The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1927, Page 6

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) PAGE SIX ev GEHRIG “ETS 22ND HOMER IN “SUNDAY AME Is Now Only Two Behind Babe Ruth, Who Was Out With an Injured Knee he Associated Press Pitted against the runner-up clubs in red-hot duels, the leaders of both major leagues today were hauling} out all their hitting howitzers hold the fort. Lou Gehrig's 22nd home helped the Yankees to take the sec ond half of a double ler from} , the Athletics, by a er losing the first game, | abe Ruth was out of th lineup with injured knee s rried him to within e of the big bam By loos that riddled ultaneously © rungs, r beating Cubs fell} is, who victor tight deci- the fallen back almost from ond to third met mingled fortunes. the Pirates Satu victim to the 1 Luque pitched to ite poor suppor lief pitching marked the sion for the White Sox Tigers, Connell over raw’s weak hurling staff, rengthened recently was no match for Dazzy | , and the Giants fell before the | Robins, 7 to 1, Uncle Robbie's men although threatening to’ pass them in the standings. Split Double Bill le of the Indians, like nvincible and bested Browns in a 2 t Cleveland, Bu less suce ful in the se game of the double bill, being bi from the box as the Browns won,| 7 to 3. Buddy the Red § mates at yer, traded this year to x, turned on his former Washington and_ slammed out a homer, double and single, but | P the Carrigan clan lost out, & to Walter Johnson went ‘down as the winning pitcher although he was re- lieved in the fifth. Set New Record Toledo's Mudhens paddled bravely forward yesterday in their quest o the American Association champion- ship, taking a double he f the second division Lou nels, 4 and 4-1. In winning, the. ran their string of consecutive tories to 11 season's record. Milwaukee crawled closer to second place Kansus City club winning two from Minneapol and 4-2, Half a game now these two clubs. Kansas C do no better than break eve St. Paul, losing the first, 5 to scoring a 3-0 shutout in the se behind Murray's four-hit pitching. Zumbro, of Columbus, pitched the y other shutout of the day, his beating Indianapolis, 4-0, after Indianapolis had taken the’ first game, 13 : Holman Is Favorite in Stanford Tennis; Stanford Univers: — (#) — Cranston parates could with Cal., June 27. Holman, eighth] ranking player in 1925 and junior} champion the same year, is the tennis ace around whom Stanford's! intercollegiate hopes arey centered.| Runner-up in the _intercollegiat singles the last two years, Holman is! favored to capture the singles title} this season, since his greatest rival,| Bud Chandler of California, has been graduated. After indifferent success last sea-| son, Holman’s playing this year has} improved steadily and he has easily brushed aside all collegiate compe- tition on the coast, He deefated Bill Tilden in an exhibition in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4. Paired with Holman in the doubles will be Lionel Ogden, a consistent| player, although lacking the reputa- tin of his team-mate. College Golf Is Gaining in South Atlanta, Ga., June 27.—()—Int collegiate golf in the south may have had a late start, but it has come into its own, and each succeeding school session finds the ancient game with increased popularity. So significant has been this growth that southern entries are considered among the strongest nationally. Twice has Fred Lamprecht, of Tulane, been National Intereollegiate cham- pion, and the fact he will not be back this year to defend, his title in the tournament starting June 28 at Gar- 1 i to| f runit and | ber the Syand */and jumped back to the top of the ® SPORTS | ure of .381, While Horns- by Still Dominates National League’s List of Premier Hitters Chicago, ere long be s walk the streets of aps remark I ta you so Friscl, the erstwhile nt to St, Loouis in a orite Rogers Horns. Frisch s and more even though hem did not travel quite those which bounded of: club. efforts hav otlight bea trio who st Le hitters —Clyde Paul Wan nate of premier nhart, Joe wee! ore than Even the not stic pit re doubtable could for long though he with Waner for ler of the ith nine hits his figures The ten in the Na ‘ Southworth of the Cardin dropped ce edged righ, al- gures a bit too swift « and back i out Root of 2 1 defeats. Crowding two is old Grover Alexander, out of turn Wednesday 2, but with these who pitch to down his old team, the Cubs, for his ninth, s Leading hitters i the National sburgh, 41 South- ynor, Pitts- Although the Yankees seem hardly in need of batting st th behind the 7 it is there if the wre y shows signs of falteri Collins is the slugging backstop, his av of two hits per game this week has landed him today among the ten hitters of the American L n averages com- piled today including? Wednesday's games, Pat id Schang Back at Top Even better than that is the per- formance of Wally Schang, wearing shinguards for the St. Louis Browns. He gathered two hits per game, too, His collection of swats in- two home: Heilmann of Detroit makes among the top ten hi ATS. y This year, however, he seemed to be waiting for some hot weather pitching. Collins and Heil- mann crowded out Goslin of Wash- ington and Shulte of St. Louis, B: Ruth passed three more stick perts in’his slow but steady climb ;;toward the top, landing in twelfth place today. Ruth on Wednesday had 24 hom- ers, leaving Lou Gehrig's 18 far behind. Lou, however, might try for hit record, doubles to 23 George Burns’ two | also 59. Gehrig has 22 for Buns. ‘ With such a heavy socking group back of him, Waite Hoyt mav soon catch the White Sox pairof flingers in victories, i he? of the Yankees has 10, Thomag, 11 -and Lyons, 12. Lyons leads the trio in hard work with the equivalent of thore than 15 full games. Hoyt and Lyons have each been sunk three times, Thomas five times. Goose Goslin’s slump at bat has also spread to his base running, though his total of 10 is still two ahead of a group of fleet footed pur- suers. In team batting, only the Cleveland Indians pettered their figures of a weck ago, gaining three points while all the others dropped back a bit. Leading Hitters Leading hitters in the American os aati 4s He May Do It den City, N. Y., is causing little Worry among southern schools. For Georgia Tech .will be repre- sented by Watts Gunn, recent win- “4 A the Southern Conference title,| mémber of the last Walker cup team and runner-up in the National Ama- teur of 1925, while there also will be othe intries. rami conference veld five years ago. Alabama, ‘University of Georgia, Sewanee, Vanderbilt, Washington and Lee and Georgia Tech entered teams in recent tourney at Athens, Ga, Gunn won the title by the margin ft tw one in defeating Johnny » of Alabama, in the finals. Baugh of Alabama, who paid city title, was known ‘as the “human ce) thinks he i ‘rom ‘Los. her FRANKIE FRISCH PASSES ROGERS HORNSBY IN BATTING AVERAGES ‘risch Has Percentage Fig- Is .376—Pirate Trio, has lined § ville sa or tin, arris Harris oy ed from cl with mamksof 287. Is, Freddie + Lindstrom of the Giants found the ; 8;! | Boston, as adorned for | St. Loufs, .418; S84; Dykes, Phil- | League: Schany, Gehrig, New Yor , adel phi; immons, Philadel- | ph Meusel, New York, 1-377; € ig Philaddlphia, .36 Miller, St. Louis, .364; P. Collins, New York, « Fothergill, Detroit, \.868; Heilmann, Detroit, 858. At last there seems to have been found some one in the American Assoc: on to give Dewitt Lebour- veau a race for the batting honors. : Mike Kel- new outfielder for the Millers, his clouting must be as manna jto the Earl ith and Kelly, e ina slump, d few knocks ducing deserip- 2 points, is still is. more ation bat- . Rutherford, Louis- new third sacker, is another omer whose In ters can boas itting will bear ames he has hit ching. 16 ¢. | Toledo only a Paul made the ains in team bat- one po |while the x in the Association, in aver- used today, including Wed- games, but they climbed st place to sixth this week | Wilson Moves Up Vilson, Milwaukee fly chaser, is newcomer in st com- + moving up from to 354 for ninth place in the standings. He ed out 15 hits in 8 games. man, the Brewers star flinger, the circuit's leading pitcher today with only one setback to ten tories. Moon of Minneapolis 10 victories, but he has been beaten even times. Zinn of Kansas City jis on the heels of this pair with a record of nine and four. i} Hauser of the Blues poled one of the infrequent homers of the As- ciation, tieing Smith of Minneap- olis at nine. They are one behind Kelley of the Millers. |. Leading hitters of the Association: |Lebourveau, Toledo, .40; Orwoll, | wauke Grime | Russell, India ; Columbu: F. Wilson n, Minneapol tern League + batting parade gained on jthe pitchers this week, in averages released today ineluding Wednes- day’s games. Bill Cunninngham, Des | Moines new outfielder, raised his jmark to the phenomenal position of 493 for 21 games. He garnered 13 jhits in his last six games, passing ithe mark of Casey, the Tulsa slug- ger, who is still out from the effects ,of a bean ball. | Joe Rabbit, the Omah ‘on the paths, j ness in {grabbed three this flock of safe hits which moved him |up among the first ten for the first time this | Comoro: vh Dun All the W ‘top of the n. the Wichita fly chaser o Pittsburgh, made one of the ‘gest gains of the week, going from with marks of .287, | Home Runs S red The home run business was dull, probably out of sympathy for the {mighty Casey. He and his team- mate, Munson, are still tied for the lead at 17 with no one seriously threatening their joint ownership of the lead in this specialty. George Blaeholder of Tulsa won one and lost one on the hill, giv- ing him fifteen victories to two defeats, C. Davenport of Des Moines ranks him slightly in percentage with nine wins and but one defeat. Lincoln has temporarily taken the leadership in team fielding away from Tulsa, with a mark of .966, one point ahead of the Oilers, but none is close to Tulsa’s team batting mark of 336. Leading hitters in the Western League: Cunningham, Des Moines, :493; Casey, Tulsa, 424; Wingfield, Tulsa, 419; Langford, Des Moines, .397; Momorosky, Wichita, 391; Ben- nett, Tulsa, 376; Porter, Tulsa, 374; F. Griffin, Des Moines, 373; Rabbit, Omaha, .364; Munson, Tulsa, .356, Kent Enters Henley Race as the Pick of Nation’s Prep Crews New York, June 27.—()—Athletic competition between the United States and Great Britain invaded the schoolboy division when the husky crew representing the Kent School of Connecticut ‘sailed for England to take part in the Henley Regatta, Generally regarded as the pick of this nation’s preparatory school crews, Kent is matching prowess in an open race with universities, schools and clubs in the Thames Challenge Cup race. Coached by Rev, F. H. Sill, cox- swain of the Columbia varsity eight in 1895, Kent this year defeated the Columbia freshmen, the Harvard 150- pound varsity and the Yale 150- Pound freshmen crews before win- ning its dual race with Choate, a rival preparatory school. The,Con- necticut crew began its ‘training early January on the Upper Hou- satonic river. Although claiming no championship honors, Kent's chances in England are considered very good. Seven of the crew were graduated this spring and will take their col- lege entrance examinations in the Henley Town |. Harvard, Yale and Princeton will attract two oars- men each and the coxswain, Robert L. Colmore, of Porto Rico, intends to enter Princeton, The personnel of the-Kent crew is as follows: Bow, Rowland D. Irving, New York City; No. 2, Robert Ogden, Ithaca; No, 3,. William H. Lane, New Canagn, Conn; ‘No. 4, Nathaniel E, Parkinson, Charles River Vill 0 Witti |] Pennant Progress | | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, | w. OL Millers as their heavy hitters, | { | string to him leading; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Toledo Kansas City Milwaukee Minneapolis . Paul .. Indianapolis Louisville | Columbus . | | Minneapolis 7; Milwau! Games Today Columbus at India: Louisville at ‘toledo, New York Philadelph Chicago Washingto: Detroit Cleveland St. Louis . Beston 45 Philadelphia 7, 4; New Detroit 4; Chicago 0. St. Louis’ at Cleveland, Games Today St. Louis at Detroti, Chicago 6; St. Louis Brooklyn 4, New York Games Today Pittsburgh at St. Louis. Chicago at Cineinnati. Others not scheduled. New York Brooklyn lor; Vance and Deberry. las R Chicago . 5 Cineinnat 38 Blake, Os nd Hai Hill and Gooch; ‘and Schulte. Others not scheduled. First Game St. Louis . cy Cleveland . Stewart and O'Neil; Sewell. Smith and Myatt. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww. OL NATIONAL on NATIONAL LEAGUE R <H Pet. 23 si 28 69 29° 561 33. 1607 i 36 463 36 463 se 42 1417 Pe eT “1 388 Once Light. Heavyweight Results Saturday kee 4, Kansans City 13; St. Paul 4, Toledo 10; Louisville 3, Indianapolis 10; Columbus 4, Minneapoils at Milwaukee, Kansas City at St. Paul. otis, Results Saturday Washington 8; Boston 3. paign calculated to carry him out of the has-been class by taking on Pct,| Charles Rammel, Australian heavy- 20 692! weight, in a 10-round bout at the St. 28 .669| Nicholas rink, 30 [545| For Berlenbach everyhing hinges 29 ‘Suzlon the battle tonight, If the old 30. 492| sleep-producer is working and the 33!' 476] old fighting spirit is there, intensive 3 .484| ring warfare will follow. 47 .242| On the memory of the Berlenbach punch the small arena already is out. York 6, 2. ——___- Philadelphia at New York. Cleveland. at Chicago (two games). L. Pet. Pittsburgh 38 22 633 St, Louis . 8% 24 07 icago . 3 36.687 |New York 30 © .516| Hard Hitting Features’ Close .| Brooklyn 340477 Boston 32 418! +~Game—Score Tied in Philadelp! 36 £390 ; e Cincinnati 41 369 Eighth Inning Results Saturday Pittsburgh 4. » 73 Cincinnati 1, 10, Boston 3, 7. Philadelphia 3, New York at Philadelphia, ORs eernesarre ee | Yesterday’s Games | t iaaiied Artin abeilleorer site| 6 10 Benton, Songer, Jednnes and’ Tay. 10. rtnett; Lu: que and Hargrave, Picinich. 5 R A E|Stars came through with a lone tally Pittsburgh _ 9 lland Lehr again repeated the next ce 3 4\time up with a single count. In the % 7 Haines, H. Bel Sree effort and crossed the plate with an- AMERICAN LEAGUE other lone tally in the ninth, but the R HH Elstars got oxt of a bad hole when they Boston ...... aa eee | Mhad the bases full with only one Weskiogtan - 8 18 Idown. Again the Stars tied the Welzer, MacFayden and Hoffmann; Johnson, Marberry, Braxton and Ruel. H 4 2 4 Uhle and J. eu Clos i BERLENBACH AND RAMMEL Champion Meets Austral- ian Boxer Tonight + New York, June 27,(/)—Joining the “comeback parade” headed by Jack Dempsey, another former title- holder returns to the ring tonight. Paul Berlenbach, once light heavy- weight champion, launches a cam- FROM LEHR NINE BY 9 T0 8 SCORE Coming from behind in the eighth inning to tie the score’ ut seven all, the prison All Stars managed to put two runs across the plate in the last half of the ninth to win their ball game from the Lehr nine Sunday afternoon, after the visitors hhd broken the tie with another run in their half of the last inning. Hard hitting by. both teams fea- tured the game, and the closeness of the score throughout, made it one of the most interesting played on the prison diamond this year. Ech team is credited with four errors, due principally to the strong wind which swept across the djamond through- out the game, Lehr Leads in Scoring After several lone tallies had been made by each team, the score was 6 to 4 in favor of Lehr at the end of the sixth inning. The Stars re- tired Lehr in the seventh on a dou- ble play when Poole, third baseman, caught a pop-up fly and finished the play to first base before the runner could get back. In return at bat the eighth inning the score was tied up with seven each, : Lehr came back with determined BISMARCK 9 DEFEATS GLEN ULLIN, 9 10'4 Visitors: Get -Three Hits in Fourth Inning and One More in the Eighth Allowing the visitots only four hits, three of which were garnered in the fourth inning, “Doc” Love, as- sisted by some excellent hitting on the part of his teammates, pitched, the Bismarck ball team to'an easy victory over the Glen Ullin nine here. Sunday, the final ‘score being 9 to 1. After three innings which went scoreless on both sides, with little excitement other than’ the usual one, two, three, out story, Glen Ullin opened up in the fourth. Ployhart, who was safe at first because of a bad throw by Love, advanced to third on Armstrong’s two-bagger and scored on Wadeson’s overthrow to third. Reuter reached first on a fielder’s choice when Love elected to throw Armstrong out at third. For- and struck out, after which Walery hit to center, Reuter stopping at sec- ond. Isaac hit to short left, filling the bases. Love then “did his stuff” by striking out Verdun. Glen Ullin’s only threat during the balance of the game came in the eighth inning when Barr hit safely to center but was thrown out in try- ing to steal second, Simonson to To- bin to Sagehorn. Four Scores in Fifth Bismarck started the fireworks in the fifth inning. Webster was first up and hit to center, after which he stole second. Paulson hit to center, Webster stopping at third. Wadeson struck out but Fuller hit over third base, scoring Webster. Walery muffed Sagehorn’s Idng fly and Paul- son scored. Fuller stole home for the third score and Sagehorn fol- lowed him across the plate when Si- monson bunted to third base, being thrown out at first. Tobin was safe on a bunt but Love was out on a fly, retiring the side. In the seventh inning Bismarck scored ugain when Wadeson walked and then stole second and third. Full- er was out, Reuter ta Verdun, but Wadeson scored on the play. Sage- Lode struck out and Simonson flied out. , Tobin hit to center field in the eighth inning and then stole second. Love flied out to center. Moen walked and Webster hit to Geck, who MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1927 ed Meyer and Leonard to meet Cave in the finals. Cave defeated M. Ha- gen and Mundy. In the first round matches Leonard be: joddard by de- fault and Mundy feated Wenzel. Thorberg won the third flight, by | defeating Irick, Fleck and Hemderson in order. Hendersop beat ‘McRoberts and won on a defatilt from Olsness to enter the is. In: the first round matehes ‘Fleck beat Baker and Olsness beat Simons. Minneapolis Golfer Starts 6th Defense His Amateur Title yer |, June 27,(7)—For the sith ecutive time, Harrison’ R. “Jimmy” Johnston of Minneapolis, starts defense of his state amateur golf championship in the Minnesota tournament at the Somerset country club here today. “Jimmy,” former western amateur titleholder, as won the state ama- teur six years in a row and another victory will set a new record in Min-|- Johnston and , the Minikahda Club vet- of Minneapolis, are tied at six each for consecutive wins of the Wonors. Legg is one of the contest- ants this year. More than 150 entries ceived ‘for the tournament. NOTICKR OF MEETING OF THE ROARD OF UALIZATION, NOTICE [8 HEREBY GIVEN that- the board of the City of Bismarck, orth Da- kota, will meet at the city hall in such’ city on Tuesday, the 14th day of June, 1927, (being the second Tuesday ‘in June), at the hour of nine-thirty ‘in the . morning, at which time all persons considering themselven aggrieved by the assess- ment for the year 1927, may appear before said board and show catse for having such assessment rected. M. H. ATKINSON, City Auditor, 6/8/27 NOTICE OF SALE. PUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby given that competitive bids will be_r ceived by the Village of Wing, Bu leigh County, North Dakota on the 6th day of July, 1927, at 2° o'clock D. m., at the office of the County Auditor in the Court House in the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, for the sale of $6,500 VILLAGE HALL BONDS of said Village of Wing, to be ‘iesuetl for the purpose of con- structing a Village Hall in and for said Village, which bonds are to be dated June ‘1st, 1927, bear interest at the rate of 6% per cent per an- num, payable semi-annually, and to mature June 1, 1937, both principal and interest of said bonds to be payable at the First National Bank, Minneapolis, Minnesota. All bids must be accompanied by a certified check in the.sum of not less than 2 per cent of the bid. The Village will furnish the blank bonds were re- 7 cor- muffed the ball, Tobin scored. Fairchild, batting for Paulson, flew out to Ployhart. Churchill, batting for Wadeson, sent a grounder dowr the third base line which Geck failed to handle properly and Moen and Webster scored. Fuller hit to center field, scoring Churchill: Sagehorn was safe on Ployhart’s error | end stole second, but Simonson flied out, retiring the ‘side. Sensational Catches Webster's sensational catch of Reuter’s long fly to right center in the sixth inning and Walery'’s one- handed catch of Webstet’s foul fly 3 cs Webster made a one-handed grab for Reuter’s fly and caught it but the ball bounved out of hts glove. Making another grab for the ball he caught count in their half of the inning on a “squeeze play” when Snyder taid down a bunt with’s runner on third that crossed the plate. Garver, run- ning for Poole, brought in the win- ning run when Kelly smacked out a line drive between short and field, which finished the game, making the total score 9 to 8 in favor of the All Stars. wicks 1a Mee ‘Good Mound Work Reaiaue % Ht EN. Nagel, speed ball pitcher for roti pia 3 12 Albehr, retired seven men by the “Gaaton and Schang; Buckeye, Karr, strikeout route. Wright of Bismarck took a short workout on the mound for the Stars and pitched the first four innings. He whiffed away six. First Game plot Lehr's batters nad made hres i ii p|putouts, retiring nine men in’ palladalonie $ 33 Qlouts. J. C. Kelly finished the pitch- Quinn a ‘rane; Thomas,| ing for the Stars, getting five strike- Giard and Grabowski . "Jouts in the five innings of play. The Box Score 4. ..; Second Game LEHR— ABR H,POA E Philadelphia ... 3 5 3/D. Meyer, 2b. ‘ New York... 7 ou 1|Hoyme, ¢ 4001410 Gray, Baker, Pate and Perkins,|S. Nagel, .p 600101 Cochrane; Moore and Collins. N. Meyer, 1b 613020 B. ‘Nagel, 1b . 1251-1 R H_ E|G. Anderson, if ....4 2110 0 Detroit ............. 7 10 2|L. Carlson, cf .....3 0 0 101 Chicago .... Be 8 2/Zlegenagel, rf .....3 1 2 0 0 0 Whitehill, Stoner and Bassler; —------— Thomas, Connally and McCurdy,| Totals ..........41 81025 5 4 Sonal, sae ALL STARS = ABR HPO A E jarver, If-2b ....... o20 AMERICAN AEEQCTATION «=| Srendy, 18-26 1.035 0 1/1 2 0 Columbus .. +2 8 1| Huddleston, see Indianapolis . 13° 16 0, Holland, 2b 332230 Morris, Harris, Biemiller and Win-| Poole, 3! 424244 g0; Boone and Florence. Snyder, ¢ 10011 00 right, p . 7 {Game og) glFrieken fsck 1 2-0 0 8 c 4 0 -—- > felneibds 2 2| Totals ... Ho A 12 2712 4 Zumbro Leverett, inal K s Lehr. 021 102° 011-8 Koupal and Snyder. ie Be: Re ieee s Two- Ziegenagel, Holland, R H E|Garvér. Sacrifice hits — Carlson, Louisville oe 5 1|Snyder (3), Glenn. ‘Stolen Basés+- Toledo ..... 4. 6 - 2/Ho Hand (3), Garver (2), clea And- Cull id Mi ; Milstead, Mc-jerson, Ziegeni . impires ayou Cullpach ata Uren for All Stars, Addler for Lehr. Recaed fame z| McCarthy Rebuilds Louisville : aaa ice: i user and Meyer; Pfeffer and of 4 Pennant. Race Than, First Game Chicaga, Juwe 27--UP—A. bases soi RH. Elball team sitting jn jsecond place Minneapolis ......... 1 7 + 8\and:going strong would sati Milwaukee ... + 8 8 0| managers, but nak Benton, Hubbell and Kenna; Or-|pilot ‘of the. Chica; woll and McMenemy. eat of the National nant race he has revamped his pitch- ‘Second Ganie ing staff and ‘rebuilt his infield, : R an E|and now‘he thinks hé has a pennant Minn lis. 2 5 1|winner. —* : Milwaukee .. oon 4.4 wt Moon, Middieton and Gowdy; John- son and McMenemy. I. Roy and Shi: ly and Gaston. : ge: Second Game Rr ‘Ganton. | Clty uate. 2 | Dean, pitehe $ are by eee en our, ‘i phe ‘Tth, six o’elock Sunday clos- "Murry and Shinnilt;. Zabmiser. 4nd ar te Philed Iphia and movi " to ‘short. raded E Hae, tered Freigau and er al young hurler, to Kai City for new : thitd ‘sacker,: Pick, .. sent, Beck, ‘utility trfielder, to sec- ond.; For and Kaufman, an- other pitcher, ; Hal Carlson, star r 2 at Syoetcas ‘was accom. " in’ eae hd i while In progress. ‘eiG: know Edna and Jim it again before it fell. Love struck out 11 of the visitors, while Armstrong, who worked the first five innings for Glen Ullin,| struck out four and Reuter, who! re- placed Armstrong, struck out one. When Armstrong ‘was sent to the. bench at the beginning of the sixth, after Bismarck’s first scoring orgy, Geck replaced ‘Reuter at third and Reuter went to the ‘box. Next Sunday Bismarck will meet the fast Turtle Lake nine on the local diamond and on Monday the Bis- marck and Mercer teams will play at Brush Laké as part of a Fourth of July. celebration at that summer resort, ‘The Box Sco e re. BISMARCK Fi AB R H POA E Fuller, 2b ...4 12.2 0 2 0 Sagehorn,ss..5 1 1 8 38 0 Simonson,c..4 0 0 9 3 0 @412n 1 0 8 0004 1 3 1211 3 0 4211 00 . Se Re. Boe Paulson, rf ...3 1 1 0 0 0 Churchill, Ib.1 1 0 2 0 0 Wadeson, If ..2 1 0 0 0 1 Smith, rf....0 © 0 0 0 0 85 9 ‘8 27 16 GLEN ULLIN AB R -H PO A Fink, cf .4 0 0 2 0 Ployhart,ss..4 1 0 3 1 Armstrong, p 4 9 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 » 0 01 0 Forand,2b...4 0 0 @ 1 Walery, If ...3 0 1 2 0 Isaac,c.......3 0 1 8 0 Verdun, 1b ..3 0 0 6 O Barr, rf .....8 9 1 2 0 1-424 5 3 Score by innides: Bismarck— * 000 040 Mx 9 8 2 Glen Ullin— j * 000 100 000 1 4 4 COOK, LYNCH AND THORBERG WIN TOURNBY ae ¢|Bismarck’s Young (Gulf, Star Beats Ed Cox, 1 Up, to 1 + Win First Flight — n eine Bismarck phenomenal Payl ‘ages rou layer, trated fis ability in the short. stop tournament at the country club here esterday. : ; r Cook ‘was the niedalist of the tour- nament with a 87 ani defeated Ed Cox in the final who has been prebably, will marek club in’ the than ten-days, and/at Fargo. " Jones to enter the firat-; ; to left were features of the ‘game.|‘ klocotoonovom wo p: saeln, demon-, and legal opinion. No bid of less than par will be considered and the Board .reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Dated this 6th day of June, 1927, GEO. ANDERSON CITATION HEARE FOR_ PARTIA\ OF ESTATE, AN ALLOW! IN of North Dakot: ‘ounty of Burleigh. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. ¥ In the Matter of the Estate of Car- rie D. Taylor also know’ line .Donnelly J. L. Bell, Ad vs. John McCrory, Sarah Suste” Day, ‘Florence _Cochra Emma Salzer, Edith Harms, Will McCrory, Sarah Butler, Anna But- ler, Eliza Terhune, Frank Che: ‘own, Will Chesrown, Joseph Guy Chesrown, and irs, devisees and legatees under the will of Catherine Gard- ner, deceased (a sister of the said Corre D. Taylor, who are Kath- fyn Gardner, ' Ruth Gardner, A. Gardner, Sherlie R. Gardner, Alice KE. Miller, Hugh M. Gardner, Lottie B. Whiteman, Gertie M. Geddes, Sara E. Gard- ner and Alice E. 'Millgt and Sara E. Gardner as executrices of said will and all. other persons inter- ested in_ the ‘estate. of the sald Carrie 1D. Taylor, deceased, Re- epondents. The suue of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondents: You and each of you are hereby cited and required to appear before ¥ t of the County of Preave! County, at the Court House in the City of Bismarck, in said County and State, on the Ith day of July A. D, 1927, at the hour cf 10 o’clo in the forenoon of thit cause, if any you petition of naid* yd = for a partial distri- estate, on file in said Court, should, not be granted, and why prior distribution of said ox- sald administrator © di, bution of said uired by Jaw. ry 38th Uny of June, A. D. By the Court: i LC. (Beal, . C., DAVIES, ») sudge of the County Court, F. H. Register, |Att'y for Petitioner, Memarck, N. Dak. 6/29-27 NOTICE OF ITGAGR FORE- PonuMte Maui having occurred in the conditions of that certain real estate ‘mortgage, executed and Margaret jLuella Gla: ratrix of the es- lanville, deceased, Default terms and n it age fited gages at page au, and thereafter uly assigned to Kmily I. Schilling ind Clara ©. Schilling, which | a1 was filed in said , and there duly recorded . 139 of Assign- mente at. page 207, sald mortgage Will be foreclosed by a sale of the in. said mortgage and ter described at thé front Nov. co} uly ‘he prem- mortgage and herein- bed, to satisfy the td said mortgage on es jcribed in said ‘will be sold to re those certain site din urleigh "sD. ‘and described us fol. wi jotion One (iy nares . Forty be due on nal® mort- Le le th a of the costs of id statutory at- Minot, N. D., June are, ©. SCHILLING, 1 CHILLING, x signees, cov for Asatences, E8211 /-19 Mickey Walker Gets Bad Cut Over. Eye London, June 27. — (7) — Mickey Walker, American middleweight champion, was nursing a bad cut over the eye today,’ the result of a furi- ous mixup with George We: bust English middleweigh! hard workout in the training for his fight with Tommy Milligan, of t- land, for the midddleweight cham- pionship of the world. The cut is an old. one reopened, and, in the opinion of some, it may jeopardize the American's chances in Thursday night's bout. PROPOSAL. For Painting -at North School will be received by. th of Education at First Bank, Tuesday, June 28, m. | Specifications on file with at 210 Tenth street. | Privilege served to reject any or all bids. \ By 61 ofthe board of educa- tion. RICHARD PENWARDE c 6/18. 5-27 Ward 1 =2 TAKEN At my farm on ¥ bay gelding 8 years pounds white black mare 123 pounds no brand no marke: One black mare 4 yeurs qld weight 1030 pounds no brand blind on right eye. One ti year old weight Sam Bippus. Wing, Bur-

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