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PAGE SIX ~ American Association | WL Repl we 10 12 y Minneapolis Milwaukee Indianapolis 10 12) aL do 11 13 Columbus 10 13 fe wisville 10 13 435 as City 9 14 $41 7 Results Yesterday Minneapolis 9; Toledo 8. St. Paul 11; Columbus 2. | Louisville Milwaukee 1 City 9; Indianapolis 2 ° - —_———-*] Columbus at Minne Toledo at St. Paul Louisville at Kansas City | polis at Milwaukee, | s.merican League HEAP BIG INJUNS’ REL w. Iphia 14 Washington 13 7 12 if 4 W 10 Ww New York tee Detroit 8 16 Boston 6 44 300 Detroit 13; Boston 5 | Chicazo 10; Washington 8 (2 inns) yp RIGHT— SWIFT HORSE ings) New York 12; St. Louis 1, | The Cleveland-Philadelph postponed, duced quite rain. {At the D —— {Indian traditions by chopping six s GAM MONDAY ; It was one of the most notew Washington at Chicago. 2 New York at St. Louis Boston at Detr Hea Ces ‘ Philadelphia at Cleveland. | ae pees i Jatin Shot Put—Won National League | Meyer, MeClusky, W. L. Pet.! Ashley, third. Dis New York 14 6 —-.700) inches Circinnati 10 9 SOT Chicago elma , MeClusky, ~ s« Brooklyn 1 10 thin), Dist Philadelph 10 L os aL(Kun_jegtonenbop: iL ett Mile Run —Won te St. Louis . 8 12 Wurtzke, secc Pittsburgh .... gin nROT NT Tin 18 RESULTS SUNDAY If Mile Won by New York 8; Louis 3. MeClu Brooklyn 9; Cincinnati 8. cea ings.) Others not scheduled. GAMES MONDAY { Chicago at Biston. [mt Pittsburgh at Philadelphia i Others not scheduled a CAPITAL CITY MEET IS WON MeO: smarek a bang ies were All the ath) ACTIO ley City, BY BISMARCK aptured the Local Athletes Run Away With First Honors in That’s What Annual Carnival Bismarck High school’s track and} field team easily won the nd an-| nual Capital Ci field meet here Saturd: 2 points while its nea tor , Ash- Jey, counted only 17 markers. One} “hundred and 16 athletes, represent- | ing 12 western North Dakota High tebools, competed in the carniy tr and scoring 45 Capital City meet records were broken in the javelin throw, discus | throw, half mile re 120 yard high hurdles and the 220- yard low hurdles, and the meet re- cords were equaled in the 100 yard! dash, and pole vault. | Wuhi, sturdy youngster of Ash- y, won the meet’s chief prize, «| gold watch, scoring 15 points. He was pushed by LeRoy of Bismarck,! credited with 13 points, and who} would-have taken first place had hej not been disqualified after winning | the high hurdles. Bismarck won the half mile relay cup. | The dirt track was in good condi-} tion but a wind handicapped the run- ners at times. Boelter of Bismarck took the 100 yard dash in 11:1 against the wind. Good time was! made in the half mile relay, won by | Bismarck in 1:59, and the low hurdles | in which LeRoy and Sanders tied at 28 seconds, | ‘The Summary | 100 Yard Dash—Won by Boelter, Bismarck; Ferry, Wilton, second; | Diehl, Bismayck, third. Time 11:1. | 220 Yard Dash—Won by Boelter,, Bismarck; Ferry, Wilton, second; | Fahlgren, Washburn, third. Time, 25; seconds. } 220 Yard Low Hurdles—LeRoy, Bismarck, Sanders, Bismarck, tied for | first; Landers, Bismarck, third, Time | 28 seconds. i 120 Yard High Hurdles—Won by! Fahlgren, Washburn; McCarty, St.| Mary's, second; Sanders, Bismarck, ! third, Time, 18.2 seconds. Half Mile Run—Won by Register, Bismarck; Wurtzke, Arena, second; Hovey, Minot, third, Time, 2.12. _ 440 Yard Run—Won by LeRoy, Bis: tnarck; Swanson, Underwood, second Olson, Bismarck, third. Time, 58| ‘seconds. i Broad Jump—Won by LeRof, Bis-| jarek;. Schulz, (Washburn, second; faikman, Wilton, third. Distance, 18 11 1-2 inches. igh Jump—Lofthouse, Bismarck, and@Schulz, Washburn, tied for first place; Senders, Bismarck, and Fahi- Washburn, tied for third. Pole Vault—Won by ig; Beck, McClusky, atetter, New Leipzig, Height, 10 feet. Diseus—Won by Wahl, Ashley; ! ee ne sete oo third, . ’ pioneer eee et ae it MRD SRS OM F cenieidshnineittiiiaincsh teentals ieieiecah ehciendie ‘iain wai SS a aA LAC aS SRILA AT LAR EARLE ICC er er A PIC If you crave excitement and You'll find both there. ous sports on the old calendar, of lacrosse, eo Methodist chureh warded ut the banquet VALLEY CITY WINS KIWANI TRACK FES D., May 11 hool annual You ight The rIVAI athletes Kiwanis the usily club | Baldwi ND EXCITEMENT! Get Strenuous Pastimes in Lacresse, plenty of action just two of the bes s off y performai Drake Games OW or being fleet of foot. be askell In the c igh respectively. year, but the servi field men, s high man awarded a followed the AY QUARTET Sp orts a Institute Runners Showed Great Burst of Speed in Setting New Record at Recent | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE STANDING BEAR AND WHITE’ BIRD above) lived up to week when he him nd promoters xious to use him, ldwin is in fine si out every day e. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER SPECIAL | With 214 cars a year ago. EXECUTION d Down through the years it has pro- aps being Tom Longboat and Jim Thorpe. titute runners (pictured 1 record in the two-mile relay race. s of the entire affair. old Baldwin made a big hit in Britton, | ers at $9.80. Bologna bulls, canners aMoure, their S. D. t b defeated , | Kid Brocko, who outweighed ten in that state ¢ He is ith Battling WHEAT SHOWS satisfy the same are described as [at Southwest quarter (SW%) of Section Nine -(9) Township Hundred and_ Forty Four (144) North Range Seventy Six (76) West Lof the 5th P, M. There will be due on said mortgage he date of sale the sum of $3101.68 and the costs jof foreclosure including -attorney's i H HARRIET BE. TRAUGER, CRAWFORD, Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgagee, Dickinson, N. 4-27—5-4-11-18. MARKET NEWS Wire Murkete By i Associated Prose | i| | UPWARD TREND | Unfavorable Winter j News Brings Boost Crop (By The Associated Press) Chicago, May 11.—Winter wheat, shows a decided upward trend. The ocean report of wheat brought the total up to 4,000 bushels less than Inst week's aggregate and 6,000 less than a year ago, Unfavorable ne: about the winter crop came from the} winter section. There was a consi-! derable pressure to sell, markets | readily advanged May and July wheat} selling at from $1.50 followed by a} rise to $1.52, CHICAGO PRODUCE (By The Associated Press) Chicago, May 11,—Live at Roosters 14%%¢; ducks 24 to 25c; beeves 15¢; chickens at 45c; broilers | 27. William Koutz, Boonville, Ind.,.sells eggs. | dog, was cutting into the profits by stealing the eggs. “SPOT” PAYS HIS WAY HOME ‘MONDAY But he found that Spot, his So he ‘bundled the dog into his automcbile and «vopped him 65 miles from home. When Koutz returned home he found taining $50 and some valuable paper ing the wallet. up at home carry at he had lost his wallet con- About daybreak Spot showed Koutz will keep thé dog. q Four per cent of ordinary firsts sold at 23 Storage extras {30% the hundred. Killing pigs 50c ‘up. Hogs $12.75 to $13.00. Cattle, slow, 25e up. About 1,500 steers Fat lambs, weak. Clippers at $13.00 Po . ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK St. Paul, May, 11.—Cattle 4,000, quality plain. Yearlings, — $9,75. Fancy stock, steady. Cows .and heif- d cutters at $4.25, 4,100 received. Cutters and feeders steady. Calves, 2,200, mostly 50¢ higher. Butcher hogs $12.25, Packing sells mostly at $11.00. Sheep, 500, receipts steady. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat receipts 105 cars compared Cash No. 1 northern $1.54 3-8 to No. 1 dark northern . No. 1 northern spring . No. No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum ... No. 1 flax No. 2 flax No, 1 rye . Rye No. 2 $1.11 1-2'to $1.12 1-2, Flax $2.78 1-8 to $2.82 1-2, BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russel-Miller Co.) Bismarck May }, 1926. 1 amber durum Dark Hard Winter . Hard Winter Barley .... 65 We quote but do not handle the following: Oats ao . 30 Speltz, per cwt, . 80 SHELL CORN Medals w igiv>)) 2 is hereby given that by vir- | $1.56 3-8, Yellow White & yse athletes jtue of a Judgment and Decree in} No 1 dark northern spring; choice| Mixed foreclosure rendered and given in| to fancy $1.69 3-5 to $1.80 3-8; good| No. 4 81 : held inj the District Court, County of Bur-|to choice $1360 3-8 to $1.68 3-8; or-| No 5 7 with the track meet Pagel |i¢ieh and orth Dakota on | dinary to good $1.65 3-8 to $1.69 3-8. |No. 6 72 City Jamestown and won the doubles er and Hayes. ORRIE BALDWIN TO FIGHT IN kie Doyle One et into a game Fer it’s one of the most strenu- above picture ate several Yale University players during a hectic bit of pastiming at New Haven, Conn.—the They’re all up in the air at the same time, to get a high one. ¥ Blue stronghold. nets extended in an effort Jes title | wherein | meet | pense | Judgm e Driscoll > Loan Association, a corporation was the defendant Roy ( sum of $21 1, inclu Colton for ing costs, whi ed the sale by me of said real est: r described to satisfy mount of st ther of s the ts und t among other things direct- Plaintiff and Roy C. Colton, Clara M. Colton, The Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul, a corporation, May Donovan, Winnefred Eustice, Jane |Fergen, Agnes Ford, Gertrude Ford, Ellen Hogan and Catherine Donovan were defendants, said Judgment in|, favor of plaintiff and against | 3-4. the ich ate the id Judgment and inter- ex- o muchrthere- f said sale will and by virtue of a Writ of duly issued out of the e of the Clerk of the District Court, Burleigh County, State of North’ Da eal of said | court, of real | proper id Judgment and Degre trom, Sher- iff of Bur orth Dakota, | of Sport’s Most | wil | re | to terest and the costs thereon and the | sell the properte hereinafter at public deseril anetion bed to ‘the highest bidder for cash at the front aoor of the Court House in tae leigh and State of North Dakota the 16th day of June 19 hour of two o'clock satisfy s id Judgment and cribed in ‘ment and to be sold nnrsu: to. are described as follows, ; Bast Quarter (Sits) > ( North West Quarter (S% and Lots Three a of Section Two Hundred F a i, said premises t+ to the rights nd B of The ank of Saint Paul, St. Paul, innesota, & Dated this 9th da: ALBIN HE OM, eriff of Burleigh Co., N. HYLAND & FOST. Att 3 for N. SAL that in n nd conditions tain mortrage made, on the ist day of Febru d for record in the fler, and on the with ae an Page 456, which said morte d bY the sale vo, ag the y the amount mortgage the day e. e default in said mortg: rongisting in the ,failure of Mortgagors to pay the prince! p of I the 20th, day in accordance with M statut premises described sald [&a8¢ and which will be sold . M. of that day on Page 454 and day of assigned to Harrlet + which assignment was 192 in such case provided. The mort- of Bismarck, County of Bur- on the in- such ent. to- ut ) and the South Half ‘our sold sub- | Federal of May, 1925. TROM D. E de: the of that cer- executed and delivered by John I. Moore and indith M. Moi his wife, Mortga- rors to Interstate Securities Com- pany, a corporation, Mortgagee, ary of- on tiled for record in the gaid office July 12, 1915 at 9 o'clock A. M. and recorded in Boole 108 af Marten age mortgage and here- Of que of Age the inal the Ist day of December of the to No 1 hard spring $1,80 3-8 to $1.90 Nof 1 dark Montana on track $1.50 3-8 to $1.79 3-8; to arrive $1.50 3-8 to $1.79 3-8. May $1.52 1-2, July $1.50 3-8, Corn No, 2 yellow $1.08 3-4 to $1.09 Oats No, 2 white 42 to 42 1-2, Barley 72 to .86. did!” want cand} it ony Sample grade object to innovation will help you # you money.’ x 63 1 cent per pound discount under 56 Ib. Earn corn 5 cents under shell, In the seventeenth century leather coins were used in parts of northern Europe. : ELECTRIC. COOKERY CORRECT COOKERY “This is not as o ALBERT SHEETS, EARLY SETTLER, DIES IN LAKOTA Lakota, N. D., May 11.—Albert E. Sheets, Sr. 70, resident of North Dakota since 1881, and former state’s attorney of Nelson county, died here Thursday afternoon of cancer, Born at Cornwall, Ontario, he was educated in the public schools there. In 1872 he moved to Massena, N. Y., remaining until 1876, when he went to Northfield, Minn, Migrating to North Dakota in 1881, he established a general mercantile store at Larimore .and continued in that business until he moved to La- kota in 1885. He engaged in the real estate and insurance business here and in the meantime was. studying jaw. In 1890 he was admitted to the bar. From 1893 to 1895 he served as state’s attorney of Nelson county, He acquired about “4,000 acres of farm land near here, and a two story office building and other property in Lakota. Mr. Sheets was a member of the Masonic, Elks, Knights an Pythias and Woodmen lodges and of. the La- kota commercial club, His widow, two sons ‘and daughters survive. Bs Funeral services are being arrang- four - fathers did” les! ; Why have we progressed? * Advertising, more than anything else, has-made of us a nation willing to judge something new on its merits, rather than on narrow, ancient traditions.’ Advertising today is as‘necessary as electricity, sani- tation alhd rapid transit, It is more than the system by which we are kept informed of every new improvement that is.to our advantage. It is the catalog -wherein, every day, all their iyidvidual advantages.’ Read the advertisements. Be guided by them. They mn making your selections. They will save Oe Onna i ‘ x To buy thé new is to progress $ The civilization of the Chinese is old—older than the’ d oldest records that are musty and yellow with age. Yet China today enjoys very few of our modern improve- ments. The Chinese do riot weleome change. They , saying “This is not as our fathers Imagine an American today saying that. he did not electricity because his father was satisfied with manner of articles are listed for use — to learn of it Airst is to read advertising hy ur 4 ed. dependent upon the time when distant relatives can arrive. A son, Albert E, Sheets, Jr., former assist- ant attorney general under William Langer’s administration is practicing law in Colua, Calif. DATE SET FOR COMMENCEMENT AT JAMESTOWN By The Associated Press) Jamestown, N. D, May 11—The Jamestown college commencement will be held June-17, with Dr. Wil- liam Arthur Ganfield, president of the Carroll College, and former goy- ernor of Wisconsin, as the speaker, it, was announced here’ today by President B, H. Kroeze, of the local school. A. The Rev. William C. Snider, new Synodical~executive of the Presby- terian Church for North Dakota, will deliver the annual baccalaure- ate address on the afternoon of Sun- day, June 14, Each. of these ceremonies will be held in the college chapel with aca- demié costumes and a campus parade or march, / President Kroeze will be the com- mencement speaker for schools at Hunter, Nome, Aneta, Gackle and Hannaford. Others of the faculty will speak elsewhere on like ec- casions. —* HELD FOR MILLION London, May 11.—Charles Alfred Gardiner, managing director of a shipbuilding concern, ig charged with obtaining a check for nearly $1,000,- 000 through false pretenses. The Romans took a bath every nines days. Coal Burns! Electricity Gives Heat! Oi] Makes a Flame: But Gas is eombusti- ble. Use The Super-Fuel. ——————— DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 5th St. Phone 428 CARS - WASHED AND SIMONIZED Best - Work - At - Low Price. Phone 985W a | with MAY 11, 1995 | [ i >