The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 27, 1923, Page 6

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WILBE Presonting three baseball Beau Brum: the early nineties, Wilbert-Robertson, Hughey — Jenn- ings id Kid Gleason The pictures were snapped waen Vincent Ri ROBINSON, HUGHEY JENNINGS, the three star players were members o » Baltimore Orioles Nhe noted that the athlete right out in style in those days, wearing: tue dress suit as com- fortable the eball id the ichards’ Dope on Tennis Runs True | To Form; Makes Good His Expert Opinion By Defeating Tilden’ By Billy Evans | Eastern experts seem satisfied taat Vincent Richard. famous tennis] Tilden will be as good as ever in- Rinne cseateatl 1928 in” chamlon) hs ita.ofs three smonthe) They. istet Renate te one of Hill Tilden’s | that his play has lost none of its ous rivals, He looms up | brillianey, and the master mind, of us one of the select few who have a] course, is still there. counce of dethroning tue titleholder, Recently, in an article in which he discussed 'Vilden's future, Richards emphasized the faet that Tilden would suffer a setback ‘before ae regained oldtime form, Tilden recently nee of the ear in New! York the first opportunity castern tennis experts had of ue up the champion’s game since he sustained the injury that necessitated the amputation of the end of the middle finger of nis racquet hand Tilden Decisively Defeated Iden made his: metropolitan de- 1923 pitted against Vincent in an exhibition indoor match, Richards won in two straight great in victory great in defeat. All of which proves that Richards sized up the situation pretty’ well, in a recent signed article, when he told tae world that before the sum- m over Tilden would again prove his mastery of the court Richards. howe predic feat for Tilden in his early It is a rather str that he also stated that he to make all kinds of troub champion, and would be much dis appointed if he didn’t seore victories before the close of the year. he decisive defeat of ‘Tilden by Richards in tae first clash of the year on the indoor courts at New k mukes Richards stand out as prominently as a writer on tennis us a player. His tennis dope cer tainly has run true to form. Long Shots In High Basketba long been a theory in bas- taat a quintet depends on It ha ketiiall team play and combination work to ¢ the ball down the floor for a close shot at the ¢: will con- sistently beat an out that over- looks the passing end of the game to & certain extent, and resorts m ly to long tosses for its points. taeory f course, still holds true. That's easy to be seen. It couldn't be otherwise. For it’s far ier to drop the ball through the oop at close range than it fs from a dista In the latter instance the element of luck plays too big a part Howe old. theory doesn’t ys. Simply be- end of play has and the guard- cau ing has become so close that it is wel] nigh impossible to pass the ball down order to obtain a » meshwork. Get- down underneath the sket is almost out of the question Favor With Big Ten ll Teams Consider thé recent Western Con- above figures go to prove that under the present rules the guarding. is’ so close and the players “cover up” so well that “distant” tosses are to a great extent the only alternatives, And as in the IMoosier-Sugker em- broglio, when but’ six goals out of © made, the ually results dis- astrously There thought in this angle of the pastime. seems to be much food for Loss of Miller Fails to Stop Michigan Five By NEA SERVICE Wien Bill forward of the Michigan quintet, ntly declared ineligible, it ught that the Wolverines had a great deal of their scoring For Miller was not only a “clever basket shooter but also ked as one of the best free throw tists in the Big Ten. But while Miller's absence is of course felt, still in Captain Gilbert Ely, center, Coach Mather has found a worthy successor to his star for- ward. In fact the elongated pivot man has far exceeded expectations, and has stepped into Miller's shoes in stellar style. In the recent games with M@nne- séta and Wisconsin, Ely alone was responsible for 37 of his team’s 49 “pints, storing 26 of the 34 mark- ers made against.the Gophers and 11 of the 15 accrued in tae Badger clash. All told, Ely droppéd in 10 field goals, and made good on 17 in 28 foul tosses. His feat of counting 26 points in a single fray is but oné behind the season’s Western Confer- ence record hung up by Miller a short time ago. Ely along with Gibson sof Wis- consin, easly stands as the pre- mier center in the Big Ten, and when pitted against the Cardinal star recently, outplayed him’ by a goodly margi é lost pow Grid Stars Shine In Basketball For Wisconsin By NEA Service Madison, 7) Feb. 27.—"The nd Williams has of tie ling feature. Purdu ly the B Champion Lynch Prepares For All Contenders Pema, JOE LYNCH, ON HIS TRUSTY STEED. “PEE WEE” KAISER. Shadows of Carl Tremaine and best defensive combination’ in the Western Conference,” is what fol- lowers of the University of Wiscon- sin basketball team are calling Captain Gus Tebell and Hollie Williams, stellar guards on this year's quintet. ind frankly, they stack up. just bout that way. In fact much of the Badgers’ success, on the eourts tas been due to the great defensive _ play of this pair. They are veritabic bulwarks st the guarding end of ‘the pastime. ead In practically every game Wie- hes played to date, the work Johnny Curtin are haunting Cham- pion Bantamweight Joe Lynch. Lynch shortly will be called upon to meet the winner of the Tre- mainé-Curtin bout. Tremaine be- of a previous’ victory over Cyrtin is the favorite. ‘or a year Lynch had dodged the Tremaine issue. A victory over Cur- tin’ will insure Tremaine a champion- ) ship bout. Lynch is now at Hot Springs, Ark., rounding into ‘sl He is shown playing horse -with “Pee Wee” Kaiser, who is also a bantam of note. ference game between Indiana’ and Illinois, which the former won, 31 to 24. In that fr the two factions , combined had exactly 131 shots at the hoop, of which only 23 resulted in goals. And of the 131 fttempts but 28 of them were close shots, and 22 medium heaves. No less than long tosses were tried. All told, 23 field baskets were scored with coming on shots from near the cage, four on medium throws, and six on “Long Toms.” Obviously short .shots always re- turn the largest rew but the KID GLEASON m. ently an old-timer said tae Orioles rented the dress suit for the occasion and all the athletes wore the same coat in posing for the pic- ture, | unifor R were held to but three field baskets, | though winning the tilt on free throws. In the clash with Michigan, the supposedly wonderful scoring prowess of that team fell down completely when pitted against the Badger defens: The Wolverines did well to count four times from | the floor. And it has been a great deal the same in other frays in which the Cardinals have participated. Oppos- ing teams have found the Wisconsin defense, composed of Tebell and Williams, well nigh impregnable, Tebell and Williams are both foot- ball men, having gained fame the 1922 Badger eleven which met with but one defeat LEAGUE TEAMS GOING SOUTH FOR TRAINING Twirlers Will Shed Excess Poundage During Next Six Weeks New York, Feb, 27.—Heralding the approach of spring and. anoth- er diamond campaign, advance car- avans of nearly all of the sixteen major league baseball clubs now {2re on their way south for the an- nual conditioning process. ‘Train- {ing camps. ‘scattered in lands of the palmetto and cactus from Flor- ida to Catalina Island, Calif., will be in full swing for all of - the clubs by the second week of | Marth. . For the veterans, the next six weeks’ or so of conditioning and exhition pastiming will mean shedding excess poundage acquir- ed during the winter lay-off and limberihg up for competition with eager and ambitious recruits, hun- in their careers, This rivalry for regular berths promises to be especially keen among several clubs going through a marked process of reorganiza- tion. including the Cleveland and Boston Americans, and the Bronk- Ivn. Chicago and St. Louis Na- tionals. Interest ameng fans is centered largely in the prospects of the New York Giants and Yenkees re- peating their triumphs of the past two seasons in the face of increas- ing streaigth among several of their more dangerous rivals. While they are not discountin the opposition they will enccunter this vear, Managers McGraw, of the Giants, and Huggins. of the Yankees, are confident their team: will keep the National and An can League pennants inthe same city for the third straight year. Both pilots declare their teams |will be decidedly stronger, al. though they plan relatively littl {vebuilding. The Pittsburgh Pi | rates, in. McGraw's opinion, loom as the club the Giants must’ eli- minate te stay at the top of the heap, while the Yankee leader ex- pects his strongest battle from Ty Cobb’s Detroit Tigers. Cincinnati, in the National, and St, Louis, in the American, are picked as the next strongest contenders by the metropolitan club managers. McGraw has announced that he will stand pat on his 1922 cham- vionship line-up, with the possible exception of centerfield, devcting most of his attention to bolstering weaknesses in the pitching staff which nearly cost the club the pen- nant last season. Jimmy O’Con- nell, $75,000 “phenom” from San Francisco, is expected to fill’the berth in midfield, but McGraw will give the veteran Casey Stengel, whose come-back was a sensaticn last year. and Bill Cunningham an opportunity to contest for the job with the coast younster. Jack Bentley, another exnensive acquisition, is expected to add con- siderable strength to the p:tching corps, Bentiey starred beth as a portside flinger and slugger with the Baltimore Orioles for several Giant leadet-has a dozen or more reeruits from whom he hones to weed out another twirling star. He also looks for.» decitiéd —improve- ment from his _veteratis—Hu McQuillan, Jeck Seott, Art. Nel and Jess Barnes—besides greater effactiveness from youngey moundsmen like Bll Ryan, Claude Jonnard and e8.. Pittsbur; hitting. aggragation, in McGraw’s belief, will pres ve @ formidable ob- stacle, under the'léadarship of Bill on} dreds of whom will strive for big} ; league positions for the first time| the county of Burleigh and state of | a veteran and hard- Hi heim around mid-season last |and developed the club into a dan- gerous contender in the | McKechnie, who took the Pirate year closing | month of the campaign. N ! Cincinnati, reorganized with a brilliant young infield and gocd pitching, also figures strongly in | McGraw’s calculations, while the | | Chicago Cubs, with. a pitching staff | jabove the - ordinary, promise to} , bear watching. i | Huggins bases much of his con. | |fidence in 1923 prospects upon his | i } {belief that the Yankee pitching | staff, the deciding factor in last | year’s race, will be even more con- | sistent this year and that Babe! | Ruth, if he returns tc. 1921 form, | |will bolster the morale and at-| j tacking sstrength of the club. | The diminutive pilot figures Car! | | Mays and Sam Jones, whose piteh. | ing was a disappointment last sea- | ; | 8on, w.ll flash old-time form, while Bob Shawkey and Joe Bush, 1922 : ; mainstays, will be more effective | jthan ever. Ruth’s determination jto regain the home-run_ hitting | [laurels he lost last year has been| }demcnstrated by the strict pro- |gram of conditioning to which he | jadhered during the winter on his | Massachusetts farm. ‘ | The Tigers, formidable last sea-T | son, will be much_ stronger, ac-| cording to the Yankee view, as a} ay : Baule of the acquisition of Del! i Pratt, veteran sec $ | ils,” : land lip Collins, SODA | Leading the advance of the Frnech’ military fore es into the ‘Ruhr are the famous “Re Devils,” the ‘from the Red Sex ifi exchange for! picturesque segiments recruited in thé Vosges. Here they are shown entering Recklinghausen, the point |Howard Ehmke, pitcher. Cobb has} of France's deepest penetration into the German ind ustrial region. ; an unusual array of heavy hitters, j flanked by # promising corps of F ; ‘ h “ 9 : | young itchers a combinat‘ Forty (140) Feet, thence south one BREE BE ac ene RL GP eg aa ALL QUIET ALONG THE RUHR! Et ne Hundred Forty ‘eet, con- Dose Louis Browns, unless| taining Fourteen Thousand (14,000) . ; ee i they are strengthened in’ several | plue'n part of the Southeast. Guars Positions, are net rated as high| ter (SEM) of Section Twentyenine |¥ as last year, when they finished| (29), in Township One Hundred Just a game behind the Yankees in| Thirty-nine (139) North, of Range a dail finish, nor as dangerous (abt Man (77) West of the 5ta jas the Tigers. | P.M. a i leethe, Chicago White Sox, with al | There will be due on such mort team that developed fast last year | were ooe deeacineeeoste d te and boasted a brilliant. string of| pursements and expenses af” this lyoung pitchers, and Connie Mack's | foreclosure. Athletics, who are about due to! Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, {emerge from the depths, may fig-| this 19th day of February, 1923. ; ure prominently in this season's ee | Pennant chase. :WTON, DULLAM & YOUNG” vida is the most popular ENON: eg ee noe 2 training ground this year, seven| pitorncys for Mortgages, clubs choosing the "Everglades © "220-27 8:6-13-20-27 |state for their conditioning. Texas,] Eo ee {Alabama and Arkansas each have| NOTICE AND CITATION, HEARING {wo clubs in thelr confines, while TESLA CORTE AS DEE ! ulsial Fe i Jali i F aE \ cach hawt oeoreia, and California) oy arn on NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- \ fone list of 1928 training sites| CoUMtY of, Buricigh. | In County ‘ ‘ollows: : Judge. ” PENG 2 National League In the Matter of the Estate of SS ; pe New York, San Antenio, Tex. Louis Rohwerder, Deceased. : Cincinnati, Orlando, Fla. Ww. Rodenstab, Petitioner, vs. A French patrol is shown here returning at dusk from a tour along the bank of the Ruhr river be- Pittsburgh, Hot Springs, Ark, ‘Rosie Hillie, George Rohwerder, St. Louis, Bradentown, Fla. Chicago, Catalina Island, Calif, Brooklyn, Clearwater, Fla. Philadelphia, Leesburg, Fla. Boston, St. Petersburg, Fla. American League New York, New Orleans, La, St. Louis, Mobile, Ala. Detroit, Augusta, Ga. Chicago, Seguin, Tex. Cleveland, Lakeland, Fla. | Washington, Tampa, Fla. Philadelphia, Montgomery, Ala. | Boston, Hot Springs, Ark. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Default having occurred in the | condition of the mortgage hereinafter | described, notice is hereby given that delivered by Floyd J. Niles, a single man, mortgagor, to Edwin Béadle, | mortgagee, dated the 29th day of | April, 1913, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of North Dakota on the Sist day of |May, 1913, and recorded therein in |book 111 of Mortgage Record at pages 350 and 361, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described | at the front door of the court house of Burleigh county, North Dakota, in the city of Bismarck, in Burleign county, North Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., on the 9th day of March A. D. 1928 to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described us fol- lows, namel. | The northeast quarter (NE%) of | section thirty-four (84) in tor ship ‘one hundred and thirty-sevef (137) ‘north, of range seventy-seven west jof the fifth principal meridian in Burleigh county, North Dakota. | There will be due on such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of {nine hundred and ninety-eight dol- ‘lars and eighty-four cents ($998.84) besides thé costs, disbursements an xpenses of this foreclosure. D. 1923, EDWIN BEADLE, Said mortgagee. GEORGE M. REGISTER, Attorney for said mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 1-23-30—2-6-18-2 . NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- 2 CLOSURE SALE Default haying occurred in the conditions of the mortgage herein- after described, Notice is Hereby Given, that that certain mortgage executed and delivered by Fred Put- nam..a single man, mortgagor, to S. 'R. Day, Trustee, ‘mortgagee, dated the 2lst day of March, 1917, and d for record’in the office of the r of deeds in and for of Burleigh and state of regi cou: | North Dakota, on the 16th day of | March, 1918, at’ two o'clock P. M., and duly recorded in Book 151 ot Mortgages, on page 229, will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises in ry such mortgage and hereinafter des- cribed, at the-front door of the courthouse at Bismarck, in the coun- ty of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., on the 2nd day of April, 1923, to satisfy the smounk due upon such mortgage on the d of sale, The premises described in, such years, but his work with the cham-| mortgage and which will be sold to pions ° will be confined to he, satisfy ithe same, are situate in the mound, acéprding to McGraw. he | county ‘of Burleigh and state of | North Dakota, and. described as fol: lows, to-wit: © Commencing at thé stone monument at the intersection jot McKe: Street and Roosevelt Avenue jn Watson’s Addition to the city of McKenzie, North Dakota, and running Nine Hundred (900) Feet to a point North on a. parallel with ithe section line between Sections ‘wenty-eight (28) and Twenty-nine . and then described from this polmt as follows, to-wit: North One aR rt Feet on a paraliel with section line between Sections Twenty-eight (28) and Twenty-nine } (29),"‘thence West One Hundred that certain mortgage executed andj Dated this 23rd day of January, A.} fLouis Rohwerder, and Annie Roh: werder, Respondents. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondents: You, the said Rosie Hillie, George Robwerder, Louis Rohwerder and Annie Rohwerder are hereby noti- fied that the final account of the administrator of Louis Rohwerdcr late of the city of Bismarck in the | County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased, has been rendered to ‘this Court, therein showing that the estate of the. de- ceused is ready for final settlement and distribution, and _ petitioning that his account be allowed, the residue of said estate be distributed to the persons thereunto entitled, his administration closed and he be | discharged; and the special adminis- | traton “Edward §. Allen, having also filed his final account herein; that Tuesday the 27th day of March A. D. 1923, at ten o'clock in the fore- noon of that day at the court rooms | of this Court in the Court house, in | the city of Bismarck, County of | Burleigh and State of North Dakota, |has been duly appointed by this Court for the settlement thereof, at which time and place any person’ in: terested in said, estate may appear {and file his exteptions in writing, to said accounts, and petition and contest the same. / And you, the above named _res- pondents, and each of you, are here- by cited and required then apd there to be and appear before thfs Court, and show cause, if any fou have, | why said accounts should not be al- lowed, the residue of said estate dis- tribyted, the administration of said estate closed and the administrators be’ discharged. Dated the 17th day of February, A.D. 1923. > By the Court:* | (SEAL) H I, C, DAVIES, | > @ | Judge of the County Court. | —— : | Let the foregoing citation be serv ‘ed by publication in the Bismarck | Tribune once each week for four ‘successive weeks all, not less than | ten days before said hearing. | (SEAL) I, C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. 2-20-27—3-6-13 | NOTICE TO CREDITORS | STATE OF N | _ ty of Burleigh. In County Court. | Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. j In the Matter of the Estate of | Samuel B, Toney, Deceased: Roy S. Towne, Petitioner. vs. Charlotte S. Toney, Malcolm B, To- ney, Richard S, Toney and’ Cyril L. Toney, Respondents. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned, Roy S. Towne, executor of the last-.will and testament of Samuel B, Toney, late of the city of Bismarck, in the county of Bur- leigh, and state of North Dakota, de- ceased, to the creditors of, and all persons *having claims against, said decedent, to exhibit them with the neqessary vouchers, within four months, after‘ the first publication of this notice, to said executor, at his office at 305 Broadway. in the city of Bismarck, in said Burleigh County, North Dakota, 3 Dated this 24th day of February, 1923. ROY S. TOWNE, ‘ Executor, First publication on the 27th day of February, 1923, 6-13-20 eee “HEARING PETITION APPOINTMENT OF AD- MINISTRATOR STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- -ty of Burleigh—ss, In County 5 Court, Before Hon. I..C. Davies, Tudge, =). ernie rk ie the. Matter of the Hestate of Ellen Freede, Deceased, Henry Freede, Petitioner, vs. Lu- Freede Hull, Robert Freede, C. W. Freede, Respondents, fen cille. Above Named, Respondents and All Person. 5 ‘rested inthe Estate of Ellen. Freede, .Decease: You + a of you are hereb; notifiedthat Henry Freede the peti- tioner herein, has filedsin this Court n aipon~ estate ' of the city of, Y TH DAKOTA, Coun- | = tween Werden and Kittingen, Oklahoma City, in the County of Ok- lahoma and State of Oklahoma, de- ceased, be granted to John W. Me- Laughlin, and that the said ition will be heard and duly o by this Court on Tuesday, the 3rd day of April, A. D. 923, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of that day, at the Court Rooms of this Court, in the County Court House, in the City of Bismarck, County of Bur- leigh, and State of North Dakota, and you, and each of you, are here- | of February, | vacation in Europe and made an |appcintment immediately to see | _|President Harding. He goes out | "| of offiee Wednesday. | f Dated the 15th day A. D. 1923, Let the service of the above cita tion be*made by ‘publication in marek Tribune, as required by law. (SEAL) 1, C, DAVIES, | Judge of the County Court. | 2-20-27—3-16 | FORBES WILLING TO Mr. Forbes said that he was ling to cooperate in the invest- gation to be made of the bureau by congress and said he believed it would_prove an end to charges made against officials, by cited to be and appear before this Court at’ said time and place, | and ‘answer said pefition, and show| ¢ | cause, if any there be, why the pray- er of said petition should not be _— granted. 3 “ By the Courts Penne ton) Feb. 26.—Charles (SEAL) . Forbes, retiring director of the . KINGS PILLS I C. DAVIES, Veterans bureau, returned to Dok Judge of the County Caurt.’ Washington today after a month’s stonconstipation iil ce oo Bs E t AY i} Tm Nt a Saeeee Ce OFFices ~ a If You Want to Buy or Sell wee Use the . . Tribune Want Ad Page — The Sultan of Turkey abdicated and left dozens of wives unprovided for: The new officials endeavored to dis- pose of them through the American newspapers! 4 * We can’t promise such results from our Want Ads—but if. you ‘have anything else you wish to buy, sell or ex- ‘The State of North.Dakota to the || change, they’ll surely help you accomplish it. - Want Ads accepted over the phone. eer The Tribune, Bismarck | Covers the Slope Like the Morning Sun. :

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