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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | ports! YANKS GIVEN ANOTHER BUMP. INFLAG RACE w York Club Loses Fifth Straight; Sisler’s Great Work Downs Tigers he Yankees straight game Mon- Miller, whose hom- New York, their 5th day when “Bing er deaided yesterda ed a 9th inning tr Dykes with the run that adelphia the victory, much substitution of s and numerous pinch hitters the bitter struggle of the to reir slumy R. H. E.| 816 1 TAL Phil Heavy new gave R to 7. 101 04 Philadelphia y 000 310 New York Baumgartner, Walberg, Groves, tommel and Cochrane; Shawkey, Hoyt, Jones, Franc and O'Neill. 00. SISLER HAS FIELD DAY Louis, May 5.—George Sisler, manager of the St. Louis Browns, | had a field day sponsible for the 5 to 3 at ad- | ministered Detroit= — In addition to | getting 2 singles, Sisler hit into the | right field bleachers with 2 men on the bases, and then in the 8th in-| ning pilfered home on a double steal. | It was the 19th consecutive game in| which he has hit safely. St. i RH. E.| 001 000 012—-4 7 0| New York, May 103/000 01x—5 8 0) the m and Woodall; Davis, ling 2 eid GIANTS Detroit St. Louis are ton | McTigue, the | Att to a blush MeTigue) you Paul the F WIN when weight champion Mr. McTigue labeled. Mr. enough to d arbered chin. the Bruiser Boston Takes Close Game From Dodger Club bach Philadelphi -The Giants n the opening game of the series with Philadelphia 12 to 2. T Jackson, Giant — shortstop, hit home runs in consecutive times at bat in consecutive innings. Frisch | also made a home run. a punch. bach to do inst Mike the disce with not oints, the H. 15 1 13 Decatur, Fil- ich and Henline, Wilson. |” Can Berlenbach Well, Micky Mickey, though s fighter than Berl Mc It_ wasn't didn’t stop } d enough. New York Phil... Bentley and Gowdy: lingith, U 000 000 060 002 000 12 i ship, a {bird like MeTig MARRIOTT BEATS ROBINS Boston, Marriott's single | in the 9th with 2 out scored Ban- | croft with the run that gave the, Rraves a 6 to 5 victory over Brook- lyn, B Brooklyn Boston Petty, O: quard, G 020 002 0090, 000 030-—5 301-6 orne and Deberry nd O'Neill, Gib 10 1 Mar-! son, T ship. — All his career | defensive fighter. 1 BASEBALL {| you to hit PSE AMERICAN Detroit at St Chicago at ( Boston at W Philadelphia LEAGUE Loui eland. hington. New York NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Pittsburg. Cincinnati ate Chic Brooklyn at Boston. New York at Philadelphia. 0 enroute fr: York. |net for scores of photographers. To each and e AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas C€ Indianapol at Minne. Louisville at St. Paul. ne Se tory purse. American League w. i i he regarded Giecaisid. logical contender Washington Philadelphia Chicago .. St Letis’........... 3 iy New York . 4 Boston Detroit . am inclined National League Ww. L. 11 . 10 - 10 8 6 6 6 6 New York . Cincinnati . Chicago .. Philadelph Brooklyn . Pittsburgh Boston . St. Louis Minneapoli Indianapo] Toledo . Milwaukee . St. 1. Louisville . Columbus Kansas City eee Results Yesterday —-— NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 5; Boston 6. New York 12; Philadelphia 2. Gincinnati at Chicago, cold weath- er. . Others. not scheduled. / AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia, 8; New York 7. “Detroit 4; St. Louis 5. a 4 bras postponed, rain. MG AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, Indianapolis 5; Minneapolis 8. Columbus 4; Kansas City 10. : postponed, cold, I h Ww MeTigue has been a y would ralyzer thing exceeding soft h anything His prospects of wi ufficient to bring himt But winning on poin gaudy achievement. agey for the “White W I him you hit him—and careful Dempsey inte: fighting in defense of his heavyweight title? ly doubt it T met Dempsey Jack, naturally, wa newspapermen and pien insisted he w logical conten! to Terrible as He is, Mr. Mike McTigue Ought to Escape Knockout Punch by “Paul The Paralyzer” BY JOE WILLIAMS. ell now tha ched what will P: aul Berlenbach do mention conclude in for ou f the Wher its nd i ardly top him? ki Her, It Icott.” f he doesn't TITLE a n Cal the y one the cham ready to fight | er for a satisfac. Gibbons. aind also failed to t sum of money he regard- | dot think that raly2- st Mike | world’s worst figh st blush (and you are entitled Mr. th some- And maybe he Certainly he has little to fear from A world, humorously eTigue cannot hit hard turb the lather on an hard cnough Ito drop an iron hitching post wi And yet we do not look for Berlen- spectacular gon points| Ff a win on rates a r couldn't, and is a better ch ever will be. igue Is No Dumb-hell Walker's that y he tried ' 6: ere is one ring quality in which McTigue is skilled to a high degree, and that is defensive ring general- aren't going to Mike never HE HAS A SLEDGE HAMMETT? WALLOP. wants close to fighters ti e star. later some- cTigue, care- be Berlenbach. t think so. There is little about Berlenbach. He is just at you'd suppose a reformed sstler would be. There is no diversity to his attack. With him it ug, slug, slug. lenbach May Wear Him Down w him against Augie Ratner Ratner is another Me- craftiness and And he was McTigue, even now. er could do nothing Not once did he land a gainst the fading Ratner, naturally, did he you even to hitting him. Where centrated on offensive ta ue set out to be a defen i? i course, sooner is going to nai ful as We do come mo: at n- | capabilities. gone th ill th th oli blow and not one a knockdown. rlenbach's kro ub a get comical and stamina chief rinst hope for a the champion (to !) lies in his youth From the start he will wage relentlessly agy ssive cam- pain, In the end this may tell on igue, particularly in his legs. (Mikey weary in the closing Walker.) Reduci © of physical fatigue where his legs no longer re- spond to the urging of his alert mind, Mike the Myth would be an y target, an open target, for one of Berlenb crushers, And what Berlenbach de= mands ‘ore a knockout against wnybody—an open target. He isn’t smart enough to maneuver himself into a position to score one against ile thinker, and McTigue (what- tle indictment you care to place against his fair Celtie name) is all of that. he to do ma He refused to say whether or not} Wills or jinterview Dempsey gives out_on the} t fight game has movie publici motive. y as its MOVIE ACTOR J he phere and environment of the “movies” has wrought” a con- siderable change in Dempsey’s make- npsey of today rin style cight is more the anner than pion of the ug | world, ‘The paraffin nose has done much to make Dempsey lose that fighting ce his outstanding cha r the near Valentino now, | n the cave an of other |e al appearance that s you. I doubt if he cent of his physica three within ness of Unquestion: at his big a ny his ring reputation and he is seeking to capitalize on it. I doubt if Dempsey ever’ fights ain, If he does, and his opponent of championship caliber, the re- ult may produce a new heavyweight champion, FIGHTING SPIRIT A good game ball club is far more dangerous, over the long route. than a great club that has a tendency to{ curl up when the going gets rough. ! No ball club in recent years better _ typifies the fighting spirit, gamen mere than the world champions, | Washington. Courage under fire, more than any other factor, won. «a pennant and bascball’s greatest honor, the world series, for Washington. * Three times last season Washing- ton received seridus setbacks. Once it was the loss gf five games in a row, on two other .occasions the dropping of four straight. Such reve! coming at a critieal time in the race, test the mettle of a ball club to the ‘limit, Each time Washington came back with a string of viptories to offset the unexpected reverses. Gameness | did it. REAL CLIMAX In the spring series with the Giants, after losing five of the first games, apparently hopelessly out cf the runnitig, Washington dupli- cated the start made by the Giants, by winning five of the last six con- tests, evening the series, Gameness did it. In the first two weeks of play the club came from behind to win half ot its games. It takes “courage: to come from behind. > However, to my way ef thinking, it would have been hard. for a writer of fiction to hive staged a better climax than put across in a recent 2 to 1 victory over New York. Beaten 1 to 0 in the ninth, two out and the bases. filled, Manager Farris suddenly realized h¢ had used up all his available pinch-hitters. A |: rush call to the dressing-room brought the news that Walter John- son was preparing for his shower. Would the umpires delay the game ‘a moment for Johnson? Of course. He was lacing his shoes as. he came on the field. Then he proceeded to drive out a tvo-base hit, scoring the two runs. necessary to win the ball game. It brought back memories of the world series ‘and the part Johnson played. MODERN GRID RECORDS SET California Teams Undefeated: For Five Years California, by cutive seasons without meeting. defeat, hung up a modern football reco so far as big university elev re concerned. Nothing to equal been put over of recat | nds out as the perform-! t approach to the re- markable feat of the Smith school mark within the last 10 seasons or so that made by Cornell. The Itha. | ans went pretty close to four years without a reverse, finally going, down during the 1924 campaign. Michigan under the superb tutel-{ of Yost and Little, skipped over three seasons, without leaving the field on the short end of the score. Fact is, the Maize and Blue went just three years to the day defeatless, los- ing to Ohio State, 14 to 0 on Oct, 22, 1921, and again on Oct. 18, 1924 to Mlinois. , Marquette University also boasted a three-year stretch sans defeat. But like Cornell and Michigan saw an end to the streak last fall. Penn’ State, a couple of seasons back, had something like a mark of 0 consecutive triumphs, but the Nit- tany Lions were halted tRere. Two of the best winning jamborees ever recorded, however, belong to teams of 15 and 20 years ago. One was made by Michigan. It covered a period of close to five years, the first whipping being ad- ministered in the final game of the fifth campaign. From 1901 through 1904 the Wol- verines copped. every game, And they contests a season then, too. In ‘1905, however, Chicago stuck a huge knife into the record by trim ming Michigan, 2 to 0, a bone-headed piay preventing the Yostmen, from gaining a tie. During that five-year span the GRIMES BOYS STAR IN TWO SPORTS on Baseball Diathond These Five Brothers Also Real Experts in Trapshooting LEFT TO RIGHT—SHIRLEY, KENNETH, RAY, ROY AND BURLEIGH. Hére we haye the five baseball playing Grimes of Minerva, 0. Shirley’ is in the Soutl t Kenneth and Ray (twins) are with Columbus, American Association, Roy” nents ae wae Burleigh, as you -no </oubt know, isa star pitcher on the Brooklyn staff. Photo. shows ‘them on the:rapge_at Camton, O;, Where: their ability as expert marksmen. ig well. known. Roy plays in the minors also,’ while going through five} were playing between 11 and 12 | view LEADS ILLINI- ~ Eddie Mieher,. Middle Dis- tance Runner, ‘Is Real Star EDDIE MIEHER Crack distance runner and captain of the University of Illinois track team. He is expected to win many points for the Urbana school on the cinders this season. Maize -and-Blue won 55. games, lost One and wed one. : To Gil Dobie, better “Gloomy Gil”, goes the the longest winning canter, Dobie, now coaching Cornell, pilot- ed his’ University of Washington elevens through nine successive cam- paigns without a blot. He was never beaten during all the time he tutored the northwest combination, This stands as the premier performance in gridiron histo (Copyright, Coal Burns! Electricity Gives Heat! Oil Makes a Flame: But Gas is combusti- ble. Use The Super-Fuel. known as honor of NEA Service, Inc.) 1 i Bud Fisher the creator of “Mute and Jeff? bet inal v perhaps, | Annual STAR TRACK ATHLETES 70 COMPETE HERE Capital City Meet To Be Held at Baseball Park Saturday With a record number of entries and some high class performers sche- duled to appear, the annual Capital City track and. field meet will be held Saturday at the Baseball park. The mect will get underway at 10 a. m. The preliminaries and semi-finals will be run off in the morning and the finals will be held in the” after- noon. “4 The Bismarck High school ath- letes will hold their tryouts tomor- rew evening. The ‘entire list cf events will be runoff and the best performers in each event will be se- lected for Saturday's meet. , The following officials have been chosen for the mect: Honorary referees—Governor A. G. Sorlie, Mayor A. P. Lenhart and Sup- erintendent H. 0. Saxvik. Manager of mect*-J. J. MacLeod. Starter—Al -Personiu Clerk of course—Ross Bodenstab. Finish ju@ges—Joe Shean, Mick Lynch, Mike Donovan and Toni Thoraldson. ‘ Head ‘track judge—Ed Cox. Head field judge—W. F. Bublitz. Judges of jumps—Robert Byrne, Harry Homan. : Judges of weights—Leon Sorlein, Gordon Brown, Harty Woodmansee. Timers—O. W. Roberts, Lou Cras- well, Mal Brown. Head scorer—Dana Shearn. Announcer—Art Cayou. Marshall—Judge W. S. C: Scorers—Stanley Robidou, Brown, ullen, Bob ny selman, Gabriel DAVIS FILLING GAP NICELY FOR COLLINS The White Sox appear to have picked up a good prospect in Ike Davis, shortstop. Davis so far h been playing a whale of a game fox Collins. The short field position has been a weak one in.the Sox lineup for quite a time. ‘Health courses for passengers are the latest innovation on the Atlan- tic liners. than any other cartoon- Copyright 1925, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co, v as mortga: at th TUESDAY; MAY. 5 1925 BUSINESS MEN AND SOLDIERS . MEET TONIGHT The Business Men's _Kittenball team will clash with the Company A team at 6:30 p.m. today on the Wil- liam Moore diamond. Senator Olson will play first base for the Business nen, COATS Amon the int modes are coats, made yarn in many colors giving estry effect. i KNITTED GOLF VE The knitted golf vest is item of dress that interest: sportswoman. BROTHER AND SISTER A novel sytle that is copied from European fash s that of dress ing a smal similar costume: NOTICE MORTGAGT, FroRiE- CLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given ‘that that © mortga executed — by Heino, a single man, Mort to ‘Union Com- Tortgagec, the 25th y ‘of September and filed for record Df the Reg- ister of County of B eh d d filed for record the Register of 24th day of Februa o'clock, A, M, and 3ook 174 of AS 0, will be fore of the prem ge and he front door of in the City of Bisma Burleigh and St 2 hour of two Ho follows, to-wit: half of the Kast half ( Section | Thirty-t ip One hundi rth, of Range Seven r i situated in the ¢ of Burleig! r here will be due on such 5 the day of: sale the pf $1,323.45 together with the disbursements of fore- ko- Attorney for’ Assignee of Mort- gagee, Bismarck, North D: 3-31 — Such camellia’ na be deserved | in-the-limousine”—men of life, laugh with Bud “Fishes. ..He deaws. more smiles, recognizesthereal thing—whether it’s cartoons or “ Witness te sustained popular- ity of Chesterfield cigarettes. Here again men ‘have found the real thing, in richersmildér, better tobaccos, and in KIRTS ck 1 VERY WIDE gowns have v ‘bod: and draped The most fantastic world is the coral fish of Java. color deep orange with pale blue bands edged in black. cA cigar you'll like “The beginning of a perfect day what A. ROLTAN BUNDLE EMPRESS,” (10c each, or 50c for a bundle of five, foil wrapped.)