The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1917, Page 6

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Cowen ae wre Be lgg°2 “SEL ES geee » Club— w. iL Indianapolis . HK St. Paul’. Louisville . Columbus . Milwaukee Minneapolis . Kansas City . SSOSCOEE OOO WV Pet. Toledo .... SCOTS SST HOST HEY ° NATIONAL LEAGUE. + OSES OSHHE TICES Pet * Club— wok New York ... . 8 Philadelphia 7 St. Loius .. Cincinnati Chicago . Boston .. Brooklyn Pittsburgh .. 330 GAMES THURSDAY. Boston at Brooklyn. First game— Club— Brooklyn Boston Batteries Smith Scott and Meyers. and Krueger; » Second game— Club— Brooklyn .. Boston o Batteries lore and Krueger; Nehf and Tragesser. , No other games played. - OOS CTFTFOOOOHOO ¢ AMERICAN LEAGUE, ° FOSS OHHEOOOOOOE Club— L. Pet Chicago . 54.656 Boston . 62.592, Cleveland : 67 567 Detroit .. . 1 513 Washington . . 80.481 Now York . 4 81.467} St. Louis . 9% 875, Philadelphia 98 .360 GAMES THURSDAY. Washington at Boston. i Cth orn cet nF Batteries — Pennock and Mayer; Shaw and Ainsmith. Cleveland at Cincinnati.” Club— RHE Cincinnati . 116 0 Cleveland . Ronco an meer Batteries—Toney and Wingo; Bag- by Coombs, Morton and, O'Neill. } awe St, Louis, at $t. Louis. icity Rents betas J qiub— oe Jani St? houts “(Nattonals) ae OOF SEOS OEE OOS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. ¢ TH scooP A “ OBSERVATION BALOON TO BE ABLE TO LOOK ETTER FOR, MY BLONDE (Uttttt t Set REPNATER KG WMO { TARDON Me MADAM=£ OF INTRODUCTION: BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE ———— Baseball Classic Which Starts Saturday Stage . May Pitc * fp. ve Rasneeanbocd Soi arbi ah ; Shvereid y Doak and Snyder. © jy! RAILROADS” USE; MORE!” PUSS oof or ee ° BHdmindted Variety ‘Con-. gt tity *houmed In‘ #516] Wae ‘11.8 Greater Than In 1915. 5 at ~?T ge : iigures dotined Hy 01 3 eeher of Ogcle Sam’s geological survey show that 136,000,000°:tons “of bituminous coal, 6,735,000 net tons of Pennsylva- ala anthravite! and 22,050 toris of coke a iby; the; rallrogds, tn ¢. Tenants telat ne tease the quantity of bituminous coal used by the railroads in'1916 was 14,000,000 tons, which was 11.5 per cent more than in 1915. The increase in the con- sumption of anthtacite by the railroads was but 535,000 net ‘tons, or 8.5. per tent, There was an increase in rail- toad consumption ‘of nearly 4,000,000 tons of coal from Illinois, about 2,800,- 900 from Ohio, and of. 4,800,000 from West Virginia. The quantity of coal (rom Pennsylvania. used by the rail- toads decreased nearly 3,000,000 tons. , The quantity of bituminous coal used by’ the railroads In the Eastern district Increased from 56,500,000 to 62,700,000, pr. 41, per cent. The Increase tn/ the Southern ‘district was from 22,000,000 to 23,300,000, or' 5.1 per cent, and in the Western district, from 43,500,000 to $0,000,000, or 15 per cent. The total quantity of bituminous coal used by the railroads was about 27 per’cent of the total production as against 28 pet rent In 181 Put Outside the Law. The strangest punishment whitch still survives in Great Britain under modern law is that of “outlawry.” About ten years ago a Ipwyer charged with forging,a-check wag “outlawed” in the Glasgow, high court. By. this sentence the. person’of.the accused’ is declared forfeit., “He; cannot bear: tes- timony ‘in a court, nor sue, nor: defend an action. - He cannot ‘act. on a: jury, nor Vote at an election, tior act ‘as-tu- tor or Zuardiah :to:anether-person. \If anyone robs:him-he has'no redress sx Fuel : Value. of Woods Hickory, , Weéch, birch! ard ma- NS NS NS 7, ie aS As WS “s A we LO a ae MA: ny we ey gS ‘n iN sy RS % iS a2 an WAX S PLY A, S 2. NR on As ” ~< 5 Ss sy WZ, L. ws SS; ne N A vA Sy AY NS A wr wa NA on ss A aA Ay i Edward V. Cicotte, pitcher, was born in Detroit, June 19, 1884, and began profession! baseball in 1904 at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. Cicotte has had a varied career. He was a member ‘of the Detroit Americans, having gone’ there with Ty Cobb from the Augusta, Ga., club of the Southern Association. He was sent back and latter be- came a member of the Boston Am- ericans. Ile was released by Bos- ton to the Chicago White Sox, about six years azo. He bats ‘and for Opener CTA WSS n NA PAA QRRAA PDAERER OE RAS SA SS PENS ‘“, ey Ss , 667; earned’ runs per ‘inning of 1.54; ‘tional’ hurlers working in. the initial 'teams as evenly matched as the ac- and for ‘this reason it is customary js for the managers Uf the rival teams, to send ’ theif’ best’ pitcher’ to the| mound“inorder’'tq gain ‘the lead and, have the ‘sare twirler available ‘for, the ‘third, “fifth, @ven seventh’ game should the occasion’ arise. “’For tnis reason tme.genetal expectation is tat iManager: Rowland willselect Cicotte to face the'Glants while ‘Manager: Mc- Graw ‘wilf depend ‘upon Schupp. * ‘Both ‘these’ twirlers are ‘among the star pitchers oftheir leagues, with re- markable récords for the pennant sea! son just ‘¢loséd!'‘Cicotte'is a right- hander® with pitching average of and ¢losé‘'to’ ¥50'‘strike-outs to his credit for ‘the year: Schupp is » left- hander’ with a*pitching ‘average’ ‘of 731; ‘earned rans*per inning ‘of ‘1.92 and a:strike-out ‘record which at least yuals Cicotte's:” With these” semsa- game: and the other divisions of the companying figtre# would appear to indicate, it cam’ easily Je understood why the adherents %f ‘the rival clubs are loath “to Offer odd@in financially backing their ‘belief’ that the home combination ‘willcapture four of the seven ‘games mecessary to clinch the championship. ‘The appended ‘tabulation shows the pos#tions’ of thé players who are ex- peeted ‘to participate in the opening ganie: ; Gal ac Chicago Americans, Gandil... re mn A PERS n AK bd a Stats NS A, SSS a Sew ae ay ¥ wy ye ie PI SSN NSS x ~ AL ey SS A S y Ay NS SS x A wa S NY wy married and resides in “ Detroit. This season has been the best ‘of; his career and he is the leading pitcher of the league,’ rated ‘on earned runs per game. He has! mastered ‘a delivery ‘dubbed the “shine ball,?? which although | a myth, apparently, was declared legal by, the American League. However his great work has not all been attributed to the ‘‘shine| ball’? ag he uses'an assortment’ of curves. All told he has been in the major leagues for ten ‘years. Hé weighs 160 pounds and is five throws’ right’ ‘handed. ““Cicotte is feét; 8 inches tall : TEAMS OF UNUSUAL CALIBRE ‘| Felsch .. --At. Madison; Betoit vs Wisconsin. Collins . McMullin .. Weaver Liebold « Jackson .. Schalk. |: SATURDAY GAMES ’ At Urbana; Kansas’ vs Mlinois. At’ Colymbus; Ohio Wesleyan vs Ohio State. At ‘Evanston; Lake Forest vs Northwestern. At Ann’ Arbor ; Case vs Michigan. At Iowa City; Cornell College vs Towa. At Ames; Coe vs Ames. At Grand Forks; Jamestown vs At Des Moines; Penn College vs woe weonee Is Hope of Giants ™ 4, LOPSALSS AY VIIA bs NASAL AAS: POQOLOLLLZ PPP, Adal NNN, AN NAN RELY WINNS ARAL, LESS SS PASAY IPDS OILG ILI NNNININNIN DANO L ILS NNNNNINIION SIS NAIAI N ~ B 1 NN SSSNISS He) NAS 4 RS ee RN is! ZA A gS SEP. ws AS < NS % LS ‘A SS A LAY A ‘A, ~S ¥ NN ny Ferdinand, M. Schupp, pitcher, 'the Three I League. He came to his first. profess Play- born at Louisville, Ky., where he, still resides, Jan. 16, 1892. amateur - baseball for Manual Training Sehool, Louisville, and height is 5 feet, 11 inches. He is i, ‘ : onal, appearance ja ‘‘southpaw’’ but - bats North Dakota. lab with the Decatur, Il, club of handed. ' New York in 1913 and has been ‘onthe Giants pitching staff for five years. Schupp is 25 years of age, weighs 170 pounds and his right: Drake. . At St.'Paul; St.Thomas vs St. Mary’s. AIN'T NATURE WONDERFUL By Gene Ahern Tho N. L. World’s Series Umpires Bill Klem came. to ' Rochester, N. Y., because ‘Silk’? O’Laughilin came from’ there. “Klem has been in more world’s series thar there were world’s series. : He is the good ump of the league. He had‘a dozen indicat- ors' worn ‘out when Eddie Plank SERIES PUZZLES ROUSH Great National League Slugger Doesn’t Believe Southpaw; Will ‘Fool Sox By TOM SWOPE. (Sporting Editor; the Cincinnati Post) Eddy Roush this season has. been a face. National league season with a batting average between .340 and .350, Against New York he has batted record shows what a good, fre terror against the pitchers the White Sox batters will be called upon to Roush will probably finish the 359. This ving- first started to fondle'a ball in the eradle, and that Was quite a few moons ago. He’s one of the hard- ckt boiled ‘umps that ever stopped . bottle. _No ball player ever jaws: for him, because of Jackson's trick of Back at Klem even over the phone. ing, left-handed batter can do against the Giant: pitchers and Joe Jackson, the White Sox centerfielder, is that kind ofa hitter. Roush, though, does not expect Jackson fo find the Giant | pitchers as easy as they havé been standing with his feet together. “Schupp and Eenton’s curve: @ SO New ‘Yorkt} Oct. 5.—When the Chi-; wanting in examples where younthful cago’ Ameritans and the New’ York Nationals, respective winners of their league championships, meet in thé op- ening game of the 1917 world series at Comiskey Park, Chicago, tomorrow, the contest will bring together teams thé stars and deciding ‘factors in the dattle for the interleague champion- ship. b: From every angle of comparison the conclusion is reached that the seriea| | players, unnoted »by fame, have proved gle, ash, elm, locust, long-leaf pine and of virtually equal offensive ahd defen-| about to begin will prove one of fhe gherry have fulrly High iheat ‘values, one cord Of seasoned: Wood | @f those species is required to equal ton of coal. Hickory, of. the:non- inous woods, has the- highest fuel; jue per unit volume’ of: wood, and is othe: advantages, “It bums evenly aud, a8 housewives say, holds the heat, The oak! -comes text,-foltowed’ by Yeech, birch and maple. ~~ ny, Cancer Not Hereditary. ,, Accordirg to the latest statisties of aix ‘large life insurance companies, ied by an expert actuary for the Américan*fociety for the Control 'of Cancer, if one or even, both of an indi- Yidual’s parents’ have died of cancer, to-ascertain in advance there is little if any advantage in favor of one or the other comination. ot the work of the individual ‘players and the teams as units shows that if there is a preference in one division |this margin of strength is. counter- balanced by the. opponents’ edge in another department of the: play. Both the White Sox and the Giants are-clubs of unusual calibre. with bril- liant young players holding down cer- tain positions while older and veter- an professionals, scattered throughout the combinations, steady the teams and give that touch of experience ‘ne- céssary to. perfect any machine.* If 'there is any outstanding. advantage which will count in the contests of the that individual is no mofe likely, thin anyone else to die of the.same disease. Tt begins to look as thowgh cance hot ‘hereditary ‘at ‘all, ¢obtrary' to’ an quent belief, re Were vor the New Vork Giants, |mext few days it may be that the'pre- ; Ponderance. of players who have taken part in previous world series will fa- Even this ‘is problematical, however, for the. his- ‘tory*of this baseball classic is not the mcre numerical value of victory home like a’ grizzly bear. isive strerigth: ‘So far as it is’ possible| i most exciting and closely fought since these contests wére taken in chatge ‘is a peach of-an Klem is a huntsman in the win- ter, and in his. trophy room you have to do some ¥ hunting to fiid‘a-trophy. ASathuntéer, Klem them unless Roush said. big Jackson may not be able to reach he bats differently,” Roush doesn’t see any rosy path ahead for either team, in the series, ; but he does believe picking the New ; nt The N. L. World Reries Umpires. | York. pitchers is a harder one than RIGLER by' the National Commission in 1905 An analysis! and made. an annual climax to the front name but himself and he’s baseball season. .A study of the rec-! ords of the’ players and-the’ teams in! their respective leagues develops: the fact that-so: far ‘as figures ‘and aver- ages can disclose there is little mar- gin of afvantage for either clu. Tak- ing the personnel of the teams as they are expected to. enter’ the battle, the statistics: show that the Giants-are a rifle: stronger -in hitting _ while «the White Sox have a few points the bet- ter of the fielding. . The National League standard. bearers appear. to have the edge in double: plays but the Chicago combination offsets. this: with more stclen bases’ indicating ‘greater speed upon the. baselines. Winning of First. Game. It is one of the axioms ‘of World, Series play that the winning of the first game carries greater weight than Nobody knows ‘if Rigler has a probably” forgotten it.° ‘Rigler is alive today on ‘account ‘of his g, mitts. He had tofight his way out of West Virginia. In'the old days when an umpire used to unip with his fists, Rig settled a deci- sion by. easing a: eonple of ft makers on tivo ballplayers’ chir thus qualifying him ag-.an ump for the big league. > Rix ts noted selecting the White Sdéx. “How the Giants can hope to win to another lefty. “it see Pred Anderson by working Schupp, Renton and Sallee; in turn, no matter in what order, is} beyond me,” Rotsh said. it, but Fred is a bear of a cold weather pitcher. He has a mean spitter. “Tesreau also may be good for one good game, but I don’t ‘elieve De- maree and Perritt wiil do anything wonderful. : “Benton's recent slump doesn’t mean anything to me, except that the Rube is likely to be right on edge when the big games start. “Jackson and Collins ‘are likely to have their troubles with Benton and Schupp. Those two birds have curve balls that will bother nearly any left handed hitter. Yve been fortunate enough to soak Schupp pretty hard, all year. “It surely ought to be the greatest, series. we have had for years, unless the Giants do too much yelling about the shine ‘ball and make the games draggy by always taking time out to examine the balls. “With Herzog crippled and on the outs with the rest of his club for taking a vacation without permission, Tl bet McGraw wishes he hadn't let} little Peter Kilduff go. Kilduff could /: t hard hitting team like the White; pitching. wouldn't sur . Generally if e me much to x isn’t going to be fooled very longi by southpaw any club cracks a southpaw hard one | day it will do the same the next day’ McGraw will have} to' do some tall thinking choosing a! right hander. at in with'a’g90d ball. Zim and Fletcher are likely tol game or two. “Most people don’t know | prove the most dangerous hitters.” full in at second and carry the téam along all right. But unless Buck plays McGraw is going to have his troubles. “Jimmy Smith seems too green. Mac may shift Zim to second and use Hans Lobert at third. This would’ be pretty fair. “Unless he gets too darned anxious Benny Kauff is likely to show them he’s a real ball player. Benny's great- ést trouble is that he tries to kill the for his fog horn chirp and it’s also ‘a warning. to ballplayers, whatev- er he calls, it’s jes’ what he said, and there’s no chanee for misund-! In the maticr of the estate of Dicd- erstanding what he said. -| ena t deceased. rites aes a te Notice is hereby given by the un-| tHe nece: Rig lives in’ Cleveland in the dersigned Robert-L. Walton, execi- NOTICE TO CREDITORS. snow. days and hibernates in his tor of the last will of Diadena Walton jlate of the city of Bismarck in the county of Purl Dakota, deces , to the creditors of, nd all persons having claims against, id deceased, to exhibit them with ary vouchers, within four months after the first pwhlication df pany in the City of Bismarck in said | Lurleigh county, North Dakota. Dated September 23, A. D. 1917. ROBERT L. WALTON, "4 Wxecutor. Newton, Dullam & Young, alulu eye aud a XOCuUs, t Bismarck, N. D. ‘ 9 28; 10—5 12 19 CERTIFICATE OF CO-PARTNER- SHIP. This is to certify that the under- signed did on November Ist, 1916, form a co-partnership, under the firm name and style of Bismarck Fur Com- pany, for the purpose of engaging in the fur business, with its principal office and place of business at Bis- i marek, North Dakota, and ever since {have been and now are engaged in | such business at Bismarck, North Da- ' kota, under said name and style. | That the names in full of all the members ‘of such partnership and ‘their residence are as follows: 1. E. Caspary..of Bismarck, North ; Dakota. j Hergliot Caspary of Bismarck, North Dakota, ; Dated February 2nd, 1917. | I, E. CASPARY, BDRGLIOT CASPARY. | State of North Dakota, County of | Cass—ss: On this 12th day of August, A. D. 1917, before me_Theodore Koffel, a notary public in and for said county and state, personally appeared |. E. Caspary and Bergliot Caspary known to me to be the persons who are de- scribed,jn and who executed the with- in and above instrument; alld ackriowl- edged. to’ me that they exécuted :the ame. ; . x (Seal) THOS. KOFFEL, ‘Notary-: Public; “North Dakota: commissio) gxnisee il wad O51 NOTICE OF DATE SET. Fw AWARQING. OF SONTRAGE F i ‘PAVING. AROUND... THE. COURT, HOUSE SQUARE IN PAVING DIS- TRICT NUMBER. THQ. enn. ‘Notice jor marohiog ony {seat the board of city commissiongrs will meet. . on Monday, Octpber 8th; 1917, at eight Fo'clock fp. m., for the purpose | of awarding contract for paving on Ros: ser street ‘from the east lino 6f Fiftt: street to the west lind of Sixth street; on’Thayer street ‘from the ‘east’ line of Fifth street ‘tothe. west line of Sixth street; on Fifth street from the north line of Thayer street to the south line of Rosser: street; on Sixth street from the north_lin: street ‘to the’ south line of Rosser street in paving district number two. in accordance with bid received and opened at the meeting of said board held October 1st, 1917. Owners of the majority of the prop- erty liable to’ be assessed may file their written preference of the kind of pavement desired. 4 By order of the board of city com- missioners cf the city of Bismarck, North Dakota. Dated Qctober 1st, 1917. C. L. BURTON, City Auditor. 10-2-3-4-5-6-5t | Each GAME of | The World’s Series will be Builstined in The Tribune . window. but the Rube has been a puzzle to me iImmediately after the last player is out-a Tribune Extra will be on the strect giviny full particulars of tre game, Play By Play Be sure to get your paper—this is fhe onc big Baseball ‘“‘SCRAP’’ of the year. IMPORTED China Tea SILK ‘Hangkerchiefs and state of North FOR SALE H.WAH - $18 Brdy. this notice, to said’ executor at the office of the Northern Express com- BISMARCK, N. D. & * i iF), i ’ R t * wy A.

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