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‘PAGE SIX — ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BASEBALL i JUST WATCH aS American League | Advice of Blind Man, Honor Ww. oL. Pet. | Dancing, | Philadelphia hington Chicago | Cineinnati Detroit [BASEBALL { Sports| PIRATESTAKE =: IN NATIONAL 233% New York St. Louis Brooklyn St. Louis Athletics Shove Senators Out of First Place in Amer- ican League LEAGUE Philadelphia Boston 2 Chieay ao AMERICAN LEAGUE L Louisville t. Paul Kansas City Minneapolis Indianapolis Toledo Milwaukee Columbus New York, July 24.-(P)—'The shifting scenes of major league base- ball, today Pittsbu and Phil the top of the pictur Waiting until crushing batting once more disp WRESTLE S sin starred delphia oy the 9th to ttack, th ed the Giants at the crest of the National league pi by shading the Cardinals 3 te while the champions were havi double header with the Bra percentage points separ clubs today. The American which has he lo AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Detroit Boston at Philadelphia. b ONAL LEAGU! New York at Boston. St. Louis at Pittsburg. Cincinnati at Chicago, league see n teetering for several weeks, curried the Athletics up at one end and tossed Washington down at the other yesterday, homers by Lou Gehrig of the Yankees, the second of which arrived in the 7th with the bases filled, bounced the Senators out of first place, 11 to Rommell’s | 17th triumph of the season and timely hitting by Poole enabled the Mack- men to tuke advantage of the break by edging out the Red Sox 6 to 4, The tumble of the Giants was in the opening melee with the Braves | and Johnny Cooney was responsible Although he allowed the champions 11 hits, he blanked them until the | seventh and gave them only three | runs over the full route while his | mates were gathering six off Bent-| ley. | Smart pitching b and 9th inning sho Southworth rescued the second game, 5 | The Curds-Pirate h, a piteh- | ing duel between Haines’ and Yde, | ended with a Pittsburg batting storm in the final frame when Cuyler op- ened with a triple. Traynor’s double and Wright's single then put the game on ice. The defeat pushed the down into sixth place, After Thurston had been batted | out of the box in the second, Con- ; rally took up the. pitching burden for the White Sox and gave the ‘Tigers only one hit during the re mainder of the game, ‘Ty Cobb was | back in the Detroit lineup after a week's suspension, but he failed to} rally the club after an early start. Chicago won 3 to 4. went hitless after in 22 consecutive ames as the Browns trailed the In- 10 to 1. Smith gave the losers ur bingles. Bob MeGraw, Miller moundsman, suffered his first defeat since start* ing his string of victories that have extended to 10 in yesterday’s mingle with Walter Beall of the Saints, The remaining teams of the cir- cuit took the duy off, none being AMERICAN ASSO! Kansas City at Milw St ul e Louisville Columbus o——_-. National League New York 3-5; Boston 6-3, St. Louis 2; Pittsburg : Others not scheduled American Association veland 1 t. Louis 1 ago %; Detroit 4, ton 4; Philadelphia 5. Washington 7; w York 11, J AMERICAN AUG Minneapolis 1; . a WESTERN LEAGUE New York.—Sight is a convenience, Oklahoma City 5; Tulsa 2 not _a_ necessity.’ ; Others not scheduled, That is a bit of philosophy tha TO MEET FAST TEAMS HERE The speedy Northern Pacific Shops club of St. Paul will meet the Bis- marck White Sox Monday evening on the Bismarck diamond. ‘The game is heduled to start at 6:30. Bism and the St. Paul Shops met here Is year, Bismarck winning two games out of three. The Shops club is stronger this year than it was last and took second place in the Twin Cities championship race. The All-Nations will meet Bis- marck here on Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 1 and The Saturday game will start at | 6:30 p.m. and games will be p Sunday scheduled. noon, the first contest starting at o'clock, Boardman and Yellowhorse, form- erly of the Pittsburg Pirates, will op- pose each other on the mound in one lem at New Salem KEARNS HOPES FOR AGREEMENT WITH DEMPSEY (#)—Hopes over the differences arisen in a so-called between Jack Dempsey, heavyweight champion, and his man- ager, Jack Kearns, were expressed few hours be- Kent Greenfield tring catch by the Giants in to’ 3. | SSOCIATION . Paul 4. scheduled. to rning most which he is a girls—and to swimming und pial “Loss of my eyesight did not com- pare with the blow of mother’s 8 “Her loss was T would a thou have a mothe sight and on times sooner and no sight than mother. everance is all that y come the handicap o pp the memory th Work out things along lines. © never seen Yet you are shorter t Massa was right. “How do I do it? The sound of your voice comes from about the height of my neck. Just pay cl attention to trifles and you'll s esn't mean so much. Measurement proved my — mouth just the height of Massa’s throat. The story of Massa’s strugyles and triumphs extend over 17 When he i fun-loving youn in a vacant lot near his hom found a stick of dynamite. It didn't look like lead pipe to the youngster. It couldn't be a sash weight e lad took a large roc! u need have entific pei before. No?” you an 1. New in a meet Sund e game. Rosenberg Knocks Out Shea After Great Rally New York, July 24. American pugilis boxing cham- Pionships remain in the east today after a stout hearted, strong armed defense of the bantamweight. title by Charley (Phil) Rosenberg against a vain but furious challenge from F Chicago. , fore the scheduled arrival of the| “Of course, T felt bad Rosenberg sits on his throne along | champion from the east. nayes Masan! qnulcs la with Genaro, lan, Ballerino,| If any reception committee has| mind to get ahead, Alw, Goodrich, Walker, Greb and Berlen-| planned to greet Dempsey upon his | had been set on being buch, but only because he was able | arrival at central station they face|I was determined to real to knock out the hard hitting Eddie |a possible disappointment _ because | bition. ¥ Shea after 9 minutes and 27 seconds| Kearns did not know whether t “For a while I went to a school of terrific fighting. Wading through | champion would ride boldly into ¢! for the blind. There, when we u: a maelstrom of ha ers, the cham-|or leave the train at some suburbun| to tell of our ambitions, as kids will pion put down Shea after lifting him- | station. do, the others used to taunt me when self by a mighty effort from the| “Maybe today or tomorrow I shall)! said I would be a lawyer. I re- brink of defeat. have a conference with Dempsey and | ceived the equal of a high school edu- The east is now fistically supreme | thresh this whole thine out. I be-| cation. And all the time I w in every division except the heavy- | lieve the differences will be smoothed | cially training my memory weight class. And in that division, | out all right,” Kearns said. ‘ I In 1919, young Massa applie two formidable challengers, Gene It looks to me like ordinary | admission to Columbia Uni Tunney and Harry Wills, are bark- | business misunderstanding. The authorities demurred. ing their knuckles at the gate of Jack Dempsey of Utah and Cali- for: In the first rounds Shea drove the champion all over the ring. Then Rosenberg met the challenger in the center of the ring and slugged with him, toe to toe, until a ter- tific right floored the Chicago boy. Shea took a count of two and sprang up only to measure his length on the canvas from a right of 3. Exchanges in the fourth ended in another crushing Rosenberg right. This time the game Chicagoan went down for nine. He was too grogey to defend himself when he arose, and the champion floored his man. GREB CHOSEN AS DEMPSEY’S NEXT OPPONENT Chicago, July 24.—(P)—A seed that may blossom into a meeting of Jack Dempsey, world’s heavyweight cham- pion, and Harry Greb, world’s mid- dleweight titleist, in 10 rounds at Michigan City in September, has been sown. -Chiecago sports writers. meeting with promoter Floyd Fitzsimmons last night, decided Greb was the best available opponent for the heavy- weight champion, who has said he could not bé ready for Gene Tunney or Harry Wills this year. Assurances came from principals that they would fight soon as the promoters and their managers made an agreement. The promoter has posted $50,000 guaranteeing to stage| the contest. Dempsey would post! $25.000 and Greb $10,000 if the nego- tiations were completed. Greb and his manager, Reddy Ma. zon, will come here Monday to confer with Fitzsimmons. Dempsey snid he would return to Chicago within two Los Angel (P)—Kight of of smooth Be aduly eae one eye, and so impaired the other that he has never been able to see out of it. The specialists tha could do nothing. He was to total blindness for life led doomed at first,” de up my CHICAGO DERBY VICTOR Caractus, 30 to 1 Shot, Leads Classy Filed to Tape at Hawthorne Oval CARACTUS, JOCKEY H. THOMAS UP Pfgustptlel Soractts, wher of the $20,000 Chicago Deby at the old wthorne track the other «uy. Caractus, a 30-to-1 shot, ‘yeat a classy eee ee nee ees ae he bost| field including King (Nadi, Mark Master, Kentucky Cardinal, Silver Fos we be staged either Sept. 19 crjand Arbitration. It was the greate: racing day Chicago has ex: 25 at Michigan City. erienced in the last 20 years. find | | ural and artificial THE TRIFLES! Student, Exnert at Checkers, | Bowling { | i | | | ' 2 MASSA » provision at the college for teaching the blind—no books such as they use. But with Massa’s determined in- sistance they finally permitted him » enter on probation, In four major | bjects Massa warded one A and three B’s his first But while M s with his studies, he had problem to solve. His pare they could not afford to M through college. { How to earn his way was the ques- tion. Not many methods of — part- |time work are open to a blind man. | i took his ability to play to Starlight Park, a subur- nusement pa ere nightly “he would play e! simultaneous games of checke The layout of the men on the eight boards were urried in his memory. His moves | he made himself after his opponent i moved. And most of these games | Weret won by the blind boy. So skep- al were many of his _ blindness, s blindfolded in or- convince onlookers and oppo- it he could not see the another ts were ht Three years sufficed to complete for the young Si pre-law course. | But despite the fact that he was earning his way through college, |and was learning his lesson by memorizing them—he would have fellow students read over to him the | ases involved in the next day's les- sons—he found time to take part in lighter activities of college life. He went out for the wrestling team of the college and in 1921 made the varsity team—winning the Kilroe medal heavyweight champion wrestler. , He was active in swimming, div- ing and attended the college dances. He did all the leading—hi: keen sense of hearing enabling him to avoid collisions, He took his examinations for the New York bar by having the ques- tions read to him and dictating his answers, completing well within the time limit. “But that. was easy,” he says. “The hardest task I ever undertook, 1 believe, was when I played 28 op: jPonents at checkers at the same time at the Union Settlement. It meant carrying in my mind the posi- | tions of 672 checkers, | “I am looking forward to a politi- cal career, Already for four years I have been stumping for Tamman Hall. And I am told that my are for them has been successful.” Incidentally he has gained the name of “Tammany’s Blind Orator.” >—___.________», | FISH AND GAME | e FISHING BAITS By Morris Ackerman There are two fishing baits—nat- The natural con | now, worm. crawfi grass- hopper, hellgramite, ‘roach, potato bug and a few other fish-fatteners, Of the nonpalatable or artificial b variety there is the wooden plug, whirling svoon, phantom, pork rind, ; spinner, fly and myriads of combi- ations of these make-believes, For still-fishing, from boat or shore, failure of the use of natural bait means an empty creel. Natural bait means live bait. Bait ———— BOWMAN UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalnaer in Charge. Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R. WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directora Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 j choose between the clubs. a an ten cette nena seen with a kick. The more kick in a minnow, frog, millroach or potato bug the greater speed on the of the fish in acquiring its provender. Artificial lures—there is ev thing from the sawed-off end baseball bat bristling with gang hooks to the delicate eved fl; One thing is sure and that you catch a game fish on actured bait you do so by fooling the fish into thinking this lure was good to eat. From observation and experience I have learned that the lighter the lure the less splash when it strikes the water--and the best chance to deceive the quarry. Also that the m action from your lure the more (attractive it is to the fighting fin. And that the more hooks on the bait the less that bait’s action. Contrary to the belief of many, }1 am inclined to think a single hook is a deadlier killer than a gang. 1 believe the unobstructed point of the barbless hook will take more fish than the barbed hook. There is a distinct advantage using the single-hook type of 4 fi you can put back hurt, the smaller fish as well en- joy the sport of catching, and still turn to the water, game fish that you cannot use. It is a safe prediction that within a very few years great majority of both game and pan fish will be taken, with more sport, on single-hook, and’ humane casting lure: in tie un- to make the = = ——- Billy Evans Says | FORM COMPARISON Youth and inexperience are going ‘to be the greatest handicaps of the Athletics in their fight for the American League pennant, Down the stretch, all other things being equal, the team with the me experience, ‘poise, has a decided ad- vantage, As you compare Philadelphia Washington there is but little to Philadel- Washington the and phia has the youth, experience, Just so long as Philadelphia con- tinues to get high class pitching, the club is certain to retain its morale A complete break in hurling is the one thing that would rout the A’s. But, after all, the greatest club in the world looks amateurish when it fails to get good pitching. STRONG RESERVES Washington, good enough to win the pennant in the American League last season, is an even better club this year. Winning the pennant, and a world championship gave it a certain con- fidence that comes only with vie- tory. Confidence is a sary asset. I the matter of reserves, the ¢ is far superior to the 1924’ aggrega- tion, Last year’s team was woefully weak in this respect. The veteran shortstop, Everett Scott, is ready to step in and deliver should Roger Peckinpaugh be forced out of the lineup. In Hank Severeid, the club has corking backstop, who ‘can rest Muddy Ruel or work regularly if he suffered an injury that kept him out of play. most neces- more or less are performing Stanley Coveleskie, pitching outcasts, sensationally. Strengthening of its reserves, plus the confidence that comes with vic- tory, makes Washington a far more formidable club than last year, IT iS TO LAUGH The prospects of a meeting be- tween Champion Jack Dempsey and Harry Wills, for the heavyweight to have its humorous of years Wills has after a match with Demp- somehow. the champion, Mr. Jack Kearns, his manager, has always dodged the issue with the “Brown panther.” On several occasions a rather poor howing by Wills axa dinary fighter temporar enthusiasm in a proposed bout. Despite. all this, Wills unque: ably is the logical contender titular bout with Dempsey. By his recent decisive knockout of nert, which by the way was 1 , Wills strengthened. hi sus Demp: Now in keeping with the many ludicrous situations that have been a part of the ballyhoo for a Demp- sey-Wills bout, we find Wills sailing for Europe on the very day. that Dempsey departs from foreign shores for America. It may be just a strange coinci- dence, but it is nevertheless highly amusing. for a A Dempscy-Wills match will prob- ably never get beyond the conversa- tional period. Demp: or did have a yearning for Wills and_ it’s Erobably less now than ever before. A good compass is the first con- ii A double-bladed — jack- ssen A cheap, but de- pendable, watch is desirable. If you get lost follow your com- pass, It without compass ase your watch, Point hour hand of watch towards aun, south is hand and 12. * SPORT BRIEF half-way between | ° July 24.-(®)—Zev, the test winner of Ame: thor- reds, who earned for his own- er $313,639, has been retired the track because he has gone stub- born, Zev’s greatest winnings came In addition, “Dutch” Reuther and! hour| from! in FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1925 his two and three-year-old form. He is-five years old Manchester, Mass., July 24.—()- Miss Helen Wills of Berkeley, Cal fornia, national women's champion, decisively deefated Miss Mary Browne of Santa Monica, California, second ranking player in the United States, in the finals of the women’s invitation singles tournament at the Essex Country club here today. The scores were 6-2; 6-1. PRISON TEAM TO BATTLE HARVEY SUNDAY The Prison baseball team will clash with the Harvey club Sunday afternoon on the Prison diamond. The game is scheduled to start at 1:h The Bismarck White Sox will be away Sunday and it is expected a large crowd of fans will witness the game. Harvey is coming with a strength- ened lineup to battle the strong Pri- son aggregation. | The Referee | —— When did Harry Heilmann of the Detroit Tygers lead the American League in batting and what were h —D, T. U. and 1923 and his hitting marks were .394 an. .403, respective- t's the regulation height of a 8. 8.8. ar the center, OF MOR CLOSURE that that executed and de- livered Leslie S. Hackney and Lillie M. ‘kney, his wife, Mort- gagors, to the Hackney Land Credit Company, a corporation of St. Paul, Minn, Mortga dated Nov. 1, and filed for record in the of- fice of the Register of Deeds of Bur leigh County orth Dakota, N 1919, and recorded in Book “98, 141, which said mortgage has n duly assigngd by an ingtrument in writing to BE. H. Brandenburg of Minneapolis, Minn, which sald 3 signment rded with the Reg- ister of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, in Book (175) of Assets. on page (205), will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises in said mortgage and hereinafter de- serihed at the front door of the Court House of Burleigh County, marck, North Dakota, at 10:00 in the forenoon of August to satisfy the amount due -'date of sale. The premises in said mortgage and vhieh will be d are situated in Burleigh County, rth Dakota, and described as the NE of Section Township 141_N. of Range 78 West of the Sth’ P. M. There will be due on said mort- the day of sale the sum of 40 and the costs of foreclosure certain June 22, 1 H. BRANDENBURG, ssignee of Mortgage. T. BURKE, as Attorney for Mortgagee. Bismarck, N. D. 6-26—7-3-10-17-24-31 MEANS COOKING IN COMFORT | office ForE- | FOR SALE at a Big Discount, 70 Shares of the Bowman Furniture Co. Stock. Inquire at W. E. PERRY'S Funeral Parlors 5th St. OF MORT. CLOSURE SALE tice is hereby given, that that certain mortwage, executed and de- livered by H. D.” Hodges and Luey G. Hodges, his wife, as mort to Farmers Trust Company, a cor. poration mortgagee, said mort- wage dated the 28th day of October, 191 nd filed’ for record dn the of the Register of Deeds in and for Burleigh County, N. D., on t day of November, 1919, at ‘lock a. m. and recorded in book of mortgages on page 4 ch mortgage Was as- signed by the mortgagee, by a writ. ten instrument dated the 12th day of January, 1920, to) ‘The Merchants Trust Company, a corporation, said assignment filed for record fi the office of the Register of Deeds in and for Burleigh County, N. D, on the 2ist day of January,’ 1920, o'clock a.m. und recorded in’) 185 of Assignments on page thereof, will be foreclosed by of the premises in such mc and hereinafter described, the front door of the Court House in the ity of Bismarck, Burleigh County, Db, on the 17th of August, clock in the afternoon that day to satisfy the amount due on such mortgage on the day Ne, E FORE. 1 sale rtgage bed in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows: Southwest quarter ‘our (4), ‘Township ‘One ndred forty-four (144), North Range Seventy-six (76), West the in Burleigh n that the As- The Merchants rged with the Company jd Minois Mere! ey that by virtue of nois Merchants ‘Trust and is the owner There will on such mort- le the sum of 3 and in addition to said sum 8 of these fore- closui Dated J TRUST Mortgage. Attorney for owner of mortgage. Bismarck, N. D. READ TRIBUNE WANT ADDS veryuhere/ ‘ Smokers are now buying the popular cigar in this popular package. 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