The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1917, Page 6

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i | i sIx _ BISMARCK: DAILY TRIBUNE : TUESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1917. - scoop THE CUB REPORTER T THINK TEL CHoase TH’ HYDROPLANE—\| * END-OF TH’ AWIATI - “Ht-Possibl ON SERVICE. BECAUSE, I. LOVE TO FISH AND G e Combine Pleas x \ eres ti Ww BASEBALL SCORES Ce a a ee & AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. 4 COGS Oo & & O] Meyers; Monroc and Nunamaker. Club— Indianapol Louisville . St. Paul Columbus. Milwaukee Minneapolis . Kansi ‘ily. Toledo .+.. GAMES MONDAY, Indianapolis, 13-2; St. Paul, 3-2;Ahe second game was called in the fifth inning on account of darkness. Columbus, 3-4; Kansas City, 4-1. Ce ee oe ed ° NATIONAL LEAGUE. o CVOCSOSTSEHOCEOOOD Club— wih New York . see 82. 48 Philadelphia wads Ib BE St. Louis ... svenre G2 62 Cincinnati. 68 66 Chicago .. 68 68 Brooklyn 62 66 Roston . 57 71 Pittsburgh 3 $8 GAMES .MONDAY. Brooklyn at New York. First game— Chib— R.H. BL New York ......... 610.2 Brooklyn . 13-13 (4 Batteries: son, Teg- reau; Benton, McCarty; Rariden, Pfef- | fer and Miller, Kruger. ! Second game— Club— RHE | New York . ek OL Brooklyn . Sietaie Batteries—Anderson,. Benton and MeCarthy, Rariden; Marquard ‘ and Kruger. { 1 Pittsburgh at St. Louis. 1 Club— RLE. BENMouis i... . eee eeeeeeeee 2° 9 1 Vittsburgh ses Poe Oe Ree | Batteries—Goodwin and Snyder; Ja- cobs, Evans and Schmidt. Philadelphia at Boston. First game— Club— RHE. Boston ...... 210 4 Philadelphia .... 5 9 2 Batteries—Tyler ‘and Tragesser; Al- exander and Killifer. R. HLF. Boston . 12 14 1 Philadelphia . 229 38 Batteries—Regan and Meyers; La- vender and Adams, Burns. Second game— Clob— GAMES TODAY. Brooklyn at New York. ; Philadelphia at Boston. 1 Chicago at Pittsburg. St. Louis at Cincinnati. ee ee ee ee ° AMERICAN LEAGUE. . | o CFOS SHEHOHEFHO OH Club— w. Chicago .. 5 91 47 Boston . oak Gleveland Th 60 Detroit 69 62 New York . 63 59 Washington . 60 71 Philadelphia » 48 83 St. Louis ....... . 48 88 GAMES MONDAY, Boston at Washington. First game— Club— R.H.E. ‘Washington ... oi ataven, ae 8. 1 Boston sew sk.) Brak ‘Batteries 4 Harper, Thomas and Sniith; Ruth and Agnew. Second game— } Club— R.H.E. Washington 3.60 Boston .... 45 0 Batteries—Shaw, Dumont ‘and Ain- smith; Mays and Agnew. j » New York at Philadelphia. | First game— chab—- Philadelphia New. York ...... HS 4b 9) UpBeie a yeteest Ririlbscanae 16 Philadelphia , New York . agers shake.in their. boots. for fear concerned, and he had most to do the bush Idaguers will beat their with Merkle’s sudden leap to re~ nines in exhibition games, athletie prizes, some athletes will have to go to war.and win them that way. baseball. but we just can’t think @ubs during a series in whieh he of them while White Sox are fighting to get at each other, ball games, Gan Johnson ought to. by a play-off, Now, as fete world eneconrage the''shine ball. instead faye it, he’s ther of ruling it out. jthan any, other. athletes, another argument for prohibition? #..-2 5 2 prizes must. have.heen cooked up, doesn’t: eave. althongh he’d much jnst to ‘rankle: human ‘medal win-) prefer showing un the latter. Rookie Pitcher Gets Rare have thought. twice what Lee Fohl, Cleveland Indian . pilot who jumped into, the lime- light right-out of the minors, did. big league baseball before he wa chosen to make a |team out of a bunch of trailers la year. He did, and what’s more rookie pitcher to work sooner than riding in but T didn’t: he has opened the dyed-in-the-wool leadeyf; by ting up one of the most brilliant fights for the lead the American leaene has staged for some time ing is Tee Fohl. ean be classed with Wilbur Robin- | his new pitcher. He never prom- son of the Dodgers as a developer | ises, but he goes ahead and does, Second game— Ch— R. HB. wie, L102: 5 iL O and Batteries — ‘Myer Baseball, like any other sport, must have its little joke. This time the victim is Fred Merkle, first baseman of second jbase fame.. The fates have de- 2 jereed to put Fred in-a somewhat ‘paradoxical situation and laugh at ihim. Veteran ‘fans will remember when Merkle made the bone that made him: famous. in 1908, he | vowed to wreak vengeance on the I ‘club that caused his team’s dawn-| Now is, when big league man- fall.. So far as Johnny Evers GAMES TODAY. Cleveland at Detroit. New York at Philadelphia. Boston at Washington. nown, Fred’s vow has been ful- filled. For. Fred now is trying’ to fill the gap Evers left when he anit the Cubs, But what makes b X -.{ Merkle’s position severe is his en- There are other ‘sports besides foreed rest. with the unsuecessful Tf they stop awarding medals as and hed benad to. heve achand, Merkle was sore-at'Chiecago fans and everything thatt smacked of : a [the Smoky City, after the Cubs To speed up American League {ook the pefhant from the Giants the . Giants playing with) the Cubs, and destined to wateh seem to: last longer | OMe of the most severe warld se- Ts this’ Ties hattles in history. Fred, even now, ean’t have a hand. in lieKine Chicaeo—whether The idea. of: giving dogs eash it’s'the White‘Sox or the fans, he Swimmers, He would be able to put up a' Chance to Make Good c E of pitchers, Stanley Goveleskic } and Jim Bagby, both among the; leaders in pitehinig, owe their sup- veteran manager would Any before doing ing ability to Wilbur. , Lee Fohl had not. even played Now comes the surprise to vet- eriority to their new manager, just; as Rube Marquard owes-his pitch- | tay Rees WA me ~ if le were ,still good fizht ‘tala with the Giants. ‘for: his. batting and fielding has not been lowered to a miarked degree, Tle has shown better judgmetit and great- er. skill in ‘batting tis ear than last. although in formey years he has exceededyhis preseut:standing. Tn 1915, when with the Giants, Merkle finished sixth in batting THE PARADOX OF BASEBALL wren ré With Businéss and his fielding avers 1508, the year of his. tame batted .268 for the 18 games he played. He had come. to Giants only the year before from Tecumseh, Mich, Merkle, still has the hope of re: joining the Giants and beating the Cubs. the team he plays-with now. to the pennant. ; State Examiner J. R. Waters Con- 79 AND THERE SEEMS. TO SE PLEN OF CHANCES FOR. UT IN THIS BRANGH ser OF TH SERVICE! RUSSELL TELLS. G4,674 TO FORM, HOSEL TS tle black eyes of the kind always de- One-Twentieth of One Per, Cent scribed as beady, a large mouth anda prominent nose., With. his -slickery of $83,349,000 Becomes Avail- able January1 | hair.and glittering eyes he must have strongly suggested thestage edition of Svengali. According to all accounts he had no charm -of‘eonversation nor of manner, and his ignorance was as plain:as his arrogance the instant he began to talk. t Although here was:the last man in the world that you, would think a seltf- | respecting . woman. would «have: an amour with, Yet it is related ‘that over many intelligent and. rather wise women he exercised an extraordinary power and over -hundreds of others What seemed like an uncanny fasci- nation. All this is usually. aceountea K 1 Russia on the iheory that he sessed some secret of Hypnotism. With the other unpleasant traits he Sead oi etteet was a famous booze-tighter, Even at- North Dakota’s<first guaranty de- ter the prohidition 4 vodka he seem- posit fund, which is expected ‘Jo be- ed always to be well supplied ‘witn hh. come availatle Jan, 1, will telat gaz. {ator and it was the common belief 674.50, according to an estimate made irom ey Uige ine Oneeryay MAL LUA 24 he could stand more rum than any by State Examiner J. R. Waters to- other man in Petrograd. When. he day. That amount, it is believed, will was on.a drinking bout he chose tne be sufficient {> meet any demand |inost disreputable ~ companions and which will be made on the fund for {went on a-wild bat that lasted for sev- the reimbursement of depositors in| eral days and wound up in the lowest any one year. If it should prove in-|dives of the city. s sufficient, the state guaranty board| The police knew him well and fedr- has authority, under an act passed ed°him, ‘for they had accurate’ knowl- by the last legislature, to call up to}edge both of his power and remorse- $833,490. Iéss tse of it. When he came in his The guaranty fund is based upon} borrowed robes of a priesthood. ne the average daily deposits of the 690}had no right to claim, roaring ano hanks and four trust companies which |roistering, they stood. aside and let are the beneficiaries. .Such average}him go. Any person that was with daily deposits, reports in the office of |him was imnune ;if he were a érith- the state examiner show, are $83,249,-|inal that the police. had Jong wanted, 000, The law authorizes the state|/no one.dared: lay hands upon him.’ He board to levy-for the. guaranty, fund | was: a friend of Rasputin-and. Rasput- one-twentieth of one per cent of these] in’ was. the all-powerful ‘of Russia, FUND OF 833,490 WiLL ULTIMATELY BE ACQUIRED siders New Act Cheap Form ; of Mutual Protection 989. Tn Jamestdyn, N. Dy Sept) 1 ‘m methods. I believe in organized la-, of that. gang.” | B. ‘Hoover, held in the county, jail here asa witness in-the Kensal shoot- , ing affray of last week,‘in which two transients were shot in cold /lood by five I. W. W.’s, made this statement to Sheriff James H. Ross in telling his! story -of the affair: ‘Hoover ‘boarded the train at Valley City with avout 30 other I. W. W. Herald and Gruber, the two “wobblies” shot by their five “comrades: fn arms” alsd boarded the train wlien; Hoover -got on. ‘The ative holdup artists went” through Teéarty’al! of us on the train,” divi eran baseball—Lee Fohl? rookie first the any long experienced | manager put- would dare do. | Only a short time ago, Ted Torkleson, eves of eame to Cleveland from Marshall- But even more than the remember. one and Bob Veach Be , Torkleson in mind for being And the man behind the pitch-|canght off first by a foot. ~ The Tndian pilot] Lee Fohl won’t say much about himself, has put a. brand new against the side of thes bos o a young -were also described ‘b; light-haired, right-hand spitballer, ' The Indians ‘are third, as Ty town, Ta., and has already faced Cobb as Hughie Jennings © will the Tigers and the Browns. 1 — have to admit. Jt mav he their! The yonng piteher is not m a batting. what. with Tris» Speaker different from any other, so far as and Bob Roth and other leading looks go, brthe has shown he ean ‘swatter: keeping up their good piteh—and Feld, too. Ty Cobb! work. i batting. if has heen the pitehine 'strikeéut avast each bv this het has robbed the Tigers of third rookie and Ty will especially keep _ place. said Hoover. “They. stick. me. up ve.a cent so they let me go.” Cae Cruel tactics of thi shooting, down Herale WAND BAY DECLARES WITRESS, ~ TORUGENT TRAN HOLDUP “They fired at least twelve shots af- through with the I. W. W. and;iheir | ter the fleeing transients,” said Hvov- er. “Both Herald'and Grider Grop bor but not anarchism and the blooa- ped .to the flat car, face down. The thirsty tactics employed by members men went over and searched-in their their Tt was They took $47.50 in cash from the two men, but then found pockets “for money, despite groans: and ‘pleas for mercy. terrible. 1, W. W. cards on their person. “Oh, you fellows are I.-W. W.’s.’ satd one. ‘All right’ boys, we won't They put the cash back and the membership ‘cards ana leaped from the train just before it concluded Hoover. touch your money.’ reached’ Kensal,” Herald Recovering. James: Herald, the man most serf- ously wounded by the bandits, is re- covering slowly but surely at the Car- rington hospital, according to reports Gruber is resting easily at a today. Kensal hotel. No trace of the five: men respon- sible for the shooting has been found thus far. i How Long ’ From the Pangs of Rheuimatiom? 48 Jy there no real relief in sight? Doubtless like other sufferers, you have often asked yourself this qtcs- tion, which continues to remain un- answered. Bcc Scicnée,has proven that your Rkeu- matismHs¢caused w get mpin-your load, a e cniwar 9 reach it'is by a rent ch eNmigatcsyand re- moves. th tile pain gemons® your Wood "This Lata aS whys Gents and lotions can oa saa nent good, for they cannot ‘possibly these germs which infest your reach blood by the millions, S..S. S. has been successfully use for Rheumatism for more ¢han fift years, Try it to-day, and you wil find. yourself at) last on. the: right track to get rid df your Rheumatism. You can get valuable advice about the treatment of your individual. case by Chicf Medical Adviser writing to the Ch: Swift Specigs Co. Dent, OD lanta, Ga° * deposits, which is equivalent to $41,-] He had a, power to pull himselt. to- 684, the amount which the board wiJl| gether as great as his other unusual have at its disposal July 1. gifts! ‘The next day after a frightful Remains on Deposit. debauch ‘he would ‘appear in frest This guaranty fund is not removed |canonicals and go about talking piety from the state banks which set it|and rotling up his eyes to heaven, and aside, until there is a demand for}those that saw him even at close funds with which to reimburse deposi-|range could hardly detect any sign of tors who have lost throtigh the failure | the souse upon.him. : of some state bank or for some other }' Traded With Germany. reason which the act covers. Then} Jt was not. possible that these only such percentage is called’as may }tnings could last. All the, tinie ‘the be actually needed. Each year & suM | nobles that happened by: some cliance equivalent to one-twentieth of one per |tg pe still loyal to Russia were hear- cent is added until the fund amounts |ing. the stories of “his trading with to one per cent of the average daily/ Germany, while the people ‘nt large deposits. At the‘end of 29 years this} wore gathering hatred for his cruelty fund may he expected to have swelled!“ phere was-only:.one class-in_ the to not less than ‘a million dollars.| community that. found anything to When the fund shall have become approve in him. - That was the revo- equivalent to one ner cent of the aver. itionary agitators. They used Thin .age daily deposits no ffrther.devies | a about Russia as a airst class ex. are to be mada upon the state banks) ample-of the folly of monarchy, and until the fund; thitough the payimént of dn 4 + bd BAY) cand lesses, falls below-that ‘standard: couldnt shave: Rad's: better. ‘They Bee, ; saw to it that his name and deeas “The mors’ fataltine T Teconis Wwith |2ecame ‘known throughout the: land, this guaranty act, the better I like it,” 404 to this day. the comic illustrated said State Examiner Waters today, P@Pers aré using: him as a text. “{t seems to absolutely safeguard the -.'!" Russia where nobody, you might interests of the depositors, and at the ®2Y: had a vote or.a,voice in the gov- same time it plaees no’ burden to ¢™ment there was no civilized way speak of on the banks. They continue ‘© g¢t at sucha croature... There was to have the usé of'their money; it is 20 law that could. be invoked, against not removeti from circulation, but Dm. The-only real law was the will merely sct aside as a reserve on the Of the czar and that was all for tne books of the institution, subject to ¢7@rina, and the czarina was all for draft from the guaranty board. We Rasputin. have had a very satisfactory experi- There was no way to counteract his ence in this state so far as state banks influence He was the only person are concerned.’ There have been no the czarina ‘trusted or would really disastrous failures, and if we may listen'to. * base our judgment on the past it will . Under thgse conditions there was be safe to say that no heavy calls nothing for his oppone:'s to do but need be anticipated on this fund. ‘The to kill him. ane fund is there, however, if it should be| One night on -his way home fi needed, and it constitutes.an absolute Winter ‘he was shot at, the’ bullet guaranty to depositors. ~ "piercing the back of the sleigh ang “The state guaranty law is nothing Missing him. by a few inches. N more than an_economical form of mu- long after an assassin made his way tual insurance. State banks now prob- into Resputin’s honse and: tried té ably pay an averageé of at least $59 stab him.'Several times, according ‘¢ yearly for surety bonds. . They cannot the story, thugs lay in wait for hi become depositories for public funds to beat him up. 1 of any description unless provided ~ He escaped all these and hegan td with such sureties. Under the state have the renutation-of a charmed life! guaranty act the average assessment He must have taken little stock i will be little greater; the money is that himself; He now went. about not removed from the bank until it is Petrograd with a body guard of picked needed, and at the end of 20 years men. o the fund should, haye attained such His fests put no check upon hig proportions that further levies will be drunken tongue. When he was rina a unnecessary for years to come.” the used to talk about the czarina ai Effective January 1. |he-talked about a drab. Reports from all-of the state banks ; and trust companies have reached the state éxaminer’s office, and definite groundwork now is being laid for the placing of the act in operation: Jan. 1. / Every bank in the state has signified its intention to comply wit pro- visions of thew¢ty and thes ov- position encounteted at first J id to have died away. ~ After a time he began to talk loose- ly about the then Grand Duchess. OF ga, the czar’s oldest child, and that in the eyd, did for him. ai £8 The-ex-grand duchess seems by all accounts to be’ a :rather. superidt young woman, consittering the inisfor- tunes of. her -birth and: bringing up! There wag a voung nobleman in Pe; Waa Hoey hada profound respect — and admiration for her: When: hd NOTICE TO CITIZENS OF “BIS: Jearned that ‘Rasputin ‘had boasted itt MARCK CONCERNING CITY WA hk dive that before long:he would ‘havé TEM. her atso in his powér? ‘this..9 4 The City Commission of the Citv vf novleman made up hig mind thee Bismarck advise you to boil the water time had come to silence that ribald’ fernished you by the Bismarck Water tongue and the task belonged to him! Supply Company before using it fcr} He performed ™ it: conscientiously; domestic purposes. The City Commis- and that was the end of Rasputin. $1 sion will notify you when it is safe to/ It seemed as if with that shot the use this water without boiling. people woke fip-to'the enormity of dae on by order of City Commis- the ‘whole degrading burden that ion. [cursed them’ and bowed them to the C. l. BURTON, Auditor, ‘ground. ep oe ey SNE isk: u if

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