The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 24, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. Sports BASKETBALL PAYING SPORT IN INDIANA Fine Many Schools Build Buildings as Result of | : + | Interest in) Game | | Fndianapolis, F 24.—This ! son found Indian ore basket “mad” than ever before in the his- sory of the indoor sport. | x hundred teams are | expected to compete in the annual | championship series under auspices of the Indiana High School Athletic round of. the | rly in March. | So keen has been the interest and | so.rapidly hus the sport developed | that a dozen or more high schools | have had to build new gymnasiums | to accommodate the crowds. Basket- | ball is a “paying” sport, and it has been an easy matter to sell the nec- | bonds to erect large modern | buildings. Bedford high school’s new gymna- | sium and basketball court cost. ap- | proximately $85,000. It took a day | and a half to sell the bonds. Con- ner: le has a new $45,000 gymna- sium, Anderson built one at an out- | put of $90,000. Martinsville, 1924- | 1 champion, is playing in a gym- | nasitum just a little more than a year! old. | Three hundred or more games are | played every week by the high school | teams. Most of the contests are | staged on Friday night. In the small-| er cities, every Friday evening, lit- | More than erally the entire town storms the! gymnasiums for choice seats: | In addition to the varsity teams, | every high school has several scrub team: Girls teams, too, are being developed to a point where they play basketball under the same rules and regulations governing the boys’ Colleges of the state also ha their great followings, thousands at- iending nea?ly every contest. é Independents | Win Cage Game Over Glen Ulin! Hlaying before the largest crowd ever hasium, won the the Bismarck Independents eighth consecutive game dahl was the high point s making a total of Doyle and “Middaugh starred. on the defense, Glen Ullin has the fastest team the locals have played as yet and are the outstand- i on the west line. n re very enthusiastic over their teams showing and are anxious for a rcturn game. The game was a thriller all through but marred by rough playing on both sides which was caused by the small floor. Coach Johnsrud started his second string men but put in the first team at the! end of the first quarter. The locals | are preparing for the tournament which will be held here the latter art of March. Ed Alfson star cen- ter for the Bismarck High in 22 and 23 may join the locals in a week or so but at prosent is under the doc- tors care with an infested leg. Alf- sons presence will give the locals onc of the fastest teams in the state. Capt. Grewer was Glen Ullins big man playing an excellent floor game The locals will probably have a gam with Mandan Ind. some night this week but it has not been arranged definitely. ty its atte: Wate. ee ete { Billy Evans Says | o—___--— -—__ —_—_+ For some reason or other few of the, experts'are picking the Washing- tom team to repeat in the American League race this year. The claim is-made that the Na- tionals were not the best ball club in the league last season and that either the Yankees or the Tygers, with a better break in luck afd’ con- ditions, would have gone on ahead. But the proof of the baseball pudding is in the final figures and these figures showed Bucky Harris’ team on top. To prove further their supremacy the Nationals stepped out and won the world championship from the strong New York club. This would seem to the team’s victory in the American League race was anything but a fluke. Just the same the experts are still indicating a hesitant atti- tude. TI notice, however, that Miller Hug- gins, manager ‘of the Yankees, is very much impressed with the po- , tentialities of the Washington team and predicts he must beat that team in order to win the flag. Huggins ig a shrewd judge of baseball strength. I recail he was none too ‘enthysias' about “the Yanks’ chances to- repeat when I sawthini at New Orleans last spring. While. practically everyone was congedins the ‘flag “Ro* the Yanks Huggins “pointed.” out the leagite as'a whole would be strongér, particularly the. Washington, Phila- delphia ‘and Cleveland’ teams. “fhis'y means,” went on. Huggins, “we ape going to have ‘a, tougher time winning ball-gamés from these teams than we did the year before. It id not so-much a question of our being. strong enough to: win again it isa question of the other teams if enough .to ‘hold. us | yard dash on a one-turn traok. y games, sci jteam that must be athered in the Glen Ullin gym- 5 prove that |S TWO WORLD RECORDS [ILLINOIS SPRINTER HOLDS, RED GRANGE GAVE HIM HIS START ¥ at that institution. Last year Evans sct a new world In, the coming Illinois re I, ns will be pitted uc! What “Red” Grange is to Illinois football, “Bud Evans is to track and Wittman of Michigan and McAndrews of Wisconsin, ILLINOIS: CRACK SPRINTER record for the 200:meter and 220- ecauled for Feb. 28 at Urbana, h well-known sprinters as Hubbard beaten, Harris will start the season with a stronger | outfit on paper than the one that! faced the barrier last April. Coveleskie and Gregg, to say noth- of Reuther, all veteran pitchers, | ren't going to weaken his team any. | Nor is Mike McNally, who is a ver- for reserve infield work. e Washington outfield is strong. The infield, if it goes along without mishap, will rank with the best in the league, if not as the best. Judge is a fine first baseman, Harris and Pec, x great keystone combination, and Bluege will more than fill the bill at third. | Ruel deserves ta be ranked of the game’s greatest catche the return.gf Walter Johnson to be a big factor. all the Washingtons-look mighty formidable. I'd say, off hand, the Nationals will start the season as favorites to repeat, but a ace is certain with New York, Detroit and pos- sibly Philadelphia furnishing plenty of opposition. 1 HARPER LED ALL GARDENERS AFIELD Among the National League regu- lar outfielders, Harper of the Reds and Phillies had the best record, de- ely. Harper played in 131 had 270 putouts, 16 assists de but four errors, a total? chances, He also participated His fielding 290 in four double pls average was |! WILTON WINS Wilton, N. D., Fe High School defeated } to 4, at Wilton, Saturday night. The demon athletes have begun} boiling out at Hot Springs but it] wil] be July before the irate fans start boiling. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. In District Court, Fourth Judicial District. Charles Kupi Plaintiff, vs. Per- cival S. Dudley, P. » Frank; V. Barnes, Bis ‘ck National Bank,| a nationa! banking association, Isaac P. Baker, agent of said Bismarck Na- Bank in liquidation, Fred W. Justus Bragg, Caroline M.} avid B. Smith, Katherine . E, Smith, Vingent Moses, M. Mead, George S. Grimes, William |G. §S.. Grimes, Josophus Todd, H. Porter, G. H. Fairchild, Grace F: child, Grace A. Fairchild, James Fairchild, William S, Kenny, William S. Kefney, George W. Sweet. J. W.! Watson, W. B. Watson, and Erastus A.. Williams, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to ,the; Above Named Defendant: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this action, on file in the .office of the clerk. of the district court in and for the county of Burleigh aforesaid, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscriber within thirty days after the service of this summons service; and in case of your) failure to appeer or answer judgment will be taken against:you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this 13th dav of, January. 1925. 7 BENTON BAKER, | Attorney for Plaintiff, - Office and -postoffice addres: Bismarck. Bank Building, Bismarek, North. Dakota. 10 the defendants above named: You -are further notified that’ the’ relief: sought -in this-action .consigts m ‘any interest in or. lien’ upon’ following ‘described ‘real estate Waggine was right,’ The Yanks did Rot repeat, “Washington and Phila- . delphia “were stfonger. | Cleveland fs t to his sprii beset 3 Mss to team eereseth. is ™ oe the Washingtoi ggins misy be. right ‘again. in e Was team ty ‘the situated. in the. county of Burleigh and state:“of North Dakota, to-wit » Fifteen | friends of William H, Minions gath- .j and jwriting to upon. you, exclusive of..the day of; hour of two o’clack in. the afternoon wholly :in.exciuding the defend: ts "Thirty-five? D. 1925. Invalid Given | New Wheel Chair By Neighbors Beach, N. D., 24.—About fifty | ered at his farm home Wednesday night and gave him a pleasant sur- prise, not only by their presence, but by the presentation to him of a fine new wheel chair, Mr. Mini being a pari in his lower limbs. The value of the gift can be appre- ed when it is known that for! two years Mr. Minions had not been, out of his bedroom, and when placed in the chair wheeled’ about all parts j of the house with delight and to the hearty greetings of the friends pres- ent. The donors of the gift had aiso provided for a runway for the | from the house porch tothe ground and neighbors will build this at an early date, so the invalid can about outside when summer again. get comes Dunn Center | Man “Kills Big, Hog lideer, N. D., Féle,.24.—The other R. Hammel, living Teeth of Dunn nter, killed a hog whichdressed at 610 pounds. It had been “fed on ground oats. %, A hog dressing at 610 pounds is enough to make anybody sit up and} take notice. Besides a barrel full of meat, this one hog produced for Mr. Hammel 200 pounds of lard, 50 of soap and 75 pounds of The hams were just about | as much as one man cared to lift. During the, past year the Hammel’s ave made over $700 on hogs alone/ h they claim is a very good showing for just a “side line.” di E 0 MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE NO’ Notice is hereby given that that c n mortgage executed and de- livered by Leonard Carlson and Lela rlson, his wife, mortgagors, to Drake-Ballard Company, a corpora- tion, mortgagee, dated the 2ist day of November, A. D. 1917, and record- ed in Book of Mortgages, at Page 196, in the office of the regis- ter of deeds of the County of Bur- leigh, in the State of North Dakota, assigned by an instrument writing to Dubuque Savings Bank, which assignment was dated the 6th day of March, A. D. 1918, and re- corded in Book 151, at Page 310, in the office of the said register of deeds, and which mortgage was thereafter assigned by Said Dubuque Savings Bank by an instrument in i Mount Pleasant Home, which assignment was dated the 31st, day of May, A. D, 1918, and. recorded in Book 189, at Page 24, in the of- fice of the said register of deed will be foreclosed by. a sale, of the premises in such mortgage and here- inafter described, at the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh. and State of North Dakota, at the on the 2nd day of March, 1925, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are, described as follows, to-wit: The South Half of the South Half (S% of S%) of Section Twenty (20), Township No. Hundred age at the date of sale the sum of 'wo Thousand Eighty Dollars and Twenty-two Cents ($2080,22) and. the costs and expenses of foreclosure and si Dated this 19th day of January, A. {to ‘Rwenty-four’ (Gh dnctesives in Block ty iMtams’ Addition to the. City Set that: .no., personal, against any of “the sets may hear the solémn ceremony of ‘inducting President Coolidge into the: highest’ office within’the gift of the American’ pei Et * In homes, stores, factories, church- MOUNT PLEASANT HOME, Aasignee of Mortgage, Dubuque, Iowa. ZUGER & TILLO TBO! § Attorneys: for. said. Assignee, Bismareky North , t see 1-20- 8-10-17-24 es, school houses, theaters, and other rathered. the larg di- ever listened me ia ths -nroblew, af. cazrging. the. core- all over the Northwest | “TUESDAY, FEBRUARY: 24, 1925 , i . | WCCO requires engineering skill of f this spring, articles for several tour- SORLIE GIVE the highest tyne and the arrange- ing and outing magazines now being Z jment of special facilities all along in ation, : ' the 1500 miles that the sounds must he annual meeting of the Eastern f travel over the wire to the new 5000 Division inéluding the states of q aS he Watt Sending Station of WCCO, the L{ Ay| North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin iL FADE i completion of which has been rushed AAA liltnois will he: heldeab the: Me: : | TIE Ito insure to the Northwest an equal Kenzie Hotel, Bismarck, N. D., Thur. f ‘ : | T0 NORTHWEST ier": with the i BE HE | D HER hb, when ‘ars pace pro-| Clip This and Save if Subject f ipate in this great e activities for the pinnae | eiieted that with the increased power ‘Officers ‘of he To Sore Throat or j Jof the, new Station, which | swings state units will be elected at this Tonsilitis 5 =] into action on that day, that al m i visi Sonata’ tite |Message From Governor Is Meibion#ole the. NovtNwest will) Fe: Eastern Division of ace ¢ ae j Ser a . Radio Stati ‘ceive the program clearly. tion to Meet in Bismarck . Prepare a harmless and) effective Rent ab Radio Station wo Killed Many i, fargle by dissolving two Bayer Tab- From Minneapolis’ . March 4 Hurt-in Collision | tts ot Aspirin in four tedspoonfuls YEAR’ Ss LOANS a of water. Gargle throat thoroughly. { { - jeteae r ‘Two pas-| Repeat. in two hours if necessary. iy /ALL No. DAK. Nicht) OF FINANCING /work ror THE YEAR|, Bvtizon, Nt, Toby 24 Tea, | Oe sure: yon sas oy, ihe gage , ba | BODY ARE TOLD missing and more than a score were | B2 er epee oy ae marred : Last night. was all-North Dakota | pawns Nearly $11,000,000 was spent along | injured when a New York-Washing- Vet ete tae oh eee tablets of night at WCCO station of the Twin (Continued frora page one.) the National Parks Highway, between | ten express train Fortean | taretewscentee hae: ; Citics, a program being presented|the operating company, to January! Chicago and Seattle, in 1924, by | ¥ania Railroad | CR at a ty 1, over all organization, overhead and| 2,196,625 tourists traveling in 75,000] f a New York-Pi train a under the auspices. of the Greater operating expense, was $51,137. AJ cars, according to the annual report Manhattan. Tr fer today. Most of —.. Se THE BEST WAYS TO « a North Dakota Association. A. mess-| total of $200,000 has been set aside|'o¢ officers of the Highway Associa-|the injured were in the dining wipe Sie 1S Se WANE i ¢ from Governor Sorlie of North|as a contingent fund to meet losses| tion for the past year. ‘This is an in-}f the ae ealp, cunt J j akota was read as follows: resulting from doubtful loans. =| crease of 34 percent over that sf|hurled from the -track and: rE THE CLOCK ALL DAY | ay, A ATA Of the $1,000,000 appropriated in| 1993, caught fire. The dead are all em e é | You who are listening in on this {110 spring of 1924, for the purpose of| ‘Tourist travel to the Northwestern [Plcyes of the railroad. Program live in the richest produe: | Jing in the purchase of livestock/to| states is increasing each year and pererpnn ct ing section of the North American!‘ ined the movement toward\farm| the large number of inquiries so far| The entire output of some Brit- continent. It is upon this section} or ce: imately $600,-| rec nia panes 0 per-|ish, golf ball- factories is being and upon you that the world depends | ‘iversification, approxima ¢y r|meceived, indicate from 2b to 40) Per | cd to the United States, on a for the production of the smal}| 000 tas heen distributed among farm: cent ir je in 125, the report ieoint of the increasing popularity grains, livestopk, butterfat, wool, and {°° and, has financed the purchase of | states. Prospect of considerable road Me the Gane Here u many other of the necossities of fife, | the 3200 cows and 32,000 sheep. The | improvement in Montana and that Tt sedias teva G0 4edlime that wrath finaneing of lWvestoek poe et palace in North eee a i é ; oti continue. during 1925, along the ‘S| mulated interest in the Northern fy this Producing section should @0-| sdopted last year, until the balance} route and the travel is expected to Too Late To Classify j for the best interest of ourselves and |! the $1,000,000 has been distribut- be much. greater in the future. | nor RENT—Cozy 1 and g room our produets. The Great Lakes-St.|°* _ Active cooperation with the Na-| ioartments, furnished, close in, Lawrence Waterway is one of the a onal Barks High yey fro Chicago) private entrance, reasonable, Phone problems that should notbe over |New England SE ee ee ie, toe on looked by us in this section. e: 5 i ange eee copiblbtinn’ et this project wilicreake Holds Lead) through the Bae area Seema é ¢ ” it possible for this producing section Ve a cose Nott ee ape, ani| WORK WANTEDI=Cabable © girl AKOTA’ MAN to emaneipate itself. The State of| New England, N. D., Feb. 24.—| plement this wor! new maps, til) wants to take care of children by North Dakota has a particular inter-|New England led all other points| ond Guides wil be remy for OS t-| the. hour, Call 441J. HAS MICHIGAN JOB est in this project because it is Gnelalong the Standing Rock branch line] Pution in Ape! an’. laiee | Dane 2-24-3t of the large exporting states. of the Milwaukee for the year He Gab cicnes eeebiian wae i te “The’ population of North Dakota |in shipments for the year 1924 of a es, along the ay is only initia more than 600,000, |varieties of grain except barley; led| Placéd in Twin City and C eo Si ! Don't Y Scores’ of graduates of. Dakota consequently we consume but a very|the line on the number of carloads Pere gnse aio Sin SLs ‘top! on ou Business Galete, Fargoshane. cone small portion of the products of our}of cattle shipped; shipped as many. OF! a ts wns fo various ord ottiges, the lat- state, We, the people of North Da-|carloads of poultry as all the rest{Highway will also be distributed Cut Off My Leg est being, 1. Lashes. now with j kota, have not as yet sold ourselves fof the Cannon Ball line stations com-| through the Association early in the € x n ee Sean Dra eae the Ford: Moter €o., Iron’ Moun- on North Dakota. We have not yet| bined and stood well up with the|Season. : |. “Had 51 ulcers on my logs. Doctors | oi) “Ng SLi . begun to realize what this. great|leaders on the point of hogs carlodd| Remarking of the Highway has} wanted to cut off log. Peterson's | tain, Mich., J. 8, Largon, recently state—The Best of the, West, can|shipments, and in addition to this| been completed as far west as Drum-| Ointment cured me.” . William J. graduated, has a fine position. with produce, or the many natural re-| shipped more than double the SUE Le Me SHIRE Aes pee sia, AE Wilder Street, Roches-| the Farmers, 8 Merchants Bank, i fc shipped from any other g. Severa e at-lter, N.Y. fee coe rates qvarar thanvoueener® Bauants Wie 4 tractive sign boards have been) Use Peterson’s Ointment for old Jamestown. Gertrude Kremers, ‘ ; e tedvat dence tevartdentiiete 2 all skin dis-|[0W with the Wolfer-Newberry dred auiltion bushelés of the. ste Pode nereetoemntterey erected at junction points and others|sores, salt rheum and all skin dis-| 7 A wheat raised inthe world; we have MINNEAPOLIS | FLOUR repainted. : eases. It banishes pimples and | Insurance Agency, also of James- untold billions of tons of lignite| Minneapolis, Feb. 24.—Flour un-| Articles on the attractions of the)bluckheads in less than 10 days and | town, is the third “‘Dakotan’’.cm- coal-more than ‘enough coal to heat| changed to 10 cents higher in car-|National Parks Highway have been|jeaves the skin clean, clear and| ployed lately in that city, the entire world and the development} Icad lots family patents quoted at printed in forty-one national maga-| pleasant to look upon. Big box 60 pera of our coal lands has scarcely begun; | $9.85 to $10:10 a barrel in 98 1b. cot-| zines and several talks broadeasted|conts at all druggists. : Watch results. “‘Follow:the guc- we have, from engineering reports,|ton sacks. Shipments 40,938 barrels | from Chicago iio Staite This! Mail orders from Peterson Oint-| cegSful.”? Write F. L. Watkins, the finest grade of pottery clay] $25 to $24. publicity, program w HW be continued | ment Con Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv. Pfes., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. found anywhere; we have, in the = Badlands west of the Missouri, some of the richest deposits of cement: to — - . be found, and minerals and materials —————N ‘ = Rg of other kinds not yet estimated: AQ \ WS XV CS: ‘lt is) safo to peedict that, even ——S SS SSS N with the richness of the Red River! NN SS Valley; where there is the most wen- =e S\N SS E_T = 1 found anywhere, even that T= Vie section -will become secondary to the \ Si S28 = land west of the Missouri, when the RY \ 1. To resources of the western. section of SW) : L Si) 5 the slate have been explored and de- Sn | veloped. =f". “God intended that all creation k should serve a purpose, and He. has kept hidden the wonderful wealth in| ; this section until people can and will Ps 7 | better appreciate itg value and know i how to use it. I hope that our na- = | tional government will see fit.:to = create the Roosevelt National Park | = ~ in the Badlands. By doing so. we will tees pyjulll all have a chance to enjoy this won- 3 | \ derful handiwork of Nature. There Ze Mouths are beauties to be seen in the Bad- Ze » lands unsurpassed: anywhere. in the Be tl ii world. 4 Eth ‘ “I extend to all you people who are 2. listening in on this. programa. most FE gr IY cordial invitation to spend your va-j° \ " cation in North Dakota, so that, you Mat may obsorve for yourselves: the: op- if portunities’ that await you in. this Mudvng state. Our summer weather, is de- = i lightful and our winter weather is Ellin good, with automobiles” running = every day and roads always’ open. = wai imi The people of North Dakota’ are most = cia hospitable. and. invite you, to come = my to this state to partake-of their has- € pitalify, = ("i . OLE Will Broadcast. . Z f i Pres. .Coolidge’s i \ ~s = qt Inaugural Speech Dnt For the first time in history the inauguration of 4 President will be broadcast by radio, when. on the = morning of March 4th all America > will) tune in. > The Gold Medal Station, WCCO, $ is included in a list of twelve out- E standing radio stations over the = country whieh 2 broadcast | the cetemony and inaugural address of President Coolidge. ‘The hou¥-is set for 10:20 a, m,, Central. Standard Time, and it is expected that the program will last approximately two hours. Preceding the start. of “the| ceremonies, the Gold: Medal Station 7 broadcast Patriotic orgaly “music a ? rom the State Theatre, Minneapolis. A Every schoo} child in: the twin. el. eae eZ SO ee ties, 170,000 of them,’ will ‘hear the . =< i | ceremonies right in ‘school, both sh ” = , . Way ge eye 5 2 public and parochial school. authori- hit a ee ge aE PI rae ties in St. Paul and Minneapolis : - sae i z Have ‘agreed to suspend clasées during. : i eR a - Most rematkable tobacc dio. Trade Association has ‘agreed . , e. ® > through: its members to ‘provide, r} ; stall and supervise: the operation of eae atte S| Ever Olfere ‘pipe smokers r|the Twin Cities, over 200 in all. heated . : f ‘ ‘ ; With the ‘announcement made i ; : 1 eee? ee at through the press:that WCCO would es li LY participate in the broadcgst,"a’-flood I Piet ore, == IN Gua >1N value, in taste ‘west started pouring into the Gold 3 Wie, ia Weds Al 7 ff of F fe ee Mega Ataaton, asking far° complete 6 : MeV A : : letails. Among ‘them are a number nila) 3d } * < Gms, from publi schoo} aubhorities who ' Back abouti87o, James N:Wellman which: just seemed to“go’with . see in this event an opportunity to, develope PF aCCO 2 ‘9 el: ! instill in the heart of yoiing ‘Auer-| . developed a Secret tobacco process a pipe. Na, one else ever. knew : ; ica the. significance of». Presiden- r .which won. inStant and widespread his secret until .we acquired : jal inauguration; he ‘ : ‘ s filley bodies Vellman’s. Met ‘and it : | It is expected that public gather-| favor. It yielded a: fuller: bodied “Wellman 5 ethod by. its ° d : ings willbe held gll over the North-| <7. * i ‘ mildness ant fra, amade: é ‘Rough a west during the ceremonies; where! sy tility richness, : and, agian ae es : Grangin: Git people’ by means of radio réceiving| ~~ z “ s ea hy cae E e Be gi Sag : 3

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