The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 28, 1921, Page 4

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le So Se PACEFOUR eo ——————— FANS TO. SEE STRENGTHENED ‘VALLEY CITY TEAM IN ACTION, OPPOSESALE 10. BOTH GOING BIG Series Opens Here Friday Even- ing at 6:15 O'clock With Dean Sterling’s Team FARGO TEAM SCHEDULED | Valley City defeated the strong Fargo ‘Athletics in Fargo last evening, 6 to 2. Bitter feeling developed during the game, in which Valley .City took the lead, and there was a fight between “Lenehan, Fargo second baseman, and Gilbraith, Vailey City third baseman, it was reported, with a _ free-for-all argument for a time. | IManager Dean Sterling, of the Valley City team, which passed through at noon to Mandan, 1s that Valley City is out to take all | three games, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. | Valley City’s baseball team. consid: | erably strengthened since its last visit { here, opens a three-game serier with | Bismarck Friday evening at 6;15. The | two teams will play‘at 6:15 Saturday | evening and at 4 o’clock Sunday. atier- | noon. { The Valley City team will meet Bis- marck after two games wita fargo! and one with Mandan, to be played | this evening, and is out to tak2 the; series here. Two new pitchers whom | the ‘Bismarck batters did not face | here before are with Va'ley City. | Dean ‘Sterling, the whirlwind second | Daseman who played with Valley City | and Bismarck last year, is ieading | the Valley City team, “and he has | strengthened both the infield and the | outtieid,. ‘ine Valley club now is a: slugging outfit which will try the! mettle of local pitchers. our home | runs were made by Valiey players in | the recent series in that city. Fargo Is Coming. | (Manager Joe Collins of the local | club announces that the Fargo Ath- | letics ‘will play a three-game series ; here on August 16, 17 and 18, Tues. | day, Wednesday and Thursday. | Charley \Poardman will get another | erack at the locals and the locals will | get another crack at Kutina, who is | pitching wonderful ‘ball for Fargo. | ‘Boardman, according to information received here, may pitch the Sunday | game here for Valley City, being | anxious to beat ‘Bismarck on the home | lot. { Marvin “Buck” Taylor “Buck” Taylor, Bismarck pitch- er, has won 24 games this season. ‘He has lost none. Quite-a sizable record for a young man (of fairly slight build for a pitcher. ‘But local fans who like “Buck's” pitching don’t intend to miss a game in the remaining few weeks of the season—because they don’t hope to see him return to Bis- marck. winning regularly show” next year. They expect him to. be in the “big Other Good Games. | ‘Bismarck plays a series at Minot | the first week in August and Leeds is | scheduled to play a series here soon. | Negotiations have been under way for ' games with Devils Lake and several | other good teams. rattling good last | month of baseball is planned. TENNIS AGAIN GROWS POPULAR | WITH WILTON MEN) Wilton, July 28.—The game of ten-/ nis hag again been revived in Wiltur and:severa) veterans of the sport aug- mented by a number of. promising stars are putting in some consistent practice every evening. The only | drawback to the sport is the lack of | courts. A fine court -has been made | on the Dr. R. C. Thompson property, but since its completion, the zest for the racquet game has increased and | several more courts will be necessary | if all are to be accommodated. Plans! are on foot for intercity matches with neighboring towns which will | make the game more interesting. | Among the piayers who handle a nifty | racquet are Dr, R. C. Thompson, Reg. FE. Thompson. H. W. Gray, J: A. Pit-; zer, Tim Gilmore, Rev. J. Brandt, Harry Golding, Dad and Lester Hes- | ton, Mac ‘Thomr: . . G. W. Stew- art, ! i REAL FANS RETURN BALLS; a DEAN SNYDER. | The Philadelphia Nationals are | feeling the pinch of balls lost :n the ; Henry Wincfietd Henry Wingfield, ptaying firet, has won a big place in the hearts of fans. Wing covers about as much ground about first base -as a grandstand, and picks ’em out grandstand. | of the air and the dirt with equal They are offering passes for re-| ase, Wing managed Valley City turns. | last year and Lisbon this year This is opposite to the system used i in Cleveland. Owner Jim Dunn has publicly announced that customers | who nab stray baseballs ‘nay keep; them for souvenirs. | But of course Dunn. has just won @ pennant and is well on his way to- ward another while the Phillies are having a lean year with a cellar ball club. We believe Dunn is using the right tactics and that he will get better per: | centages than Philadlphia. Fans ought to be loyal enough to, return balls without having to bribe them: We can imagine a small boy turn- ing in a ball for a pass, but mot an honest-to-goodness fan. | SECOND GUESSING. i Charley White, after an absence | at Fall River, Mass. of nearly seven yeais : New York rings, will get back on the Gotham |tatives of soccer ever gotten to boards Aug. 10. | gether. ‘He will have Johnny Dundee, the! ‘They came to America for the: pur- rubber ball Italian, as nis opponent.| pose of stimulating interest in their If he can master this fellow in 10) game. i rounds to a decision bout he will! They eucceeded. again loom as a lightweight contend-| ‘Seeing finished players {n action in er for Leonard's crown. \ any sport is a boost fer the sport it ‘And it is really Leonard toward | represents. whom White is pointins. | —-— The Chicago boy is like Carpentier; LEFT EARFUL. in that after being knocked out he; Babe Ruth dislikes to pinch at bat; has figured it out where he fought; ‘He'd rather sock for blocks. the champion wrong at Benton Har- bor. ‘Carpentier has figured gout the | emit an A peetcaeanee eat eas ore |The gallery that struts around But the ring is one piace where | The golf course every day second guessing doesn’t bring home ; Admires the stars and wonders how the well-known bacon. | The deuce they get that way. DISAPPOINTED. | TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS The tour which Abe Mitchell and | Z (George ‘Duncan will take over Ameri- | ean links won’t be as successful as | the one made a year ago by Ted Ray} and Harry Vardon. | KODAK FINISHING The ‘Britons failed to show as jm-; pressively in the national open as did || Quality Work for the Amateur wvardon)and) er SLORBY STUDIO After Ray won the American | Siceessorerte until Lisbon disbanded and _Bis- marck obtained him. The photo- graphs are reproduced by qour- tesy of the Fargo Forum. . | ARR eee sorry exhibition. He’s got the magic | stuff and he’ll show it before he leaves ; our shores. | Ray and Vardon are at their best ‘in individual play. ‘Mitchell and Duncan show to advan: tage most /in team play, SUCCESSFUL. | The Scottish all-star soccer team | which toured ‘Canada und the United | States won 24 consecutive games and | tied one. That. was a wonderful record. The RIGHT EARFUL. | has just returned from the islands, | thing’ of the temperament of the peo-| +a cession to the bitter end,” he said. { opening of the Panama Canal, Barba-' { county from 1905 to 1909, died at Dev. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE r F ~~ [umtit 1996, since whieh time he had | been engaged in the real estate bus- : : |iness, Served*AS Clerk. In public life Mr. Stade had served as town:’clerk and school treasurer} of Grand. Harbor and as postmaster! ‘ of Grand ‘Harbor from 1884 to 1887 NITED OT He wag. elected to the state’s senate from. Devils. Lake’ in 1904 as a Re- ; | publican and received 1,600 maforiiy! ITED: jover his. opponent, and served one} Plymouth, July 28.—The people of! term, refusing to be a candidate for) the. West Indies are wholly opposed to/ re-election. He was also a delegate} any suggestion that the islands should; to the territorial convention at ‘Pierre, | be ceded to the United States as pari! S. D., in’ 18865. payment-of Great Britain’s war debt, “Mr. Stade was the ownet of some jaccording to Sir Gilbert Carter, who | 2,000 acres of cultivated land and of} {realty in Devils Lake, and is con- Sir Gilbert, who has been succes-| sidered one of the leading men of the! sively governor of the Bahamas, Bar-; community... bados and Trinidad and whose wite’ is the daughter of the late Francis! ~ AROUSES IRE OF THE CLERGY largely American; “but if I’: know any- | | -London, July 28.—Prime Minister | Lloyd George has aroused the ire of | leading churchmen by telling them ithat they ought to Keep out of poli- cs, The occasion was the General As- sembly of Welsh:,Calvinistic Method- ; iste at Portmadac, Wales. when the Premier delivered an address, in the ; course of which he complained of ublic. utterances’ by. highly placed ‘divines, at church conferences and tls Lake.” Pernicious anaemia with elsewhere on. queetions of the day | which he has been suffering for the! Such as Ireland ai je Industrial un | last four or five months; caused his! rest, which, he “asserted, “they were | death. 4 (not in the least competent to discuss. One of the best known men in thas | He stigmatized ;thefy observations a3 ie task of govern- ‘section of the state, Mr. Stade wag. interferences | greatly admired by all who knew him.| ment, which, Jf followed, are replete Prominently identified with public at. [with mischief: both to the church and fairs, he was state senator from. hig ;'© the state,” county four years and he took an ac-; . This indictmept. has aroused «a tive interest in many ‘state matters.| Storm of protest “and. rebuke among} He was an active member of the (Mr. Lloyd George's former colleagues sonic lodge, Knights Templar and! !n the Free Churches, and resolutions was grand commander in ‘1910 and! have been passéd. at various evan- 11911. | gelical council meetings ‘strongly dis- Mr. Stade has never married, and; senting from the;Prime Minister's a:- [made his home with Mr. and Mrs.) Utude, ‘Jens Svee, Mrs. Svee beng his sister.| Dr. John Clifford, the veteran Bap- \ Mrs, G. L. Elken of Mayville is a! tst leader, asserts ‘that the Premier's niece, | doctrine is contrary to his own, which | Masonic Headquarters. ‘is.that “the churches should take suca | Masonic headquarters in Fargo, no-! action a8 to secure the application of tified this morning of Mr. Stade’s| the principles of the Gospel of Christ ideath, had not been advised of funeral} to the political. ;conditions ot the arrangements. world,” A | Andrew J. Stade was ‘born. at More outspoken is the Rev. H. J. Vaage, Gubrandsdalen, Norway, March | Taylor, a Primitive “Methodist leader, 4, 1858. His parents, John-and ‘Bon=} who. says: “The. Premier declares ‘ple of Barbados, they would resist: Sir Gilbert added that since the! i dos’ has become one. of the’ great. health resorts of the .world, where} visitors from both North and ‘South, , America congregate. FORMER STATE SENATOR DIES Devils Lake, July 28—Andrew J. Stade, state senator: from Ramsey | i i | i | nang Gaugen Stade, were: both of | Norwegian birth and: ancestry. ts | He was educated ~in® the < public | schools of his natve Jand and later jin the district schools, of Olmstead | county, Minnesota. He ‘spent the ‘early years of his life on’ his father's jfarm in Norway, moving ‘at the ‘age ‘of 14 to Christiana, where he’ lived buntil 1877 in the capacity of :a clerk In a general store and in. getting a ‘business education. In 1877 the. fam- lily. moved to America. and took . up their residence in Olmstead county, !Minnesota. From 1877 to 1882. he worked in a general store in Byron, | Minn. He then moved to, and.engaged jin the general mercantile business at later for four years was in the same line at Grand Harbor, N..D. On com- ing to Devils Lake in 1887 he again |entered the mercantile business and {his mistress. isto > mind, their own | Brookings, S. D., for one year: and}. that the business'.of the church and job., Their job.is to.demand that the Premier. should:: practice ‘religion in the law of the land.” From the pulpit of St. Paul’s Covent Garden, the Bishop of Chelms ford flatly told the Premier that he wouldn’t. accept..his rulings. “If he had).waid the church must not interfere :in., party. politics, we might:be agreed; butithat is very dif-) ferent to politics,”.the bishop said.| “The government. touches human life at every point, and’ the church can- not agree to refrain from expressing her opinion upon that which touches all-her members, + : “We are going to make continuous war upon all that poisong the atmos- phere,” continued the bishop, “we in- tend to have our politics impregnated Pea SRL DUET TUN CoD RE ESET EL \ THURSDAY, JULY 28,:1921 Suits 1 Price 2 Boys’ Knickers $3 grade $1.50 Men’s Shirts $3.00 shirts $1.50 Men’s Caps $2.50 caps $1.25 Men’s Union $2.25 garments $1 Boys’ Straws $2.50 milans $1.25 M . Satisfaction or money back Specials $40 and $50 Suits $25 and $35 New sport models Young men’s models Men’s conservative models All season weights en’s STERLING CLUB __ | LOSES BUT TWO Sterling, N: D., July 28.—Sterling’s baseball club has lost but two games this summer, Whe two being played at the state prison. The Sterling club is composed of P. Phillips, manager; A. Maguner, captain and second base; L. Ersland, pitcher; BE. Kusler, catcher and pitch- er; EB. Elness, third base: C. Kusler, shortatop; J. Kelly, first ba: >. Kus- ler, ‘catcher; J. Cox, vente sell,. rightfield; V. Rice, leftfield, and M. Sedivie, first, base. The club believes that any visiting team playing in the prison is handi- capped because the grounds are smal:, and visitors are not on how to handle rebounds from the wall. Sterling hopes,.to put out an even better club next year. TAKES KICK OUT OF CRANK A mechanic of Bordeaux, France, hag: patented .a device, for use e- pecially on trucks, which is designed to make cranking every bit as easy and safe as “self-starting.” The' device fits over the end.of the crank -shaft, in front of the radiator. ‘By means of three gears and an eccentric, the crank shaft is separated from the -crank’ in such a way that, when the motor bucks, the handle is automatically disconnected from. the shaft while the force of the kick is lost among the gears, It is necessary to re-connect the handle by pressure ona hand-spring at the top of the devi The crank is then in position for a second trial, with the right ‘spirit—that of Chris- tie game was their last, being played. | These Scots are the best represen. | | In fact, the only way he'll pinch i Is in the pitcher's box. i followed that occupation successfully | tianity,” | JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD presents the .- “GOLDEN SNARE” With Lewis Stone Arctic Blizzards — Fighting Men — Fighting Male-: » Mutes—A Mystery Girl with Golden Hair—A Baby —A Mad Loup—Garou in Hiding from the World— A Sergeant on a Man-Hunt—And a Ship Ablaze in an Ice-Pack. The North as Curwood Knows It. ELTINGE _Thursday—Friday—Saturday es ra onal open, he was a drawing cai HOLMBOE $' 10 Bet don't judge his golf by that | Matinee Daily 2:30 \ | i S. E. Bergeson & Son The invention is cons{dered a clever adaptation of very simple mechanical principles to practical. use. The inventor conceived the idea and planned his model while recov: ering trom a sprained wrist, the ‘re- sult of a crank “kick.” WILTON MEN TO HAVE GUN CLUB Wilton, July 28. A-meeting of the trap shooting enthusiasts of Wilton was held Tuesday evening in the Wil- ton Bank for the purpose of organiz- dng a gun club. A. W. Fossum was . Thompson elected president, Reg. I sec.-treas. and S. R. tain. The following ar L. J. Truax, AM. ing, A. C. Wilde, Chas, Michel, Eids- vold Ulness, Carl Holmgren, Paul Curl, Tim Gilmore, J. A. Pitzer, EB, M. Moe and Dr. R. C. Thompson. HOUSE FOR SALE Modern house of seven rooms and bath, reception hall, screened in porch, East front, trees, nice lawn, every thing lovely, centrally Jo- cated near churches and schools. Nice neighborhood. This desirable house was built for a home and is just as good as. when. erected. $1250 cash, . balance easy terms. This is a cea) bargain. J. H. HOLIHAN, 314 Broadway Phone 745 NEW LIGHT-SIX RETURNS FROM WEST. Alfred Zuger has returned from 9 western trip, during which he visited Seattle amd other coast points. He was ubsent from the city about three weeks. KODAK WORK KINS Done For The AMATEUR Reasonable Charges — We are known everywhere for the expert we do. Mail Orders Give t Prompt Attention, ©) 90 SSURINS, Inc. Bismarck, N. D. CAPITAL CITY CLOTHING STORE Our Great Sale is Still On. Owing to the lack of room to rdisplay. the large stock of goods we: have‘ on hand, we will continue this sale in order to‘ dispose of everything we have on hand. The stock ‘is still large and. there is just as good bargains as before. The Capital Clothing Store 5th and. Broadway Bismarck, N.. D. TUDEBAKER’S great volume of pro- duction and modern manufacturing facilities account for Studebaker’s ability to offer in this NEW LIGHT-SIX the great- est light-weight automobile value on the market — a car of noteworthy quality and exceptional performance at an extremely low price. 416 Broadway This is a Studebaker Year BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distributor Bismarck, N. D. NEW PRICES OF STUDEBAKER CARS f Touring Care and Roadsters o. b. Factories, effective June let, 1921 Coupee and Sedans 1300 LIGHT-SIX 2-PASS. COUPE ROADSTER. $1608 1335, LUGHT-SIX 5-PASS. SEDAN. 995 1585 SPECIALSIX 4-PASS. COUP! . 2459 1635 SPECIAL-SIX S-PASS. SEDAI 2550 1635 BIG-SIX 4-PASS. COUPE 850 1985 BIG-SIX 7-PASS. SEDAN. 950 ALL STUDEBAKER CARS ARE EQUIPPED WITH CORD TIRES

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