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ae PAGE six is TT! = DAY? YAMS GTC FIRST SHUT OUT OF 186 Results in Score Tom % vy, BO-year-old left hander of i. nerly of the Sen thing i of first to Snow nitted the slugging to hit safely nine time ut his veteran head turn ck when trouble threat le struck out four, Tony eri from Salt Lake City proving St. Louis won, 4 ms hitting a home , d Sam Jones shower has been ly voss the Indians path for two years and perheps it was the fault of his mates, who mancuvered carelessly | on the bases, that he lost. Lead Grows Smaller Cincinnati today maintains gin of only 1 1-2. games world champion Pirates and Cardinals in the National league, ing fallen before Brooklyn again, 2 to 1. Pete Donohue, who has reg istered 1) victor this season, beaten for the eighth time. He much-worked pitcher. Outfield errors permitted both runs made by the Dodgers. Charlie “Cube” Root gave a more than capacity throng in Chicago something to rave about by toppling New York Giants, 2 to 1, in as tle with Hugh MeQuillan puthworth, playing fourth club in the National league, appears to have found his haven at | last in rightfield for the Cardinals. The former Pirate, Brave and Giant | run to his list y, in the Cardinals’ 9 to 7 victory over Philadelphia. ‘The con- | quest put Horns! team in a virtual tie with Pittsburgh for second place HAZELTON WINS FROM | » leaders in the American [a Leo Gehrig, Yanks’ first baséman, and quite, a +! Phi jadelphia, Young Stribling mid Jimmy Slattery.” Slattery hay gained | decisions over Delaney in six-round: Berlenbach is anything but — un- happy, and already there comes from his followers word that he will be back in the ring before the summer is over, with champion Delaney in the opposite corn Pennant Progress ! NATIONAL LEAGUE Standings Cincinnati St. Lows. is Brooklyn + 46 i + 46 44 . 3b 32 mes Today Phi lade|phia at St. Louis. York at Chicago. Boston at Pittsburgh, Brooklyn at Cincinnati AMERICAN LEAGUE Standi: New York.. Philadelphia .. Cleveland Chicago .. : Washington " 18) 500 ai St. Louis at New ‘york. Cleveland at Washington. Chicago at Boston. Detroit at Philadelphia. - AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Standings Milwaukee . Louisville Indianapolis . Kansas City Toledo . St. Paul Minneap Columbus . No games Gcheduleds ————_______» | Yesterday’s Games | Fs aa enannn aamnemamamniaemeen amma) NATIONAL ban ts Brooklyn .. Cincinnati . 1 8 2 McGraw ai Hargrea es; Donohue and Hargrave. AY MISS CANNON DEMONSTRATING PROPER BREATHING First and foremost, get used to water. Get used to having . your head under so that you don’t mind. Keep your eyes open all the time un. det water for the sake of confidenct —and believe that swimming is tural thing, dust as natutal as walk- ing. 1 There is no need to learn to swim in a day, It can’t be'done. But with confidence and not too much hurry, Progress can be made in a day and it is progress which counts. In a week, if one really tries, enough can be learned to make the idea of swimming feasible and a few strokes can be made. Never “duck” anyone learning to swim and never Tet anyone “duck” you. The psychological effect of be- ing ducked is very very bad on the driving at 35 miles an hour on River Side Drive. “How do you plead?” the magis- trate asked. “T plead Ruth responded and admittea that’ he had been fixed imilar offense two years 0. ‘As traffic records “dissolve utter one year, howver, George Herman was fined today ‘as a first offender, beginner and will last a lifetime. The person learning to swim should be allgwed to take his own time in eet tiny tomed to having the head inder w: To get used to having one’s head under water, kneel in water about a foot deep and place the hands on the bottom. Take a breath and put your face down in the water. It doesn’t matter at first if nothing but the nose is under water. Keep at it, getting deeper and deeper until the whole head is under. You will find very soon that the terror of being under water has been lost. It isn’t there, Keep the eyes: open and look for things ‘under water. In the interest of trying to find something, the idea of being under water will be for- gotten. Breathing is gta the biggest thing to Tearn in The swimmer must expect under water for much of the time~ while he is swimming. Therefore the novice should be prepared for that. Breath should always be taken in through ¢he mouth and expelled through the nose. This permits the exhalation to occur after the head is under water. Try the ducking exercise and breathing together. Inhale through the mouth and then put the head beneath water and exhale. Go slow- ly at first and keep at it until th hang of it is attained. Get used t it in quiet water until it is the nat- ural’ thing te do. [deeb 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) |MONEY SAVED ON EXCISE TAX SHOULD BE INVESTED IN SERVICE. AND BETTER ORGANIZATION, SAYS A. A. A. PRESIDENT Washington, D. C., July 19—Elimin- negligible sum and it contains 1 ation of the two cent excise tax on|® significant and valuable lesson, League for the first half of the season, or, if you fener ante himself, was*three-base hit prince with RuWosE NORTHWESTERN automobiles is saving every car buyer! vanization pays motorists huge di |prefer, Ban Johnson's advance troop 14. George Burns of the Cleveland Burnses topped |New York . 1 7 0 this year an average of $11.00. The|dends. The excise tax saving is sniall I: “Babe euth: thet REAR se) ‘ _ | his field in doubles with 36, as well as hits, with 112. | Chicago 2 5 pertinent question—What is he going|in comparison with the tremendou ;, Babe Ruth, the busting Bambino, as you know. | Bob Meuscl, another Yankee pastimer, was showing] | McQuillan, Davis and Florence; to do with this money ?—is raised by| achievements that the future hold jis the home run pace-sette: ing run-scorer 2 ing with 14. McMullen; Root and Gonzale: officials of the American Automobile | when a greater proportion of Ame! jand the a t the half-way Y k, Geor la batting percentage of | lar Association. ca’s 20,000,000 car owners become con Will be put the $11.00 back into| scious ‘of the advantage of mass ac- in the form of some accessory | tion.” Addington, Visiting Pitcher, asking in the offensive spotlight as the phitadelphia Had Local Batters at His Mercy Sunday Three hun defeat of B local park by a i n from Hazelton, Linton and Strasburg. The score was 4 to 1. Addington, working on the mound} for Hazelton, had the local men at his mercy. He had 11 strike outs to his credit and allowed only six hits dur-| ing the game. | Tobin was the outstanding star of| the game for the local boys. He ac- quired four hits in four times at bat./ and shone in the infield. At times ‘during the game th | good ball, making Mia Moe Love pitched a good game, and with his usual support the wouki have been much closer. The; played the heaviest hitting team! which has vet come to Bism | In the second inning of pl et brought in Webber for uae score of the game. ‘ine score was not} tied until the last of the fifth when) Tobin brought in Tufford, making Land 1. itl ten In the seventh Hazelton went into! White Bear “the lead again, when Addington| #nual campaign to determine the brought in Kallber. In the first of | Western amat, the eighth the visitors put the game, under way in ‘their pocket when Anderson} co alesgh in Moon and then himself |? in on Webber's two bagger. An ipient batting rally in the fifth in- ning was squelched by Addington aft- $ netting Bismarck her only run of! th lien Grid Star to ~~ Join Flickertails ely sin, Ia., July 19.—The Univer-| * sity of fowa has fought a losing bat- tle with the Unive: kota at Grand For! ’ for the services | _ Standing prep school football per formers, it was disclosed here today when Herbert Samuelson, Oelwein’s all-state Towa tackle, announced that he would matriculate at the-rprthern university this fall. ‘Samuelson played three years on| the ‘local eleven after coming kére from Bowman, N. D. Starting out a feastically no knowledge of the in game, he hus developed into beg tes lineman this city of 16,000 has sent out in several years, tea work against such teams as) {Waterloo, Dubuque, Decorah and Ma- Pred City, last fall placed him at Je. on the Des Moines Register’s oti @amuelson is 6 feet 12 ae? and weighs 175 pounds, tocal 8 predict a balent career him ie college football. is rumored here that the local "s brother, a North Dakota man,i dium director at his alma mater,{ his brother to come north in| rence to what would have been) at-Western Conference stuff at, ee! ag university in lowa City. duet ile is getting in shape grind by heaving brick at Fonte and he promises to rn. Flickertails some this autumn, is in Mohices. White Bear Yacht Club Cours: in Excellent Condition For Matches championsihp honors now y Keefe Carter of The program called i five minute in- day and the second 18 carded for to-| | From this field, the 31 low scores | for the 36 holes, to: who does not of North Da-| W 1 the alone fing of one of ‘the Hawkeye state’s ou! (tet Saturday. Us by the excellent condition EST AMATEUR 2 GOLF TOURNEY :: STARTS TODAY | n the western it here toda Westland tur GY for the 72 ps birdies going out a more come | | present campaign, ; s y| tournament, The fairways, hardened; not be sure of my condi several days ‘| been aiding tee shots. ong competin; alf of the play mateur gelf tourna- ! is k was three stro urse record of 66, ti | MAKES: HOLL, White Be (A) r Lake, One for the boo wolf tournament here toda ‘the | When Jimmy Wall of the Spok {t t . with 18 we them to- Z three years ag in the Pacific northwest tournament on his home cours: sion ise ‘regi try club shot a hole in one Oklahoma Helen Wills ‘Feels Fine’ After Short Practice Session: sun,! and 40 yards to} h he greens were in| Mass spies Monday for the Essex, inn., July 19— n urred in the qualifying play of the western ami jteur ng a mateh ard to Jetenaice her title| in the women’s national tennis cham- pionships at“Forest Hills, N. Y., next month, for at least another week, “I feel for whicn| minute pr: ape for the, Heston, pro, yesterday, “but I ean n as yet.’ plans to practice every day k and go to Mancheste: Coun Club invitation tournament, The following week she will spend ad | the Seabright, N. J., tourni SARAZEN AND SMITH TIED IN GOLF TOURNEY Play Scheduled For 72 Holes, 2 Days, Already Covers 108 Holes, 3 Days New Yor! A -{ metropolitan oj scheduled at 72 holes of medal play in two days, already has required 108 holes and three days—and remains ane who won the open kokie in 1922, and silent methodi- MacDonald Smith, who captured ern and ‘Long Island open titles last year, are arrayed against cach other in a record making duel. Already they have reached the limit to which Bobby Jones: and Willie MacFarlane were driven in the n: tional open at Werchester in 1925— two rounds of play off—but with a different result. ‘They remain all even, and will try to reach u daels iin another 18-hole round at Salisbury aid after a 40-/ jon with Paul: 3 next Saturday marning. They tied at 276 at’ 72 in two play off rounds by scoring under par the morning, 72 in the for the 6417 yard ures, 70, aerneaoe P course is 73. Each has taken 428 strokes in the championship to date wi «ix rounds completed—an average of 71 1-3. ‘DELANEY MAY HAVE TROUBLE | GETTING BOUT Crities Believe B Berlenbach Is Only Man Who Can Give Him Real Battle New York, July 19.—(@—Jack | Delaney, newly .crowned, may find himself a king without a kingdom. Boxing observers believe that only cne man-can give Delaney a real Raritepe the honors that he won by a decision over Pei rlenbach in Brooklyn peasy i man. is Berien| But the man war among them “Oont Pau! id the “Astoria ‘Aasasein' 1d conclusively tl makiag it for the 175-pound: division is ry Three tax upon’ his, Friends said before the tle meas tif Paul: was; — youngster, capal laney.an argument, pede mn but Batt now his had ied 76 runs and smashed out 26 circuit | American League chase begins the final half of the] st. Louis 1 Carlson, Dean and Wilson; Sothoron and O'Farrell. Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE R OH St. Louis ,.. New York . Zachary and Thomas, Hoyt and ain Cleveland ... Washington . Karr, Shaute and Coveleskie and Ruel. Otehrs not scheduled. AMERICAN ses sax Minneapolis 4 iL 5 St, Paul 10 iddleton, Hubbell i Gowdy, Byler; Pipgras, Johnson and Hoff: man, 3 9 1 L. Sewell; First Game R 3 1 1 5 1 Robertson und Young; Olson and Shinault. 7 Young; Snyder. Toledo .. Columbus . Ry M Lyons and Hruska. (8 innings agreement) Clarkson and n; McQuillan, Sammers and Hruska, Meuter. | —, Ej the 18 holes, Pale. of the an ‘WESTERN Li Lincoln 4-2; Tulsa 4-9, Wichita 8-3. rr, 020 St. Joseph 10-3. 3 123; Oklahoma City-7- RESULTS — Indianapolis Milwaukee + Kahsas City rc AMERICAN L LEAGUE 2-3; Boston 8-4. Philadelphia 2. New York 3. Washington 5. Chi NATIONAL LEAGUS Boston 9; Ld np a Rreokty mS br ee she us 9 1 eCullough oy Heving; es regarded as unlikely in p vast ma- Tournament at Minot So Pop- ular That It Wiil Be Made an Annual Affair Minot, N. D. July 19—(AP— L. 8. Sorlien of Bismarck and 4 gol ment. Sorlien defeated I. S. Hattman of Minot, 4 and 3, in the semicfinals and Kruckeberg beat G. L. Hardy of Farge, one up in 10 holes. — Minot, N. D., July 19-—-@)—Cham- pionship honors in the first annual northwestern North Dakota golf tournament in Minot are being fought for in the final rounds on the local course this afternoon, with visiting players possessed of an advantage, due to qualifying a larger number for this flight. Three of the eight play- ers who teed off this forenoon in the second round of the championship flight were Minot entries, and the|t! others were from outside towns. Elated over the score of the northwestern North Dakota tourna- ment, the golfers at their banquet last evening at a local hotel brought into existence the Northwestern North Dakota Golf association, which hereafter will annually sponsor a tournament for this section of the 1927 tournament will be m of Kenmare was president of the newly or- jociation and A. F,. Violette resident of ‘the Minot a Be m secretary. we president: and secretary men! of the hoard of. rectors, and and R. Sorenson, huge” and. Dr, a Anderson, Williston. Shi cde rp ‘ight vag fo ppting. Wa 6 over par for H. Bradford, chum- Minot club in*1926, and “Sorlien of: Bismarck, the for- pee a sehen of the game and the ‘tter possessed.of three and a half’ yeu ofe golf e: pera “age ty tied for the jonor of rpen palityiag hk coming og with a cai of Each made 9/38, three above ar, in.the first round ai jome with a 40 on the second round. In the driving contest, -conducted in the afternoon off tne sixth tee, Dr. A. Sorenson of Rugby carried off first honors, making a total of 709 yards in three drives. Chicago Will Get * cage Hereid July 18 19—( fatvely learned. “thet rae iginlty bar tio cham- pomp. contest would be. Cots beneath. os ‘ex Rickard after "his backers, whom he ‘five of ‘the biggest men uly 19——lond ath swimmer, a1 intendr-to jority of cases, because the 1926 automobile, almost- regurdless price class, is being put on the mai ket fully. equipped with all the fi s that contribute to the co: nce and safety of driving. With the accessory field virtually closed for this season, what is there left in the field of motordom for, which this nae ee can most advan- Bo rey it ro into organization, ihetes ese neglected feature in motor- dom in this period and one of its most important so far ys the motorist is concerned?” sks Thomas P. Henry, president of the A. A. A. “It is to or- ganization, even on its present scale, that the car buyer owes this tax saving,” says Mr. Henry. word ‘owes’ is used advisedly. ig literally true that the elimination of the excise tax was the result of organization. Car-owner unity pro- duced thé volume in objection to this obnoxious levy that convinced Con- gress of the wisdom of removing it. Aggregate Is Large “The average saving, in itself, looks like rather a small sum. It is es- timated, however, that 4,000,000 auto- mobiles will be sold this year. If is figure is correct, it is apparent that elimination of the excise tax will result in a saving to car buyers of $44,000,000. By any appraisal, this Pointing’to the old adage that life is a conflict, Mr. Henry continued: “Everything about the automobil industry, the greatest in the world, is thoroughly organized, except motor car owners, The individual concerns represent’ the acme im cf- ficiency because the need for ordination was apparent in the Dealers have their thelr assotiations. we bile firms have their Netional hamber of Commerce. i Results Manifest “What is the purpose of this unity? It is si progress and _ pro! tion. sults ure manifest to even the caamal observer. “Th pulse for progress and protection already has impressed 800,- 000 individual car @wners who «are members of 815 local motor associa- tions scattered from one end of the country to the cther, and with a coordinating agency in Washington to speak the collec mind of this constantly growing group. “This national coordination had a telling effect in connection with the consideration of the revenue hill and it resulted in the elimination of the excise tax. but one of hundreds of fields in which it Can make itsclf felt to make motoring more free from prejudicial restrictions of all kinds, 1, legislative and otherwise.” Bond Issue Vote in Sauk Valley Town Held Valid An election held in Sauk Valley townhip, Williams county, to deter. mine whether or not a $5,000 bond issue should be sold to provide funds for # township house was valid, the supreme court held in a decision. jon to prevent bi vccrsyting of the bonds following the election was in- stituted by te Oo each came |: The pla tiorari in the Williams county trict ae ‘but the application 5 ‘he plaintiffs cleimed that a | defect existed in the official notice ‘of election issued by the board and that one person voted who was not elie a resident of the township: its decision the supreme court affirmed the lower tribunal and held that “certiorari is not sporoptiate remedy to prevent anticipated wrong or injury. ‘Phe-purpese of the writ inn t to to restrain or prohibit but to annul Motorists Present | ‘Bill of Rights’ Chi », July’ 19—T ndapipd ae the anual convention Associa- » inoluded res- rnors mcs te system of as- to keep the rom detours. ae of road ability inturanee ro cteretis y| place yee pe Phares riot arte’s pies of responsible car. ‘owners. 3. EEE changing the automobile light from red to yellow. ee Urge Congress to enact a law for the regulation of motor vehicle common carriers. 5, Demand that the remainder of the war excise taxes be repealed. G. Oppose use of special taxes. for purposes other than road work. 7. Commend a fair and .impartial investigation by thg Federal Trade Commission of gasoline price: 8 Condemn the practice of grant- ns to the detriment of