The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1918, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

hit the first ball Mayer pitched for a triple. | CHICAGO DOWNS ps Downed in Mitchell's Last * : ting three Cleveland pitche! winning 8 to 4. men in the seventh. ed him and passed Chapman. Speak-| MAJORS TO USE “ er singled and Danforth gave way to! Cicotte, who allowed one more to score on a sacrifice fly. feature of the contest. With Collins on second and Ja Jackson on first, Speak-| New York, N. Y., April 30.—Regular | 3 's fly and tagged Col- jehampionship games of the National B ED lins, then touching second, forcing; and American leagues will be i | er trapped-Felse Jackson, thus repeating a play worked on Detroit ten days ago. iday. A wee | Polo ground: ew York, or at Ebbets | Field, Brooklyn will be transferred to Sudden Batting Rally Changes| °° to play at Har ( JOST WHEN T 6 : BED olD BABY ) WAST WAKE U FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS . By Blosser NO MORE ID THAN DONE JIMINY CHRISMES ) ev Tt CRY ~~ DAWGUNNIT 1) t SOMETHINGS GoTTA ELEPHANT IP AN’ _- a, CRE WITT NORE T 2 1 eee [ ef WONDER IF TH’ WAV TO ELeor with Z: ACUAM OK WILL BIT WM TH MORE UE YELAS From WERE T! TH! IN GAS UST? a @) GoESS Ue Witt: } EOS TL GOTTA PR 4 ‘DEAL ) \] —$——— FEETSPRINTS AINT QUIRREL FOOD .- By Ahern DID AN’ BELONGS To THEM FEC TSPRINTS + HUN, SHIVERY MUSIC, PROFESSOR —DUM! DUM! TRAAA! CHESTNUT CHARLIE By Blosser .,. Y'KNOW GEORGE~ “THAT LIL CATS PILLOW YESTIDAY DIONT MAKE ALL THOSE GROWLIN’ AN’ THEM THEY (9 SOMETHIN’ ELSE IN THe CAVE HOLE WOT BY HIM, So~ “THERE 1 1S SOMETHIN’ WITH, SHINE EYES AN’ Tv DoNyY Look POPULAR LIKE To WST A MINUTE, Now 650R6E, WHAT RRorESSoR! \S \T THAT RUNS UP WILL AS GASILY AS EA ‘OP HAPS WE 25 > HAD BEST LET 5 “Waar 1 18,77 a Oe ALONE 67% spur! spur! FLuck! FLick! spsssess | —S Re, WSS 8 a le NIT RUNS Down? A FENCE!!! ALUITRLE MUSIC, PLEASE ! G to right, and a single by G |them three runs, tying the With one out in the f GIANTS HAND riffith gave | wor ore. jan halt of | b ighth, ‘Niehotf doubled to right; match to be de rld's heavyweight champion, was tched tonight to meet Wladek Zy- sko, the Polish champion, in a finish ided here on May 8. and Baird walked. Regan was then re-! lieved by Eller, wh assed Hornsby, | 4 ‘ filling the bases. Cruise flied to Roush | | who juggled the ball, but caught it! *. before it reached the ground. Niehoff | Mayer Hit Easily, Extra Base|ran home from third on the out, but! A NATIONAL LEAGUE o_+ t New Yor tiladelphia, 0. ‘ . was called out by Umpire O'Day for t St. Lou ncinnati, 4. Hits, Wild Throw Make for {caving third base before the cate) At Brooklyn, Boston, postponed, wet, Tallies was made, thus completing a double} At Chicago, Pittsburgh, postponed, Bus Iplay. In the last half of the ninth | ¢old. = Neale and Blackburne singled and Wingo was purposely passed, filling | Philadelphia, Pa., April 30.— NeW | the bases. Chase batted for Eller BY ST.LOUIS § ew York .... 10 1 Standing of the Clubs. W York retained its hold on the National | i Seale a F | Philadelph 8 3 1 . and foreed Neale at the plate, but|Phi s 3 leagde lead by blanking Philadelphia | Groh sent a long fly to right on which | Chicago fg Devices agin ‘while ‘Mayer was | DiexEWAe Soored the “Winning: in eT tb 300 batted freely, extra base hits and | ane eres. I$t. Louis By) 20 2 Stock’s wild throw acounting for vir- Boston Sa clanti 2 8 5) was the star, geting a double and Brooklwn . 21 9.100 three singles in five times up. Young i Games Today. ittsburgh at Chi t. Louis at Cincinnati. ew York at Philadelphia. oston at Brooklyn. shard and | Louis secured eleven hi jon balls and one hit batsman, In I held Cleveland fifth and eighth innings the loc t around, getting five e) St. After Williams he to three hits in innings, he lost | 9titec 1 four D his control and passed the three runs, respectively, Danforth re FEDERAL CLUB'S A double play by Speaker was the Sunday hereafter at the former Newark Federal League grounds at) | Harrison, : vi he | eve IN ame scheduled at the |the Harrison Park each Sunday. | | The fact that major leagues contem-| plated using the park became known| last week when the New York and} i were ordered by President Ban John-| ban a : Washington was unable to comply as| ago. Course of Score in Ninth | it already had an exhibition game! ant Inning | President Tener of -the Pi ARO Le league said it ¥ the major leagu National necessary so that/ call | que; double. and Smyth’s| ZBYSKO AND CADDOCK oft Chicago. mL, | for Ugly, Unsightly Pimples Are Signals of Bad Blood |“ Give Heed to the Warning. {fier known, and contains no minerals les. on’ the face and other] or chemicals to injure the most deli- | ly are warnings fromjcate skin. | | Go to your drugstore, and get a ‘bottle of S. S, S. today, and-get rid of those unsightly and disfiguring s|pimples, and other skin irritations. | had And it will cleanse your blood thor- | but Af you wis} vice, you can’ o| wift Laboratory, Atlanta, I medical it_.without jhe Direc- sreatest veeetable b! ca Philadelphi St. Paul, Minn., April 30. | Washington American League clubs| {to muster out of state servi on last Sunday.|lery, organized about eight xpensive for the state to maintain. {WILLS SELF RA’ | AMERICAN LEAGUE | i Game Before Going to “ os C3 hington. Poston, rain, ‘ ; | amp ! igo,s; Cleveland, 4. aca! —— At Detroit, St. Louis, 12. St. Louis, Mo, April Poor piten) New York, Philadelphia, wet ground Takes Cleveland Opener 8 to 4 jing jy Mitchell, Hall and F enn Oi Standing of the Clubs. ‘ va ‘ » fabled St. Louis to win the opening wou oP With Williams Shutting Off pone or the series trom Detroit here | Pos i 2 833 Hits today 12 to 3, It Mitchell's last | Cle 3 game with the Tigers. He leaves to © 2 =a night for Camp Pike, Little Rock, Ark., | Detre i Cleveland, 0., April 330.—Chicago | having been drafted. New York .... 7 ypened its series in Cleveland by hit-/ Off the three Detroit Washington . 6 Louis .. Games Today. nit at St. Louis. ago at Cleveland. shington at Boston. hiladelphia at New York. GnouNDs WEEKLY MINN, ARTILLERY s announced to-/ War Department Refuses to: Muster State Corps Into Federal Service An order ve and dis- second Minnesota field artil- months , was issued late today by Adjut- General W. F. Rhinow. It is ef- id the scheduled with the Boston Nationals.| fective April 30. Refusal of the war department to the regiment into federal service, could get back some| it was explained, made disbandment Cincinnati, O.. April 30—Cincinnati! of the money which they must pay| necessary, as tHe organiaztion is too won from St. Louis today by a sharp, for rental of the park under the terms! batting rally in the ninth inning. The} of the federal league peace agreement.| visitors scored one run in the second on Hornsby’s single, and added two more in the | fourth on hits by Baird, Hornsby and} Smyth. Meadows held the locals per- | fectly safe vntil the sixth, when hits | ‘by Groh and Roush, S. MaGee’s triple | Earl Caddock of the National Army,| War department to set a dex. ‘ollowing many disputes over thi stion of whether or not members he regiment were exempt from th dra# and uncertainty over the disposi- MATCHED IN CHI. MAY 10) tion of applications for discharges of men wishing to enter federal service, | of the Northern Pa April 59.—Sergeant| Governor Burnquist recently asked the} pany in Fargo. “We hope it will come nite date a call into federal servi Onr |fusal he authorized the discharge of | enlisted men seeking immediate active | service. More than sixty applications! promised in Tee | were acted upon in the week follow-| employes of the railroads and the rail-| | T RETURN TO GERMANY. Douglas, Isle of Man., April-20 — : he director gen- | | : is Frederick Brandauer, a wealthy er ee ie tHeEe increases. wit | , are directed without delay manufacturer, has committed suicide in a German detention camn rather) than return to Germany. Brandauer lived in England for thirty yea his naturalization had lapsed. In a letter to the camp commander! j,ost. ‘There is algo a report that the! death said that the-agonies of suffer if he submitted a repatriation, jane be nothing to what he would) 4; which the government proposed. coMPERS TAKES, HIGH LIGHTS IN | Montreal, April 30- muel Gomp-} ars, president of the American Fed-| J i. Helena. Mont., April 50. Wash- j eration of Labor, became suddenly ill while addressing a mass meeting of abor representatives here tonight, | spatch received here todav|Some Reasons Why Ninth Dis: a sub-committee, of which Sen A > J. Walsh of Montana is chaic-| trict May Be Proud of Its Citizenship IS FAVORABLY REPORTED, ; BILL TO SUPPRESS |. W. W. favorably reported to the | umittee a bill by to suppr the ac- strial Workers of the '5,000 FLAGS ARE EARNED ilar organizations. sh, air ity of the [ | World and ‘$s ay | Minneapolis, Minn., April 39—The} rmer of the northwest; the com- jmun: NORTH DAKOTA s of German blood; the individ- ual allotment plan and high percent-! " i age of distrivution—these are the four ‘ : WJ high tights of the successful Thira! Liberty loan campaign in the Ninth! A : \federal reserve district. | WV | loan the. farmer has out-/ ight his city brother whose batting if: age in the first and second loans} what carried the loans through. ! ilure on the part of the farmers to} buy more liberally in the former loans} jis ascribed to lack of familiarity with ‘government securitie: | German communities, in many of} which the government received little| support in the | Highest Increase in Wages Will | Come te Lowest Paid Who Need it Most st two loans, this; are elated ‘ae. the. ai ‘ t time took off their coats and went to are elated over the announcement work for Uncle Sam. In practically i Washington that their wages every instance where German blood witl Le increased and that this increasé; predominates in a commun thar} will date »: to Jan. 1, this year.«Phe |Community this time has reported al . 5 ey healthy oversubscription. i rate of increase has not been ma The individual allotment plan aad public but it is. asserted that the low: fhe high percentage of distribution | clags of employes will reap the largest | went hand in hand in this campaign. | ‘The alotment or card index plan met eee OR some opposition when first sug- i 4. 5 gested, but soon was accepted. board fas been at work on this sched oe ee oe eee ea cee | | ule for everdl months past and it has! ; Weeks: in advances commities ame | ‘just been announced at Washington | m eal Reena community and laa 4 .. carefully listed up every person “‘sus- | that this work has been completed and/| pected” of having the rite of a bond iday that e ia expected the announce. | 2ount in bonds which the committee (ee 1a mpec ee “| thought each individual should take. ME eee et aaite? The Ninth district did not start its . . i isales campaign until April 15, nine MY . Fi ban ad started. Saturday, April 20, the | be ‘affected, except that the Noe wiped district was oversubscribed and A. R. It was claimed by local railway offi- he Jong _dinianee ta els ae ue cials yesterday that they had heard!“ j\rore than 5.000 counties, cities, vil- that men now drawing $250 a month lages and townships already have put and over are not likely phe included, in claims for honor flags. ‘Many ask- . Lares "7 = 7 * per cent oversubscription, some for will receive bubstaatiel ot the ag tg] the two star flags, indicating treble ign See eta Parte: he agen) thelr allotment, and Whitefish, Mont. of roads pass SE eater made claim for a three star flag to branght, the TespoS TT show the world that Whitefish went] n fon re "| fou rtimes over. x |cerning the reported wage increasees,| The entire, district followed the Jexcept that it was coming soon. same general’scheme of sales, though * From January. cicheb that various counties injected some origin-| | gL tae Seen dupes dispatches that) 4] methods. Fergus Falls, Minnesota, | |the wage board has completed its work | pyblished the names and bond allot- land that the announcement would be made soon, but haye-no official infor- mation,” said James E. Johnson, agent Railway com- Railroad employes in North Dakota 2 | benefits. Director General, McAdoo's | | , CLEAN UP j The season of the year j | v «more Liber- |. ; pretty soon so we can buy‘ more | has arrived for a general | | \ty bonds. We expect: the announce- ;ment béfore long, however. ‘Director “G ‘il. McAdoo has “in wages to the clean-up of all vacant prem- ises, back-yards and alleys. ' Ashes and other debris are disease breeders and_ will | not be tolerated by the City Health Department. Ten- ants and property owners jway wage board has been at work on) ‘the schedule for some time, that is all I know about it,” said J. lL, Rohan, | ‘agent for the Great, North “T also} | || to clean their premises and | assist in. making the city | healthier and more beautiful | for all residents. Do it now. | By order of : ut May| | ~... DR. F. B. STRAUSS, of | - City Health Officer. 4-18 to 5-1 date back to. Jan, 1, this year. “T do not know what. ciass of em- ployes will be affected by this raise, ept from ‘round about information | that those lowest paid will benefit the | | i announcement will be tegle ‘Tribute Want 2”, 7 ea ing Results. 4 m nts of every bonds, They did. At Yankton, South Dakota, Liberty loan salesmén were established at ev- regular polling plac ers bought bonds as if voting. Buffalo Lake, Minn., probably takes the honor of being first over the top which lived up} @ of those communitie to the starting rules. per cent German blood. | s were summoned to appei | village hall at midnight, April 15. At one minute after twelve April 15 the | | citizens began signing up and calling of ftheir subscriptions, siapped down on adding machines. At 12:15. the town was through | 5; ng and the aiding machines totals: ing out showing 150 per cent 2 bay cume fh over su ription. individual in their daily papers, together with a notice summoning those named to appear on a certain day at headquarters to buy and the buy- All her citi n the | were of a first payment on a bond. In the two Dakotas where it ri icr two days, band ained | ousers of a mining man. smen slep:|comes to New York to the rescue of a “ARROW COLLARS FOR SPRING CASCO-22/9 in, CLYDE-2¥9in lease in metropolitan society in the angle play “Between Men,” to be seen at the Orpheum Theatre tonight. ‘o make the contrast more vivid Hart © /is first seen wearing the wide Stetson, * | the ki shirt and corduroy Then he a.l night in automobiles mired in the | friend who is in the toils of a Wall dee Parades, HART PLAYS PART AS A WESTERNER ON 5TH AVE. mud, but they all “went over.” loyalty meet- irgs, red fire and all that sort of thing were features in almost every tcwn throughout the di fireworks, | street operator. Hart then changes to the attire of s y when he appears at the home is friend: and meets his charming jdaughter, played by’ Enid Markey. | Hart seems as! much at ease with his dress suit and patent leathers as he | did when he was\in rougher and more jot his AT ORPHEUM TONIGHT | unconventional garb. He is still the Wiliam §. Hart, the popular actor | of wild west roles. makes a novel ap- pearance as a westerner | ning clothes and is quite at his | O'Connor. eve! cool westerner, ready for anything and everything that may happen. Before buying a piano see M. J. Advertisement. | resulting ACGmor ne — CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY: NEW VoRMCITY. NHS ~ eta “ALGOHOL-3 PER GENT. ‘Vegetable Prepa ate tncteod ty The Stomachs and Bowels INFANTS | CHILDREN 1 thereby Promoting Digestion} ;, Cheerfulness : AhelpfulRemedy |Gonstipation and Dit | ‘everishn - eae oF bees —"" FacSimile Sig CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria no, ln Use For Over Thirty Years

Other pages from this issue: