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Tl Nw mAcem. PAGE SIX ~~, Sports LOCAL LEAGUE PLANNING FOR FINE FINISH Commercial League Gets Un- derfWay on Last Half of Season’s Schedule ASKS FANS SUPPORT The Bismarck Commer which has resumed its s pects to league games during the remainder of the present season. The Bisenarck Commer Teague is sponsored by the Association of Commerce with the object of fur nishing good cle I without the expense which the city tear the last two years have incurred, The standard of play is iT y not as high but he League, hedule, ex n baseti tion of knowing the pliyers d not feeling a cramp in the poc- thoox every time that ‘aseball is mentioned, , An admission charge of 25 cents is made, one fourth of which oe toward payment for th the stands in an ende: the park for public use high school athletics and other ally require ae} mmunit opositid of this league the Association of Commerce fe that these games are a public op- portunity for both community ser- | vice and through enjoyment. Friday evening at 6:30 at the ball park the Transportations meet the Alex Rosen & Bro. team. A win for either means a tie for first e season is as follow Versus Team No. Monday —July 14..2 vs. Wednesday July 16..1 0 vs. 3 Friday = —July 18..3 00 vs. 2 Monday vs. 4 Wedne: vs. 2 Friday vs, 38 Monday vs. 1 Wednesday vs. 2 Friday vere Monday Aug. 4..2 vs. 3 Wednesday—Aug, 6.4 vs. 8 Friday Aug. Deeeyer ord Monday Aug. 11..4 0 vs. 2 Wednesday—Aug. 13..3 0 vs. 1 Vr Aug. 15..3 vs. 2 Monday Aug. 18..4 vs. 1 Wednesday Friday First named team the at home team Transportation—Team No. 1. Alex Rosen & Bro.—Team No. 2, Lahr Motor Sales. am No, 3. Hardware Stores*Team No. 4. SENATORS HOLD TO TOP RUNG Divide’ Double Header With Detroit Tigers Chicago, July 10.—Washington still rested in first place in the Americans today, having split with Detroit in a double header, and the Yankees having gone down to defeat before the Chicago White Sox, leaving Washington with a 19- point lead. Washington lost the first game to Detroit, 5 to 2, and won the second game, 4 to 2. The Boston Red Sox tcok a dou- ble header from St. Louis, 5 to 0 and 5 to 4. The Cleveland Indians also won.a double header, the vic- tim being Philadelphia, 3 to 1 and 6 to 3. Ineffective pitching by Markle:and Gaston gave the Chi- cago White Sox an 8 to 6 victory over the New York Yankees. Mos- til hit two home runs for Chicago. In the Nationals, Cincinnati beat Philadelphia, 6 to 3, while Boston defeated Pittsburgh, also 6 to 3. - Jess-Petty, pitching ace of the Indianapolis American Association team, -registered his 16th victory yesterday. BASEBALL . eo: @ American Association Pet. Louisville “ +592 Indianapolis . i 671 St. Raul : 35 565 Columbus . . 39 Aga Toledo . 29.480 Kansas City . ; 43 449 Minneapolis , 44436 ~ Milwaukee . a4 413 * National League L. Pet. New York 25 (662 Chicago . 30 583 34. 534 4, 528 > Cincinnati at’ 481 iladelphia Al 423, oh 2 48 419 46 878 tage a hot finish in the} an at Jeast have — the | BY JOE WILLIAMS New York, July 7.--The strange ly 1s lumber in finto the operating room for further J as*the saying goes, with Ge r | pentier, celebrated French foot racer, 1] here next month. hedule for the balance of ; i and perplexing case of Mr, James Tunney, known professional- ene, is to be wheeled back 1 experiments, Tunney, professing to the light y-weight championship of 4 ened to exchange punc rges ¢ clinie Nobody seems to be able to state with any degree of positivencss whether Mr. Tunney, a fistie product of the A. E. F,, is a first-class fight- ing unit or not. We discussed ‘his case with Martin Burke, champion heavyweight of the south, some days ago. Burke was brief and to the point. “I think he’s an awful tomato,” he said. , ursed Along with Caution Burke, however, may have been mildly prejudiced, since the remarks were made several hours after a fight in which he had taken a severe wal- loping from Tunney Tommy Gibbons is another fight- ing gentleman who can hardly keep aight face when Tunney’s name mentioned, "ll say this for him, though, he ses beautiful English.” iibbo a be mode prejudic . Paul shamrock has been trying, unsuccessfully, for several sed get Tunney. Much of the skepticism regarding Tunney’s ability grew out of the treme caution with which his mana- ger, the shrewd Billy Gibson, en- gineered his matches. If the boys shot at! ~~ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BOUT WITH CARPENTIER AT LEAST WILL GIVE ’ FANS LINE ON REAL ABILITY OF GENE TUNNEY looked too tough, Mr. Tunney was kept far away from them. With the exception of the two ney hasn't faced a er. In the high gra¢ st Greb bout, s beaten, in the second he was victorious. In neither did he look the part of a sensation, Gibson, his manager, tells you Tunney is « greatly improved fighter and predicts he will beat Carpentier worse than Gibbons did at Michigan ¢ Will Beat Carpentier “I brought Tunney along slowly,” ys Gibson, “just as I brought, Ben- Leonard along by easy — stages. Tunney didn’t look any worse in his fledging da ly Benny reached his real form and won the world’s lightweight cham- pionship. Tunney won the American light heavyweight title before reach- ing his top-most abflity. Today he is really a great fighter.” Mr. Gibson is, of course, not un- like the common run of fight mapra- gers, and one should not take his enthusiasm too seriously. Tunney is a pretty fair fighter, but no world beater. He is fast and clever and these qualities ought to win for him over the decrepit ear- pentier, however, has never been geressive fighter, Taking chance: not his specialty. Car- pentier can still fling a fairly hard ight right. Tunney may decide at discretion is eminently the bet- ter part of valor, and go into a shell, If he does it will be a tegrible fight to watch, for the Frenchman proved in his marathon. with Gibbons that he can retreat with the worst of them, a great RENAULT AND DEMPSEY LABOR DAY? Champion Expected To Meet Canadian Chal- lenger In No-Decision Fight BY JOE WILLIAMS ‘Michigan C July 10.—Here's a piece of fist Ws right off the tcaster and it has a better than fifty-fifty chance to stand up. Despite statements to the con- trary, Jack Dempsey, champion of the heavies, intends to fight one fight ‘before the summer ason ends. And that fight will be held in the blue sky bowl in this picturesque village on Labor D Jack Renault. Canadian heavy: weight, who has been steppit high, wide and imprtssive of late, will be the champion's opponent. The fight will be 10 rounds with no _ decision. Frank Parker of Chicago—Lucky Parker they call him—will be the promoter. A New Tex Rickard Parker is the new Tex Rickard of the middle west. Parker promoted the Carpentier -Gibbons fight here and it drew a -gate of $227,000 a record for a bout in which neither contestant was a champion. Parker, on July Fouth, had two champions scheduled on the same card here—Harry Greb, monarch of the middies, and Abe Goldstein, boss of the bantams. It was not his fault the card was postponed on account of an epidemic. Associated with Parker is Floyd Fitzsimmons, a close personal friend of Dempsey. Generally speaking, you must lay the dough on the line for Mr. Dempsey. Friendships mean little or nothing in his combative career at the box office. There is, how- ‘ever, one exception. Dempsey will 0 out of his way to fight for Fitz- simmons. ‘He has done it-befere and the dope is he will do it again, Renault Eager To Go Fitzsimmons has asked him to accept the Labor Day date here and the feeling is that he will not decline, Parker. the bank-roll man, is willing to slip the champion $200,- 000 in crinkly, green notes. ‘Thi is not to be sniffed at in any 1: guage. And it is soft money for fighting a stingless puncher like j Renault in a no-decision fight. The Canadian will sign if the champion comes to terms, as it is believed he will within the next 10 da . Renault, encouraged py the nd Gibbons made against Demp- y ut Shelby, and remembering that the awkward Firpo knocked the champion out of the ring, is said to be eager for the match, Renault doesn’t think Dempsey can box well. enough to put him away and he has a:notion that he will make such a good showing h sti that a return bout, with a rich{ purse involved, will be inevitable. East Closed To Champ Not that iRenaylt would be fight- ing the champion Labor ;Day for nothing. _ His end, if the bout goes through, will be close to $50,000. Paker feets that: he can spend nearly $300,000 on ‘a Dempsey4Re- nault match and still make money. The blue sky bowl will seat 40,000. That's amply big enough, with i) s ranging from $5 to $35. Another reason te believe this match may go over ig that. Demp- Sey ‘hasn't a chance: to fight in the east before next winter. Rickard has Firpo amd Wills carded for laté August. That will be his final gesture for the season in big league promoting. 36 39 36 40 30 a7 Results Yesterday National League Philadelphia 3; *Cincinnati 6. Boston 6; ;Pittsburgh .3. Others postponed, wet grounds. Cleveland | Boston . Philadelphia American League St. Louis 4-0; Boston 5-5, Cleveland '8-6;, Philadelphia 1-3. Chicago 8; New York 6, Detroit 5-2; W: ington American Association Louisville f The Nut Cracker | MR. “H. GREB Harry Greb is first middleweight | leather on other delegates’ ribs that champion ring has had who could|he hag to keep a shoemaker in) a abdominal puffings of John L. look a tin type of Stanley Ketcher between the eyebrows without blush- ing in all foreign and domestic languages. _ They say Mr. H. Greb doesn’t kich hard... But he does kick often, and any picnic hound will tell you what an awful ting an all-day drizzle le ee aN They say, too, that the Pittsburg plague is just a two-handed fighter : +. Still, his victims haye never been able to learn where the pther six keep coming from, The hurrican cares not who writes the country’s laws if he may paste most of the country's jaws. Mr, O'Goofty thinks quite well o1| him. He made a hit with me the first time I saw him,” says One Punch. “In €act, that’s how I got this tin ear.” he: tornado. wears out ‘so, much | That has been the situation in | one ran was all the vogue. ‘The sac- | er and the rise of the slugger. The HES FROM NAUGH’ GREENWICH VILLAGE WON LIGHT HEAVY WEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP OF AEF. NET QUEEN IN OLYMPIAD | Opp@sition in the air by constantly s than Benny did. Final-|* Be rariecaet eens ging, followed by a revival of base- running, : baseball covering the period of the lost 15 years. Going back that far we find that pitching was the dominating factor of the sport. Close games with low scores. were the rule. Playing for vifige and the. steal were popular strategic moves. 4 Then came a curbing of the pitch- home run became all popular. Kvery batter took a healthy swing. Stra- tegy inva sense was discarded for brute foree. + Now we have a sort of a fifty-fifty Proposition between the pitcher and the batter, which tends to. make for more baserunning. Speed once more becomes a most valuable asset, ‘Ty Cobb once told me that he re- garded his speed as his one best bet, during the days when he was con- stantly thrilling the baseball world by bis daring on the bases. When one thinkssi of Cobb's greatness as a player, his remark able batting ability stands out as the thing that made him the talk of the baseball world. Yet Cobb says his great speed did more to make him a dimond celebrity than any other one thing. Cobb explains thus- ly: “Nothing worries a player more than to know that he must handle a ball perfectly in order to get his man, That means he must field a ground hit cleanly and follow it up with an accurate throw. ' “In my prime, I believe I could travel down to first base as fast as any one, Opposing infielders knew it, and when I came to bat they worked under a strain. “Incidentally I sought to keep the shifting my style at the bat. “My speed, and the mental atti- tude y@f the opposition, helped me reach first hundreds of times, when I should have been retired.” Speed isn’t the asset to a winner that it was 15 years ago, but its value during the past, five years has increased over 100 per cent. The dangerous clubs in the two eee agues today are those who le utilizing their speed by taking Manager Harris has his players run- | the ning at every opportunity. submit helplessly. Claims to Have Seen Owls Flying in Floch | Pen” HELEN WILLS Although beaten in the international « Wills, queen of America’s tennis court therself in the Olympic net meeting, which ‘bring together all the SUZANNE ON THE GO «moionship in England, Helen will get a chance to redeem Here is the first picture to reach this country 4f Suzanne Lenglen, idol of France, in action on the Wimbledon courts, ‘one of the hardest battles of her career the other day in a match with Blizabeth Ryan, a California girl. practicalfy all her strategy to do it. prvnened mines Os ae Smart Tennis Stars Often “Lose to Win” By Mercer Beasley The A-to-Z Man of Tennis The French star faced Lenglen finally won, but it took serted, and he begi greater care and caution, that your “losing ta win” brings worth-while returns, provid- ing you~haven't already fost heart as a result of your opponent's early s to play with Sometimes it pays to lose,to win. This may sound misleading, but as| a strategical policy it is not with- out merit. Here is Where it applies. Suppose you are facing an opponent who has started oyt in whirlwind fashion, and is playing all over the court and playing well. to appear as if you may be over- You may not admit he can beat-you but yok must concede he is playing better tennis. i is man must have a weak- uu have seen so far is The “flash player” is not at all uncommon tennis. By that I mean the player who warms up like a national champion and perhaps continues to play like one through the first set. But as the match lengthens out his true form is as By now you have probably learned Ygur opponent’s weakness But you would -not have detected these flaws if you had tpjed to match every dazzling shot he made ages of the match. ent so much of in trying to in the early You would have your time and ener; “flash form” would have lost any traces of weak- ness whieh he might have disclosed. Study the scores in the big tourna- ments and you will see that some of the big stars are frequently beaten In-most cases you lown that they were “los- 3 in the first set. corner to half sole the gloves be-, Sullivan, but it over big today. tween rounds. . “But who'd he ever put togsieep?” Mr. Moody, champion of Engliand,| the heckler in the upper left box stepped into the ring with the ty Phoon recently . . . When he was revived he -demanded to. know very sour cockney, “Who blew up the bloomin’ glove factory 2” Well he never put the customers, to sleep, and that’s something you exn’t gay for a lot of the champs. Tes ed Big sSays | —__—___@ The walue of speed to a pall tea: is sloWly coming back to its own it the major leagues. For a great many years,: epeed has been mote or te3s of a negative F Ne quantity. Hitting has dominated the | County. North Dakots ‘on The long distance grouch’ nursers claim Greb is equal parts of clown This reminds us tha it took some of the ancients a long time to admit Christo, pher Columbu Greb has simply quit waltzing and gone to one-stepping. the good. Mr. Queensberry’s ballad and made a fine jazz out of it. other styles, those of bh ee baseball constantly of play seems to ran in. cycles, First we have the pitchers, su- Preme, then comes.an era of slug- Phis.may ‘not-sit well withthe be: whiskered gents who thrilled to the tawny, barn, and long-eared owls they are today far more numérous fourth, flying over the field on our Tight; indeed, it seemed that there was a whole flock of them, as we | of sale, The premises described in| Dated Jane 4th, 1924, counted as many as six clearly | said Mortgage und which will be KARL P. DOFFING, visible against the sky at the same | sold to extisfy the same are those Assignee of Mortgagee. time, At first I thought that they | certain premises must be peewits,' which often be- | County of Burleigh and State of Attorney for Assignee of Mortga- sport themselves thus after dark- North Dakota and described as fol- gee, ieeey Nut aBIthG: binie oceans lllowe. wet Valley City, North Dakota. rays of the head lamps there was | East half of the Southeast quar- 6-5-12-19-26—7-3-10 Health Scholarship Winners Urge “Tooth Brush Drill For Pupils ba §| AMERICAN ‘f Rg | CWO UEaLrH |FeS id Aas |g ‘When Alice went rabbit hole on her way to Wonder-| These are two such unusual land you will recall that she tasted|brushes, grown large at the com- of the little bottle labeled “Drink|mand of the Duchess of Health. Me” and then to her dismay she|They made their appearance on began to shrink and shrink and|the Pacific coast where apples and Perhaps these two young/trees and things often grow very ladies shown above are two ad-|large. People out there are often Alices, for the tooih-/inclined to look at things in a ‘e evidently too large for|large way and this 4s the result. What do ydu suppose really| As a matter of fact these two happened? A toothbrush can’t grow. Even|Savage, a teacher at San Francisco, if the Duchess commanded it, the|who won a $500 health teaching at chances on the bases. } Most obliging toothbrush would be|scholarship in the contest conduct- The Washington club, present sen-| at a loss what to do. sation of the American League race, | Duchess lost her well-known temp-|Child Health Association. The is a shining example of this truth, | er and crted “Off with their heads” | $25,000, needed for fifty such toothbrushes would have to scholarships awarded to elementary: But wait! Per-|school teachers in fifty cities, was haps there is a chance for them! |furnished by the Metropolitan Life A reprieve! A toothbrush is a pretty im-|promote good health teaching and: -¢ Part of anyone's equip-!thus improve the health of the That's what the teachers in'children of to-day and the grown- It is commorf knowledge that | the public schools have been try-|ups of to-morrows. ing to impress on a great many,| During the year the toothbrush have increased considerably, in | who have been rather disposed to|has grown larger and larger in the numbers in East Lothian thirecent | consider toothbrushes as, at most,|minds of children everywhere in years, and there is no doubt that | @ nuisance. It is quite possible someone may/and ‘clean teeth is but one of the than most people have any idea. have taken it into hts head to|Rules of the Game of Health Motdring recently after the fall | make @ couple of of darkness along a byroad between | xrow very large so as to emphas-|teache: Macmerry and Pencaitland, writes Tree Ce D. Mc witha, Hambargh. Sentet of Burleigh County, North Dakota man, I drew the attention of my | in said office in Book “139” of As: assenger to an owl flying over | signments at Page 540, will be fore-| Six (6), Township One Hundred Mead, and at the same time I slack- | closed by a sale of the premises, in} forty (140), Range Seventy-five ened speed so that we might ob- | such Mortgage and hereinafter des-{ (75), * tain a better view of the bird. We | cribed, at the front o Ne then noticed a second owl, and al- | Court House in the City of Bismarck | gage on the day of sale the sum of most immediately a third and a|in Burleigh County, North Dakota] One Thousand Ona Hundred and at the hour of Two o'clock P. M. on} One dollars . and Fifty Cents July 12th, 1924 to satisfy the amount | ($1101.50), and the costs of fore- due upon said Mortgage on the day| closure and sale. venturing teothbrushes 1924, and recorded Northeast quarter (SEM of door of the} There will be due on said« Mort- situated in the| JOHN 0. HANCHETT, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1924 down the/ize the importance of clean teeth. Alices are pupils‘ of Miss Dora Even if the/ed this year ‘by the American jInsurance Company in order to | America as a résult of this contest which Miss Sayage and the other hasizea, 'NE%4), and Lot one (1), of Section no doubting that they were owls— Ceruhaly they were nat lngene’ (Aughes and Dr, Eliot Approve i Page School of World Affairs; $1,000,000 Fund Appeal Begun owls. i Long-eared owls are, to some ex- tent, gregarious and sociable by dispodition—that i, a number, of them thay foregather irrespective of food or mating attractions. Such meetings are purely jsdcial, and in the case of the long-eared owl they May occur at any season, day or night; but I have never heard of a purely social gathering of brows or barn owls. Simply Meant He Was Guest at. Two Dinners Burlington looked up from_ his desk, upon hearing a _ cheery “Hello!” and found himself look- lng into the face of Davidscn, col lege chum whom he had-not seen for several years, ‘says a writer in: the Kansas City Star. - “Why, Davy, old fellow!” Bur- lington exclaimed, “Where in the world did you come from and what are you doing here?” * Then the two launched into ex- Planations and reminiscences of col- Jege‘days.- ‘after an ‘hour or more Devidson declared that he must be jon. his way, |: “How long are you going to be in. town?’ Burlington asked. “Oh, two weeks at least,” David: “That's ! Won't you come out~to the house for dinner Sun-| of ment for Sunday,” he said. ‘Can't. ing?’ ‘Til gee you again a week from Sunday, then,” “Ob, -y: ington said. “I thought you bad another engagement for next Sun- ete 2 ” Davideon re-| s school, atone i “Sure, - I.: have,’ wre-) @ scl ang peated, “but it is also at your | tionall; ou! morning and said ‘helle. to and | Charles E. Hi she invited me. out for jay !" | State, aad Dr. ‘ aA NOTICE ‘OF MORTGAGE rore-| Gniveraty ‘LOSURE SALE “TI am: glad to know certain Mortgage executed and deliv-| the cred by Geo. H. Niles and M. E./ gorm of permanent school of in- cans,. can make f Progress: potting, | ternational affairs at Johns’ Hop-| of civilization, but it bar retiies: . Niles, Mortgagors, to Ch: Mortgagee, dated January 80th, 1918, and filed for record in the office of ‘the, Register of Deeds bruary: id of- 1918, and) recorded in uly signed to Karl Fs es ore y Tethy 1818, tt "Hed or record in the office gi ‘ Following acceptance by Johns] relations. The proposed school = son replied, . Hophlis Ue e international ersity of Somat ol! try providing the facilities for sci- relations ‘at the|entifie study and the basis for a day?” Burlington asked. Baltimore institution in:memory of| sound public opinion. It will un- - Davidson hesitated a moment. | the late Walter Hines Page, spon- doubted “But I already have an engage- | sors of the movement have launch- the training of those who enter our ed 2 nation-wide “api ice.” you make it the ‘Sunday follew- | 000, a ” FeLet whi is estimated will be re-|tee for establishing the fund, de- “Sure thing,” Burlingtop aggeed. | quired to hoes and maintain thej clared that he was heartily and en- n new \ » This action is the outgrowth of| 5 : es; Dut you'll: eee me next | a conference held in New York,| The trustees, among whom are Sunday, too,” Davidson told bim.|-and. attended by a distinguished| numbered thirty nationally promi- “I don’t quite. get .yeu,’.’ Bur- gathering of educators, statesmen,| nent men and women, have issued icists and practical men of af-|a statement outlining the charac- i the need for andjter and scope of the school and stablishing such urging public support. 1 i“ He scores of a3 nN ee 'y known’ personages who! port,” the appeal concludes, “4 we, I ‘called up your wife this | have accorded it their aperoval arelerection of this post-graduate Saetey of} school in the form of contributions ih liot, arv: to discuss sibility of ‘e: Oftries ; of the /pro-| living. institutt Notice is pereby given, that that! posat to’ establish a memorial to an investaient preteen Mee falter Hines Page in the| tributions which we, as’ Ameri-: of Burleigh Bebe is commenting Book “150” of Mortgages at| tion to thone who-are endeavo! New York hi jo 54, and which Mortgage was| to bat ring| New York ss | been selected as the will be of great value to this coun- = lly be an important aid in 1 for $1,- tic service.’ 6 income of} Eliot, in accepting as a trus- thusiastically in accord with the project. 4 'We ask the general public sy to the capital sum of. $1,000, that is required to found saa eee tain it e creation of such a for the youth of ou: example ‘and iuttucnee’of voile American.” aie, | The Hanover National Bank of: undation for the: bet-| “of international tribute -to: ister of Deeds fet understanding of