Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
axirnnee PAGE sIx ~~ Sport LOCALS BEAT INDIANS HERE INGOOD GAME Joe Day and Sorlien Oppos Each Other on the Mound In The Contest aying a nnon Ball India twirled for Bismarck’s 19% team and who has since Hibbin visitor: that time. His best exploit was in sue the fourth inning when he fanned five | Bismarck batters. The catcher! ing | dropped two third strikes, md this feat possible. The Independents delighted the crowd with three fast double plays, Fuller, DeRochford and Simmons participating. Sorlien pitched fine ball for Bis- marck and good support. Sunday the fast Minot team comes to Bismarck at 3 p.m. sharp. ‘The line-up: Cannon Ball Indians RH. POA. E. 0) 1 Oe 01022 Oro 22: @ ar 0 00000 10602 0 Ors 0 0 015 0 2 O° 2.1 Oo: J. Keeps, Joe Day, ef-p... Littlecrow, rf. F. Y¥. Bes sighos Ambrose, Tusk, c. Paul Keeps, p-cf.... 3 Totals)... 29 a | Bismarck AB.R. Fuller, 2 .4 0 De Rockford 4 ‘Thompson, 4 0 Tiffin, k rf. by Day, 12; by Keeps, Loubeck. By inning R.HLE. Cannon Ball .....000 000 010-1 6 7 Bismarck - +... 100 320 00x—6 9 0 BILLY CONLEY WINS BOUT Fred Barth, former Mott, North Dakota boy, who fights under the name of Billy Conley, today wired his brother, Jacob Barth, thet he won his Fourth of July fight in Idaho, with Bob Sage of Detroit, Michigan. The fight was scheduled for 20° roun Billy Conley will stop off here in a few days on his return to the east. KELLEY TRADES MILLER PLAYERS) Minneapolis, Minn, July 7—The biggest baseball deal of the in the American association was con- summated Sunday night by Mike Kelley when he traded Pitcher Leo Magnum and Catcher Joe Grabowsk his pet battery, to Charle owner of the Ch exchange for Infielder French and Bill Block, C: Wirts and Pitcher Douglas McWeeney. Kelley also will receive another pitcher of note and a large sum of money, thé exact amount of which he refuses to make public. a | Billy Evans Says | oles A In the m there are j or leagues this about an even dozen pitchers who ‘have been in the main canopy 12 years or more. Strange to relate, three of them are on the same club, Reference is made to Pennock, Bush and Shawkey of the Yankees. Each got his start with the Athletics back around 1912, But despite their long service in big time, two of them—Bush and Pennock—led the American League gunners as late as 1922 and 1923, In 1922, Bush, by virtue of a sensational comeback, showed the way to the rest of the field, while Pennock, a team- mate, turned the trick last season. A pair of note-worthy records, indced! The work of each played @ big part in the success of the Huggins en- tourage those years. Not only do the Yanks boast three of the oldest hurlers in the game in point of service, but in Sam Jones they have another who only lacks a season or so of being up as lengthy a tithe as Shawkey, Bush and Pen- nock. Jones, likewise, had a pretty | good year in 1923. That the Yankees have the vldest pitching staff in baseball is a well- known fact. They're veterans in evéky sense of the word. For a dozen that in more than one respect. It's problematical of course. ~- 01 ‘tig but te ran: y pitching corps psent,. Hi | | ust grade of ball, the | Independents won from the | here Sunday | afternoon, 6 to 1, Joe Day, who! heen with | pitched six innings for the) triking out 12 men during | 0 0j}p ican League | took four of the five games of the series. The world champions scored four runs in the ninth inning, win- Babe Ruth got his 2: homer of the season, in the eighth. Danforth held Detroit to three hits t. Louis won, 5 to 1. Pitcher Cole of Detroit made home runs. The Chicago White | nd, 9 to 6, in a free hitting} mention one of the hardest chins! seasons or more in the majors is quite a stretch for a pitcher. True, €y ‘Young, Matty and some of the other old-timers ‘leaped far beyond Ba, but they were exceptions ‘The present Huggins staff may keep hurling winning ball for some time to come,, And then again it may not. thing. is certain, however, and is that Shawkey, Bush and Pen- jock et al. can not got on indefinitely. hey are bound to hit the shoots jooner or later. Obviously, it be- the Gotham management to ral a bit of young pitching. mate- .. For outside of e up in 1919, the ” THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE ©" "OR WESTERN MAIDEN BREAKS NANCY ATPN A new woman’s national intercollegiate record for the 65-yard hurdles was established recently in telegraphic meet at Des Moines, fa., when Nancy Aten of Drake University clipped a tenth of a second off the old mark. staff fa falter a victory ning 7 to 4. and In the son. St. Paul . Columbu: Kanss Toledo Minneapoli Indianapo’ Washington New York . |Detroit . | St. Louis | Chicago | Cleveland Boston New York Chicago . Cincinnati Boston ¢ es ruin, should the pitchers multancously and tear of long se ‘SENATORS ARE BEATEN AGAIN New York Yankees Take Four Out of Five in Series Chicago, July 7.—The New York 0| Yank | seri concluded Sox beat Philadelphia administered nts, the score being second game. won, 5 to 1. Games Saturday St. Paul, 7; ; Louisville, 2 Columbus, 8; Tol Columbus, 8; Toledo, 2. Kansas City, 8-7; Milwaukee, 5-7. American League v. Pet. Philadelphia ‘Games Saturday New York, 2-2; Washington, Boston, 6-6; Philadelphia, Chicago, 8; Cleveland, 7. Detroit, 3; St. Louis, 0, Games Sunday New York, 7; Washington, 4. Chicago, 9; Cleveliind, 6. St. Louis, 5; Detroit, 2. National League Pet. Cecelia Belanger '658| Ben Bartuloft 600) Margaret Brownle .542|. BE. W. Batchelar *502| John Black . ATS A417 Al4 375 Philadelphia St, Louis ... ys Games Saturday Pittsburgh, 11; Cincinnati, 4. Brooklyn, 8; Boston, 4. New York, 6; Philadelphia, 5. Chicago, 6; St. Louis, 2. Games Sunday New York, 5-0; Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, 9; Cincinnati, 2. Boston, 4-0; Brooklyn, 1-5. St. Louis, 13; Chicago, 4. a ker | ——————-% STRAIGHT DOPE BENNY ON THE RADIO ‘The thing that makes the favorite son business, as practiced by poli- ticians, all wrong, like red ants in the picnie pickles, is the horrible| judgment displayed in selecting said favorite sons. A. Who is the favorite son of Geor-| Hilda Evenson gia? Ty Cobb, of course. iil ins’|-Ty’s. mame put in nomination at And was either of the word-tossing tourna- ments? It was not. What if Cobb knows nothing about the tariff, world court, disarmament program or ship subsidy, can’t he still make a bum out of any pitcher that grooves one with the bases loaded? eee And who is the favorite son of Kansas? Don’t ask such silly ques- tions? Walter Johnson has done more to advertise Kansas than all the bag-punching statesmen at large. And what does he get when the big-lunged gas pipes of the country assemble to pick the next golf ch mpion of the White House lawn? he air. They didn’t even let him go in the bull pen to warm up when the dippy delegates knock McAdoo and Smith all over the lot. Does Utah give Jack Dempsey a tumble? Does she storm up and down the aisles singing throaty praises to two of the greatest fists the world has ever known? Not to Nationals Jimmy Ring of] She doesn’t. Only one delegate first}even mentions him. That was when white wash dose of the season to the|he stood in the middle of Madison to 0 in the)Square Garden, where the prize-ring In the first New York]is usually placed. Williams of Phil- ve adelphia got his ninth homer of the} “I hope Dempsey never gets knock- ed out of the ring on his head in The Pirates beat Cincinnati, 9 to 2.| this hall,” he remarked. “The floor Brooklyn and Boston divided header, Boston and Reuther pitching Brooklyn to a] I ask you ladies, and the things to 0 shutout win in the second. St.]the minister wished on you, i: Louis beat Chicago, 13 to 4 looks powerfully hard.” this justice? Is this what our daring forefathers came over in the May- flower for? Was it to gain this sour if BASEBALL 4 and sordid end that we crushed @| Ger Kultur and kraut? I propose that in the future when a politician nominates a _ favorite son that he be forced to specify whose favorite son he is and why. Grove Takes / RECORD IN HURDLE RACE| Another Game, Washburn Loses Southpaw Scott turned in the twelfth straight win for the Grove gang Sunday afternoon when he -blanked the fast Washburn outfit on |! the local field. Hurling pretty ball all the way, he was never in danger excepting in the sixth frame, when Tower hit a single and Cunningham swatted out a two-bagger, Scott then tightened up and retired the three |) next men that faced him, The Grove gang secured one run in the second frame, one in the sixth, when R. E. Smith crashed one over the wall for a homer and in the eighth again counted one score. This contest was easily the fastest and cleanest exhi- bition staged on the local fidld this season. Tower, on the mound for the visitors, pitched nice ball all the way, but hitting when it counted and errors by his team-mates lost the game for him. The team that the Penitentiary has in the field this sca- son is by far the best organized and evenly balanced team, so the mana- ger states, that Grove has put into the field in the last ten years, Next Sunday, July 13, the fast Cannon Ball. team is scheduled to play on the Grove diamond against the unde- feated Grove gang and the game wild commence promptly at 2 p. m. Michigan Banking On Her Two Stars In Olympic Games By NEA Service Ann Arbor, Mich. July 7—Two Michigan athletes—DeHart Hubbard and Jim Brooker—will compete for America in the Olympic games at Paris in July. They were the only Maize and Blue entries to survive the final tryouts at Boston. Hubbard will appear ih the run- ing @road and hop, step and jump, events. In both he stands an ex-, cellent chance of finishing first, Futthermore, he may hang up new world’s records. His present: broaa jump mark is 25 feet 2 inches, just a scant inch behind the retord leap of Ned Gourdin, former Harvatd star, made several years ago. In the hop, step and jump affair he hits 48 feet consistently. Brooker will confine his activities to the pole vault. He’s good for 1¥ feet practically every time out. With Lean Brownell of Illinois out of the games, Brownell looms as © Uncle Sums best bet in the vaulting event. Hubbard and Brooker, by the way, are two of the greatest’ athletes Michigan has boasted in some time. Both are Juniors and with another year of collegiate competition should better their present records in their favorite events. Brooker was re- cently elected captain of the 1925 team. He hails from Cass City, a little town in Michigan. Hubbard's home ig in Cincinnati. Oddly enough, Michigan also had two representatives on thfe 1920) Olympic aggregation. One was the great Carl Johnson,’ hurdler, high and broad jumper and sprinter. The other was “Duke” Dunne. Johnson finished second in the running broad jump, but Dunne failed to place in any off his Specialties, the weights. Commerce Teams Will Resume The Lahr Motors and Hardware teams will meet Tuesday night in the resumption of the Commercial League schedule. If the Hardware team wins it goes to t¥e top, now being tied with the Alex Rosen and Brother team for first place. Stockholder R, R. Alexande: Wm, Arnold ja Anstr Anstrom is. Asmus . n vig, Anderson Anderson Mrs. Leola Arms . John B, Anderson Nelso Anderson A.B. Anderson . Adolph Anderson . Christ Bauer . Mary Buchholz . Axel Bratsburg J. M. Brouillard Brouillard .C. Bradley . Cc. B. Bash ... C. B. Bash D. G. Brownlee . Howard C, Beaver red Broedl dd Broedl Cc, Bakken . _C. Bakken . Cc, A. Brown .... Mrs. Claole Bonderud . Mrs, Claole Bonderud - Walter Beardsley « Ben Bartuloff ... . Clausen Clausen s. EB. Chapman Clemens B. A. Drawver 8. E. Dronen . 0. H. A, Engeseth 3 % Eneeseth NOTICE Re: Idawa Gold Mining Company, Bismarck, North Dakota. ‘There is delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the 18th day of April, 1924, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: 1360 2095 100 4.00 1167 300 12.00 220 8.80 4 200 8.00 200 8.00 200 8.00 300 12.00 1000 40.00 00 24.00 500 20.00 26 1,00 50 2. 100 4.00 200 8.00 00 800 20: 20. 500 20.00 2000 £0.00 100 4.00 100 4.00 3000 120.00 200 “gino 400 16.00 $00 923 200 3 aossaSSSossa 33235S33533SS5: an0 £5 3m $08 : 38 1:00 f 400 16,00 —~ 200 8.00 400 16.00 820 8.80], MONDAY , JULY 7, 1924 Ne. of Shares Asaessment 200 8.00 Henry Edmark’ 29: 3 3 an Peter Pederson . 29 2 3 Burt Finney Ee Andrew Peterson Andrew Fisher . Miss Florence & . Pr A. W. Fagerlund . A. W. Fagerlund . A. W. Fagerlund . . erroregots nrscansnane ARSSRONARANSASSSSSSSNORNSS BON: 3500000 900%20095500090Rm29200 wn os $23SS3333833333323333333SS3333SS3S333SS333333333: Gottfried J. Pearson John A. Peterson Anton Friese Orfa I. Power Suwa awe SSo0 333358333: cory : sessveosssoss Bennie Peterson i Oliver M, Pi: Charles J. Poppas . . H. Fitasimmons J. H. Fitzsimmons .. Wm. Forum Max Fishman . Wm. Felares John Foster. o ss : orge Rowerdink Ernest A. Gibson’. Gust B. Gordon : Gust E. Gordon feo. Gomulok Bernatd Gorey. . 8. Gustafson LS. Gustafsor ord ae Ss5: Cc. F. Ramspott .. Robert Roaldson Aug. Reuhman Aug. Reuhman Aug. Reuhm: Aug. Reuhman F.C. Ramspott . Mrs. F. C. Ramspott . Esther Sophia Strand ... Esther Sophia Strand .. Arthur Sporel . Arthur Sporel Jesse Spoer) Minnie Shannon . Ge ore ney iemety 33 SSSssooooecse>. 1. ¥. Hoppenstedt - . 1, F. Heppenstedt .. Colette Homan . 2oesoasoomesos: nome nom SONAR RASS OVO SM as eo =} rt jess0 ze SSeS Osa MS. Wm. Hanson . NM. F M. BE. Howland . Harry Hedstrom John 'T, Hanson ~ Peiconan P. M. Hairing D. L. Heckling - James Henderson . Sus Reaewecse . 2 Soooceaz0a509 SSosooose W Alex Harchanko Alex ‘Stenquist ".- Ski E W. J. Hermin, Ss. [i Hilbling” L, H. Heckling - Qscar Swenson |: Chas. L. Shirmer Stephen Semenuk W. H. Stark . Anna J. Schrot Anna J. Schroeder Nick Schroeder Nick Schroeder = io NOIR Oem ‘red Sundermeyer - . B. Sorenson . . B, Sorenson . B. Skorheim PrN ded Iver Iverson Iver Iverson almer Jacobson W. G Jertson Rosa B. Johnson B. O. Swiggum .. Henry Johnson Roebling Jarvis Geo, H. Johnson Bennie Johngon L. R. Johnsoh, Tri Andrew Karonis . Geo. W, Kemper Robert Steele . Adam Kraft Harry J. Kann Salome Kline . Carl B. Trove . Chas. ‘Tenneson . H. M. Tenneson . Amond Thor Amond Thor 7°:: J. C. Thompsén Hi. B. Tiehueb . Joe Timishkevicl Chris Thompson Chris Tascas W. Thoreen David Leibuman Rachel Larson Hiram Landers Fred Luckow John Langdahl Elmer G. Larson ... Bimer G. Larson mer G. Larson Nels -Leidahl . Harold Roy Little . Harold Roy Little ‘Land: Lydia Weber J. R. Washburn Wahl eoeonso5555005950229% 3 3333338S3SSSS533335SSS5 Esther M. Watne Sig. Wacker. Howard Wilgon Lewis: Warmka Joseph Warmka Helling & Wallac Helling & Wallace Helling & Wallace Helling & Wallace Helling & Wallace 01 01 5.0 5.01 01 01 c. Mounce James T. Makholm . Frank Miller ... Gunnar A. Malm . Gunnar A. Malm . Walter Michel Jesse. Mathe: Meh’ Louls Mortenson... Bere. Mastiaton Miss Meta pallies 20. S >>: soso. fs Sesessse2e: PSSse Sssses. 29 mtons _ tstesoee SESE NN: 2 3S SOD05: 3 jSooooooose: ING COM! ly B.A. Nordquist, , Secret