908, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Eurleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 1ith day of November, 1908, and re- corded in book 27 of mortgages, at page 288, and assigned by the execu- tor of the estate of said Alonzo ‘Thompson, deceased, to Hattie I. Lind- ley, which assignment is recorded in book 33 of mortgages, at page 2369, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- inafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 10 o’ciock, a. m., on the 11th day of August, 1917, to sat- isfy the amount due upon such mort- gage on the day of sale. The premises described in said mortgage, and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are described as follows: The North Half (N 1-2) of Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4), ana Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of Northwest Quarter (NW 1-4) of Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4), and Southeast Quarter (SE 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of Sec- tinn Twenty-nine (29), Township One Hundres and Thirty-nine (139), Range the the the the the the B PAUL PURMAN. - Three managers in, four days, that’s an all-time baseball. record. oa of, baseball clubs © are; i, credited with records in the te Hooks, ‘but this record must be credited to Earney Dreyfuss, presi- dent of the Pittsburg Pirates. In four days Dreyfuss had three club, The first was Jim Callahat who began the season with the P rates; the second, Honus Wagnet who threw up the job in two days, and the third, Hugo Bezdek, who d serves credit for his nerve, if for nothing else. Bezdek's appointment is more or less of an experiment. Practically unknown to the baseball world, it is a question whether the former Chi- cago athlete will be able to accom- plish what a smart ball player like Callahan failed to achieve and the wily and ancient Honus did not care to attempt. Jezdek has been with the Pirates as a coach ‘and scout. 3 Hugo Bezdek, Jim: managers in turn piloting his ball! His earlier| Three Managers in Four Days VALLAHAN. WAGNER, BEZDEK—THAT‘S NEW RECORD ESTABLISED ay DREYFUSS allahan, loft; and activities have been generally Viit- ed ‘to college athletics, foothall main- ly. In faethe never played profes- sional baseball. The only other man- j agers who come to mind who have not been players are Bill Armour and Branch Rickey. | Football fans will remember Bez- dek as the dazzling ‘gridiron star of the Maroons in the early years of this century. His last game was the mem- jorable 2 to 0 defeat of Michigan by He has since coached college teams, having been with the Oregon univer-} sity, coast champions last year. Jim Callahan is a smart manager. | His failure at Pittsburg cannot be; j any more ascribed to his deficiencies) {than to the failure of Dreyfuss to end money for good ball players, instead of the bush leaguers he has} ‘been trying to keep-in the race with. | \ | Callahan has one great fault. He_ ‘is inclined tobe ,upstage and in, this | fails to gain. the confidenop ot his ball players. kd This probably was the cause of his Hans Wagner. failure with the Chicago White Sox when he had unlimited money to spend and built ‘ur the wonderful pitching staff, which’ included Eddie Cicotte, Mel:; Wolfgang,,,Ked Faber, Reb Russell and Jim Scott, and which added-Ray Schalk and “Happy Felsch to the club. Callahan tried hard at Pittsburg. He had every possible expedient to get a winning club, but he couldn’t win with the misiits Dreyfuss wished on him. Wagner's case is different. In the first place he didn’t want to play ball this year, He has plenty of money and didn’t care to take the trouble to get in shape. His decision to play was merely'a concession to his friend- ship for Dreyfus Wagner is popular in Pittsburg. By becoming manager of a tail-end clu» he realel that he might forfeit his popularity, a sacrifice that even his friendship for Dreyfuss would not counterbalance. Right now, it looks as though Bez dek has a thankless job before him. Eighty ($0), West of the 5th P. M., Burleigh County, North Dakota. There will be due on such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty- eight Dollars and Seventy-one cents ($1,258.71), besides costs and attor- ney's fees. Dated this 30th day of June, A. D. 1917. HATTIE I. LINDLEY, Assignee of Mortgagee. THEODORE KOFFEL, Attorney For Assignee of Mort- gage Bismarck, North Dakota. (7—5, 12, 19, 26; 8—2, 9) SUMMONS. State of North Dakota, county of leigh. In district court, Sixth ju- dicial district. B. F. Tillotson, as administrator, with the will annexed of the estate of Nina Downey, deceased, vs. Alexander McKenzie and all other per- sons unknown claiming any estate or interest in, or lien or incum- brance upon the property described in the complaint, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Defendants: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this action, which is filed in the office of the clerk of this court, at the court house, in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh county, North Dakota, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscribers within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service; and in case of your failure to appear or answer judg-| ment will be taken against you by de-| fault for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated June 13, 1917. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLUTSON, Attorneys for Plaintiff Office and post office address: Bis- marck, North Dakota. Notice to'Said Defendants...» Please take notice that the “above Plaintift | 7 action relates to, and the object there- of is to quiet title in the estate of Nina Downey, deceased, to the following described real property, to-wit: Lot six (6) and the north ten feet of lot seven (7), in block eighty-nine (89), | McKenzie & Coffin’s addition to the city of Bismarck, Burleigh county, North Dakota; and that no personal claim is made against you or any of you in said action. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON, 6-14-21-28 : 7-5-12-19 Attorneys for Plaintiff NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. The Board of Education of Haynes | Special School District No. 21, Ad- {ams County, N. Dak., will rec posals until 8 o'clock p. m., 1917 A. D., for the ereétion and com- ; Pletion of a brick and concrete two- story school building at Haynes, -N. Dak. Each contractor shall furnish with-his bid a certified check to the amount of 5 per cent of his bid. Also, will be required to furnish a bond of 50 per cent of the amount of the con-| tract. Plans and specifications may be called for at the clerk's office at Haynes, N. D., or at the Architect's | office, J. T. Levesque & Co. Great! Falls, Mont. By the order of the Board of FE: cation of Haynes Special School Di: trict No. 21. J. C..STENNES, Clerk. AUTOISTS TAKE NOTICE! East bound and west bound traffic always has the right of way on Bis- }Marck streets. Automobilists travel- ing north or south must observe this Tule in order to avoid accident. Signed: CHRIS MARTINESON, Chief of Police. NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF THE! BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY. TAKE NOTICE, That on the Ist day of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota, the matter of the application of C. B. Little, Receiver of the Bis- marck Tribune Company, a corpora- tion, for a confirmation by the Court of said Receiver’s report of distribu- tion of the assets of said corporation, which is on file dn the office of the clerk of the District Court of Bur- leigh County, at Bismarck, North Da- kota, and for a discharge of said Re- ceiver, and the release of his sure- ties from further liability on the Re- ceiver’s bond heretofore filed, will come on before the court, and at said time and place the Court will hear and determine any and all objections to such confirmation and discharge that 1 be y ented by parties in- terested in said action or other per- sons entitled lo object thereto. C. B. LITTLE, Receiver of. the Bismarck Tribune Company, a corporation. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON,, for said perceives Prevecvrewerreerettrrers + BOOST FOR. LIBERTY * : There’s a place | somewhere in & the big league for that young fellow, MacKenney, who struck out 25 men the other day at Liberty, Mo., and alowed only one hit. Watch the scouts flock z down to foe ; Where Bluebirds Are Found. During the nesting season the blue- bird may be found in the United States (y to Arizona, Colorado; yoming and Montane), southern Canada, * Mexico. and Guatémala;, in the winter in the southern half of the eastern United ital and south of August, A. D. 1917, at 10. o'clock 7" M., at the court house in the City to Guatemala, a ANNIVERSARY OF BIG RUST SCARE SEES STATE FREE kes Not Single Case of Plague Re- ported to Date to Commis- sioner of Agriculture Just a year:ago: North Dakota was beginning to. awake to the dangers of rust in its wheat fields. To date not .a single case of rust has been reported in 1917, Wheat may be short, backward,. light in thé head and everything else that wheat has a habit of being, but it is not rusty. Whether freedom from rust is due to a difference in atmospheric duties, or whether Professor Bolley of the agricultural college was right in as- cribing this plague to the barberry bush, which has been banned through statutory enactment, the one consol- ing certainty is that rust has not proven a repeater. State Commissioner of Agticulture |; and Labor Hagan has had special bar- berry agents engaged in the exterm- ination of the bush since early spring. They have scoured the state over and it is. doubtful whether a. single Dbar- berry hedge remains zn North Dakow. Many fine lawn decorations have been sacrificed, but the people have done it gladly. this week. . are in Jamestown attending the North ‘church now being held’ there. uty Sheriff Paul Mueller weré o_o MANDAN NEWS | -U Rev. Frank Bell of Menominie, Wis., will deliver a iecture on Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock, at the Har- mon hall. Rev. R. R. Hedtke will also deliver ay address in the interest of organizing a Sunday school at Harmon. Mrs. R. 1. Mackin and daughter, Dorothy, left this afternoon for Ha- zen, where they will spend a few days visiting with the former's aunt, Mrs. Gus Daffinrude. Chas. Keidle of Gillette, Wyo., ar- rived in the city yesterday and is visiting with relatives and friends for a few days. Trainmaster John Wynn is in Man- dan, looking after official business matters. He will return home to Dickinson tomorrow afternoon. Chas. Blei¢k, ‘state railroad com- missioner, was in Mandan yesterday, looking after business affairs. ‘Mrs. W. E. Kellogg of this city is visiting at the Potter home at Breien Mrs. J. W. Golden of Sweet Briar in Mandan yesterday on busi- Rev. F. W. Thompson and family Dakota meeting of the Presbyterian Lucille Chase of Breien was in Man- dan yesterday afternoon on business. Mrs. Melarkie is visiting with relly of the state. States Al y. = ates Attorney Connolly. Sy New | satem on Tuesday afternoon on busi- ness. ‘Mrs. Gilbert Ashworth returned yes- terday afternoon, from Hazen, where she had been visiting for a few days. Mrs. Joseph \Williams is in James- town, attending the summer. meeting and lectures at the Presbyterian col- lege.’ She expects to be away about two weeks. Mrs. B. W. Shaw left yesterday morning for Jamestown, where: she will attend the summer session now being held at St. John’s college at Jamestown. Miss Mildred Farr is visiting at the Wachter home in Bismarck for a few days. Old Consignment of Beer.at. Last Finds Its'Way Back Home Hazelton,,N. D., July 12.—The com- paratively at amount of liquor) which remained in station or express agents’ hands unclaimed when the hone dry law took effect at midnight July 1 has been returned by the car- riers to the consigners. With it went one historic shipment which had been in the Northern Pacific warehouse since the winter of 1914. It was froz- en in transit. The consignee refused to accept it, and the consigner’ re- fused to pay for its return transporta- tion, soit remained in the freight house, ageing in the wood, until this week, when it: went back, along: with D- j other. consignments which did’ not make home.::! ros! way. N LMdlyyys “iyy lly <2 Mother Nature of it make VEL For VELVET is matured by two full years of ageing in Nature’s way. The result is that mellow, aged-in-the- wood smoothness that no other smok- ing tobacco possesses. You can’t get that smoothness in any other Lagett Myers Felacce Co 10c Tins Sc Metal-lined Bags One Pound Glase Humidors “ld yy yy Udy a iti made diamonds out of carbon. But pshaw!- Look what their method does with tobacco. Two years and Father Time VET. appt we

Other pages from this issue: