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le ik (4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1936 - DESIDERATO BELTS HOME RUN 10 OPEN BIGHT-HIT ATTACK Hi-Liners Rally for Three Runs in Fifth Inning to Dead- lock Score PLAY AT MINOT MONDAY Dusky Capital City Hurler Lim- its Strong Easterners to Four Safe Blows Valley City, N. D., June 15.—Hilton Smith limited Valley City to four hits as Bismarck’s national semi-pro champions chalked up a 5-3 victory over the Hi-Liners here Sunday after- noon, A home run by Joe Desiderato, third baseman, touched off a three- run Bismarck outburst in the first in- ning, but Valley City knotted the count in the fifth. A pair of runs in the sixth sewed up the victory as Smith and Lefty Foster bore down effectively for the re- mainder of the game. | Al Leary, first sacker, led the heavy-hitting Capital Citians with two doubles and a single in three trips to the plate, one of the doubles bounding over the left field fence. Smith augmented his tight pitching performance with two hits in four times up and Red Haley, center field- er, got a double. Bismarck went to Minot Monday morning where they were scheduled to meet the Bearded Davidites in the first game of a doubleheader. dedicat- ing the Magic City’s new $100,000 ball park. Tuesday and Wednesday they play the Acme Colored Giants at Leeds and go from there to Brandon, Manitoba, to participate in a tourna- ment with four other North Dakota teams. The box score: Valley City O'Rourke. ss . Morlan, 1b . Wilson, c Justice, rf Alfson, 3b Chell, 1b . Schauer, cf Griebe, 2b Foster, p . Totals ...... Bismarck Massmann, 2b ..... Desiderato, 3b . Troupe, c Haley, cf wot wl cooronono™ 8 = NhccsuBuuacsd «| wwcowccon> sl Ei ererarerererars mow me menes wl comwmHons 8 pa Sl comooniow 81 Totals Scoring: Bismarck 300 002 000—5 Valley City 000 030 000—3 Errots—Selfka, Desiderato, Mass- mann; home runs—Desiderato; three base hits—Haley; two base hits—Mor- lan, Leary; struck out by Foster 7, by Smith 11; walks off Foster— Leary, Selfka, Goetz; off Smith— Morlan. CCC Outfit Hands Capitols 19-6 Setback Stan Hettman hurled COC camp 1750 to a 19-6 victory over the Capitol | ball club in a seven-inning game Played at Bismarck’s “Big League”} ball park. Hettman allowed the Cap-} ttols only three scattered hits but got ragged support in the field with his teammates committing eight errors, one more than their opponents. The victors garnered seven safe blows off snes and Johnson. The box score: AB R H PO A E Thomson, ss ..5 1 1 0 0 Erickson, 2b..5 0 0 0 3 2 Pistner, it boa 2 2 Oo 4 Krause, c BA 2 40 8, 10 Iver: 3b me: a os et Myh: e380 1 0 0 L. Lee, 5 3 0 60 0 Oo B. Lee, cf oe 1 4 3 0: 8 Hettman,p...5 2 2 1 4 2 Totals .... 45 19 13 18 9 8 Capitols AB R H PO A E Wyeiskala, 3) 4 0 0 9 1 1 2 OT aR eae aes? el 0 8 9- 3 CS Ses eee eae | 3 1 0 1 0 0 Beghi a 6) 4/9 coer et 0: 2% Oy 30 Set 8 2) 8 Y, 0 8 0 0 °Morlan, rf... 2 1 0 1 2 «0 Totals .... 29 6 3 22 9 7 “In for Jundt Ist of 3rd. | Twins Hold Northern Lead With 4-3 Win &t. Paul, June 15.—(#)—The double- header victory of the seventh-place Superior club over the third-place Eau Claire nine featured Sunday's games in the Northern League. The Blues hit hard in both games to win, 8-5 and 9-3, the second being called in the seventh because of dark- ness. Fargo-Moorhead continued on top of the standings by nosing out Win- nipeg, 4-3. Jamestown missed a chance to tie the Twins by splitting their double-header with Crookston. Jamestown won the first, 7-2, and the Pirates took the second, 8-7. Duluth got one less hit than Wau- sau, but the Lumberjacks couldn't hit fk pe pinches and the Dukes won, So prevalent has tobacco-smug- gling become on the Franco-Belgian border that “dazzle guns” are being used to circumvent it. These guns throw, for @ distance of four miles, of light so powerful that it ‘arily blind anyone in its a! comonsons | \ | | By EDDIE BRIETZ Smith Silences Valley City Bats As Bismarck Wins, ” Overwhelning Favorite for Thursday Lowly Hens Take Pair From Blues Brewers’ Split With Red Birds Throws Association Lead | Into Tie 1 Chicago, June 15.—(P)—With just 69 percentage points separating the; six clubs highest in the standings, this season’s American Association race looms as one of the best in the cir- cuit’s history. Sunday the cellar-occupying Toledo Mud Hens rebelled and took a double bill from Kansas City, 12-1 and 3-2. The defeats left Kansas City tledj with Milwaukee at the top of the standings. | The Brewers split with Columbus, | Milwaukee taking the opener, 8-1, and losing the second game, 6-2. Minneapolis finally checked the rampaging Louisville Colonels, beating them twice, 6-2 and 9-2. Burleigh Grimes, fiery Louisville manager, was ejected from the first game after pro- testing a decision that one of his; piayers had not touched third base ; as he came home on a double with |two out. | Indianapolis took both ends of their |double-header with St. Paul. Hits by Oscar Eckhardt and Heath enabled Vince Page to gain a, 1-0, decision over Art Herring in the opener. The Indians hammered out 18 hits io win | ithe second, 9-3, for a sweep of the five- | 'game series. | Kels Win Two Louisville—Minneapolis won a doubleheader from Louisville, winning Sports Round-Up ‘Bismarck Juniors New York, June 15.—(/)—Mr, Van; Lingle Mungo wakes up this blue Monday morning to find himself squarely behind the eight ball ...! his one-man strike did what is known / along Broadway as the old flopperoo | t+. Not only is the temperamen- tal South Caro- linian in bad with §-4, 11-Inning Triumph Here Sunday liors nosed out Harvey's juniors, 5 to leary of taking on is ».., }for Bismarck. They let Harvey down!Indianapolis ... 100 350 00x—9 18 3 an athlete disloy: ba | iwith three nates, . | Rigney, Weinert and Fenner; Bolen enough to eer With the Bismarck team still in its 2nd Riddle. 3 out on another va |formative stage, 18 Bismarck players | Hens Take Pair |club. .. be it said + —— jgoi into the game and this led to a; Toledo—Toledo took a double |to the credit of ball up” in the batting order which | header from Kansas City, winning the} {the Dodgers, they didn’t yicid an cut short a Bismarck opportunity to/first game, 12-1, and the second, 3-2.} jinch . and when Mun found win the game in the tenth. At that!First gai RH Eit jthe Giants had lost interest. he was'time Bismarck loaded the s, with | Kansas City .. 009 001 000—1 9 3! glad enough to go back .. . he ask ly one out but a Bismarck player /Toledo . «+ 150 000 24x—12 17 1/j jfor it and he got it—right in thi d batted out of turn and was called] Page, Wyatt and Madjeski, Breese; | known neck, out and the next batter struck out. |Boone and Tresh. for a ciub in the Evangeline league, tossed a perfect game for 9 2-3 in- nings ... then three opposition bat- ters singled to win the game, 2-0. . Harry Cooper knows just how the ki felt... Why has nobody grabbed “Nim” Newberry, who only batted ‘head. .482 for Oklahoma City university last | season? ... that is busting the apple in any league... North Carolina State got even with Duke when Hunk Anderson beat Wallace Wade at golf} the other day... Those who have heard him, say it’s a good thing Joe Louis can fight better than he play harmonica. . . McCarthy labels Lefty Grove No. 1 pitcher in and an error. arck picked up two in i when Clark was trapped betw: catcher dropped the ball. marek tucked the game aw: leventh when Beall doubled cut, stole third and scored on Schneider's bunt, which went for hit. ;the American League this year... | Bill Spear, of Dickinson, N. D., high,! Harvey ;Mone of the scholarship boys m ; that strong freshman foothall team. | Score by innings nothing in a name, eh? ... Well,} RH 020 100 010 06-4 3 tossed the javelin 177 feet for a newiBismarck. 000 220 000 01-5 3 state record. = |__Batteries: So they said Paavo Nurmi's two- ; mile mark of 8:59.6 would never be, Schneider and Feist, Scott. broken, eh? . . . how about that 8:58.3 Donald Lash of Indiana posted in the Princeton meet, Saturday? ... and we'll leave it to you whether good old Gene Venzke proved it pays to keep trying ... how many times has that Jerked meat, known as “jer! usually venison, fire or in the sun. Nose Out Harvey’ Beall Scores Winning Run in Bismarck's American Legion Jun- iin an ll-inning game Sunday at the his teammates be- | feealspatne First game— ae cause of those The visitors showed an uncommonly 'St. Paul ........ 000 000 be 4 3 lasts about poor 'good pitcher in Clark, ace mounds- |Idianapolis .... 000 000 10x— 4 support, but the {man from last year who let the Capi-| Herring and Fenner; Page and first-division clubs |tal juniors down with five safeties but |Crandall. have cooled off : {his performance was bettered by the Second game— RHE .. they are a bit jfour moundsmen who went to the hill!St. Paul ..... ++ 000 000 030—3 10 0 Harvey scored twice in the second Second game— Shorts: Demoran Ravne, pitching inning on two hits and two errors and Kansas City . in in the fourth on a hit, a stolen Tot=do s thi ourth inning on two hits, a wall and an error and forged ahead in the} fifth on a walk and a home run by |Columbus—Milwaukee and Columbus | !N. Schneider over the center fielders ‘spi: Harvey tied it up in the eighth'the second, 6-2. een third! First game— ‘and home but got home safe when the ' Milwaukee After threatening in the tenth, Bis- | in the Stout and Owen, Chervinko. vith one {Second game— Clark and Michelson; | Yeasley, A. Schneider, Dahlen, M. Tt is lean meat, | cut into strips, and dried over a slow} the first, 6-2 and the second, 9-2. First game— REE Minneapolis .... 001 003 020-6 8 1 Louisville ....... 000 011 000-2 8 0 Grabowski and George; Shaffer, Terry, Marrow and Thompson. jSecond game— RHE} (Minneapolis .... 300 101 103—9 11 0 jLouisville ...... 000 000 020-2 9 1) McKain and George; Bass, Terry, Holley and Ringhofer. Saints Beaten Twice Indianapolis—Indianapolis_ won a double header from St. Paul. The first! !game was a pitchers’ battle, 1-0, and the second 9-3, 4, RHE + 020 090 00-2 5. 1 + 000 000 021-3 9 2 | Moncrief and Madjeski; Sullivan, i [oonen and Linton. | Erewers, Red Birds Split t jthe ftrst, 8-1, and Columbus taking Columbus . 600 001 000-1 8 0 Milwaukee .. Columbus ...... 020 200 02x—6 10 1 Presnell and Brenzell, Detore; Ryba and Owen. Bismarck Co. A Wins Battalion Ball Title a E 6 7 to a .500 average for the campaign by trimming the Dodgers, 5-1, on the RH El strength of Lee Stine’s four-hit hurl- « 3€9 203 000—8 14 1] ing job, Hamlin and Detore; Fisher, Potter,|Louis-Boston baitles rained out, the American League saw the Athletics R H E/knock the Indians into fourth place 000 000 200—2 8 0! with an 8-6 victory, advancing Detroit to third, while Vernon Kennedy's tight pitching gave the White Sox a 6-4 margin over the Senators. DIZZY DEAN'S RELIEF WORK HELPS CARDS BEAT PHILLIES, 12-10; Giants Snap Losing Streak as Schumacher Shuts Out Pirates, 8-0 (By the Associated Press) ‘When batting might hooks up with pitching strength on the same base- ball combination, fireworks are the general result. That's the answer to the current pell-mell parade of those climbing Chicago Cubs, now riding high, wide and handsome on top of an 11-game winning streak, longest run in the big leagues this season. It wasn’t only that they suddenly came to life at the plate, or on the mound. But when they hit both at the same time—the resultant explo- sion is no more than can be expected. For two weeks now the batting brigade has clubbed out a grand to- tal of 123 safe blows, averaging-slight- ly over 11 a game, and each hurler has gone the route. That tells the story. SUNDAY’S STARS Frank Demaree, Cubs—Batted in all runs with two homers in 3-1 win over Bees. Hal Schumacher, Giants— Pitched five-hit ball to end Pi- Tates’ seven-game winning streak. Bob Johnson, Athietics—Hit homer with bases loaded as In- dians were defeated 8-6. Lee Stine, Reds—Limited Brook- lyn to four hits for 5-1 win. Dizzy Dean, Cardinals—Stopped Phillies in relief pitching assign- ment with only 24 hours’ rest. Mike Kreevich, White Sox—Hit triple and two singles, driving in two runs, in 6-4 victory over Sena- tors. Leaving Home Park The big question mark now is: Can they continue, away from Wrigley field, as they've done at home? They Start the eastern swing Tuesday. The long successful home stand ended Sunday with Frank Demaree’s two homers accounting for all the runs as the Boston Bees fell, 3-2, and Lon Warneke chalked up his third win of the victory streak, his second Straight seven-hitter in five days, The triumph, however, didn’t cut down the St. Louis 312-game lead even a fraction. The gas house gang hooked up in a wild slugging spree with the Phillies and came out on Op. 12-10, as Dizzy Dean, going to | Work with only 24 hours’ rest. went in as a relief pitcher to end the game. Schumacher Bests Pirates The tio leaders pulled away from he third-place Pirates, as the New York Giants snapped their own five- game losing streak and the Bucs’ Seven-straight winning run at the same time, with turning in @ five-hit performance for an 8-0 edge. ‘it two games, Milwaukee winning} program, Hal Schumacher Winding up the league the Cincinnati Reds climbed With the Yanks-Tigers and St. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cards Defeat Phillies St. Louis—St. Louis outlasted Phil- adelphia in a wild scoring game to Devils Lake, June 18—(®)—Three diated oaaiaiie ee | battalion championships in soft! tg Were determined at Camp Grafton,|Philadelphia .. 104 110 021-10 14 1 where the North Dakota national lee Louis ...... 430 200 03x—12 16 0 guard is encamped, with Grand Forks,: Johnson, Jorgens, Passeau and Carrington and Bismarck companies annexing titles. guy run second to Gienn Cunning- ham and Bill Bonthron? Can't vouch for this, but our agent at Cornell says ede That _ Brooklyn-Cincinnati The live wire town of Mineral Wells, Tex., is angling for a big league club to train there next spring ... club a first-division threat. trade — Fred Frankhouse for Babe Herman— seems to have fallen through. . . too bad the Senators, with six good out- fielders, can’t swing a trade for that pitcher so badly needed to make the Company M of Grand Forks won! the third battalion championship by idefault from Co. K of Dickinson, while the second battalion final was won by Co. F of Carrington with a j 10-7 victory of Co. E of Williston. In the first battalion, Co. A of Bismarck won over Co. B of Fargo, 8 to 7. Yj UMP + YES, FRIEND—~IT WAS MY MISFORTUNE TO HAVE MY 16-CYLINDER LIMOUSINE FORCED INTO THE DITCH, WHILE RETURNING WY HAR-R-R-UMPH—~ BEFORE I PURCHASED HOOPLE MANOR OF 500 ACRES, AND FOUR MOTORS, NOTHING GAVE ME MORE PLEASURE THAN DRIVING A SMALL CAR LIKE THIS / FROM THE CONVENTION, WHERE i& THE DARK, BUT I HEADED MY STATES DELEGATION~) I'LL BET IF HE'D AT THE NEXT GROVE SQUIRRELY AND TIP HIS DERBY, A CUCKOO WOLILD OF WALNUTS / Grace, Wilson; Walker, J. Dean and Davis. New York ...... Pittsburgh Phelps; Stine and Lombardi. Cleveland Philadelphia ... 500 110 Olx—8 13 1 P. Dean, Heusser, Giants Halt Bucs Pittsburgh—New York ended Pitts- burg's seven-game winning streak by downing the Pirates, 8-0. RH 000 203 021-8 10 0 see 000 009 000-0 5 0 Schumacher and Danning; Weaver, Brown, Bush and Todd. Cubs Down Bees Chicago—Demaree hit two home runs to account for all the Chicago hinnid as the Cubs defeated Boston, 22 OSS RHE LOOKS WorsE! ‘ fee sessceeee 100 000 00-1 TO TIS A HOP IN tants: McPayden acd Lopez; Warneke and O'Dea. Stine Quells Dodgers Cincinnati—Stine held Brooklyn to four hits as Cincinnati won, 5-1. RHE URN HIM Loose Bisgatea 2: 8 oo ams $ THEN Hi LOOSE | anna Jeffeoat and Berres, AMERICAN LEAGUE A's Conquer Tribe Philadelphia—Philadelphia held an early lead to defeat Cleveland, 8-6. RHE seeeee 100 000 500-6 12 1 Hildebrand, Lee, Hudlin, Harder. and Sullivan; Ross, Kelley and Hayes. Pale Hose Trim Nats Washington—Chicago slugged out & 6-4 victory over Washington to even the four-game series at two apiece. bid RHE 200 000 400—6 12 3 102 000 0014 11 1 Chicago .. Detroit at New York rain. St. Louis at Boston rain. Ten thousand British school chil- dren traveled abroad in 1935 under the auspices of the School Journey association, and visited many coun- ‘tries, including Greece, Czechosio7 vakia, Italy and Finland. Dematee’s Two Circuit Drives Provide Cubs With 1th Straight Victory 175,000 Expected to Pay Close ‘to Million at Yankee Stad- ium Thursday New York, June 15.—()}—Joe Louis, a 22-year-old, coffee-colored boy from |Detrott who has made the fight fans Shell out money in million dollar chunks to see him fight even when they felt sure he couldn't lose, is ex- pected to do it again in the Yankee Stadium Thursday night. to face Max Schmeling of Germany, former world heavyweight champion, in a 15-round bout at the Yankee stadium then with 75,000 or more per- to it to see the fight. And, strangely enough, few if any of them expect to witness anything but @ quick knockout victory for Louis. That was the case when Joe fought Primo Carnera last summer and when he fought Max Baer before a throng that paid just a little less than a mil- lion. The attitude of the fans was neatly summed up by one of Joe’s Harlem ad- mirers, overheard as he left the stad- ium after the Carnera fight: “Ah paid twenty. dolluhs to see him, and ah’m satisfied; puffictly satis- fied.” Promoter Mike Jacobs, whose rise has been almost as spectacular as that of Louis, offers assurance there will be more satisfied fans Thursday. The pre-battle ballyho has stressed Schmeling’s courage, his experience, and his cleverness, neglecting the fa- mous line about his being the man who won the title sitting down and lost it standing up. While there’s no doubt about those qualities in the German, he still does not appear to be a match for Louis. So certain are the fight faithful of the Negro’s triumph that betting has been unusually light. Indications are that Louis will be a 10 to 1 favorite when they enter the ring at 9 p. m., (EST). Both Louis and Schmeling are slat- ed to conclude their training Tues- day at Lakewood, N. J., and Napanoch, N. Y., respectively. CCC Team, 6 to 2 Penitentiary Team Coasts to Win After Piling Up 5-Run Lead at Outset Grove Giants, state penitentiary baseball team, took a five-run lead in the first inning and coasted to a 6-2 victory over the Bismarck CCC nine at the penitentiary park Sun- day. In the seventh inning, the CCC sluggers belted out four hits to score their only two tallies of the game. Flanders for the Giants fanned the first seven men to face him, struck out an equal number during the last six innings and limited the CCC’s to seven hits. Myhre was nicked for eight but walked four. The box score: ece AB H PO A E Hettman, ss .. B Lee, cf Thompson, Krouse, ¢ Erickson, Iverson, rf . Pistner, If Myhre, 'p . M. Lee, 1b Totals .... 32 Grove Giants AB Brooks, W Hubbard, 1 Wilson, rf Johnson, rf mewoMouters mmm RCD ecoononosy HEHOMMEHS Owrnosonne eocoHHHoS Lind ohn Srooconeg Comm co cetono me - Totals .... 31 Score by innings: €cé Bismarck ... Grove Giants e, Erick- son, Hubbard, Johnson, Jerome, Slat- er; sacrifices—Hettman; doub! triple plays—Pistner to Erickson, @. Lee to M. Lee; hits off Flanders 7 in 9 innings, off Myhre 8 In 8 inning: B| struck out by Flanders 14, by Myhre 9; bases on balls off Myhre 4; wild pitches—Myhre 2; hit by pitcher— Davidson and Johnson by Myhre, Um- Pires: Strand and Arnold, R ‘The Handel and Haydn Society was the first oratorio society in the United States. It was established in Boston in 1815, _ More Tests to Come! TONY MANERO, the second “sl ” Open winner in as many years, finds his troubles just beginning. Open champions are always on the spot—and ch OTHE AS *FURNISHER The “dark destroyer” is scheduled | Di sons paying a million dollars or close j? Grove Giants Whip}: The Standings (By the Associated Press) NORTHERN LEAGUE Fargo-Moorhead ... 21 13 Jamestown ...seeeee 20 14 Eau Claire . 21 (16 ‘Winnipeg . 21 «16 uluth 14 (16 Wausau . 18, (2) Superior Crookston 12 23 Results Saturday Fargo-Moorhead 6-11; Winnipeg 6. Eau Claire 4; Superior 1. Wausau 7; Duluth 4. NATIONAL LEAGUB Ww L St. Louls Seeds! 28 Chicago . 3102 Pittsburgh 31023 New York 29024 Cincinnati 260 (27 Boston 24 BL | Philadel; 20 36 7 Brooklyn . 20 36 Results Saturday Pittsburgh 6; New York 2. Chicago 7; Boston 2. St. Louis 7; Philadelphia 1, Cincinnati 6-1; Brooklyn 5-: AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww L 675 | New York .. Boston .. 618 | Detroit . 1418 | Cleveland 509 | Washington « 1500; Chicago ..... 1481 | Philadelph 1385 | St. Louis .... 31 Cleveland 3-19; Philadelphia 7- AMERICAN vidas its ON Kansas City . Milwaukee . Minneapolis ... St. Paul ..... Columbus . Indianapolis Louisville Toledo .. Louisville 3; Minneapolis Columbus 21; Milwaukee 0. Kansas City 6; Toledo 5. Indianapolis 3; St. Pau Major League Leaders (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE i Batting—S. Martin, Cardinals, .379; J. Moore, Phillies, .360. Runs—J. Martin, Cardinals, 51; Vaughan, Pirates, 47. ‘Hits—Jordan, Bees, 83; Moore, Giants, | 78. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 12; Klein and J. Moore, Phillies, 9. Pitching—J. Dean, Cardinals, 12-2; Carleton, Cubs, and Hollingsworth, Reds, 7-2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Sullivan, Indians, 397; Rad- cliff, White Sox, .369. Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 64; Geh- ringer, Tigers, 54, Hits—Gehringer, Tigers, 85; Gehrig, Yankees, 75. Home runs—Foxx, Red Sox, and Tro- sky, Indians, 14. Pitching—Grove, Red Sox, 9-1; Sor- rell, Tigers, and Malone, Yankees, 5-1. 222 zatetete omstoer 0 | 0; ese Yankees, Nats Trade Chapman for Powell New York, June 15.—(?)—To keep the accent on power in their drive down the pennant stretch, the Yan- kees are giving up Ben Chapman, bat- ting disappointment of the lineup, for Alvin (Jake) Powell, the Washing- ton Senators’ fly-chaser. Getting under the trading deadline by a day, the Yanks announced the deal Sunday as a straight player swap. ‘The Cards did some player business, too, obtaining Arthur Garibaldi, heavy-hitting, base-stealing Coast league infield star, from their Sacra- mento farm. Dog fish oil is a preparation for keeping away mosquitoes. [FANS DISREGARD SCHMELING’S _|Squad of 13 N. D. | SURE DEFEAT IN LOUIS BOUT) Trackmen Chosen Athletes to Compete in Second International Meet at Estevan, Sask. Williston, N. D,, June 15.—(P)— North Dakota’s best track and field athletes will meet a crack Canadian squad July 1, at Estevan, Sask., for. .| the second international meet, John- ny Mach, coach of the North Dakota delegation, announced Monday. The Williston coach has selected 13 trackmen from this state to meet the Saskatchewan club coached by Joe 9 | Griffiths, track mentor of Saskatche- ‘wan university. North Dakota men will assemble in Minot June 30, leav- ing by bus for the meet. Last year trackmen of this state nosed out the Canadian club by three points, Athletes who will carry North Da- kota colors in the Canadian meet are Joe Walery, Gladstone, and Lloyd Trosseth, Hannaford, entries in the hundred and 220 yard dashes. Walery broke the state century record at Bis- marck this spring and Trosseth was first in the 220. Duane Converse, Carrington freshman of Jamestown ‘college, will run the 440 and 880 yard events. His running mate is Clayton Welch of Bismarck. Both Converse and Welch were winners at the inter- national meet last year. Sammy Robinson, Dickinson Teach- ers college, and Marvin Welliver, Bis- marck, are entered in the mile run. Hollis Deitz, Mohall; William Spear, Dickinson, and Gerald Cysewski, 4 Jamestown, are slated to handle the weights. Herbert Paul, Wilton, state pole vault champion this year, and Lawrence Tanberg, Dickinson, are entered in that event. Robert Tor- 569; 50n, Mayville, and Tanberg will be this state's high jumpers. Canada does not have hurdle entries and the broad jump has been scratched. The first American World war 3\ troops arrived in France on May 10, 1917, Procurement Division, Public Works Branch, Washington, D. C., June 3, 1936, Sealed proposals In ‘duplicate will be publicly opened in this office at 1p. m., June 30, 1936, for furnish- ing all labor and materials and per- forming all work required for remov- al and replacement of one passenger elevator in the U.S. P.O, & CT. H., extension and remodeling, at Bis- marck, N. Dak, Attention is directed to the special conditions of bidding set forth in the specification. Draw- ings and specifications will be sup- plied free to each contractor interest- ed in submitting a proposal. The above drawings and_ specifications MUST be returned to this office. Spe- cifications and drawings (if any) will not be furnished to contractors who have consistently failed to submit Proposals. One set upon request, and when considered in the interests of the Government, will be furnished builders’ exchanges, chambers of commerce or other organizations who will guarantee to make them avail- able for any subcontractor or mater- ial firm interested, and to quantity surveyors, but this privilege will be withdrawn if the sets are not return- ed after they have accomplished their purpose. If the bid is in excess of $2,000, the bidder to whom award is made must, when required, enter into a written contract on the standard government form, and furnish per- formance bond in amount represent- ing 50 per cent of the contract price, within 15 days after the prescribed forms are presented to him for signa- ture. Sald period will be extended only upon presentation to the con- tracting officer, within said period, of reasons which, in the opinion of the contracting officer, justify the exten- sion; and no extension of more than 10 days will be granted. If the writ-‘ ten aontract and bond are not re- ceived within said period, the Gov- ernment will proceed to have the work required by the specifications performed by any means at its com- mand, and any excess cost to the U. §. will be charged against the bidder to whom the award was originally made. W. E. Reynolds, assistant di- rector of procurement, public works branch, BUDWEISER Now 15c No Charge for the Bottle Motor Sales, Inc. Capitol Service Station Lomas Oil Co West End Texaco Service Station AND ALL GOODRICH DEALERS