The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1917, Page 6

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jomrreaensienatd eG THE CUB’... : SscooP REPORTER 1G17— INTL-SYND - BALTB-MD Hogs Are Gost y CN BOSs-DO ow HOW HIGH T “JUST FLEW ? HAT I FOUND THis PORK CHOP ON A CLOUD; ‘You NCAT (OU MUSTNT FLY SO HIGH, WHEN NOURE. UST STARTING By SCG0P) —- CORES @ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. 4 COSC SETOOOOSOOS St. Paul . Columbus Milwauke: Minneapolis . Kansas City . Toledo GAMES TUESDAY. 11; Columbus, 2-0. Toledo, 1-1. St. Paul, 0. Indianapolis, 1; Minneapolis, 0. Milwaukee, 8- Kansas Cily, Louisville, 1; CO94F959009999008 © - NATION Ce Club— New York .... Philadelphia St. Louis .. Chicago . Cincinnati Brooklyn Boston . Pittsburgh GAMES TUESDAY. Pittsburgh at St. Louis. Club— Pittsburgh St. Louis Batteri der; Steele and Second game— Club— St. Louis .. Pittsburgh Batteries — Ames, Horstman Gonzales; Carlson and Fischer. Philadelphia at Boston. First game— Clat— Boston Philadelphia . Batteries—Barnes and Tragesser; Rixey, Fitterey and Killifer. Second game— Club— Boston .... Philadelphia . Batteries—Oes len, Walsh and Meyers. — Cincinnati at Chicago. First game— Club— Chicago Cincinnati Batteries and Wilson; chell and Wingo. Second game— Club— , Chicago ... Cincinnati Batteries son; Toney, Eller and ‘Wingo. Brooklyn 4 First game— * > Club— Brooklyn .. ‘New York . (Ten innit Batteries — Sallee, maree and Rariden; Cadore, Smith and Krueger, Miller. i Second game— ee Club— Brooklyn . New York Batterie: ng nN | Rares eer GAMES TODAY. lavinning. i Brooklyn at New York. by Philadelphia at Boston. Chicago at Pittshurg. ‘St. Louis at Cincinnati. } OOOOH EHH OHO OHS BASEBALL SCORES | jes—Doak, Packard and Sny- Reuther, Eagean, Mit-|!op and Nunamaker. voombhs ane ritt, Anderson and Rariden. The Tennis Face Ce a a AL LEAGUE. ° w. iL 84 48 76 58 - TB 63 70 68 68 68 62 68 72 89 Wagner. Coha Strachan?! Ilere ‘is a picture that contra- diets anyone who asserts tennis is a ‘“‘lady’s’ game” or ean see no ‘fun’? in the sport, It shows John R. Strachan, western tennis star, just after he returned a fast ball,.almost at the side line, sent over the net by Har- old Throckmorton, The pair was playing an exhibition match for the Red Cross on an East-end ten- nis club’s court at Cleveland re- cently, when this picture wi taken. Strachan defeated Throck- hger and Bi New York at Philadelphia. First game— RUE}. Club— - 614 | Philadelphia .. 512 2|New York Aldridge, Carter] Batterie: RED only after hard and brilliant play- SA era .1 8 0] ‘The picture shows vividly the op and Meyer; Cul-itense expression on Strachan’s face, thé tightened muscles of his arm and the strain upon the whole n.u.B.{ body as the player hits the ball, -1 8 1,And the,keen eyes,of the stay keep Bi Second game— Club— oer Philadelphia New York 3°23 Batterics—4Noyes, Anderson and Ha- jar; . n and Wil-|Jey; Shocker and Nunamaker. left the racket. LITTLE MAC BETTER Flasher Hustler Man ‘Able to Leave Hospital No other fathe scheduled. ‘ GAMES‘ TODAY. Cleveland at Detroit. New York at Philadelphia. Boston at Washington. at New York. Anderson, De- Hustler. SHE's RUNNING AGAIN HAT 'City Service Restored on. Capital Theyre. cating green sea turtles! Street Railway in New’ York. Has the Giants’ nae : ak diven them to’ The Capital street car line fs. again drink? in operation through the business dis- “# .,.,._ | trict of thé city’after having been ‘out Hans Wagner lost an exhibition of commission for several months dur- gaime to the hidians and caused a ing the paving operations. ~ otreqbigsslump in Wagner stock, Ree Kingdom Gould is getting a new) MINNEAPOLITAN NAMED” e AMERICAN LEAGUE. @ yacht for the coming races. THe’d y 9, McMullen Succeeds ; T. 6. a 0000000000000 66 Father encounter a German sub- Fy 7 Club— , Chicago Boston .. Cleveland . Detroit New York _ Washington * Philadelphia . St. Louis sees ' Croll as Assistant {marine than serve in the army. 4 , a ‘ J.0.'‘McMullex. of: Minneapalis has W. L. Pet|. yy ee pera an teeg cites) on) a h The ereatony snoty oF te vs . S been named by :Chjef Elevator Ac- 81 52 hunting —for the kaiser’s head. | countant Fred Schulz to be chief Ralph’ De Palma may not take deputy elevator accountant, ' succeed- part in the Sheepshead races, The pee oy a Tesigned rmy wants him to run down the ‘ ¢@list with the Canadian’ army. Germans, ae . 3! If Charley White wants to box COMES LONG WAY ' ar Benny Leonard for the lightweight Registrant Journeys From Racine | GAMES TUESDAY. jchampinship, let him call Benny to’ Meet Board { A ‘a slacker. oa Cleveland at Detroit. | G. B. Gunlogson af Racine, Wis., re ; Olut RAE ‘search engineer for the J. I. Case Detroit . Pa) : 2] HEARING CONTINUED ; company, appeared hefore the district Cleveland wl D ° Pa ‘exemption board this morning, travel- Batteries—Boland, Cunningham and] Louis Stone, alleged white slaver, ing all the way from the Badger state Stanage; Covaleskie and O'Neill. j was arreigned before Justice of the for this purpose.‘ — Peace Ailton Beefthis afternoon, and i Boston at Was Club 1) = Washington + | because of thé inkbility of his alleged CHIEF JUSTICE ARRIVES. . HE | victin, whofs ill in a local hospital,’ An‘Atlantic Port, Sept. 12.—Rt. Hon. 12 4 to appear, the hearing was continued Viscount Reading, Lord Chief Justice igton. cam ge Boston ... +3 1 until next Tuesday. Stone remains in of England, arrived here today on an , Batteries — Smith and Ainsmith; jail in-default of bail in the sum of American steamship. He was accom- Leonard and Agnew. $2,000. | Panied by Lady_ Reading. . morton in two straight sets, but]: ---4 6 0 track of fhe ball even affer it has ‘ f _J, K. McLeod, “Little Mac,” to his huffdreds of North Dakota friends, has | ° so far improved as to be able to leaye} the haspjtal for a stroll eagh,day and ; hopes soon’ tO Ve back on'the*joll as |: publisher and editor of the Flasher Jackies who we on the baseball Great Lakes Na Baseb: bossed by Phil ms back had scen eaehiis Pitchers Coo perton from from Texas, reliable..ei have scar latter son, formes (Piri now on: the ¢a New. York | GIRL, AT 16, Uh aman agree ‘thatthe: PO, diamond: 1 Trawiing sta. Chouinard, in 1910. Chieago’s Semi-pro. ball, fans to to give St, Louis a winning team, E itkies. team hag spent about $600,000 in_base- und.the ball since he first invested in the; piliz- St.Louis Federals. Oui, yn xe from St. Louis, Chouninard, (who formerly best pitchers in the American As- played with the American league) sociation, from Penn- ‘Culber er from most » and ais; ~The mere dil- op and of the jore he : MP-SWIMMER; Miss Gertind, old girl, hold hip for womer distance, in vous slow head.tid ‘Oakland Beach; |v. 100-yard. switt N.Y., under the ipervision of theRye-Beach club. Miss Ailehh Alle ‘ples & C. hol hoard. title, al high | faney. for- women:at. the Las An- mational pionship ‘, Sept. 12— joined the navy, the jackie had ar the Navy blue offers-from several minor league at the clubs but turned them down to ag - serve his country. tion are attracting attention thru-! ’ St, Louis, Sept 12.—The out the middle west because of Louis Americans, during the sea, their work during the last month, son of 1916, made a profit of 1 experts who have watch- about $25,000. The loss/ of the éd the cub in action, have termed club during the current season is it the strongest team that Uncle expected to equal that figure, mak- Sam ever managed. The team is ing an who played center field for the Chicago for, CAtehor Vinee however, and already he has La Berge ‘campetyom St: . Louis. + fn from . Texas, rhomm; Kleoffman ers whom the St. Lonis\‘eluls has wy Sialritrom Texas; obtained are Kenneth. Williams, Scott from Minnesota, Tanner .| pany.is hereby called, by the directgrs on it, too. s:| “ ‘feven break’ on the two years, ; ' Phil Ball, chief owner of the’ lub, whose ambition it has been! len This sum of He said he will stay in the game | spent $27,000 for new players for | next year, Among the new play:|f power '-and p ftrong Pacific coast star; Earl Smith, star hitter of the Western League; and Grover Lowdermilk, one of the GIN ! Ann Arbor, Mich., Sept, 12. Less than one-half of the pr t= | ive candidates for the University , higan 1917 football eleven will report.for practice late “in September. The other warriors aie serving their country. A call for gridiron volutecrs has been sounded: and it is considered cer- tain that the ordinary player will have the chance of his life to win an ‘‘M”’ this year. 12.—Ty Cobh er assistance SPORTSMAN WHO HAVE A QUICK TRIGGER 3 FINGER are just as quick to realize that our. Gun; and Ammuni- tion are the best. BE READY FOR THE QPENING OF THE HUNTING SEASON Shotguns-Shells HUNTERS :—Wo | wish to call your attention to our BLACK SRELL, as it is par- ticnlarly .des.red for 1t3 water’ proofness, penetrating HUNTING COATS, LEG- 38, GAME CARRIERS, SHELL VESTS, ETC. We are in a position to rend- lect! your foraphernalia for d, je hunt. f if _LOMAS HARDWARE CO. 316 Main Street exceptionally Primer. when you se- Detroit, Sept. made a statement to Trainer Har- ry Tuthill some time ago which not only has been fulfilled but wi has served to illustrate the BIG WB AHEAD ieorgian’s determination and keen confidence in his ability. —_ One day, in June, Cobb had a (Continued trom Page One.) _ batting streak and passed . Tris took down the names and the-assign- Speaker for the league leadership, !ments of the selects. ‘oMhat’s the last time Speaker Then the men were loaded into ae th 1@ Speaker! army: trucks—the same trucks that MF Hy Tees, this season,’’| saw service in Mexico a year ago— sal ob uthill, and hayled out to Camp Sherman. Milwauikee, Sept. 12.—William “city Two Miles Wide. “i Juneau, former football coach at Imagine a city, two. miles wide an he University of Wisconsin and three miles long). (in whieh (every. the : pase house is of yellow pine, painfully Maruette University, is to coach 'new—that’s Camp Shernian. the University of Texas football] Imagine a ‘country road — suddenly suad at Austin, Tex., the coming | compelled to carry ‘ traffic . heavier b a than that of most city streets—that’s | Van Gh ue gril, Sreseed Gene | itigh st., the thoroughfare over which | nt, yan er!WisconsiN the new soldiers are hauled to camp. football star, who has entered the} It’s two, months, almost toa day, miljtary service, ri i sincé the cat yellow. pine Hitiding all tak was erected at Camp Sherman. Now Juncen will take hold a4 Ane there are ‘1,200 of them-complete, and Texas eleven dn, Sept. 15. © 200 more to be finished at. the, rate of team won the sothwestern confer- j20 or 30 a day, so that 42,000 soldiers ence cllampionship last’ season,'and officers may be accommodated. but several of its best men have| If all the buildings were ‘put end ae ai . ~~ fo @nd, contractors told me, thev'l enlisted sq Juneau will have greet make a line 26 miles long. Each has ed. for practice at the opening of electric lights and sewer and water mnaterial ta develop. connections. Charles E. Large of Sandusky, 2] The average number of workmen 4 A F t]:¢ at Camp Sherman while the canton- | referee, Js the proud owner of the tent is. building is something like boxing gloves Bob Fitzsimmons 9,000. And the feat that’s been per- Iwore in his second heavyweight formed here has been duplicated in championship contest with James all the other camps. J. Corbett. Most of the selects seemed ibewil- When Fitzsimmons was hére’re-'dered by the immensity of thé camp. | cently,’ Large entertained him Laidet blame them. Iwas staggered and the former champion promised. ‘First on the program ‘for the sol-! him something that he would ap- diers after’ reaching camp, was UNGLE SAM HAS ciate. T i ere the “mess.” The word came a little awk- eereiate The gloves wi ‘ «) wardly’ to: some of the boys, but they, gut. quickly: learned that, in the army, St. Louis, » Sept. 12.-Rumors breakfast, dinner and supper have one that Walter Johnson, the big common-name—MESS. pitcher with the. Washington Am-| “Nevér'ate-better grub in our lives,” ericans, is for sale or trade have a pac of Ciacinnati selects assured been spiked by Clark “Griffith, ““xtter:mess—which in the case of manager of the club, who deleared my. soldiers happened to be the noon- the report that he wanted to,tarde day! bal: came the first real work. ee of gos-| ishwashing, it was. e Jobnion was: the. Vidlest of go | ‘I didn’t know that dishwashing P was part of being a soldier,” grinned s Private James Mullen‘of Cincinnati. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING CF «put pm game. I want to learn this s THE STCCKHOLOERS OF, THE war, business fast; so we can lick the MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR COM- jaiser and get back home.” . ‘PANY. Grins on the Faces. A special meeting of. the stockhold- That’s the spirit I found among all ers of the Missouri Valley Motor com- the‘ selects. Army officers remarked of the company, to be. held:at the‘prin-} MOST OF THE -MEN GRIN—grin cipal office of The company in the city when they plunge their arms to the of. Bismarck, North Dakota, at_7:30 eloows in grcasy dishwater; grin when o'clock p. m./on Saturday, the fif- a training sergeant gives. them a teenth day of September, 1917. dressing « n for turning to the left ’ The object of said meeting is, by wher the Order is “right face;”. grin the stockholders consent, to authorize while they're going through the rigid the Board of Directors tq increase the physical examination that is the last apjtal stock of the company to one step before they’re formally accepted j;hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars. as_ soldiers. r ficer at Camp Sherman. “The selected men. arp: going to give ug that co-oper- ation"that we need to make them into first class’ fighting men. “And it is going. to be a fast job. There'll be no loafing. The men will have to put’in cight hours a day at hard work. At first, one hour a day will be spent in marching and another in physical exercises. Trench work wil start soon. “The drill in discipline will be con- tinual. The men have to learn the lesson of instant,unquestioning. obed- ience; of strict conformance to rules.” I asked Private Andrew Nelson of at Camp Sherman interested him most, “The bayonet fighting,” he said. I found he’d been watching some of the Ohio guardsmen, on police (duty at the camp, making attacks with their bayonets on straw stuffed canvas dummies. “I want to learn that,” said Nel- son. “Then I want to get_over in France and practice what I’ve learned on the Germans.” TRAIN TAKES WALK BY 1T8 LONESOME ;. CRASHES INTO ANOTHER FREIGHT Lemmon, S. D., Sept. 12.—While the crew of: Milwaukee freight train 62 were at breakfast at the Palace ho- tel here, the train crawled through the switch onto the main track and took a leisurely course eastward. It continued on ifs way until it crashed into a west-bound freight, a short dis- tance east of the city, derailing:the latter's engine and smashing several box.cars. A number of cars of gaso- line were derailed, the tanks punc- tured, and much.of. the valuable flyid Jost. .No mempber of the crew was injured. NAVAL RECRUITING OFFICER ‘ENLISTS GOOD HUSBAND : Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 12—Miss Emily Parkinson, daughter of Deputy County Auditor and Mrs. A. Parkin- son, prominent for her: work as. naval recruiting officer in this district, and Andrew Loram, proprictor of a local confectionery store, stole a march on their scores of: friends when they journeyed to, Minneapolis . ard ‘were united in mariage therc.‘ They were wédded in the Mill City. yesterday. ONE BABY OVERWORKED Used by Seven Families as a De- pendent Child Glendive, Mont., Sept.’ 12.—The child in the case-of one community in Butte and Silver Bow counties, where. it is proven that a single baby was used as a “dependent child” by seven differ: eat familjes in filing claims for exemp- tiqn with their local board. Arrests are threatened, and wives are held Dated at Bismarck, ND, July 14,! “If.I ever had any doubts of the 1917, suecess of the selective service plan, JOS. P. HESS, they’re gone now,” says Major Gert . “Secretary. ieral Edwin F. Glenn, commanding oi; mY equally responsible with their hus-, hands for practicing this deception. Tribune want ads will bring results Toledo which of the things he’d seen ~ labor laws seem to have been violated,

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