The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 27, 1917, Page 6

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i be ERR + to take off the rough spots. SCOOP Y BIG. LEAGUES STICK 0 THE THE CUB REPORTER [WE Away SCoUT- HIE OLD GROUNDS Show Little Disposition To Make Changes in Spring Training Camps ONLY ONE CLUB TO HIE AWAY TO A NEW CORNER d —big clubs show little disposition to make changes when the time comes for them to start on the annual spring junket. Seventy per cent of the ma- jors will be back at the old grounds this year unless Dave Fultz breaks things up by making his threatened strike effective. Only one club in the American league will hie itself to a new spot Wash- ington will stop this year at Augusta, league | Ga., instead of Charlottesville, where ! things have been done for Clarke Griffith’s pennant hopes in the past. The National league clubs this year show @ more lively disposition. The Cubs, for instance, have given up Flor- ida and will go all the way to Pasa- dena, Cal., to get in the early knocks. In doing- this they are dumping over the findings of Charles Comiskey, who @ long ‘time ago decided California wasn’t doing a thing good for his ball players. He went back to Texas, The Dodgers, pennant winners in of the BLADDER relieved in } 24 HOURS Fich Cap- sul bears t ame 43" Beware otconn, WANTED General Agent For Life Insurance Company. The New World Life Insurance is preparing to operate ely in North Dakota. Has splendid proposition to of- xperienced fer to two or thr men. wle of developing large districts in that state. Only experienced men wanted, who are ¢: ble of producing good volume high-class business and building up profitable general agency, men who are aibitious to grow with one of the’ strongest companies in the West: Wri nd learn kind of co-oper- ation we extend by making depos- i n banks throughout your dis- We 2 the money to do h, but want type of men that can imake most of unusual facili- ties extended, Address HOME OFFICE NEW WORLD LIFE INS. CO. Spokane, Washington. | Jackson has appeared, ; City. | 2.CENT BASEBALL | Sine SSNoy,: the the merry-go-round, undoubtedly will be immersed in the Hot Springs jof Arkansas for their daily baths. They will do their training stunts on the diamond left to shiver by itself When the Pirates chucked Arkansas loverboard. The Dodgers will have for | company the champion Red Sox of the | American league. | Pittsburgh threw over the Ozarks jand the rest of the Arkansas scenery lin favor of Columbus, Ga. to be cut, says ‘ause he only bat-| | ke is Jack Dillon's latest | meg cket. Dillon's fond of continu- | ous vaudeville. j The IMlinois legislature may pass | another of those ten-round boxing ; hat will be another place for | Welsh to box. | re taking the swat out of base- ball. They performed a similar oper- ation on boxing several yea Willie Jackson says he will never | | stall in a bout. Willie is’ still very young. i Wonder if Dave Futz ever read the | obituary of the late lamented Federal league, The main difference between a box- ing ma and a prize fight seems to be that there’s no fighting in the for- mer. The I-Knew-Him-When club_ will gain a large membership since Willie GRAND RAPIDS EXPECTS TO SET NEW RECORD FOR A. B, C, TOURNEY The annual national tournament of the American Bowling congress will be held in Grand Rapids in February and already energetic boosters from the ‘Michigan town are predicting the numver of entries will go above 80( teams and break all former records. The record for teams is now held by Toledo, where 75 fivemen teams rolled last year, of which. Toledo en- tered 224. Grand Rapids will have only about 100 teams entered in the 1917 tourna- ment, but expects unusually heavy en- tries from Detroit and Chicago to boost the entries to 800 teams. Chicago entere teams at Tole- do. und Rapids is expecting threo | times that number from the Windy FOR SOUTH BEND When it com s to innovations in minor league baseball turn to Indiana. Evansviile was the first city to build a municipal ball park where ———$ { iW oS ly " i in unt Seoecncue ante mnenenCessieet ee NN ELAN SDL! ai Chicago New York . Pittsburgh Cincinnati Phisadelphia Brooklyn St. Louis Boston ~ ° * ° ° ” ny * % Washington Boston Chicago New York . St. Louis Detroit Philadelphia Cleveland . OED CROSSE EEEIGE IGS OOOCEHS OOO OEE OOO ° The full list of training camps and teams to visit them follow: NATIONAL LEAGUE. AMERICAN LEAGUE. POTTETSSSSOOOS SOO OS SOOO TESCO SOD . Pasadena, Cal. (Marlin, Texas . Columbus, Ga, Shreveport, La. it. Petersburg, Fla. Hot Springs, Atk. . Hot Wells, Texas , Miami, Fla. «++. Augusta, Ga, . Hot Springs, Ark, ineral Wells, Texas sdieine Macon, Ga, Palestine, Texas . Waxahachie, Texas . Jacksonville, Fla. . New Orleans, La, SRAPTIPROSSES POSSESS minor league games~-are staged, and which is used as a municipal stadium | between times. Now South Bend comes across with & proposition for 2-cent baseball, back- ed by the chamber of commerce. Ed Smith, president of the South | Bend Central league club, has asked : the commercial body to help him sell | season tickets at $1.50, a cost of 2] cents a game, and the chamber w'll make an effort to sell 10,000 of thi tickets, which, Smith declares, will not only pay the cost of operation, not usual in the mjnors nowadays. HISKE AND DILLON WEAT FOR BIG BOUT Fights Recently Staged Prove That Two Must Meei in Long Affair To. Settle Tite . RETURN MATCH BETWEEN BOYS IS NOW EXPECTED New York, Jan, 27.—The two bouts staged recently in New York between Billy Miske, the light heavyweight demon of St. Paul, and Jack Dillon, the Indianapolis whiz, have accom- plished at least one thing. They have proved beyond a question that the fans never will be satisfied as to who is really the better man until the two have had a chance to mill it out in a long bout with a referee's decision tacked onto the last round. Many Dissenting Voices, Each bout between the two in New | Spring Suits Made-to-Order Repairing and Pressing neatly done. First Class Work Frank Krall Tailor ways right. Order a Load of | KOO! Lump © Coal Today Headquarters for all kinds of building material and fuel. We carry nothing but the very best, and our prices are al- Wbliems oL You will like our service. F. H. CARPENTER - Lumber PHONE 115 itraction possible, with the exception York has resulted in an overwhelm: ing opinion among New York newA- papers in favor of Miske. Each time, however, there have been enough dis- senting voices to make it quite appar- ent that enough of a shade was not earned to warrant a decision. In the first bout, two papers awarded a de- cision to Dillon, while two others call- ed the bout a draw. Deserve a Right Decision, Such slamming and banging as has been indulged in by these boys cer- tainly calls for a better opportunity than has been afforded in New York with a referee who refused to recog- nize that Queensberry rules call for a man to fight with one arm free. They deserve about somewhere where the proceeds will be enough o compensate the mfor the splendid ex- hibition they give. Also, they deserve the decision that would be given. May Arrange Another Bout New York promoters undoubtedly will be after a return match between he boys. The fans like that kind f milling and they’d be the greatest at- of Les Darcy, in their division. It is not improbable that Darcy will be matched with one or the other. JACKSON SAYS SCRUB CATTLE AND $150 LAND BAKE POOR COMPANION: Speaker at Stock Meeting Til: of Three Classes of Men Who Will Fail in Cattle Raising “Every man is adapted to the pure- bred stock business,” stated F. E. Co. Jackson, Hu:ley, S. D., banker-farmer, in an address here yesterday. “There are three classes of men who would be failures in it, as a rule. The first is the man who holds his purse strings so tight that he will not spend sufficient money to buy choice animals; the second is the man who buys a few good females and doesn't get a good sire, and the third is the but leave a fair margin, something . DRI % ® ‘a teacup full at any time during the man who buys pure-bred stock. and tries to win out by giving them scrub treatment. Just remember that scrub | stock and $150 an acre land are poor company.” Mr. Jackson has been financing young men in the cattle industry in} South Dakota, and made the assertion that out of the 16 men he has helped finance for short-horn herds, there has heen but one fajlure. PESOS OOOO OOD NK HOT TEA ¢ FOR ABAD COLD ¢ oe SOOO F HSS Get a package of Hamburg Breast Tea, 6r as the German folks call it, “Hamburg Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy: ‘ake a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water up- on it, pour through.a sieve and drink ay or before retiring. It is the most effective way to bfeak a cold and cure grip, as it opetis the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Alsq loos- ens the bowels, thits driving a cold from the system. ,, Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip.! It is inexppnsive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless. RUB BAGKACHE AND: LUNBAGO RIGHT OUT Rub Pain and Stiffness Away with a small Bottle of Old Honest t. Jacob’s Oil When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don’t suffer! Get a 25 cent bottle of old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil” at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don’t stay crippled! This soothing, penetrating oil needs to be used only once. It takes the ache and pain right out of your‘back and ends the GNETY RELGIS AT OPENNG OF lg CARNYAL Thovsands Robed in Multi-Color. ed Costumes Participate in First Day’s Celebration BOOSTERS SAY IT WILL SURPASS MARDI GR* (United Press.) ©" St. Paul, Mint, Jan. 27.Robed in multi-colored costumes that breathed the spirit of the Northlands, thous+ ands of men and women, boys and girls today froliced in St. Paul’s snow banks, and disported in sub-zero air. It is the second annual St. Paul Out- door Winter Sports carnival, and will last until February 3. City Given Over to Gayety. The city was given over entirely to gayety today. Parades, marching clubs’ demonstrations, and all activi- ties of the monster celebration were held outdoors. The affair this year grew near national. Its boosters plan that it will surpass the New.Orleans Mardi Gras, the St. Louis Veiled Pro- phet unveiling, and the Seattle Rose Week celebrations. 2 Hill Back of Carnival. Louis W. Hill, son of the late James J. Hill, empire builder, and now head of his father’s interests, is, back of: the carnival. He costumed’ 2,500 in warm woolens for the event. Dele- gations came from Winnipeg, CI Grand Combination Sale 40 Registered Draft Horses 60 Registered Beef Cattle WILL BE SOLD AT AUCTION AT MANDAN, NO. DAK. THE HORSES WILL BE SOLD FEBRUARY 21. ‘ . THE CATTLE WILL BE SOLD FE®8RUARY 22. Sales begin promptly at 1o’clock each day. Under the auspices of the North Dakota Live Stock association. The horses include 30 Percherons, 18 stallions and 12 mares rang- ing in age from 2 to 8 years; also 10 Clydesdales, 6 stallions and 4 mares. There are a number of mature stallions that are proven sires read for a heavy season’s work, Also a niimber ‘of mares in foal. The cattle include 30 Short Horns, 16-bullsjand 12 cows and heif- ers; 20 Angus, 8 bulls and 12 cows and heifers; and 10 Herefords, 6 pulls and 4. heifers, This is an offering better than the ordinary, horses being drawn from the best studs and cattle from the best herds in the state. All horses will be inspected by a state veterinarian and sold with the guarantee of the association as to their heakh and soundness. All cattle will be tuberculin tested and sold with health certificates showing their freedom from tuberculosis. ‘ Sales will be held in heated building near Northern Pacific depot at Mandan. e Terms of sale, cash or bankable paper. For catalog or further particulars, write Or, Edmund Mackey, Mandan, N. Dak., or W. H. Peters, Secretary, North Dakota Live Stock Association, Agricultural College, Fargo, North Dakota. go, Butte, Mont., and intermediate points. Hundreds of bands played’ uncom- plainingly in the low temperatures throughout the city. Strong men from the South St. Paul stockyards formed a fearless “Hook ‘Em Cow” marching-club, which made merry by promiscuously “grabbing anyone) not | smiling, and bouncing them in a blanket. | Shoes Repaired oe Serer L. E. Larson 406 hain Street Fence Post j Made of Reinforced Concrete misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn’t burn the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sciati- ca and lame back misery so promptly! Kind on: cet here. We now have on + +a god supply of MONARCH : This is a nice clean, clinker. a“ tha’ “hich. will burn twice as has as coy ordinary kind. Try | tou today and let us show-you Lumber Co. PHONE 17 Owl Creek Nut Wyoming Lump Anthracite Nut This reinforced concrete fence post is made by the farmer on his own premises, at a cost to him that is less than by using a set of mo. the price of any ordinary cedar post, ds that can be procured from me. The means of attaching the fence wire to the post is the secret of its success. This is the pa- tented feature. The fence wire ‘can be attached -or detached instantly: without changing or destroying any Sooke by nection wi manipulating a retaining rod in con- the permanent staples. They will not rot, burn or rust 1 have an attractive proposition for agents. in exclusive territory. Business of Farmers’ Clubs is solicited. 7 ‘Write me for further particulars Hellstrom Bismarck, North Dakota “SATURDAY, JAN.°27, 1917. ° | 1 aad

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