The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 15, 1921, Page 6

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“he, s PAGE SIX LUCKY SIXPENCE SAVED HIM | Good Story of How Fate Intervened to Preserve Beau_Brummell to .History’s Pages. The old superstition about the lucky charm of a crooked sixpence aros early in the Highteenth century, and its author was none other than Beau Brummel, the most famous of the world’s dandies, Brummell, although the bosom friend of the prince of Wales, came from common stock, hig grandfather having been a valet. But he saved, as did Brum- mell’s father, and Brummell had some $150,000 to serve him. He became a great gambler and a good loser, often staking thousands of pounds. One night he played at Walter's club, and when he rose from the table he w a pauper. Not only that, but heavily in debt. ’ He wandered out into the London streets, with head downeast; and as crooked sixpence. In a whimsical mo- ment he returned to the club and matched it with a chance friend. He! won, matched again and again, and | won cach time. The game changed illing matghes, and then to gold and Brummell at the end of | minutes found himself with two or three pounds. He went to the gaming table, sat down, and when dawn “came and the game closed he had won over 12,000 pounds, or about ; $60,000, ‘The crooked sixpence he car- ried with him for rs, and shortly | after he lost it his bad luck arose again, and he once more became a pauper, } | RANKED AS MARVEL OF ART) Michelangelo’s Superb Decorations in| the Sistine Chapel Sufficed to “| Give Him Eternal Fame. | — | Michelangelo's decoration of the} vault of the Sistine chapel was hailed as the greatest piece ‘of work ever done by a painter's: hand, It was al task of colossal proportions, the ceil-| ing alone measuring 132 feet by 44; fer The painter had to do much; wor ing flat on his: back on a scaf- | enough | olled along he picked up a? By Dean Synder. George Chaney’s comeback is no flash in the pan. ‘He’s headed for Benny Leonard's territory, Ten straight knockouts in a row have given him the confidence he lost back in 1916 when Johnny Kilbane cooled him in three rounds. His tenth kayo was more sensation- al than the other nine had beeni He knocked out Babe Picato, the New Castle miner, after being out on his feet the first round. % Cannon Ball Sting. It was a wild swing that lifted Pica- to clear out of the ring. It carried the sting of a cannon ball. “I'm a -kayo fighter,” says Chaney. “Fans like to see a knockout. fans like I try fo give ‘em. “The better I please ’em the tighter they'll pack in to see me go. “T’ve got my wallop back now. Short fights always did suit me best. ' “It’s easier to extend yourself for two What | fold. For some ‘time afterward he! was unable to read except when in} that position. | Michelangelo arranged the vast | space as though it had been roofless, | framing it with architectyre in per-| spective delusion and filling the open | spaces?with paintings. Just above the; windows are the figures of the ances-' try of Christ In attitudes of eager! walting; 2bove them 12 gigantic fig- ures of prophets and_ sib; in the corners, four representations from the; history of Isra In the center of the/ vault the stories of the “Creation of the World,” the “Fall of Man,” and | the “Deluge” are told in nine pictures. | Among. the central pictures “is the| gay fans. eation of Adam.” Adam Is depicted} Women and kids like to be amusea. on the point of rising, just’ as) They don't know pil about basebail God's touch sends the first thrill of| by a long shot. : life through his veins. Of the proph-| They don’t get the drift of all the ets, Jeremiah is the image, of deep slang peddled around a ball park. thought, and Zachariah a type of men-| Baseball men are all fairiy good tal absorption. ; | business men. They , wouldn’t last | long if they weren't. But their ideas ‘need dusting off. Here's the Dope. By DEAN SNYDER. Baseball's undevcloped resources! Magnates overlook many way uo keep the pine hoard seats jammed. As a result a lot. of that might be—just_ is: They have the ladics’eda kids’ d Most park ow go at that. With a little a la mgde they'd make the fair fans and the kid fans every- ind the s let it ° Fidelity Marked Telegrapher, One striking example of the H. J. Benson, owner of the San spirit of endurance under great Antotiio Bronchos, thinks he’s got the of which the telegrapher of the oldj right dope. He'd make the women school was capable was given by John} and kids more interested. Carnahan, then a young mon in his| He thinks ‘it isn’t enough to have thirties, at the time of the Custer! em clap their hands and sgreech a massacre. He was operator'and news-| little. Benson wants ‘em fo go plumb paper correspondent at Bismarck,| Y@ppy over the game—god_— wild—go which was the nearest telegraph ‘6f.| buks—go Clear up in the air! fice to the scene of Custer's last fight, | a Teach 7Em Shing. 500 miles west. Attending his regular! Soeme. funny, Says Benson, “that duties, and gathering here and there | creat Rusineass Ten a peopel ‘would from the-incoming scouts and plains; jh cabed resources They, stragglers the thrilling story of Custer} ee eens {t-In both pho minors and to send to the anxiously waiting world,! “Phe women and kids~-they’re the he worked 40 hours without rest, and undeveloped resources. for several days and: nights he only| “A man who takes his wife to a caught a few winks of sleep, yet all, game doesn’t want to be dragged out the newspaper -redding world were! of his rooting revelry by having her rasping for ‘the thousands of | 28K silly questions. words of story he was gathering, They| “Nine out of every ten women don’t never knew how one man’ was work-| know the home plate from the family Ing to satisfy them, plate. They, don’t even know why an umpire {g rotten and a losing pitcher is bum.” “ Here’s Benson's scheme to pep up the game and the‘;owners’ -pocket- books: / z For the Women, Give mation pictures of baseball at the theatres: Have men who know the gane lec- ture on it. : Teach the women to talk the base- ball vocabulary—the whole book. x TOBACCO “No-To-Bac” has helped thousands to break the costly, nerve-shattering tobacco habit. Whenever you have a longing for a cigarette, cigar, pipe, or for a chew, just place a harmless No-To-Bac tablet in your mouth in- stead, to help relieve that ‘awful de- sire. Shortly the habit may be com-} pletely broken, and you are better off mentally, physically, financially. It’s 80 easy, So simple. Get a box of No- | To-Bac and if it doesn’t release .you | from all craving for tabacco in anv | form, your druggist will refund -your ; money without question. Insist. upon Pape'st | —E——————s—— FARMERS AND TRAPPERS ATTENTION Sell Hides and Furs Under ing Low Market. Let us tan them either into fur sets, robes, coats or leather and use same to a good advantage instead of sacrific- ing them at the present low prices. Send. for FREE price list and tags. If you prefer selling we. always pay the highest market price. THE BISMARCK HIDE & FUR CO. Bisnlarck, North Dakota Don’t rived MINNESOTA BATTERIES (Guaranteed 2 years) ELECTRIC. SERVICE. & TIRE COMPANY 215 Main Street \ or three rounds than to go along play- ing safe for 10 or 15. - Points ‘No Fun. . “There's more satisfaction ia knock- ing out an apponent than in just ovj- pointing him. “If I don't kayo my man IJ don’t-wia. “] believe I hit harder: fat nly, weight than Dempsey.,’».. wy “Any fighter.can’ come back if he has the heart and the wallop. That's all there is to the fighting game. “Vl be ready for Leonerd one of these days. There may be a new champion after we. fight. “For I'm a comeback who-1s com- ing all the way.” Chaney’s String. Here’s Chaney's string of kayos: ~ 1. Johnny Rose—3 rounds. 2. George Brown—1 round. George Reynolds—&5 seconds. 4. Joe Phillips—2 younds. 3 rounds. 6. > Metrie—2 rcunds. 7, Al Murphy. rounds.* aseball_pep | PEP UP THE GREAT AMERICAN GAME! Women and Kids Are the Undeveloped Resources of Baseball Give 'em bargain admittance pri don't appreciate the free di ‘ dime and see ’em snap gain, ‘or the Give the kid ds. ent gate. Make n't much. ge a few sideshows for the games when Nick ‘t in town. ‘em ice cream cones amd pop for rooting. Teach ’em baseball slang. Give ’em pictures of the with their records, ' Make ’em feel they're appreciated. i For the Owners, /¥ans put a fortune into baseball coffers last year. The profit to the majors for ten million. But they paid it with most of the undeveloped resources tintouchetl. - Winning teams always pack ’er) in, Losers fizale-at, the box office’ witless they happen to have a colorful’ star or two to attract. So here's the hunch—get after these undeveloped resources. Make the women and kids red-hot - every-day fans. id Besides pepping up thegreat Amer- ean game it, will pep up the players. 00. players f ot © % The headlock is doomed. ‘It’s too deadly, It’s torture—not’ skill. The hold is a vise-like: grip about the ‘head where delicate nerve centers are located. 4 oe se Joe Stecher is partially paralyzed from. the effects of it. a. Wladek Zbyszko, was also’ put in a hospitel for several. weeks ater, ex- periencing it. He nearly Went blin1. Ed “Strangler” Lewis won the cham- pionship with it. But he is more taz | zed than boosted. The hold should have been. barr! before ieewis developed it, It wa work a hardship on ‘ewis_tc have to defend his titleswithout’it, But better a championship lost than a murder committed. ‘ Torture has no place in sport. The toe hold’ and the strangle hoid \ arn their way in sometiges.:A| GEORGE CHANEY OF BALTI MORE AND His KAYO FISTS, mi i i t | | ! pe aananmapananemaammaanaaaaaanan e MANSION DEEDED TC BRITISH PREMIER ‘. -—° ~- | Chequers; a beautiful mansion in the Chiten Hills, Buckinghamshire, England, has been deed- ed to Britain, as the official country home for prime ministers, by Lord and Lady Lee of Fareham. |Lloyd George will use it until a new premier succeeds him. “He is-shown heré posing for his first, Sate tee | snapshot outside.the new official mansion. Lady Grenwood, wife of the chief secretary: for Ireland,| ° is taking the picture. . Lord Leé was formerly military attache of the British embassy in Washing-| iton. Part of the Chequers house. was built in'1489, before Columbus discovered America, * . i 8. George Papin— rounds. 110. Babe Picato—2 rounds. That amounte’to about 60 minutes actual work betwen the ropes. Chaney is a southpaw. He can floor a man with -either®fist, though. ‘His real kayo’ is a short left which travels from -6.td°8 inches. ty | 5 Floored Welling. Before he started his kayo string he floored Joe.’ Wing ‘three times in six rounds and “twice in an eight- round return bout. , His knockout of Ual Delaney show- ed his ‘real caliber. ‘Delaney had -iev- er been ‘rocked to sleep. Before Chaney met Kilbane he had rolled up a total of nearly 50 kayo victories. ‘ When the ‘feather champ handed him ‘some of’ his own medicine it. shook his confidence. He tapered: off into a no-decision fighter after that. His recent comeback is one of those queer quirks which bob up in boxing HERE are people in the world —though we believe that they ™ aré greatly in the minority — who still consider that smallness is a merit, that greatness is a shame, that mediocrity is commendable, and that commercial success is a crime. ‘The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) believes that without great commer- cial enterprises a nation is a dead na- tion; that great commercial enter- slpseg must be efficient in service to p successful, and that this efficiency Means more to the nation than the success means to the organizers of the enterprise. The Standard Oil Company believes that a great commercial enterprise, to be successful under existing condi- tions, must contribute to: (1) Greater efficiency in the production of wealth; (2) Greater justice in the distribution of wealth; (8) Greater wisdom in the consumption of wealth, (1) Greater efficiency_in production: Among other notable improvements in the refining of petroleum, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has contributed ne Burton Fence. This process greatly increases the percent- - age ofgasolinederivablefromcrudeoil: ' (2) Greater justice in the distribution : ‘wealth: The Standard Oil Company Indiana) cites the organization of its Company, its liberal policy toward employes—including its annuity sys- tem ‘benefitting retired workers; its fairness to competitors—in maintain- ing open prices and never deviating ' from them; to'customers—by bring- - ing necessary petroleum products to now and then. were barred from wrestling because they re torturers. } The headlock is. ii the same class. Leit: Kariul. | The headlock an@ the wristlock The toehoid, too, must, go; | Hereafter rasseling. will be As fierce as: tit-tat-tog. i Right Earful., Hoppe posts, one thousand beans To meet’ the Belgian whiz!< ¢ But when: it comes to running Ma's a regi in Lig | 04 \ | Johnny \ Wilson is: a 'slow starter | for a fighter who wants to clean up a half-million, before he quits. Orr Carrentier is drawimg mgh to Frank Moran’s “Mary Ann.” ots Uncle Wilbert Robinson is a man) of few words. “We'll” win again.” That’s what he said last years —o- Heinie Groh may draw either sec- . them with the utmost economy. Rae aa portant’ Middle Western States. Standard Oil Company 910 South BE esr aves Chicago, Il. House in editing the papers for the ‘ (3) Greater wisdom in consumption of ' wealth: The Standard Oil Company (Indians) not only recognizes its obli- gation to conserve petroleum and pe- troleum products to the end that no waste occur, but jt maintains a staffof experts, ever at the service of its pa- trons, to instruct them in the efficient and economical use of the products manufactured by the Company. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is committed to a policy of creative leadership, and because of its-loyalty ~°¢o the ideals’outlined above; 'it is to- day of signal service to hundreds of thousands of people inten very im- .340-gaited bat. Memphis sent Dixie ond, short’ or third. “He fits any of | == = out | thinks Del will Poll—the Southern Leaguer with the | Claude Hendrix will ‘use his piten-|fF@ ae ing arm hereafter to make gestures The only way ‘Ted Lewis will ever to prospective automobile ‘customers. f-o— Bantam: Champ Joe Lynch holds his cr@wn only by a split’hair. —o-—- ‘ McLean can get no business With_others of his clan; He’s skating now in vaudeville As only ice-men can. —o= Why do they want'to yacht it all the way to Belgium? ‘Chere ‘are oth- er wet countries closer home. i | beat Britton is to get under thé good luck mistletoe. COLHOUSETO TELL STORY. OF PARIS SESSIONS New ‘York, Feb. 14.—Colonel Ed- ward M. House, representative of the Wilson administration throughout the \ pate: war and Halted States. commissioner Hugh Dutty, Red Sox skipper, says|‘ the Paris Peace Conference, is as- that “Deb Pratt. won't be allowed to] Sembling the manuscript’ of 2 book | join ‘the team in mid-summer. He| otitled “What Really Happened at e Paris; the Story of the Peaco Con- ewan | ference, 1919,” which is-shortly to be published by Charles Scribner’s Sons, that firm announced here today. meee ont | The book will include contributions {by other American ‘delegates who < | participated’ in the treaty making at ae ! Versailles, namely, Charjes H. Has- i kins, chief of division of Western Eu- trope: Robert-H. Lord. chief of Polish | division; Douglas Johnson, chief. of | division of boundaries; Charles Sey- | Mmour, chief of Austro-Hungarian di- vision; Isaiah Bowman. chief terri- torial adviser; Thomas W. Lamont, ! ;and-Allyn A. Young. economic advis- ers Samuel Gompers, chairmen, com- —o~ The St. John’s’ college’ professor who is trying to enter his canoe in the trans-Atlantic sail race may know some chemical formula for mak- ing the wind blow. ~ ‘iation; Herbert C. Hoover.’ director- | general of relief; James Brown Scott ;and David Hunter Milley, ‘lezal ac- visers, General Tasker H.: Bliss and ~| Admiral T. Mayo. , Colonel House’s own contributions to the work will treat:of preparation for peace, the story ef the armistice \and@ the fundamentals of the peace, | while the other. délegateg wil include in their subjects ,The Trial of | thé | Kaiser, The New Boundaries of Ger- |many. The New Poland, the Story of | Fiume, Reparations, the Feeding of Europe, Disarmament and the Labor Clauses of the Treaties. ‘ Mr. Seymour, who is professor of | JOSEPH BRESLOW. Drugolet | | mission. on international labor legis- |. fl : E get spring fever be-| history at Yale, is assisting Coloncl forthcoming volume. WANTS. TO HELP OTHER MOTH- ERS. Mrs. Wm. Sager, 901 Nichol St.Ut- fea, N. Y.: “I gladly write anything that helps a mother’ with her chil- dren. My little girl had whooping cough and I was afraid she would choke. I gave her Foley's Honey and Tar_and it helped her wonderfully. She could sleep ‘most all night with- out coughing.” The good cough sy- tup checks colds, stops coughing, cuts phlegm and covers raw, inflamed membranes with a_healing coating. —adv!, |- WEATHER REPORT. For twenty-four hours ending at noon, Feb. ¥5, 1921: Temperature at.7 a. m. Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday Lowest last. night. Precipitation Highest wind velocity .. Forecast, For North Dakota: Snow tonight And possibly Wednesday; cold wave; sero temperature b; Wednesday morning. z ANGELS GET DIXIE, Los Angeles, Feb. 15.—Swapping ’em round gives the Angels Dixie Car- Y worth, Read a case of it to the Cardinals who, in turn, traded him to Los Angeles for Bill Pertica.~ EVER HAVE IT? If You Haves. the Statement of This Bismarck Citizen. Will Interest You Ever have a “low-down” pain in the back? In the “small,” right over the hips. That's the home of backache. If it’s caused by weak kidneys. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Bismarck people testify to their (Mrs. Anna Gorneflo,'319 9tirSt., Bis- marck says: “An attack of influenza left my kidneys weak and disordered. ‘The action of my kidneys was irregular too. My back ached at.night so that 1 could not rest and for nearly a ‘yean I was:unable to do any work to speak of. I also had dizzy spells. 1 used six boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills and they cured me entirely of the trouble and my cure has bees a permanent one. I gladly recommend Doan’s.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t sim- ply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same “that Mrs. Gorneflo had. FosteréMilburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Ys 00000000000 nn Bo many cases of Rheumatism come from a tiny disease cerm that infests the blood, that physicians are beginning to realide that this seuree of the disease is becoming quite prevalent, Of course a <is- ease: that bas its source in the Weod cannot ‘be reached by local remedies applied ‘to the surface. One Tessedy thy has.given splen- id results je treatment cf f eee is S.S.S., the fine cli 7 I Look Out for Rheumatism * As Winter. Approaches, ood remedy that has been sold by druggists for more than fifty years. S.S.S..acts by driving out of the blood the disease germ that causes Rheumatism, thus affording real relief. f Begin taking: S.S.S. today and if you Sill write. a complete history of yout case, our a ist eairester ‘will give you expert advice, with- out dar 2 Address Chief Medical Adviser, ‘51 Swift Laboratory, At COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPHS COLUMBIA RECORDS ON EASY TERMS IF DESIRED COWAN’S DRUG STORE ? RG ecto eine eerie ~

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