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AAGE SIX i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CURLERS MEET INDULUTHFOR “BIG BONSPIEL Some of the Greatest Stane, Heavers in U. S. and Canada | Will Perform | | Duluth, Minn, Jan. 9—Curlers from four states and also two provinces in Canada will gather here on January 14 for the twenty-ninth annual bon: | spiel of the ‘Northwest Curling asso- ciation. Frank E. Fregeau of Duluth, president, said reservations had been mado for-upwards of 50 rinks. Last year 45 rinks were represented in the meet. Curlers trom Minneapolis, St. Paul, | Eveleth, Virginia, Chistolm, Hibbing and Duluth, Minn.; Portage and Madi- son, Wis.; Fargo, N. D.; Butte, Mont.; Winnepeg, Man., Fort William Ont. and otner Canadian towns are expect: ed to attend. i Some of the greatest s in the: United State perform on the ce during the week’s tourney. ‘The bonspiel will he staged in the new home of the Duluth la will come the Mc- runner up for the grand le prize at last s tour: e Goreéon Hutchins of Winnipeg; the C. C. Chisholm rink of the Manitoba Curling association, the Jim Pepper rink, known having the oldest skip in these parts, and other | formidable rinks. i The ¢ in Minnesota. received a substantial biost this year. when the Minneape ub laid the foundation | for a new seven-sheet rink. lnor the Yu Naa NY A eerie A three-cornered fight for mextior se tanks many ot those Dies bonspicl between ‘Minneapolis, |@@t were watching Mays pitch for the first time. ‘They were puzzled eth and Duluth is expected to ted by. bis Sa i stimulate interest which may be re ished by his unusual style of de- OVER - MAND BY BILLY EVANS Now can he pitch that way? I heard that query sccres of times first game of tha 1921 i during «the world series. s,doing the pitching flected in the registration. The walls pccca ep Ny te fe of the ring enclousure have been fans, watching the game, are é and this with other led as to how Mays pitches jit is y ge at Very easy to imagink how disconcert- night m tory, according to |i98. hi ‘le is to the batter. is pe- a 8 tv culiar delivery puzzled the Giants. Mr. Fregeau mie 9 {That was my one big reason in diop- aya ‘ing that he had a chance to win three DICKINSON WINS —_jgtnes' in tue IN TWO GAMES 4 's unquestio! unique style o . game. He Dickinson, Jan. 9—The high school] ajmost ex basketball <ezm defeated Mott and| mixes i s-urm curve, He threw New England high school basketball | j ch balls in the threé games teams in fast double-header played; he worked ageinst the Giants. Mays here Saturday night. Score: Dick-|starts his delivery well beiow the on Mott 14: Dickinson 22, New!knee. The lower he can get the more "Phe Dickinson quint went] clfective the ball. That is why Mays into the games divided, three regu j bas to pay more attention to his ist lars playing in the game with Mot ine than the rest of the twirlers. Any two with New England, the balance ;¢*tta weight around the waist makes 7 siubsti-| it more difficult for Mays to get down a y has ihe most itcher’ in’ the rh | FREAK DELIVERY IS CARL MAYS’ BEST ASSET. and ; AND TAS SUBWAY VRLNERY i | { When Mays pitches the batter is looking at a style that is the decided exception. For that reason it is puz- and thereby takes some of the “zip” off the ball. Critics have labeled Mays’ delivery the “subway ball.” ’ ft has -been well yjand 60-100 | tai om Ed NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE Notice is hereby given that default has been made in the conditions of that certitin Mortgage made by 1, F. Sapp of Driscoll, county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, Mortgagor, to Driscoll State Bank of Driscoll, county of Bur- leigh and state of North Dakota, Mort- gugee, dated the 24th day of March, 1920, to secure the following indebted~ hess, to-wit: One note for $1,500.00 fdated) January 13th, 1920, and) ‘one {note for $103.50 dated March 24th, 1920, {both bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum, and which Mort- gage wns duly filed in the office of the Register of Déeds of Burleigh County, State of North Dakota, on the 26th day of March 1920, at 9 o'clock A, M., and which default’ is of the following-mas ture, to-wit: The notes are beth: past due and wholly unpaid, and that: there is claimed to be dite on said Mortgage at date of this notice the sum. of | ($1,913.50) Nineteen Hundred ‘Thirteen Dollars ‘for principal: and interest. And that said Mortgage will be fore- glosed by « sale of the personal prop- erty in such Mortgage and hereinafter: described, at Publie, auction, agreeably to the statutes in su case made and provided, at Southwest quarter. of sec- ition 18 in township 138 North of Range e of sale being fixed by agreement ith the mortgagor, in the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota/ at 6th day of January, 1922. -That na! property which will be sold to One black cow yeurs old, 2 ‘ows eight years old, 1 red cow nine rs old, 1 red a white cow seven years old, 2 red cows tour y old, 1 black and white cow jfour years old, 1 red cow seven years old, 1 white cow six years old, 2 red and 3 two years old, 6 red and two years old, 1 bluish year old, 5 red and white one year old, 1 black steer one {year old, 1 black gelding eleven years [old named Cap. 1 gray gelding nine years old named Sam, 1,gray gelding 12 years old named Prince,.1 bay s@d- ing eleven years old named Tom, 1 black mare’ eleven years old named 1Queen, 1 bay gelding six years old named Ginger. MISCOLL STATE BANK. OF DRIS- COLL, N. D. by Ky A. Ersland, Ageutt. F, E. M rdy, ‘Attorney’ for. Mortgagee. | Bismarck, N D, | follows, to. K NOTICE OF. MORTGAGE SALE e is hereby given that that cer- ortgage, .executediand delivered by Wesley Swenson and Ella Swenson: (husband and wife) mortgagors, to A. 1. Garnes, mortgagee, dated the 11th day of July, 1919, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of Dakota. on the 20th day of arch, 1920,.and recorded in Book 161 Mortgage Deeds, on page $27, and ling. In addition Mays is Wlessed with fine control and is generally able | to keep the ball where he desires it. | ‘The wnder-hand ball must be kept low | ti, be effective. Mays’ ability to keep pitching at the knee is really uncan- | ny. series, he threw only three balls | above the waist line. Incidentally | Mays never lets a batter crowd the} plate and get a toe hold. The fact that his under-hand ball acts differ- ently adds much to his effectiveness. One style keeps -raising slightly and | curves out, the othe? style breaks { down much after the manner of the spitball. named, Pecause ‘it’ cértainly starts |from down. below. Le What makes the ball so effective? That is another questici that is put to me hundreds of tines every year. are a number of reasons why is a hard man to hit. I will try to explain a few of them. Perhaps the véry best reason for the of Mays’ delivery is thac it is entirely different. There is no in either major league yle that is at all similar. e over-handed and side- arm pitching constantly, but there: is ronly. one Mays and ine under-hand de- ivery. 1 ot ions beirg filled by j tutes. The local team goes to Beach; next Friday night, Valley City comes} here following Monda ea ‘SOVIET ARMENIA Billy Evans Pays Tri-| bute to Hoyt’s Greatness BY BILLY EVANS Those sitting cut in front. know. what is going on back of scenes That is true of the ball field as well as the theater. While the - crowd laughs and applauds, ,tragedy in its various forms is often being enacted Famine Described as Terrible As Those In Volga Region never the Constantinople, Jan. ¥.—Famine in certain parts of Soviet Armenia is de- ' Volga region. Although political con- behind the scenes. Humor also has | ditions are more stable, the generai its place. situation is considered highly alarm- In baseball, the field is the stage, | ing a the clubhouse is behind the scenes. | is being si ARs 7 Walte Hoyt, star pitcher of the New | .,fu.° peng sought by an economic re es ee Aaa m headed by A. Garinian, Ar- rk Americans, was the big figure in | menian commissar of justice In some of the eight distr of Soviet Armenia, Garinian says, crops have been fairly good but in others | the drought and the Turk have strip- iped the country and the people are starving. “The tctal number of refugees de~ | pending upon government is upward of 200,000,” Garinian said. “We have | besides 50,000 orphans most of whom |are looked after by the American Re- j lier Committee. In adition to th enormous figure, thousands of starv ing peasants in the districts affected bby the drought are hopelessly strug- for food. The government is ut- would glance at the y:impotent to check the evil. Thou- Ris pitching hand and shake his head. sands of Armenians will perish this When I dropped imto the clubhouse | winter, unless Help “is extended to 1 ‘ound Hoyt the center of a crowd of | them trom abroad, allithe Yankees; i! he usual noise that «The Soviet gcvernment of Armenia Ce ay world series victory Was) Would welcome foreign capitalis' Had Badly Injured Finger (exploit the country s pat Al riches I felt. sure something was wrong.; They are confident that their capitai L edged into the crowd and found | would improve an excellent invest- Trainer Wcod of the Yankees exam- | ment.” ining tho second finger of Heyt?s pitch- ing hand. There was a big blood blis- ter in the end of the finger which ex- tended well under the ‘nai un possible that a pitch- with Such a finger on the throwing ha The silence that pervaded the dressing room made it evident that all Yankees enter- tained such an opinign. After the finger had received medi- attention, I got Hoyt off to the side +” asked him what he thought of nces to start another game. finger is terribh sore,” he “It prevents me from getting a the ball and therefore zip" olf my fast ball. Mow- 1 be in there if I am only Dle to dish up show ones.’ Hoyt Has Real Courage The news about the injured finger was kept a secret. Hoyt won his si | = cnd game after a hard struggle. v forced to resort to | = pitching stratezy he po actions, plainly showe ¥ such a setting during the 1921 serfes' with the Giants. After the second game of the ser- ies, in which Hoyt had held the Giants in the hollow of his hand, I dropped around to the Yankees’ clubhouse to’ see hiw the team felt after twice de- feating the Giants, each time over the shufidut route. I had: ancther reason for so doing. During the last few innings of — the some I noticed that ‘Hoyt used a curve ball almost entirely. it surprised me, because vhis fast ball which he had been using was | used practically unhitable. “He had the ve more as a’ threat. noticed that the oc } H i 0, 9--The ciation re- s ordered language,” Lancashire, Kngland, J Laneashire Feotball ports that out of 655 off the, field for v phd He bit of s His d the finger was | = giving him much pain. i Before his third>start, his injured | finger was world-wide gossip. He lost! that game 1 to 0, because the usually reliablc; Peckinpaugh made an error at a critical stage. Hoyt’s, performance in the world | series, great that it was, was all the more remarkable when one considers | the conditions under which he labored. | ) In the slang of the sporting world, | “guts” means courage. That word was coined fi Hoyt. ‘ r (Waite Salvation Army was founded in Lon- , don in 1865. | —————— ji BS. ENGE. D. C. Ph, C. { iJ Chiropractor ! Consultation Free Sulto 9 1—Leeas Uluck—Phone 268! CONDITIONS BAD: | scribed as quite as terrible as in the; tor treatment - NEW YORK PITCHING STAR 60 per cent were members of Sunday! ranged by J. J. McLeod for Bismarck o—-- a fall from the Missouri river bridge to the ice, is getting along nicely. Three of the fractures he ‘suffered | have been permanently:“mended and the foutth, 2 fracture of. the feg, was ito be set today ‘by surgeons. “It is believed he will recover’ entirely from the injuries. It was thought it would be necessary to amputate a foot, but this has, been ‘avoided. Editor in Town, Hugh Black, publisher Werner Spotlight, was a Bisma: itor today. of: the} TCK VIS- | ters Hospital. Mrs. Carl Gefrah or Hague,-N. D.,; (has entered the St. Alexius hospital Baby Girl, | Mr. and Mrs. Martin Ander of Dris-| oll are the parents of a baby girl . tmjured ‘in Fall W. E. Rawlings, of Sterling, was e brought to a local: hospital suffering born in the city yesterday. , ‘ |fnom injuries received when a ‘horse |which he was riding slipped and fell, Baby Boy. Fr ‘crushing a bone in the foot of Mr. . Mr. and Mrs, Louis Garske of the! Rawlings. Mr. Rawlings will be able city announce the arrival of a baby | to leave the hospital within a few boy at their home yesterday. days. ar ang att nas are te DIRECT CABLE parents of a baby boy, born at the BETWEEN ITALY AND S. AMERICA St. Alexius hospital yesterday. (Buenos Aires, Jan. 9—Juan Carosio, an Stalian engineer residing in Buenos Aires and chief promoter of the pro- ; Jeet for a direct cable between Italy saad ee ORE angsSouth America, has returned from OM Be! Ree Raa Italy where he obtained “the support De. toe tee baby Bow hor ate the cf the Italian government and an- Beret e, DUN ROME ona © nounces that the work will soon com- Bismarck hospital yesterday. 'mence. He expects the cable tio be e : ‘finished in two years. Celebrate Christmas, | The Italian government will allow A large rufber of Greeks from Bis-;a subvention of $2,000,000. annually. Marck, Mandan and community met, The cable will'touch Spain, Brazil, at the Van Horn Cafe here yesterday | Uruguay, Argentina and the Canary }:na cclebrated their’ Christmas, as it;and Cape Verde Islands. The Italian ; celebrated inthe Greek churches. | government's control over it is limited S ito the extent of preventing its falling yat any time into foreign hands. i Baby Girl. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Engel of 811j 'Sixth Street, announce the arrival of | La baby girl at the St. Alexius hospital. H Baby Boy. es Boys Tonight . Nestos will address ithe boys of Bismarck tonight at the thigh scliool at 7:30 o'Glock. sii ithe of a series of saddress Addre: Governor R. ‘Nails and Carpets Take Place of Marks; Berlin, Jan. 9—In qonsequence of the low buying power of the mark, 'Germans are gradually reverting to trade by barter, or to counting. com- and articles as the real mon- i i i moditie: ley unit. | It is reported from Pomerania that jpezsant farmers have pledged them- {selves to sell eggs and hutter at | prices measured in pounds of nails. ' In Berlin, Persian carpets are re- ‘garded as money. START GIRLS’ SPORTS, Strasburg, Jan. 9—Megr. Ruch, new bishop of Strasburg, has instructed | the Catholi¢ girls’ societies in his dio- jcese to organize athletes for girls. The girls will be under strict medical supervision. FOR SALE—1920 Cleveland Six. Run abcut 12,060 miles.- Car and tires in good condition. Owner leaving city. Bargain if taken at once. Call EK. G. Hanselman, Grand Pacific Ho- tel Saturday and Sunday. — 1-9-1w TAKEN UP—One bay mare with white stripe in face, and one white hind foot.* Als9 one dark grey mare with colt. The mare has cut on left front foot. Owner can have same by paying charges. 3 1-2 miles northwest of Menoken. 1-01w ————_ month, Hedden Real Estate Agency, i Webb-block. Phone-0, 1-9-3t In the first game of the world | F lguary, 192 Harry Masterson. ; FOR RENT—Modern house, $31.50 per, assigned by sald mortgagge to: de C. ndgrson by an assignment < mortgage dated Mareh 8, 1920, and. filed ‘for: ree- ord in the office of said register of deeds on the 20th day of March, 1920, ang recorded in Book 139 of Assign- ments, at page 362, will be foreclosed hy a sale of the premises in such mort- ige and hereinafter described, at the ‘ont door of the courthouse at Bis- arck, in the County of Burleigh and ate of North Dakota, at the hour of f., on the 20th day of Feb- . to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale, the owner and assignee of such mort- gage having declared the entire sum secured thereby due and payable for defaults authorizing hint thereto under the mortgage. The premises described in such mort- gage and-which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows: The East Half of Southwest Quarter and Lots Three and Four, of Section Seven and the Rast Half of Northwest Quar- q St 2 o'cloek F School League football clubs. boys, and all boys of the city are in- beer and Lots One and Two of Section Sn | Vitedto be present> Wightecn, all in, Township One Hundred — —- “| —— 1 “Two North ts Range pBeventyy i ering. Se: Vest, of the Fifth Principal | | CITY NEWS | |. Pileger Recovering, Meridian, cogtaining 207.14 acres, more a Ernest Pfleger, who was injured in} rding to the U. S. Govern- or less, acc ment survey thereof. There will be due on such mortgage at the date of sale the Bum of $6,680.48 exelusive of legal attorney’s fees and costs and cxpenses of foreclosure. Dated Jan. 9, 1922, |. C. ANDERSON, Assignee of Mortgagec. Miller, Zuger & Tillotson, Attorneys for Assiznee. N. D. « 1—9-16-23-30; 2—6-13 N » Weport of THE McKE at McKenzie, in the State of North Da- kota, at the close of business, Dec. 31, 1921, RESOURCES Loans and discounts wee $ 91,181.47 Overdrafts, sccured secured 90.2 Warrants. cates, claims, etc. 171.62 Government issues . 269.53 Banking house, furniture fixtures .... 4,900.00 Other rea 1,172.12 es Cash and Due banks Total Capital stock y Surplus tund . ss Undivided profits, less Venses and taxes paid Individual deposits subject to. check $12,793.19 Guaranty fund de- 5,358.91 103,143.88 -$ 10,000.00 6,000.00 188.14 ex: posit ...... - 226.64 Demand certifi- cates of di if) Time c of depos 65,105.44 21,850.00 J, $103,143.88 STATE NORTH DAKOTA, County of 1, named bank, do solemniy swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. P. v : Burieigh—ss. P,P, Bliss, cashier, of the above . P. BLISS, -. (Seal) Cashier. Subseribed and sworn to before:me this 9th day of January, 1922. . §. DOBLER. Notary Public. The resident population of the city of London proper is only 12,200. West, at the home of mortgagor, the) jthe heur of 2 o'clock P,.M.,.on Monday ; 8 sty said Mortgage is described. as; wit seven | POOL CHAMP 1 t i i ! { 1} ; Ralph Greenleaf (above), national pocket billiard. champion, defeated Arthur Woods, challenger in the first two blocks of their inatch at Hotel Astor, New York, 305 to 219. ‘ESKIMOS MET IN _-ASNOW CHURCH — LIGHT WENT OUT Bishop Rowe Tells of Experi- ences Attending Church In The Arctic Circle OXYGEN WAS ALL USED UP No One Stays Away From Church Except For Illness er Accident Chicago, Jan. 9.—When. the first Eskimo: chu: built inside ,the arctic circle , its lights went out, according Bishop Peter T bishop of Alaska, here in the interest. of the lAlaska Indians. ‘This was’, because it was a snow church and the Eskimos had to pack, into its small interior so to Rowe, Episcopal who |i: ‘closely that they used up the oxygen Bishop Rowe said. The snow roof dripped, too, and al- together the big igloo did not prove a good meeting place, Bishop Rowe jadded. So they built the first frame structure, above ground, on Alaska's northern shore, | “The Eskimos did not know how to use tcols,” he said, “and the mission- ary and I took two sets of them, four | in each, and.showed them how and! altogether we, built: the church.” All along the northern coast of Alaska there are Eskimo villages to- day holding Episcopal services regu- larly every Sunday Bislfop Rowe re-| | ported.’ “they do better than many of the congregations in the United States,” he remarked. “The whole commun- ity turns out. stays away ex- i n't age from a_ little see an HEskim distance, and it is an odd thing on a Sunday morning, when the church bell rings, to see them all come out of the snow.” The Episcopal church has been working among the Eskimos so long that’ they are entirely familiar with Jits fitual and conduct services them: jselves when alone, the bishop said !adding that a number of villages had vested, choirs. + Bishop Rowe began his labors in Alaska in the winter of 1895-6 be‘ore | the great gold stampede and on his NMirst trip camped on the site of Daw- | son. then without inhabitant. _In‘each Hee John Carleton of the Dartmouth Beck, Jr., of Philadelphia, JUMPING 110 FEET ON SKIS Outing Club, Lake Placid, N. Y., mak- ing 110-foot ski jump. That won for him the trophy presented by Charles | MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1922 succeeding year he has made 2,500 miles through the country, most of it with dog teams. He observed here ‘ ‘ that his coldest weather was 78 de- grees below zero, encountered on the Dahl river‘north of the Yukon, He goes back to Alaska next month. i —_— —————— COOLING MILK REDUCES LOSS Natural Ice Can Be Harvested on Ma-| Jority of Farms and !s Most. Profitable Crop. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Customer—This milk is sour, Milk Inspector—Y our bacteria count, | Is too high. " Cheesemaker—I can’t make good { cheese out of this milk. | ) Buttermaker—We can’t use this ¥ \ cream, \ Hurts, doesn’t it? “Yet that Is what happens regularly every year when can after can of milk frtives at the milk plant or creamery sour. , One creamery returned over $2,600 worth of milk and cream in one year to farmers. A milk plant received nearly 50,000 gallons of sour milk in one year. Why? Because the milk was held and shipped at too high a temperature ‘ and the bacteria in it multiplied so rapidly that the milk soured before it arrived. t Cooling milk on the farm will re- duce this loss, All shat ig required is a supply of ice and a little care. Nat- ural ice gan be harvested on farms where 85 per cent of our milk is pro- duced, and it is one of the real pay- ing crops of the farm, Few tools are required; and for the average farm two saws, two pair of tongs, two ice hooks, one pointed bar, and one ‘ straight board for marking should be e ‘ » sufficient. (a The first thing to do is to provide a place to store the ice. If ice is scarce and hard to put up, it would probably be well to build an ice house, plans for which- may be obtained from the " dairy dyvision, United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. When ice ig abundant and easily harvested, it may be cheaper to disregard the shrinkage factor-and store it in a pit, cellar, shed, or other place, and insulate it with sawdust or shavings. If this is done, i 20 to 50 per cent additional ice should be provided to allow for shrinkage. Where cream only is to be cooled, al- low at least one-half ton of ice per cow. For cooling milk, allow 1% tons Ver cow. These quantities should be i enough to leave a margin for house- hold use; but it is better to have too much than too little. Whenever prac- ticable, build the ice house in the form - of a cube, allowing 45’ cubic fect of i space for each ton of ice. The pond or stream selected for cut- ting ice should of course be free from dirt or contamination from barnyards, privies, or refuse heaps. ‘The ice j ee |~Cutting Ice for Cooling Dairy Products in Summer. should be kept clear of snow, as snow retards freezing. When it has frozen to a sufficient depth, mark off the surface into cakes of the desired size, making sure that the lines form rect- ji angles. Cut out a strip of ice (with the saw) the width ofthe cake desired, and force this strip under the thus forming a channel to the landing and loading place. Large strips may then} be sawed: off and floated to the land) ing, where.they may be cut up into, cakes, These cakes are then hauled! to the storage place and packed in as close together: as possible, and all! cracks and air spaces filled in with sawdust. Cakes that are cut squarel and are uniform in sige and. shape; pack together with less air:space and) are convenient to handle. | 'The cost of ice is small, and:the work} generally comes during a slack season.| There is little reason, therefore, wh) every farmer in the natural-ice section| should not have ice with which to cool his dairy products, and to make such} delicacies as ice cream, iced tea, iced Imttermilk, iced fruit and‘Wegetables, ete., possible on the farm. x Detailed information on harvesting | and storing ice will ‘be.foun@in Farmn- ers’~ Bulletin 1078, “Harvesting and Storing. Ice on the Farm, which may be obtained on request from the Uni- ted Stutes Department of Agriculture, } Washington, D. C. } SALT IS, REQUIRED BY COWS : Best Plan to Place It in Boxes in Yard Where Animal Can Lick It at Will. / Salt is required by all animals. The dairy cow requires an ounce or more a-day and while she shewtd be given all she needs, she should not be forced . to take more than she wants. It fs best, therefore, to give only a small antity on the feed, and to place rock salt in boxes In the yard where she ean lick it at will, \