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| i | | rene ee ee ~§cooP RESULTS FROM BOWLING MEET AT JAMESTOWN Sterns of Fargo, Swoop Down on} Bowlers Saturday Taking a Share in Money { BETTCHER WINS BALL | FROM COMMERCIAL CLUB} (Special to the Tribune.) Jamestown, N. D., Jan, 22.—Arriv- ing in Jamestown Saturday, the Fargo | teams were not at all backward in let- ting the other contestants in the Northwest bowling tournament know they were in the game for the money, and the first money at that. The Val-/¢. Jey City teams, which had been having for the four days o! yoke to find that by Tgo pin experts had brok- FUNNY HOW A DAW WILE YAKE to ME - THIS ONE SEEMS TG THE CUB REPORTER Winnipeg, ‘Man, Jan. 2 st dog race ever run on the Amer ontinent will start from here J {and finish in Paul, 500 miles en into two of the five high places in traiis entered. trenches in the doubles. La aa erald of Jamestown took fifth) m place inthe si forcing out John-; ¢| son of Valley and dividing the q five places, two for Fargo and three for Jamestown. ta In the doubles, Fargo succeeded in; ousting Valley City and Cooperstown from their places except in the pre-! Leod of Valley C 1,171, The final struggle in the dou-{ bles came in the evening, when the experts of Jamestown and Fargo bat-,thoroughly as a tled tor a share in the prize money. hi In the team event, which Valley city was leading with the three fir: up to the last day of the nament; | the Sterns of Fargo took first with score of 2,781 Blacks’ s of Jam town, second, with 2,765; Busine o! The redskin governs his pack 0; ed the winn Should an Indian get in a leaders he receives a winter's supply | collie. nt, with the fastest and t dog drivers of the Canadian It will be a contest between India} nd white men, and between the! nethod. Indians lash their dogs criu- Ly i empts to gain ground; white rivers use the lash seldom. bru. long al force the paleface by kindne: This derby will be longer than the; do. yee Alaskan derby,.run annually between | {Nome and Candle and i mier position held by Soulis and Mc-| miles. It will be 200 miles longer than | drivers, is ‘the redskin favorite. John; ity, with the score of! the famous non-stop derby of the Hud-: son. bay region, return, 412 The dogs for the race are trained as high-priced race- orse is prepared for a big turf event Cash priz f groceries, for they refuse to race s of $1,900 will be award-/ ky can be. Ah they are white men. | try back years to a g the| Canadian timber wolf 2nd Capt. Baldwin Anderson of River ton, British Columbia, and His Racing | Dogs. ! ‘for mere money. Gold coin means | nothing to them; food and blanket Tommy'Spence of Bad Throat. Man.. jthe most ‘noted of all Cree Indian Isfeld, who took 100 gogs to Shackle | ton, the British explorer, for the Ant lartcic trip, stands foremost amon3 the white drivers. He will drive a pack of huskies, as pure bred as a hus- y We his ances- It is expected the race will Drivers and Dogs To Sleep on Snow, Live in Great 500-Mile Drive’ | the BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE en fish diet. The drivers will,run alongside their dogs most of the way. hopping into rest. KNOW BUT WHUT THIS DUCK BELONGS MONDAY, ‘JANUARY: 2, 1917. trifle-cver 30 miles being trav- inv. “Spence and Isfeld have de wager that the winner will 1 live on frozen fish. Any i ¥, would weaken - and might ruin ir stomachs e accustomed to the froz- carryalls from time to time for men of Jamestown, third, with Hunters, Jamestown, fourth, 682, and the Dakotas, Valley with a se of The Bia stones lost first place by only 16 pins, the last pin in a strike would have changed the score, giving the Black- stones the lead. O. Bettcher won the Jamestown Commercial clud ball with a score of | 1,767 in all events. The five high men in the s were: \ O. Bettcher, Jamestown . Emil Edhind, | Mueller, Ware, Fitzgerald, Jamestown Five high in doub! id McLeod. Valley City, Ware and Dech, Fargo Edlund and Long, Fargo ....... Johnson and Stadden, Fargo ... McGarry and Stromme, Rogers. .1.125 WOULD REDUCE SIZE OF COUNCIL AT MILWAUKEE Madison, Wis., Jan. 22—A reduction in the size of the common council of the city of Milwaukee from 37 to 18 and a four year term for the mayor, who is vested with power to appoint the city attorney is provided for in two bills introduced by Senator David V. | Jennings. fi CAPSULES e ceeds (iby) sale bearsth nate ae NOY Beware of cornterfeits SUITINGS AND OVERCOATINGS In the Latest Patterns Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed ‘ MERCHANT TAILORS ESTABLISHED 1878 PINKIE MITCHELL NOW THREATENS KILBANE’'S CROWN Johnny Kilbane’s title is threat. | ened again. | This time t Pinkie” Mitchell, | brother of Richie Mitchell, Mil- waukee lightweight flash. iys his brother is the g he ever saw on two predicts he will be ig champion within has been bexing with and has flattened a n three-round bouts stag- yy the A. A. U. in Milwaukee. Young “Mitchell is tall for his weight and Richie thinks this him an advantage. I've taught that kid every: Richie s: “and ome things I nev- Kilbane - better er when he ready to tackle the profes- sionals.” er saw before. sidestep. this youn, get: TWINS HAVE A MIXED HEREDITY POINTING TO WAR Misneapolis, Minn., Jan. 22.—The |blood of most parts of warring Eur- ope is mingled in the veins of the “Cosmopolitan Twins,” Minneapolis’ rst-pair of 1917 twins, whose arrival, which took place several days ago, was announced today. Yes, if there is anything in her- dity, the Bevernick babies ought to be fighting themseives. Their mother is a Belgian. Her father was a Russian. Their father is an American. His father was a German. The birth of the twins was an- nounced today by their French grand- mother, Mme. Elise Pinet. both girls and were born at St. Bar- They are The Lvestick Department of The Da- kota Farmer wants to be of service to you. Hf you are i the market for any kind of stock—grades oF pure-breds—we will locate the kind you want and the closest to you. \<. , Our livestock representatives are constantly traveling all over this and adjoining states and aim to keep in touch with every breeder. This service is free. Tell us what you want and we will inform you where you can bey such stock or will make the purchase for you if you desire. Write gjrect to The Da- kkota Farmer, Aberdeen, S..D., or to the rep- resentative closest to yoo. REPRESENTATIVES RN. Aberdeen, S. D.; Horace Otis, Yankton, S.D.; B. H. Critchfe'é, | visht, fl ;Nabas hospital. Their parenis are Mr. sland Mrs. Albert Bevernick, who make ; | their home with Mme. Pinet. o—__— 5 M'CUTCHEON MARRIES; HONEYMOON TO BE SPENT Chicago, Jan. —John TT. Me- ‘Cutcheon, cartoonist. war correspo! dent and soldier of fortune, who was ! married here today to Mis: ! Shaw, has always had a hankering to {live in the haunts of pirates and | buried gold. | Island. He took the island. | After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. ‘ Meutcheon started on their trip to the and dales of Indiana. McCutcheon recently bought Balt Cay, the island of the Bahama group, miles from Nassau, New Providence, and is in the midst of British terri- tory. WISHEK FARM ACK { Cp LE PROPOSALS Wishek, N. D., Jan. 20—Protests against “two more years of feed dock- |ing and all the other forms of thiev- lery which Bill No. 44 is destined to jabolish,” were registered by 75 farm- ers of this vicinity today in adopting ‘a resolution addressed to the North Dakota senate advocating immediate passage of the house measure provid- ing for a new constitution. NEGRO STICKS IN CHIMNEY; i TRYING TO KEEP WARM Des Moises, Iowa, Jan. 22.—When Walter A. Huntoon, a grocer, investi- gated a sound in the basement of his store, he found William Gaines, a ne- gro, Stuck in the chimney. Gaines says he entered at the top in order to get warm, but found the aperture at the bottom too small to emerge ithrough., Firemen chopped him out. BARTON FARMER WRITES COMMISSIONER FOR WIFE Grasd. Forks, N. D., Jas. 22.—Axel Fred, farmer at Barton, this state, has decided that he needs farm, and desires such help in the he has written A. G. Sorlie, “Cupid’s commissioner,” appointed at the time North Dakota bachelors played havoc with hearts.of Chicago girls, and asks for assistance. BOY RIDES AWAY ON MULE TO SEEK FORTUNE IN WEST Sioux City, Iowa, Jan. 22,—Chris. Greiser, 18 years, mounted the family mule at Beemer, Neb., this week and started out to make his fortune in the West. His brothers traced him here and learned he had started, in the teeth of a cold wave, for the Rocky Mountains. Five-reel Paramount feature, “He comedies at the Bismarck theater to- help on his| form of a wife. With this idea in view | Fell in Love With His Wife,” and two; | legi: | corsets in Indiana, today declared that j “the corset has killed more women j and Evelyn | war and famine.” ' This worse than barbarous cus- ; né | tom, That left him a choice’ waig, | between New York city and Treasure injurious than the savage custom of ; flattening the head or the Chinese custom of binding feet. ; ‘ ! “Reports indicate that thousands of | land he has dreamed of ever since he | getormed babies are born every year | sailed his boyhood brig under the as the result of mothers binding their skull and crossbones over the hills | waists with corsets. The government ; has passed laws prohibiting the sale ‘of habit forming drugs. mi government going to do to prevent the perhaps better known as “Treasure coming generation from living in a Island.” This romantic little splotch whalebone prison before birth?” of land stands up from the sea five | seanicdy Sata |LAMOURE Il last = 0 | CORSETS MORE FATAL | Indianapolis, ON TREASURE ISLAND Hoeitke, the woman who will ask the | LaMoure, N. D., Jan. 22.—LaMoure high school defeated Oakes at Oakes THAN WHISKEY, WAR TOBACCO AND FAMINE | Jan. 22.—Mrs. Anna! islature to pass a law abolishing children than whiskey, tobacco, | ” said she, “of deforming the of girls and women is far more What is the WINS OVER OAKES 30 TO 14 LONG: ARMED BATTERS. MAKE LONGEST HITS Laws of Physics Work Out in Baseball Just as They Do in the Laboratory LONG DRIVES RESULT FROM GREAT LEVERAGE The hardest hitters in baseball—the fellows who connect with the old pill and drive it the farthest—the real fence -busters, prove that the laws of physics work out in baseball just as they do in a scientific laboratory. These sluggers, almost to a unit, tall men with long arms and most of them use long bats. And the long hits result from the great leverage they get which cannot |: be attained by the player with short arms or the player who “chokes” up on his bat and pokes the ball. The longest hitter is not necessar- ily the. leading batter, and at the pres- ent time it is‘ remarkable that the most powerful hitters in the two big leagues are not even in the .300 ¢lass. Walter Pipp was generally credited the heaviest hitter in the American league last year. He batted only’ .262, but he led the league in home runs and | made many triples and ‘doubles. All of his Urives were long“ tnd’ trashed to the outfield with remarkable speed and force. There may be many fans who ques- tion Pipp’s right to be considered ‘the; heaviest swatter in the league. I put the question up to Billy Evans, a great judge of batting, who toJq.me he con- sidered Pipp superior, to either Sam nm Jong Pipp is a tall, long-armed man, He! uses a 42-inch bat, the longest pér- meets the ball with a free swing there sphere. | Crawford and Jackson are both long- armed. Both meet the ball with free swings and get the advantage of lev- erage. In the National league the hardest ' hitter perhaps is Fred Luderus of the Philadelphia club, a .289 batter last year, whose great-reach, aided by the length of his war club, gives him tre- mendous hitting power. Heine Zimmerman, a much lighter bat, and Cy Williams of ——————— week by a score of 30 to 14. i CAPITAL & SURPLUS $200,000.00 A Home Like Spirit Prevails © in the banking fooms Of the First National Bank. Every consultation is conducted’ with the utmost - frankness: yet in wpsolute confidence, by our corps of efficient, experienced ‘officials and employees. — We invite small as well as-large accounts. | whose consistency with the club made mitted by baseball rules, and when he;}- is a tremendous leverage. behind the]. WHEN IN Bromagck MAKE THE CITY NATIONAL BARBER SKOP Your SHOP EACH CUSTOMER GETS INDIVIDUAL HOT TOWEL Chicago, are also terrific hitters, Both | are long-armed and use long hats. | WAR IS TAKING { The, loverage principle has always] | ITS TOLL FROM i applied in baseball. | ITIS. i Perhaps the hardest hitter of all |_BASTIBE: ATHLETES | times was Ed Delehanty, whose death 14 years ago ended one of the most. remarkable careers in baseball. Delehenty was a free, hard hitter, War is steadily taking its toll from the ranks of British athletes, There have been few casualty lists which have not contained the names of athletes famous in some branch of sport, The latest lists isstied it London contain the name of Wilfred G. Vint, a fdmous coxswain, who steered the Shrewsbury crew to victory for five consecutive years. Lieut, Lionel E. King-Stephens, a famous British hockey player, and Ted Wickham, an Australian swimming champion, both were ‘killed. on the Somme. him one of the most feared. men to pitchers and outfielders. His average of .365 for 12 years is one of the most remarkable jn the major leagues. Delehanty lacked an inch’ of. being six feet tall, byt he had remarkable long-arms and-used a long bat, Five-reel Paramount feature, “He Fell in Love With His Wife,” and two comedies at-the Bismarck theater to- night; roa ‘ SOMETHING REALLY NEW. IN Hotel Catering © MERCHANTS ‘HOTEL, : 8t. 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