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r , PAGE SIX Sports| ‘BIG TRACK AND FIELD MEET IS SET FOR MAY 3 Bismarck High School To Be Host to Athletes From 39 High Schools of State BIG) CROWD EXPECTED Will be Largest High School Vield Day Ever Held in Bismarck Territory wae thi invitations tocay | to the first] ack and Vield | Sat territory ived . te send repre Capital ¢ to be held i » May 3, Edgar thleties in B nnoaneed. The meet wa not to contlict with the 7 annual urek on direc High ar MeLean county track meet and the Dickinson meet Jamestown an D it is cx et whieh | than 205 will ente becmade the largest affair of its More pecte wil kind ever held in this part os the state, Loving cups and medals will be awarded the successful schools} 1 individual «fara of the t. Work of preparing the marek baseball park for the meet has sturt-| ed, A einder running track huilt, and conpetent rect the High schools invited to send ath letes hi re: New Salem, Carson, | , Hazelton, Strasburg, Brad} Napoleon, Steele, Dawson, Hl, Sterling, damestown, Tp pen, McKenzie, Wilton, Washburn, Underwood, Turtle Lake, Coleharbor, andan, Garrison, Dickinson, hool, Mandan; Glen Ulin, ‘on, Stanton, Hazen, Flasher; Ft , Mott, Hettinger, Wishek, Ash- Baldwin, Regan, Wing, New is to be} officials wil! di-| ley, Leipzig, and Bismarck high will en ter athletes. The local high school, never done much in trac which has will enter HARVARD VARSITY CREWS TAKE TO WATER THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The ve an exclusive photogr AR OF OTHER D: MAKE KYS Arad FRED CLARKE ~ OVER RECRUIT)», all Phillies torture of play day nee however, the hing TURF DATES ARRANGED | TO AVOID | The men back of the | ess and the Kentucky Derby ve seen the light There will be [no conflict between these two great turf events this spring. es The Preaky Will be run a week | exelier 1 the Derby. ‘This will le her s for be With good w the classic nen to point their en- nt r, Which ustally running: of these twor rac- . there should be no dif- ficulty for the trainers to keep their n edge for both events, cakness is the shorter dis- ,anile and a furlong. Tt be- run first, es it possible for | the thoroughbreds to be gradually jvorked up to the Derby distanee, which is a mile and a quarter. greets, ing | STAR TWIRLER OF NATIONAL SOON TO RETIRE EA Servi By " April 3.—This may be us a pitcher, and again it r league not. Johnson has an idea that he may By NEA Service fi dea t tt ber of men, Several athletes} ” New Orleans, La. April 3.—Here i Nunouseman | H at part owner and are in training, and if the nicelager and outfielder, held his bat as le Clarke as an| Manager of a ta 5 sin the, Pacitie re r continues, it is expected 75] outtielder was in the same cktss of Cobb and of today. Hel bing a Set fi pee ear uthletes will enter the high school] could do everythin es “ing Weary of the major Teague nter-¢ peet pri 26. his s o ve here vt the egestic of - oS : au - M pu Mil ae Che xirle ol Hinkie Haines. |, “Why. you look better than’ ever - Manager Mi CO ee prin rented one of his Bismarck High - ess ae teran te «cand T kind of . yee aoe lcok for you to ud the league Will Have a a Baseball Team): athletes are going r the first time this spring. \ Within a few days the team will get into action, it is expected, and games will be played later with Wil- ton, the prison team, Mandan train and others. will enter the ¢ ing school The team league providing’ it is proposed Phillies Weakest Club In Majors formed, 18 Art Fletcher Seems Certain} To Pilot Another | j Tailender | BY JOE WILLIAMS April uch to fed ‘hen t cnr ntly but none the securely into the hands of a skinned midnight prowler, Which 1s they will finish .no worse th, gnanimous Mr, Baker, who owns the ball club) hasn't spent a he Phil-j ok for- has jark- to say | jy | Krause Take pitcher met Art Fletcher, elsewhere. The Phillie: ain thi home. Short Vacation) ———— | rek today dime to strengthen itgand the] Jay several weeks, 4 Phillies happen to be a ball club|to present plans, he said that doesn’t need strengthening any} There was a good crowd at the Ash- horse needs hoofs. ley bout. Krause k the Phillies finished an Aaa in the eurnest and emphatic las You'd] sixth round. | naturally think that some serious pales ! effort would be made to rebuild.| prowish MADE MOTHER ® \ Conni for example, didn't BANS SUNDAY BALL ay sizable sums for new fter his Athicties pulled up Jame in sixth gi Thi ms to ow that the material w i hesit faces consider what"the big hearted | to give the con's enter-| Sandlot “Beauties” .. .. .. His two most promising pitchers among the newcomers are Howard | Carlson, a Pittsburg discard, who was drafted from Wichita Falls, and the aneient Earl Hamilton. No other major deague club thought enough of | Carlson=to buy him, so he fell to the} frugal Mr. Baker in the draft. Hamilton, long since through as an effective workman, was picked up for nothing, a free agent. Benny Helgeth and Leonard Metz are the outstanding infield prospects. All Helgeth cost was car fare from Chicago, where he played ‘semi-pro ball, to_Leesburg. A vicious rumor is afloat that ho was even asked to make the trip in a day coach. Metz came from the Nebraska State League and must have cost all df six bits’and a red cravat. Two other “million-dollar beauties” on Mr. Baker's enormous ‘pay roll are Fritz Hgnri¢h and Fred Krisin- ger. Henrich, you know, is that great left-handed outfielder you've been reading so much about. What! You never heard of him? Why, he was atfar in the Philadelphia Twi- light League last year, 3 Refuses to Spend $8000 And surely Krisinger needs no introduction. Krisinger was a right- 4786 sandlot teams in Chicago and handed pitcher on a Chicago sand+] are wrong. “I don’t think psychology lot team last year. There are only enters into the case at all,” says Mr. Service entown, de 1a., April 3.—Braneh | i manage his Cardinals ybody knows. Ricke the Md, old d. member of the n beloved promise still w vhen Mother luctance—gave her ambition to become ball player. | Go abead and let ‘em kid you, about Sunday baseball. You | weren't the first boy to make | a promise to his mother, nar yet the first one to regard it as sacred. h_grea consént to his RICKEY BANKs 0} SOTHORON TO MAKE GOOD! By NEA Service | Bradentown, Fla., April 3.—Mr. Branch Rickey of the Cardinals of | course has found out what ails Al Sothoron, the veteran spitball pitch- er, who was driven out of the majors because he couldn't field a bunt. It has always been presumed that a sort of mental hazard seized Sotho- yon in such circumstances. Early in his career he had made a botch of fielding bunts and the fear had grown on him that the task was be- yond him. That’s how Lee Fohl, who managed the Browns, sized up Sothoron’s case. Tris Speaker of the Indians made the same estimate. \ Mr. Rickey, however, insists they © | CALL DRISCOLL the | TAILE a professional | 7 M IS TOUGH JOB FOR MANAGER “You do, ch?” smiled the big swift, Well, now, if you can make that sitive Fl change my mind.” CALL FOR BIDS Bismarek : un- April 5, 1924 at 2 the publication of ). Supreme Court Re- ts. ions will be fu by the Reporter to those desiring submit bids. The right to reject or all bids is rved. By Order of the Supreme Court. E. J, TAYLOR, Reporter. | SUMMONS | STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, | County of Burleigh. In District 1 i Court, Fourth Judicial District. Malvin Otson, Plaintiff vs. Peter ulso Anton and Solomon Nicola known as Sam Nicola, Defendan' tate of North Dakota to the al I - amed Defendants: This} You are hereby summoned and re- ages the quired to answer /the complaint of have it{the plaintiff in the above entitled , suffer {action a copy of which is hereto an- evening. Manchester High School five. Rickey. “Sothoron simply tries to basket. \ MILDRED WATERS Scoring 59 points in a baskethall game-constitates*a rather busy ’ Miss Mildred Waters, star of the Bridgeport, (Conn.) High School team, turned in such a performance recently in the defeat 8f the South The score of the game was 106 to 2, Miss Waters making more then half of the points for her team. She scored 29 field goals and one bes first workout on the Charles River, the ay, without he will have nexed and herewith served upon you and to serve a copy of your said an- swer upon the subscriber at his of- fice in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh y, North Dakota within thirty after the service of this sum- mons upon you exclusive of the day of such service and in case of your failure to so appear and answer judg- ment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated January 5, 1994. F, E. MeCURDY, Attorney for Plaintiff, Residence and P. 0. Address, Bismarck, N. D. 8-6-13-20-27—4 3 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that the jcertain mortgage executed and de- livered by George F. Nelson and Annie Nelson, his wife, 18 mortga- gors to Drake-Ballard Company, 2 corporation, mortgagee, dated the 1st day of November, 191%, and ‘filed for record in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of the County of Bur- Jeigh and State of North Dakota on the 7th day of February, 1918 and duly recorded in Book 161 of Mort- gages, at Page 201, and assigneq by said mortgigee by an instrument in writing to Caroline Gunnerson, dated the ith day of May, 1918 and re- corded in Book 151 of ‘Mortgages at. Page 341, will be foreclosed by sale of the premises in such mort- gage us hereinafter described, at the front joor of the Court House in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two | come help. Benny Meyer, the old {o'clock p. m. on the 19th day of ; Brooklyn ontfielder, will carry some | April, 1924, to satisfy -the amount | of tlie yrief. Meyer will be stationed |due on such mortgage on the day of at first base and’ Pletcher ut_ third. [gale The premises described in euch Ths suffering i iT morigiuge and which wi e sold to ake nia Terie Swill bey equeus satisfy the same are described as | Officially, Meyer will bg known] RCS. west Quarter’ (SW), Jas captain of the team, the “only | Southwest Quarter of the Northwest { non playing captain in captivity, by | Quarter (SW% NW%) South Half of the w the Southeast Quarter 4) and the Northeast Quarter of the South- east Quarter (NEY SEM) of Section Twenty-six (26), in Tawnship One Hundred Forty-one (141), North of Range Seventy-eight (78), West of the Sth Principal “Meridian, There will be due on such mort- the date of sale the sum of gage Three Thousand’ Seven Hundred Ninety-seven and 07-100 ($3797.07) Dollars, and in addition to said sum | the costs ang expenses of these fore- closure proceedings. Dated at Washburn, North Dakota, this 11th day of Marap, 1924, CAROLINE GUNNERSON, Assignee of Mortgagee. LIAMS & 'TELLEFSON, ys for Assignee of Mort- | By WILL Attor gagee, Washburn, North Dakota, 3-13-20. 3-10-17 Renews Attack — On Women; Says Suffrage Cause a New York, April 3.—Woman suf-, frage has brought in its wake a flock of evils to womankind, includ- ing abandonment of decorum and the corset, necording to A. B. See, presi- dent of the Elevator Company of that name. Mr, See whose views of women gained wide-spread publicity in No- the building fund of a, woman's col- lege, today Inunched- another broad- side on the subject in a-letter to the Lucy Stone League, which advocates women’s retention of their maiden flames after marriage. LT eRROR PATH | In adve + vember, 1922,"when he refused 'to aid}: its mother. vertisements. IT’S A FRAME UP @ BREATH! _ “Since the advent of suffrage, he! writes, “women drink more rum and cocktails and smoke more cigarettes than ever before. They walk the strects swaggeringly with brazen faces; they have abandoned corsets nd use more cosmetics than ever be- fore. When a woman dances with a man,” he adds, “she, leans on his shoulder and tries to sit on his hip. Young girls, the letter says, have become. insolent to their parents, heartless and brutal and brazen in their demeanor in school. BABY MONKEY: _ AT MINOT DIES Minot, Ne D. April 3—The baby rhesus monkey at the Riverside park zoo died Monday night. There was great mourning today on the part of According to the z00 eS fHURSDAY Wists ON YouR,.)*t attendant, death was caused by un- dernourishment. The little one was a great attraction and nearly 3,000 pecple visited the 200 Sunday with the monkey child the chief center of attraction. “Kaiser Bill,” sbead of the elk herd shed his great antlers, Sunday, as is his annual custom and within a few weeks will start the growth of an- other pair. Superintendent Doolittle has re- ceived several pairs of Hungarian partridges from the state game and fish commission and these will be lib- erated near Minot in the near future. The Hungarian. partridge ‘is a. hardy game bird about the size of ‘the bob- white quail: These birds have -been liberated in considerable ‘quantities in Saskatchewan and Alberta and Mr. Doolittle says that during his trip thru these provinces last summer he saw large numbers of them, all ant thriving condition. - ‘. Rather valuable few minutes! ; ONE OF “THOSE HEALTH MAGAZINES POINTS OUT RE DANGERS OF © EATING RAW MEAT. SEEMS UKE - BANKRUPTCY OUGHTA HEAD THE ust!) ~ Ss Minutes ~ a few minutes required to run your eye over these rfising columns, you may learn of something that will serve your convenience for years. You aren’t spending time when you are reading ad- You are saving both time and money. ~- Each day advertisers help you to compare values and prices. They tell you where you can secure the best and most serviceablé at lowest cost. ° Advertised‘ goods are more dependable than goods unadvertised. They must be exactly as claimed. . They can't afford to be otherwise, : ‘Makea daily habit of reading the advertisements. It pays. : __ MISTAKES IN BUYING ARE COSTLY—AVOID ‘THEM BY READING ADVERTISEMENTS. - ) RU, Sti Te nr nm Munn Go nO TMU Lu LL a Naa A NTH l TT MTOR seaebagaply fe 1 a