The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 2, 1917, Page 6

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BIBMAROK DAILY TRIBUNE THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1917. __ SCOOP SHSSHSESHSESOSEO OF ¢ AMERICAN ASSOOIATION. # SHSSHEHHOHOCOO OOF Club— WwW. L. Pe Indianapolis 3 St. Paul . 41 Louisville 48 Columbus sf 49.510 Kansas City . 48.500 Minneapolis 59 ANG Toledo .. 60 406 Milwauke aT B84 GAMES WEDNESDAY. Minneapolis, 11; Milwaukee, 10. (Fourteen innings, first game.) Minneapolis, 5; Milwaukee, 0. (Sec- ond game, seven innings—darkness, Columbus, 9; Toledo St. Paul, 8; Kansas City, 6. Indianapolis, 1; Louisville, 0. GAMES TODAY. Columbus at Indianapolis. Toledo at Louisville. Minneapolis at Kansas City. St. Paul at Milwaukee. SOSPTESSETOEBIOOD ° NATIONAL LEAGUE. ° CH OOHHHHHHOHHH HHH Club— L. Pet. New York . 30.668 St. Louis ... 43 BAT Philadelphia 40 541 Cincinnati 48 Chicago 49 Brooklyn 46 Boston al Pittsburgh 64 GAMBS WEDNESDAY. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. Club— RWB Cincinnati .. + 21004 Brooklyn . 610 3 Batteries—Regan and Wingo; Pfef- fer and Miller. New York at Pittsburgh. Club— R.H.E. ittsburgh .. col ww York 3.8 Batteries—-Steele and Fischer; Per- riett and Gi-son. Philadelphia at St. Louis. Club— R.H.E St. Louis .........esceeee eee 2 (ea | Philadelphia -210 0 Watson, Am er, Lavender, Oescher Boston at Chicago—rain. GAMES TODAY. Boston at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati ‘New York at Pittsburgh. Philadelphia at St. Louis. and Killifer. SOHSHHHHOHHOOHO OH ¢ AMERICAN LEAGUE. + SOSSTOSHHHS SEO HOE Club— Boston Chicago . Cleveland Detroit .. New York shington Philadelphia St. Louis .... AL 376 347 GAMBS WEDNESDAY. Chicago at Boston. Club— RHE. Boston ... 0 61 Chi ae 41010 Jones and Agnew; Russell and Schalk. Cleveland at Philadelphia, Club— R Philadelphia ... Cleveland Batteries— Noy: Schang; Lambeth, Schang. 0 2 R. Johnson and Covaleskie and Detroit at Washington. Club— Washington 2 Detroit . 3 Batteries — Dumont, Shaw, Ayers, Johnson and Ainsmith; Barnes, Cun- ningham, Boland and Stanage, Yelle. GAMES TODAY. Detroit at Washington. Cleveland at Philadelphia. St. Louis at New York. Chicago at Boston. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE BY ADVERTISE. MENT. The notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage, made, execut- ed and delivered by Simon Harris, a widower, mortgagor, to Alonzo Thompson, mortgagee, dated the 7th day of November, 1908, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Nakota, on the 17th, day of November, 1908, and re. corded in book 27 of mortgages, at page 288, and assigned by the execu- THE CUB REPORTER ‘(THERES A SIG s\WISE OLD hae OVER THE! I iM FROM SEEING BY PAUL PURMAN His obituary has been written and ‘| re-written. Time and again he has been count- ed out. His batting eye, they said had dis- appeared. His feet, they mourned had given way. But John T. ed them all. He is out there on the ball lot every day at first base or third and National league pitchers are learn- ing that the batting eye which was supposed to be gone is almost as bright as in former years. ‘All of which recalls a statement Clark Griffith once made about bat- ting eyes. “It isn’t the batting eye that counts,” Griff opined. “It’s just the natural faculty of batting. Where was never a pitcher wno could fool Lajoie, Cap Anson, Dan Brouthers or Ed Delehanty. “Speed wouldn't stop them nor curves nor anything else a pitcher used. They would hit anything and they might go after a waste ball and hit it out of the lot just the same as they would one in the groove.” The statement was made when Griff was asked his opinion of why a smart ballplayer like George Mc- Bride could never learn to hit. “It isn’t natural for McBride to hit and there are many like him, fellows liks Scott of the Red Sox for in- stance. It is natural for some of the others.” Then Griff made a startling state- ment. “U'll bet if old Cap Anson or Dan Brouthers could get some one to run to first for them they would bat better than .300 in either major league today.” All of which is open to question, of course, but which brings us hack to the starting point, John T. Wag- ner. Honus is in the middle of his 21st season and he is hitting well above .300, which might be used as an ar- gument for Griff’s statement. Wagner—Honus—fool- tor of the estate of satd Alonzo Thompson, di sed, to Hattie J. Lind- ley, which assignment Is recorded in book 33 of mortgages, at page 369, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in sich mortgage and here- inafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 10 o’ciock, a. m., ou the 11th day of August, 1917, to sat- isfy the amount due upon such mort- gage on the day of sale. The premises described in said mortgage, and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are described as follows: The North Half (N 1-2) of the ‘ortheast Quarter (NE 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4), ana the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of the Northwest Quarter (NW 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4), and the Southeast Quarter (SH 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of Sec- tion Twenty-nine (29), Township One Hundre? and Thirty-nine (139), Range Highty (80), West of the 5th P. M Burleigh County, North Dakota. There will be due on such mort- Rage at the date of sale the sum of One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty- cight Dollars and Seventy-one cents ($1,258.71), ‘besides costs and attor- ney's fees. Dated this 80th day of June, A. D. 1917. HATTIE I. LINDLEY, Assignee of Mortgagee. THEODORE KOFFEL, Attorney For Assignee of Mort- Bagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. (7—5, 12, 19, 26; 8—2, 9) NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING CF THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR COM- PANY. A special meeting of the stockhold- ers of the Missouri Valley Motor com- pany is hereby called, by the directors of the company, to be held at the prin- cipal office of the company in the city of Bismarck, ‘North Dakota, at o'clock p. m. on Saturday, the it. teenth day of September, 1917. The object of said meeting is, by. the stockholders consent, to authorize the Board of Directors to increase the capital stock of the company to one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars. Dated at Bismarck, N. D,, duiy 14, 1917. JOS. P. HESS, Secretary. 7-18. 8-1-8-15-22-29:9-5-12 BIDS FOR BOILER. Sealed -bids for stalling one 42x12 Return Tubular Steam Boiler, containing 34 3-inch tubes, -12 ft. tong (bid to include re- moval of old boiler from building) will be received by the Clerk of Board AND iF CAN ishing and in! The New Bush Tasted Like Hair Tonic M EER Vt NEVER, SAW i BUSH, BEFORE}, NS weceer---. CAN’T COUNT HIM OUT HONUS WAGNER HANDS CRITICS A JOLT BY SWATT'NG AT TERRIFIC RATE When Johnny Kilbane and Benny Leonard fought at Philadelphia a few nights ago they received more money for the length of time they were in the ring than any other pair of boxers in the history of the game. Each of the champions received $11,692 for his end, a total of $23,- 384 for the bout. Lasting three rounds the boxers’ share per minute was $2598, an un- heard of amount. The greatest purse ever offered two fighters was the $101,000 grab bag hung up for Jeffries and John- son in 1910. The bout went 15 rounds Leonard. Kilbane Set New High Fight Cost Record '.°0.2°02 7" is the only bout in ring history which even approximates the money re- ceived per minute by Leonard and Kilbane. Jeffries and Fitzsimmons received ) a minute for the 11 round bout al Coney Island in 1899 and Jeff and Corbett divided $632 a minute for their 23 round set-to at Coney the following year. Foxers’ pay per minute in great bouts include: Nelson-Britt, 18 rounds, 1905--$581 other Corbett-Fitzsimmons, 14 rounds, 1897—9593. ROE MCLE DARKS 20 rounds, 19093— $28s. served to reject any or all bids. By order of Board of Kducation. RICHARD PENWARDEN, 7-18-13t Clerk. NOTICE AND CITATION, HEARING OF FINAL ACCOUNT AND DISs- TRIBUTION OF ESTATE. Statesof North Dakota, county of ‘Burleigh. In county court, ‘before Hon. IL. C. Bradley, judge. In-the matter of the estate of John E. Corwith, deceased. Alice R. Corwith, vs. - American Home Missionary Society. Phebe R. Reilly, American Bible So- city, Sarah Corwith, Mrs. Edward Hempstead, The Presbyterian Church of Bridgehampton, New York, Charles R. Corwith, John W. Hall, Susan Corwith, Nathan Cor- with, George R. Corwith, Hdward G Corwith, Mrs. Elizabeth H. Shears, David Dangler, Henry ©. Dangler, Eliza C. Hammil, Mary C. Baker, Isabelle C. Cramer, John W. Cor- with, Henry C. Corwith, Gurdon Cor- with, Susan H. Dickinson, Mary Hempstead, Frank Hempstead, Eli: abeth C. Wells and Gurdon E with, Respondents The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondents: You, the said respondents, are her by notified that the final account Petitioner or at the rate of $2244 a minute. This} Gans-Nelson, 42 rounds, 1996—$266 of Education until August Ist. Speci-| of North Dakota, has *been duly ap- fications on file with clerk. Right re- pointed by this court for the settle- ment thereof, at which time and place any person interested in said estate may appear and file his exception in writing, to said account and petition and contest the same. And you, the above respondents, and.each of you, are hereby cited and required then and ‘there to be and appear before this court, and show cause, if any you have, why said a count shall not be allowed, the res due of said estate distributed, the ad. ministration of said estate closed and said exccutrix be discharged. ‘ Dated the 22rd day of July, A. D.. 917. By the Court, H.C. BRADLEY, ‘ Judge of the County Court. Let the foregoing citation be served by publication in the Bismarck Trib- une. H. C. BRADLEY, Judge of the County Court. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, Don’t Need Too Many. Don't swerve so far to one side of tbe road as.to make too many enemies nor yet so far to the other side as to make too many friends. A few good friends are enough, and usually a few enterprising enemies will manage to keep you busy.—Houston Post. the executrix of the will of John Corwith, late of the city of Galena, in the county of Jo Daviess, and state of Dlineis, deceased, -has been ren- dered to this.court, therein showing that: the estate of said deceased is ready for final settlement and distri- bution, and petitioning that his ac- count be allowed; the residue of said estate be distributed to the persons thereunto entitled, his administration closed and he be discharged; that | Tuesday, the 4th day of September. | A. D. 1917:at'teno'clock-in ‘the fore- noon of that day at the court rooms in the court house, in the city of Bis- marck, county of Burleigh and state “TO THE POLICYHOLDERS OF THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA. Netice is hereby given t! Poe Fy | | aid Conn ShaGitvot Newsre ‘New Jersey, on Mon Ags third day « of De sxmber, 1611, at twelve Veletk neon, for the ft electing. sixteen persons to be feted for by the policyhotder’s Trustepns mem: Directors et the annual election of Directors of the Company to he hel onthe fourteenth day of J: ry, 1918. ‘At such mecting evesy Bolicyhoider of the Ceeporation who is of the: twenty-one years er upwards and whose has been in foree for at least one year last past shall be en- titled to cast one vote in pernan or by proxy. FORREST F. DRYDEN, ={ Doctor Borsch on his return, | MARVELS WORKED BY EVE SURGEONS Remaking of the Eye Region' One of the Wonders Performed. Handle Patients With Coolness and Rapidity Under Constant Menace of Death—Wounded Loud in Praises of Surgeons, By C. F. BERTELLI. Paris.—The remaking of the eye region through the transplantation of part of the mucous membrane and the gratting of eyelids and lashes are among the marvels.of plastic surgery accomplished in France during the war by Dr. Louls Borsch, the famous American oculist, who, since August, | 1914, has been chief ophthalmic sur- geon at the huge Grand Palais Miii- tary hospital in Paris. Doctor Borsch has just returned from a ti e hospitalay made: at the ‘re- quest of the ‘department of health for the purpose of advising ais to the pos- sibility of improving existing methods | of treating wounds of the eye and saving the vision of the thousands of ; soldiers who in this latter phase of the war are suffering from such injur- | fes. “Three years of constant dally ex- pericnce in the treatment of eye weunds at the Grand Palais,” said abled ine to witness a very cons able Improvement in the Inethods em- ,dloyed, and very- gratifying results are Hwe couldshuye benefit of the experience we have since acquired, our results would cer- tninly have been tire than 100 per cent better. Under Menace of Death. “The one great lesson we have lenrned is that our chances of oper- ating successfully in cases of eye wounds are enormously increased When patients are brought to u i medintely after they have received their wounds, The same remark, of cour applies to all wounds. “Fiow well the heads of the French jeal service realize this will be vod when T say that during mye Champagne, trip T found many cages in which, the wounded had been brought from the trenches to. the flel:l hospitals, washed and operated | npen, with all d sings completed, within four hours of their receiving their injuries. The surgeons and nu prk under the constant .men- » of death, I myself saw them werking in first-aid dugeuts and in ‘ho hospitals just behind the lines sui tri never-ending showers of big shells, yet they handle their patients With 2 coolness, rapidity and skill which cannot be surpassed in the operating theater of a Paris hospital. “The wounded are unanitous in iheir praise of the treatment. they recelve, and so thorough and eflicient s it that I do not think it possible to improve upon the work of the jeld hospitals that we inspected. We saw many wounded with severe frac- tures of the thighs and legs who were walking about the wards in a special apparatus four days after their being wounded; these men as- sured me they had never suffered a noment’s pain. “We also saw many German wound- od, and there was noi one of them who lid not scem pleased to be a prisoner n French hands, They are treated with preciscly the same care and de- votion 2s the French wounded, whose wards they share, and no distinction whatever is made. Surgeons Work Wonders. “Dangerous eye wounds, that in their treatment call for nerves of steel in the surgeon and a hand that never deviates a hair's breadth, are tended amid the most hellish uproar imaginable ; the quick and efficient use of the eye magnet, for instance, for drawing out shell splinters from the region of the eye socket has saved sight in thousands of cases. “Unfortunately beneath the cease- inss cataract of exploding shells the face weunds in many, cases are So bad.that no ophthalmic gill ,could possibly save the sight. But here plastic surgery, one of the wonders of, the, war, comes in tg,.make the victim's face again presentable. Plas- tie work ..goes -further- than -the re- OPERATE WHILE GUNS ROAR Joie Ray Has Great Chance To Set Two-Mile Record he docs his best running after the first mil America’s crack distance he entered in the A. A. U. aoe Ra est three trials at the two- | game Louis this summer, but j just ut he will enter Ray has tance are Shrubb’s, Ray's and j not y ided on. rd of 9:11%, made in It is likely he will enter the! ngland 54 y ago. mile event, for his failure at New — Fractional time for the mile and | York recently to come within strik- ufter the first mile show that. ing distance of the world's record veled his k as fast as nd's faster probably will keep him out of that. Pe and sevei great two- Should Ray a e to enter the two- than either of the other | mile event his performance will be | inilers. watched with much interest, as Ray} Kay ran his first mile in 4:35 and is certain to make every elfort to beat ; econd in 4:42 2 ent record of 9:09 3-5 made] Shrubb ran hi Shrubb. cond in 4242 t effort at the two-mile st mile was negotiated in distance is just two seconds slower | / his second in 4:444%4. {than Shrubb’s great mile and Joie eviden that Ray was {confident that he will be able to over-| stronger at the finish than either of come that handicap. the others and may presage a brand Ray’s running is remarkable in that] new record for the distance. first mite in 4:27 2. Uncle Sam’s aircraft protection beard is co-ordinating the work of alr- plane manufacturers and makers of allied materials in the interest of stand- ardization and efficiency and will plzce contracts for everything the govern- ment buys in connection with the development of the great air-fighting force which the government plans. Members of this important board, shown in this picture, are: Scated, left to right, Rear Admiral David W. Taylor of the navy; Brig. Gen. George 0. Squier, chief signal officer of the army; Howard E. Coffin, chairman of the board and a member of the council of national de- fense. Standing, left to right, Sidney G. Walden of Detroit, automobile man- ufacturer; E. A. Deeds of Dayton, O., ignition expert; R. I. Montgomery of New York, a banker. “TINGLE SAM’S SOLDIERS OF SEA IN ACTION | This is a photograph of a painting made by Sidney H. Riesenberg for the United States marine corps, which is not only, according to its slogan, the “First to Fight,” but is the first branch of Uncle Sam's fighting forces to be recruited to full war strength following the declaration of hostilities be- tween the United States and Germany. - g d nos making of ‘shattered jaws and Wonderful Cave Found. the upper part of the face. including the eye region, car be patechet up so} as to make the poor wounded pre-’ sentable and not objects of hi wrror | to their fellow men.” The records of the Grand Palais | hospital show that Doctor T was one of the first Amer’ geons to graft the cornea, cessfully transplanted skin, bone, car- tilage and mucous membrane io the) orbit. In several cages he has pro- vided soldiers with new taking cartilage from the ri T ing it over the socket and afterwards making an incision in the new skin. | To the upper and lower edges of the | slit thus made he has grafted flesh-| bearing hairs, which is taken from} the eyebrows, in this manner furnish-! ing new lashes, and has afterwards | patched up the eye socket by trans-— plantations from the mucuous mem-| brane taken from the mouth. has suc: ‘ beautiful stalactites: ! ful sight. ‘are in A wonderful cave has been discov: ered at the lime quarries about 15 miles from Potgietersrust, Cape Colony, A workman, using his pick, came to a large hole, and this proved to lead to a wonderful cave containing the most a really wonder- ‘These “pendant cones of curbonate of lime, attached like icicles to the roof of the cave and formed by the dripping of the water charged with the vonate from the rock above,” ‘arious and in some cases most intricate designs, and should be of ! great interest to geologists. The cave is about 50 yards long and 30 wide, and no one ever dreamed of its existence. Safe. The man v of pulling that old stuff about there being nothing new under the sun manages to keep mum around his wife just af- ter she has bought her new outfit. « se

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