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CAGE SIA ASU IN KS Immigration Threatens|,+** BILL BRENNAN, KNOCKED OUTBY ‘COAST TRIP PUTSSPOTLIGHT | \ vA ra 4 . 5 Safety of Americans X) DEMPSEY SEEKS ANOTHER CHANCE O N T H E B ( ] C K E ¥. Ef 3S C H OO LI Berlin, Dec. 15.—Emigration to mas the United States from centra! Eur- ting, Seta Te Vigne ee nln 4 ope has reached a stage where it io "> | threatens to dump into América near- 0 Ey ec e ei sae ly 1,000,000 of the “most undesirable @ ings Dedares He’s Not Satisfied That SISLER’ § WORK : . peoples of Europe,” says an official pen vi n the Champion Is His Superior | \ of the American Siate Department ‘ ; y ie who has been watching tie recent ex- EERE ER EERE EERE REE —Champion “Surprised at Bren AMPS H IM A t odus with much concern. < es . } The emigrants are principally from | d nan’s\Showing ‘ ,,| Russia and Pqland and large numbers‘ ose F fe Sf “AMONG GREATEST 4 ot ths who are very poor, have : i 4 beén directly assisted with mone LEAVES FOR THE COAST) Vea and’ advise from America, ‘the. cor- Christmas. oe : { respondent was told. Consular offices New York, —Bill Brennan, | z es ayo are swamped with their applications d who was knocked out in the wwe | Patticipating it’ Every Game He we! LiL NEEO for Poachers and steamship acco an * round by Jack Dempsey, heavyweight | ands as Bes modations are inadequate. to 44 et ciampion in Madison Square garden, | Siands out ay Best Batter SOME OF | all who-have permits to sail. ( New Years suid today he intended to ask for an- in League FRESE oy L There is virtuaily no check on this other match. ¥ | bY movement, which beyond any question ; a not satisfied that Dempsey iS) Compiled ae ; | must soon be a most serious probiem » superior, "he declared. | Compiled. by Trwvin.M. Howe, Chicago in America,” the ‘correspondent was y te challenger, while saying that! In releasing the batting records of informed. “An effort has been made | ‘ . he had vindicated” himself, j the American League for the to keep out the so-called ‘reds,’ out viene he was “surprised” when the 1 2 j seni hberty ag Uiken [nergy to die that, too, is futile for it is impossible | = motioned him to his corner, believing reet the attention of the public to to investigate the applicants carefuliy Cs 90199 that Brennan had bealen thé knockout | Some: ef te more noteworthy perio: 7 enough to exe'nde undesirables. R ESON 5 count in the tweltth. Dempsey said: | Mances of this” magl “stceéssful sea- ‘e. | “The only thing that can be done, | Lrennan was tougher than 1 ex- Be a Thane range “ sed it seems to mé, is a new émigration 4 ieeRy pected. He stood up longer than 1} ie he use ‘of a more perfect shall law sharply curtailipg this business eofeefofoofnfoof> thought he would, His blows didn't ee Benes eaiee om ae ot duiape ite: dovn MTLOUEE OF Kuy- ls ‘ k 7 > use of the fe upon our shores. nd that, too, ae BUT a leananite Ae cia um spitter — batting wa increased’ over is going té be a diflicult thing for 1 oF the scheme operiting to shift the Dempsey Goes West the 1919 average, fifteen poi This, there will always be the possibility | immigrants into o-amerga-”. E Dempsey’s manager said the cham- eee ally added to the ungertainty of - of discrimination against classes that |, -~ pion was not in the best of condition | the, result of any particular Would, make valuable. citidens,’ ir /Pirst- Woman Jurcr - having trained too hard. {th 4 re increased the in immigration should be stopped en-} F No Ty. Mine dey expects 10 leavésfor tie the pal rony in a corresponding de>; tirely for a few years, say five, we ‘or. North Dakota Pacific coast tomorrow to remain until gree. , might wake up to the situation in i — late in February, when he will come | For, the second time in Wutteen America and seek a way out of the! Williston, Dec. 15.—Mrs. Elizabeth hack to New York to train for hi years Tyrus Rayniond € obb | forced < trouble. | M. ‘Champion, ani employe oi the mitch with Jess Willard on St. Pat- lo yield first place toa ri Pete government.agents have been ; Y uditor’s office, served as i contest for individual batt doing their best to meet the ~emerg-| @civil case “in Williston The new leader, George § ency with the machinery of the law, ; trict court. ses and So \Yar ag can be learned she w stthe first but ghat {s pitiably inadequate. Avout stars, althougi~~ Stinchcomb ‘and all that can be done is to send depart-; woman(in North Dakota: -tc “Hoge” Workman siaad out as jumm- ment of justice agents to New York! jury. ht by rounds: great first baseman of the St. c ROUND. ONE: |team, finished with a matk of .40%7 ‘The men got into the cénter ofthe | nineteen points ahead of manager Tris. sit on a only a small part of the glory that will Winning three Western Conferertcasbave been centered in the Ohio school. ying, Dempsey landing first, a right | Speaker oi ‘Clev land (388) who- in football titles 2a7¢ Ohio State Univer-| ‘School's Vision aries oa..actount of. their dramati¢ | and. ‘warn’ the grafters and the anore| When the civil action of J.C. Ryans chop to the head. AThey-exchange:t) turn y ront of Joe si irtle de of padlicity in its own| The university; ie-all set to build a effectiveness with the forward pass) radica) promoters of this immigra-j Vs- C. E -Burke, in which the plaintitf lefts and rights to the body at close | Jackson neck of the ayoads. | Mussseeeuuudi’acuetic stadium. Presi-|-0W sc>res show that all his play tion that they must not resort to il-| Was suing to coHect a note, the court quarters and clinched frequently 8 work during the p: - 5 aBut .w ch Jack Wilce drew | dent Wi. 0, Thompson has- just an-| are of highclass calier, offensively legal means. Some of them who| found a ‘shortage of jurors and Judge Brennan worked left hooks to the; son stamps hinias one of the assig t to take his gridiron] aounced that 99 atres of land have | and defensively. 8° \| were reaping rich rewards out of tha| Frank B. Fisk, presiding, ordered head while Dempsey sent two rights|players of all time. cragt fo Pasadena az a representative | been secured ‘iy the gchool for athletic While the Guckeyes are reputed as/| passport bu gs—pretending to se-| Sheriff MacKenroth to draft the first to the id, one of which narrowly | every game his team pl otAastern football fo battle the Gol- | purposes. The Olentangy river is to| being a forward passing eleven almost | cure proper papers for sums paid’ in four voters he eould find. One of missed Brennan's chin. Both men) led all in times at bat, erent apothall fe battle the Gol ibe dredsed and remodeied so as to| entirely it is not the case. ‘They plaX)hand—have been frightened off, but|them was Mrs. Champiod. : worked fast at close quarters and hits, 257, a new American League 1 rm Day he spread the fame of the Buck-“permit inland rowing races. all kinds of football, ‘ there are others still at work. | While the cas? was_unimyortant in Dempsey seratched ord. Cobb's 248, made in 1911 being insitution across the limitless! Winning athletic teams have given » “One of these grafters moved to) @s much as .the amount involved eye with a left soak. Deinpae | the high mark uatijnow. He | the school a bigger vision than it hever Give Us f Berlin and probably is doing a thriv-; Was small, the jury remained out 11 hours: when they reported a disagree- ment. Mrs. Champion found the ex- perience interesting altho the 11- If the Californians are expecting 0 see the Wilce elexen uncork dozens of forward ‘passes onNew Year Day ing businss. ‘Nothing can be done about jt. He is within the law, a3 which will| ever’ had. before, Credit Wilce coast tour, three weeks, is the A The Pacific cover a period: of "| first round by a shade. | triple ROUND TWO: Denipsey landed a light right on {ing his 172 singles h Liege: thing that ever happened to{ Muchof the credit for Ohio's athle~ far as we are concerned. He may go 1 t the Brennan replying with a; @er Speaker for second place in the school. \ | tic enterprise is que to Coach Wiice— they will be fooled. The Buckeyes | out and collect any amount of fees for; hour session was a little tiresome, ; similar blow in the ne Then they | scored with 137, f in three b: Route Card {the man who has\bufit the super-foot-| don’t cut loose with the overhead |‘aasisting’ immigrants to secure pass-} she said’ - Ni . hits, pall machines. / style ‘unless Hard’ pressed. {ports and whether he succeeds in And when it is over the Ohio dele-, sec@id in two base hits, tied with ener De LEGION MEMBERS ‘got into a short-arm mix-up. Demp- sey missed a left hook for the head. his team imate Jacobson, for, econd gation of will have traveled; Wilce is a very uwiet fellow. He is} The Ohioans aren’t what you \ean | getting the papers, which cannot be 3ren hooked left to stomach, | Place in run ven in, 12 i total of near] The! the thinking and not the talking-kind.| q wonder machine in any sense. They|held up if the applicant meets yre-|- Regular _ meeting Thursday. Short. lefts. and ‘vights were dx-|Stolen bases with 42 while he was yonte will take ‘them over a hal’ dozen) He i8 not going. West over-confident.| are just a well balanced team who|qutrments, or not he can keep the/ Neo 45 Memb ki : changed at close quarters and Dem) |tiTown out,in attempts to pilfer but difterent railroads. Most of them will, “We'll play our best foothall—win] never. give up until the last whistle} money.. The Applicant ~won't, ec. 15. Members making can- seventeen times, have caten the st Caristmas and | or lose.” ° | as blown—and they know football ‘squeal.’ | vass on Club oom will be call- sey sent a half arm left to the body and brought it up to the face with | much steam behind it. Dempsey was short with right to the head an\! Brennan got in two half arm upper: cuts over the heart.’ They were in a; lively mix-up at the he Brennan had shade in this round. ROUND THREE: “However, such men are only_part| ed ofl for report. New Year dinners in California. The; That is the only: prediction We is} trom fundamentals to:tricks. urn trip will be made by wa of the | making ‘8 to the outcome of the inter:| Grand Canyon with a stopover for | sectional battle. \ | work of George H. Ruth, the slugging , sight-seeing. No Super-Players outfielder of the New York t Big | ‘That's a great jaunt, but the trip is! His team is not made up of super- “Babe” poled 54 home runs, a greater) __ 4 | number than any entire team in either |7~ 77 : si 7 / | wajor league compiled. Ruth's won-/ hard for the strike out record, fanning! Manager Tris Speaker drove out : : |derful performance was the more ex- ‘on 80 occasions but was beaten lout) sfty two-baggers. e more than Sis- ‘They rushed intg a clinch and then | traprdinary because he was out of the jof first “honors” by: his’ team mate ne wey af sin EY ae pa exchanged. body) blo Both landed jjjneup in fwelve=games, and in his, Ward, who whiffed $4 times. Meusel, | ight n, | short rights uppercuts, Dempsey ' 442 contests he was officially “at bat”’ of the same’ team, also struck out 72 who was third in the Mgt of-two-base j ducked into a right hook whichgwas 1/3 timeg iess thangSisler being ob- times, but Jimmy Dykes, of the Ath- | sluggers. followed by a lett and right to the | tiged to accept 148 bases on balls from {etics, fipished next to Ruth with 73. | Joe Gedeon of the Browns was ‘ered- head. Dempsey ‘then started after | opposing pitchers while Sisler was| Edgar S. Rice, the fleet outgelder of ited with forty-eight sacrifices as was|_ his man with Jeft and right hooks, | passed but 46 times. Ruth crossed the |the Washington team, stole sixty-two ajso Owen Bush of’Detroit. Mclrnis but seemingly did not put much pow | plate 158 times with needful tallies,jbases in ninety-two attempts, his’ of Boston was third with forty-five: er into the blows. Dempsey’ showedsiqeading Speaker and Sisler who sec-|nearest competitor being S asi Tris Speake” with: ninety-seven Even more spectacular than Si remarkable record—though not so val- tuable to his team—was the wonderful | many manufacturing _lines, ™ and, more* patticularly, in refining and distribution of petroleum products, large scale operations are essential to insufe ie some’ fated operations, -in ry ag XY 5 3 slight scratch over his n68e. There | onq by 21 thins. He also led the league |noted above. Robert Roth also_ of bases on balls and Harry Hooper with tinh a few exchanges! with nao in driving in runs (137) being thus | Washingto was third in stolen bases, eighty-eight were nearest to Ruth in maximum economy and service. y ‘airly even. Dempsey crossed hi | responsible for 241 of the 838 runs|with twenty-four out of thirty-six being awarded free passage to first; — Tight hag to ties tle it the “pardesy acdred by the Yankees. NBabe” tried | efforts. ; base. The production , of crude oil plow so far in the » The cham =< pion, whether intentionally or not, * ‘ f varies but little on ‘account oft , missed a couple of right hooks for the |, 5 % seasofial changes, and the refin- head and then brought his left to G 3rennan’s: mouth, which, was blee@- ing processes are continuous ing at the close of the round. ! Dem rounds’ operations. ‘ : ROOND FOU; They exc hanes body blows with The consumption of petroleum pro-- both hands and then landed light . “docs however, varies widely wit the season. In summer, consumption far outstrips production, while during the winter months the reverse is true. To prepare himself for-the summer left and right hooks at close quarters. Dempsey blocked a left lead for the face and nt a short right over the hear ‘There was a good deal of in- effective work at, close quarters é ‘ oe / Brennan sent hfs right twice to the hampton came hacl 2 . Ca ee the. Tas coe ae bin S b ac the — \ rush, the oil refiner, who is ambitious right cross to the ear. ‘Then e “ to render a maximum service, must ‘ - eGoncinued son: bane Seven) : J ‘ operate his fefineries at full capacity throughout the year, and must pro- vide,adequate storage to take care of his surplus output during the winter ‘months, and store it against a day of maximum demand when the country “friendly glass: WRESTLERS. WILL' Parity foo rwahio MEET ON MONDAY é state : and a eastacion | roads and city boulevards are crowded a IS MLE ae bai with machines, and the farmer. has is making his home in Mandan, will | in ever ot ea UE 1 his tractor in the field. meet Albért Finlayson, of Bismarck, | 4 y well known amateur wrestler, in a To perform this service requifes the ae it oe hall Monday Rnowi everywhere+ ‘Buyit it investment of huge sums of money, Collins has been elternating be- ~ by the case for your home. and the maintenance of a complete tween Mandan and Bismarck but_ organization at all times. looks on Mandan to furnish his “home ‘ Th Standard Oil C di of rooters for the match. Fin- | A -B ana, s friends wll. be backing him | NHEUSER USCH e.otandar tale hi (ne ) e mumbers, it is expected. | S L is ambitious to be a lea er int ie pe : Brads, of Mandan, will ref- T. LOUIS, : “~ troleum industry. It is ambitious eree. The match will be catch-as- ‘ i i \ D f \ ve and adequate resources can q ‘ | devise. | In carrying on its-business, the Com- : iny has invested more than 185 mil- 1 | f ‘ lion dollars; jt operates four large ae | ; refineries in which it manufactures « cotcoumterheity | ‘ the many varieties of petroleum prod- ucts needed by the consuming public. It operates’ 3215 bulk stations, more than 1000 filling stations, and a fleet of ‘nearly 4000 tank delivery trucks. Hebert Winter Suits an d Overcoats Uisitors cordially tavited _ t oa | . 4 € | $ . ss Its permanent organization consists of From = #0 inspect aur P sn | ; about 23,000 efficient, loyal men and $30. 00 ¢ \ : \ women, ‘working under one head, to > to: <| = | render a service which makes it pos- fible for you to geta gallon of guveline, or a quart of oil, or a pound of grease, wheg you want it, and wherever you may be. $75.00 - All wool and good fit guar- anteed, or money back Free! Extra! pants with each Suit KRALL, The Tailor i iv Standard Oil Company 2 910 S. Michigan Ave: Chicago, a Hagen esate vail URE Camble-Robinson Fruit Co. Distributors, , Bismarck ‘ \ {see a