The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1917, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ally work a hardship on the clubs in- | Six SCOOP jie ous, HEY You- BEAT \T- LAY YOUR, EGe AN' BEAT \T-T SHOULD SAY2 L NEED MY Best! THATS “TH’ GIRL. — Now Scoop: Ought Fo: Feed:It Mint OBLIG ING SURE: A RUNNY EGG} A DOLLAR SIGN ON ed ed MOSFET 25 TE. = Firsr-EG@e SHE LANED AFTER TL KOCKED HER. Sy; OH Boss — Bo You Minp | OFFICIALS. STOP TALK OF CUTTING LEAGUE SCHEDULES Good Weather Usually on Tap for Opening Dates, Says Governor J. K. Tenor New York, Jan. 12 There is one mighty good reason why arguments in | favor of shortening N schedules or starting them later, never leration at meetings of the older major league. Governor John K. Tenor son and his explanation: quietus on talk of that sor ured it out last summer when the Bos- ton Brave: aving such a hard arly in the spring a the rea- | an ago the s had good weather at home and so did other National league clubs in But later it began to, rain, the east. wa 1, and everything against baseball. was that although the Braves were in the race right along they had one of Pore! ©. UNDERWOOD. UnoeRwour the poorest ‘s in their history. Governor Tenor observed that good ae /, WZ weather had favored this club early Wy and he hegan to go into records. He gpl A a tex | found that just as often as not good of weather was on tap for opening dates, and in fact for the first month of the off. Then would come bad spells.| . i struck the eastern uit and some times they He found, he declared, that HES THE ONLY PLAYER MGR. IN THE BIG LEAGUES By Paul Purman, didn't. more games had been lost in late sea- son than in the early spring. With this to work on, it was easy pilot of the Red Sox saved the play- | bench this year. ing manager in the big leagues. ting the season ort would actu-; to discover that sta later or cutting it s the bench, Bill Carrigan’s jbeing the only active player left at the helm. stead of giving them a at the good weather John Heydler, sec league, added a little information {78 when he said that for several years tH rt om | thr ; raze ‘ard, the new Red § ‘oh d a November weather has been better Frazee and Ward, the new Red Sox | Moran and Robinson each on "| owners. i # The retirement of Joe Tinker as Sime tone | mia ager of the Cubs, took the last 5 early and perfect ones playing ager out of the National ed three ed’ once. ie ‘ e 7 fi He eo. Barry Only Playing Manager in Majors! Former Athletic Shortstop Is Youngest Big League Leader and Has Played in More World Series) Than Any Ballplayer. : {in only two:or three games last year, The appointment of Jack Barry as | is excepted. He will remain on the Half a dozen years ago more than | pennants. Fifteen of the reinsmen on the two | half the 16 managers were players. In big time circuits do their driving from | 1910, 1911 and 1912 from § to 10 of uccessor | the bosses played regularly Of the 20 pennant last 10. years, 13 have | Barry will remain at second hase| by bench’ managers. r, having made that a condi-| copping four times, Hugh Jenaings,! come up in hig individual play and, have not been coniple n accepting the position from] three; McGraw, three and Stallings, | that naturally cuts down his own effi- Playing managers who took the| him commit errors of omission or seven were Carrigan and Chance | commission enough: to lose ball games. Past_records of baseball do not_in-| proved. Vag other contenders: for the position. | ne ih pepe renga eer THIRD EASIEST INFIELD fleld. should he played. JESSE. HARPER BUBY nearly completed, but the foot! dates have not been’ drranged: Chicago; Jan..12,-Jacques Fournier |... : first baseman with the Chicago: Amer]-| cans, wants: to return-to the-evtfield. }He has informed Manager Rowland that he will try for the right field berth next season. John Collins; Ed- dje Murphy and Nemo Leibold are}-jish authdr; declining an invitation purchaser of the’ Columbus ¢lub of the American association, considers: third base the easiést’ position in the in- “That's why I'm going-to:play third ow herewith: for Columbus next season—because I j think it wil be a soft spot,” the fot- mer.manager of, the. Chicago Nation- he’s a bit too slow to i jd tinte. position, as it | me... I€ Americans ball Ne val WHY GEORGE BERNARD SHAW REFUSES A -newly published letter from jthe truth abou my: Polen gud ‘velig- R , Eng: ‘lous convictions: or’ péj 8 they. nev- George Bernard shaw, famous Eng: fer heard of anyone telling thet suai oh ies : a about. such matters, ( from’ the Drama League of New York, | know that opinions om marriage and [contains two amusing paragraphs— |the population. question’ Ww ena eee ’ pi one in which the playright pictures me. to. several years’ imprisonment. POSITION, SAYS TINKER jinsete'in lls’ old age and an object | Thay do not know that 1 ; a ‘of disillusion to his potential American | quently take , railway” journey# FEE ie Bie ene audfence, and another in which he re- ladies to whom I am_ not, married. (an. cites.the dangers he might incur un- abandoned practice comtion jn. Eur- der the Mann. act. and other of our lud-| ope), and, that for this I might in Am- icrous moral preservatives. They fol- | erica end my days ina felo j They do not know that.in many states ‘i the. purchase, of a smart tie’ or the ‘America sometimes starts a train of accidental profusion form my pocket thought. which. ends in my wondering ‘of. an, attractively , colored. hdndker- us off ious as to whether it might disappoint from German .dyes my tiee and hand- r knew anything kerchiefs were the .stupefaction of about America, they would excludé all London), would consign, me to. the visitors until they had put their house penitentiary. if a. policeman detected in order, But.J never yet met an Am-'a lady in the act of admiring. them. one d i yerican who had any notion of the insti, : But I know all these things, and a ON FOOTBALL SCHEDULE ‘tutions. of his native land beyond ag ort, ai {Notre Dame, Ind., Jan, 12.—Jesse Harpér;.. aftiletic: direvtor at. the Uni- j versity. of Notre Dame, $s* busy: ar- | Tanging the 1917. baseball and foot- ball schedule, The baseball schedule, which provides for 2 number of games with western” conference teams, is 'y anxiety lest I should disappoint whether America ever feels at all anx-|c! Benetal and mostly erroneous Atlantic. should not be allowed to land if I told ‘hief (and until the war" cut oor: many more of, the '5; idea they naturally make me that they are glorious, They do not President Wilson will, give.me a ‘sate know the risks they are asking me to conduct, insuring my. return from the [tun when they invite me to cross the lines of American. morality, I shall be They. do not. know that I much more likely to trust myself to ff ruth They. dg’ not ie cell. bragka, howev Dame’ again next year. aba: —AND BAW:iS’EM OUT” RIGHT ON.THE FIELD ing defi games with Minnexo! teate that the bench manager has iw wide margin on the playing man- | ager, but The manager playing on the field |town, Fordham, Boston college may have all the requisities of a great Conne Mack} whole team with the problems that |tional contest with tht ciency, perhaps just enough to make| GLEASON MAY CONTINUE each and Clarke} Playing managérs who have become} Chicage,..Jan. bench managers “have generally im- nie years have: been league, if Miller Huggins, who played CONCRETE STADIUM FOR Statis stopped ules. sity instead. Bloomington, Ind., Jan. 12.—A con- crete stadium, with a seating capacity ICE TENNIS GAME TO neighborhood of $79,000 is to be er- Grand For tennis, recently Stiehm, athleti the east as a novel wel las attrac- Cook, of Indi tive sport, will be introduced into this Jer, of Crawf city next Sunday morning when mem~ of Indianapo bers of the Grand Forks Ice Tennis alumni secretry, have been appoint: |¢™ club, but recently organized, will play ed to carry out the stadium plan. three sets. They propose to visit other univer- Ice tennis has been declared an ex- sities in the west in search of ideas, ceptionally attractive ice novelty, and, son. although played under the same rules OHIO STATE TO PLAY heen scheduled with Denison univer-} SCHEDULE FOR INDIANA UNIVERSITY 'LED | Rouncement has not been made. Clar- IVE UNSETT! ence Rowland, manager of the team, Jan. 12.—E, ©,| considers Gleason a valuable aid in. j aut nes eaters were | Stiehm, athletic director at Indiana | developing young players, Gieseca's han 10,000 a sting i imade by, Ohio state authorities to ar- university, has been empowered to} temperament, Rowland: says, makes BE PLAYED AT FORKS of moro than 10,000 and costing in the vines a‘game with Cornell, bul the| mak ap’ ie 1917 football schedule jhim thoroughly fitted for the task, Denison was tied for UNIVERSITY OF INDIANA first honors: in the Ohio conference last season and has prospects of a ; Strong team next fall. ected at Indiana university, 3. 0. |/thacans declined to: come to Colum-! without further consultation with the director: George M. bus, The 1917 season will open one| athletic committee. |week earlier than last year. Case will | said that except for the Ohio and Pur- ville Frank [.. Jones, | Play the opener here on Sept. 29, fol-! due games, nothing definite has been and Ralph V. Stollitt, lowed by Ohio Wesleyan one week lat-| settled as to the schedule. Northwestern, which played Ohio | a possibilit ith jfor the conference championship last ; season here with Wabash. Ohio state [8Chool basketball game inthis fall, will come to Columbus Oct. 13 for | will be played at: Indianapolis on Nov. f Will’ be played:at the local, Y. M: C,. the first contest of the “Big Nine” sea-j 3, next season, although official Bloomington, Ind Coach Stiehnr| MICHIG. Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 12,—Mi he said, of opening the | ey, tonight, when . the. firs It is probable that the: Minnesota game will Le played at Minneapolis. as the summer game of tennis, new al- 7 GAMES NEXT SEASON lurement is added by the hazardous task of swinging a racquet while at full speed on the blades. ‘Clever skat= | Columbus, O., Jan. 12.—Seven foot- ing must be combined with clever t hall games complete the schedule for nis so that nov are not consid-|Ohio State university next season. ered in the runnin The 1916 season champions of the Twelve local tennis artists western conference will meet four “Big Nine” elevens—Northwestern, In- diana, Wisconsin and Illinois. Ober- ter members of the new orga and it is expected the members! be increased rapidly when the sport |lin, 0., traditional foe, has been tem- is once seen in the city. Switzerland, and “| through this paper. ‘New Universities Dictionary BISMARCK TRIBUNE slaves. the military lash. its limits, suffice What Is Going on in Germany As Told by the Newspapers We Get From’ Teuton Empire, : ia be hh BKNECHT PAPER Bruns MASSES RISING The following translation is from}in Essen, of a simultaneous demon- porarily dropped, and a game has ;the Tagwacht, the organ of the Swiss | stration in Duisburg. -a= | social democracy, printed at Berne, piece of the socialist democracy in | Another in Berlig, on the oceasion of Germany. Liebknecht, the noted Ger- | the revision of thé ‘Liebknecht trial. man socialist, addressed all-his mani- 0 festos since the beginning of the war | on strike and compelled the dock own- - | ticte is an appeal, headed’“The Limit,” | yield concessions, to the working people of Germany: I “From cast and west . trains are | tation; indications that the tide is-ris- rolling in with Polish and Belgian |!g. To attempt to fetter the masses Under military escort Bol-| With chains in this state of affairs is gian and Polish workers, torn away | &4mbler’s last trick.” from their wives ard children, are be- if Sscrootnor ing driven to Germany. WAR CAUSES 5 chains and whip laws, commonly caH- ed the civilian compulsory servite bill, . will force many thousands of textife Germ poate er ak og orth E workers into munition: factories. ag follows: t * “All those rejected from muntary service—cripples, children, and old-| awakens in our’ otherwise harmless age pensioners—are to be put under } boys wiki desires that often assuihe tion is to be settled by the sword, and | and, in many cases the mother. prob- woe to those who, like the ‘Hamburg | ably owing to the miserable conditiahs workmen, cross their arms to show | of her existence, can no more exert a that the power of the state of siege has | restraining influence on her ¢h'ldrén. “If the squeezing out of the last | the majority of the teachers are in the ounce of strengtit from those worn- | trenches. out victims of imperialism will not | often the schoof houses serve as bat- make up for the healthy and able-bodied wage-earners, insatiable militarism will drive to its altar the’| woidertul system of education, but last working girl or woman. R The limit has been rea¢hed—the high fees we béi it of the sacrifices which imperial-| from the advantages of a liberal edu- ism can exact from the German work- | cation ; af ers. In the last few months the pro-| “Wh fing excellent form this early in to select ‘a five, stration strike i ko occasion of the Liebknecht trial, of a great street demonstration’ of Aug. 16 “On Nov. 2 a great demonstration so. chief mouth- | took place in Dreésdon, and next day “In Hamburg 30,000 dockers went The following ar- | ers, and the military authorities to “These are proofs of a deep fermen- The new | PRORLEM IN GERMANY. The problem of the schoolboy in |: doubt it is the war spirit whic |- The wages ques- |-ugly shapes. The father is at the front, The greatest Professional and Amateur. Jumpers: ‘of the World will participate. “The schools’ are disorganized, ‘as Discipline has gone, and 8. We are bragging, much about our in 7 Parades ane. eats: peed: anid | Bani ting, Ten. Rinks, Big Carlin "Bon. spiel & Mammoth "Toboggin The Biggest Event the North- we must confess thet by charging suth the poorer classes not imitate those countries letariat has begun to rattle its cliains |' Where public care is taken of the chil- west. has: ever known. very forcibly. In the first number of | dren of the poor, who are provided Brisgvewe senny and friends ‘Spartacus,’ the illegal organ of the | where necessary with food, shoes and and haye the time of your international gfoup, which sppeared | clothing? Perhaps then we should rot lives, a demotstration’ sti in September, accounts were given of | niect. with the Woeradine apectable | 2 ‘huth reintiet-. men in Berlin in ‘July, of « 3 z 5 ¢ of 60,000: work- demon: | baretoot eat it ign 50008 Costumed Carnivaiters - ..WH play’ ‘otre and Alma, from present indications, prob- ably will not be on the schedule. Kal- amiazoo college may get.g guiite, Noth- has been elabateed about i yf other con- ferencé’ teams, although. local: senti- , ment favors.one or more games with’ Sey mer etn often Wits members of the “Big Nine.” .George- and Dartsmouth are seeking games ‘with | leader, may ever: be more proficient |Notre Dame and are anxious to play in the| than the boss sitting on the bench, but | either in Indianapolis or Chicago, :.Ar- directed | he must divide his thinking for the |fangements for the anita! tntersec. W ‘Army eleven! an- FEY TO: PLAY GRAND ¥F RES TONIGUT There is |:gan City will invade Grand, Forks 1 The Michiganites are reputed to have & strong quitit of’ basket: tosgers, while, the local aggrégation have been show-' the season. Coach Duggan his been work- ing his court‘ artists hard and will have a dearth of material from which Ast ‘AS COACH CHICAGO: TEAM William “Kida” the veteran. baseball player.|.. probably will: be retained: as coach of. the Chicago American:. league club It’s the All the piquaney and zest, that’s the secret of ‘‘ Piper’s get from “‘Piper.”” So why Freat. 3 P eonvefii fresh, clean. and appetizing. PIPER NEI CHEWING TOBACCG - Same Grand Old “Piper!” ES Sir! ‘Fhe same ‘ chewing tobacco that . old ‘m& chewed before the moderh:motor’ truck supplanted the horses. 2. 5: Farmers: have crowed Piper Heidsieck’ the’ prize : winner these thirty-five odd years,-ai favorite chewing tobacco from Maine to California: tasty, tender, fruity timers today it’s the: the flavor and: snap of tender, sun-ripened Kentucky white Burley—cured: by. the original and exclusive ‘‘ Piper” process—’ ”” popularity... - Big. and bountiful is the harvest of ‘satisfaction ‘jou’ | wait or debate? You're ‘oddenough to: appreciate rea/ chewing tobacco. your: taste to a fruity chew: of:¢hamipagne _, flavored “Piper.” You'll sure love it! ae You'll Like The Modern Package, Too! * The world’s best. chewing tobacco comes jin. a! ent ‘package keepifig it. Pasteboard slide. boxdi!? Je; tin 10e. ~Alsoin : the origh inal plug form: .

Other pages from this issue: