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i : i OPEN SATURDAY, IS GIVEN HIGH RATING Visitors Who Won 97 and Lost | Only 20 Last Year Have Powerful Aggregation BOAST GOOD MOUND STAFF! Mohn Priming Hurlers to Bear Down When Visiting Stick- ers Come to Plate Bismarck Friday was preparing for @ resurgence of interest in baseball as Burlin White and his Boston Regal Giants, one of the best traveling teams in the country, invaded Bis- marck for a three-game series which is expected to prove the hardest fought of the current season. The series begins Saturday with a game at 6:30 p. m., and continues at 3 Pp. m., Sunday and 6:30 p. m., Monday. ‘The visitors won 97 games last sea- son while losing 20 and tying three. Boasting a strong pitching staff, 22 of the 97 victories were shut-outs. In addition the Regan Giants are at the plate and Manager Pyatter (Babe) Mohn of the Bismarck team Friday was priming his hurling staff for a real effort in the three- game series. ! ‘The Bismarck club turned up for the climatic series Thursday night by ‘knocking off the All-Nations team again by a 5 to 1 score. Four errors by the visitors enabled the national semi-pro championes to garner their runs on nine hits while the All-Na- tions were chalking up one lone tally on seven hits off Hilton Smith. Me (seacacnlue oooh Low ec00-c0cet #| coooHowoolt seen cnc el cucamencett Serecescataloocoeu-wse eroconHon% +! cooocoH00F COuMNoHomND ©] OwWHOoHNOND> 110 000 » Steen Winning pitcher, Smith; eon pitcher, Estes Tete on bases, All Nations 5; Bismarck, 6. Sacri- fi All Nations; Bismarck 1, De- sigerato. ‘Two base hits, All Nations, -.__THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1986 Bismarck Beats All-Nations Again; Tunes Up for Crucial Series In Three-Game Series Here here Saturday evening. White, a leading catcher for 24 years, \is asserted to be one of the smartest and still one of the best receivers in the game. All-Nations Takes state penitentiary, @ score of 6 to 4 Wednesday evening. 6-4-4-3. off Smith, 7 in 9 innings. Struck out, by Eeste; by Smith, 10. Wild pitch- es, Smith, 1. Hit by pitcher, Lyles. Umpires, Cayou, Shipley. Jamestown Rampage Puts It Near Lead &t. Paul, July 17.—(?)—Jamestown's most recent victory string, which stood at six straight Friday, has care ried the Jimmies to within 2% games of the Northern League crest. Jamestown’s sixth consecutive win ‘Thursday was at the expense of the Duluth Dukes by a 9-4 count. Dave Odom struck out 12 and allowed only six hits in 6 1/3 innings, but ran into trouble in the seventh and Bill Sek- eres finished the game, allowing not @ hit. Eau Claire pushed across a run in the ninth to nose out Crookston, 8-7, and Winnipeg, behind Ebnet’s effec- tive pitching, swamped Wausau, 8-0. Fargo - Moorhead hit hard in the innings, scoring all their runs in the first five frames to defeat Su- Perior, 16-10. Slate Brundage for Olympic Committee Aboard S. S. Manhattan, En Route Berlin July 17.—(?)—Avery Brun- Chicago is slated for election International Olympic commit- succeeed the late General Charles E. Sherrill. Seasickness was added Friday to vantage of the lifting of the menu restrictions. Because of complaints of the lack of variety and quantity in the train- ing table diet, officials Thursday agreed to give their charges the full run of the ship’s menu. Yesterday’s Stars | Press) — Moore, on the hill for the giants, fanned 18 batters in eight innings, the 7] Same being called at the end of the , {eighth because of darkness. The box score: Kansas City All Nations a elo sesweeL gi al cascnccken 3 Si Ssse Bs sees S| weneunwoug Cloud, ss Gray, c Carpio, 3b Ribadaux, Carr, rf-| Swan, cf .....: Brown, p-rf .. my Srom S| comm mmertomor™ 2] onnon Totals .... Grove Giants Hubbard, If .. Johnson, 2b Heib, rf > Aen oumone J) a. Louisville ...... 100 001 000— 2 6 2 LeMay, ss ‘Minneapolis .. 020 000 63x—11 16 0 Blaters 3b oy Tising, Terry, Bass and Ringhofer; rents eed ,McKain and Hargrave. Moore, p . Sl oremmrmcowt | onmrmenoon | Racoconed Total 24 Score by innings: K. C. All Nation: 000 120 03-6 Grove Giants 001 01—4 Summary: Winning pitcher—Cai losing pitcher—Moore; left on ba: All Nations 5, Giants 8; stolen bi ray, Carr, Brown, Hubbard 2, Davidson; Home runs—Slater, Cloud; hits oft Brown 4 in 1 inning, off Carr 6 in 7 innings, off Moore 6 In 8 in- nings; struck out by Brown 2, by Carr 6, by Moore 18; bases on ba! off Moore 3; wild pitches—Moore hit by pitcher—Cloud by Moore, Le- May by Carr; passed balls—Smith 1; time of game—2:05. Umpires—Bell and Arnold. Michael Hillegas was the first treasurer of the United Colonies, while Alexander Hamilton was the first secretary of the treasury under | the U. 8. constitution. wenere Pictured above are SBurlin’ White and his Boston Regal Giants, reputed te be one of the best traveling semi- pro teams in baseball, which will be the attraction in a three-game ser- tes with the Bismarck club opening Contest at Prison Playing an exhibition game at the the All-Nations team nosed out the Grove Giants by A three-run rally in the eighth inning jles.| put. the game on ice for the visitors. al proncconott ow] cococcHoutt To Boost Lead in | Association Loop’ Tightens Grip on Top by Eighth Straight Win as Brewers Break Even Chicago, July 17—@)—St. Paul, |which grabbed the American Associa- | tion spotlight early in the season with & 16-game winning streak, has taken over the center of the circult’s stage once more. Manager: Gabby Street’s club won its eighth straight game Thursday, beating Toledo 13 to 12 to tighten the Saint's hold on the circuit lead. It was St. Paul's eighteenth win in the last 20 starts. Henry Steinbacher, Saint's left fielder who has been playing sensa- tionally lately, smacked out six hits in as many trips to the plate and tied the American Association record. One of his blows, a slashing triple, drove in the winning run in the ninth inning. Steinbacher hit safely in his last three times at bat Wednesday. | Bob Fenner, Saint’s backstop, hit homers in the second and third in- nings, the latter with the bases full. Columbus and Milwaukee split their double bill, the Red Birds taking the opener 11 to 4. : Minneapolis beat Louisville 11 to 2 after breaking a 2-all deadlock in the seventh with a six-run scoring burst. Fabian Gaffke, star Miller center- fielder, was the big seige gun for the Kels, getting two homers, a double .| and a single to account for five runs. ‘His second four-base smash came in the big seventh with the bags loaded. »| Indianapolis beat Kansas City 6 to 4 in a night game called at the end of the eighth inning to enable the In- |dians to catch a train. | Saints Still on Rampage |. St. Paul—St. Paul won its 18th out its last 20th game as they defeated Toledo 13-12, Steinbacher got 6 hits. RHE 126 012 101-13 21 1 and Linton, Tresh; Fette, Weinert, Spencer and Fenner. Millers Best Colonels | Minneapolis—Gaffkee got two hom- i <A gehen defeated Louis- le 11-2. RHE Brewers, Red Birds Divide Milwaukee—Milwaukee could do no ‘umbus winning the first 11-4 and los- ing the second 7-3. RHE ++ 000 103 000— 4 7 0 (Seven innings by agreement) Macon and Chervinko, Owen; Hev- \ing, McDonald and Brenzel. Long Losing Streak Ends | Kansas City—Indianapolis ended its \eleven-game losing streak by defeat- ling Kansas City 6-4. i |St. Paul Continues FE second game 7 to 3 after losing the = 114 310 020—12 12 0] Ne jbetter than an even break with Col-/|q Ryba, Fisher and Owen; Hamlin! |, jand Second game— RHE) {Columbus . + O11 012 3—7 121) I Milwaukee - 002 1000-3 6 1, BOSTON CLUB WILL Phillies Cause Eyebrows to Lift by Winning 10 of BANK TEAN WALLOP SHEL GAS OUTRIT Two Pitchers Let Losers \ Down With One Hit; Three- Way Inn Wins Scoring 25 runs on 21 hits, the Bank of North Dakota defeated the Shell Gas team 25 to 0 in the Kitten- ball league Thursday night as Walters and Fisher let the losers down with only one hit. At the same time the Three Way Inn was nosing out the CCC squad 12 to 11 and Nash-Finch was racking up & 13 to 11 victory over Schlitz Beer. The box score: Bank of N.D. AB RH PO A E Walters, s: 6 4 3 4 1 0 5 : ae 2 2 0 ee tome ee th ane Ae ite ae as i 6 1 2 1 3 0 5 3 2 0 0 0 4 2 2 0 0 0 ys e 4 3 2 4 9 0 Fisher, r-p CUR OUR Beate ea Hae | Thoreson, cf. 6 2 2 0 0 0 Totals 61 25 21 21 6 2! Shell Gas AB R H PO A E 2 0 0 3 0 6 0 1 2 1 3 0 o 2 0 2 sil 0 0 0 0 1 -3 0 0 6 1 1 38 0 1 6 1 1 Monroe, c se Oa or Whiteman, 3 0 0 ; ad 0 J. Ibach, r 2 0 0 0 0 0 Totals .... 24 0 1 21 4 16 Score by inning: Bank of N. D: Shell Gas 000 000 0o— 0 Summar: base—Bank of North Dakota 9, Shell G: wo base hits—Fish three base hits—Carr; kk, 721 0-25 2 i in 4 innings, off Watts innings, off Papacek 6 innings; struck out by Fisher 2, by Walters 0, by Watts bases on balls off Fi . ters 0, off Watts 2, off Papacek Umpire: F. Hummel, AB Nash-Finch Engenson, cf.. Bennett, ¢ Bolstad, 1b. Schlosser, 2b Thomas, ss . Bradley, r .... Tarbox, 3b .. Jackwitz, If Doyle, rf Berg, p Totals .... Schlitz Beer AB Christopher, 2b 3 Balzer, rf.. M. Ibach, A. Neibaue: Litten, r h McCorrle, ¢-ss. A. Knoll, 3b. Cieveland, 16 F, Goetz, cf. C. Balzer, g ° sl ic ( Setercsscoretem | mnrsonsoernionett eaannonon | rommnsrcconniy S| commumenmony & a] wosmnommoct! al cnouemonont sl wonwanonwed | onrscsrsomcsmes a leagenaueeds Bl eeuasnucstp | ntsc ome orem Nash-Finch Summary 302 mn base—Scehlitz 9, Nash Finch 14, stolen bases— Thomas; two base hits—Bolstad; three base hits—Jackwitz; hits off Nelbauer 13 in 7 innings, off Berg 11 in 7 innings; struck out by Neibauer 2, by Berg 2; bases on balls off Nei- bauer 11, off Berg 5. Umplre: John Roehick. AB H R PO A E ~5 2 1 2 0 0 6 1 2 1 1 1 3 2 ao o 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 Beaudoin, 4a 8 3 0 6 Martin, p 2 0 1 0 o 0 J. Yeas! es ae ee ie ae Beylund, c .4 0 1 8 0 0 M. Benser, 3rd 1 0 , a 1 0 te ee am ms Gale Vea Jom Totals . 33009 «12 «21 2 cc AB H R PO A Erickson, ist .. 4 1 1 6 0 Deeds, -r . 2 aa Bushe, 3rd 4 0 1 0 1 Krause, 2nd... 4 2 2 2 3 Hettmann, ss. 4 3 2 2 1 4 1 2 2 e 4 0 0 3 0 ame ee ee 3 1 0 2 0 3 1 1 0 0 Totals .... 36 12 11 21 6 Score by innings: Three-Way Inn . ccc . Jaffair, on the strength of Lon Ware Last 14 Contests [LON WARNEKE LETS. 194 LINKS LEADERS The | MD-WESTERN BACKS BEES DOWN WITH 4 | ENTERST, PAULOPEN| | Stamndlirngs.| (LEAD CANDIDATES HITS AS CUBS WIN sme — (IN ALL-STAR VOTE OE ATIONAL LEAGUB w L Cubs Now Two Full Games! 29 Ahead as Dean and St. | &t. pau, July 17—m)—Missing one former champion, Olin Dut a Louis Team Are Beaten _|fieia of 184 professionals and ema- teurs teed off Friday in bd YANKEES INCREASE MARGIN seen a rae or ene Oe et eae Washington course. No relief from the scorching sun| poston. and wind, which for two weeks have| ch Biggest Field in History of Event Will Vie for Honors and Cash Awards | Berwanger, Shakespeare, Pil- ney and Roscoe Are All Closely Grouped Cleveland De' ;Claw Tigers as Indians Beat Philadelphia to Take Over Second Place It may be only a flash in the Na- itional League's red-hot pan, but those Phillies are giving the baseball world an occasion for some eyebrow lifting. Although they're still a long way Pago Soa ae ie jfrom the first division, let alone the | money two times, and ;top of the heap, they've been the hot-|orr with two others another test outfit in the big leagues since| Johnny Revolta, Evanston, Til, Jim July 1, and the only club in thelr /Foulis of Hinsdale, Ill, and Horton loop to keep up with the pace set bY | smith of Chicago, are back again try- the galloping Cubs. ing to wrest the title from the defend- They made it 10 victories against |ing champion, Cooper . four defeats since the first of the! A new course competitive record month, two in a row over the Card-|was furnished a large gallery Thurs- inals, and spoited Dizzy Dean's re-| day in the mixed foursomes as Jimmy jturn to action, by teeing off against Thompson of Shawnee-on-Delaware, |the “great one” Thursday and bury-| pa, stroked his way to a nine under ing him under a 6-2 score. “Old Diz” | nar 64 to lower the previous record by lasted just five innings against the | one stroke. [slugging Phils in his first start since| Five birdies on the first nine where @ line drive knocked him unconscious | he got a 32—and missed a 31 when and out of the lineup last Saturday, two-footer failed to drop—and The defeat of the Gas House gang} more and an eagle on the second left it two full games back of the| for another 32, got him his 64, Cubs, who also won their 10th start} Another 18 holes of medal out of 14 since July 1 by turning back | scheduled for Saturday, with the Boston Bees 1-0 in a ten-inning |36 holes Sunday. i list, with 1 tops last year’s record of at Fargo Braves Win Place in Finals |«z: sce, ree Of State Tourney |si22:"siesirnsa" Alabama 52,- 608, Fromhart, Notre Dame, 62,284; Strasburg and Kulm Eliminated |seiael, Minnesota, 50,996. Halfbacks—Berwanger, Chicago, in Thursday's Games at 57,116; Shakespeare, Notre Dame, 54,- i Devils Lake i JOHNNY LERMAN finals with a 6-3 triumph over Coop- lerstown Thursday, Friday remain in Ne Dakota for the neke’s four-hit hurling. the running for Bill Dickey and Joe DiMaggio led the Yankees to a 5-2 win over De- troit, boosting New York's pace-set- ting margin to 10 full games. The beating bounced the Bengals tout of second place and the wild-hit- ting Cleveland Indians moved in with @ 7-0 walloping over the Athletics— their sixth straight win. The Red Sox, with Jimmy Foxx hit- ting homers number 25 and 26 to take the Big League lead, climbed back into the first division by splitting with the St. Louis Browns. The Sox ost the first 6-3 and then won 5-4. Boston’s advance was at the expense of Washington which fell again be- fore Jimmy Dykes’ Chicago White Sockers, 9-7, and dropped into fifth place. In the National League, the Giants won over Pittsburgh 7-6, when Mel Ott hit his 17th homer with a mate on base in the eighth inning. The By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, July 17.—(%)—Give Jimmy Doyle of Cleveland for the snappiest line ‘of the of dope, all right, but it dished out by Lemwprepedl gentler Indiana’ distance runner, is sleeping. He is thinking of Louis," who is a pretty good ‘himself. Two other Indiana three to Lash all season. . . ‘Smith hadn’t bowed a tendon setting the pace in the 5,000 m¢ at Randall’s island last might have beaten Deckard, who fin- Sports Round-Up ||.2 oe TOURNEY FAVORITE Chicago Shotmaker Given Good f Chance of Winning West- ern Open Title SO SE 0 Chicago Reds and Dodgers were idle. AMERICAN LEAGUE Yanks Pull Tigers’ Claws New York — Broaca held Detroit in check as New York pounded out a 5-2 victory. RHE Detroit . 00 001 000— 2 8 2 New York. 012 010 10x— 5 9 0 Bridges and Hayworth; Broaca and Dickey. Red Sox Split Boston—St. Louis and Boston split doubleheader St. Louis the first 6-3 and Boston the nightcap 5-4. RH &t. Louis. Boston ished third, thanks to Lash’s coach- ing. Lou Gehrig says the reason he's hit- ting all his homers with the bases de- serted this year is because he for- gets about circuit clouts when men are on and concentrates on getting ‘em home. . . Is there any better recipe than a round tripper, Lou? .. . Com: Parison: Up to July 4, Gehrig had whiffed only 18 times... Jimmy Foxx had fanned 65 times. Rag fH i g lily i | Z Hy 7 g i 6 ig gee jt i pF ite i, winning run was the result of a walk, a passed ball, @ bad throw to second and a steal of home. Bing Crosby, the crooner, bet $10,000 Freddie Steele woul? whip Babe Risko, and cleaned up. . . Joe DiMaggio is hitting less than .225 F : Van Atta and Giuliani, Henry, Wilson and Berg. White Sox Beat Senators Washington—Although outhit, Chi- cago defeated Washington 9-7. RHE 040 010 211. 10 1 Washing! -000 034 00O— 715 1 Hemsley; 88 iL, rotate ool i gk F League in unas- sisted double plays? . .. Nobody, but iene struck out by Martin 7, by Deeds i, by Covey 1: bases on bails off Martin 1, off Deeds 6, off Covey 3. Umpire: ‘Ted Moe. Scorer: Bob Boelter. Kansas City .... 101 020 00-4 5 2 (Called at end of eighth to permit Indianapolis to catch train.) Trout and Crandall; Shores, Moore RHE Indianapolis .... 201 001 20-6 13 2 Our Boarding House With Major Y Z STAND STILL, y THEY'LL TAKE YOu FOR A WALL- DON'T WwoRRY / THEY'LL and Breese. Hoople HE TRIED" TOPUT % ‘EM ON AN IS-HOUR DAY, AND THE BEES that grand old timer, Sunny Jim Bot- tomley, with five. . . Looks like our hustling Cincinnati Reds have wilted under the heat wave. Applause cards to William G. Caw- ley, Westerley, R. I. Sun; Pau! Siegal, Te Wichita, Fred J. marion V. Yelter, Cain, Brown and Sewell; Appleton, Cascarella, Dietrich, DeShong and Bolton. Indians in Second Plice Philadelphia — Cleveland went into second.place as they defeated Phila- delphia 7-0, RHE Cleveland 300 001 012— 712 0 Philadelphia 000 000 000— 0 5 3 Allen and Pytlak; Fink, Gumbert and Hayes, Plaintiff. vs. J. W. Raymond, Harry Brownson, Sarah J. Brownson, Martha Rog- ers, J. H. Mai ) James H. Mar- shall, Samuel ng, Charles M. Henderson, Wilbur 8. Henderson, and Francis D. Everett, copart- . J. Edger! ew J. Edger- ly, Joseph W. Bull, Emerson i. ull, Bertha Lumm, Carlton Bull, Burleigh County, North Deko! Cc. G. Derby as County Auditor ot the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, Wm. Port, NATIONAL LEAGUE Warneke Bears Down Chicago—Warneke pitched four-hit ball as Chicago defeated Boston 1-0 Wilfred Courtney Barber, of Chi- cago, was the first reported Amer- ican casualty in the Ethiopian war. He died of malaria. _—— ‘William O innings) SUMMONS Port, and all other persons un- Cantwell and Lopez; Warneke and|®TATE OF NORTH DAKOTA COUN- known, claiming any estave or in- O'’Deay. IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH gu. | {rest in or lien or encumbrance Phillies Defeat Dean DICIAL DISTRICT. 7 | SERS sue prenaney. Coen (ROR 1B Ane, St. Louls—Philadelphia defeated St, | The Federal Land Bank of Saint Defendants, Louis and Diszy Dean 6-2. R H | Paul, a body corporate, Philadelphia ....000 311 010— 6 14 1 vs. Stella W. Kupkufski, a fee OD 12.8 2 ry Nagel ‘and Mrs. He THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint of the plaintiff the above entitled action, wh said complaint is hereto nexed ai erowith served upon you, [and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the subscribers at their office ao Dakors Naslcan Bank & Trus' Pjaintite, widow; is wi True Colors! known, claiming any ei terest in, or I or encumbrance upon the real estate described in Lean Association, a corporatio: Defendants. THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- hereby summoned to an- swer the Complaint in action, which will be filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court in and for Burleigh, State re ita, and to serve a head f your Answer upon the subscriber within thirty day: of this Summo! You Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) Talsa, “Okie—Max Beer, 1% have bi m tiled in tl Clerk of the District County, North Dakota, action is epee for the purpo! eae Ge erate fe coe real estate, to- (N%) of Bectit yonine C38)” Nort, Mange | “Eo two (8) Block Pela Fe wi (40) Fiani & Wetherby Ad- igs na ty, of Bismarok, Coun- Dat ie Burleigh, ite of North Dako- 1936, at And no. personas claim is made hy of the ssid defendants. Piaintite, Pra?