The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX FHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1923 MINOT CLUB COMES HERE 4TH OF | © SS Seo ce HESTER COMES WITH CLUB TO MEET LOCALS: Fast Baseball Is Scheduled for 3ismarek Base Ball Park Tomorrow TAYLOR COMING! baseball is ourth of July brings his club to the on the Fourth here sured for Bis- league- city for of July, Thursday, | y and Sunday, + i rth of uly games will be at 10:30 in the morning the afternoon, The | to avoid any sin Mandan or ‘The Mandan | n untiy after | the offic. on ere 0 in were arranged with netivit on the di not be} of the second game, marck club came in from Hester's team | ng in from New Rockford ter brings 4 shed ball tes ue thus far. n today the best in the center who has be the sensational Bismarck, I | MATION | CLES Y STARTING ONE HEAVYWEIGHT. Ni OUT IN THE CHAMPION’S W HE N WRITING FOR > OF HIS SPARRING ap JOUNNY MIDDI ORK. 1 KA SERVICE AND THE BISMAL . DISHING IT OUT IN GOOD DOSES Looking Through the Came OUTS WITH GEORGE GODFREY, F. THERWEIGH' CHAMPION, GOT SOME FIRST-HAND INFOR- EN THE ARTI- RCK TRIBUNE, f injuri same to- in uniform for | sand his injured ankle is ABuck” s thi in of the game ‘ourth of ne sha tiy strengthen | nd comes ee: lor’s presonee will g the team, it ist The local o believe th ames will be hot contests and hope | the fans will turn out in big numbers | on July 4. | JAMESTOWN IN EASY VICTORY: Takes Second G Game by Knock-| ing Bernier Out of Box Jamestown, July Sunday's game wi Jamestown and Bismarck : when the Jimktotans slammed Bi nier for 13 hits and got to his res- cuer, Shanley, in the remaining thre: for 6 more, winning by the tremen: score of 15 to 4 with Venamon © bag- ond a hit batsman | a three score leat the swatting was{ dous in the box. pers, two singles gave Jamestown in the f and heavy all thru, Wenz got his home run off Shanley. It hit inside the fence and bounded over, in the sixth inning and Whiting scored with him.| A walk, a sacrifice by Zart, sacri fice fly by Randall and Dou two base drive brought in Bismare first, score; two hits and a stolen base the second, a walk, a two a three bagger the otheg two. Box Score:— BISMARCK AB. R. H. PO. Randall, rf & 2nd ..3 1 0 Dougan, ¢ 401 Shanl ba tila Berni .4 0 Boardman 40 Condon, Nord, ss Zart, cf Day, rf .. alocensorn Totals JA Hilden, If .. Meier, 2nd Cenowith, ss Wingfield, 3rd. Whiting, r! Wenz, cf . Schanlaub, 1st . Clark, ¢ Venamon, p Totals 19 11 Two base hits. deiean Wingfield, Schanlaub, Nord, Meier, . Shanley, Venamon. Three base hits—Meier, Chenowith, Bernier. Home Wenz. Struck out, by Venamon 3} by Ber- nier 2, Shanley 1. Base on balls, off Venamon 5; off Bernier 4; off Shanley 3. Double plays—Schanlaub to Chen- owith to Schanlaub; Bernier to Con- don. Wild pitch—Bernier, Hit by pitch- er—Schanlaub, Fly. Score by innings:— Bismarck --001 100 200—4 6 3 Jamestown 303 205 11x—15 19 1 LINTON TAKES HITTING BEE Strasburg, N. D., July 3.—Linton defeated Strasburg in a slugging match Sunday, 14 to 8. The score: Linton + -210 362 000—14 15 4 Strasburg 011 150 000— 8 11 5 Batteries: "Angell, © Englerth; Throckmorton, Lipp & Fettig. Wenz, run— Fourth Champion jlenger Tommy iivetorehandl of the | flashed out ltwo he hief Gibbons. as to his own attack knows that won Jack Demps crown, there jar left blow in which Tommy Gi bons spe nockouts that are credited to him in his last 37 three year and | h jboth can wield a deadly punch with the right mitt. But both of them {use the right more for follow-up stuff. Gibbons does so more than Demp- sey. Dempsey outs over at G |that time ithat right either with the hefty terrible right blow th: jtween a jab comes in under the opponent's guard or through that Dempsey seem ling to the opening. way of an uppercut. hear the v Taylor probably. will pica Both Wield Mean “Rights,” | “Lefts” Will Carry Slecp Preducers at Shelby But Use ’Em Mostly In Following Up N Shelby, Fight Mont., aay 3. of July battle Jack Dempsey This between and Chal- Gibbons looms up 3 the meeting of two st left hands that ever from the shoulders of weights in a world title Wilson Ross rF | gre For it’s the left mitt that is the asset of both Dempsey and Gibbons himself will tell you that and the world left hook that y his heavyweight it’s the And the parallel is for the strong even hook is the particu- ized in achieving the fights in the last Both Follow With Rights Sometimes the left hook wasn’t | the actual knockout punch, but if it wasn't the blow that sent his rivals | toppling for | said left hook |nearly every case weakened the oth- er man and prepared him for finishing blow. the count of ten, the the blow that in the Ry this I don’t mean to infer t and Tommy have their nds chained up. Fai at right from it— For been watching y in his work- Falls and I find and n he turns loose a cross over guard when a him lower it. wields a cross be- It other fellow's left has made And the champion and an uppercut. it. In fact it's a blow to vary accord- If he finds the clear to the body, it's more of , but if the opening gives him nee to the chin it becomes more it's a terrifie punch. ds you nearly ‘tim grunt. always Gi een ean RT to score in the first inniny, but Green was cailed out at the plate on a close play. on They hag men bases in the second, sixth and! Batteries for and Garland. across. Carson, ! Stanton, | BIG FACTOR IN VICTORY Mis Long Club Helps Yankees to Pole Out Victory Over Washington > = Chicago, July 3.—Aided by the long club of Babe Ruth the New York Yankees continued their winning Summary—Three-base hits, Angell. Two-base hits—Becker, Young and Struck out—By Angell, 6; by Throckmorton 3; by Lipp 2. Base on balls—by Angell 4; by Throckmor- Umpires—Brown and Rower- Angell. ton 6. dink. STANTON IS VICTOR, 2 TO 0 Stanton defeated Carson Sunday, 2.0, in a*fine exhibition of base ball.’ Stanton scored in the first inning On Seibert’s two-base hit, and is in the third on Seibert’s single. Car >. {Rivage « Uitw oO streak yesterday when they took the opener of their series with Washing- ton, by a score of 13 to 4 ¢Ruth, who poled his 15th homed of the sea- son, also collected a double and a triple, while Pipp, a team-mate, also got a circuit drive. Shawkey, wh held the Senators to eight hits, was. robbed of a shut-out by loose field- ~ ing, The vietory gave the Yankees ten foll games in the ‘American. The Giants lost their third straight game when the lowly Phillies pound- ed feur New York pitchers heavily. Cy Williams, premier home-run elouter of the year, got his 22nd four-base hit of the season. The is using 14-ounce gloves kouts-if he wasn’t using that sort of pillows, his sparring partners would all be helpless — by now. As it is, it's hard enough to find sparring partners who can e champion’s aids re- quire get back to normal so he can sume his job receiving the terrible lacing Dempsey hands to one and all. oe Little Billy Wells, the British wel- terweight, was the last one to ta off. But as the fight draws er Dempsey becomes more and more tigerish in his workouts. And this Wells, one of the gamest and cleverest men of his weight Ij have ev en, finally had to take av: ion, although Dempsey likes st of all and ‘tried to pull his d save the doughty little Britisher. Thinks Lot of Tommy Right here, let me say that I'd like to see the battle if this Wells ever gets a chance at the world’s welterweight crown, now worn by Mickey Walker. Furthermore, let! me predict that if that meeting docs! take place, Wells won't come off. second best. I asked Dempsey what he thought of Tommy Gibbons’ chances and Jack replied: “Well, he can hit hard. Otherwise he wouldn’t have knocked out 33 men in his last 37 fights, even though none of them were really tough opponents. ‘But I won't fight him any differently from the ws have fought Willard or any of the other heavyweights I have met and defeated. “A fight is a fight to me. I don't see why I shouldn't hit Gibbons the me I have hit all the others. I saw him fight Harry Greb in that serap in New York in which Greb won the decision. They say he wasn't at his best then. ‘But that fight didn't make me figure that I'd have to use any dif- ferent tactics against Gibbons than I have used against anybody else. I am not figuring that I'm going to have a cinch in this fight and I’m not predicting when I will win it, but I expect to keep my “I want to say, ho here that I expect to ha sony ie ee eee LEO ‘ation every so often to, re-| A \ on the local course in 38 Sunday, one of the best scores ever made there, STANDINGS | N. D. STATE LEAGUE W. Minot Jamestown Bismarck New Ro New York j Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chics Brooklyn St. Loui Boston . Philadelphia AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww. . 44 . Al 30 29 26 22 21 31 34 37 36 39, St. Paul } Kansas City Louisville . Columbus Indianapolis Milwaukee Minneapol Toledo ... 1400 AMERICAN LEAGUE » Pet. New York 667 Philadelphia Cleveland St. Louis Chicago Detroit | Washington - Boston | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul 6; Milwaukee 5, Indianapolis 14; Louisville 1, Columbus 4-3; Toledo 3-6, Kansas City 13; Minneapolis 13. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 10; New York 4. Pittsburgh 14; St, Louis 1. Cincinnati 9; Chicago 8, Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 13; Washington 1. Boston 7; Philadelphia 4. St. Louis:7; Chicago 2. Others not’ scheduled. INCORPORATIONS Articles of incorporation filed with the Secretary of State include: Gate City Building and Loan asso- ciation, Fargo; capital stock, $5,000,- Phillies started with an early lead, Mitchell holding the Giants well and! assisting his team-mates with two three-base hits. Pittsburgh kept its ninth, but lacked the punch to put hold on second place in the Nationals it Mortenson Larson and Seibert. . BABE RUTHIS by defeating St, Louis, Hamilton holding the Cardinals helpless, Cincinnati, however, kept right behind the Pirates by defeating the Cubs in a close fight.. Roush’s sin- gle inthe ninth was the deciding fac- tor for the Redsi Three home-runs by Chicagoans were to no avail. The St. Louis Browns maintained their third hold in the first division by defeating the White Sox, Shocker ninth, The Athletics after losing four straight to the Yankees were tumbled in the first game of the series with Boston. It ‘was Eck’s 12th victory and home runs by two fellow Red Sox were material fac- tors in the win. Detroit and Cleveland, in the Americans,and Boston and Brooklyn in the Nationals, were idle today. Thé National Leaguers got six home runs to the Americans’ four. ae Chicago scoreless until the 000; incorporatoys, W, D. Gillespie, M. M. Hendrickson, J. L. Graves, W. H, Schulze, T. V. Carey. Allen W. Wood, Thot Greenshield, N, ©. Rusk, John Anderson, N. H. Young ang W. L, Purdy. SHE SHOWED ’EM Country Club Tournament To Get Under Way The annual handicap golf tourna- ment of the Bismarck Country Club will get under“way this week. All players in the elub are eligible in the events; the handicaps to be bas- ed. on avernge scores. The number of Country Club has inggeased greatly this year, and an interesting tour- nament is expected. E, B. Cox made the “nine « holes golfers at the}, Jennie M. Forrie wasn’t permitted to enter the motorcycle mil climbing ‘contest at Delaware Gap, P: baetere she was only a woman, but she her bike” up the hill at a peed t j@mazed the men contestants, 379 51 pected. JOUNNY , IN A (NEWSPAPER MAN'S ROLE, IS GETTING THE LOW DOWN ON THE FIGHT FROM JACK HIMSELF. By Johnny Kilbane Shelby, Mont., July 3.—One of! the most interesting slants of Dempsey-Gibbons fight to me » different mental the two men, Dempsey fights primarily because he is a fighting animal. He’s hap- t when he’s in the ring. The ut vitality which distinguishes him from other men finds its great- est outlet in fighting. amusements pall on y do not give'him the op- portunity, to let out the flood of energy stored up in him. Dempsey enters the ring with the same feel- ing that a hungry man advances on jhis dinner. Just Tommy’s Trade bm Gibbons, on the other hand, not love fighting. Nature en- dowed Tommy with some hands that he figured could best be turned to account in the prize ring. So Gib- bons became a__ prizefighter. He made fighting his business, his trade—and studied it accordingly. Gibbons is a plugger. He's thor- ough. He's studied from the grouffd up the business he has made his life’s work. The results are what might be ex- Gibbons is mechanically perfect. He knows all the details of the roped-in battleground. bons Is Cooler But fighting is only a business with Tommy. With Dempsey, it’s life. Gibbons probably will be the. cool- er of the two men in the ring here July 4. Dempsey will be on fire to enjoy the thrill of battle. It is not likely he will have any set plan of action other than that of ceascless attack. Jack's defense will be instinctive. His sole thought will be a quick knockout. oe OREN OR the |fore he enters is'watehed the champion defeat viewpoint of} pentier at A Ne righting Everything in Life for Jack, But It’s Only Business With Tommy Gibbons probably will have map- ped out a complete campaign be- the ring. Tommy Car- Jersey City and knows jwhat he has to face. Ever since a Dempsey-Gibbons fight was first talked of Tommy has been studying a plan of action fon possible use against the cham- pion. When he steps into the ring on Independence Day, he will have foreseen and planned a checkmate for Dempsey’s every move. Now, can a carefully mapped pro- gram defext Dempsey? If so has Gibbons, the challenger, the neces- sary ability to carry it out success- fully? ‘ WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck aud vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday, pro- bably scattered — thundershowers. Little change in temperature, For North Dakota: Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday, probably seattered thundershowers. _Little change in temperature. General ‘Weather Conditions Low pressure, accompanied by scattered showers, prevails over the northern Rocky Mountain region and a dry low is centered over the Southwest. Rain has fallen: in the Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes region and in northern Texas and w@&Stern Missouri. Temperatures have again risen slightly. from the Mississippi Valley to the Rocky Mountain region. + Road Conditions The highways throughout the State are mostly excellent, but dus- ty. North Dakota Corn and Wheat Stations, Amenia .. Cee BISMARCK . High Low Preci. 61 50 0 C 78 568 0 C a ¥, aban See Pceeeas coe ee es te see, es ecu ee SORES a ore: x me we “APPROVED BY-500,000 USERS” JULY | ras Eye at Dempsey’ s Training Camp KILBANE AND THE CHAMPION ARE ASSISTING REN WRAY, SEVEN-FOOT OKLAHOMAN, TO HIS FEET, AFTER THE SOUTE WESTERN GIANT HAD E FELLED BY ONE OF JACK’S BLOY MEETING POSTPONED mecting of the State trial commission at — which bonds sales were to be di scheduled for yesterday ft was postponed because members were engaged in other board meet- ings. Bottineau Bowbells .. Devils Lake . Dickinson Dunn Center Ellendale The indus- state eeseo cussed, noon, Jamestown Langdon Larimore Lisbon . Minot Napoleon Pembina Williston Moorhead C, clear; cloudy. Orris W. Roberts, Meteorologist. Refuses To 2 Give Up Weights John N. Hagan, state supervisor of grain and grain g: s, yesterday refused to turn over to Joseph A. Kitchen, commissioner of agriculture and labor, test weights and measures to be kept by him under the act of the 1923 legislature transferring the duties of inspecting weights and measures to the sheriff, Mr, Hagan, who had maintained the act was invalid because it at- tempted to repeal an initiated act without two-thirds vote, had sought an opinion of the Attorney General and was confirmed in this contention. eeesooto 3 ° ot s PC c part 4 56 =0 Cl, cloudy; PC, BISMARCK STORAGE COMPANY Licensed and Bonded, Space to Rent for All Kinds of Storage. Rates on Application. Baled Hay For Sale. ‘Office 207 Broadway BISMARCK, N. D, Phone 82 POSTMASTER FINED. Fargo, July 2.—Allen H, White, postmaster at Harmon, Morton coun- ty, was fined $3,161.37 by Federal Judge Charles F, Amidon. White was charged with defalcation of that amount of postal funds while in charge of the office at Harmon. There was no jail term connected with the sentence. ‘ smooth runni engine et all spec Sajcopeckcontol CORWIN MOTOR BOSCH CHILD’S JAW BROKEN, Napoleon, N. D., July 3.—The five- year-old daughter of Reimand Volk who Was riding with her father on a load of lumber fell from the load when a train frightened his horses} and a wheel passed over her jaw, breaking it. The unfortunate child was immediately taken to Bismarck for hospita] care. I think I was one of the*first newspaper writers in America to use a Corona in my regular work — cer- tainly the first of the sporting writers. I well remem- ber ‘the “razz” I used to get some eleven or twelve years ago, when I first appeared in the press boxes with my little black case. Now I do not believe there is a single big league sport- ing writer who does not own a Corona. I had mine with Pershing in Mexico, with the Giants and White Sox in their world tour, with the A. E. F. in France and in Germany as correspondent. I would not be without my Corona if I was going across the street. Damon Runyon, Corona is the cnly portable typewriter ‘with. a record. of, sixteen years of satisfactory service. Thirty thousand went thru the World War; half a million in use today... The New Corona, just out, is so complete ite really. an office typewriter in portable form. Tas all modern. improvements, yet. ‘weighs less than ‘seyen ‘pounds! _ for free demoxstration. io POLLAK, Costs but $50.00, coupes with case. Phone or call ° B: Le N Dak. All makes of rebuilt machines, “‘sold, rented, repaired.” } Sesiesk Typewriter Company C.J. HAMMEL.

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