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| ; j BEANTOWN RADIATES SERIES ATMOSPHERE; EXPECT 42,000 GATE Senior Leaguers Taking Con- test Seriously, Plan to Turn Tables FAIR WEATHER PROMISED Grove Likely to Get Starting | Assignment Against Dean or Davis Boston, July 7.—(#)—Boston's big- gest baseball show since Babe Ruth was a rookie southpaw with the Red Sox found the All-stars of the Na- tional League pepped up Tuesday to! turn the tables on their American | League rivals. | In the words of the normally fun- | loving, banjo-playing Charley Grimm, | manager of the Chicago Cubs and/ this year’s boss of the Nationals. i “We didn’t come up here to help} celebrate the Boston tea party. We're | Planning to throw one of our own.” | By contrast with the American! Leaguers, who took things in stride and refused even to be disconcerted | by train wrecks along the route to Boston, the Nationals staged some- thing resembling an old collegiate rally, { Take Game Lightly | Joe McCarthy, pilot of Americans, j wasn't even on hand to answer ques- tions, much less conduct a rally, un- til Tuesday. Smarting under the sting of three; straight reverses in the all-star rivalry | { that began at Chicago in 1933, the picked representatives of the senior circuit took the situation much more} seriously. They went into a huddle with Man- ager Grimm Monday night and were up bright and early Tuesday for sig- nal drill before taking the field at! Brown while Paul the National League park, once known | as Braves field but now the “hive” of the bees. The rules this year provide that/ no hurler on either side can go more} than three innings. American League power again ap- peared a dominating factor, but the} National Leaguers relied on acknowl- | edged pitching superiority to supply; the antidote to the big bats swung by Gehringer, Gehrig, Foxx, Averill, Dickey, Gostin and the sensational! Yankee freshman, Joe DiMaggio. Mound Choices Unknown i Both Grimm and McCarthy kept, their pitching selections under cov- er, but it appeared likely Robert Moses Grove, southpaw ace of the} Red Sox, would draw the assignment ; against a National League righthand- er, Wizzy Dean of the Cardinals or Curt Davis of the Cubs. With fair weather promised, base-| of Monday's gam K. Nash-Finch, nch, O. 11 safe blows, bu \Nwers. to the plate and the Capital Che City League and ‘ball owners looked for a capacity R A E of starting his second team. The Na-| crowd of 42,000 fans. The advance/s. 2b 3 2 jtionals have a decided edge in pitch- sale totalled 17,000 and 25,000 “rush” | Guthrie, ss -- 93 3 {jing, but the Americans have it on seats were to go on sale at 9 a. m. In| Meye CR RSRERIE foes ® 1/\them in power, events of unexpected showers, th Diebert, HE bog if 9 Tom Yawkey came up from New eet start at 10 a. m. (E. S. T. Brown oe . 4|York to see the game. . . But wishes) lay. Q ri a jhe hadn’t come so early. . . He had Next year’s all-star show has been; IK 4 { , ° | been kept busy trying to explain to ae ew arhneton. . Bobrien, rf. 4? $ _° | disappointed Beantowners just what e pr atting order: Totals 36 15 7 3 {happened to his gold-plated Red Sox. qAlmericansAppling... Chicago. $i paramount ABR A 3 Mr. ances rashes he rock ‘ . . is * ai Neibauer, If 3 3 9 ‘m so tired talking, I can't think,” New York, rf; Gehrig. New York, 1b; 3 fuss, 3b ef iy 2 i {he said. . Messrs Joe Cronin and Sec, Cleveland, ef; Dickey. New| f Winslow. eran 0 2\Jimmy Foxx also are in town, but ‘ork, ¢; Goslin, Detroit, or Selkirk, ie Waa 3 2 2 you didn’t see much of them on the New York, If; Higgins, Philadelphia. Ae: 1 9 \ boulevards. . . They were quite con-/, 3b; Grove, Boston, p. _ a ae cat ° Qitent to let Mr. Yawkey do whatever Nationals—Galan, Chicago, cf; Her-) 4” Anderson, 2b 3 1 2 o({talking was done. man, Chicago, 2b; Collins, St. Louis,! Bride, « . Fit 1 9, Lou Gehrig, the Yankee power- 1b; Medwick, St. Louis, If; Demaree, 10 “3 ~@ house, has played in all the previous Totals Chicago, or Ott, New York, rf: Hart- | nett, Chicago, c; Whitney, Phillies, “ee or Riggs, Cincinnati, 3b; Durocher, eure Bs Tonle as: J. Dean. st. touls, or) Summary: Laft on mene E Cie te [at Jos DiMaggio, a sure starter for Davies Chicago, p. Baar ieoneain I Mibaue Bride; | the McCarthy forces. . . The overnight Replacements: Americans—Rad-| two ‘bare h cliff, Chicago, and Chapman, Wash-| Ashmore; th ington, outfielders; Crosetti, New| epee m7 it | cans, with either Dizzy Dean or Curt York, and Foxx, Boston, infielders; R.| struck out by Brown 3, by Neibauer | Davis chucking for the Nationals. Ferrell, Boston, and Hemsley, St. bases on balls off Brown 3, off | Louis, catchers; Harder, Cleveland,, Neibauer 1% Umpire: Hummel. | By mixing aluminum with other Gomez and Pearson, New York, Rowe, Detroit, and Kennedy, Chicago, | pitchers. Nationals—Berger, Boston, and J.) Moore, New York, outfielders; Suhr Summer (AL), and Vaughan, Pittsburgh, and S. Mar-| (NL) second base; and Kolls (AL), | siilcon, and aluminum, is invaluable tin, St. Cincinnati, Louis, infielders; Lombardi, | third base. catcher; Hubbell, pele Time of game, K.C’s Turn Back | Paramount, 15-10 Wins in Unreported Games Last Week Paramount Theatre stickers pound- ed 12 hits off the offerings of Adam; ing the Knights of Columbus team to the field gave the Catholic club a 15- 10 victory in a City League diamond- tor and O. H. Will teams ended in a protest in the seventh inning with |Copelin’s leading 8-0. The dispute ‘arose over an umpire’s decision andj will be decided by the board of man-; Guthrie with three hits in five trips , two for four led the K. C. batting at- tack while J. Neibauer, Harold Wins- low and Kennedy were heaviest hit- ters for the losers. In two games which were unreport- | ed last week, the Will crew trounced Slugfest from Shell Gas, 17-15, in the | Commercial League. York, Mungo, Brooklyn, and Warnek:, | Chicago, pitchers. Umpires—Reardon Americans Favored Over Nationals in All-Star Game: Charlie comm orts Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ | | c Boston, July 7.—(P)—Boston 1s ;chuck full of the world's series at- mosphere Tuesday. . . The outstand- | ing stars of the major leagues are hfre for baseball's ). H. Will Chalk Up i annual dream ame, . Every- Neibauer was limit-| ody is lionizing the celebrities on the squads led by Manager Charlie Grimm and Joe McCarthy. .. Even the Lowells and the Cabots are speaking to ‘em. . . {It's the nearest thing to a world's series Beantown Landis fans have had a peek at since Ed Barrow, now of the Yanks, piloted the Red Sox to a flag in 1918. . .| | Judge Landis arrived early to boss the show. . . He occupies the royal suite S. at the Copley-Plaza and roots for good weather. ¥ The American Leaguers will be go- ing after their fourth straight vic- tory... They have had such an easy| time in the past that Henry P. Ed-/} The box scores; Wards, the league’s demon publicity Iman, says Joe McCarthy is thinking | it ragged support in Ernest Bobzien with | vrolet, 13-8, in the; Nash-Finch won a all-star games, but he'll be looking for his first hit Tuesday. . . National League fans are anxious for a peep 10 eibauer, | dope was that Bob Grove would be j the starting bowler for the Ameri- ~ | elements, chemists have produced al- | loys that have revolutionized modern | transportation. Duralumin, an alloy (NL), | of copper, magnesium, maganese, base; plate; first Stewart | |in building new streamlined trains 12:30 p. m, (B. 8. T.). | and airplanes. { MASOR, MEET MY COUSIN, YOu TWO HAVE PLENTY, IN COMMONS HESA HORTICULTURIST FELLOW Our Boarding House | With Major Hoople Y SNUFFY SAYS HIS COUSIN POOCHEL HAS Joe Metarthy Nationals Concede Ability of Pitchers to Halt Geh- rig, DiMaggio, Dickey, Foxx May Decide Boston, July 7—()—The National League will concede about 22 points lin batting to the American League |sluggers when the pick of both cir- cuits line up for their annual all-star baseball game. Manager Joe McCarthy has at his Gisposal an array of American League \sluggers hitting the ball for about 334, The question seems to be whether Manager Charlie Grimm's senior cir- cuit representatives, batting for .312, have the pitchers to subdue such clubbers as Lou Gehrig, young Joe DiMaggio and Bill Dickey of the Yankees, Jimmy Foxx of the Red Sox, Earl Averill of the Indians, and Char- ley Gheringer of the Tigers. The starting pitching berth for the National Leaguers seems to rest be- tween St. Louis’ Dizzy Dean or Chi- cago’s Curt Davis. Manager McCarthy has two stellar southpaws available — Lefty Grove |and Vernon Gomez. Until this morning McCarthy had two righthanders he could have | started, but Tommy Bridges of the Detroit Tigers passed up the game be- cause of a cold which forced him from the mound at St. Louis Sunday. He returned to Detroit with most of his teammates, leaving Mel Harder of Cleveland the American League's most eligible righthander. Georgie Feist Beats Slater at Sioux City Sioux City, Towa, _ July 7.—P}— Georgie i, “128, of Grand Forks de- feated Mickey Slater, 128, Sioux City, in the six-round preliminary to the Buckler-Hook bout here Monday night. In the main go, Jimmy Buckler, 1262, Louisville won on a ‘foul from Henry Hook, 120, Indianapolis, in four rounds. In the semi-windup, Everett Right- mire, 126, Sioux C: beat Alber Man- riquez, 126. Sioux City, in 10 rounds. Power With Stick: VALLEY CITY TEAM DISSOLVES; TONIGHT’S GAME IS CANCELLED | Mohn to Meet With Board of Di- rectors to Decide Course of Action k's scheduled game with Valley City tonight has been called off because of the dissolution of the Hi- Bismarck’s Liner team, according to Manager Babe Mohn of the local nine. Mohn was informed’ Monday that the Valley City team had broken up for the season. Besides tonight's game Bismarck had a return engage- ment with the Hi-Liners scheduled at the eastern city’s park on Friday. Mohn said he planned to meet with the board of directors of the Bis- marck Baseball association to deter- mine what course the Capital City team would take in the future. A lack of capable opponents for the local club, which marched to the na- tional semi-pro championship at Wichita, Kans., last year, has made it increasingly hard to keep the team self-supporting and some definite ac- tion has become mandatory. 44 New Ace-Hole Members Added * ‘National Hole-in-One Club Ros- ; » ter Soars to 760; Two States Unreported New York, July 7.—()—Member- ship in the Associated Press national hole-in-one club soared to 760 Tues- day as late returns brought in a new harvest of 44 aces. Since the records were started on January 1, every state in the union except Idaho and Nevada has pro- duced one or more ace golfers. Seven golfers have scored two or more for the season. Heinie Klein of Pittsburgh was the latest recruit to the “double ace” ranks, On June 28, Klein slammed a | brassie shot 227 yards to ace the sixth hole at Wildwood Country club. Two days later, he hauled out a 4 iron and banged a perfect shot on the 170- | yard 11th hole of the same course. 4th at the Meadowbrook course to win trial for the national public links championship. He shot a 78 in the morning and came back in the aft- | & low 36-hole aggregate of 147. deroga Country club. course. Expect All-Star AA Milwaukee, Borchert Field here Friday. Officials of the Milwaukee club, park's capacity is 14,000. 6,637 in 1935, at Minneapolis. of the same size. Don Winge of Columbia Heights, Minn., scored an ace on the 120-yard the qualifying medal of the Minnesota’ ernoon with a 69, four under par, for Two newspapermen produced news for their sheets by scoring aces during the week. Bill Parriott, sports editor of the Morgantown, W. Va., Post, got’ a “piece for the papers” by scoring an ace on the 155-yard 5th at Morgan- town Country club, W. R. Tefft, editor of the Ticonderoga, N. Y., Sentinel, did likewise by canning his tee shot on the 17-yard 17th at the Ticon- Henry Holder of Johnson City, Tenn., scored the longest ace of the week, holing out with a driver on the 300-yard 7th at the Cherokee golf Game to Draw 1,200 July 7.—(/P)—Advsnce ticket sales indicated Tuesday that the largest crowd to see an American Association all-star game would wit- ness the third annual classic at which will oppose .a team of stars picked from the seven other Associ- ation teams, said most of the reserved seats had been sold and predicted the attendance would be 12,000. The The game drew 7,435 in 1934 and Flawless emeralds are very rare and are about twice as costly as diamonds The Standings (By the Associated NORTHERN Lmacun Pet. Fargo-Moorhad . 21.614 Fau Claire . 23.608 Jamestown 25.528 Winnipeg . 27518 Superior 2 +509 Wausau 30473 Duluth 31.404 Crookston 335004352 NATIONAL LEAGUB Ww L Pet. St. Louis 28 522 Chicago . 27.614 Pittsburg 3305S 4 Cincinnatt 33 535 New York 34 B34 Boston .. 41.543 Philadelphia . 46.370 Brookiyn ... 50 324 ‘7 Pet. New York . 5 23.689 Detreit 41 33054 Boston . 42 34 553 {Washington . 40-35 «533 Cleveland 3 :513 Chicago 5 Philadelph L ct. 34.580 Paul 48 3765 Columbus 44 40584 Indianapolis 4200 39519 Minneapolis . 42 494 Kansas City 420.488 Toledo .. 46.446 Louisville . 52 +388 F-M Twins Maintain Scant Lead Margin St. Paul, July 7—()—Eau Claire was tied with Fargo-Moorhead on the basis of games won and lost for the Northern League leadership Tues- day, but the Twins held the top rung by a few percentage points. The Bears nosed out Duluth, 11-10, in a free hitting game while Winni- peg was downing Fargo-Moorhead, 5-3, in @ game featured by raising of @ blue and white pennant symbolic of the Maroons’ 1935 league leader- ship. Fargo-Moorhead has won 33 and lost 21 and the Bears have two more spective percentages of .611 and .603. The Superior Blues pounded out four home runs to beat Wausau, 10-7. The terrific heat caused postpone- ment of the Crookston-Jamestown game. The mercury reached 116 at the latter city. -—_________.___-+ | Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) 130, St. Paul (8). Montreal—Al McCoy, 183, Can- ada, outpointed Tony Loughran, 18514, Philadelphia (10). Hartford, Conn.—Howard Scott, 135%, Washington, D. C., out- Bat Battalino, 140, Hart- ford (10). Sioux City, ee ae Buck- HERRON LEADS FIELD Minneapolis, golfers faced another 18-hole quali- fying round Tuesday under a blazing ‘13's. “I OWN ENOUGH pipes to stock a store, And he’s been smoking Prince Aibart tn ‘Sen uth ou 18 seus, * “You can smoke Prince Albert from morning till night, same asI do, and you'll never find one single trace of ‘bite’ or rawness. I figure that’s due to the P. A. ‘no-bite’ process.” No matter how much P.A. you smoke, every pipeful tastes cool, fresh, and flavory. Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don't find it the mellow. est, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever - vest of the tobacco in it to us at any tiene within says Frank Fisher. ee ee ee (Sanh 3. Nore Teen Come wins and two more losses, with re-| Th July 7.—()—Weary sun, with Lee Herron of Minneapolis, the 1932 champion, holding a one- stroke lead over the field for medalist teur golf championship. Herron shot a °72 Monday, one stroke ahead of Dick Sawyer and Tom Rogers, with| Bis; LEGS OR HIPS SWING MOTION; ARMS RELAXED START BACK- @NeA By ART KRENZ NEA Service Golf Writer The first motion of the backswing should be made by the legs or hips— the weight should be shifted first, fol- lowed by the turn of the hips. If one starts the hands first, the club Pet; lis Mfted upright. This is a character- istic motion of the beginner who swings the club as though it were an ax, That the arms start before any wrist action takes place is clearly shown in slow movies of the stars. Nearly all experts let the clubhead lag behind the arm motion during the first few inches of the backswing. ‘This move indicates that it is a re- laxed motion. ————— EE NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That by virtue of a judgment and decree in foreclosure, rendered and given by the District Court of the Fourth Ju- dicial District, in and for the County of Burleigh and State of North Da- kota, and entered and docketed in the office of the Clerk of said Court in and for said County on the 5th day of June, 1936, in an action wherein Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, a corpor- ation, was plaintiff and A. B. Carley and Cora Carley were defendants, in favor of the said plaintiff against the said eeanerner for the sum of Two Four Hundred Twelve Dol- lars and Twenty-three Cents ($2,412. 23), which judgment and decr among other things directed the by me of the real property hereina: described, or as much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the amount of said judgment, with interest thereon and the cost and expenses of such sale, or so much thereof the pro- ceeds of such sale applicable there- to will satisfy. And by virtue of a writ to me issued out of the office of the Clerk of said Court in and for ld County of Burleigh and under the seal of said Court, directing mé to sell said real property pursuant to said judgment and decree, I, Fred E. Anstrom, the Sheriff pe said County, and the’ person appointed by said Court to make said sate, will sell the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder for cas! it le auction, at the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 10th day of July, A. D., 1936, at 10:00 o'clock A. M. of that day, to satisty said judgment, with interest and cot thereon, and the costs and expe: of such sale, or as much thereof as the proceeds of such sale applicable thereto will The premises to sold ip ‘oresald pursuant to said judgm: and de- cree, and to said writ, and to this no- tice, are described in said judgment, decree and writ as follows, to-wit: That part of Lounsberry’s Outlot number Twenty-one (21) of the City of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dak described as follows: Beginning at a point on the West line of said number Twenty- one (21) Five Hundred (500) feet South of the Northwest corner as @ point of beginning, thence East one hundred eighty (180) fe thence South Two hundred Seve: ty-one (271) feet, thence due West one hundred eighty (180) feet, thence North along the West line of said lot Two hundred seventy- one (271) feet to the point of be- ginning. Fred E. Anstrom, Sheriff of Burlap! County, N. D. Thos. J. Bur! Attorney for Piaintite, ik, Bore h Dakota, FRANK FISH THIS D ee, CUT,’ Prince Albert {s cooler { Rome today has fewer citizens than it had 2000 years ago. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS. Notice is hereby given—That pidd will be recelved by. The Board of Ed- ucation of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota until 8.00 o'clock P. M. ston the 14th. day of July 1936, at the office of The Board of Education, for the completion of the unfinished part of the Mechanical Arts Annex to the New Senior High School. Plans and specifications for thé above mentioned work will be on file and may be seen and examined in the office of the Clerk of The Board of Education, Bismarck. North Dakot Ritterbush Bros. Architects, marck, North Dakota, and the Build. ers Exchanges at Minot, Fargo, and Grand Forks, North Dakota. Each bidder must specify the time within which the work will be com- pleted, if awarded the contract, Each bid must be accompanied by @ certified check, drawn on a solvent bank in the State of North Dakota, and payable to George F. Will, Presi- dent of The Board of Education, Bis- marck, North Dakota, in a sum equal to at least 5% of the amount of the The Board of Education Bethe | the right to hold all bids re for m period of ten days after the aay fixed for the opening thereof ai further reserves Ahe right to Fred any or all bids. Dated the 25rd, day of June 1936. The Board of Education of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, By George F, Will, President. At NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATS OF Anna G. Connolly, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned, Eleanor M. Connolly, as the executrix of the estate of Anna G. Connolly, late of the City of Wash- ington, District of Columbia, deceas- ed, to the creditors of, and all per- aving claims against the estate id deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six months after the first publication of this notice, to sald executrix at 1017 Fifth Street, north, in the City of Bismarck, in’ Burleigh County, North Dakota, or to the Judge of the Coun- ty Court of said Burleigh County, at his office in the Burleigh County, North Dakota Court House in the City of Bismarck, in said Burleigh Coun- ty, George M. Register, whose ad- dress is the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, and who resides in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, is my agent. You are hereby further notitied that Hon, I. C. Davies, Judge of the Coun- ty Court within and for the County of Burleigh, .and State of North Dakota, has fixed the 12th day of January, A. D, 1937, at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the Court Rooms of sai Court, in the said Court House, in the City of Bis in said Burleigh County, as the time and place for hearing and adjusting all claims against the estate of the id Anna G. Connolly, deceased, which have been duly and regularly presented hereinbefore provided. Dated this 11th day of June, A. D. Eleanor M. Connolly, at the executrix of the tate of Anna G. Connolly, deceased. on the 23rd day of) Jane, oy D 1986. 30 7. “ROLL-YOUR.- ‘speaks up! “Prince Al- bert is a mild, tasty tobacco, a Een a IFFERENT TOBACCO