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PAGE SIX ~~ + THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~~~ | Appear on Boxing Card Sports HORNSBY OUT FOR NEW MARK IN NATIONALS Slugging Second Bas The | Pushes Right Along | { | | eman of . Louis Nationals IS NEAR 400) MARK Jamieson of Cleveland — ts ding the League Sluggers Now Lei American batting ue, and) star jsecond with the St. Louis Cardinals, To Be Staged During Legion Convention ak is out to establish a new National | lenzue record, by leading the cir cuit in hitting for the fifth consee- | utive year With the season approaching aul half way mark, Hornsby con- | tinuing the pace he set at open- ing. He is slapping the ball at a BILLY EHMKE” 7 clip, Hornsby a has equalled the famous record of Honus | Russie Leroy, Fargo star pugilist, Wagner, who led the National league |and Johnny Tillman of Minne ‘ batsmen for four consecutive years | one of the best welterweights in 1906, 1907, 1908 and 1909, The St. | business, will meet in a 10-round box- Louis player took the lead and held |ing match at Mandan on duly 1, at 0, 1921, 19 1923, Wag-| the fairgrounds arena, as theshead- t mark was 380, and Horns- | liners on a boxing card arranged ‘by bettered this with 401 in 1922. | Jack Hurley for Legion visitors and Hornsby has mad home runs, | local fans two during one game against. the) Others on the card include Billy Cubs, Snyder, New York, is closest | Ehmke, St. Paul, Kid Jackson, Fargo, to Hornsby ewith 383; Wheat, Brook- | a colored fighter, in an 8-round semi- lyn, follows with .380; Kelly, New | windup. York, 876 and Fournier, Brooklyn, k Hart of Mandan- and Bob utter now has Md home | ¢ ampion | 17 351. The runs, while Babe Ruth, ring of Bismarck, each weighing pounds, will meet in a 6-round home run hitter, has 18. he fig- | bout. Wylie Nelson of Mandan a ures include games of Wednesday. | Harry Thompson of Sioux City, flows Other — leading batter are: | will box four rounds at 140 pounds. Friseh, New York .343; Grigsby, Chi | Jack Hoffman of Mandan and Bobby cago 348; Hartnett, Chicago | Hayes of Billings, Montana, will meet Bressler, ¢ Roush, | in four rounds 130 pounds, and Cincinnayi 3 Sale the Eckroth middies of Mandan will Grantham, liams, Philadelphia Young, New York .320; Tierney, Boston 314; Johnston, Brooklyn 14. | give an exhibition, . LeRoy, Tillman and Jackson will give a free display of their ability at the muneipal band stand at 3 0'- clock Sunday afternoon for the bene- fit of those who care to see them. The boys all arrive in the morning. In the American league, Jamieson f Cleveland is leading the pack with + followed by a Babe Ruth with 360 and Ty Cobb of Detroit third with With Harry Heilmann of Detroit hitting the toboggan, a slight shake- Luderus, Oklahoma City, .355; up resulted among the leading hit mupavenvee REbiasay ters, but it did not effect the con-| Omaha Washburn, Tulsa .342. 387; Miller, St. Louis .384; Tulsa ; O'Brien, Denver tenders much as those hanging on the fringe of pecta-] After a long seige, Lapan of Lit- > bilit MeNulty of Cleveland, who] tle Rock was tumbled out of the figured as a dangerous, hitter a feW| batting leadership of the Southern days ago, fell out of the picture] Association, with the pace making with even greater speed than Heil-|honors going to Smith of Atlanta, mann. Smith batting .387, with Lapan Ken Williams of St. Louis, how-|trailing three points behind hin ever ms to have connected with In the general shake-up of the a new grip and is edging towgrds | hatte Marriott of Mobile added the top with an aver ).| three to his base steali cord, Ruth has shown consistently stick giving him a total of twenty-three, work all around. He has a total of} six more than Stewart of Birming- 18 homers, having added two within} ham can show. Paschal of Atlanta, a week, while Williams also con-| however, still clings to the home nected with a ving him ajrun honors, leading the field with total of fourteen. eleven, while Rose of Chattanooga Racing Craze One of The Ails of England Milton Bronner i N Service Writer London, June 27.—Meibers of the British Parliament are always ask- ing what ails the country, why it doesn’t. get more work done, and why more money is not saved, but ways dodge facing the truth about, one of their plagues—year-round racing. Our country, with 110,000,000 peo ple, only has races a few weeks in the yeur, And at most/of the tracks the pari-mutuel system of betting is in vogue. Great Britain with only 45,000,000 people, practically has racing all ‘the time. And with it an army of book- makers. The people are race-mad. Newspapers get out early editions in the morning just to give the fintl entries and the betting priges. “The tracks always draw huge crowds. Why wouldn’t they, when the king and the nobility are both race-horse owners and assiduous race-goers? ‘The hours of labor lost by the myri- ads of men who go to the rates are incalculable. The money lost and which goes to the maintenance of an army of parasites in the betting business must be huge ~ Our own Lady Nancy Astor 18 just about the angriest little woman in 14 countries and all because an imaginative reporter let his type- writer batter out a good one—while it lasted. It seems that Queen Marie of Ru mania was guest of the Astors at Plymouth the other day. And one of the scribes said that in her de sire to have the queen see something interesting, Lady Astor called out: “Oh Marie,*come here quick!” The American wiscountess was 89 disturbed about it that she sent & formal denial to the press. But she could have saved herself the trouble. Everybody in England knew thet was a thing she wouldn’t have said. You get chummy with lords and %atl them by their christian names, but never in the great never, with roy- altie ‘And if there is one person who understands all the rules of the 20- cial game it is the brilliant daughter of Virginia. Alaskan School Is Lauded Ketchikan, Alaska, June 28.—The Alaska Agticultural College and School of Mines at Fairbanks is an institution “in which every Alaskan may take pride, not-only for the rea- son that it is the farthest north in- stitution of higher learning in the world, but because it is deing a work that is, in itself, of vast benefit to the territory,” declared Territorial Senator Frank A. Aldrich ‘after @ visit to the school. “The spirit of the institution’s president, Charles E. Bunnell, whe frequently puts in 16-hour deys, to get the college functioning proper- ly, permeates the entire faculty and is to be found prevalent among the student body,” ‘sald Senator Aldrich. “The deepest desire expressed by President Bunnell was the wish that students from every high school in the territory might enroll in the col- RUSSIE LEROY lege, instead of seeking similar in- stitutions in the states. There are 53 students enrolled. The building for the mining de- partment was completed last fall. It is well equipped and the course of instruction includes actual mining operations on the college grounds. A mill has been provided to treat the ore and make chemical assays. Goats eat old newspapers. Eddie Collins of the White Sox|is second with ten. and Williams speeded up on the| Other leading batters: Williai bases, Collins swelling his total to] Mobile .354; Burrus, Atlanta fifteen. Williams is trailing with| Paschal, Atlanta . arlisle, Mem- fourteen. Cobb is edging up on] phis .351; Stewart, Birmingham 350; Ruth for honors in scoring, Ruth} Barber, Little Rock, Taylor, showing the way with while the |Memphis .340; Guyon, Little Rock Tiger les scored fifty times. ; Knode, Birmingham, .887; Tuc- Other le: Boone, Bos- Jew Orle 37, 03, ton .855; Falk, 4; Goslin, ae SR Washington 3 Boston, | @==—_—<—=——— 347; Meusel, New York 346. | BASEBALL “Reb” Russell, slugging —out- fielder with Columbus, furnished the American Association sensation of the Amer iB ; . a ouisville 25 tion, going on a batting rampage | powstille HH that drove him up among the lead- | gt ee ee fn ers. He also started his home run|% bat to working for an additional | COMmPSS Mivipvairenit simasiies, givinkihim a inneapolls -. total of twelve, three above Smith | Kansas City . of Louisville. Russell is eighth in| Toledo the ‘list of leading hitters with an| Milwaukee average of .348. € ‘Apparently Neun of St. Paul, pace maker in batting almost since the start of the season, is finding the going rough. He is still leading the parade with .402, but failed to add a single stolen base to his collec- tion of twenty-six. Bunny Brief of Kansas City, is hanging on to see- ond place<in batting with an aver- age of 382, Christenson of St. Paul is show- ing the way to the plate with 71 runs to, hig credit, but is hotly pur- American League Washington Detroit New York Boston St. Louis Chicago Cleveland ......- Philadelphia . 22 National League W. i ae ae sa |New York 21.661 gael ert who has scored 68 cnictes 3 i Other leading batters: Brooklyn 28.533 St. Paul~.374; Shannon, : Pittsburgh 290 BIT ‘373; Magnire, Toledo .366; Allen, | Cincinnati 3400 ATT Indianayelig, 351; Lamar, Toledo | Boston Bh Ad (349; Smith, Minneapolis .338; Chris- | Philadelphia is au a) tenbury; Indianapolis .336; McCarthy | St. Louis 833; , Kansas City 333. 888)" Boag epee Results Yesterday National League Pittsburgh 9; Chicago 0. Cineinnati 5-63 St. Louis 3-2. Other games postponed, rain. ‘Attempting to eclipse Babe Ruth’s home run record seems to have been the object of the Western League hitters this weck.| It is noted that Davis of Tylsa leads the proces- sion with 19, a gain of four within ) & week, ghile right behind him is | Washburh, 2 teammate, who smash- ed out three for a ‘total of eighteen. Cullop | 6f:Omaha, who dropped out of the batting lead, decided to. take a few! shots at home run hitting and wound up the week with him a total of fifteen. p fell out of the bat- atin of Tulsa, moved to 19 points for an ‘Als. Cullop is second Dunning of Wichita is American League New York 12-10; Boston 7-5. Chicago 9; St. Louis 3. 1; Cleveland 0. Philadelphi American Association Kansas City 11; Minneapolis 10. St. Paul 8; Milwaukee 3. Columbus 9; Indianapolis 0. Louisville Toledo 1. ‘Washington, rain. LIKES THE SLUGGERS Johnny Dundee says the hard- hitting sluggers are easy for him. “I seem to be able to tell in advance when they intend to start a swing and they seldom hit me,” the vet- eran featherweight champion claims. ‘wild cats have bgen.cap-}. cently in Scotland, B02. a batters were out to record; ith of Wichita i es to his col- : Yor the lead- of St. Joseph, Sevq ‘ Lelivelt, tured NOTICE There is delingdent upon the of set oppe s i. Alexander it \ Arnold A ‘ison... J, Anderson » Mrs. oun Nelso Anderson A..F. Anderson . Adolph. Christ Howar Re Broedl lakken Bakken akken 3 ackreid » Baron 2. Brown . Claole Bonde . Claole Bonderud lter Beardsley Belan Ben Bartuloff Ben Bartuloft Margaret Brownlee W. Batchelar . John Black .. J. Clamp and Mrs. G, Teliner - Ben Combs. . O. M. Collip Mrs. 0. M. Collip John Chubey .... Walter Christenson H. Chernuck 5. Clausen ; Clausen Clausen» Chapman mens R. E. Dewar - Lena Doebler B. Aw Drawver . E. Dronen . 3. Dronen Frank Dikeos W. H. Droffehn . Gust, Dimos. E. D.:Dite . D. Ditch, . D. Ditch M. A. Hingeseth M, A. Engeseth ca Engeseth ssment levied on the 18th day of April, 1924, ite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: Re: Idawa Gold Mining Company, Bismarck, North Dakota. following described stock on account he several amounts R. J. Fuller John Fisher Burt Finney Burt Pinney .. Andrew Fisher A. W. Fagerlund AL W. Fagerlund AL W. Fagerlund P. J. Rederenko Anton Friese . A, J. Freitag « Ole Foss Sor Mrs. N. ign t. RL. Julia Fitzimmons . i. Fitzsimmons: - JW. Fitzsimmons . Wm. Forum Max Fish Wm John Rar! ¢ Ernest A na Ghylen Geo. Gomulok . Bernard Gorey Gustafson . . Gustafson . rdon .... cri Hoppenst Hoppenstedt tte Homan Hogue . Pp, Homan . J.J. Hoerner .. R. i. Hornbachler Wm. Hanson Wm. Hanson M. &. Howland M. E. Howland Harry Hedstrom John T.. Hanson Neils T. Hanson . M. Hairing . D. L. Heeckling James Henderson . Ne eS, hanko Oe ve 5 re J. A, Hillmer John Hartzmai Jacob Haas W. J. Hermin| $. 0. Harris... J. Ho Hilblingg L. H. Heckling . R Hanson . GG Hille. Edw. Hoffman Dan Haffey .. F. Hawkins .. Helland . Hager Harmon Harmon Harmon Harmon Harmon Harmon Harmon Harmon i. Harmon 3. Harmon J. &, Harmon L. W. Hoyt ver Iverson Iver Iverson A. M. Johnson Jalmer Jacobson J. P. Johnson J.P. Johnson W. ¢. Jertson . r I I r I i 1 F I I HEE AS > W Jertson A.B, Johnson |. : Gottitied Johnson Axel EB, Johnson Axel johnson Thos. Jacobson .. Rosa_B. Johnson . ©. N“danzen . Henry Johnson . R. A. Johnson J. Roebling Ja J. A. Johngon . o, H. Johnsoi nie Johnson Fo ara Karonie ‘ eg. W, Kemper WR. Kale... lam Kraft . rry,J, Kann . Salome Kline . J ohler . R. J. Kuhiman . robert. F. Kuhlman . Vv. M. Kontas J. M. Korbel Helen W. King . David Leibuman Rachel Larson Hiram, Landers Fred Luckow . John Langdahl Himer @. Larson Elmer G. Larson Filmer G, Larson Nels Leidahl . Harold Roy Little Harold Roy Little Homer T. Landers . van eae < larry ers. WP Lohas W. P. ‘Lomas Jacob Lehman james T, Maki Frank Miler’ HE Mork L. He rk Gust Miller Louis Morte Se Martinson A. £. 8 ‘ ; Kei Johnson, Trustee .. a ea enon 5 en: SSeS S SRS TEN owe am eene Penne e meccm nm DS Iwarnaesncusnem NES hossuacane rence sth Soe e 2076 pet i te imam cate ches. me Snes ee: ry wroteon ora rate Swscssossousssones: SRSSSSsosooooSsoseoeS Sess 0 "00| Fred Stoll 0 4. 00} Carl B, Trove 16.00} Chas. Tenneson 84.00| H. M. Tenneson 08 J. H. Tauer '8.00| Amond Thor o0| Amond Thor *. 0 . B. 40.00| Joe Timishkevich ‘00 Ghris ‘Fhompson . #0.00| Chris ’. 20.00 | Hd Taombs 8.00| J. W. Thoreen 200] C. F.Uirichson 1600| A. L. Uchner .. $.00| ©. B. Vold .... i ay loc’ 3408) AS 3. Wood $00] Woods Boooesosozsooess SSsSSssssssssssssss ess 335 ers Pre ceo oe “a Fine cote a » Bop Sees o < SSS8SS3SSSSSSS5SE5: . ee 00 my FS Sessssssssssss roe DPASrMSraNSe: tts Alfred L. Olson 8S. K.-O'Nada ‘Thomas S. O' an Thomas 8, O'Brien’ Olaf_L. Qison H. T. Perry Peter Pederson Carl_C, Pederson - M. W. Plowman Andrew Peterson Miss Florence Pagle . R. L, & M. B. Pace .. Gottfried J. Pearson Gottfried J. Pearson John A. Peterson : Orfa I. Powers Orfa 1, Powers Lula Psilolihuds . Thedon Psilolihuos Bennie, Peterson Clem Paul) .... Oliver M. Pickatd Charles J. Poppas F. C. Poseley Per Person . John Palries Wm. J. Pettis 1. BE, Parmenter A. EB. Quamme ...... George Rowerdink .. John Rowerdink . ‘Wm. Rowerdink Wm. Rowerdink Wm! Rowerdink Wm. Rowerdink Wm: Rowerdink Wm. Rowerdink Wm. Rowerdink Wm. Rowerdink EB. H. Rehbein 8, Rasmusson W. S. Rohrer M. N. Reider Martin Rasmussqn M. J. Rasmussen . Cc. F. Ramspott . Robert Roaldson Aug. Reuhman . Aug. Reuhman Aug. Réeuhman Aug. Reuhman Mra, F.C. Ramspo' Mrs\ F. C. Ramspott Esther Sophia Strand Esther Sophia Strand Arthur Sporel Arthur Spore) Jesse Spoerl Minnie Shannon George Swemato . soces SESSSSSSSSeseBesssss Soowosoooooooogs 3 L. G. Smith ... J. C. Sehlipvegrill Hugo Schwantes . W. L. Smith W. L. Smith Alex Stenquist L. R. Skjod 0. J. Swenson Oscar Swenson Chas, L. Shirmer Stephen Semenuk John Stern chroeder roeder Nick Si Nick, Schroeder L, Saueressig ....- Martha L. Smith .. J, O. Saltness H. 0. Skorheim Andrew Sailer Vv. BE. Sease .. V. E. Sease ¢ V. BK. Sease .. R. W. Serkland 8. Spiropoulas Bert Swenson Fred Sundermeyer A. B. Sorenson . A. B. Sorenson . M..B. Skorheim Nels Sabin B. G. Smith: J.D. Schmuel Sam 'Samanuta . °o. Sanders... Jas Smallwood Geo. A: State ... Géon A. State E. 0. Swiggum . Delia Schroder - Clatence Smith - Stark . R, J. Sailor Ro J, Sailor R. E. Schuyler - Robert Steele ) Adam A, Sailer - Fred Took o| Peter Tamis T. Thorson J, C. Thompson . H. BK. Tiehueb . ‘ascas. Woods Woods Woods Sanatarium Inc. . Woods Sanatarium Inc. . Lew Werner . . Lew Werner . Lydia Weber J. R. Washburn . Aug, ‘ant. J. Wallman . Adolph Wacker . Esther M, Watne ig. Wacker . Be ‘Howard: Wilson .... 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