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/ PAGE SIX MANDAN PLANS GOOD TEAM ON BALL DIAMOND Drive On By Fans To Raise $2,500 To Back The Organization | FOR BISMARCK GAMES Mandan will put a baseball club in the field this year. A drive is being put on today for funds. It is expected ‘by the board of five men, 1 of them baseball play- ers, which will manage the team at- fairs, that about $2,500 qwill be raised | the team. Erickson, coach of Mandan high | s, Who also is a good school athlet 5 ayer, has been engaged as | He probably © will! 2 see ay in the infield. “rE EP 7 It is the announced intention of the ED ROUSH, THE FARMER management to use home players as |By Newspapbr EnterpFise. tar as possible, Mandan having some ne a Seana i exceptionally fast lucal players, it is | Cinelnnati, April 20.=The “services probable that a couple of good pitchers ;of Ed Roush, Heiitie Groh and Larry will be hi | Kopf are not worth $41,000 to the Cin- ed. ‘ The Mandan mans ent looks with | cinnati Reds, thinks Garry Herrmann. AMIE tate ana 0 eB inarelc| “Phat is the combined amount which during the summer, as it will be athe three prize holdouts of the ma- linancial to both teams and!Jor leagues are, reported to have give th a chance to see real |#sked. ‘ , haseball, It is held probable that Man- | But Garry's hold on the bank roll dan time will be changed from Moun- { Will not loosen to that extent. : tain to Centfal time May 1, and if this} Roush, the highest-paid player of is done, it will permit vplaying twi- (the .National League~ with $15,000, light games in Mandan, | wants $20,000, it is said, BRP A GES |. Grok received $10.00) last year and é vis ¥ rled to have asked ft 12,000. WILTON TO PLAY. bs Kopr" val va $000. Te would e satist with $9,000. | ; “There is a Timit he worth of a {ball player,” says Garry. ne | The directors of the club have gone xc further and announced that none of Wilton will play the prison team at!the holdouts would he traded. 3 the prison on Sunday, it is announced! So it’s a cde of come in on rea- today. , i stick to civies. Wilton will have in the field its} rm in Indiana. regular line-up for the coming year,} with the exception of the first bese- Groh ovrns a pool and billiard busi- man, sufrered.an injury. Cunning- | ness in Ros N. Y., He can while ham i: ed to pitek_for Wilton. It}away the long summer. days shooting was: reported that Cunningham had | pool. been offered a“place with the Lisbon | Kopf is a stock and bond salesman. team. None of the holdout Reds can make Art Bauer, who is‘handling the pris-|in business anything near what he on team, says it is improving daily. {could get out of baseball. 2 =o Both Roush and Groh have been JAME TOWN NOT {sought by the New York Giants. But even Gotham would not pay such sal- TO HAVE TEAM) ary demands. Yet; the acquisition of ET either would make the Giants look jlike a cinch pennant. winner. Jamestown, N.:D., April 20.+James-| * Their Substitutes. town will not have a city baseball! Pat Moran has plugged the holes team in the field this year, it was de-| with young blood. cided by fans. ~But,Sammy Bohne is not a Heinle ;Groh at third. Sam Crane is not a Larry Kopf at short. Charley See doesn’t class wah Hd Roush in the Y He LEAGUE STANDINGS American Association - |HOLDOUT REDS WANT $41,000 AND a (PARTS | GARRY SAYS THEY ARE NOT WORTH IT 1 : OV\. LARRY KOPF, THE BOND SALES- MAN : Without the three Redleg jewels the team is an uncertainty. The Reds—wrecked by holdouts— are @ark horses similar to the White Sox—wrecked by the gambling scan- Won Lost Pet. | outfield. ’ dal. Louisville .. 6 0 1000 a = a — (Milwaukee . 2 0 1000 @ hits, Neither had A in th Minneapolis 1 © 1000/2 hits. Neither had a chance in the Brera ee S0| feld, Pee na St. Paul . 2 73 400 ee ‘ ish ‘ Mansas City . 1 3 -250; Tom Gibbons is accused 0} picking 3 unished for Wet Feet, . ‘Toledo ... 1 3 167! “soft ones.” A good man makes any] ¢ Boy Committed Suicide, 4 ‘Columbus a) 00y| opponent look that way. s — B 5 t So ‘ Joseph Grichvich, five years 4 American League lige Sprite ea eke b the $ old, of Detroit, Mich, commit. § Won Lost Pet,! first double squeeze’ play of the base- ted’ sulcide by shooting "$ New York ... 320 «2 750| ball year, ‘Taat’s One reason why big H ‘in his head, Senne te A Washington 4 2 664 league scouts are shadowing col- ‘ statement to the police by his ‘ a pus ‘ H ae lesians. : if father, Daniel Grichvic! ‘Boston . 2 3 400! ‘No hidden mines have been struck s The boy had’ been punished Detroit . I 2 333| in New Jersey such as usually fol-} § for coming home with wet feet Chicago L 3 250| lows announcement that a pair of| ¢ and had been sent to the kitchen Philadelphi: el 4 200| heavy knugkle pushers plan to move $ to dry them, Grichvich said. A National renga A t in. f moment later the family, at din- You, Lost Pet} RS. ner, was startled b; New York . +L 750] ‘Untess all signs fail Dutch Reuther,| § shot, and found the boy ¢; Pee Chicago 1 750} under the fatherly handling of Uncle the kitchen floor. Y Boston . 3 667| Robbie, will be a game winner this . ‘Pittsburgh 2 667) season. Philadelphia 2 600] see eee TERETE Cincinnati 4 vd3} Life: has suddenly become worth} , ‘ St, Louis . 3. 299} while lo the baseball fan once more. Aged Recluse Fell Heir to $100,000. Brooklyn . 5 16% | 7 5 4 Fiffin, O.—Found at the old ‘shack 5 ——_—____* Hl Over a million dollars went through | the betting machines at the Kentucky ; Derby in 1920. RESULTS YESTERDAY ‘American Association ‘St. Paul 4, nsas City 6. Columbus 0; Louisville 4. a « Kight heavyweight championship Toledol, Indianapolis 4. | fights in the past 22 years drew a Minneapolis-Milwaykee postponed, | total of $925,277, Rickard thinks the wet grounds. H Dempdey Carnention show will pull a + Million. ‘ Right Earful . Rookies whom the majors tried, , ‘then turned loose ag'in, Watch \the: score hoards just to see ‘What: they might ‘a been. American League Chicago 1, St. Louis 4. Cleveland 12, Detroit 3. Philadelphia 6, Washington 14. >| ‘Boston-Uew York postponed. H [FORMATION OF 's GUARD COMPANY IS BEGUN HERE Enrollment of a company of the Na- tional Guard is proceeding in Bis- | marck under the direction ofa com- mittee composed of Fred Graham, Her- National League ‘New York 9, Boston 1. Brooklyn 2, ‘Philadelphia 3. St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 1. Pittsburgh, 4, Chicago 2. is Over half the necessary quota is en- (Poor hitting, fair’ fielding, good! rolled. ‘ ie oi pitching and a better frame of mind| A petition was receiyed by the city make up the equipment with which | commission last night asking that all Chanie's A’s startell’ of block 90 of Williams Addition bo i |exempted from taxation because Se Centre College without ‘Bo will not} propose company A sienites to rane sit in the exdiiour’ jtain an athletic field. for athletic Reure. much in the gridiron fiddling | sports for the benefit of the company next fall. jand for the public generally. SUNLIGHT IS STRAN Butte, Mont,,. April 20.—Recent | closing oF the copper-mineés has result- : atiog | ed in br! inging to the surface horses of the Athletics | ang mules, some of which haye not callc{| heen above ground for, 15 years. The | sunlight dazed them for several, days. Tex Rickard’s dayenports are} all out of step with the financial con*7 dition ef our country. i ick” Gallow: cannot explain why he- is “Chick.” Rookie Parallel | A starch molecule, one of. the larg- 'man Brocupp and P; G. Harrington. | by gardening, Valentine Schter, as enty-one-year-old recluse, was not a few days ago that he had fallen h to a fortune of $100,000 trrough ihe death of a brother in California. Some of the craters on the moon's surface are more than.150 miles in di- "| ameter. All the cork used in the world: in a year weighs little more than’ 1200 tons. + é “Hungary announces an issue of cur- rency to rinted’ on leather, How long a-little of the Real. Tobacco Chew will last. Nor: how much gen- uine chewing satisfac- tion the full, rich real tobacco taste will give. Ask any man who uses | the Real Tobacco Chew. He will tell you that this class of tobacco will give more satisfac- tion—and at less cost— than the ordinary-kind. Put up in two styles The records of Louis Fonseca and est known, contains about 25,000.at- Riggs Stephenson, the tw@_rookie s2c-! omg. +4 a ond basemen breaking in with the} A So Reds and Indians respectively, were! An electric lamp attached to the col- exactly the same for opening day. lar helps the hunting dog pursue his Each had 4 times at bat and made} rame into theis burrows, 4 -| Stibstitute kittens! since they .are -griz- where he has eked out a stant living | “Perhaps You says the Good Judge rh - W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco es ae RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco “THE RISMARCE TRIBUNE CAT ADOPTS TWO OF MOUSE ‘FAMILY Eats Three Before’ Maternal | Love Got the Better of | Her Appetite. i i Boston. — Probably. the «most sure prised pair of mic in Greater Boston are-fwo. which were recently adopted and ~othered against their will by a Wes: -M2d6or€ ‘cat that ate three: of their ‘family before materpal love. got | the better of her appetite. +The self-appointed mother’ 16 ..Ted- old owned: by’ Mrs. Bessie: Dickey of 12 Harvard svetue, West Medford, ‘Teddy's affections’ were badly: torn by the execution of four of her tive tatest kittens, and, it-was agiparently. to ‘fll up her depleted ‘fainily that she ddopt- ed the mice, a \ Mike and Ike, the. kidnspéd ‘twins, are in many respects, unsa' Brings Them Home by the Nape of the Neck -. 3 vled veteran§ .of::a long. catecr of mousy sin and. are, nearer’ their. ‘sec- ond childhood than’ their. first. have become resigned ‘tp their. occu- paney’ of the home’ box! however, and | submit patiently to being patted and! to having their hate;smoothed by their new mother's:tongue. |. hey are: fed by the Dickéy fiim- ily.” Their océasiotial efforts at escrpe (have been’ nipped ‘in thé bud by the vigilant Teddy, ‘whd: bri ags them home by the nape of the neck. |. f - Teddy has had a great reputation as a mouse and rat ‘exterminator. “At last, however, her (mother naturé has won out, although shé caught, killed and ate three nice early. the: same morning that she adopted her present proteges. aieaie Luck IN THis. ORSESHOE In Looking for a ‘Plice te Dispose of It in Flivver, Wad ef $300 Is Little Falls, N. Y.—A Little, Falls man went to New York to buy a sec- ond-hand automobile. ‘He found one that suited him very. well, and paid cash for it. He-had his wife with him, nt they started home :by the broad highways. As they Wére cdmitg into the Mohawk valley the Wife saw ® manded that it be'pickedl-up for good luck. ty After a brief argiifiént'as to. super- stitions and such things, the husband returned to the horsééhoe and brought it back to the car. © ° Z “Now where'll we’ put {t to: insure the niost ‘good luck?” he demanded, Under the ‘back ‘seat,” slie, said. He raised the back seat and ‘tossed | the horseshoe undér it As hé“did'se; he discovered a bill. fold, whieh ‘he nicked up and tossed to his’ wife, re ma bas at aad i there's | She opened i 4 5 | yout good suck!” -| f fortnd tn the little | old money carr 300.In'currency. | “L-told yon sald: "Horse: | | shoes always bring ety] | _ It was the custom ofsthe ancients | to bury their. young at daw! rt a The — yord: slang 200 years ago. Don’t Know” | -|doors today was. a ay (short for Theodora), ®' fout-year- | Ports "| been: completed. \* - 2 -| who. spoke here | today. 5 it From Wi They | horseshoe lying in the. roait\ and de: | SS RAINGENERAL ily are in-from-Regan~for a few days in town, “Misiness‘and pleasurer. . 2 _ “Uadeewood Doctor Here. - Dr. W.:F. Cain and Mrs. Cain of Un- OVER WESTERN br Rearaib cg alata ial PART OF STATE Clouds’ Movingti: From Western ‘Part Eastward Bureau Reports The rain which. drove Bismarck in- general over the state, according to-weather ris. C The rain just started this morning at Williston, and was geheral over the western half of the state. It was not raining at Jamestown at nooh, but the} ' rain appeared to be bearing eastward. At Bismarck at 3 o'clock this after- noon thirty-five hundredths of an inch had ‘fallen, and there was not indica- tion of an early césgation’ of the rain. The “rain és ‘déeclaredto be of ‘m-| mense benefit to the state, especially | 6 part‘of the seeding has ' ‘Ensign Marshall Here. Ensign Ernest Marshall of Milwauke ; it tieetings of :the | Salvation Army and and’ Mrs, Larson of Jamestown, who were here for the meetings, went to Jamestown e Buys Dodge. ‘ N. F. Charrie, who covers, the Mott line ‘for the Bismarck Grocery, is us- ing a new Dodge’touring car on his territory. ve New Auto Owner. « The First National Bank of Mandan has just purchased a new Dodge Brothers roadster for use in connec- tion with their ‘country business. ‘Turtle Lake, Callers. Turtle Lake ladies*in Bismarck ‘for a ‘few daya shopping and visiting are Mrs, Ebbinghauser, Mrs. Rv F. Boehm, Mrs. R. F. Lierboe, and Mrs. A. E, Debster. C. M., Diesen: and son, of Washburn spent Tuesday in Bismarck. mily In Town, -- us ‘From Firgo. R. D, Butterfield and H. Ganon are two Fargo ‘ménIn town today. Here From McClusky. Prominent ‘McClusky'‘men in ‘town today are Sam Waxman, M. Waxman, Peter A. Winter, “A. C. Booth, John A. ec! wh haw (Linton Dottor In Town. Dr. Wolverton ‘and Mrs. Wolverton were {n‘from Linton yesterday, CAPITAL CITY SELECTED FOR ..» ART EXHIBIT ‘: Madéaie Priscilla Demonstration Company to Show at = Webb’s Dept. Store ‘Ladies ‘of.Bismarck ‘will be excep- tionally interested to learn that the | Madame Priscilla Demonstration Com- .pahy of Chicago has selected this city CUT SCHOOL 70. | “NINE MONTE Bismarck school children will go ‘school nine months next year iuste| of nine and one-half months. This is the decision of the scha board,' announced’ today. * The new state law governing sch and thaximum and minimuin salar: prescribes a nine months school. TI’ salary maximums will De observed the local schools. . SMALL BOYS IN _. POLICE TOILS FOR ROBBERIE Several ‘boys, ranging in ages ‘fro} 11 to 16 years of age, are in the toi of the police as a result of numero} thefts inthe city. Three of the bo} were caught Sunday night around tl Bismarck ‘Machine Shop by Pai Gaxche, owner. An investigation. whi was started-has resulted in the reci ery of a rifle stolen from the machi shop_once before, a camera stolen of the‘aitomobile of R. M. Berge: goods from the Army and Navy s'! and material stolen from several p | \.'Phe’ New ‘Perfected: ‘Parisian Art . C. Evans and fam-| by Miss Erickson. 4s one of four points in the state of ‘North (Dakota in which they will give an ‘éxhfbition of the famous Parisign Art:Embroidery ‘needle:\ The demon- stration will be held in the Webb Department store commencing tomor- fow morning’and concluding Saturday evéning, “Bismarck will mark the last stop in this state, 'Billings, Mont., be- ing''the ‘next city chosen. vate garages last fall. t > Nofie of the boys have been forma! placed ‘under .arrést by the ‘poli There is a considerable amount of st stolen which has not been re‘urned. th®-boys return it, it is prohable t authorities will place them on pro! tion; if not, they probably will | that the boys training school. be sent to the st ‘Needle has “completely revolutionized embroidery fanéy work.. It consists of of ‘foulr Separate needles in one set, Particularly designed to use any size thread from a silk thread to a carpet rag. Phe fourth point, the largest, is built-éspecially for the making-of rag and ‘wootriigs, thus enabling one to utilize-allthe discarded silk and cot- ton ‘garments and sweaters and make, in -your own home, beautiful rag and Wool! rigs: : . : Owing to ‘the fact that many in- quiries ‘were ‘received from Bismarck dies who attended the first northwest jemonstration ‘of ‘this needle at the ‘Minnesota ‘State Fair last fall, it was decided to ‘demonstrate here- in order that. all imight have an opportunity ‘to see thuslin lunch sets, table run- ners, pitlow tops, bed spreads dnd other udéfiil household atticles. “Mr. Génitling ‘of the Madame Pris- Villa ‘Compay ‘will superintehd the | demdnstration and he will be assisted | START DIVORCE ACTION, Velva, April 20.—S. 0. Sampson Upham, former sheriff- of McHen| county is: defendant in ‘a divorce | es tion started by } Sampson, T} couple were married after Sampson tired from office. Do You Get Your Paper If your Daily Tribune is not delivered satisfactorily we want to know it. Please | phone Circulation Depart- ment, 32. total number of motor cars istered in the United States _ = * for the year. 1920 records.a in of 17.16% over 1919. There _is an automobile for every 12 “persons throughout the country. th the ay chase he states served by the Standard Oil- Company (Indiana) the percentage of gain is 23,43%.:. In South Dakota there is ‘an aufomotive. vehicle for every 5.24 persons in the state. ‘The increases over 1919 in the states served by this Company,are: So. Dakota reer ‘Minnesota 323,572 Kansas No. Dakota Wisconsin « Indiana Illinois Percentage of Increase 332/207 478438. __569,127 2,557,476 3,156,709 Regularly? ‘ | -- ‘Sixty. percent of the new cars sold in the ten states served’ by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) during 1920 were bought by farmers. ‘These figures indi- cate one reason why the demand for am products was so insistent in is territory. The farmer had to con- serve his time, and the automobile was the only solution for this problem. Another reason was the increase of auto- mofive #achinery on the farm, for these were the deciding factor which insured the phenomenal crops harvested during 1920. The efficiency of this motor drivén equip- ‘ment was due in a large measure to’ the efficiency of the Standard Oil Company “(indiana).‘system of distribution, which ‘assured the farmer that his needs would be supplied and his time conserved. © “The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) ‘is an essential economic factor in the fnational life. It ‘contributes a definite quota of imperative’service to society. It is especially organized to render this service. It operatés in an environment of the most intense competition; it survives because it is efficient. | Standard Olt: Company 910 S. Michigan Nea Chicago, Iil. ”