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

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IT’S MOLLA KILBANE GIVEN BIGGUARANTEE FOR TITLE BOUT Is To Receive $60,000 Guarantee For Clash With Danny Frush 3} | Cleveland, 15—Whén Johnny Kilbane, world’s featherweight chan pion box into the ring at Dunn field here wn the afternoon of | Sept, 17 to face Danny Frush of Bal- timore in a 12 round bout to a de-/ cision, it will be tbe first time he has | defended his title since he kno¢ked | out George Chaneg at Cadar Point, | Ohio, Sept. 4, 1916. Kilbane is receive $6),090 for his end—win, lose or draw—or possibly more, as he working on a 50 per) si cent basis: This is said to be the! largest amount ever guaranteed a This is a new studio portrait 0 boxer below the heavyweight rank Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, 1921 wom ant and very few heavyweights have re- | States.) ceived that much for a championship | match. Frush is to receive $2,500 his training expenses. Kilbane was 32 years old last Despite this supposed handi he is confident he will retain his title. Frush is 22, or about a year younger | than Kilbane was when he wrested | the championship from Abe Attell on Feb. 22, 1912, at Vernon, Cal. Although, Kilbane’s title has Apri BASEBALL | LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won 1 Pet. not | J puisville 5 been at stake for five years, hc has Minneapolis fought any number of no decision Kansas City ents. Toledo Frush is regarded here as the iow. Indianapol most opponent. He has _ defeated iseaton a7 some of the best in the featherweight |g paul 80 division, and has a far better knock- | Golumbus .. 86 ‘out record than Kilbane. In his let are sevecal who went the limit with the champion. One of these is Ar Root of Cleveland, who came danger: | vy ously near winning the featherweight Ve yew ork championship in a bout here a year St. Louis |. ago when he landed a punch on Kil-} yw; ot , j ve Washington . bane’s chin, only the ropes saving 1 Boston Johnny. Frush has knocked out Root Detroit ‘twice, while the latter stuck 10 rounds ' Chica; Hi BO .. with the title holder, Philadelphia ‘Kilbane has the advantage ster | Frush in reach, his being about three inches longer than the challenger’s. He has about four inches the better | of him in chest measurements. Frush is about an inch taller, and is quite | a little stockier about the legs. The articles of agreement require that Frush weigh 12u pounds half an hour before entering the ring. Kil- bane is expected to weight 129 pounds coming in at catch weights. “AGGIES READY FOR FOOTBALL North Dakota Institution Has, | Boston 1, Detroit 0. Stiff Schedule “New York 11, Chi eee i | Washington 1, St. Fargo, N. D., Sept. 15.—With F. H.! ag Watkins, former athletic coach at Far- xo college added to the coaching stati of the Agricultural college, Coach S. KE. Borleske hag compel thorough preparations for the training season. Assured of the return of several letter men of last year, and of a number of promising new men from high schools of the state, indicatio: hat the | Agricultural College will make ay strong showin $ The new assistant coach comes to| the college, following seme ten years | of coaching at Fargo college, during | which he has developed some of the strongest teams that Fargo college had. He is a former Univ mont. man. Preliminary tr be given the squad on Da here this year, instead of the training | trip to the lake country of former} years. Among the old men expected to return are Latimer, Mares, Mads- | ven, Bridgeford, Huey, _Rossetti,,| (Capt.) Bute, Dunham, and possibly Sage, Underwood, or Duerner. The season’s schedule for the Agri- cultural college follows: | AMIERICAIN LEAGUE Won Lost 6 Ol NATIONAL LEAGUE Won 8 Lost ‘New York .. ittsburgh St. Louis . Boston Brooklyn. Cincinnati Chicago Philadelphia RESULTS YESTERDAY American Association Milwaukee 6-1, St. Paul 3-4 Louisville 4, Columbus 3 Indiana] lis 5, Toledo 1. American League vieveiand 8, Philadelphia 5. National League Pittsburgh 5, Boston 2. * ‘New York 10, Cincinnati 1. Chicago 10, Philadelphia 0. Brooklyn 9-2, St. Louis 7-3. Oct. 1—Jamestown College, at Jamestown. i Oct, 8—Northern Normal, at Fargo. Oct. 15—Moorhead Teachers College, at Fargo. Oct. 22.--S. Dak. Staie (Home-Com- ing game), at Fargo. Oct, 29—University Grand Forks. Nov. 5—Fargo College, at Dacotah field. | Nov. 12—Concordia College, at Far-| go. Nov. 18—University ui Montana, at| Missoula, Mont | WADE HITS HIS. | 31st HOME RUN) ie aaa | Minneapolis, Sept. 15.—Minne- apolis took both games of a double- header from Kansas City here y terday, 9 to 3 and 6 to 4. The day wa cold and the field wet. Wade hit his} thirty-first home run of the season in| the first game and Russell contected | for and her circuit drive for his thir- tieth, of N. Dak., at WORLD TROTTING RECORD EQUALLED| Syracuse, N. . Y, Sel Sept. 15—Peter Manning, driven by Tommy Murphy, equalled the world’s trotting record | for all horses, regardless of age, by covering the mile in 1:58 at the state} r \ i * fair track yesterday in an exhibition | Not since the days when Artie Hof- race. Arion Guy, owned by Mrs. Har-; man used to lope over the lot has| ry K. Devereaux and driven by Mur-| there been such an all-round ballplay-} phy, set a new world’s record for four-/ er as Kelleher. year-olds by trotting a mile in 2:01.; Johnny ca pull up the easy chair to| The former record, 2:02, had been | ay bag on the infield and feel at home. held by Peter elo since 1915, He came to the Cubs as a short- Atop, but being unable to find an Chicago, Sept. 4s. —There's a one- man ball team in Chicago. It’s Johnny Kelleher of the Cubs. First baseman, second baseman, | third baseman anc | op. TRIBUNE WANTS—FoR RESULTS | empty room, hung around, RRR eee JOHNNY KELLEHER . Franklin Mallory. (Yes vhat’s is champion of che United No ManAlways Right. man whovls always right does He is still the. prospective of the development of the ‘ Even the one who generally thinks he is right will be-found fre quently to draw wrong conclusions | but he's safer to follow.—Grit. Man Tired of Living at Eighty-Six. | Chicago.— ix years is long enough’ for* any man to live. If he can't See enough of this world in that time there is’ something wrong. with him he should get out.” ' This was what Andrew Larson of Chicago told police who picked him up in a dying condition. He had severed ar- teries in his wrist, and died a few hours after being wwemoved to a hos- pital. French Adopt Schdols in Open. Pari Open-air schools as a part of the French public sckool system have been approved by a cofamittee of hygienists and educators as ‘the result of conferences between the’ ‘ministry of public instruction and Juliad Clar- ence Le New York, representing the. pneh-American Union for Open Alr Schools, Romance of 45 Years Resulted in Marriage fewell of Pittsburgh, . Emma Fuller of Newfoundland, . sweet- 45 years ago, were mar- vied recently aboard the steam- ind, en-route from New to Halifax. In the long span of ‘time since their early romance, beth had mar- ried and reared children, They in only receritly. Their noon Will be spent in Call- Deal-was injured.and they put him at third. Then Hollocher went out and that! put Kelleher back at short, Later his chance fo:. second came | andi he held that. as gracefully as short and thigd. It was- whem Grimes got, in the! way of a pitched hall that Johnny completed the route, holding down the init: « «, | thunder’ squalls, ‘totally different from ||F Fee Scie BERETS Aone the exceedingly violent smail whirling | storms that ‘bear this name in the {United States, they had one of the vest all-around players in the leagties today. And he’s clouting “349, | | ing from heart disease’ was prescribed | medical director of the Burke Founda- | tion, the great institution for the care | | courage’ arid, further exercise, in get- | ting hold of the: mild slacker;or neu- + rasthenic,, ecb eotennde ay ‘DANCING HELPS HEART PATIENTS: Medical Director Tells How Car- diac Convalescents Thrive on Exercise, Treatment in Force Two Years With Uniformly Beneficial Resulte—Most Joyous of Play Exercises—Phy- sically and Socially Stimulant. New York.—Dancing as part of the regular trentment of ‘those convalesc- two years’ ago by Dr, Frederic Brush, and treatment of convalescents at White Plains, to which many patients from’ New York city “hospitals and other Institutions dre‘ sent: ‘The re- sults of this treatment®as shown by its effect upon thousands of patients | has been amazing, and doubtless will | elicit a. gasp of astonishment from the uninitiated layman: as well as from the physician of the older school. Doctor Brush sdys, “however, that there have’ not been any ‘bad results, hut on the contrary the exercise has been of great benefit, Modern dancing (ball, contra and folk ‘types) is a val- uable form of. physical exercise in the reconstructive-convalescent stages of’ heart disease, he declares. It af- fords a high degree of ‘needed mental therapy, and advances the patient notably toward social restoration, Ex- perience indicates its safety. It gives an added‘and readily ‘available test of the cardiac reserves dnd of progress. The physician tells'about-his experi- ence with ancing “as & therapeutic agent iri Hospital Social Service. Applied exercises inthe’ convales- cént, ~ constfuctive: and | preventive stages of héart disease have three main purposes, says Doctor Brush. To improve the. general -condition (nutri- tional, muscular and. organic), in- crease the cardiac reserve power and lessen the introspective dnd neurotic tendencies. Gradual, re-entry. {nto near normal occupational id ‘social living is the end sought. It fs of assured’ ‘advantage, says the physician, ‘to ‘have ‘ the. exercises pleasurably anticipated. and enjoyed; and particularly valuable to have them simulate.or merge into’ every- day physical and social activities. Formal. Gymnastics. Formal, gyomastics ‘aid by. Inspiring gn Maeve well dn bad weather times;.bu ix years’ ob-| servation of heart conva- legeents, says Doctor Brush, no regime has given’ such aal-round satisfaction. safety add success: 48 did‘the'old farm | regime :whére a ‘total of nearly 500/ cardiacs,* boys ‘and. young) men, were 8 freedom 4n play and | work over ‘thi ‘place ‘under: Teason- | able regulation’, of. rest, ete.): Dancing may. be-called an: inherent activity—of, all ‘girls, of’ women up to! fifty, “and of mostiyoung and. middle- | aged men, says’ the physician; older persons are. Persistently chappy in watching It; it4s the most joyous of all play-exercises, and. both: physically and socially. stimulant. Convalescents with but ‘a moderate | degree, of cardiac reserve may begin | cautiously ‘to'dance, then’ go on to n} considerable {ndulgence, with safety MENTAL EFFECT 1S 6000, 100 ‘AT 17 SEEKS i i i | | i JOHN WEISSMULLER. By N. E. A. Service, Chicago, Sept. 15.—From a sickly} r at nine, to contender for the world’s swimming champonship at 17. | That is the long distance jump that ; Jon Weissmuller, boy nautical won-! der, has taken! And that is why Johnny is a firm be-; liever of —plug, plug, plug, until the prize comes home. Back in his kid days, when physi- cians looked at him suspiciously, some- body pushed Weissmul!er off a dock. Johnny bad to sink or swim. He swam) and he’s been. swimming ever since—slowly but surely to the top rung of water honors. He explains his sudden love of the water as a determination to conquer the fear he had had of it previous to the impromptu ducking. At 16 years Johnny gYabbed off a]: life-saving job at Chicago beaches Then he joined the Illinois Athletic club water ‘squad. Recently, at Duluth, he slipped through 50 yards in 23 1-2 seconds. The world’s record is 23 seconds flat WORLD TITLE || ——_—_—®* | shortiy after, at Indianapolis, he plow- ed over a 220-yard straight-away course in 2 minutes, 281-2 seconds. It isn’ the time portion of thege two races that‘interests Johnny so much— it's the fact that Norman Ross, cham- pion swimmer of the: werld in the 220 ‘and 50-yard straight-aways, was enter- THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 of them all? He says, “You Bett =~ And his explanation of how he-has.. met success is very sintple: , ‘Just keep after it. Try harder each time. Keep in training. That's all there is to it.” parr OST OO A New Versior, |ed in both. races and Weissmuller bea: ihim both times. /° “ Men ate elther anvils er ‘haimmers—- them that ain't bellows.—Ashland Will Johnny some: day be the champ | jugie. In Tine of 95 ead 60 -. Also in Standard Boree Again 2m 15¢ (Choose your cigers from this box if you want s mild, rich, cool émoke. © A carefully ee- lected long filler. Imported Sumatra wrapper. Excepe tional values. woous STACY-BISMARCK COMPANY, Bismarck, North Dakota. THE WORLD'S WHEAT CROP We have prepared a Pamphlet on this important subject which will be sent free to anyone upon re- quest. It gives in detail the Production, Consump- tion, Exports and Imports of the various cquntries of the world which raise, sell and consume wheat. All those interested in this important. product, whether producers, manufacturers or consumers, will find this Pamphlet of value in helping them to deter- miné what the price of Wheat should be this cropyear. CHAS. E. LEwIs & Co. MINNEAPOLIS ‘DEALERS IN CASH: GRAIN. AND GRAIN FOR FUTURE DELIVERY STOCKS -.BONDS MEMBERS NEW. YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ALL LEADING GRAIN EXCHANGES and benefit, ‘he .assetts, The heart! patients early led the way in this,| Women were found to be’ dancing {nj their cottages and boys exhibited vari- | ous ‘Jig stunts,” ete, The practice: wis ) checked, iran carefully observed, encouraged and) organized; and goon two or three for- | mal dances per week ‘were given, open to patients of all dlagnests and age: For: two seasons past a: dancing clas for_cardiacs under eightgén: years has; heen coriducted,” under: medical and, nurse watehfulness, the’ instruction: betng . given: pripeipally. by. stronger patients of this gre Class attendance! is compulsory as, soon as’'the heart’ ktrength. 1s consid: | ered sidequate, The weaker and more} diffident are gradually thducted. Many | cardiacs “haye- given special fancy dances In’éntertatmbents, This high-| ly diversiona) “exercise is not: stressed, | but is Included. In the difection, “to begin to: walk, coast, golf, dance, ete.,! ag soon as:you feel able. Resident: physlcidtie’ orders are: occasionally given for more or less or none of these various exercises. How ‘Batienite Are Affected. Kor six mooths® the dancing. 1s ont; of: dodts. ‘The . spectators, too, are. fected for igood, Doctor. = One hardly recognizes; these phttents at Such fuinetions ; they | show’ color, animation, strength, food | posture; pains and nburotie depre: sions have actually disappeared—and | are the less fkely to return. “T can dance agiln!” 1g a valued fexpteaston by .patlents. ‘There have been about twenty col- iF lapses br partin! faints among all the: thousartds: of ‘dancers: (30,000. patients caveil_for). About half of these were! in. cardiacs and found to-be mainty! hysterical or neurotic. patients have complained of increased pain, ete. the day after, but no in-| stance of decompensating has .fol.; lowed. (Decompensation: means. fail. | ure of the heart to increase: in power! sufficiently: to overcome valvular dis- ease.) ~The pulse rate rises: moderate. ly. Many patients exprese a feeling, ef benefit from the exercise. \ West, African Tornadoes. ‘The “tornadoes” of West; Attica are. ml: i a: Some heart |itg are reasonable Wedding Inyiiations, DUNC CRAONP AGATE The Tribune is now able to supply any and all cus- tomers with a complete line of Engraved Stationery in all the latest styles of hand engraved type faces. We “are pleased to say, that this line of engraving proves the splendid taste of the engraver. most striking piece of engraver’s skill and art. This line is very large and complete and the prices in every respect. _ We cordially iivite you to call at our office and in- spect. this line, Out of town orders solicited. This line COnBEt® | of the following: Wedding Announcements. . Visiting Cards, Plain s Visiting Cards, Panelled stock. Birth Announcements. TROPNETOIAETCT ET ER WTAE TAQ You will be interested to now that The samples are; the : Mourning, Cards. Dance Invitations. Business Announcements. Busittess Cards. Commercial and Professional Cards. stock. The Bismarck Tribune |

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