The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1917, Page 6

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¢é =. §COOP THE CUB. REPORTER AMELIA SOMEBODY KNITTED SQOOP AND T EACH AN AVIATION 4 SWEATER. AND A PAIR. X\\ It Looked’ SOME LADY NAMED =\ EACH BOX SEBMED TO - KNOW HS TOO — Had The Best Of It SOME CLASS was ADDRESSED "T0.U5 EACH, SHTSTFHIOCH HSC HOD OS @ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Batteries—Caldwell and Alexander; Dumont, Gallia, Craft and Ainsmith. Second game— Club— RHE. New York .. 39 6 1 Washington 3 8.0 4! Batteries—Cullop, Shocker and Ale Ce ee ee ee ee exander; Ayers and Ainsmith. Pet. Louisville 84 St. Paul 83 Columbus 7 Milwaukee . 7 M 73 Kansas City 70 Toledo -,70 ee L. 59 60 60 62 70 TL 78 78 GAMES SATURDAY. 554 Chicago ... 518 Cleveland BEY 473 umpire because of the dila .365. of the Cleveland players.) ‘aber, Danforth; GAMES SUNDAY. _ Cleveland at Chicago. so! Club— (Forfeited hic Batteries—Russell, and Schalke; Covaleskieé, Coumbs and Columbus, 4-6; Kansas City, 10-2. St. Paul, 2; Indianapolis, 0. (Elev- en innings. Second game postponed— darkness. - ee game— Toleuo, 1-0; Milwaukee, 0-2. & a M polis, 3; ille, 1 sah Minneapolis, Louisvi Detroit... a! GAMES SUNDAY. Toledo, 3-1; Milwaukee, 3-1; second gaine called in fifth inning—darkness, , Louisville, 3-4; Minnéapglis, 1-1. O'Neill. Detroit at St. Louis. Batteries—Sothoron, Koob, Weight | and Severeid; Mitchell and Stanage. Second game— Kansas City, 3-7; Columbijs, si tae oi 1 Indianapolis, 0-5; St. Paul, 2-2. Detroit’... 2.08 A ee ee @ « NATIONAL LEAGUE. . @ POFFO EHEHEOHO OSD Club— New York . 46 Philadelphia 56 St. Louis .. 62 Cincinnati 68 66 Chicago .. 68 « 68 “Brooklyn 60 66 Boston ... 56 71 Pittsburgh 43 87 GAMES: SATURDAY. Philadephia at Boston, L. | +Clevelard at'Chi, : ‘New York at ae Batteries—Davenport and Severéid, Ehmke; Cunningham and Stanage. GAMES TODAY. Detroit at-St. Louis. 0. Fo" chington el; First game— Clut— Philadelphia . ‘Boston .. Batterie: escl Mathewson has made much headway with his. young pitchers, Regan, Ring ) and Eller, eee The Des Moines club’ hes taken on ‘Adams; Barnes and ‘Tragesser, Mey- Pitcher Franklin Johnson from the de- ers, Second game— Club— Philadelphia. , i Boston .. Batteries—Mayer and Killifer; Ru-! dolph, Nehf and Meyers. Chicago at Pittsburgh. funct Rock Island team, eee Ruddy Kallio, who 4s pitching some . femarkable ball for Dés Moines, sodn may be recalled by San Francisco. eee Howard Holmes, out of a job when j the Three-I blew up, ‘has been signed ;for the American association umpire Yr ABN PRESIDENT WILSON SURRO INDED BY RIS “SUPER-CABINET” OF TEN, TH “WAR MANAGERS GF AMERICA.” TOP (LEFT "TO RI HT). JOSEPHUS DANIELS, BEI TON ®iBAKER. MIDDLE (LEFT TO R:GHT) RIGHT) VANCE McCORMICK, H. A. By MILTON BRONNER. Washington, D. C., Sept. 10.—Amer- ica has been in thé war five months. In that time President Wilson has created a super-cabinet, which, under his close direction, is really running the war. It has powers never dreamed Hi Club— R.A. E | Staff. mye Chicago . 611 1 Pittsburgh 2 7 1! Fred Falkenberg managed to win Batteries—Hendrix, ‘aughn and his first game after he returned to In- Wilson; Miller, Grimes, Schmidt and dianapolis, but not without sweating a 40% Fischer. ‘good deal, GAMES SUNDAY. St. Louis at Cincinnati. i First game— Chub— i Cincinnati . St. Louis Batteries—Schneider, Wingo; Watson and Snyder. 5 Second game— Club— Cincinnati 4 St. Louis Batteri ;—Toney, Wingo; Meadows and Gonzales. Pittsburgh at Chicago. Club— Chicago .. Pittsburgh Batteries — Douglas and Cooper and Schmidt. Rega Schneider t i. o will rettirn to his job as policentan in "9 4 9 Salt Lake City, It is evident that as a Wilson; Pitcher he is done. j ‘No other games scheduled. GAMES TODAY. Brooklyn at New York. Philadelphia at ‘Boston.’ eat Chicago at Pittsburg. St. Louis at Cincinnati. OOOOH HO OHH OS k e AMERICAN LEAGUE. @' The Omaha clyb has:returned Scrap- A 0999S HOO OSS © DY Moore, the college third baseman, & : to the St.Louis Browns. He failed to Fs cane wou lee show anything but:noise. 3 Boston me ‘ “cis . ee ¥ Cleveland 6) 54g _ George Stallings. has ‘added several ¢ Detroit .. 62 gray hairs to ‘his’ hirsute adornment ; id New York. 69 .469 Since-Hank Gowdy decided to get be- Washington 70 ~©.4n8- hind the bat for Uncle Sam. Philadelphia SL 872 er bg Bl a St. Louis . 88 353 _ Jerry Downs, asisuccessor to Harry ‘ — . Wolverton, has done go ‘well: with the ; GAMES SATURDAY. Seals that they: are-telling Hen Berry i Cleveland at Chicago. he snould' be retained on the jub.- *Club— R.HLE.| eee! j * Cleveland 9 5 1 | .J¢ Christy Mathewson can win a pen- H Chicago 26 2 nant forCincinnati, wé know. the name j Batteries — Bagby, ood — and of the. man who. will. finally: settle this O'Neill; Ciootte and Schalk. world war and bring about peace. 7 *: ene : ager abot Louis: REE | George Burns of the Giants is earn- + Detroit ,.. 1 4 6 ing the plaudits of the fans by his ' St: Louis. 0 5 1 Speedy playing. " He fs. considered one Batteries Stanage; of the best fielders in the major leagues. | Groom and Severeid. New York .... ‘Washington . New York at Washington. ona oom - B for Tulsa. : Catcher Harry Smith, formerly with Dallas and Galveston, is now doing the bulk of the work behind the bat There are two Joe Bergers in the 1 Western league now, the one with Wichita and the other the pitcher with Des Moines, ee John McGraw is said to be after Grover Lowdermflk for the Giants, Big Grover has pitched sofie great ball for Colu:nbus. eee The veteran Tom Hughes probably eee Polly McLarry, who started off slow- ly with Shreveport, has caught his hit- ting stride dnd of late has been swat- | ting the ball hard. é eee The Phillies are being accused of | trying to pull off. signal tipping bu- | | reau again this’ year, but there is no ' proof of the charge. 1 see eee Fire- engines .passing the Browns’ park- almost -broke up :ball game in St. Louis-the other day. This could «| every ‘American is ‘Prof. ‘Harry A; Gar- of before in the United States. Of its 10: members, six work for Uncle Sam for nothing. Of the ordinary cabinet members also members of the super-cabinet there is first, Newton D. Baker, the quiet, efficient tittle lawyer who used to be the reform city solicitor and mayor of Cleveland, and/who now has the job of bossing the biggest armies America has ever created:” He largely devised. the: selective ‘conscription Dill and has been charged with: carrying it out. ‘ ‘ Josephus Daniels, the North Caro- lina newspaper editor, . hammered time and again because he interfered with the graft of big business, in-im- mediate charge of the American navy, is responsible not only for hunting down German U-boats, but also for convoying our transports and supply ships ‘to France. In ‘addition, his or- ders are law to our high seas fleet and to our navy shipyards. The close of the war will find our navy second oftly to England’s. William Gibbs McAdoo is one of the super-cabinet by reason of the. fact that he doles out the millions to our allies. Up to date’he has thus given out. over $2,000,000,000. Of course, this money is being spent right int America for'supplies, and McAdoo, as the man behind’ the dough-bag,. is. in- sisting that it be spent as.economical-! ly as. possible, so the loans; will not} have to be repeated too often: -E. -N." Hurley ‘is chairman ‘of ‘the United Stdtes shipping board, ‘the; greatest maritime organization ever known. This board has. not only taken; over all German ships interned here at the beginning of the war, but has commandeered many now under ‘con- struction for foreign’ buyers. In. addi- tion, it is giving out contraets for an immense. amount of new shipping. Hurley’s job is to build that famous bridge:of ships across the Atlantic. Herbert C. Hoover’s activities con- cern. every farmer and every person who eats. He. has*the power. very largely. to fix the price of food. : The other man whose work. affects field, son-of the martyred president, |formerly a college°head.. As ‘coal db and see that every. section ‘gets its fair supply. Robert S. Lovett. in.ordinary times only to tell. the. railroads i freights shall be shipped first, but also to tel a great factory whether it shall department,. the navy. department, some particular one of the allies or | rector all he has to do isto: fix prices | a great railroad administrator, is the; | priority boss. He has the power not! i which | fabricate certain things for the. war; HERBERT C. HOOVER, F. RNARD ‘BARUCH, W: G, McADOO, .NEW- A. SCOTT, BOTTOM (LEFT TO GARFIELD, E, N, HURLEY, ROBERT S, LOVETT. just , been, "mnade head of tho exports, administrative board. Doesn't sound very important, but. he. has the” im- portant task of helping to starve Ger-| many by seeing that our foods and supplies do not leak to kaiserland via the surrounding neutral countries. rank A. Scott, Cleveland manufac- turer, head. of ‘the war industries board, coordinates all the activities; supplying the war and navy depart- ments. His particular jab is to speed up the production of rifles, machine; guns, field and heavy artillery and shells. ‘ 1 Bernard M. Baruch, in ordinary; times a Wall street operator, is the” greatest, purchasing agent in the world foday. All the allied nations, come to him to make their war pur- chases ‘through the body, of which he is the head. i Grows Sweeter With Age. A good and trie woman to resemble a Cremona, fiddle—age but increases its worth and swectens its fone.—O. W. Holmes. ‘Tribune want ads will bring results: | AUDIENCE SOBS AS FROST TELLS OF LUSITANA (Continued from Page. Three.) hau surrendered and were doing everything »: y power to comply with the demands of the Huns had been ruthlessly shelled; of life boats rifled of everything that would sus- tain life, robbed of oars and sails and their butts filled ,with salt sea wa: ter, turned adrift on a boundless ex- panse of seething scans the sole ha- ven of helpless ship crews; of antics less human. than those of a wild and lawless -hoard of ‘ourangoutangs or gorillas indulged in by distinguished officers and crews of his imperial ma- jesty, the. kaiser, wearing the iron cross esteemed as a token of German valor and German . chivalry, while helpless victims perished. He told of brave and. “cultured” offi cers’ who. amused themselves asthe water about them filled with drowning vanced? money? bonds? ed or are we we raise Uncle Sam’s Bank Book the Where the Money. We Are Lending Our Allies Goes, Where It Comes From and How We Are Sure We Wil! Get It Back—An Inside View of War Finance by a Washington Expert of the Daily Tribune. Washington, Sept. 10—What are we, Liberty’ bonds: and certificates’ of in- loaning our allies—real money, bonds,|debtedness ‘sold through the fetleral or credits? How much have we ad- How ' did What are we getting in re- turn—receipts, prémissory notes, or Is the United States: protect- simply pouring money down a-rat hole? + | Here aie the facts obtairied from reserve system to banks-and other in- yestors in all\parts of the country. ‘ In return we have received’ certift cates of indebtedness bearing the same rate of’ interest as the obliga- tions sold to taise the money. If the United States should convert any of the basic securities containiig Assistant Secretary Georg? R: Cook- ey, spokesman for the treasurry de- partment. » Up to date our loans 'to our allies total $2,066,400,000, distributed as fol- lows: Great Britain. France « -$1,005,900,000 | 580,600,00u Italy’. 200,000,090 Rugsia 275,000,000 Belgium 53,400,000 Servia .. 3,000,009, billion of the voted - still This leaves ne: three )illions congress available. These loans are in the form of treas- ury warrants against which the at lies draw just as if it was ‘cash on deposit in a bank. The largest ot these warrants, for $20,006,000 in ta- vor of England, is the biggest check ever drawn: All of the money from these Toaas | is being spent in the United States for munitions and supplies The United States treasury has sv- cured the money from: two sources— | different terms— 3 1-2 per cent Lin- erty ‘bonds into 4 per cents, for ex- ample—the torms’ of’ the certificates will be similarily changed. Thus tho United States will always hold obit; gations’ of the « borrowing ' countries corresponding exactly to the securi- ties it must sell to raise thé money. There has been’ some discussion by members of congress as to wheth- er the United States should not sell these obligations: of the allies and thus avoid the necessity for, raising a large amount of revenue which must underlie future loans. This is ‘simply idle talk. They may not be sold at a less price, and there is no country whose’ securities of like terms. will sell within 10 points of those of the United States. {* Anyhow, it would be poor finance, for we would not only #ecure tess than we can realize by selling our own bonds and holding the allied’ cer- tificates, but we would démoralize our bond market and seriously injure our credit. z and dead from torpedoed without warning by’ taking snapshots to send home to wives and ‘ships which-they ‘had | children, infants in arms; when he had told of the corpses, first stacked like cordwood en thé old’ quayir uv sweethearts, gers the submarine. and’ children. He told .of life-boats raked with shot and shell; of case ai- ter case in which crews’ and passen- marooned’ hundreds of miles life-boats from land-in cockle-shell were refused -a tow to land, even when the submarine had charted its course in that direction and when there: was no possibility of danger to} « - Have Added Horrors. “The German will tell you that war is rough work—yes, it is rough work, but it need not be dirty work. nee” not be waged ¢gainst women A man among men cin Queenstown; later drifting in, staring, grinning skulls, dismembered, disfig- ured, unhuman shapes; ‘when he told of the round of the morgue day after day by fathers and mothers seeking lost children, of husbands ‘seeking wives, wives seeking husbands, broth ers seeking sweethearts; of the hope- less quest of survivors, minds un- hinged by Germany's frightfulness, his big audience was wracked with sobs, and it was a poople inspired by a holy wrath against such iniquities It] and with a solemn ‘determination to do'their part in seeing such practices ended and the world made ‘safe for stand a certain amount of rough work and even foul play without squealing. But foul play against women and children, innocent and helpless non- humanity that quiethy filed out ‘of thé theatre. 35 Died Daily. The submarine’s toll to date has ‘ex- combatants is Frost. “Certain evils cannot be disassociat- The sub- inconceivable,” ed with submarine warfare. marine has come to stay, and J doubt not that we will make use of it our- Selvés befure te war is over. have omitted none of the evils incident to this form of war- fare, and they have added new hor. the Germans rors of their own devising,” The Lusitania, Mr. Frost saved his graphic descrip- tion of ‘the Lusitania horror for the When ke had finished his des- cription of the terrible scenes which followed the torpedoing of this great queen of the deep which sent to a last: said But ceeded 10,000 lives, declared the con- sul. Every day 35 people become vic- tims to Germany’s ruthlessness. ship» of all nations, even Belgium relict ships, carrying succor to a distressed and, starving people, ‘have been sent to the bottom, with never a thought for ‘the ‘safety of non-combatants. aboard. German's submarine warfare iscontinuing with its vigor unabated, One of the ‘supreme tasks confronting America, said’ Mr. Frost, is ito make the great highways of the sea saga once more for our women and children. ; ' The address was preceded by a frightful death more than 1200 people, ‘MUchappreciated concert from the a majority of them women and. little Second regimont band of Harvey.’ Rev. George’ Buzzelle, rector of St. George's invoked the divine blessing. Every ash some private consumer. Vanee .McCormick,. Pennsylvania F. happen only in. St. Louis. and Pitts- s burgh, Waa e a democratic ~ national - committee, has newspaper ownerand.chairman of the | cas eo German sailors \interned: near tort MePherson; Ga., are earning their tobacco money by casting up toy American, French and German soldiers for the children of Amer- iva. A group is-hereé:shown with their forge and ecastigg materials, anc the finished prgduct. They make any nation’s soldiers, except the British. The Germans ‘say they ll have notlting to do ‘with things British. ~~ : INTRNED GERMANS WAKE TOY SOLDERS FOR KIDDE Preserving Wern Surfaces. There are sometinies places on the exterior of a house where the paint gets worn off and which cannot be re- touched without making a “botch job” of it owing to the difficulty of mixing the new paint to match the adjoining color which has faded. To preserve the wood in such spots until the house can be repainted, apply two coats of linseed oil with a rag. This will im- prove the appearance also. — Popular @éience Monthly. ai seat in the large building; even’ to the boxes, was filled, with an earnest, serious! people, anxious to learn the truth, eae ~ Mests Coilege-mates. ‘ Wesley -Frost, former consul to Queenstown, while in the city yes: terday for the purpose of delivering an address on the German suomerine warfare under the auspices of cae Bismarck Commercial club, had thé Pleasure of taking lunch with two old college mates—City Auditor and Mrs. Cecit L. Burton, Mr. ‘and Mrs. Bur- ton graduated from Oberlin in 1908. There they met and were close friends of both Mr. and Mrs. Frost, who finished in 197. Their meeting yesterday was the first in a number pf years and was thoroughly enjoyed by the three Oberlinites. ‘Mr, Frost is traveling light, making a rapid four across the continent in order that he may meet as many as possible wiih his message, and it was thought the joirney would prove too arduous for Mrs. Frost, who is not accompany- ‘»g him. The young consul now. fs in line for premotion, and, his next\post Prebably will be one of much greater importance than his last station, at Queenstown. ‘ Entertained at Dinner. ' Last evening \Consal Froét was guest of honor at a dinner given at the MeXenzie hotel: bY President H. P. Goddard of thé Bismarck ‘Commer- cial club, President C. L. Young of the Bismarck public library board; J. L. Tell, treasurer of the Burleigh county Red Cross chapter; Rev. George Buzzelle, chairman of the Eismarck Four Minute Men; Dr. EB. P: Quain, major and founder-of the Bismarck unit of the Red Cross. and George N. Keniston, secretary of the” Bisniarck Commercial club. He ‘left Sunday night on No.1 for Butte; where his ss : —_- ___ Tribune want ads will bring results, next address will be given. with its frightfulness’ undiminished. +

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