The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 29, 1917, Page 6

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i Et mbes iene laa tasha SIX) ~ SCOOP , THE cu, If You Don’t Believe This---Ask Scoop: OF. COURSE L GRANT THAT THO ARE YOU d a home for aged ballpla Y great dope and we're for it but think that thero should be for decrepit rail presidents, cl ee etd has ward to. The Amateur the Hugh i will coach the Har: | vard baseba am. With great joy we will greet Hughie with his mona- white spats, wrist watch and hting the bull and throwing it are two different games, according to Mr, Jack Johnson hunter killed a moose. ce has been “canned” i It didn't colons asking him to join now being organized. Billy Miske is to take a rest. Well, Billy deserves it more than mest fight; |, ers we know. An Ohio man was so surprised when another guy held four aces against his ' player; king full that he knocked him down and got ested. Can't blame him We'ddight for that, too. Who says prohibition isn't advanc- “ing. BaSebail magnates drank water at a recent meeting. ¢ Johnson may a regiment become a_bull- Not if TO MY SLED.SO To. WONT | SyOP Yo BEG xX YouR_ FAR DON, ENTITLED a 2, =: I HAD:NO BUSINESS TO == ==} BREAK INTs NOUR_ BUNGALO - NEI ETB --MONDAY, JANUABY-29, 1917, Foot BALL ident of the ball- y, is the most talked of man in baseball today! Still, there is less known t than of a hundred rganization or of to fight should the men he will ha the strike come to a head—the mem- bers of the national commission and the big league magnates. ge reader is likely to be- litle Fultz, for the most heard of the fraternity j Johnson. a hitter enemy, who likes to; leave the impression that Fultz demagogue, a tr ema a biter who rves li y {eration Nothing could be further from the The ave trouble maker and bac! rves little or no consid- — Ga BALL Dave F: ultz, Athlete and Lawyer Will Not Give Up Fight Until He Knows He is Beaten PRACTISED LAW REFEREES FOOTBALL ORGANIZED FRATERNITY ole is a brilliant fellow, a good’ tung and brilliant, ..He was one of the and an old-time atulcrs who} understands ballplayers, aments, idiosyncracies a Fultz is a southerne:. spoken, but has nerve aud if to a showdown between him and. the] ed the L commission he will. have to be i:¢ked before he will quit. Fultz organized the fraternity in; starting his August, 1912, as a direct result of the| Detroit players’ .famous strike in May, which followed-the suspension of Ty Cobb after he attacked a spectator at) New York. That winter an agreement was reached between magnates and play- some ways resembles the ituation today. reer as an athlete has been strike Ful long, wordy controversy | 3 greatest ha!!-backsFever ‘developed at Brown. where he pkpyed in 1894-5-6-7, capPais the team in his senior year. The next three Years he managed He is soft|the famous Homestead (Pa.) profes- it comes |sional football team‘and in 1902 coach- vette team. -The following d at Brown. played.dy.the outfield, ! ajor league engagements with the Phillies. He then went to Baltimore dind ‘wagthen'.aht;;to Mil- waukee, where hig playing attracted Connie Mack, who signed him. He re- mained with the Athletics three years and was sold to the Yankees. Fultz quit baseball to practice law d practically dropped out of athlet- except in the capacity of a foot- ball official. He is considered one of the best gridiron referees in the east. year he coi In basehi SUITINGS AND }|=- Guarantecd A. J. Vivian & Co. MERCHANT TAILORS ball in ESTABLISHED 1878 IRVING VIVIAN, Representative Hoggart Block Opposite P. O. Upstairs PHONE 741R eoconoon ne. ' ; In the Latest Patterns Fit and Workmanship "WESTERN GIVES YOUNGSTERS At Hope, At Anet At Jame: , | the front in encouraging young play- AMERICANS PLAY BALL iN CUBA A four club baseball league to play OVERCOATINGS iS ine ado the opening of the tr been started in Havana bert, Mike Gonzales and Armando } sans in charge of three of the teams. | ¢ A number of American players who have been spending the winter in Cuba have been recrui achieve a double purpose of getting | in shape and making a little money be- fore the 1917 season opens here. jthe 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- ways right. Mali. You will like our service. _|F. H. CARPENTER Lumber Co. - PHONE 115 spent Saturday in Bismarck. i oe 6 relatives and friends. Hl * jin Mandan the latter part of last week. s+ 8 for their home in the Center district. * + | (| \home from Cooperstown, where she | visited friends. * CHANCE?—EACH CLUB MUST CARRY SIX The Western league has stepped to ers to take up baseball as a profes- sion. A rule adopted at a recent meeting compels each of the eight teams in cantile company, left last evening for an extended pleasure trip in the east and southern states, s ¢ # Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Brigil of the Huff district are the parents of a baby girl born a short time ago. Mrs. James Wt ait, fh is in Man+ dan, a guest at the J. B. Frederick's home, will leave today for her home the Icague to keep six players who]at Fort Yates. have never played in anything higher than Class B ball on their rosters. The teams a 's to develop young players. The new rule applies to old players ame as new ones joining the Only nine men with previous in leagues of higher ss A may be carried. ach club may carry five pitchers, two of whom must be youngsters. Thirty full games for infielders and outfielders, 15 games for catchers and 10 for pitchers will put them out of the youngster class. enforce the ungster” rule managers who refuse to get rid of old players above the limit will have their games forfeited until he obeys the ruling. j {MANDAN News| | 0-0 State’s Attorney L. H. Connolly L. E. Randall, formerly of Flasher, now of Chicago, returned Saturday af- ter spending several days in Mandan| attending to, business matters in con-| nection with his real estate holdings in Flasher, } eee Mrs. Nels Dahl of the Huff district was in Mandan over Sunday Visitiag , * Jack McLear, popular rancher and farmer living in the Price district, was Mrs. L. ‘A. Graunke and son, who have been in Mandan visiting Man- dan friends, left Saturday afternoon * Mrs. G. A. Renden has returned e 8 John Ganer of the Huff district was) * * Sam Warford went to Glendive Sat- | allowed but 15 men and the|urday afternoon to take his final ex- rule will be an inducement to manag-| amination to become a Northern Paci- fic brakeman on the Yellowstone di- ! vision. He returned today. oe # Dr, Edmund Mackey, who had been in St. Paul on professional business for several days, returned home to- i day. ee * Mr. and Mrs, Fred Winters, resi- dents in the Cannon Ball district, are the parents of a baby girl born to them last Friday. a aoe Ed. Smith, who has been employed tat the McGillic meat market, is now associated with the City Meat mar- ket. e448 Miss Olga Meyer, the éfficient clerk for a number of’ weeks, is expected to return in a few days. ee Fred Parker returned yesterday from Glendive, where he has been on business for a few days. Fred is g ing braking onthe. Yellowstone divi- sion, ++ * Chas, Dunahey,. who has been in Mandan fora ‘number of days attend- ing to business matters and visiting at the home of his sister, Mrs. Fred Parker, will leave tomorrow or the next day for his home in the Sanger district. see A number of the Mandan Knights in the office of County Judge J, C./0f Columbus went to. Bismarck yester- Johnson, is enjoying a few days’ va- cation at. her home in, Fargo, * # A number of boys in Mandan high school attended the Dickinson-Man- dan basketball game in Dickinson last 'Friday night, returning Saturday af- ternoon, eo 8 Mr. and Mrs. James E, Regan at- tended the “third house” in Bis- marck Friday night. While in the capital city they were guests of Sen- ator and Mrs, W. E. Martin. ee Mrs. C. R. Wilcox of Cannon Ball was in Mandan Saturday visiting friends. o oom 5 A. C, Akeley, teacher @f the Judson school, was in Mandan Saturday look- ing after business matters in connec- tion with his work at Judson. | o* 8 Mr, and Mrs. Peter Dall, are the paronts of a nine-pound baby: girl born Friday morning at the home of Mrs. Dahl’s sister, Andrew Hauge, of this city. se 8 R. Ro MecKate tas*-retérned’® from |~ Washington, Omaha, Nebraska and other points,twhere he has been ad- dressing audiences in the interest of the North Dakota Farmers’ movement. 7 Mr. and Mrs, Péter Dahl expect to move to. Mandan’from their ' home nent’ Huff in the near-future; Mr. Dahl is. a: eon tractor and builder. Rod McVey retired ‘Saturday at: ternoon fram Rochester;swhere he has been for some time. ee ee George Ritchey, who has been con- fined in the Northern Pacific hospital im That is the Kind ve cet here, We now have on; 1.7 49+ of supply of MONARCH This t wat today and let us show you; thet it really is. C. A. FINCH ‘Lumber Co. in Mandan yesterday renewing ac- quaintances. *? Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Bingenheimer, president of the Bingenheimer Mer-| PHONE 17 Owl Creek Nut” Anthracite Nut: Monarch Wyoming Lump s «ny ordinary kind, : Try, py thought struck me. I thought Id day to’confer with the Bismarck’ lodge relative to the annual initiation and banquet which is to be held-in Bis- jmarck Sunday, February 11, 4 ae eS Mrs. Frank McQuillan went to Bis- marck yesterday afternoon to spend jthe afternoon with Mr. McQuillan, who is manager of ie Boo hotel. County. Cohminsinner! Theoodore Feland was in’ Mandaw.Saturday trom his’ home in the ‘Binis ajetrery + ee Mesdames George Steinbreuck and Wm. Meisner were in Bismarck yes, terday visiting friends, * 3 3 A number of Mandanites attended the first annual snowball dancing party given by.the U. C. T. at the Pat- terson: hall in ‘Bismarck Saturday eve- ning. . ‘New Universities Dictionary OUP ON BISMARCK alana How to Get It te Nominal Cost of Sees My all around housemaid Mary, packed up her grip and quit to get married right in the middle of my busiest social season. Mary had been our faithful servant for over five years. She was.a sort.of a ‘‘windfall.”” A friend of mine who had moved to another city had left her to me and now that she was no longer mine, J didn’t know where to find another, Pr I was perplexed... "And just as T had concluded that I must do my own work a hap- girl had left her a few days ago and she al- ready had another. 2 must find out how-she got her. And she told mea Want Ad in the Tribune | Had brought her. And I profited by her experience and inserted -one - myself. And although.I thought I would have ‘to do my own work— ‘Mrs.. Sinith’ paper three coupons the above with ni i

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