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PAGE SIX INDIANS STEP Louis Team game. driving. him from the box in F seventh. P {his year and, « ed except in two innings. popular nning made it 250 with a long triple. Cleyeland concludes its series here tomorrow. Score: Cleveland St. Louis Batteries Bayne, Burwell and Severeid. Close Season Boston, Sept. 29.—Boston closed the American League season’ here breaking even in a doubleheader with Washington. The Red Sox took the first, 5 to 8, while the Senators were compelled to go 10 innings to win, 7 to 6, in the second. The Red Sox finished in fifth place, with 72 games won and 81 lost for a percentage of ATL. Scores: First game— R.H.E. Washington «, ..000 000 300-3 8 Boston .. .. ....100 020 20x—5 12 0 Batteries: Shaw, Shirley and Gharrity; Pennock and Schang. Second game— R. HL ¥ Washington ..000 500 100 17:13 1 004 000 002 0—6 14 1 Courtney, Acosta and Picinich; Myers, Hoyt and Schang. Boston .. Batterics: os ———— J BASEBALL —————— AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww. L. f St. Paul ........... 48 .706 } Minneapolis 5 16 523 Toledo .. 78 51 Louisville 79 514 Indianapolis 81 500 Milwaukee ‘84 AT3 Columbus ... 96 398 Kansas City 103 357 NATIOY E b L. Pet. Brooklyn 60 600 New York 65 Cincinnati .. 69 540 Pittsburgh 73 513 Chicago .. W 489 St. Louis .. 18 484 Boston, 3 oe 87 408 Philadelphia .. 89 398 AMERICAN LEAGUE WwW. L. Pet. Cleveland .. .. .. ..95 54 Chicago .. . New York ‘. +93 59 615 St. Louis 74 WEY Boston .... sT2- 81 Washington +65 83 AB Detroit .. .. 2 4B 6 101. 2817 NATIONAL LEAGUE Reds Take 2 Cincinnati, Sept. 29.—The Reds won a doubleheader from Pittsburgh, 2) co 0 and 5 to 3. Scores: ; R. H. E. Pittsburgh .. ..000 000 000—0 5 -000 200 00x—2 4 Batteries: Cooper and Schmidt; Cincinnati . Luque, Eller and Rariden. (Second game) R. H. BE. Pittsburgh .. ..101 001 000—3 10 Cincinnati... ..000 002 30x—5 7 Batteries: Hamilton, Morrison and Schmidt; Eller, Brenton and Raridon, Allen. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Take Two Columbus, Sept, 29.— Minneapolis and Columbus divided a doubleheader, FALL AND. WIN- TER SUIT AND ‘ OVERCOAT from $32.50 to $100.00 FRANK KRALL All wool and good fit; Guar. anteed, or money back. | | , is ne!) NEW ROCKFORD iin fn EVENTS _AND GOSSIP _FOR THE FANS tinuisnntanie on bed et soe Pe ‘ | NEAR PENNANT | WITH VICTORY Bagby on Mound as Leaders Pound Out a Win Over St. St. Louis, Sept. 29.—Cleveland got a step nearer the American league pennant yesterday, defeating the lead Pover Chicago, runner-up, to a full It was.the third consecutive defeat F administered to St. Louis by the con- tenders who launched their attack F against Bayne in the second inning It was Bagby’s thirtieth victory though hit freely, he | managed to keep the blows scatter- Local fans presented George Sisler with a silver service as a mark of appreciation for his work and the Brown responded in the sixth ith a home run to the pavj- lion in right field for his 24th hit of the campaign, establishing a new American League record to supplant that of Ty Cobb, who made 248 in 1911. In the eigth inning Sisler 31 020 300—9 12 1 +111 001 010—5 10 agby and O'Neill BISMARCK DAILY: TRIBUN! W. D. Haywood, leader of the 1. W. 1 W., waS: the pr pal speaker here! WHITE SOX MANAGER ei poumiae 3 y tardy afeermcan ot My opening Eye a session’ of the Agricultural, kers nN. 2. Union ‘convention, held in ern Rocktord, opera hause,. .behind closed doors. Men, with the I. W.:W. cards only were admitted. o About, 300° 1. W. W. aré.in New Rockford for meetings .which con- tinued, today. . Numerous threshing crews in this district ‘are depleted by feason, of the convention, operations being stapped. i Haywood’s talk was’ along typici LW. W,, lines: He condemned _ pri. vate owhership of land, dealt, with the “way Wall, street. finan grinding, the farn men, id the re; ¢ Uirobgh the “one. big unio In spite of the fact that’ three or four hundred men are congregated on~the ‘streets. of New Rockford, sleeping dy .knows where, and finding. their, meals at, the restaur- ants, lunch. tents .in the streets, or at,the hobo camps..in nearby thickets, there has been.no disorder., ‘The ¢: authorities’ put the matter squarely up to the leaders of the convention, ‘|and swore in half.a dozen of the ring- leaders, as, deputies; ‘putting them upon honor to preserve-the peace. } Incendiary literature — is being peddled., upon the streets of New Rocktord, number. of Solidarity, which séems to find. its way into every. man’s’ hand,, calling upon the ‘Reds of America” to, be ready to act atthe phychological mogient. jit-is, understood that the. conven- { tion. will remain. in. session for two, and possibly three days, longer. INVESTIGATE REPORTS TO NEW EFFORTS TO, ‘FIX’ _ BASEBALL GAMES (Continued from Page Oned «IO GLEASON: ’ of defendants later on,” Mr. Brigham _ Kid Gleason, the happy White Sox manager, is blue today.| tater said, “I.sympathize with some His great machine is wrecked—his faith in his men must be blast-| ot them. They were foolish, unsophi- ed. No one has accused the “Kid” of trying to throw the world | sticated, country, hove who gtelded 10 Kid’s ‘team has been-nraking a great fight for the pennant. | “The grand jury whose normal period And all the players declare their loyalty to him. He cuffs them| of office expires tomorrow, will be around, “busts them,” he threatens to knock their block ‘off, but poutine dndecinttely to complete the hi. j Dl g 7, a } asebai inves be the boys eu his heart is right, and they’ve played pall for him | "Cicotte, according to court attaches, —except in the last world series. told the grand jury hé received $10,- 000 from the gamblers, finding the Pet.} ning the first, 7 to 2, and Kansas City 5 BGT 9556633 i i ' eee money under his pillow when he re- Columbus winning, 3 to 2, and losing itaiiian on Oct. 30. ne ‘hoped tol fifned to his hotel on the night be: re—Fi : schedule games soon wi ickinson | fore the first game at cinnati. “UC aS oat oon loc ee gjand Glendive. The coach this yedr| refused to pitch a ball until T got it. Columbu: 000 003 00x—3 5 0/18 H, H. Aseine of the high school they ducts ere TERY: See Gis hd Oe Movers | ECU RS $20,000 by Chick Gandil, but received Score—Second Game: R. H.E.| ">: * Jonly $6000. vitamin. seers to i 31 arent " H p the witness, got $10,000. poluatnee i ae ae Ac ‘ hi MEXICO TRIES FARM.COLONIES z Wintig the stand juror voted thelr Batteries: Gi a a : Larner ms true bills yesterday -afternoon C) Sherman and Deutel ant MASSE Government Takes ‘Action to isty |. Old Roman, seated amidst, his cru the Land Hunger of the © bling empire at White Sox pari: lez x gar -Lpued the telegram suspending fe Stow Gane Peatante: ved, paid off Weaver, Cicotte and Toledo, Sept. 29.—Toledo .and, Kan- sas City struggled through two games with nothing to play for. Toledo win- Jackson, and agnounced ghecks for pay dite the others would! fe sent at = once. With his voice, trembling, Mr. government {fs establishing farm col-| Comiskey, Who has owned the White onies in the states of San Luis Potosi | Sox ‘since the inception of the Amer- and Guanajuato. ican league, ‘said this was’ the first Other settlements will be founded | time scandal had’eVer towiched his is soon as these first two ate com-| “family,” and''that it distressed him Lamb, Connelly; Okrie and Woodall pletely launched. too much to talk about it. Score—Second Game: R. H.E.| _ In these cofonies, thé small: proprie- Gattes Were Lost Kansas City ..103 000 003—7 10 2] tors will live like the Mormons in The rush of playets to bare their “Mexico City.—To satisfy the land hunger ‘of the Mexican peasantry, the the second, 7 to 5. Score—First Game: R. HE. Kansas City 100 000 010—2 7 1 Toledo.. ... +011 004 10x—7.13- 1 Batterie: Lambert, Brown and Toledo. .... ..100 001 030—5 9 2! Chihuahua and Sonora—each commun: | part started. whem Cicotte asked per- Batteries: Ross, Weaver, Ames! jty having {ts own streets,, market, ify. Kicotte wept, court and Sweeney; Meade, Middleton and] gargen, mixed school and, moving pfe-| attached said, and exclaimed, in as- MeNeil. ture theater. Apportionment of the| suish his. sorrow for his two smail chjldren as he told how he did his utmost to lose rather than,.win the 1919 world series, after he pad “found” Beat Leade adjacent farm lands will be made so Léiitevitte, Sent, Se Betzel's single| that each petty landholder will Hteral- with one down in the ninth gave Louis-| ly: have his: own “row to hoe,” thus $10,000 beneath his pillow, where it ville an. 8 to 7 victory over St. Paul,} obviating one of the greatest causes had been placed by professional gam- even break on the series. for the many recent uprisings that} piers, * i R. H.E.] have occurred in Mexico, Each farm-] He said he lobbed the ball,to. the 2 wSs sg sale ‘or exchange. They may. be fn- Easy W herited, however, and are to be free Indianapolis, Sept. 29.—Milwaukee } from taxation. 3| Fargo business man who died Aug..24] of Huerta Pelayo, in the ‘province of Indianapolis 000 000 300—1 J 0 varies : 3; jackson’s throw to the plate, ; Bhttertes: anand Chicago tied in the next inning. Gaw,Cavet and Henline. : THIS TOWN LIKES AMERICA | kopn putting Jackson on second with Cc. 0. SMITH LEFT All Men ‘in Spanish Village Pian to $200,000 EST ‘ATE Feniorate tore United Fargo, Sept. 29.—Charles 0. Smith, | Madrid —Every :man In; the village last, left an estate valued at $200,000, | Guadalajaro, has decided. to emigrate according to the will filed for probate | t the United States, according to Pe- at the office of County Judge A. G. dro Martinez Embil, the town clerk, HWangén: i | who appeared at the American-consul- Elinor B. Smith, the widow, has ate with 25 companions to secure vises been appointed by Judge Hanson as| for passports. 3 executrix of the estate in fulfillment] He declared the. mayor of the town | Cicotte's place after Daubert’s sin- of the request made in the will, and| would have decided to go to America gle and Groh filed to Felsch. The Charles S.. Foster of Fargo has been} had he not been aged and infirm. The | score was 9 to 1. ’ named special guardian for the six children. Judge Hanson today set Morday, Oct. 18, as the day for the hearing on the will. out. With Kopf on first, Neale and] with runs resulting. Wilkinson — took as soon as the men are settled in| cago, also was deliberately thrown America. away, according jo court officials 1 According to. Mr, Smith's witl,| | The number of emigrants | THOM Reus won, 2 to 0, Ring, pitching for which was written by him Nov. 20,] every village and township of the prov.) Cor nati, holding the Sox to three 1916, he leaves his entire estate to} ince of Salamanca ts increasing daily,| }i+, Both Cincinnati's ‘hits. wen his six children, Walter,-Oscar, Mar-| recent strikes in the mining districts bunched with a wild throw to first by garet, Theodore, Paul and Dana to] having caused largé*parties of work- | Gicotte and a bad throw to the plate be divided equally among them. ers to decide to leave the country. by. Jackson, which the pitcher inter- The will requested that Elinor B. cepted and muffled. The pfay of this Smith, be appointed . sole executrix | pyrnrgrennnnmmnaenreseeeenenennnenns ; inning as sent over the Associated of the estate and that she “retain 7 control, income and any such por-! % Separated for 41 Years, “Roush was out, Schalk to Gandil, the ball rolling half way to the pitch- tion of the estate she may require A for her support and care and edu- Then Kiss and Make Up $}.crs’ box. Duncan ‘was safe when Cicotte threw his drive wide to first cation of the children until the time of her death.” . 4 | When Mrs. Mary Walrad and $j the ball going to the stand and Dun A large part of Mr. Smith's, eatate Charles L. Walrad, each seven- %| can reached second. Kopf singled was in‘ the North Dakota Harness z % 1 to left and Duncan stopped. at thir! company, of which he, was presi-| ty-six years old, met at the Sol- j dent. His share in that company ; diers’ home at Leavenworth, amounted’ to about $80,000. He had: Kan., recently, it was the first approximately $30,000 in stock in the! time they had seen each other in Smith, Follett & Crowl Co., about 41.years. It was also the first a On ei Corporation bonds, $12,100 % time Walrad had seen his in Liberty Loan bonds,’ $10,000 in aoa bonds of the Dominion’ of Canada,| ba eae oe ead ate jand” other lesser property bringing! months;0rs ‘ eked the value of the estate up to $200,000. at North Miami, Okla. \She an | her husband separated in Joplin, / Football Game Mo., in 1879. Three weeks age C. F. Bolt, principal at the local high | Walrad located his wife, the school announed today that the foot- meeting was arranged, -they but scored: when Jackson threw wild to the plate. Kopf reached second. Sox Hammer Sallee in Seventh Correction: The official . scorer ! gives Cicotte the. error for mutting | | Jackson’s throw. Neale sent one % | over Jackson’s head and Kopf scored. | Neale reached second. It was a two $3 base hit. Wingo out, Ed Collins to Gandil, Neale going to third. Ring drove a vicious grounder that. Ed Collins got and threw him out at Two runs, two hits, two er- ball team will play Mandan on Oct. 16} kissed and made up and will live in Bismarck. The Bismarck team will | ¥ ‘together again. go to Jamestown on Oct. 23, and toi _ ee a le ORO ee Per Man 910 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago, IL 1 ; é show, cleanly.. Cicotte pitched nine!series fail to make a return to the | inkings. revenue bureau on_ these: r Cicotte’s next appearance’ in the| funds for- tax purposes prosecutions | EAGI E series was in the sixth. game, when| Will. be instituted, it was said tod: Cincinnati had four, victories to their | by George B. Newton, deputy comm peo, credit. against one ,defeat,.,,Richard} sioner of the income tax unit of the} Tailoring and H:t Works K Suits dry cleaned and pressed, repairing neatly — done. Hats. cleaned and ‘ left-handed | bureau. having shut,.the National hampions in the third game: virler, . who.: confessed deal, went through held his dpngnents Chjer so, won..the ‘Intentional evasion of the, provi- sions of the income tax law is 2 criminal offense,” it was pointed out, | “and. is punishable by a fine of $10,000 or imprisonment for one year or both.” Pau 110 002 003—7 11 3] er-will be furnished with agricultural | plate so slowly “you could read the Lonisyille. a —8 16 i imptements and seed. trade mark on it” in the first game it le: ster riner and ™ " ‘ine pitcher, ri ‘These farms will be nontransferable | 2t Cincinnati, when he was tuken out MeMenemy;; - Wright," Long” and} any form, whether -by mortgage, | Of the box after. three and two-thirds | leggue Becher. : innings had been played. The ve Last year’s. world series. records{ thé big gambli show that in the first inning ohne Hine innings i i ame he started by. hitting Rath, first seven hits... € n esored an ensy victory over Indian-| It 1s planned to establish the pro-| Cincinnati batter. Daubert, toliowed| game, 4 to 1, hitting Sallée hard, in Jackgon and Now is the time to fill your, basement. with Monarch Coal.— C. A. Finch Lumber Co. gpolis, 8 to 3. posed communities near railroad} with a single. over second base that} the first five. innings. c acer , , _R-H-E.| ines, so that the products will find [gent Rath to third and he scored when| Felsch each got, two hits and. drove Iwaukee .... 103 100 102—8 17 1) ready markets, Groh flied to Jackson, Rath, beating | in Chicago's, runs. Philadelphia prize lelphia, issued Billy Maharg, fighter, who, in. Phil a statement connecting,,Cicotte with a wild throw, Felsch sacrificed him} the gambling deal, and charging Abe to third and Gandil dropped a little} Attell, former fighter, headed the gam- fly safely in center, scoring Jackson. | Were double crossed by noted. gam: ek bling ‘clique, asserted. that. the .Sox Fourth Game Also Thrown Away | were double. crossed by the gamblers. The end ‘of Cicotte’s pitching and The court, offi¢ials also quoted Ci-|. the runs that won the game were} cotte as saying. that the players had scored by Cincinnati in “the fourth.] believed, “Chick” Gandil, .who,, All the. damage was done with two] said, was interested in the dealin the . gamblers, . had Wingo singied and. Ruether, hard-} crossed”, them,. and that. McHarg’} hitting Cincinnati pitcher, tripled to} story was the first. intimatidn they |’ the. ..centerfield bleachers... Rath! had* had that. Attell’ had .“held out” doubled and Daubert singled, five | on’the! $100,000. promise i + MAY FACE. G. Washington, Sept. 29.—Should an ir- vestigation digelose that the Chicago | families of the emigrants will follo& The fourth. game played, at :Chi-} white, .So: money. fe yt “throwing” the 1919 world \\vho ‘heard Cicotte’s statement. The | [=== End your Tire “Tr o ubles by putting -on a ~ AIRLESS No punctures HOWER or blowouts. : Ss ANITA Sizes: 30x3, ' B' sharply, and, so far as the records A. J. (OSTRANDER “TT takes thirteen minutes of human labor to produce every bushel of wheat that cores out of a good Ameri- can wheat state. In Europe a bushel of wheat required four and one half _hours oftabor”—Dearborn Independent. ’ Europe with its pre-war wealth of labor developed intensive hand cultivation to an extent undreamed of because unnec- essary in America. Ip the United States labor shortage developed a type of farming which ‘gave petroleum products a.chance to lend a hand. Increased labor-shortage in the United States has meant increased application of. gasoline-power to the farms of the Middle West. Mechanical power has multiplied the wheat-yield 21 times per man, ; The fact that power machinery, and gasoline to run it, ig going on the farms is responsible in no small degree for the large crops produced for 1920. The great mission of the Standard Oil Com- pany (Indiana) is to produce enough gasoline to supply the farmer with all he can use at the time and place he " needs it, and at a low price. “Domestic consumption of gasoline, far outstripping our production of crude ’ petroleum, has forced gasoline up in price. During the first four months of 1920, gasoline consumption increased 796,030 gallons a day more than pro- duction during the same period” (Oil News, July 5, 1920). While more crude oil is being produced in 1920 than even the most enthusiastic optimist darcd predict five years ago, it is not sufficient to meet the ever increasing demand. Every facility developed by the vast organization of the Standard Oil Com- pany (Indiana) through years of service, is being directed to the end of supply- ing the farms of the Middle West with necessary petroleum products. Trans- portation difficulties have been antici- pated by this company, so that there has been no serious shortage of petroleum products to the farmer in any of the states served by this Company — the dark green tank wagon delivering even to the tractor in the field in emergencies, Helping the farmer produce and market his crop is one of the essential services rendered by the Standard Oil Company Ueda) fe the people ‘of the Middle est. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) blocked, and deliver. Phone ‘583 we’ will call “215: Broadway, one-half _ , block west of postoffice Re hte ey RY PLUMBING Hot Water and Steam Heating, Round Oak Pipeiess Furnac ~ Material and Workmanship Guaranteed FRANK G. GRAMBS shee Bismarck, N. D. 3 BUTE a 2