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y q q PAGE SIX WILTON-MINOT BATTLE T0 TIE Game at Underwood Ends 5 to 5 —Wilton Team to Play During August Wilton, Aug. 5.—-The Wilton baseball aa ‘will continue to play | during the month of August. At a meeting hi Karl Knowles | elected manager and Spike Flah- | captain. The ‘games will bei played on a percentage basis. The | schedule ‘includes: Wilton at peni- tentiary, Bismarck, Aug. ; Leeds vs. Wilton at Wilton, Aug. 9-10; Van! Hook, vs. Wilton at Garrison, Aug. 14; Leeds vs. Wilton at Wilton, Aug. 1 Fargo vs. Wilton, at Wilton, Aug. 19. The Wilton team played Minot to a tie, 5 to at Underwood, August 3. i Flaherty w pitching in good form; and Minot batters had difficulty ih| connecting with his hooks. ‘The'game | was called in the last half of¢ the, ninth inning on account of darkness | atter Wilton had tiedt he score. Chi- cosky, Wilton her, was hit by a pitched. ball in the, secopd inning. A bad cut was sustained’ above the eye | and it was necessary to take stitches | to close the wound. The score by innings: | Minot 100 002 101-5 7 3! Wilton 101 000 003—5 9 11 AMERICA WINS — FOURTH RACE { { Cowes, Isle of Wight, Aug. 5. (By the A. P.)—America won the fourth international yacht race here, (efeat- ing the British entries by the close margin of 17 points to 16. Great Brit- ain won the first three races. CARP-GIBBONS FIGHT PUT OFF New York, Aug. 5.—The Carpentier- Qibbons fight planned here for the first part of October has been post- poned several weeks because of the injury which the Frenchman receive when he was defeated by Jack Demp- sey in Jerséy City, July 2. The fight now is scheduled for late'in October or the first part of November in Madi- son Square Garden. STRASBURG IS LEAGUE WINNER IN EMMONS CO. Linton, Ny .D., Aug, 5.—Last Sun- dlay (Braddock and: Napoleon played the final league game of the season at Napoleon, Braddock losing | the game by a score of 7 to 2.. It was a good game throughout, and Braddock lost her chance of winning first place in the. league. This victory for Na- poleon gives Strasburg first place in the Emimons-Logan league for 1921 and leaves Linton and Braddock tie for second. Napoleon is next anc Hazelton last. , Yollowwg is the wind-up of league standings: the | Won Lost p. Strasburg 6 2 Santon Braddock Napoleon Hazelton Aus ii | WHY, KECK WILL | | SHINE THIS FALL | > > BY DEAN SNYDER, Stanley Keck, captain of the Prince- ton eleven, will be ready for the whistle this fall. Despite the heat of mid-summer he is working daily in molesking at Chi- cago. He is spending the summer witn Mark Bates, Princeton freshman last year. Every day they go through a rigid training program. They tackle the dummy, practice line bucking and goal kicking. Keck proved himself great enough fast fall to. be named on the All- American. WAKING UP. England is coming back'as a world powor in sports. The spirit is reviv- ing which makes any nation a worthy leader. The hange hag been noted since the war. Her weakness has been her own complacency. She has originated games, taught them. to the world. ana then sat back satisfied to see other roe develop the stars and casi n, 'ro be-a winner in sport the players must take it seriously. That is what Egland has not done in the past. REMARKABLE, May Sutton Bundy and Miss K. Browne, boti come-backs in tennis, are playing brilliantly in their early tests, How these women have retained their former greatness is truly re- markable. They seem to ha stepped back on the courts from their yesterdays, the same stars they were several years ago as champions. About them there is still the orig inal poise and mechanical. skill. In other sports a layoff of: eight or ten years means finis. But Mrs. Bundy and Miss Browne are in condition to add other bright pages to their former tennis history. ALL'S WELL. The New York Yankees didn’t find “anything the matter with baseball” on their last western swing. Babe Ruth & Co, showed off before 280,000 fans, Claveland>-was “the “banner town Eighty thousand turned out for the series. Detroit was second with 73,- 000 and Chicago third with 63,000. “HAVING A HEART” IN RING ~ DOESN'T PAY, FRUSH FINDS | 2 DANNY FRUSH It's my opinion’ that the firs! good BY DEAN SNYDER. Danny Frush, Ballimore feather- weight, who fights Joknny Kilbane in September for the featherweight championship of the world, is a fight- er without 2 “heart.” He used to fight in England, where boxing skill is recognized. . But ice coming to America he has changed his style. He found that “having a heart” in this country didn’t pay. Fighters whom he let stay razzed him after- wards. Down and out, was the idea here. When he meets Kilbane he won't try to win by points, but on a knock- out if he can slip one over on the gray-haired champion. “There is no sentiment in’ boxing,” says Frush, : “In. America you aré no better than your ‘kmockout record. You have’ to stretch them on the fcor betore fans give you a hand. “I believe I can knock out Kilbane. St. Louis was the weak’ sister with but 15,000. This -is better. by 50,000 than the! Yanks drew on thei, first western) trip in 1920. Their second swing last | year drew a total of 318,000 whi their last one made the turnstiles al nearly 400,000 time: SPORT SPREE, On July 23, 40,000 Boston fans jam- med into Braves field to see the Bos- ton-Pittsburg — douple-header. Ten; thousand people witn d the Har-; vard-Yale vs. Cambridge-Oxford field meet, . Twelve thousand gathered at the cycle track the same evening. Ten thousand bugs attend- | | Louisville }St. Paul .. | Indianapolis. bike fans; man who gets. in. the ring. with him! A nti-Saloon League's General will step‘out the champion. “That why I am willing to fight him for Just training expenses and let himtake’ the purse of $60,000 | been offered by the Cleve-| which has ‘1 iand promoter, Tommy McGinty. “Pil cash in afterwards. It takes| a title to make money in the figu game. “A year ago\lI sent to. England and had my father and mother, two broth- ers and sister come to America. “I earned them a nice T want enot enough in, the ring to buy home in Baltimore. Now ugh to set my father up in business.” Kilbane Frush. in London parents. is 10 years older than The Baltimore lad wag born 23 years ago of Jewish His first fight netted him $12. Frush likes good clothes and looks | States ‘on the/dry: fist, the rest of the out for the shows a counts, needs of his family. He heart—where it .. really | BASEBALL | AMERY Minneapolis Milwaukee Kansas City | Toledo Columbus CAN ASSOCIATION, Won Lost Pet. 46 570 45 554 48° BAR WG 639 55 AM 55 ATL 57 tt NATIONAL LEAGUE. ed the Shevlin-Latzo bout. Won Lost Pet.) j Pittsburgh 65 35 613 | COMPEN ON. _ .|New Yor 10 604) When Vincent Richards defeated! Boston 40 579 William T. en, world tennis cham-; Brooklyn 50 D106 pio, he was defeating his own teach or, | St. Louis 48 510 Tilden has always taken much in-| Chicago 57 A424 terest in the youngster and shown him! Cincinnati 57 “424! all he knows about tennis. | Philadelphia: : 67 309! This case is like that of others. | ane i Jim Jeffries was Jim Corbett’s! AMERICAN LEAGUE, sparring partner at one time. He! Won Lost Pet. learned Corbett’s style. Then there! Cleveland 3 38 624 came a day when’ Jeff beat down his! New York 26 621 teacher. | Washington 48 543 Charlotte Boyle, then champ, gave! St. Louis 48 505 Ethelda Bleibtrey her first swim-} Detroit OL AMD ming. lessons. | Boston 55 AM Today Miss Bleibtrey is the cham: | Chicago 56 410 pion. Philadelphia G2 367" 5 i AMERICAN OCIATION, U.S. WINS ingly defeated the Oxford-Cambridge team, in the international field meet held. at. Harvard Stadium. Picture shows Krogness, Harvard, winning the 120-yard hurdles, ; count of races. iTeady is jaakdér official: ban. NATIONAL LEAG Pittsburgh, Boston, 13; St. Louis, Indianapolis, 5; Minneapolis, 13; St. Paul. 2. Louisville, 8. Kansas Ctiy, 11; Columbus, © 2. Milwaukee-Toledo Washingto: Detroit. 8; St. Louis, Chicago, 5; AMERICAN LEAGUE, postponed, av’ Om ; Philadelphia, 0. Chicago, 0) 1; New York, 0. Cincinnati, 1-5. n, 3-3; .Clevelang, 1-1. New, York,.3. a Philadelphia, 5. Boston, 4.'° FOOTBALL STAR | AT BATHING BEACH jor Sulton ember “hs bo y Aug. 5. jahl, University of Iliinois. student | nd football star, who was working |{ng’ more than 12 | his. way through college and had ob-| are prohibited: i into shallow GIVES THE DOPE ON LIVELY BALL Brooklyn, | Wheat, outfi ' doped out the lively: ball. “Outfielders dre laying back from | 30 to 40 feet this year” says Wheai.| to, to keep the ball from... ig knocked over their heads. Deep | | “They have YaleiHarvard athletes overwhelm: | bein; playing makes it ‘pos: slice flies aren’t trying to mab base. runner: {tained his job for the summer as a (life guard at a bathing beach here,| jdied in a local hospital last night ofial prohibition leg! ‘a broken neck. Lifvendahl, who had a} a {record of having saved 20 Persons | SPA! iy from drowning this summer, was {q-| League formed in jured a few days ago when he dived |1911 is meeting with stfong oppdsi- Harold Cc. Litven:| water, N. Y.,. Aug. 5. elder of the Dodgers, has | le for many; to fall sate, “: Outfield ia the plate for two: reasons=the throw is too grea and if we do throw the “Eve -| WHEELER SEES - | Despite this the: ‘consumption of liquor’ a imprisomment. In- Ireland there are jand. villages to vote: themselves dry H vartiamonts Ue. Support but .a strong movement | por. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE the catcher’s hj | JOHNNY EVERS | LOSES HIS JOB ' Chicago, Aug.°5-John J. (Johnny) | Evers.is no longer manager of the Chi- tago National league club, William |Killefer, veteran. catcher of the team vpaa regarded as’ one of the greatest ti of the game, was appointed ' successor. Official announcement of the change ifn the leadership of the Cubs was made before the Cubs and the Boston lub took. the field, Killefer called his layers together in the clubhouse and (fnformed them of © his appointment. iss pilot ‘made an enthusiastic r i ‘ess whigh ‘wag greeted with cheers is téam-miatés who pledged their port to make him a success im the i janagement the te team. ‘BISMARCK CLUB PLAYS AT MINOT ‘ho Rismarek, baseball club left tor Minot early todayon. the Soo line to Max, from. which point they will drive across. to Ninot. The team plays in {pinot today, Saturday and Sunday. | MIKE GIBBONS GETS DECISION New, York,’ Aug. '5.—Gene. Tunney, light heavyweight, champion ‘Of the A. | F..F., was given the judges” decision ,after’ a ten-rownd ‘bout with Martin surke of New Orleans, here last night. Tunney had ithe better of eight rounds. The athers: Wore even. Tunney’ weigh- ed 178: pounds and: Burke 173 ‘The judges gave: the decision to Mike Gibbons of St, Paul. in his ten-round semi-final boutwith Augic Ratner of New York. WHOLE WORLD pry Counsel Points.to Drys’, Progress Everywhere By Newspaper Enterprise Washington, Aug. 4.—Wayne .B. ‘Wheeler, general counsel for the Anti- Saloon League of America, comes for- ward with this:statement: “The world is going bone-dry!” |. He says Europe is waiting to sec how prohibition: turns out in America./ If police and federal ‘agents win’ in| their war. on bodtleggers, Europe will straightway ban booze, Wheeler is sure, “re America makes good in enforc- ing prohibitior England ‘will be dry, in-ten years,” the dry chief says. ~ “And. with Bngland and the United world will have to turn to prohtbition, because wet countries can't compete; with dry opes im the world's mar- kets.” Wheeler: points’ to, the international :pr ibition ituation, gathered by ‘his’ orgaitization from of- ficlal sour; “GRRAT BHITAIN A very definite, andwell organized these, ‘facts ’ on lively. ball. Je likely: to bounce ovas FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 192: i i were ‘sentenced for life in the federal prison at Atlanta, Ga. After Perez served three. years anid! \.15 days Joe Hatfield’ confessed to a Catholic priest and told the true stor, y | jof the raid. This cleared Perez, and! PATENT OFFICE (elem ear aca BREAKS DOWN | Rewspapers took ‘up’ the -matter ai; While | once’ and President Wilson pardoned} Machinery Is Is. Crippled Perez, H Inventions Awaiting Ac- tion Pile Up HIS BIRTHDAY The nate Noa “Two. Gun Hatfleta’| | Was shot recently. Perez in his lecture tells a story of] life in prison, in the Kentucky ‘moun- | ; tains,-and uses a demolished still ‘ | illustrate his talk of the Kentu mountain “moonshiners’’ and thei feuds. | By Newspaper Emterprise Washington, Aug. 5.—The * United States Patent Office is crippled. Its. small and constantly changing istaff is buried under the biggest volume of business in the higtory of ithe department. | Cases that formerly got acton with- jin 30 days now wait six or seven OFF 8, AN months before they are touched. | The result: . Industrial development | Administration Ca Can’t: Reduce is being seriously hampered. Present inefficiency in ‘the Ba leut Employes to Pre-War Number n be traced to three Large number of | res: mong clerks and exaniiners. nability to get. men to fill the places ot those who resign.be- ane of strict requirements and low i * “THRER—Unprec ent increase ot pplications for patents, Business of the Patent Office ia the last. six months has been the heavi- est in any half year of its history. Applications for patents amouated to 45,005. ‘There were 31,568 appli- cations in’the same period in 1920, ¢ Applications ‘for ark marks cing i\ 4 trict bia a {January 1 of this year have mounte ‘4-709 Newer than ane Seen aes, li 80 ae ay were Srey ane a B a | jens in he same peri , wen ho World War, armistice was) i47 jn 1919 and. 7940 in 1920. But ‘there are still 42,731 more em-| | Ployes here than on May 30, 1916, when; jthe United States began active par- ticipation in the war. Here are official figures, supplied by:'the Civil Service Commission: Number of Date * | June 30, 1916 . Nov. i 1918 .. March 1, 1921 . ; June 30, "921 | July 30,'1921 (estimate) . !' The work of some war {Mot start until the war was over. That, iWas'true, for instance, of the Public’ Charles E. Perez, a member of th ‘Health Service, which undertook ‘to notorious Hatfield clan of the Ken-' provide treatment and: hospitals for: tucky mountains, who was pardoned | Brovide, service men; ard the Bureau: from the Atlanta federal prison. by |of Internal Revenue, upon which fell President. Wilson,. will be. at the Rex) the task of collecting moncy to pay for| theater tomorrow to lecture in con-) the war. nection with a motion picture ‘deserib It will probably- be impossible’ for ring thrilling adventures in the Ker-}the present administration to reach tucky. ‘mountains. 2 ‘the old pre-war level of 39,220 em- Perez was adopted by the Hatfielul ployes. That's because of two fac- family and spent nine years with that! torg:: clay) ohow on Jan. 2, 1915, a cave ont QNE—The federal income tax re- the Hatfield lands in-the’ mountains, quires hundreds of collectors, clerks Was apiuci ny, sevenuers” anu tnree/ and gtenographers. of the raiding ‘posse killed. Pere: TWO—Many employes are required was in the cave but took'no part in}in ‘thé enforcement of the prohibition the fighting. When the battle was amendment, over he went avith the Hatfields into federal court where he and the, rest ‘TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS. _ SATURDA ees BASE “0 | By Newspaper Enterprise ‘Washington, Aug. | ment’has reduced its. forces 3471 since ! the Harding administration came into} | office. | But by August 1, according. to esti- |.mates of the Civil Service Commission, ; | dismissals: wilt'reach 6000, i Government employes in the Dis: Do you now Sam Laskin? If | you don’t, meet him Face to Face at the Economy Shoe Store. Lo- |eated 2 doors West of French & Welch, 3024, Main street. This is the Way. to celebrate your birthday.: says Charles H. Fitzgerald, daredevil: On- point of an iron struc. ture .at a ‘dizzy height above: Broad: MEN’S DRESS SHOES Our latest styles of Men’s Dress Shoes for Fall are here and our prices range from— $3.95 to $4.95 per pair. Why. should’ you, pay any more than these prices. for the same styles and quality. These prices are good for Satur- day and Monday Sale. Jake Siega! ~ ~ Wants to see you. Bismarck Fur Store Location. prohibition thavpment ds , under . way. hag shown ‘a-great increase, doubtless’ dye’ to abnormal: post-war conditions, demobilization ‘of troops ‘and unem- ployment, InScotland ‘Iquor, cannot ve sold in ‘clubs atid theaters between: 2-and '10 m. Drunken. perséns in public :places are subject to fine or patate legal’ restrictions on the liquor’ traffic. The Irish: prohibition movement dates from 1838. >) AUSTRIA Manufacture of beer is almost 'en- tirely prohibited because raw material is needed for food. Only the rich are able-to: get wine and cordials. ; “BULGARIA Thio tegislative assembly is being urged to extend permission to cities by local option, asin the early days of the prohibition movement in Amer- ica. - DENMARK oh Local option’ is ‘allowed. Two hun- dred and twenty-nino parighes (coun- ties) havo’ voted: themselves dry to 46 f) wets; Moye) FINLAND finldnd. ,is bone-dry by action . of FRANCE ° onezdry itentitien ‘receives lit- on toot to, ban, distitied liquors. Gourge” Clemenceait, former. premier, acks this: movement. Absinthe al- \ E a. gives munici- | palitics the right t6 Ideal option, if 10 of tho votes digh a’ petition. | Temperance® ‘forces are waging a fight ton distilled Hquors, 2. » ITAL’ Sale, " quer. is. prohibited after ite p. mi,’ ‘The government 18 opposed djstilled liquors: -but' favors wine. i Ruane prohibited... Ftteen thou- \sand saloons-wére cloaed during the i War, Few" a | tise of cereals for distilling in pro- formed, YORW: Distilled liquors aid wittes: contain- i POLAND. © mitted. Nation- fon. expected. Local option is An Anti-alcohol a trom the wine-growing perers “SWEDEN |: | Pronibition exists “in” a modified form. . Retail sale ‘of }fquots is in the ands of societies which turn all pro- its into, the state. ttensu! i Citizens are given ration cards eh! iting them e buy. limited. amounts of-spirits every mg} “Criminals; a evarita and aERS: -Canfot get ratién;cards. op) eos nt. of alcohol |} Third and decisive game of series “B A NK OF NORTH DAKOTA” ‘versus “FIRST-CITY NATIONAL BANK” “The First-City. National. Bank: team gave the State Bank team the surprise of: their lives in. a-whirlwind flogging 6 to:4 last evening. Each team-has one game to it’s credit anda fast: amateur. game ig predicted for Saturday afternoon. US KANT CHARLES EVAN LOANS SATURDAY EVENING POST STORY- SCRAP IRC Ne! as a abe, not.as a aude but Charles Ray as the boy who settles trouble in the roped ring t alled’ him “Sevap-Iron” when his name was Steel, and he. ran true to both when he fdught Battling Burke.’ Not, all drama; not all comedy, not all fight, but a stirring blend of all three with punch that’s dramatic and fistic. Friday & Saturday ” Matiee daily at 2: 30" IAT number Of bettie ‘by their rel alcohol, oe ee epee yp