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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 15, 1935 Hilton Smith Pitches Bismarck to 7-2 Victory Over Devils Lake HOMERS BY LEARY, (BISMARCK JUNIORS TROUNCE TUTTLE TO WIN DISTRICT TITLE ~ ANDERSON SEW UP |Cardinals and Cubs Declare Truce, |capial CITY NING |OUR BOARDING HOUSE = TRIUMPH IN THRD|Set Out to Overhaul Leading Giants) ADVANCES 10 ND. var Ae i ( ‘Kardow Shelled From Mound] STANDIN GS Win - Streak Lifts EVENT, JULY 4-28 THATS A NEW TYPE OF BEE! With Barrage of Eight A F Hits, Sellers Finishes Birds Into Second Wild to Score Con THEYRE STINGLESS |-VERILY. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION N . ° Locals Run Wrcitans —~HERE—-~DRAT IT LOCALS DOWN MEXICANS !winneapotis ....... 58 a aid Place With Indians} vineing 27-2 victory over STOP BUSTLING ME! a Indianapolis . 548 Finalists WHY. “hy Successive Circuit Clouts by|Columbus . 548 Columbus Takes Pair From “~UMF- Bates and Anderson Pro- Saints; Indians Lose: as Millers Cop Two I DONT CARE ZZ WHAT KIND OF BEES, THEY ARE——I DONT WANT THEM BUZZING AROUND ME !J—~.So, YOU MARCH OUT IN THE BACK YARD AND HANG UP MY WASHING | ‘BUT. MDEAR, LISTEN ! a" St. Louis Wallops Phillies Twice; Chicago Defeats Braves; Pirates Win Z (By the Associated Press) The St. Louis Cardinals and Chi- cago Cubs apparently have called a truce in their warfare—at least until their next series—while trying to chip a few games off the Giants’ National League lead. Instead of slamming each other down at regular intervals, these two iclubs have stepped off on a pair of {notable winning streaks and already have succeeded in cutting the New York margin to six games. 519 476 440 321 TOURNEY AT HAZELTON Tuttle Advanced With Win Over Hazelton as Champions Downed Gackle Milwaukee 524 duce 6-3 Win ‘A neat five-hit hurling job by Hil- ton Smith, newly-acquired pitcher and outfielder, coupled with home runs by Al Leary and Floyd Ander- son enabled Bismarck to defeat the Cleveland Indian rookies from Devils Lake, 7-2, here Sunday. Making his first appearance on the mound before Capital City fans, Smith allowed only four singles and double and aside from the first ‘and third innings was never in any serious trouble. Toiling under a hot sun, Smith fanned 11 Satans and walked only three: He helped himself out of a tough épot in the third when with the bases loaded and one run scored, he struck out Callaghan and took Rucker's grounder, threw Ott out at home in time so that Quincy Troupe could relay it to Bob McCarney for the AMERICAN LEAGUE Za Chicago, July 15. —(?}—Hitting their stride almost in unison with their St. Louis Cardinal parents, the Col- umbus Red Birds have dashed into a tie for second place in the American Association pennant racé. On the night of July 4, the date when baseball standings for the year are supposed to be cemented in, the Red Birds were in fifth place, 9% games behind the pace setting Min- neapolis Millers. But since then, they have won ten out of 11 games,| The locals vdvanced al a winning streak that has lifted them |‘ound with » 22-2 victory screed into @ second place tle with Indiana-| Saturday afternoon in a game nett polis and six games to the rear of|St the end of the fifth inning Je the Millers, Tuttle rallied to score Saatig bat The Red Birds Sunday won both|the last tho kn rs met Taney Poel wes. Buddy ber er ohare pitched Lou Fette in a fine pitcher's | Andy Garness Fisch Pet. New York 632 Detroit 5 Chicago . 4 Cleveland 520} The second-place Cards, by wallop- Boston .. 5191 ing the Phillies twice Sunday in cele- Philadelphia 440! bration of the vfficial hoisting of the Washington . (1934 world championship pennant, ex- St. Louis .. jtended their string of victories to 10) straight to equal Detroit’s high mark for the season. Large Crowd Turns Out 9; The largest crowd of the St. Louis ;season, 23,000, turned out to see the Cards take a pair of easy victories, 5-1 and 10-1, behind the masterful flinging of Paul Dean and Bill Walker. The Cubs bowled over the cellar- dwelling Braves 7-6 for their seventh {straight triumph. Trouncing Tuttle 27-2, in the final game of the fourth district American Legion Junior baseball tournament held at Hazelton, the Bismarck ag- gregation annexed the district title Sunday and will compete in the state tournament here July 26-28. LH NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost New York . + SL 22 St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh . Cincinnati . Brooklyn .. Philadelphia . bee ing the attack, the locals pounded double putout. ( Leary and Anderson both got their cireuit drives in a big third-inning outburst that netted four runs after the Lekers had knotted the count at two-all. Both drives just cleared the left field fence, Leary getting his with nobody on the paths and An- derson driving in Smith after Smith in turn had scored Troupe. Kardow Driven From Mound Paul Kardow, ace of the Satans’ pitching staff, was shelled for two home runs, a double and five singles in the four innings he worked and was relieved by Sellers in the fifth. Sellers, a southpaw, kept the remain- ing three hits well scattered, allow- ing Bismarck to score only one addi- tional run. Devils Lake counted the initial run in the first inning on s double by Hansch, & walk for Silvey and Smith’s error in trying to throw Hansch out at third after fielding Ott’s grounder. Bismarck went one run into the lead in-its turn at bat on singles by Joe Desiderato and Red Haley and a double by Smith. The visitors evened the count at two-all in the third when Silvey singled and came home on suc- Fargo-Moorhead .. 5 Grand Forks 4 Winnipeg . 5 Duluth . Superior . Eau Claire Brainerd . Crookston. NORTHERN LEAGUE Won Lost Ome Saturday's Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago 10-3, Boston 2-1. New York 7, Pittsburgh 6. Cincinnati 5, Brooklyn 2. &t. Louis 4, Philadelphia 0. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago 8, New York 7. Philadelphia 18-5, Detroit 5-6. Washington 11-10, St. Louis 7-4, Cleveland 4, Boston 2. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis 9, Louisville 7. , Columbus 6, Kansas City 1. Toledo 7, Milwaukee 5. NORTHERN LEAGUE Fet.| ton held them to six hits. Meanwhile the Giants took a 4-2 setback from Pittsburgh as Cy Blan- (9-4 and 4-2 to sweep the five-game series. With the aid of the clouting Athle- jtics, the Yankees managed to stave off one threat to their American League lead by splitting a double-: header with the Chicago White Sox while the A’s turned back the second- place Tigefs 4-3 in 10 innings. That increased the Yankee lead to 1% games. Lyons Blanks Leaders Ted Lyons, Chicago veteran, blank- ed the league Jeaders with five hits as the Sox won the opener 3-0, but Jonn- ny Broaca bested three Sox hurlers in the afterpiece and won 5-4 as Lou Gehrig’s 14th homer supplied the odd The Red Sox won the opener from Cleveland 14-3, but the Sunday sports “curfew” halted the second encounter at 6:30 with the count tied at 2-2 after 10 innings, The St. Louis-Washington clash was rained out. Sharp, Gallivan, Cotelle = duel in the first and Mike Ryba hung up his 11th victory of the season. Nick Cullop also hammered out his 17th home run. : Indianapolis dropped a pair to Kan- sas City 12-2 and 5-1, Minneapolis didn’t: budge an inch, however, winning both sections of its doubleheader against Toledo, 5-2 and 8-5, while Milwaukee divided with Louisville, winning the first 3-1 and losing the second, Blues Cap Pair (First game) R Kansas City.. 320 112 012—12 Indianapolis... 000 001 100— 2 J. Smith and Madjeski; Vv. Riddle. (Second game) HE Kansas City.. 102 000 002—5 11 0 (First game) Milwaukee ... Braxton and Rensa; Ringhofer. (Second game) 000 four Tuttle pitchers for 26 hits which coupled with eight Tuttle errors and additional stolen bases gave the local nine the one-sided victory. Bismarck was never in danger of losing control as Erickson set down the Tuttle team with four scattered hits, allowing only one run in the third inning and another in the jeighth. ‘The locals took a two-run lead in the opening frame, added three in the second, went on a batting spree to score seven runs in the third and four, two, four, five and one last six innings, failing to tally D amNY Nzgs © 1996 BY NEA SERVICE, WIC. T. M. REC. U. &. PAT. OFF.. Capitol Ball Nine Defeats Sterling Local Club Scores 18-2 Triumph After Sterling Nine Turns Back Driscoll (Special to The Tribune) Sterling, N. D., July 15.—Sterling broke even in a doubleheader Sunday defeating Driscoll, 10-9, in the after- noon and losing to the Capitol club, 18-2, in the second game Sunday. Given errorless fielding support Pitcher Kolpacoff limited the Sterling nine to four safe blows in the second game and got some strong support at the plate from his teammates. In the first game Sterling came up from be- Local FERA Team Beats Regan, 148 Bismarck Nine Nips Eighth- Inning Rally to Chalk Up Triumph Sunday jGermans to Be Next U. S. Davis Cup Foes Praha, July 15.—(#)—The German |Davis Cup team, led by the titled {Gottfried von Cramm, stood Monday in the path of the United States team seeking to reach the challenge round with England. The Germans Sunday eliminated Czechoslovakia in the European finals with a display of tennis that indicated strenuous competition for the Americans in their first matches at Wimbledon on Saturday. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE BISMARCK OFFICIAL NOTICE TO VOLUNTARY ASSESSMENT BENEVOLENT SO- CIETIES, THEIR OFFICERS AND SOLICITORS: Under authority of an opinion is- sued by Attorney General P. 0. Sathre Milwaukee under date of June 29th, 1925, on the grounds of public policy, an 0 pro- Louisville tect the interests of members of as- sessment benevolent societies oper- ating on the voluntary contribution plan, the following rules and regula- tions are promulgated and adopted by the Department of Inusrance of the State of North Dakota, for the su- pervision of such societies, their of- ficers and agents: (a) The certificate of membership shall state fully the conditions on which the benefit shall be paid, which shall be confined to a death ‘benefit to the beneficiary of the deceased member, not exceeding $1000. (b) The death benefit shali be en- tirely contingent in amount on the proceeds of a post-mortem assessment levied on the membership. No reserve fund may be accumulated, prior to oc- currence of death, to guarantee pay- ment of any death claim. (c) The membership fee collected shall not exceed $5.00, which may be used for expenses. Not more than four expense assessments, in amounts. not exceeding one dollar, may levied in any one calendar year. The certificate of membership shall state the percentage of death assessments, not exceeding 10 per cent, that may be used for expenses. Every certificate of member- ship shall have printed or stamped on the first page thereof, in promin- ent type, the following: “This is not an insurance pol- } icy. The Association maintains : no reserve, All benefits are d pendent upon voluntary assess- ments from members.” (e) The Commissioner of Insur- ance may require periodical reports giving information as to the business and condition of such societies, on such forms as he may prepare, and shall have full power of visitation and examination of such socletie Z (f) Membership certificates, tos gether with full information as to the plan of operation shall be sub= mitted to the Commissioner of Insur= ance for his determination as to com- pliance with these regulations. On and after September 1, 1935, no such certificate shall be issued except af- ter submission and filing of a copy with the Department of Insurance. (g) Assessment benevolent socie- tles now doing business, shall effect full compliance with these regul tions on or before September 1, 19: Failure to comply shall make the o' ficers and solicitors of such sotieties liable to the penalties provided by the insurance laws of North Dakota. ‘ Harold Hopton, _ —_—_—_—_— Commissioner of insurance. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS, Dated at Bismarck this 2nd day of Sealed bids will be received by the | July, 1935. secretary of the State Industrial | i-8-1 Commission for the construction and completion of a one story fireproof warehouse and two story and base- ment feed mixing unit, and canopy over railroad loading track together with eting tunnel and bridge to be erected in connection with and at the State Mill and Elevator located i at Grand Forks, North Dakota. Separate bids will be received on e: cessive hits by Ott and O'Hara. Leary Leads Attack Leary’s circuit drive, singles by ‘Troupe and Smith end a four-bag- ger by Anderson gave the Capital City crew four runs and put the game on ice. Bismarck’s last run was counted in the seventh on a double by Leary, a walk for Troupe, a single by Haley and a wild pitch. Leary with his home run and a double in three times up, Smith and Haley with two for four, and Ander- son with his circuit swat led the locals’ attack. Saturday night at Aberdeeen, Bis- marck took a one-game lead in the Mexican series, winning 6-3. Suc- cessive home runs by “Chuck” Bates and Anderson and some fine pitch- ing by Barney Morris and Satchel Paige produced the triumph. Monday the team goes to Devils Lake for a game at Lakewood park. ‘The box score: ‘Winnipeg 6, Duluth 0. Grand Forks 7, Eau Claire 2. Fargo-Moorhead 14, Brainerd 9. Orookston 5, Superior 9. Regan club but + 000 024 10x— 7 17 1 Hughes, Finstead, David and Peter- Hamlin, Pressnell and Detore; Le- comete, Larkin and Thompson. Saints Lose Two (First game) R St. Paul ..... 000 000 020— 2 ‘Columbus .... 012 000 00x—3 7 0 Fette, eee Fenner; Tinning id Ogrodowski. Philadelphia 000 000 100—1 10 1|*"d 08% St. Louis. 300 110 41x10 16 01, “econd gamer og RO OE “;Columbus .... 001 411 00x— 7 12 0 Mills, Hunter, Rigney and Giuliani; Ryba and i. Miller NATIONAL LEAGUE Cards Sweep Series ‘st Game) PI Iphia 100 000 000-1 7 St. Louis.. 200 000 08x—5 7 dJorgens and Todd; P, Dean and Davis. (Second Game) g 4 HE 0 v. 71 YEST ST (By The Associated Press) Babe Herman and Emmett Nel- son, Reds—Herman hit homer, two doubles and single in twin victory over Dodgers, Nelson pitched seven-hit game in first major league start. Bill Dietrich, Athletics—Limited Tigers to five hits to gain 10-in- ning victory. Frank Demaree, Cubs—Pound- ed Boston pitching for three hits, scoring two 1uns and driving in four. Ted Lyons, White Sox, and Lou Gehrig, Yankees—Lyons pitched five-hit shutout in opener; Geh- rig’s home run won second game. Paul Dean and Bill Walker, Cardinals—Pitched Cards to dou- ble victory over Phillies, allowing one run each. Oscar Melillo, Red Sox—Ham- mered out two doubles and four singles and stole base in two games against Indians. Cy Blanton, Pirates—Limited Giants to six hits, giving only two in 8 2-3 innings. Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) Havana—Hans_Birkie, Germany, outpointed Isidoro Gas- tanaga, 207%, Spain, (10). DAY'S Ss HoororneND moorroocort 000 010 2022-5 9 2 edo ... 001 000 100-2 6 2 Perrin and Leitz; Thomas and Gar- Minneapolis .. To! RHE 100 200 200— 5 10 1 Ryan and Hargrave; Boone, Stein, Weaver, Bowler and Garbark. COOmHORNO & jummary ; son; losing pitcher—Sackman; left on base—Tuttle 3, Bismarck 4; two-base hits—Beall, Fisher; three-base hits— Erickson, Beall; double or triple plays —Fisher to Larson to Beall; hits off Erickson 4 in 9 innings; off Sackman > wom munnuny “6 CHOOCROHHNOD Walter Hagen once taught a wo- man pupil to break 100 within a month of the time she first held a golf club in her hand. - ComonHsnry Regan . 12 in 3 innings; off Fairchild 8 in 2 Summary: Winning pitcher—Eids- ft moe; losing pitcher—Johnson; two- innings; of! ‘Seagrean | pacoff; losing pitcher- tase hits—David, Hughes, Johnsun; on base—Capitcls 6; Sterling 1; stolen | double plays—Peterson, Finstead; hits off| bases—Gray, J. Monaghan 2, Mergl- oft Eidsmoe 15 in 9 innings; off John- troyd 2, LaRue, Danielson; sacritices)son 31 in 9 innings; struck out by Eidsmoe 6; by Johnson 5; bases on balls off Johnson 6; hit by pitcher— Peterson, David, Slomer by Johnson; 7/umpires—Rix for FERA; Mikelson for Regan. RODEO VICTORS Wolf Point, Mont., July 15—(7)— Victors at the Wolf Point stampede Sunday were Hughie Long, Worth, Texas, bareback riding; Ike Hildebrand and Pytlak; W. Fer- rell and R. Ferrell. (@econd Game) Cleveland... 000 2000000—2 10 3 Boston ... 101 0000000—2 3 (10 innings, tie) Called end 10th, Sunday law) Lee, Harder and Phillips; mueller and R. Ferrell. A's Beat Rowe Detroit ... 1010001010—3 5 Philadelphia 000 300000 1— 4 11 1 (10 innings) Rowe and Cochrane; Dietrich and Richards. eooooooOrHKa COHMCCOH HEE ecooceoocococes ® Oster- | Leod. eoSorornaon McClosky 21 in 7 innings; struck out i t by Kolpacoff 7; by McClosky 5; hit by pitcher—Olson; time of game—1 hour, 20 minutes. Rudd, Oklahoma, calf roping, and Tony Manero Annexes Bob Askin, Tsmay, Mont, bronco bust~ Brock Tourney Crown jing. Fonthill, Ont., July 15.—(#—Tony ‘Manero of Greensboro, N. C., who won the General Brock Hotel open gulf tournament, was looking Monday for new fields to conquer. Manero posted a medal score of 291 for 72 holes to nose out Bud Dono- van of Winnipeg and Byron Nelson of Ridgewood, N. J., who were one Walter Hagen of Detroit, Henry | ,,, + Chicago . 1 | New York. 003 010 10x—5 9 1 > | Phelps, Wyatt, Kennedy and Sewell; and - ORR OnwIMIMm Cleveland.. 000 300 000-3 9 3] St. Louis-Washington postponed, Boston ... 053 311 10x—14 19 Ojrain. 101 000 000—2 eee 204 ie ee Winning pitcher—Smith; losing pitcher—Kardow; left on bases— Devils Lake, 7; Bismarck 6; two base ‘Rits—Hansch, Leary, home runs—! By Williams (__ [ APERSON CANT HAVE A \/NOW,LISSENILEMME \/ NEVER MIND BIT OF PRIVACY HERE, | SHOW YOU SUMPN! DEMONSTRATING! WITHOUT LOCKING EVERY |SHE GOES AROUND, WHERE \ JUST TELL ME DOOR—HE BUSTS RIGHT | EVE'YBODY CANSEE HER, \ ABOUT IT— IN, ANY PLACE~I WAS / IN SHORTS—LIKE THIS ! YOUR ACTING CHANGING DRESSES / THIS ‘IS JISt EXACTLY HOW \\SW'T veRY INt THE BATHROOM SHE LOOKS—~THEN, IF L CONVINCING, AND— WALZ INTOA ROOM WHERE \comenow! SHE'S EVEN IN AUNDERSKIRT, : SHE HOLLERS, “EEK, /AWIP- AWK- VEEP." NOTICE TO CREDITO! IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Rosalie Smith, deceased. : Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned, Angie W. Cox, as the ad= ministratrix with the will annexed of the estate of Rosalie Smith, late of the city of Milbank, in the County of Grant ‘and State of South Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and ali persons ‘having claims against the estate of said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six months after the first pub- Heation of this notice to said ad- ministratrix at the office of George 8. Register, in the Burleigh Coun’ North Dakota Court House in city of Bismarck in Burleigh County, North Dakota, or to the Judge of the County Court’ of said Burleigh Coun- ty, at his office in the said Burleigh County Court House, in the City of Bismarck, in said Burleigh County, North Dakota. Said George S. Regis- ter, whose address is the city of Bis- marck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and who resides in the said city of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, nings; struck out by Kardow, 2; by Sellers, 2; by Smith, 11; bases on balls —off Sellers, 4; off aes pitches—Sellers, 1; Um! na- ‘verg, D. E. Shipley. . Twins Replace Colts At Top of Northern 6t. Paul, July 15.—(#)—The Fargo- Moorhead Twins climbed into the lead of the Northern League Sunday by Gefeating Brainerd, 6-1, ousting Grand Forks from the crest. The Colts lost to Eau Claire, 8-1, in eight General Construction. Plumbing and Heating. Electrical Work. Plans for the personal use of bid- ders may be obtained from the office of Joseph Bell DeRemer, Architect, Grand Forks, North Dal Plans are also on fi! tl lowing building exchanges: Forks, Fargo, and Minot, North Da- kota. Duluth, Minneapolis, and St. 2. Paul, Min: ‘All did 0 be accompanied with a bidde: nd in the sum of 5% of the amount of the bid. Both the bid of the work the bid covers and ad- 0 John Wishek, Secretary of Industrial Commission and|is my agent. livered to Mr. Arthur F. Bonzer, Jr] You, are hereby further notified Manager of the State Mill and Eleva-|that Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge of the .|tor Association at his office, State |C and for the Milland Elevator, Grand ‘Forks,|County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, on or before: 10|North Dakota, has fixed the 14th day ;lo'clock A. M, (Tuesday) the (23) day|of January, A. D, 1936, at the hour of of (July) 1935. two o'clock in the afternoon of that All bids received will be opened day, at the Court Rooms of said and acted upon by the Industrial Com-| Court, in the said Court House in the mission not later than en days City of Bismarck, in said Burtetgn thereafter. County, North Dakota, as the time The State of North Dakota through and place for hearing and adjusting the Industria} Commission reserves 1 claims against the estate of the the right to accept or reject any 01 Rosalie Smith, deceased, which particular bid, or reject all bids e been duly and regularly pre- eired. sented as hereinbefore provided. By order of the State Industrial Dated this 20th day of June, A. D. Con mission. 1935, Walter Welford, Angie W. Cox, as the ad- Chairman. ministratrix with the John Wishek, will annexed of the es- tate of Rosalie Smith, deceased, George 8. Regis Att'y. of said administratrix, Bismarck, N. Dak. First publication on the first day ft July, A. D, 1935, Lyons, White Sox, 10-3. Ray Starr Shuts Out Dang Vong Fizates 389; Valley City Nine, 11-0) nuns—ott, ciants, Medclk and Mar- 65. july 15—()— wl Meare, Cardinals, 116; Terry, ‘Stasr, granting only six hits, shut} Giants, 110. : but valley Gity’ s H-Liners bare fos aauiee- Home runs—Ott, Gina, 19; J. Ool- town Sunday, 11-0, ai J Z lebra\ ‘Acting Governor | Pitching—Schumacher, Giants, 13-2; swellord Parmele, Giar.ts, 10-2. Secretary. tor The State Mill & Elevator As- sociation of the State of North Dakota. Joseph Bell DeRemer, Architect rand Forks, North Dakota. SRNL: WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY, ©1005 oy mua staves me Te