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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE port RECRUIT GETS | Playing The Swinging Bunt Down Base Line Calls For Greatest Skill, Says Joe Dugan 3-PLY BLOW Comes With Bu Full, En-} abling Giants To Win Chien reeruit ¢ ger with and June tfielder, out of the Maranville hard Cubs-Br walked in the winning Vance in 4 Kaufman Fourn » bases full run f eventh of the s beat the | pitched. | Louis, | Luque cs beat St Boston feating Chicago 5 Ha fine pitching, Cleveland Washington 1 and Detroit | beat Philadelphia took | behind 3 by St 5 to Hl | American Associa’ Ww. . Paul . 4 napoli Columbus 00 | at you will cith: Toledo 3 National League New York Chicago Brooklyn Cincinnati Boston Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia American League Ww Boston CS New York Detroit St. Louis Washington Chicago ey I Cleveland 18 Philadelphia 17 Results Yesterday National League St. Louis Boston 4, Cincinnati 2; Philadelphia 4 Chicago Srooklyn 4, Pittsburgh 4; New York 6. ican League Detroit Clevela Louis 5. Philadelphia 3 Washington 1 New York 3; St. sociation St. Paul 1 sas City 12. Indianapolis 4; Columbus 1, Others postponed, wet grounds. PLAY BASEBALL | THIS EVENING The Hardware and Transportat teams of the Commercial! Le; scheduled to play baseball at 6:30 p.m. JAMESTOWN TO PLAY IN CITY Jamestown’s independent baseball team, scheduled to play here last Sunday and kept from doing so by rain, will play the Bismarck Inde- pendent team here next Sunday at 3 p.m. George Smith, manager of the local team, announced today. tonight NOTICE OF MORTGAGE CLOSURE SALE Whereas default has occurred in the payment of inte and prin- cipal of the obligation secured by the Mortgage hereinafter described; and where the holder of said mortgage does clect to foreclose on the past due and unpaid principal and interest f said obli Notice is hereby given that t certain mortgage executed livered by Emil Erickson Erickson, his wife, mortgag the Manager of The Bank of } Dakota, Mortgagee, ‘dated the FORE- record in the office of the Regist of Deeds of the County of Burleig! State of North Dakota, day of Janua P. M., and r Mortgages, at paj ed by said mortgagee, by an instru- ment in writing to the State Treas urer of North Dakota, and his suc cessors in office, in trust as secur- ity for bonds issued by the Ste Nosth Dakota, which i was dated the 15th day of June, 1 and recorded in said office Register of Deeds on the 23rd day ofdune, 1921, at 9:00 o'clock, A. M,, in Book “169” of “Miscellancous Mortgages, at page 479, will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter des- eribed,. at the front door of the Court House, in the City of Bis- marck, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock, P. M., on the 19th day of July, 1924, to satisfy the amount due upofi the past due installments | _ said mortgage on the day of sale. . The es ibed in such " mortgage and which will be sold to gatisfy..the Diy are. described as R wits est Quarter (NW%4) of ‘Four (4), Township One | guides th Bist | day of December, 1919, and filed for | BY JOE DUGAN Third Baseman, New York Americans | | ost difficw NH to handle. The moment [see the ball has | been topped Vrush in at full: speed play. and make a sweeping downward | hot ones come traizht) motion with my right hand as 1 to the right o ou | near the bal i in eno to juc | n lucky J come up withthe | the peed of the atl, ne hh the first stage in cessffully making the play, In order ea ch to get you the hope | man first it is also necess up clean | 4, iy di) Dike auton ning up. This is a difficult | Another difficult play to make is ed by batters of the Cobb type runner on second and none with the bluff bunt. hes the hit and run nner on second starting with the pitch, If dashes in to p Diffiewlt Play bunt, the batsman merely bluffs that Harry 1 the runner steals third practically ba unmolested, as it is impossible to Ame is up. lieilmann ket back to the bag in time to take hits a ball viciéusly down the third | throw from the catcher. : line, This forces a third by; On the other hand, if you start man to play deep matter of | 4. cover third when you sce the run- self pres jon, ner stealing, the batter lays down a Heilmann takes a hard swing at} bunt and beats it easily, while the the ball and tops it. The result is | other runne nees to third. a slow rolling bounder toward third | 1 try to the play in this makes this 3| he old) baseball saying, “you io thirdbase When the to hiv rc ball or knock it down, the third will with th xperience fects instinet proper a play, sto th nion the most d baseman has to make swinging bunt line. Instinet L deals down aterl tle also uch I is chanc third base infic Most stop “5 SWINGING BUT 12 THE Moet DIFFICULT PR a : TRUST “ LucK One THE HOT ONES" Fy manner: With a batter up prone to pull the play, I move inj closer to the plate and well over toward the bag I stand stock still until the batter either bunts or bluffs the bunt and make my play accordingly. Good Fielding Pitcher Helps Another confusing play comes up a bunted ball with first and cupied and no one out. The bunts down the On such plays the ird baseman always vious understanding who ¢ the bunt. With a good fielding pitcher who is fast of foot, I always cover third and let him make the play either to third or first, according to the slow, poor fiélding piteher uke the bunt and make one man sure. If ‘the ball is bunted hard, it is often posible to force the ranner at second and sometimes start a double play. The most difficult batters for me to play are left-handed hitters, speed merchants, who hit hard down the third base line and in addition are clever bunters. Dated at this 4th day of dune ©, R. GREEN, As Mani of the k of North Dakota, as Agent for the Treasurer of the orth Dakota, a Trustee ute. of North Dakota, chee of Mortgagee. Bismarck, North Dakota, | said 1924, | mo! se on the day of sale. The 4 described in such mortgage and which will be sold to atisfy the same are described as follows, to-wit: Southeast Section Five Quarter 4) of (5) and Northeast Quarter (NE") of Section E : (8), Township One Hundred the Manager of Forty-four (144), North, —o orth Dakota, Range Seventy-five (75), We North Dakota | situated in the County of Bur- 6-10-17-24- 7-18-15] leigh, State of North Dake = | There will be due on the NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE:| installments of such morte: CLOSURE SALE the day of sale the sum of Whereas default has occurred in| Hundred Sixty-nine and 91-100 the payment of intercst and prin-| ($1269.91) Dollars, together with the cipal e obligation seeured by| statutory costs of foreclosure. the » hereinafter described; | Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, the holder of said| this 4th day of June, 1924 s elect to foreclose on! C, R. GREE prineipal Manager ‘of the Bank of North ation only. A en that that xecuted and de ivered by Jakob Wahl and Karolina | Wahl, his wife, mortgagors, to the | Manager ef The Bank ot North Da k . dated t and office of the the County kota, The Bismarck, Trustee for the State of Dako Assignee of Mortgz gee. G. OLGEIRSON, Attorn Bank of Bismarck, r the Manager of The ‘orth Dakota, ce North Dakota. record in the 6-10-17-24 of Dec State of day of Janu PL M., and recorded of Mortgage signed by ument in reasurer of North Dak« successors in office, curity for bon Rog TAR of Burici — NOTICE OF MOR CLOSURE as default ayment of GE ALE occurred in FORE- einafter described; holder of does elect to foree i and unpaid ereas the rigage » past nd intere: r dated the Notice and recorde the ‘Register of day of June, Winnie G. Jos M sagors, to the er of The Bank ortzagee, dated : of April, 1920, and filed n the office of the Reg- © front doo ister of ds of the County of the City Burleigh, State of North Dakota, on arck, County of Burleigh, a the 19th day of November, 1920, at North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock, P, M., and recorded in on the 19th day of] Book “166” of Mort; s, at page satisfy the amount due | 374, and assigned by said mortga- | 1 i upon due installments of gee, by an instrument ir in writing to the’ past High School Sprinter May Land Olympic Trip "Forty-two 42), North, s Seventy-six (76), West, in..the County of Bur- of North Dakota. ‘be due on the past due ‘ such mortgage _ on FRANK HUSSEY y Epeneilad to. Lawson Robertson, veteran coach, Frank Hussey, New thigh 1 boy, is the ming 100-yard champion-of the country. ‘young Huésey.-now--with-a view to- placing ‘him: ivmple team. Should Hussey come through he’ I ‘be the youngest Member of the American sprints team>~. ~ te Treasurer of North Da- id his successors in office, security for bonds is- sued by the State of North Dakota, which assignment was dated the 15th of June, 1921, and recorded said office of the Register of Deeds on the 23rd day of June, 1921, at 9200 o'clock, A. M,, in Book™*169" of Miscellaneous Mortgages, at page 179, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the City of Bismarek, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock, P. M., on the h day of July, 1924, to satisfy te ount due upon the past due inst nts of said mor ale. The prem such mortgage and which will be sold. to satisfy the same are des- cribéd as follows, to-wit: South Half (S12) of Southeast rter (SE%) and South Half $14) of Southwest Quarter (SW) of Section Twenty-four 24), Township One Hundred rty-two (142), Range Seventy. 8: ), and Lot One (1) of Section Thirty (30), One Hundred Forty-two (142), of Range Seventy-five Vest, situated in the Coun- of Burleigh State of North ¥ Township the sum of. and 71-100 , together with the s of foreclosure. Bismarck, North Dakota, of June, 1924. Cun: GREEN, As Manager of the Bank of North Dakota, as Agent for the Treasurer of the State of North Dakota, as Trustee for the State of North Dakota, Assignee of Mortfagee. G. OLGEIRSON, Attorney for the Manager of The Bank of North Dakota, Bismarck, North Dakota. 6-10-17-24—7. statutor, Dated at this 4th d Marquette’s Commencement ‘ Being Held) Milwaukee, Wis., been. made for hn encement exerc of Marqquett: university which will be held in the Milwaukee municipal auditorium on the night of Wednesday, June 11. Marquette will graduate approx mately 436 seniors the largest cl: in its history. The largest previous jass was in 1923, when there were 359 degrees conferred. Commencement plans call for a three-day program. It “will open th the senior pilgrimage to all departments of the “university, be centinued with a faculty-senior pic- nic luncheon at noon and close with u senior meeting and swingout’in the early evening. Alumni will reign on Tvesday, June 10 with the members of teri classes, those of ‘1894, '95, '96, 97, 1918, "14, ’15, ’16, and ’22, back for reunion.-The senior cap and gown | precession and the commencement | address and program take place on June 11, . While university authorities now are busy on plans for commence- ment week ‘considerable ‘time’’also is being devoted to preparations for the summer school. Marquette expects a heavy enrollment for the summer classes, and announcement has been made of a large list of faculty members who willbe at the university for this session, Courses will be offered in the” colleges of liberal arts and” Mhisic,,$he” educa- tion department and the physical education department.“ Classes will start on June 23, 4 nal plans have the annual com -1-8-15 | She Was Rich in Love By MYRA CURTIS LANE Effie leaned out of the window and looked into the street below. Ii Was on the eve of her marriage. She was twenty-eight and Rufph was thirty-seven. They were both too ofd for folly. It was essential- ly a marriage of convenience. For Ralph had un old and untarnished name, und Effie had money. More money than she knew what to do with, Her father had been & millionaire, and she had inherited half his money and a large house in the city. She was certainly & rich girl. Only love had never come her way. Justa few trivial flirtations, and twice what she thought was the genuine thing, but found was not. In that she was poor—a very poor girl. 2 It was not late. Her relatives had gone home early, ‘leaving her alone, except for the servants, In the large house. And she leaned out of the window, looking at the people passing. How intent they were, euch on his own affairs, Each person looking for happiness, and never finding it. That was the way ft went. Then she saw a couple saunter- Ling slowly along the street, their bout each other. They were Ns ‘h other, heedless of the softly falling rain. Poor they were, and yet so rich In their love. It was she who was the poor girl. If only she could step out of the great house and put everything be- hind her—Ralph, the whole past, and begin to live. She had never lived. And now she was entering a blind alley with Ralph. She had tried so hard to love | him, but it was all impossible. And somewhere In the world a lover j might be waiting for her—the lover who would make her rich, Sh tarted as.a ring came atthe door. She had sent the servants to bed, she expected nobody. She went out to the hall and opened it, a Ht- tle frightened. - Ralph stood there. “Oh, It's you! Come in!" She leaned forward, prepared to give phim the mechanical kisé that was already becoming the habit between teem. But his face startled her. “Come in, Ralph. What fs it?” she asked, facing him in the draw- ‘room. “Is anything the mat- 2” she went on. “Effie, I've been thinking. It isn't too late. Would you release me?” ‘rhe words made her heart bound. Release—what she had dreamed of! For a few moments wild hopes ran coursing through her brain. Then she saw the impossibility of it all—her relatives, her friends, the scandal. © . “Why, Ralph?” | “Because you don't love me, Effie. It would be insensate to start our life together Hke that. You don't, do you?” ,”” she cried desperately. “I— ve tried so hard to, Ralph. But It was impossible from the begin- “Can we help going through with It now?” “T'll take the responsibility.” “You can’t, Ralph. Jilting is a woman's privilege.” She laughed bitterly. “Well—let it be as you shy.” He turned away, and she saw him swallowing hard. She took a step‘ toward him. “Isn’t that all right, Ralph?” A He took her hands in.his. -“Effie, if you knew how very much I cared. Did you think it was anything else? Your money—?”" She was listening as in a dream. What was he teHing her? “I know you tried to care, but you couldn't, Effie. And that's why I want to set you free.” Ps I never knew all this, “But is isn’t too late.” “Fil give you your answer in a few minutes. No, wait—wait!” ‘ She was trying desperately. to think. If she had known—but they had started wrong from the begin- ring. She turned toward him, and the'look on his face touched her to the heart. | “Ralph, I did care at first; til! you seemed to repulse my love. No, don't answer that. We don’t want to quarrel now. Ralph, dear, I-—I want to go through with it. You see, nobody has ever cared for me, and if you Say you do—” ‘And’then suddenly she knew she wae no longer a-poor girl but a’very rich girl indeed. | (@,1924, Western Newspaper Union.) i : it Mary Lost Her Tip A’ newly appointed judge of the Supreme court, who felt pretty well satisfied with himself, was dining at a hotel and he said to the Irish |' | waitress, “Mary, how long have | you been in this country 2” “Divo years, sir.”* “Do you like Jt?” “Sure, it's well enough,” she ‘an- swered, | “igit, Mary,” he continued, have many privileges in this’ coun- try which you'd not have in Ire- land. Now at hotiie you'd ‘never-be in 4 room with a justice of the Su- preme court and chatting familia ly “with ‘him:” “But, ‘eure, gir,” ‘sald the ‘girl, quite in earnest, “ye'd never be -a judge at home.”"—Boston Tran- script. cor. « ais Had F. ‘orgotten | ‘hs ‘Hot Springs girl recently ran aon a lot of love-letters written | Many years ago, by her mother te fa ‘Wither before they were: uipr- ried.’ The daughter pretended that | thetetters wereiof Feoens, see read them to her moth: disgusted beyon manure vote it- weber 8 that a ermitted in tive ae 4 a, Pee pi when avas * e sense”"—Philadelphia Inquirer. ABRITABLE AT HOME | - NeéWYork, June10.—College eins | 2 Jose “thelr temper at ‘home. Because at college they are treated a gous, wemen, free’ to act: in’most: thin; * on their “own ‘jadgment, they” obj bjeee that |" te the restraint put upon them by their parents, a New York psycholog- ist says. In college, the investigater declares, girls are pushed toward maturity, while at home the pressure is the other way. Big Bill’s Conversion By JAMES BLACK Big -Bill' was the best worker in the camp. He was a wonder. Never got drunk and saved his -money. And every week regularly a sub- stantial part of it went to Mrs. Big Bill: down in the city. But—here was the thing that struck the postmaster as curious. Big Bill* declined to register dis letters. “Guess I'l take my chance, Mr. Farrell,” he said. “Ain't no use wastin’ money‘ on registration.” “I ‘bet the truth is, he's afraid to write his name and address in the corner,” Farrell confided to ‘his friends. “He's hiding from his wife; that’s the long and short of it.” Farrell could not understand that. He got on very well with his wife, by the simple plan of giving way to her in everything. Just now Mrs, ‘Farrell was away on a visit to her sister, and Farrell missed her badly. “Bill,” said Farrell one day, “why don’t you go back home and get.a job around there?” And then it all came out. Mra. Big! Bill was’ a fine woman, “the best in the world, bar none.” Only —she had a tongue. Twenty years Big Bill had been married to her, and that tongue of hers had never ceased. “Why,’ Big Bill complained tear- fully, dursn’t light a pipe in me own house. And I can’t sot down but what she’s after me to give some job or other. No, sir. A fine woman she is, but I've had my Gil of married life, and so long as 1 send her the money regular, I guess “she ain't got no kick com: ing. ‘But doesn’t she want you, Bill?” asked Farrell. “Not so as you'd notice it.” “Tush, man! That's the fate of | all married men, being jawed at. | Go home and laugh at her, man, answered Big Bill with a melancholy aspect. “I tried laughing, and I tried agreeing with her, and I tried everything except violence, and it doesn't go. No, Mr. Farrell, no more married life for mine. Here I am and here I re- main.” “I think you're very foolish, Bill,” said Mr. Farrell. “A good wife’s a treasure, and the best of them use their jaws. However, you know your own business best.” A few days after this conversa- tion Mr. Farrell announced proudly to his cronies that his wife was coming home. When the eventful day ‘arrived he drove down from the mountains to meet her, and re- turned with her seated beside him. Bill had anticipated Mrs. Far- ell’s arrival with a certain uneasi- ness. In the first place, she would be the only woman in camp—and he had had enough of female so- ciety. In the second place, there would be no more of those nice friendly little parties in the post office in the evening. Bill had gath- ered that Mrs. Farrell was strict and had ideas of her own as to the most suitable company for her hus- band. And this, in her opinion, did not include the rag-tag and bob-tail that sat about the post office gro- cery and ate crackers out of the barrels. So it was with misgivings that the little group assembled saw Far- rell hand ‘his wife out of the chr- riage, She. was. a_ tall,.,.hard-featured woman, and she bore a striking re- semblance to Mrs. Big Bill, She looked about her, at the store, at the little gathering, and expressed her mind fluently. “Henry,” she said, “I don't know what you've been doing while I was away, but I'judge by results. When I left, this storerayas as neat as a new whistle—aid Idok at it now! Look. att! What-sort of business man do you call-yourgelf, with half the cans ‘falling down from. the shelves, and I'll. bet. that floor hasn't been swept-since I swept it tmyself, and" she peered into’ the eracker barrel—“half this. barrel empty, eaten up by loafers who never ‘pay a-pehny, but come in here to guzzle.” Sadly and disconsolately the Ut- tle group filed. out. Next morn morning Big Bill came. to Mr. Farrell.” Guess I’m ‘taking yout advice, Mr. aay ” he ‘sald sheepishly... “I'm, oa “Well, Bill, ike fin, 1” erlea Farrell enthusiastically. “But what's |, put chat potter “fato-your head?” “whiy, it:was seaing Mrs. Farrell,, and what) a g isekeeper-like swife ‘she ts; ‘and—and ‘hearing: her: volce—it mate me’ kinder lonesome and_homesick.” (Oy 1924, Weitern Newspaper? Ubion.) Keene: Won and Eoet ‘ : Millions of ‘Dollars “Tt is to be questioned whether his tyimgsup ‘with Jay Gould or :the es cate, ats wal e electer was RK ‘eene’s gréat-' ibe of: Jud To his then! associate, Keene attributed his omen fn ‘Western inion, ‘andi ‘wheat dn the: late-seventles, 2»... “*For vatl of ‘his ‘speculations over! 50 years, Keene, when he ‘died, in ) left but 0,000, and he t more fatitves in his opera- tions. than .suéce: enaaee. C Atel pia expbrient Re ce with Geaild, abe 8 “gollowe and Keene was in ABBA By;-2 he i rortine wilak cont? th the whisky com-| "end! American ‘Sigur’ He ‘Later in the same decade he won ud lost ang, won again. on a nea, it, only to enue Pail- At the. time of ‘the floor shortly after cae ‘the ae lapse. of . Southern,’ Ean hee New: York Times. ae ee ete eee cee cee They were seated in the living- room—Fred Henderson and his guest from the office—waiting for the dinner gong. “Nice little home you have here, Fred. Everything so neat and in good taste. What’s the recipe?” “Credit. the little woman in there. She’s the home manager —art director, purchasing agent and general counsel on what to buy and how to buy. “She knows! Reads the adver- tisements! Reasons that adver- tised goods must be right goods—- in style, taste, quality; that they must be truthfully represented, and that they must be worth every penny asked for them. If they were not, the manufacturer making them or the dealer selling them could not long continue in business. Logical, isn’t it? “Yes, sir, Bill, if I were as well informed on things to eat, clothes to wear and furnishings for the home as Louise, I'd kick up this bally job of mine and become an ‘Expert Adviser to People Who Don’t Read Advertisement,’ ” ADVERTISEMENTS ARE YOUR EXPERT ADVISER ON BUYING WISELY— READ THEM ALL t il Your ee tu Announcements —at— Te THE TRIBUNE All Styles, Printed or Engraved. ** * a4 " Po Be: ‘BIBMARCK TRIBUNE © CO. rer)