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i ° SCOOP BY GLY THs SAFETY ROPE FOR. CHILDREN FouR FEET TALL 1S TUSTMY SPEED, : T'DAY - SHHSETOSSIOPIO SOS «» AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, «& SHHHL OS HOSOO OO OOS Club— Indianapolis St. Paul .. Kansas City Louisville 38 Columbus 41 Minneapol 48 Toledo 46 Milwaukee . 50 G AMES FRIDAY. M Innteduo St. Paul, iadiatiapolts, 5. Columbus-Kansas City—rain. ‘Toledo-M‘lwaukee—rain. GAMES SATURDAY. Milwaukee at Columbus. Kansas City at Toledo. ( Minneapolis at Indianapolis. St. Paul at Louisville. SCHHSLOTOETFFOOOD e AMERICAN LEAGUE, o OSE HHOSHOO OO Club-— WwW. iL. Pot GAMB3 SATURDAY. Chicago 30 620 Boston 30 10 Cleveland 37 New York .. 85.027 ‘Detroit 39.500 St. Louis 40.43) Washington . 430 497 Philadelphia +28 AT 878 GAMES FRIDAY. New York at Chicago. Club— RHE. Chicago . 5.8 3 New Yor 43 Batteries — Williams, Faber and Schalk; Caldwell, Love, Cullop, Rus- sell and Nunamaker. : Boston at Detroit. Club— R.H.E.! Detroit wo Ae Boston Oo Mt Batteries — Jam and, Stanage; Leonard and Agnew. Philadelphia at St. Louis, Club— RHE St. Louis . ee Geet Philadelphia 1 64 Batteries—-Davenport and Severeid; Bush and Mey Schang. ' —— Washington at Cleveland—rain. GAMES SATURDAY. Washington at Cleveland. Philadelphia at St. Louis. New York at Chicago. Boston at Detroit. SPOS PHSTHEPESTETOOOSD : NATIONAL LEAGUE, ° SHOHSSESHHHOS HOO OE Club— W. L. Pet. (New York .. § 25 48 Philadelphia St. Louis . 35 Chicago 38 Cincinnati .. 40 Brooklyn ... ... 3y Pittsburgh .. MH Boston ..... 42 GAMES FRIDAY. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. First game— Club— R.H.E. Brool.lvn we AD Pittsburgh 0 6 Batteries-—Cheney and Milter; Ja- cobs and Fisher. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Second game— Club— RHE. Brooklyn .. vee s 9 1 Pittsturgh -172 Batteries—Smith and My vers; Steele, Grimes and Fisher. Cincinnati at New York. Club— R.H. BE. ‘New York ~ 4110 Cincinnati . 3.8 2 Batteries — Benton, ‘Tesreau and Rariden; Mitchell, King and Clarke. e St. Louis at Boston. Club— R.H.E Boston .. -6W 1 St. Louis at UL Batteries—Reuibach, Allen, Barne: Pagan and Trages: Horstman, Maye, Watson, Packard and Gonzales. Chicago at Philadelphia. Second game— Club— R.H. EL Philadelphia . Arie sea) Chicago ... S088 Batt@ies — Alexander and Killifer; Douglas and Wilson. Chicago at Philadelphia. First game— Club— R.H.E. Philadelphia . 240,42 Chicago . ll E20 Batteries- y and ifer; De- matee and Dilhoefer. 3 GAMBS SATURDAY. 4.| to prevent the farmer from employ- THECUB. REPORTER Ww ag BISMARCK HOPES TO TAKE WGLUSKY Capital City Champs Will Meet Strong Sheridan County Ag- gregation Sunday The Bismarck crew, led by Capt. “Dolly” Elder and strengthened ‘by the addition of Frank Talcott, will tackle the strong McClusky outfit in two games on the local diamond to- morrow afternoon. McClusky has fill- ed its lineup with some real stars, and it comes tomorrow with the avowed determination of taking Bis- marck into camp. Frank Talcott of Bismarck, who has been under the tutelage of Ira Thomas, former Athletic star and one of the brainiest men in baseball, has been secured to pitch one of Sun day's games. ‘Talcott has produced, and the coaching he has had from DONT sEEMTO Have. TH! OLE DOWN THE LINE = /A\NID yusT THEN THIS DAINTY THING— APPEARED IND ~ @ET RED OUT IN IS BENNY LEONARD’ A SLACKER? “NOT NAILE KILBAN EHUNGERS HS ‘IGRI “HORS 0+ ENGINEERS TAKE REAL GANE FROM STATE HOUSE MEN; Closely Contested Exhibition At- tended by Good Crowd— Return Contest Soon The capital city engineers took a real game of basevall from the state house ¢rew on the Athletic club dia- mond in a close contest, winning hy a score of 7 to 2. The Engineers play- ed an_ errorle: game, and scored their seven runs on two hits, off of Rhud’s delivery, coupled with five er- Thomash wonderfully ~ improved his work. “Goldie” will pitch the other game, and from the form he is showing now, he should be a hard man to hit tomorrow. McClusky has two crack pitchers in Cunningham and Rohrer, on whom it is depending for victory. These games promise to be real {battles from the drop of the hat, and credit, and the rubber will be piayed! Bismarck promises to redeem itself for the ‘beating “it suffered at Halli- day, which club comes to Bismarck to give the ‘locals revenge July 21 and 22, / To Mcet Minot. The Champs are now in training for ries with the Minot team of,,the' late Northern league. Half ofthe; games willbe played here and falf-in the Magic city. Minot was playing its host “hall when the leagu is- banded, and there has been much: dis- cussion as to the relative merits of the two teams. The fans will be giv- en a chance to see for themselves in near future. Later the Champs hope! to take on Williston, which is the only independent team which has humbled the Magicians to date. VALLEY CITY FARMERS Valley iCty, NX. D., July 14.—The} league's proposal to contract with the}! Agricultural Workers’ union, an aux- iliary of the I. W. W., for a supply of farm labor for North Dakota was unanimously rejected by 150 dele-| gates, representing the farmers of; this section of the state, in a ratifica- tion meeting addressed Thursday af- ternoon by President A. ©. Townley, whose ideas are embodied in the pro- posed agreement. In his plea for the ratification of the proposed contract, President Townley, in a typical manner, paid his respects to the press, which, he declared, has misrepresented condi- tions of the agreement. It was ex-} Dlained that the contract does not seek to establish a closed shop, nor ing his sons or local labor which is not affiliated with the union. At the close of the several explana- tions made, the farmers, without a dissenting vote, rejected the plan in toto. M. A. C. Hall Mandan, N. D. Monday Evening JULY 16 BILLY | RYAN KID HALE 10 Rounds Good Preliminaries Beginning at 9:30 Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Cincinnati at New York. Chicago at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Boston. Admission $1.00 REJECT LEAGUE'S PLAN)» (WASHINGTON WRITER | TER, EGGS, CHEESE, FROZEN AND. Serves of food being held for specu- | pounds of cured beef in cold storage, } tan increase of 75 per cent over a! rors. - Niles, \on/ ‘the, mound ‘for the hits, and he had mucn better support than had Rhud... Conhus, on short for the Engineers, is especially fast and would fit into any organized tcam playing in the state. Hach team now has a win to its off in the near futre, when an enthus: fastic: crowd’ of fans is expected. ta turn out. The tale in detail: Sys RAULE CRM AN: State House— AER HAE The eyes of the boxing world are Kelly, ss c 0 0 2 4] centered son the meeting between the Cox, 11 2 2) lightweight champion and the feather- “Th weight champion, Tucker, It . 2 Lek 0 é Klackion oo 2 of Benny Leonard, who so recently Patrick, ¢ 0 0 9 1{ won his crown at the expense of hompgon, ‘rt 0 0 0 0} Preddy Welsh, may be a slacker in hud, p . C01 Vig. ai re OVS s ‘Walla, ef. 9-001 o that he did not join the army « had promised, but when it com the ring game he is no slacker, as ®Jhe is taking on the most dangero: ,| fighter in the world when he me 00090 Johnny ‘Kilbane, undisputed king off Engineers— Patten, If . Doherty. O01 ojall the featherweights. ee 3 o120 In one way Leonard is not risking tL 1 0 g{ much, as he meets Kilbane in Ph | 0 0 9 of delphia over the ound route. | Hall, ef 1 0 0 o| There is not one chance in a million Riddell, 3b 2 1 9 4 o{tbat Kilbane or any other fighter in| Ross, ¢ 2 1 9 » ofthe 133-pound class can stop Leonard | Jorgenson, 2 2 0 © fin that length of time. BAI Oy Li ‘So far as Kilbane is concerned he 27.7 2 6 048 not risking much. Even should Leonard stop him he would not forfeit By innings: Ate i his featherweight crown. State House + 010 100 0-2 Engineers . 100 240 * From a financial standpoint it is Summar: out, by Rhud, 6; going to be pretty soft for both of the by Niles, 8; bases on balls, off Rhud,|Doys. Twenty thousand dollars is the 6; off Niles, 4. Hit by pitched ‘ball,; Pw'se offered, to be evenly divided. Niles. Left on bases, State House, 3;| Figure it out—$10,000 for 18 min- Engineers, 7. Double plays, Kelly to| Utes fighting; a matter of $550 a min- Cox; Rhud to Cox to Thorberg. Um.) Ute each, pire, Mounce. Time, 1:40. Attend-| The main interest in the bout will ance, 19 adults and 32 kids. center around Leonard’s agility in the ring with such an opponent as Kil-| bane. True, they have not before, but at that time | nobody in ring ¢ onard was merely a ;—just one of the many 10-round scrappers picking up a living around ‘New York. — Kilbane didn’t take Leonard seriously at that time, and did not exert himself par- DECLARES FOOD ——+ ticularly. (Continued from page one) It is an entirely different proposi- tion now. Kilbane’s great ambition storage holdings given out by the departracnt of agriculture this week, The statement, confpiled from re- ports received from about 250 cold storage plants throughout the coun- try, shows THERE ARE MORE BUT- is to hold both the featherweight and lightweight titles. He thought he had this opportuni within his grasp when Welsh was ampion, and there is little doubt t he would have stopped Freddie over the 15 or round route, had not Leonard him to it. Kilbane realizes as much as any- body else in the world that he has a much more difficult task on his hand agunst Leon than he would hav had against’ Welsh, but Kilbane is crafty and will not let an oppor- tunity slip when he meets the New York Hebr And Leonard is not disillusioned. He knows just how: dangerous Kil- bane is and knows just how valuable | the lightweight title is. For that rea- he is not going to give Kilbane if it is humanly with- » opportunity, in his power to avold doing so. beat CURED MEATS, LARD AND FPROZ- EN POULTRY in the refrigerating es tablishments THAIN EVER BEFORE IN THE HISTORY OF THE NATION. The law of supply and demand no longer obtains. With these great re- lative purposes, the cost of food is HIGHER THAN DURING THE CIVIL. war! ae Here are some startling figures. | Mark them well, and when you mark them think of congress, = that knowing them, refuses you relief: The frozen poultry now in cold stor- age totals fifty-four million pounds, an increase of nearly S00 per cent ove the quantity held in the refrigeration plants a year ago. (is it any wonder that chicken has become an unattainable xury in millions of American nomes?) There are about thirty § miltion the food bill with a fake debate about whiskey and beer, the food specula- tors and hoarders have been grabbing | all the food they can get hold of and making you pay outrageous prices? Just one word more: In America, the greatest wheat- growing country in the world, wheat costs the consumer more than in France, England, Germany or Italy. And what is true of wheat is equally |true of many other food staples. year ago. There are about ninety | pag ‘million pounds of frozen beef now in Far Ti COMER The Maloney Farm Co., Webster, as vase et, HEY. LADY- WOULD YOu MIND STEPPING OUT OF TH OCEAN LONG— ENOUGH FoR ME f “ BauT—m- + PROCCEDINGS OF THE CITY COM. MISSION, JULY 18, 1917. At @ special. meeting of the City —0—; Commission held July 13, 1917, for the | purpose of considering and acting ‘tipon authorizing and ratifying the ex- | ecution and delivery of certain war- rants to E. L. Gedney. Upon roll call lon and Oakes. There were present: DIAMOND “NOTES - Babe Ruth says he wants to Pitch; ! three games a week, see Larry Sutton, former scout for the Dodgers, is now Scouting for the Cin-* cinnati Reds, se @ “' President Lucas, Commissioners Bat- 1 fe; Bertsch and Best. Commissioner Battey introduced a resolution authorizing the execution ‘and delivery of $4,509.45 Sewer War- {rants to E. L. Gedney. Uuon roll call lon the adoption of this resolution, | Ayes, Battey, Bertsch and Lucas; nays | Best. The ‘resolution was declared | adopted. Commissioner Battey introduced a resolution: authorizing the execution and delivery-of $11,420.00 Paving Dis-: ‘trictNumber,.One Warrants and rat- ifying the execution of certain other ‘Paving District Number One Warrants. Upon roll call on the adoption of this Kansas City, Mo., has 119 baseball ' resoultion the Ayes Battey, Bertsch clubs in its municipal amateur base- ' ball association. ao Sew Manager Robinson of the Brooklyn | Dodgers predicts that the Giants’ pitch- \ ers will “crack under the strain” and | that his champions will soon catch Me | Graw' V's team, ~ i A} TNEYS TO WIN WAR (Continued | trom rom Page One) that could he shot through a factory something like Henry Ford grinds out. jitneys. When this decision was reached, Howard Cottin, aircraft board engl neer, called together the country’s best engineers—men wa) knew gaso- line engines ‘better than their dwn children—locked them iny a . council room with him and told them: “Boys, it’s up to us to beat the kaiser. The airplane will do it, but not without a topnotch engine, light- er and more powerful than anything you ever thought of, and that can be turned out in quantities. It’s a big order. Now take off your coats, and sweat.” They did. They tore designs ahd actual examples of the ‘best aviavion engines, French, English and German, to pieces and picked the best piece out of each. 'Fhen they asked ques- tions about each piece: “How can we improve it?” and “How can we adapt it to quantity production?” They took off this’ piece a flange that would haye kept it from being handled with high-speed‘ tools. They saw this other pieces was almost ex- {actly like a standard American part and made it exactly alike. They saw on this part the ten French machin- ing operations could ‘be cut to four. They consulted the French and Critish aviation experts with Joffre and Balfour. At last they had a com- posite of the best foreign engines, lapted to American manufacturing methods, which, as one of them says, “Fitted together like a wch.” They rushed its construction by choosing out of the thousands of Am- erican factories the best for each sep- arate’ part and then giving rush or- | ders with priority over everything. Now—only a little more than a month from the time it was conceiv- ed—they have the engine ready for te severe that every possible weakness will be disclosed. No one doubts these tests will bring modifications, the design fecls he has had a part in preparing kaiserdom’s death blow. Velva Marshal Kicked Out for Discouraging Recruiting for Navy Velva, N. D. July 14.—On_ the strength of affidavits from four Velva ung men .who have enlisted in the navy, to the effect that he had inter- fered with recruiting, Village Marshal George Sigman was removed from of- cold storage, or about 30 per cent! canitalized at $60,000, wasincorporat- more than last year. ed today by Thomas H, Maloney, Cath- Isn't it perfectly clear that while! ering Maloney, Thomas Maloney and r congress has been helding uptwo other Maloney. SSS fice and severely reprimanded by Mayor H. J. Tillapaugh, who announc- but every engineer on; PROMISE ASSISTANCE. Washington, D. C., July 14.—Rail- roads of the country have promised to co-operate in the campaign of the food admi to place conservation posters in every station and waiting room on_ their lines, it was announced today. Stuffy McInnis, Connie Mack's star, is agile and ambitious and will outplay apy first-sacker in the American \ City ration and have agreed [ and Lucas; nays Eest. The resolution was declared adopted. Commissioner Battey introducea a ‘resolution authorizing the execution and delivery of $13,500.00 Sewer Dis- trict Number One Warrants to Ged- ney and Murphy. Upen roll call on adoption of this resolution Ayes, Bat- tey, Bertsch and Lucas; nays, Best. 1 The resolution was deciared adopted. On motion the Board adjourned to meet again July 16, 1917. ADVERTISEMENT, Commissioner Best introduced the following ‘resolution and moved its adoption: BE IT RESOLVED by tie Board of Commissioners of the City, of Bismarck, North Dakota, that it is necessary, and the City Commission- ers of the City of Bismarck, North. Dakota, hereby declare it to be neces- sary that a lateral sewer be constrict- ed on First street, from Avenue C to a point fifty feet north of the north line of Avenue D, in Sewer lmprove: ment District Number One, according to the plans and specifications of the City Engineer, which plans and spe- cifications were adopted ard, placec on file this 9th day of July, 1917. State of North Dakota, City of Bis- marck—ss: C. L. Burton, City Auditor of the City of Bismarck, (North Dakota, here- by certify that the foregoing is a true and correct copy of the original reso- lution passed ‘by the Board of City Commissioners at their regular meet- ing July 9th, 1917. C, L. BURTON, 7-14-20-2¢ RYDER MAN PROMOTED Ryder, N. D., ~ duly 14.—Roy B. Thompson, who has been in the em- ploy of the Soo line here fer some time, has been appointed cashier in the office of Superintendent Scott W. Derrick at“Bismarck, whithér hée-will” league, if not in the country. BISMARCK SATURDAY, THE SHOW rh 30 EDU | CATED ANIM A Ls ALL AG ORS 5 INCLUDING Lions, Tigers, Gears A Leopards, Jarusre, f Elephants, Camtets, Zebrns, Sea Lions, Zébus, Monkeyesttt. SAMSON AVIATION LION Causes. Thrills of Amazoment ed his act and his reasons in open council meetin: “Exhibitions Daily, Rain or Shine, =LIONS-30) {8 ONE ACT Big Bill, Wrestling Grizziy, Tango Dancin Elepkants, Hor: Leopards and Bears. Pontes. Degs and Monkeys. Galy Meai Wild Animal Circus on Earth Glittering, Rew, Mile-Long Street Paratfe 2t' 10:30 nop move with shis family Sept,.1.; JULY Ss 2 BIG SPECIAL TRAINS 100 ANIMAL TRAINERS Mest Thrilling Wid Animal Act Extant — Taro Acts ) World's 5 § Premium Horses and Pontos 5 nner Actors. 402° -Tickiing: | Animal Clowns § Korses, Farce Comedy Riding Lions, 209 Military & High-Diving end Jumping 2aad 8 P.M. Doors Open, 1 and 7 BARNES | -BIG 4-RING WILDANIMAL- CiRCHU THAT'S OIFFERENT