The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 14, 1931, Page 14

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BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1931 Complete Schedule PRELIMINARIES WILL ~ BE RUNOFF FRIDAY; 13 SCHOOLS ENTER To Award Trophies to Victors at Association of Com- merce Banquet TO HOLD COACHES’ MEETING Number of Winners in May Fes- tival and Carnival Here Last Year to Compete Completion of the schedule of events for the eighth annual Capital City track to be held at the Edmund ‘A. Hughes Field Friday and Saturday, was announced Thursday by W. H. Payne, manager of the meet. Preliminary events are scheduled to begin Friday at 3:30 p. m. with the track and field semi-finals scheduled for Saturday at 10 a. m. The finals will be run off Saturday aftertioon. With eight schools entered in the carnival Wednesday, five more, Fargo, Fessenden, Washburn, Denhoff, and Selfridge were added to the list, boosting the total to 13. ‘Two entries from Bismarck are in- cluded in the field, Bismarck high school and St. Mary’s Academy. Other schools entered in the meet are Ashley, Bismarck, Garrison. Haz- elton, Mandan, Napoleon, and Steele. ‘Among the individuals entered are a number of winners at the May Fes- tival at Fargo last week. Farzo will hhave Lloyd Loberg, Leo Gerteis, and Lyle Fisher; Bismarck has Gilbert Benzon, Wade Green, and John Spriggs. St. Mary's will have Ralph O'Neil, who came within one-half of an inch of breaking the Capital City meet record in the high jump. The mark was set at 5 feet 7 inches by Schwartz in 1929. ry large number of athletes who made good showings at the mect here last year including Prescott of Stecle, ‘Alvin Langseth of Fessenden, and of Events i Prison Baseball Team Antici- pates Hard Struggle on Pen- itentiary Diamond Two of the strongest nines in cen- tral North Dakota will clash Sunday when the undefeated Beulah baseball team meets the Grove Giants, prison nine, at the penitentiary diamond {Sunday afternoon, Undefeated in all contests this sea- son, the Beulah aggregation has won all of its games by comfortable mar- gins. The Giants, likewise undefeated in games this year, anticipate a hard battle. C. H. Geil, Beulah’s player- manager, has four salaried players. Two of them are pitchers. Olson, formerly a moundsman with the Three-Eye League, and Viestenz, for- mer Western League hurler, are the nucleus for the Beulah nine’s suc- cess so far this season. Geil also depends on Webber, Beulah, third baseman and formerly of the Border League, and Heihn, of the Southern League, to ald his club in defeating the Grove Giants. Individual batting averages of the members of the Beulah club range from .413 to .250. Gell, shortstop, Herman, center fielder, Webber, third baseman, and Heihn, first baseman, are rated as the heavy artillery of the Beulah attack. Although C. E. Orton, Giant man- ager, has not computed the individual averages of the prison team, he be- lieves his trio of outfielders, Wells, Garver, and Taylor, have averages equal if not better than the Beulah leaders. ‘The tentative lineup for the Giants follows: Glenn, pitcher; Johnson, sec- ond base; Taylor, centerfielder; Gar- ver, leftfielder; Evenson, shortstop: Wells, rightfielder; Stoller, first base; Beaudry, catcher; Lodahl, third base; and Marzlof, Bjornson, Woods, LeMay, and Christy, utility men. The probable Beulah lineup follows: Viestenz, leftfielder; Gell, shortstop; Herman, centerfielder; Webber, third base; Heihn, first base; Knause, sec- ond base; Perkins, catcher; Olson, pitcher; Carmichael, rightfielder; and Willard Chase of Garrison will com-/ Easton, Gentz, Hamilton, Gieger, and pete for honors in the eighth annual vent. x Goaches of the visiting teams will be guests at a luncheon at the Grand Pacific Eat Shop at noon Friday, at which drawings will be made for lanes in the preliminaries that afternoon. Cups and medals will be awarded to winning teams and individual con- testants at a banquet Saturday night sponsored by the Bismarck Associa- tion of Commerce. Visiting judges, superintendents, principals, coaches and all contestants will be guests at u nquet. sane following is the schedule of events for the meet: FRIDAY AFT! Prelimin: 3:3€—-220-yard low Half-mile run. 1 11:00—Pole vault. SATURDAY AFTERNOON Finals th jump. ard high hurdles. 3:50—Broad jump. 4:10—440-yard dash. 4 fle run. 4:40—Half-mile relay. Senators Beat Cleveland 9.3 ‘Tigers Bunch Four Hits to Nose Out Red Sox; Yanks Win on Double Cleveland, May 14.—(®)—The Wash- ington Senators won their first game of the season against Cleveland by pounding three pitchers for 18 hits and a 9-to-3 victory. . HE. Washington .....103201020—9 18 1 Cleveland 200000 001-3 8 0 Ferrell, Shoff- rown ai H ner, Bean and Sewell. TIGERS DEFEAT RED SOx Detroit—The Tigers bunched four hits in the seventh and eighth innings to overcome a one-run lead and de- . feat the Red Sox, 2 to 1. RHE, 000 100 000—1 8 3 erry, Ruel; Whitehill 000 000 1ix—2 11 and Hayworth, MACKS BEAT CHISOX Chicago—The Philadelphia Ath- Jeties scored twice in the 11th inning to defeat the White Sox, 7 to 5. Philadelphia ..01002001102—7 11 1 Chicago .......20010200000—5 9 2 Earnshaw and Cochrane; Thomas, Faber and Tate. YANKS WIN ON DOUBLE St. Louls—A double in the eighth inning scored the winning run as the Yankees came from behing to nose out the Bro’ 3 to 2. R.H.E. New York 0000002103 7 0 st. 02 000 000—2 10 1 Pipgras, Gomez and Dickey; Blae- holder and Ferrell. F TS Last IGHT (By ‘The Associated Press) syracuse, octpeinted Madison Diz, ou "Detath, Mine Retsiaft, knocked out Jack Gag- men. Boston (4). Chienge—-Babe Kellar, Toledo, necked ont Pat Hill, Phila- Mastro, Chi- cage, ‘out Ward Sparks, etrote (3); Frankie, Palme. Cin ‘Seattlo—Fredale Steele, ‘Wask., knocked out Joe Ve i} {Indianapolis .. i ley and Padden, Neville, utility men. Hens Take Lead in Saint Series Helpless to Allow Colonels to Win 8-3 St. Paul, May 14.—()—The Toledo baseball club took the lead in a four- game series with St. Paul by defeat- 0 5. R.H.E. Ferguson, Murphy and Snyder. PENNER HOLDS BREWERS Milwaukee—Ken Penner held the Brewers helpless while the Colonels hit Denny Gearin opportunely toewin, 8 to 3. . HE: Louisville 0212100118 11 1 Milwaukee 0001000203 6 2 Penner, Walsh and Thompson; Gearin, Ferrell and Manion. HOMER WINS FOR MILLERS Minneapois—A homer in the 10th inning gave Minneapolis a victory over Columbus by a score of 9 to 8. R.H.E. Columbus. 10 0300220—8 11 2 Minneapolis... .2002112001—9 11 4 Campbell, Baker and Hinkel, De- sautels; Hensick, Henry and ’Har- grave. SPLIT DOUBLE-HEADER sas City—Indlanapolis and Kan- sas City split a double-header, In- dianapolis winning the first, 3 ‘to 1, and the Blues winning the second, ¢ to 5. Firat Game R.H.E. +200 010000—3 10 2 ;000 010 000—1 2 Kansas City 4 idle; Bayne, and Ma- Daney and jecond Game {Indianapolis .....100000031—5 10 1 | Kansas City z 000 203 1ux—6 10 0 Greenfield, | Smith and Angley, Riddle; Swift, Sheehan, Thomas and Peters, Padden. ‘Twenty-seven tennis courts in Salt Lake City have been lighted for night play. Giants to Meet Beulah Nine Sunday DETROIT IS ONLY WESTERN GIB 0 WIN CONSISTENTLY Cleveland Indians Make Most Disappointing Showing During Week ATHLETICS JUMP TO LEAD Rain and Cold Weather on At- lantic Coast Stop National League Play (By The Associated Press) ‘Though held back by cold and wet Piping, leaving a surface adaptable weather since they reached the far-| for other purposes during non-skat- thest western outposts, the eastern ths. ady have demonstrated pretty conclusively they still hold the balance of power in the American ‘They have won 11 of their first 14 intersectional engagements. Through ‘Wednesday’s games the champions, Philadelphia Athletics, had scored three straight over their western rivals, the New York Yankees had won @ pair between rains, Washington had won three out of four and the Boston Red Sox three out of five. But for a staunch stand by the Detroit Tigers the route of the west- ern clubs would so far have been com- plete. The Tigers have won all three credited to their section. Cleveland’s Indians have made the most disappointing showing against the invaders, losing four straight and the top place. The Athletics, who went into first place Tuesday, continued Wednesday tar three-year-old of A. C. Bostwick, enriched his owner by $50,000 the 40th renewal of the historic Pimlico track in Baltimore Saturday. His victory enhanced Mate's prospects of victory in the Kentucky derby next Saturday, as Twenty Grand, Ladder and Equipoise, strong derby bene all trailed the Favorites Lead in Association Pennant Chase St. Paul and Louisville Have Slight Margins Over Re- maining Teams in Loop Preakness over the Bostwick colt in ted Press) RICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia .. w Chicago, May 14.—(P)—It looks as though the baseball experts along the American association circuit are doubled in the e! Jimmy Reese and gave the Yankees a close 3 to 2 decision ‘Thursday, with the flag chase one month old, almost all pre-season pre- dictions are standing up. St. Paul | and Louisville, hand-picked favorites, are running one-two in front and the rest are bunched closely enough to make it an interesting baseball show. | f Louisville's Colonels, seeking to be the first team in the loop to repeat the championship since they turned the trick back in 1926, climbed to AMERICAN ASSOC! » righthander, lost a tough 2 to 1 verdict to Detroit when errors helped the Tigers score. Wes Ferrell was driven from the mound under a fourth-inning bar- rage as the Washington Senators won their opener from Cleveland, 9 to 3. Senator southpaw, yielded only eight hits, one of which was Averill’s fourth homer. Rain and cold weather on the east- WEDNESDAYS RESULTS or Lloyd Brown, National League No games played Wednesday. League for a total loss. Brothers College Made Track Stars a eee ee Ala. May 14.—Percy bama Polytechnic In- atitute’s hurdling star and world’s record holder in the 70-yard high hurdles, and his brother Jeff, also @ varsity track performer here, are developments of Coach Wil- bur Hutsell alone. Neither of the Beard brothers participated in track athletics as high school stu- dents and Percy failed to go out his freshman year in college. During the winter months, Percy was undefeated in five it eastern invi- tation meets, despite the fact that his only means of practice was in lum hallway over one He is working out fre- quently here with an eye to the - 1932 Olympic cl OR LEAGUE ty (By The Associated Press) AMERIC, Gi Batting—Simmons, Alexander, Tigers, and Ruth, rican Association aul, 5. ‘olum! 4 ‘Kansas City, 1, Indianapolis, 5, (By The Associated Press) Earnsha\ George iw, Athletics— Held White Sox to nine hits in 11 innings to win third straight vic- Lou Gehrig, Yankees—Doubled eighth inning, bringing in Reese with run that beat Browns, 3 to 2. Lloyd Brown, Senators—Turned back Cleveland with eight hits for 9-to-3 victory. brought six homers. Bubbles Har- grave produced the most important one in the tenth. McManus, Tigers—! in deciding run in 2-1 triumph over Red Sox. | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern PROFESSOR! ~ PROFESSOR “THERES. “HE GHOSTLY NolsE! ~ EGAD, PROFESSOR, WAKE UP!) ae DRAT IT, “THiS MAM SLEEPS AS ONE UNDER ETHER! ~~~ PROFESSOR II CONFOUND (T ~Now HE NOISE WoT accuR AGAIN, FoR ANS 40. Stone Tigers, and Sim- johnson, Tigers, and NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Hornsby, Cubs, .362; Roettger, Re 22, its—Traynor, Pirates, 2.8 Berger, Braves, 5. (By The Associated Press) New York—Dick Shi Philadelphia, threw Ser; main Siberia 16140); Renate Gardint, threw Milo rm, 215, many (one fall, 20:20); Rudy Pittsbargh—Jim MeMillen, 214, threw Ivan Vacturoff, jone fall, 28:57), oc! Chicago, threw Joe Cox, 205, sas City (one fall, 40:40), ~ College Result isconsin, 2; Notre Dame, 1. Jack Johnson, former heavyweight champion, has been barred from box- Kansas on the ground he ts condition. for Annual Capital City Track Meet: EASTERN TEAMS HOLD BALANCE OF POWER IN AMERICAN LOOP [12 Derby Hopes Have Final Workouts University of Illinois to Require Skating in School's Cur- riculum Champaign, Ill, May 1 Profits from varsity football will and stone building by 141 pew een eee ee Ing. ‘The skating arena will measure 126, by 193, the concrete floor being crossed by some 80,000 feet of imbedded ‘ing quired activities in physical educa- tion, and intramural hockey will be Tony Binek Completes Sched- ule for Cowboys; to Meet Giants Here May 30 Sunday, the Washburn ghth, the Dickinson play the ‘fairgrounds here at 2:30 p. m., also was in “There are no outstanding favorites this year,” Farrell said, “and the Salem June 14, Zap at Dickinson June/British open should be an unusually 21 and Zap at Beulah June 28. A re-|interesting event.” tentatively} Sarazen said he intended to use the scheduled for Dickinson July 12. lighter and larger ball adopted in the Fans will see the Cowboys in new/ United States this year instead of the turn game with Lemmon is ILLINOIS. FOOTBALL PROFITS BUILD $300,000 SKATING RINK Ee Sa 5 ‘What is the proper address for a tong iron shot? eee Pictures are worth 10,000 words, so U.S. Golfers to Play in England Sarazen and Farrell Thursday in Pursuit of Brit- ish Open Title Believe Horses Will Be Sent From Post Because of Lim- ited Number of Starters Louisville, Ky., May 14—(7)—Final workouts Thursday completed train- ing of the 12 three-year-olds expected to stary Saturday in the 57th running of the $50,000 added Kentucky Derby. A definite estimate of the size of the field cannot be made until the starting horses are named through the entry box Friday. No speed work- outs will be attempted the day before the race, but the starters will be given brief warming-up gallops. With a field of 14 or less almost certain, the Derby will be sent from the post from @ starting gate for the first time in history. ‘This assures a quicker start for the Derby horses, which heretofore gen- erally have been at the post many minutes before being sent away. The gate accommodates just 14 horses. Yankee Chieftain Thinks American Loop Clubs Good Joe McCarthy Pays First Visit to St. Louis as Pilot of New York Team St. Louis, May 14—(?)—If there are any set-ups in the American League this year, Joe McCarthy, new skipper of the New York Yankees, hasn’t seen them. Marse Joe, paying his first visit to St. Louis as an American League pilot, explained Thursday he had not yet seen the Cleveland Indians and Detroit Tigers in action yet, but called the other clubs “good ball teams.” An interviewer reminded McCarthy that Conine Mack recently picked the Yankees to give the Athletics plenty of trouble before the season is over. “T have the greatest respect for Mr. Mack's judgment,” he replied with a smile, and “I'll take his word for it, especially as I am quite sure he's right.” McCarthy said the Athletics were the team the Yankees would have to beat to win the pennant. i(St. Paul Man Wins Conference Medal ' Minneapolis, May 14—(?)}—Lowell Marsh, of St. Paul, captain of the 1931 University of Minnesota swim- ming team, and Big Ten and national intercollegiate backstroke champion, ‘Thursday was announced winner of the ‘Western Conference medal. The award is given annually at each conference school to the gradu- ate highest in scholarship and ath- suits when the game opens Sunday. old sphere still used in Great Britain. | jetics, ‘The new ball, he said, gives just as ern seaboard threw the National| Grant Clark Leaves much distance and fer better control. eee Reveals New Ball Planned as Secret —_— OO Chicago, May 14.—The new To Play Pro Football, 400-meter mark in the 1928 Olympic He is now track coach at the Uni- versity of San Francisco. The condition that the new ball quietly and let the Players find out about.it when the Pitching improved and the batting dropped off. Distance Ace Assails ‘Staleness’ Doctrine passes is entirely mental, boredom and the training grind. As Soe Sine sinstion, Se says, Sey 20) x-| Select U. S. Horse To Win British Race Jored | mortgage, and which will be sold to Walter Mehlhoff Is Tuttle Athletic Star Tutle, N. D., May 14—If his high School record approaches that set by him in grade school, Walter Mehlhoff will see his name in big print one of these days. He scored 25 points to win individ- ual honors in grade school competi- tion at the annual play-day, held re- cently at Pettibone. Donnell Elliott, also of Tuttle, marked up 11 points for second place. Tuttle won the meet with Dawson second and Steele third. It was the fourth consecutive year that Tuttle ~ walked off with the champiun- ip. NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN that a certain mortgage, made, executed and delivered by JOSEPH’ SCHNEIDER, and MELANIA SCHNEIDER, his wife, both of Bismarck,- Burleigh County, North Dakota, mortgagors, to NORTH WESTERN MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, a corporation, mortgagee, dated the Ist day of Sep- tember, 1928, und filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, on the seventeenth day of September, 1928, and duly re- corded in book “178” of mortgages at page 476, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bismarck, in the County of Bur- leigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock P. M., on Satur- day, the 13th day of June, A. D. 1931, to satisfy the amount due upon said mortgage on the day of sale. That the default occurring in the terms and conditions of said mortgage con- sists in the failure to pay interest, principal and delinquent installments, Provided for in said mortgage, when the same became due and legal notice was given as provided by law of the intention of the holder of said mort- gage to foreclose the same. The premises described in said satisty the same are situate in the city of Bismarck, in the County of seen | Burleigh and state of North Dakota, and are described as follows: The south seventeen feet (8 17 ft.) of lot six (6), and the North Seven- teen and one-half feet (N 17% ft.) of lot seven (7), in Block Seventy-cight (28), of Williams’ Addition to the Cit of Bismarck, according to the certi- fied plat thereof duly filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds in and for Burleigh County, Dakota Territory, on the first day of Augus' A, D. 1877, and recorded in book “A” of plats, reference thereto being ha ‘That ‘there will be due on said mortgage at the date of sale the sum of six hundred eighty-six and 65-100 Dollars ($586.65), besides the costs of this foreclosure.” ated at Fargo, North Di 28th day of Apri FOB aot nl NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL SAv- INGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, SHURE & MURPHY, SERED ig No. 11 Broadway, Fargo, North Dakota, lorneys for M 4/30; 6/7. ese trea mality im your attire when you have youn” clothes made to measure } Imaivids re Chicago John Henlein esentative Patterson Hotel Basement

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