The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 19, 1917, Page 8

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{ Fi t f BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1917... < = ‘B0S5-LLL SAY G BY- IM GOING UP YO RY TO LOOP-TH-LOOP NN’ MAY NEVER. CEST EEEDETODS @ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. ¢ COTES EEEEEOESE Club— Indianapolis St. Paul .. Louisville . Columbus. Milwaukee . Minneapolis . Kansas City .. Toledo GAMES 'TUBSDAY. Toledo, 5 Minneapolis, 4-3, St. Paul, 9; Columbu: Indianapolis, 10; Milwaukee, 9. SCHSTSEITETETOSS % NATIONAL LEAGUE. o CROSSES EEEEEEOOOD Club— w. L New York . ~ om 49 Philadelphia . 77 60 St. Louis . 66 Cincinnati 7 Chicago . 72 Brooklyn . UB Boston eee 7 Pittsburgh ... o, GAMES Philadelphia at Cincinnati. Club— Cincinnati... Philadelphia . Batteries and Killifer. Boston at Pittsburgh. First galue— Club— R.ILE Pittsburgh . 7 2) Boston ..- 0 Batteries—Cooper and Smith; Ru- dolph pn ata Second game— Club— RHE. Boston Is 6 Pittsburgh 630 Batteries — Ponder and Schmidt; Nehf and Meyers. Brooklyn at St. Louis. First game— Club— RW. EB. St. Lou i Brookly Batteri fer and Krueger. Second game— Club— St. Louis . Brooklyn . 412 2 Batteries — Doak and Gonzales; Cheney, Wachter and Wheat. New York at Chicago. Club— RHE Chicago ... = 93 New York . _ 24 6 °0; Batteries: rter, Hendrix and Dil- hoefer; Benton and Rariden. GAMES TODAY. New York at Chicago. Boston at Pittsburgh. Philadelphia at Cifcinnati. Brooklyn at St. Louis. Ce e AMERICAN LEAGUE, o SPOTLESS HSEFOOSO Club— Le Chicago .. 48 Boston . a Clevelan¢ 1 Detroit ... 68 Washington . 72 New York , w4 Thiladelphia 89 St. Louis ... 92 GAMES TUESDAY. + Chicago at Philadelphia. cinh R.A. Bs Philadelphia . ~110 2 Chicago . » 610. 1 Batter! Bush and Anderson, Mey- ers; Faber and Schalk. | St. Louis at Washington. Club— RIE Washington ~9o 1 St. Louis »310 4 Batteries Ainsmith; r Koob, Wright and Severeid. Cleveland at New York. Club R.H.E. New York . Cleveland. Batterie: eill. and Billings, No other games played. GAMES TODAY Philadelphia at Washington. | Boston at New York. Cleveland at St. Louis. Chicago at Detroit. | —_ i The Tactful Job. Anybody can run the government. It is the job of naming the baby that} demands the tact, finesse, diplomacy and executive ability of the average, family —Topeka Capi : | Res OLE EER wwe SCOOP ,tHe cue ORTER FRED IIERKLE™ Qa RN IND MU NDERAO QUA RLDALL OLE ROUSCH SOME STARS M’GRAW HAS LET GO BY. A good dash of fortune, scrambled in with the real ability that Is evident {s as much responsible as anything in the success of John J. McGraw. ‘Touted a Wonder as a baseball manager, it is doubtful if McGraw would be able to produce the same results that have characterized the efforts of several other big league managers if he didn’t have the wealth of his backers to draw from, leaving him free to choose at will from among hundreds of ball players. The cases of Eddie Rousch and Dick Rudolph are perhaps the most’ pre- dominant. Rousch is near the top among National league batsmen. Ru- dolph is Boston's most effective pitcher and was one of the main reasons why the Braves were able to battle their way to a National league championship and a subsequent world’s champion- ship, Both these men once were Giants. Rousch was kept mainly doing bench duty, while Rudolph scarcely got that far. Milton Stock is another example ; Fred Merkle is a fair idea of a ball player discarded as a has-been, and who is doing great work. There are BASEBALL STORIES Waite Hoyt continues to pitch good j ball for Montreal, eee We'll say this for Ty Cobb, he shows no signs of abdicating his bat- ting crown, eee Norman, the former White Sox pitch- er, has been turned over to Des Moines by Wichita, eee On a really hot day it is better to as- Sociate with an electric fan than with a baseball fan, eee Outfielder Dan Costello, former Pl rate and International leaguer, has joined Kansas City. eee Although it is not generally known, the Reds had Fred Schupp of the Giants, but let him go. eee Middleton, the pitcher released by the Giants to Louisville, was consid- ered the best minor league hurler last fall. eee Joe Myers, the Notre Dame colle ‘ gian, did not last long with Columbus, ' He proved a weak hitter, and was re leased after a week's trial. ee 8 Ralph Miller of the Waterloo Cen- tral association club, who has been snared by the Chicago Cubs, is said to be “another Zimmerman.” : eee The New York Yankees grabbed one player from the disbanding Northwest: ern league. He is Elmer Leffer, pitch- er-outfielder of the Bytte team, many others. McGraw has cast them aside to make room formen he thought would do better with the men making up his team, He has been successful in winning pennants and has to his credit one world’s championship, but if he would gather the stars he has let slip from his grasp and form them into éne team the chances are he would have a machine that would be able to crush the present galaxy of stars with which he is trying to fret his way to a pennant. A little more than a year ago Me. Graw set out to gather in a surplus of stars with which he threatened to make a runaway race of the National league pennant. Among these was Hans Lobert. Lobert didn’t even finish the season and is used now only as o pinch hitter. McGraw considers him finished, yet it is only a brief stretch of time since he went into a breach and won a game for the Glants by the bril- liance of his fielding and hitting. It is one thing to have money be hind and still another to be able te | build a championship team, enn Some of these days Myers of the Athletics will win a pennant for Con- nie Mack, eae Picketing the White House seems to be about as successful as arguing with the umps, \ see Cleveland ball club has lost its mas- cot. Maybe it will begin to win ball gumes now. ee 6 It seems that Joe Jackson will come within the “also rans” in the race to catch Ty Cobb. * s Now that Stallings has signed Ed Walsh, maybe he can get Johnny Kling to catch him, eee Perhaps Jack Barry figures it harder to win a flug as manager than to play on a Winning team. 1 te Forty-three-year-old Eddie Plank is as good as the first day he pitched with Connie, back in 1901. eee {The way to spell the peppery littl Cub catcher’s name is this: Dillhoefer, Dutch, not German. ee 8 Imagine, if you can, the grief of Ping | Bodie when Jim Callahan was chase as manager of the Pirates. eo George Burns got $59 for hitting the bull. Ile's more successful than a lot ; of guys who try to throw it. j eee No matter where the Reds finish Cincinnati will still love the Mattys for trimming the Giants twice ia onc afternoon, eee n of the Chicago Ex- ible for the umpires y, being labeled the Charley Dry aminer is respu. By The Boss Lo Onr— ‘ a — BATS —MD — TH LIL GoOr Y_- \ FORGOT VO A NHAN G- BRITAIN REVEALS ITS AIR SECRETS iAmerica Given Results of Ex- periments Carried on for Several Years, : { ‘BIG FLEET PLAN OPPOSED Turning Out of 30,000 Craft Deemed Unwise, In View of Continual Changes Made Necessary by War Experience. London—If the United States pro- duces airplanes on a large scale and the western front It will be due in no smail measure to the great aid rene dered America by the British govern- mert in aeronautics, Britain is toe day supplying American aero factories | With concrete results developed by exe , periments carried on for several years, j# few of which are outlined In a recent jrepurt by the advisory committee for jweronaut ‘Tae work of the advisory committee hi ywh to such an extent in the last year that si pointed for s lines, One subcommittee is experiment: ing on internal combustion engines, while another is dealing exclusively with light alloys. As a result of exe perience gained in actual warfare changes are made in construction ale most diily, and it is this fact that makes the plans of the United States for the immediate construction of 30,- UU virplines seem inadvisable, Perhaps the greatest advance in afr- plune construction has come through the work of the committee on aero- dynamics, which has tested models of every type of aircraft now employed. Important tests have been made of various shapes to discover which .of- fered the least resistance and which best distributed air pressure. Airship Stability. Along this line 2 vast amount of ex- perimental work has been,carried out along the theory of airship stability. A complete series of tests have been completed relating to air propellers with a view to increasing the accuracy of prediction of performance, thus fae cilitating the design of propellers for special types of aircraft. Extreme care has been devoted to the study of design to secure adequate strength in high-speed fighting mae chines. These machines which the United States already is at work upon require high power, while the weight must be kept to the minimum, and the best compromise between these two opposed conditions does not admit of precise determination. Special atten- tion has been paid to the manner in which strength varies with dimensious. Machines have been placed upon test tables which allow of accurate obser- vations of the effects of vibration. Every wire, brace and stay has been put to severe tests. The use of light alloys has become of paramount importance, and the im- provements made in the dast year along this line are goin~ to have tre- mendous effect on future development. The national physical laboratory has been conducting experiments’ light alloys for many years, and during the last two or three months results of special interest have been achieved. To carry out the manufacture of the newest type metal the subcommittee on light alloys hopes <> eo-ordinate the work being done in various centers and of placing the information. gained by experimental work at the disposal of manufacturers, Fabrics anc: Varnishes. This information, in part, has been sent to the United States and will take its big share in the final achievement of tremendous output.‘ Collaborating with the. military air department, the advisory. committee for acronautics has taken up several questions dealing with the use of fab- tics and varnishes anc protective coat- ngs. These material; have been test- ad for use in the tropics and for use in he cold high altitudes and in the win- er months on the western front. Con- ‘dusions of importance have been ‘eached in this line and changes have veen made in the materials and coat- ngs for wings with regard for the changes worked by sunlight, rain and ‘ther atmospheric conditions. Aviation schools have aided greatly n the work of perfecting bombs to be varried by airplanes and the same ‘chools have also supplied valuable in- : wis they prove successful in the fighting on! ommittees have been ups: cin! work ‘along certain | if | | wers His Fielding Average SOME O' THAT OLE BASE SALL STUFE ob By “Hop” NOPE TH OLE TJUDGEMENT, nstruments and the effect of altitude m them, Two new types of bombsights nave been tested and a new form } 3tundardized, Lastly, the advisory -ommittee reports that establishment of stations in the proper areas to re- port upon the development and pro- cedure of thunderstorms. They are traced across the map and reported to the affected districts, O'MARA LANDS WITH ATLANTE. Former Brooklyn Star Has Short: stopped From Coast to Coast, Winding Up in South. Ollie O'Mara, who has shortstopped from coast to coast this year, has joined Atlanta. He started with Brook- lyn, was shipped to Oakland, waa * Ollie O'Mara. shipped back and thence to the New York State league, where the economy policy caused him to be discarded, whereupon the Brooklyn club unloaded him on Atlanta, FANS DON’T LIKE ROWDYISN i General Demand for More Aggressive. ness on Part of Players, Both | Major and Minor. There is a general demand for more aggressiveness on the part of the ball players, both major and minor, This is proper enough, as there has been al- together too much refinement about baseball, which is supposed to be a red-hlooded masculine contest, and not a pink tea, But in encouraging ag- gressiveness, the magnates must not fall into the error of reviving one phase of aggressiveness that is akin to and provocative of rowdyism in its worst form, That fs the indulgence in more or less derogatory personal ex- changes between ball players, known | as “riding.” This form of goading an’ adversary is intolerable and s prohibited. Insulting opponents is sup- posed to be evidence of fighting spirit and ginger, and is favored by many mianagers, bat seldom pleases specta- | tors, especially women who sit close | to the playing field. The famous, Mackmen were “colorless,” according to scribes, because they did not indulge ; in “riding” opponents, but it is sigatfi- cant that more women attended the; games at Shibe park in the days of, the famous machine than are on band at other major league parks, A SALE OF A DIFFERENT KIND. Mr. M. B. Gilman, [manager of the Missouri Valley Motor Co. inaugurates a sale on used cars tomorrow that, ss been attempief® in re fe ANSWER: THE ALARM Bismarck People Should Not Delay. If your kidneys are inflamed, Don’t stand around and do nothing. Like a fire it will soon be beyond} control. You will get the alarm in time— Backache, or dizziness or disorders of the urine. Heed the warning. Give your kidneys a rest by living” more carefully. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills to help stamp out the cause. Profit by this Lismarck man’s ex- perience: D. Hill, 515 Broadway, says: “My experience with Doan’s Kidney Pills has been so satisfactory that I recom- mend them to anyone suffering from kidney and bladder disease. 1 suffer- ed from a stitch in my back when- ever I lifted anything. My kidneys were weak and I had to get up often ut night to pass the kidne retions. Doan’s Kidney Pills quickly cured me.” Price 60¢ at all dealers. Don’t sim- Ply ask for a kidney remedy—get vans Kianey Prus-—ime same that cured Mr. Hill, F 'tures of the sale that surpass any similar sale in the state, During its progress, and to lend ad- ditional interest, Mr. Gilman has taken a Chalmers master six, selling at $600, and will reduce the price of this car each morning at $ a. m. $10, and each afternoon at 1 p.m. another cut of $10 will be made in its price. , This fea- ture will continue until the and while the sale is on. Over are included in this first sale of used cars and each car iced so ajl may pur 5 a car for either pleasure or business purposes. See their advertisement on last page of tod une. CITY NEWS Returns From Coocrich—Miss Paul- eturned to the city from here she s called by Takes Charge of Piant—James A. Sennett of this place has gone to Un- vod where he will manage the lectrie light plant of that place. Licensed to Wed-—A_ marriage li- ecense Wd issued by County Judge dley last week to John M. Klein of ar is sold, i k and Miss Anna Lipp of Strasburg. ee iss Dorothy duties as cor- of the sec- of state today after a two Resumes Duties — Schnecker resumed h poration clerk in the off reta ~W. B. Pratt of ting Warren Ee, Bitulithic Man rere Portland, Ore., repre: Bros., is in the ci ing the bitulithic paving, in which his concern is interested as patentees of the pro- cess. Insurance Maw meve—R. R. Koch, Minneapolis insurance man, is regis- tered at the nd Pacitic while here adjusting claims resulting from. the death of Robert A. Johnston, the young farmer who recently was killed on the Third street crossing of the Northern Paci Want Stockyaras — 1c business peo- ple if Silver Leaf, located on the Great Northern, in Dickey county, to- day petitioned the rai y commission for a stockyard, citing the fact that heavy shipments of cattle are made by farmers in that vicinity, who must now dri their stock to a station some mile Tribuno want ads vb TRIBUNE CITY CIRCULATION-1236-Possible-1500- Think A Can You Give Three Reasons why the people of Bismerck are reading the Bismarck For the three best answers to this question, THE TRIBUNE offers FREE a Three Months Moment Tribune? Subscription For the three next best answers the Tribune will give three two-months subscriptions iP Sit Down To-night Write the Tribune. giving your three best reasons WHY THE TRIBUNE IS THE REST PAPER PRINTED AND CIRCULATED! IN BISMARCK AND VICINITY. The answers will be judged by a committee of 3 Bismarck Business Men Neatness and legibility of writing will be considered in all replys. Answers must be in the businezs office of the Tribune by October ist. GIVE YOUR REASON ter-Milburn Co., ke

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