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PAGE SIX HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i WOMEN COMPETE IN WESTERN ND. TENNIS MATCHES Also Play Rounds of the City] Tennis Tournament at Country Club Play was resumed at the Country Club yesterday afternoon in the west- ern North Dakota women’s singles ten- nis tournament. ‘Two matches were also played in the City Women’s Sing-! les. In the Western North Dakoca} Tournaments, some of the best wo-! men’s matches ever seen on a local) court were held. In the first round Mrs. 0. L. Rob- ertson was defeated by M Rose| vember 3. The bouts sere arranged Hanlon in a match which was much} through Major Wilson, British pry : closer than the re indicated. Miss moter. Jn the motion’ picture industry the; are augmented by ah army. of -archi-} Hanlon won 6-2, 6-4. In the second round of - the pionship of western Miss Florence Homan Claire Kling 6-1, . Mrs. Dorothy Register defeated Miss Rose Hanlon 6-4, 9-7, ‘one of the clos-| est matches possible. Miss Hanlon played an aggressive game and it was cham- North Dakota, defeated Mrs. only Mrs. Register’s experience and AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, thousands of theatres with its unlimited -resources, and its | ability in placing her shots that en- Won Lost I I Ines nothing but Paramount Pic-! constant flow of product, the best that | abled her to finally break through| Louisville ..... 2 59 5SL_ tures, ;the market affords, means to the coun- and take Miss Hanlon’s serve and win| Minneapolis 59 566; That this huge number of motion’ try’s exhibitors, has been thoroughly the final set with a score of 9-7, Mrs.| Kansas City . 62 544 picture exhibitors can be marshalled: appreciated by them from time to time, Register will meet Miss Florence Ho- Toledo 69 -492| for the showing of a single brand of; and never:more thap during the past man in the final to. determine the| Milwaukee 74 471; pictures in their theatres for seven|few months when general business championship of western North Dako-| St. Paul ... 76 -465 ' successive days, to the exclusion of‘all/ conditions have brought to them their ta some time late tomorrow afternoon. | Indianapolis . 76 465! others, is made rossible through the’ full share of worries. What it means In the play to determine the wom-j Columbus .... 81 413) resources and em of an organiza-'to the general public’ may be realized, en’s championship of Bismarck, Miss ‘Homan defeated Mrs. Margaret Page 6-0, 6-0. Mrs. H. L. Wheeler and Mrs. Won Lost. Pet.! world. me | mount Week. \ Claire. Kling played a very close| New York . 82 48 631; ‘The Famous Players-Lasky:Corpor-| : 5 — i match requiring three sets to decide| Cleveland 51 -617/ ation, the company’'that produces and } ab é CO the winner. Mrs, Wheeler won, score] St. Louis .. 65 .519! distributes Paramount Pictures. is’ L NINE FIND H 6-4, 3-4, 7-5. Mrs. Wheeler meets! Washington . 68 -482' organization of more than 8,800 per-} i Miss Rose Hanlon in this match to-| Boston . 66 .485 !manent employees: It is a union of sev- ‘ day, and Mrs. C. L. Robertson plays| Detroit 72 471 eral of the larger companies whic i J Mrs. Dorothy Register this morning.) Chicago . 17 421i were pioneers in the production and, i i At 4 P, M. Mrs. Kling and Mrs. Rob-| Philadelphia SL .367 | distribution of the modern, or multi-' ertson play Mrs. Register and Miss ‘Homan to determine who is to play in the finals of the Western North Da- kota double Championship. The win- ner of this match will play Mrs. Mar- garet Page and Mrs. H..L. Wheeler for the championship. has all been very interesting and some of the closest matches are yet to be played. Miss Rose Hanlon will: very likely again meet. Mrs. Dorothy Reg- ister in the City Women’s Singles. This should be another very close match. The finals in all matches will be completed by Sunday evening. WILSON BROUGHT BEFORE BOARD) N. J., Sept. 9.—Johnny Wilson of Boston, holdev of the mid- dleweight pugilistic belt, was sum- moned to appear before the New Jer- sey boxing commission today to ex- plain why he did not put up a stiffer battle in his Labor day match wi Bryan Downey, Cleveland claimant of the title. The commission ordered Tex Rick- ard, promoter, to hold up Wilson's $25,000 share of the purse, pending the hearing. Wilson has tat it be known that he intends to bring court action to obtain the money in the event the commission decides to bold it up per- manently, Jersey Cit; VALLEY CITY’S | COACH IS BACK Valley City, N. D., Sept. 9. eg Geotzloe arrived in the city recen| to take up his duties at {he local hi school for the coming year. Mr. Geotzl taught ph al education in Wisconsin last ye: and has been) attending school at adison, Wis., this summer to gain a further knowl- edge in the line of atiletic He is the man who brousht :he high schoo! football team into the jinals for state champions, and made state . cham- pions out of the baske:!:all team. NEW GOLF COURSE AT DEVILS LAKE Devils Lake, N. D. ‘Sept. 9.—Work shas begun clearing the new gol! course of the Devils Lake Town and Country club, located on the shores of Devils Lake. It is thought that the course will be ready for play next season, and that it will be the sportiest course in the northwest. The Selby Golf club of this city iv} soon to hold another tournament. Its first annual tournament finished last week, the men’s title being won by James Barrett, while Miss Katherine | Peacock of Chicago, walked off with the woman championship. There were 50 entr MITCHELL WINS S. DAK. PENNANT} Mitchell, S. D., Sept. ¢—By winning yesterday's game from Huron, 11 to 2, Mitchell clinched the Dakota league pennant. Mitchell won the pennant last year. GIBBONS 5 WILL FIGHT OVERSEAS St. Paul, Sept: § “A series of bouts for Mike Gibbons, St. Paul middle- weight boxer, to be ucid at Albert) Hall, London, in Novémber, has been arranged, it was annou.ced here. The Phantem’s first fight will be with Boy McCormick for which Gib- bons has been guarantced $10,000 for 12 rounds. The date haz not yet been set. On November 24 Gibbons will met Ted (Kid) Lewis im a 12-round go for $8,000. covering up. pionship, but, wit! | the final bell, will meet Jack Bloomiicid and John- ny Basham. The play to date;Boston . Won = Lost ,acts a third of what may be called Pittsburgh 80 51 611; the wholesale business of the film: New York . 54 605 industry. Its retail clients embrace! St. Louis 59 ‘360 | nearly hree-quarters of all the ex London, Sept. ..—In the first num- | Boson ol -541 | bitors of motion pictures in the coun- per. of the new Labor Monthly, Pre- ‘ooklyn Bs ‘try, and they are served by 250 sales-) 5 faa =| 74 Sea ae mior Lenine explains the discovery | tS aie inecmes rome tiilrty ranch: of, wf the Soviet Government of Russia | 1 i ism along the’ path of state capital- Others not scheduled \Haward Knoblos Robert Hichen,' jjsm—of how it ‘plants’ state capital- iy] SE ST ED {Elinor Glyn, Hen Arthur Jones, | jgm—is concessions.’ Everybody now! BARN DESTROYED Avery Hopwood, E. Phillips Oppen-jagrees that concessions are neces- ‘heim, Samuel Merwin, W. Somerset! ary, but not everybody fully appre- downpour of violent electr the destruction of a cluding livestock and the w of 200 feet of Caledonia early today. ing a call from the “front” for reinforcements. fense. to his side. The St. Paul man als? Virginia, and, inset, E. FP. | i i This’ picture the Johnny Wilson s taken just be the final bell. It fr Downey (at he right) still the aggressor, and Wilson, at left,, Referce Jim Savage is at extreme right. ‘The bout w pposed to settle the middleweight cham-| h Wilson playing a timid game and Downey swinging wild, and beth fighters on their feet at} TOWNS FROM COAST TO.COAST. ©. ARE OBSERVING PARAMOUNT WEEK Gibbons will sail for London No- jweek of September 4—10 i, Week, and will be celebrate! mount | tei doin no! sign interior decorators, costume de- | "s, carpenters, ‘electricians, pro- | from Seattle to Key West, there is not: trom. rare antiques and: precious art a town of importance that will not! objects. down to the simplest utilitar- n in th annual Gemons.ration! ian arti¢le. of the be otion nictures. For a} | What’ this 3} LEAGUE STANDINGS immense organization, tion whiek;-less- than ten years old, is |i in a measure, by.,tens of: millions of AMERICAN LEA jone of .the.wanders of the. business: American picture-lovers | during Para- af |ple-recl, type of picture. It is bac NATIONAL DI LEAGUE. ed by millions in capital and trans- NEGESSARY EVIL that it could not: get, along without capitalism invsome form and why it} ‘has compromized on what it cails | '“state capitalism.”: | “State capitalism,” he:says, “is in- st studios and laboratories ; where th mpany produces its Para- ;Mount Pictures for the entertainment} ,of America’s millions are located in ‘Los Angeles, New York and London. i - oa comparably higher ‘economeally than in these centers ar--gathered together (4) present: economic systqm—thtat ithe pick of the literary and dramatic jj. yne point?” and,‘se:onilly there is jbrains and genius of the world. Its 'riothing in it’ that is terrible for the rs are the loaders in the profes- soviet . government, ;ifor-(the Soviet s reprosent the cream ‘state is a.state which. guarantees ge and screen talent. Its w ae power to the workers. an@ the poor. s include many of the most “One of the simplest cases or‘ ex- read authors and most ny cone of how the Soviet government | of the pr guides the. development: of captal- AMERICAN Minneapolis, 10. ; Columbus, 3-' Kansas City, 7; St. Paul, 3. Toledo, 7; Louis: AMERICAN LE Detroit, 15; Clevel Re Philadelphia, 6; w York, 5. St. Louis, 4; Chicago, 3. Others not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Chicago, 6; Mu neinnat Philadelphia, 8-2; Bos: IN MINNESOTA Seni. 9.—A_ severe in accompanied by a Maugham, Joseph Conrad and Har-'ecjates the significance of concessons, J. O'Higgins are but a few of “The Soviet government secures the company has'advantage in the form of the develop- ment of productive forces and an al] gstorai, resulted in! Twenty separate producing units. increase in the quantity of products large barn, in-|each with its own players, director available immediately or within a ing ow/ and assistant directors, cameramen short period. We have, say, hund- k near and scenario writers, are constantly at dreds of entorpri mines, forests, | work at the studios. These workersiete., we cannot. develop them all; | Minn., Winona, brought into the movies. railroad tra FIGURES IN WEST VIRGINIA MINE WAR Above are some of the armed members of Logan county’s ‘rdofende: s,” seated on the courthouse steps, await- The Logan county courthouse is headquarters of the army of de-| Below is a supply truck, en route from Logan to “the front.” Notice the gun which the driver keeps close | At left is Brig. Gen. H. H. Bandholtz, in charge of the fedeval troops that were rushed into Westi organ, governor of the state. \ fewer than seven thousand motion perty men—artists. ‘and. artisans in| tombstone. picture theatres in the United States.: every. line’, The property poms ‘con- | From Haston, Me. to’San Dicgo, Cal.,) tainthundreds of thousands .of pieces, | ale nate not enough machinery, food sport. ‘planting’ -state capitalism in the form of concessons, the Sovict {government strengthens the quantity lot products of large industry in its hands and strengthens the state re- ‘gulations of economic relations as {vounter-balance to the petty bour- j pence, anarchic relations. H TO AID FOREST FIRE SUFFERERS St. Payl, Sept tne state board ‘of relief this mornig authorized the is- | suance of ‘$15,000’ of certificates of in- | debtedness to be sold to the state in- ' vestment available for the relief of fire suffer- ers in the Whitepine and Solana vicin board and made immediately ties. HOMES CONDEMNED, Glasgow, Sept. 9.—Twelve thousand ' houses in Glasgow have been reported » |ag unfit for human habitation and con- - demned. The town clerk estimates 4 at Boyle’s Thirty cee Jerey City, Labor Day,| need ‘of 57,000 new homies. SMOTHERED IN SAND. New Haven, Eng., Sept. 9—Arthur the crown still rests on two heads. | Hibling and two children were buried in a cave-in of ten tons of sand. children crawled out and went for help. they returned. The Hibling was smothered when SANG IN HIS GHAVE. London, Sept. 9.—Kight years ago Joseph Cave supervised the digging of | hig own grave and the erecting of his When it was finished he of weight only. BOYS NOT-LEGALLY ADOPTED. SUING FOR A SHARIN ESTATE 9.—Carl Bastion, Devils Lake, N. C. Bastion and Eugene. F. brothers, were. taken from the Chris- tian Orphanage home at Council D., Sent. | Bluffs, Iowa, in 1895, by Mr. and Mrs. John Laurie of Crary, N. D., fur adop- tion, but when the estate of Mr. Laurie was.up for settlement, following his death recently, it developed that the Laurie’s failed to file with any court legal papers of adoption, other than to make an agreement with the Chris- tian. home that the boys would be legally adopted. As a result of this failure. the ‘boys are now suing the estate of John Laurie for a share of it, and a petition will be submitied to County Judge W. T. Swenson here to- morrow, asking that the boys be de- clared legally adopted sgns-of the late John Laurie. about $50,000. In their petition the boys, who now live at Crary, declare that they had lived with the Lauries since 1895, when they were adopted, and that they always. had been under impres-|a. sion .that the proper adoption papers had been filed. Carl C."Bastion states in the Mn tee Belicibn tbat he ved ob Ney that he lived on the The estate amounts to Reted aa oes dee sans into it and sang. been buried in it. EASED HIS € London, Sept. 9.—A dairyman als} He has just eans High —they 5 Laurie farm until he was 24 years of age, and that both he and his broth- er worked most of their lives on the farm without ‘receiving compensation other than their board and lodging. It is also stated in the petition that when they were 14 to 16 years of age they threatened to leave the Lauria home, but that Mr. and Mrs. Laurie insisted that they could not. do so, since they had been legally adopted. They had always used the. Laurie name until a few years ago, when they learned of the whereabouts of their mother. They then assumed their original names.. ‘The present action is being brought against John; Shand, administdator, Mrs. John Laurie and the three daughters. The administrator and the heirs have refused to permit the Bas- tion boys to share in the estate, and insist that the boys were never legally adoped. The only evidence to be pro- duced by the boys showing of the in- tent of the Lauries to adopt them is a paner called “Certificate of Adop- tion,” signed by the managers of the Christian home and Mr. and Mrs. Laurie. covered his scales defective. Calling on Inspector George Priyet, he found ont the amount of money he had cheated his customers of, and sent a check, covering it, to a hospital. Price go together! Gravity, high or low, means nothing in relation to the efficiency of gasoline. It is a comparison e outstanding characteristic which i gravity has is that it accompanies high price. The only true measure of gasoline efficiency is the range of boiling point fractions. fractions—without a gap. Buy RED CROWN "=the High-Grade Gasoline Red Crown has a perfect chain of boiling point It has a low initial boiling point for easy starting, the correct range of boiling point fractions for mendous power and speed. 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