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PAGE SIX \ INDIAN BACKERS HILARIOUS OVER MONDAY’S GAME They Were Expectant, Too, Hop-} ing to See Final Game Copped by The Tribe MAILS WELL-.SUPPORTED Cleveland, Oct. 12.—Cleveland fans were happy and expectant tod ter y Ss win in the world 7 ies, when “Dest is held the Dodgers to three hits and Cleveland won, 1 to 0. If the Indians won tod: it meant the fifth game and the he winning of the game yes can be traced to an additional edge n | the part of the Indians for ence in the macing power of the’two ed the diff rence between the solit h rewarded Brooklyn's ef. to connect, with “Duster” Mails’ weeps and sharp breaking bend Indian Support Beiter s’ team batting average xth game .was the same a y, being .247 but in the that of the igre result waS one run instead of t 4 accumulated — y Brooklyn, on the other, hand, terday | otenders eventually spell-| DRIVES IN II] i ston for Cleveland, put, yesterda; the only yun of the game. umped | before the baffling delivery of Mails| from .240 to .214. I Burns is a The credit for the victory cannot, |; however, be accorded entifely to Mails’ superiority over Sherrow Smith for the Cleveland hurler, was backed\ by a better blend of'!team defense | than that behind the National box man. 1 Brookl. were left} se stranded with potential runs in the; making while but four Indians re- mained on the sacks after the third | out. Although (Cleveland. had~two men on bases at one time during the ond inning it was not until the h session that the runs which gave the; home team the victory was pushed | across. The making of the winning! tally was neither startling nor un-{ orthodox, but stood out -like a light- | house on a_ stormy night. After Evans had flied out to Konetchy, hi only hitless appearance at the plate during the game, Wambsganss was out, Olson to Konetchy. Manager- Captain Speaker shot a single to left. With two down the stage did not appear to be sdt for run-making with “Crowd Is Series Largest ght up to a fever pitch of en- 2 sensational play of ; city and surrounding | ions turned out another tremen- ‘lous gathering of fans for yesterday’s games. Paid, admission totalled 27, 194, the largebt in the ‘series to date. he gate receipts amounted to $82,- 69 which will.ge divided 10 per cent. | to the national commission and the’ balance equally ‘between the owners of the two contending“¢lubs and the. treasuries of the major leagues. . Wea@icr conditions were untike | those prevailing at, ahy of the preced- | ing games. Thesky (Was overcast and a stiff breeze blew‘across the out- field causing" the fielders considerable trouble. - There were plenty of opportunities to cheer both the home players and the invaders. Several brilliant field- ing featur stood owt, and by a stran; coincidence, two\ were made ae ‘ee Hine: ae alternates, at first base. ONLY RUN | BURNS HM 72 ‘ . John- Qne, of the “great' ‘Teatires of the : plan otitlined by the'dom: , natned y ’s world. serge win on ‘ice by by the government: Fern ont its cracking out a double Hter Speaker singled. and Syeaker scored © which have prevailed: the playing of Evans offthe base after the latter f. club to date was again had gained the first. station as. the ye result of a clean single to center. | ST. PAUL HOME, PLANNING FIGHT | ON ,BALTIMORE|: St. Pau Qct. 12—The St. baseball club, champions of the Amer- ican Association International , World ‘series ‘tomorrow. time. four games. ‘Managers of both teams and the players ar morrow’s confident of winning to: me. YY: ‘CARPENTIER TO” MEET LEVINSKY WA tn Paw and the Baltimore league champions ar- rived here today to’ continue the junior The first game, to be played Wednesday will ; bring the teams together for the, fifth St. Pavfl has won oné and lost j co! AT JERSEY, CITY BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE | WIRELESS OVER ENTIRE WORLD => BRITISH PLAN N Would Make (Great Sys er tor Use Both i in War and in Peace : _ by Empire” COST WOULD BE HUGE, BY MIETON BRONNER European Manager, N. E. A. é London, Oct!, 12—for strategic. use by her navy;inkipase of war, and for, commoretal use by. her mercantile | marine. ‘and ‘her greatest. business! | houses in, times of peace, the British government is’ seriously considering | the constriction‘of an all-British gov- ernment ‘owhed and controlled wire- Jess chain. alt ound the world. The initial. cos estimated’ something like Se. £6,000, of ich about $4,000,000 peut the impefial govefni ance by the gover minions of India, Austr | Afrifa. Te{ also ‘estimated! that Joss \gn the; system woul $500,000, of which ‘$300,000 ‘w: L sustained by the’ iniperfal: gdverimieii and the balance. by: hed Unions, Distances Not.’S feasibijity and. cost, is* that’ none of, the distances betwéen’ stations would be nearly, ag great 48. would appear ne essary in such a gidbe-girdling pr cess. For Oxford, _Englani linked up with a’ wireless guid - ‘he, istation ‘at with Bathurst in West Africa; 2779 miles iaway. Cairo would be linked Nairobi, in Central Africa, 2190 mile | away, and the /latter with. Windhul, | tin ‘South Africa,” 1923 miles -|'Poona, in India, 2793° ‘tyiles away, Poona with Singapore, in the Malay straits, 2344 miles away, Singapore with Honghank, ,China, 1611 miles with Port Darwin, Australia, 2021 miles, and with Perth, in Australia, cted with New Zealand, Oxford also. may soon be connected With Morftreal, 3194; milesiafway. ‘The importance of such a chain of government-owned and _ controlled\ high power, wireless stations for the Briti ayy needs no stressing. “Great Ald. to ‘Owners. But: it’ will be ‘équatly important for the further development of the British ‘mercantile’ marine. Most. ; as tineau;«pioneer ld “be. borne by ¢. THREE E SETS OF | Cairo, Egypt, 2239 miles distant... Also |; up with Bagdad, 793 miles away, witli'|’ 93 away; |. Cairo would also be eprinected up with |‘ 2430 miles away. Australia is already | scout’ and guide, a pension of-$50 a month. ~The copy of the memorial is a gift from V. BE. Patnaude, St. Paul, a grandnephew, of Bottineau. ‘he. memorial cifes that Bottineau was an old and experienced guide, and for many years materially helped ‘the development ofthe Northwest and Minnesota,‘and that his service to the goveynment merits the consideration of, the members ‘of. dongress. At the time’ the memorial wna’ presented, Bot~ tineau, through ‘hig advanced age, was, {inable to adequately, support, him- sel th 1851 Rottineaw was. employed as guide and interpreter to the commis- ‘sion to, make a treaty with Chippewa Indians at Red lake. Two years later he acted-as gifde’of Governor Ste- vens fh surveying the route to >the Pacifie. Bottineau acted as chief guide under) command Of General H. H. Sibley’ in the ‘expedition against the hostile Sioux Indians. He also acted | ad | guide and: ‘interpreter’ on numerous ex- peditions in locating sites for military. camps (apd laying out of trails. Some, of the. signers of the: ‘memo- rjal were:, Governor. J, S, Pillsbury: enry, H, ‘sibley, latg Major, United t| States’ ‘ariny;” PR, Van Cleve, adju tant conga ¢ Mihnesota, arid Judgo, Bin county, distrigt: ‘court, Oe .j sets of brothers on the Jamestown college foot! ganization 1 néé in’ th playing ability, of. the machipe. brothers, Ji kK Harry Wild with or. without waters blodsant to, to,take, QUICK ‘RELIEF! ome ee SEOETOS MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE seid oF’. Yabo i in| Vandetourgh: ofthe’ Henne-, 1. tea. making, or-. rv asfamily af: my 3} at detract fri TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12; 1920 ‘MANDAN — NI BISMARCK “At the Capitol Grounds Saturday, Oct. 16th, 3:30 P. M. ~ Admission: 25c and 50c field’Saturday, and the dope gives the edge to the locals. The Movorhead team, under the direction of Coach hr resitlted in'a tie, Upshaw, is composed “of many new e locals meet the Cincordia col-! players, whose. worth, has not been lege of Moorhead, Minn., on the local | determined in hard games. of the: Seam and all shone bright- y ‘in-the game last ‘week against the | Notth Dakota | Agricultural. college, ' COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPHS COLUMBIA RECORDS ON EASY TERMS IF.DESIRED ~ COWAN’S DRUG. STORE , rN 110101 there were approxi- thousand cars Smith slanting them over with) by Shortstop \Sewell who was also| ’ D plenty of speed and curves. George|charged. with two errors, both | of i re ships nowadays haye witeless’ outfits et in pal United States, . q Burns proved to be the batter who|which placed Brooklyn runners on Jersey City, Oct. 12—Georges Car-|-that cdn keep them@n toue jwith the |: y f was to deliver the blow that wrecked | the pentier, French war hero and Eu: | home ‘ports in’ crossing the, ‘Atlantic iu the Robins’ hopes of again tying w In the sixth sewed assisted in‘ the} Topean champion, tonight wiltengage and in sailing through’ thie}, Mediter- To operate these cars there thd series. He caught one of Smith’s | second ani third’outs With two great |in a twelve round bout with Battling | ranean, but when they get’ into, the was ayailable a line rO-- sweeps on the very tips,of his bat{stops and throws to first of hard, hit Levinsky, Amerfcan tight heavyweight | far southern Atlantic and Pacific wa- , D i and lifted the sphere clear to the balls from the bats of Wheat .and| title holder.’ Under the New Jersey | ters it. is probably a different story. dtiction of 750 milli ion-gallons : center field bleachers, thé ball hitting |} In the same session Catcher | boxing law no decision is permitted. By means of a series of ‘stations, | ud : the low rail and evading both the | or” eill jsnappeil a fast throw to —— such as the Brigien sprerneut 1s or, approximately, 1875 gallons \ hands of Zack Wheat and those ot}George Burns after, Neis had walked MARQUARD GIVEN ‘considering, ‘any firm of shi p_ owners r Car. ae ' several men and boys who tried tojto first, and caught the runner sev) could get ‘into toch with ete ships pe: 2 be clu it, being finally retrieved yj eral feet off thé bag despite his des- a t them ‘from that co t ga: Sivers,ir too fate to brevet Speak |yerate efor tw 'roran sthe, ug.| A SMALE FINE icine iaurnon ss In 1919 there were more than er from scoring. Olson protested, Pitcher” Smith engineered a -some- The. British Marconi company “has |‘ ere wer claiming interference with the ball, | whht' similar lay in the eighth when Cleveland, Oct. 12 12—-Richard ' Rube" proposél to the government the con- iI ef million cars. and trucks oper: put the umpires refused to°consider{he flushed -Yhe ball. ‘across thej Marquard, of the Brooklyn Nationals, propels of twenty-six main trank = the claim, The peculiar circumstayces|dianiond to ‘Koneteby and caught was fined $1.00, and costs in the local | Statione’ 50. main feeder stations, 100 ating in the United States. »> ———————— ee | muniefpal court’ here this morning on| iocal feeder stations and) 200 ‘stall ; tT 7 a charge of violating the exhibition 3 , ticket ordinance, President Heydler,| 10c@! stations. This, would, necessi- \ To supply these engines there . a Hee ee arcane ceatea, we eam {Bs mobilized tn,dime.of war, | was available, according to. i s , || “The government's 7 committee -has j woth take no Bere ecmlea he | recommended that the ‘proposition be “bl. of Mines Re ort, : 3 rejected, stating it would be better for i Britain ander’ dominions’ and, colo, illion, 957 on gi ons y -s j (GREAT HO HOE ES nies to undertake’ the scheme’ thent erie or, approximate VA . MEETING TODAY)‘. | gallons per car.. % ° nigig | eng exe ee an ae Windsor, Canada, Oct. 12.—Overeast Minnetota Historical In neither case has consideration rSiatamesien ct he ieeseee | OR ea ee x Petit, 2 been given to the demand of tractors, ; olds. ‘gpa Sir Barton, the greatest] y J Bo tinea -etition x 3 7 senoeaty gas oe, or, va gase our-y@ir-old in training. ~ Re uired yy e.arts an indus- 3 5 At K ilworth key track, how-|. St. “Paul, Mign., Oct. 122—1 Niinnes . : ever, ‘ioe rata 1 ae a week: ta’s tsate “historical society ye Rel sf ey tice Nor have we considered. ‘the at A pen ud finished grooming, a hard ceived a copy, of the ‘memorial pre- ‘ . ne volume of this product shipped. : track at noon, which held promise ot record. speed this; afternoon. signed by many ofthe leading elti- abroad annually, YE a eth Ty zens of Minnesota of that time, ‘pray~ FRENCH BEAT YANKS. ing congress to pass. a special-act for. cs % The’ above figures dre peesentil so Paris, Oct. 12—The French cham-| the benefit of granting Piette’ Bot- : that you may ‘visualize one.of the | pion football team defeated the Amer- 4 bs | ican Olympic team,by,14 to 5. A large ae ; problems the petroleum Eien has crowd of Paristans,;,but only a few]. Z 4 been calli lve'in the past Americans, attendéd' the'gathe. . This USE. SLOAN: ed upon to sol . ; was the first defeat in France for the]. _ American team, which previously had K} c & - Won three contests. i In 1910: the Standard -Oil Company if Soe ‘You can, jase eal dag tal bycits hedtehy > é (Indiana) Lolo about 20. per- : | SPORT TIPS\ = ||. stimuttting: odor, thag tc: 18 \ cent, of‘ the gasoline output in ‘the . ye hae at solng toda you som, ay, ’ United States, or approximately 150 <7 WILLS AN-EX-JOCKEY i Lonly: tad tome Sloan’s Lia. Ben ) _ Million gallons. In 1919 this Com- pee T ment!” ;, How. often you've said j milli 4 2 NEW YORK—Harry Wills, "giant that!” And then: when the, rhew. pany sold about 640 ion gallons - -colored heavyweight, is an ex-jockey. Back in 1906 he was quite a rider and| gasoline, or about 17 percent of matic: > twinge’subsided—alter' hours of went under the name of Eddie Bar- Dan do ore 5 betale ag r ' the eal for that year. a tt for use 5 ; [ COMES BAC conch <A aden stack ay eae "Tt has been the task of the 7 men FORDHAM COMES BACK —-| Gn-stiatica, luptbago, sore’ muscles, NEW YORK —Fordham University} packache, stiff joints, “neuralgia, the é / who manage the ffairs of the Stand- is back in the football field his sea-|' painsawd aches resulting frot‘expos- * ard Oil-Company (Indiana) for the son after having been-without.a team| ure, “You'll’soon ‘find’ wartgth dnd re- } f wh since 1917. Only one member has| lief in‘Sloan’s, the liniment that pence | . ' 5124 si olders, not one of whom ) | ever played on a Fordham team be-| grates without rubbing. ae nome owns much. as 10 percent, of the ; ‘ee eat et ee , total, to expand the organization not , a ; CUP FOR OFFICERS \ oO e Sas only to keep pace with, but to keep 4 NEW OR ae en ee ee si : ~ ahead of the extraordinary and per- i " . ° petition at the Nation: Ss NoShrinking al Horse Show in, Madison Square s / sistent demand for gasoline. E Garden, Nov. 15 to 19, to stimulate rid- / FAGHROCKS are preshrunk —home shrinking MR | octiion ix open to roruler ofcer . How well they*have succeeded is is practically eliminated. This, added to their HDS 4 ‘ fact tha z of the U. 8. Army. Bs illustrated clearly by the fact that in lasting qualities—the soft fleece lining that doesn’t pat the 10: period bove mentioned, id > come off—makes High Rocks the most all-around JIMMY. WAS REGULAR — e 10-year period above satisfactory underwear. \a DROOKLEN ay sone ey, Mies ieee the Standard Oil Company ‘(indiana) * sacker 0! he Braol » pied pare ime are _ High [ed in 152 consecutive games this sea-|[) pS" a ‘ Hips token Siena partin Bry [son without missing ‘an inning. ailoring and Hat Works ‘ ; gasoline luction 440 percent ae i ‘ Look for the High Rock label on the front. At your dealer's | while crrde oil pro“luction increased in two piece or union suits. Phoenix, Ariz. Oct. 12.—Tommy ; Suits di clean and | * g ( Milton broke the world’s 100-mile dirt || pyesged, ay ee et in only 94 percent. : | track record here in @ three-cornered / H rd. <1 race with Gaston Chevrolet and Omar{], done. Hats. cleaned an i . | Toft. “He covered the distance in one |} blocked, > ‘a Standard Oil Company é FLEECE LINED | hour, 24 minutes and 2-5 seconds. ™~ Phone 58; we will call =a : ‘ ( ‘Indigna) and deliver. 215 Broadway, one-half , block west of postoffice = UNDERWEAR> =; HIGH ROCK KNITTING CO., PHILMONT, N. Yo The South Sea fslanders have a ctirious method of salutation. which is to fling a jar of water over the head of a friend, 910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, I.