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‘DEMONS’ ROLL UP BIG SCORE ~ ON CASSELTON Expected Oppostition of Vi tors Fails ot Show in Game Here The expected opposition of the leton high school basket! n did not develop and the “Den came through with the long end a Gi to 12 score in a game played pin the local gy ; ir The contest, general Inwas siow and uninteresting, howing spurts of speed hitimes, and then rel: . The five minutes was just > s for the possession of the ball, an? Bismarck team were unable to hfind themselves in the ~ beginning hstages of the game. The score stood t four apiece, before Alfson and eBurke adjusted their eyes to the lubasket, and ran up a comfortable lead. The passing gf the local team. hwas erratic, and the defense was not eup to standard during the first, half. Accurate shooting however brought lethe score up to 25, as against 9 for Cassleton. The second half corrected many llof the faults of the local team. The sing was slightly better, and the Pidefensive work improved, One long feshot and a foul was the most their €opponents could register, while 36 Ipoints were hung up by the Demon: Alfson and Burke were the most eonsistent basket tossers on the floor. The big center rang up 14 field goals, and Burke was not far hind. The remaining counters ly well distributed, the Demons leave on playing James- town, Valley City, and Hankinson. PlHowever, there will be an opportun- ity to witness a second team contest Pon the local floor Tuesday evening, when the Woodworth ‘five are en countered, y throughout, both at first ‘ambly uy “« Following are the lineups: nCassleton sOtto, Gendio, ie] jlenecosct If k, rg PHanev, Ig . HAsken, ¢ 4 BBismarck Halloran, Burke, If iberieg ae (Mjddaugh, rg Seresuins ig, |, Scroggins, rf Murphy, If | Rhud, c Klein, Ig Scott, rg pNathan, Revs re. wloocoscco 4 3 Referee: Boise. INCH HITTERS: SCORE VERY FEW TALLIES jRecords. Show That Out of f 104 Only 55 Made Hits i > American League managers called fon 104 players during the season to gact as substitute! batter, either to fdstart a needed rally or to deliver a hit in a pinch. Only 55 made hits t any time, but most of the 49 who failed were called upon only once jor twice and of these, six were each responsible for one run, but without hanging the result of any game in hich they acted as pinch hitter. Of the fifty-two who hit safely, Manger Speaker of Cleveland was tthe most sucessful, the Indians’ Meader having worked the opposing pitcher for four bases on balls and ten hits. in 21 appearances as qsuv- stitute batter. Larry Woodall, Detroit, was at but twelve times in eleven games and made five hits, while Hauser, Phila- hia; “Menosky, Burns, Foster, McClellan, Mo land Strunk, Chicago; Uhle and:Gard- faner, Cleveland; Gagnon and Marter. jjDetroit: O’Doul and Schang, New. york; Welch, Young, Hauser and Me- Gowan, Philadelphia; Robertson, iyVangilder and Durst, St. Louis, all fhit .300 or better. Walter, Boston, ile, Cleveland, were up twice an'l livered a 1,00 per cent, while. Blue, jqDetroit; Judge, Washington, ane iyWitt, New York, each drove out a ‘dsingie in their one effort. Pinch hitters aften created inter- n the final standings of the teams fffollow: ~~ On Jaly 7th, Joe Harris tied the with the ‘Browns in the sev- inning with a double, in the h Burns ¢ied it again with 9n- double, and inthe thirtee n won, This was low the Browns suffered during from pinch hitters.’ It wis Med that St. Louis lacked No Other Sport: 0 HANS WAGNER wAs THROUGH AT +O BY BILLY EVANS. Golf is @ mocker of time. In baseball, a player is a veteran at 30, a decrepit old man at 40, Hans Wagner, famous Nationa: Lehgue star, managed to keep going until he“was 43. Hans, however, is a rare bird, the decided exception. In the fight game, the boxer is young at 18, old at 25 and usually through at 30. Jack Briton managed to win a title at the 35-year-old mark, and hold it two years before being dethroned. The fight game, however, boasts few Jack Brittons. College football players reach star- dom at 20. Usually at 25 they have graduated and passe up the stren- uous game of football for all time Thorpe Is Exception, Jim Thorpe is one exception to the rule. Out at Carlisle Indian school, where Jim first gained fame on the gridiron, for a dozen or more yea’ Thorpe continues to shine in a pr fessional way on the gridiron. Jim is well on the way to 40. But golf-—well, that is an entirely different sport with an interesting story. Golf is literallygplayed from the cradle to the grave, There is no age limit to starting or;stopping. That is why golf is certain to continue in popularity, with a constant in- crease in its devotees. oe True, last year youth was served in golfing circles. Gene Sarazen, at 21, won,the national open, Jesse Sweetser, at 20, captured the na- tional amateur, while Glenna Coi- lett, only 18, was supreme among the women golfers. The theory that youth served doesn’t hold good despite the sucess joyed in 1922. Case of John Ball. Gene Sarazen, in winning the na- tional open, finished only one stroke better than John Black, who is 43 agd a grandfather. must be in golf, that youth en- haa be Ral SOHN BALL -won BRITISH OPEN - AND 2H YEARS LATER MON IT, AGAIN v open’ at 43, while Harry Vardon, 51 years of age, finithed in a tie for sec- ond place. Back in 1888 John Ball, Jr. won the British open. He kept on winning them at various times, so that 24 years later he won the title of Brit- ish open champion for the eighta time. What other sport could pos- sibly produce such a happening. “In the United States, we have Walter Travis to offer as rutinerup to the feats of John Ball. Travis began playing golf at the age of 35. At the age of 60 he ne- gotiated the Palm Beach course in 68, In a space covering 25 years golf has increased its number of. play- ers from a mere 10,000 to over 2,000,- 000. It is played by more people than any other sport except base- ball, if we can take the word of the In 1920 Ted Ray won the national Four New Managers statisticians. SACK BRITTON was Will Make Debut In Majors Coming Season Four new faces will be seen among the various big league managers, over those of a year ago, when the 16 major league cluBs start their an- nual invasion into southern climes | within the next six weeks or so. Art Fletcher, Phillies, and Bill Mc- Kechnie, Pittsburg, of the National loop, and Frank Chance, Boston, and Owen Bush, Washington, of the American, are the quartet referred to. Of the other dozen, Connie Mack is the pioneer, having led thé Athletics on 22 previous campaigns, or ever since Philadelphia came into the Johnsonian circuit back in 1901. McGraw of the Gians is right be- hind with 20 seasons to his credit, While the rest have been piloting their resnective clubs at least two campaigns. And of the 16, five have acted in Hervey McClellan went to the plaice five times as pinch hitter and made ‘god on four occasions. Three times he started ninth inning rallies, but not in a single instance was the re- sult of the game changed. d Larry Bardner made two hits in the eighth inning of the game ot August 16th against the Athletics and Cleveland scored sevén runs, but the lead of-the Maciffien was too long to be overcome. Guisto beat Detroit in the final-innig April |20th after the Tigers haf led Cleveland for eight rounds, i Nunamaker’s double was a potent factor in the defeat of New York on June 19, when Cleveland counted three times in the eighth. Nuna- maker also helped down Washington in the tenth innipg’ of the game August 19. Speaker and Stephenson also had much to do with the victory of September 15 over Washington when the Indians’ scored three runs in the last inning. It is obvious that timely hitting had much to do with landing Cleveland in the first division, ; Danny Clark, pinch hitting for De- froit in the ninth round of the Phil- adelphia game, May 22, drove out a home run with two men on, which tied the score, the game being called in thé eleventh with the count still even.” July 7th Detroit was seven runs behind Washington when the finth-inning opened. Woodall, pinch hitter, led off with a safe drive and before the side was retired he came Up again, made another hit, and De- troit won, 11-9. Cam» Skinner beat the White Sox fn the tenth round, 9th, with a oO ger Milan's four pinch hits came in the ninth inning of thy me with Boston, May 31, and aided b the scoring Of ays runs and vic- aa team batting averages of the substilates given’ in ‘the adjoining ‘table are interesting, as.they tend to prove ‘the: often made of tying New, York for ; ir mor Strunk stored: Path beter Us be batsty whan he come ye reso. Bit, ‘and won. from|up at only infrequent: Intervals than oe im the eleventh round. |it is when ig regular: a similar capacity for other major league outfits, with Huggins of the Yankees, Chance of Boston, and Rickey, Cardinals, having led teams in both circuits during their careers, Most of the present-day pilots have long since laid aside their playing uniforms, being content to give thei orders from the bench. In fact, Cobb, Speaker and Fletcher, are the only regular player-managers, though Bush may decide to get into some of his team’s games this season, One’ odd feature-in regard td the men who guide the destinies of the major league clubs concerns Conme Mack, In all the years that the elongated’ manager has ‘piloted the Ahtletics he has never appeared on the bench in a uniform. Mack comes to the ball yard in his regular citi- zen’s regalia, and reposes in the dug- out in the same outfit. MOUG EARNED -AGOOD DRAW MANY CLAIM Friends of . Russie, LeRay, Fargo welter, were too optimstic when they claimed he bent Joe Moug of Medina at Jamestown this week, according to correspondents of The: Tribune. Moug, it is declared, earned a good draw in the six-round battle. One correspondent gives the first round even, the second and third to Joe, the fourth even and the fifth and sixth to LeRoy. He also says Russie was in trouble in the third | OR ge In Ages RAINBOW IN THE HOME TOWN a { Speaker ° Protests Against | Seeking Pot of Gold Elsewhere ~ (By the Associated Press) Fargo, N. Dak., Jan. 27—In urging his auditors not to be seeking taa foot of the rainbow. in “yonder towns”, at the expense of the’ old home town, the Reverend Roy L. Smith, Minneapolis, speaking before the final session of the state con- vention of the Norta Dakota Imple- ment Dealers’ Association here to- night, declared there are opportun- ities ‘and pleasures in one’s home town that kings and queens of a century ago would have given emy Pires to possess. “Start out and explore your town jome day,” appealed the speaker,” OBFEATESO AT 37. P round but Moug missed his chance] ¢ hy. failing to follow up his advantage. | act as if you had never seen it be Moug says “now the fight was sup-| fore. Look at the cnurches and li- Posed to be 4 draw. And LeRoy did] braries aud schools that it has build not knock me down. I slipped and] for you. Think of the preachers and fell in ‘the fifth round. It was ‘a{ teachers and lecturers and musi- clean, fast fight all the way’ througn,| cians it has hired for you. Taink Krause wants to box the winner, but| of what the old home town has ii= add to that that he never took up| vested for you. Look at the homes my challenge I put in the paper.” | atid you will find them the aappiest The bout was ano decision affair,| in all the land. Look at the people referred by Leo Kossick. “<| and yoy will find them the happiest BE USED T0 | AID SCHOOLS; “Be a Christopher Columbus some day and discover your own Stockholm, Jan. 27.—That motion picture films will be extensively Home town You ll find that you are living at the foot of the rain- bow—that the gold brick is in the “other town” and taat the pot of used as a medium of education in thg public schools of Sweden is now assured. The Superior Board of Education has been won over to gold is in your own home town.” bows,—the gold brick ones and the idea and, in conjunction By those of the pot of gold. The gold brick rainbows taat men chase, he declared were called “the other man’s chéince”, “yonder town”, “soft snaps”, “easy joys”, “good ‘ luck”, pulls, political and — otherwise,” “something for nothing.” The real rainbows, according to the speaker, were the ones men nev- er chase, but waich give up their Pots of gold when men devote them- selves to work, education, science, play, love and worship, CLOTHIERS SET STYLES FOR MEN AT DETROIT MEET Detroit, Jan. 27:—Styles for cus- tom-made men's clothing for the Present year are expected to be get here during the fourteenth annual meeting of the National Association of Merchant Tailors, January 30 to February 2, inclusive. The fashion deerees will be-contained in tne re- port’ of the fashion committee. One ofthe most important ques- tions ‘toeome before the conven- tion, atcording to Wilbur W. Stewart of Philadelphia, association president, is the lack of workers in the clothing trade, said by Mr. Ste- wart to have been caused by re- strictions on immigration. “It now requires 13 days to fill an order for a suit of clotnes,” Mr, Stewart said. “This is harmful to the business and we will seek to find a remedy at the convention.” Charge Roads Used Armed Men Reverend Smith’s topic was “At the Foot of the Rainbow”. He point- the National Bureau of Motion tures, it has issued instructions to make the plan operative. From now on \Swedish childrey. will learn their keography lessons from the screen, by which they will also be informed’ concerning the customs, industries, etc, of the principal countries of the world. Films will be used in teaching na- tural sciences, and in giving in- struction in the technique of vari- ous trades. Physics can well be taught through slow-mtoion pictures and, as stereographic projection be- comes more ferfect, solid geometry can be taught in a way not other- wise possible. The Board of Education plans a systematic inauguration of the new Scheme. Thus one of the first steps is to give regular instruction to young teachers in the proper’ car¢ and handling ‘pf projecting mia- chines, and other film apparatas. In certain cases films will be pur-}, chased and become the property’ of the schools, Other films will be rented and sent on tour from ona school to the next. All government, institutions and industries will be specially filmed for the purposes of instruction. : Instruction by motion pictures in the regular curriculum of the pub- lie schools, under competent. teach- ers, is taken here to mean a safe- guarding of the children’s educa- tion and a correction of the misin’ formation and erroneous impres sions now so often obtained fro: the commercial films in the public theaters, sai ed : To Punish Union American Woman (By the Associated Press) Honored by Havana ,,“'°*!2"@: Obie, Jan. 27-—Chargea ata train “carrying armed men” was run over thé Missouri and North= ern “Arkansas railroad for the por. pose of inflicting punishment on the strikers af the railway were made to- dq ‘ 3 lay by Donald Robinson, president pecenition. des services ups et es Brotherhood of Locomotive children and . defenseless animals. | sn? neers on eirenien. ar Robins In addition to making her a daugh: | conor ofarhonnne ey vith the gov- ter of Havana the city council has | °TM0F OfNrkansas and asked that an Presented Mee Raden ihe cits | investigition of the lynching of an vestented Mek Bydenbyy unidentified striker “by a citizens Visiting Guba aso tqurist a gen-| Committee” be made. No definite eration ago, Mrs. Ryder’s sympa. statement has yet been made as to thies were aroused by the-treatment| ‘he Position of the Brotherhood of accorded dumb animals, and she de-| Firemen and Engincors as to the cided to dedicate her life and her| °Utrages. in the state of Arkansas in small fortune’ to their benefit, The| 88rd to the mob carried on the spe- Band’ of Mercy which che dizeets {cial train over the Missouri tno has developed to a point. where it|4rkansas for the purpose of inflict- combines the only manifestations in| inf punishment on the employees Guba of the Society for the Pre-| who were dut on A legal strike in vention of Cruelty to Animals, the| Protest against an arbitrary and ex- juvenile courts, and Santa Claus. | cessive reduction in their wages by Havana, Cuba, Jan. 27.—Mrs. Jea- nette Ryder, an American, president of the Band of Mercy, has been adopted by the City of Havana -in When Lee Fohl Retires Page George Sisler By’ NEA Seévices j) *, St. Louis. Mo. Jan. 26.—Just at present Magager Lee Fohl is’ riding on the crest of popularity. The placid leader of the St. Louis Browns made a fine showing last season With a faltering pitching staff, he landed the Browns in second place inst one game away from . the league leaders. No manager in the world could have ‘done more with the Browns than. Fohl® accomplished in 1922. With an ordinary: pitching staff, clined ‘at times to be very, erratix, an ‘infield. that “lacked stability at third, atid forced ‘to ‘be without’ the services of his big-star, Sisler, when he was ‘most needed,~the Browns wete.in the, fight until, the very last day. ry Shortly after the close of the season ‘it was rumored: that Sisler might succced Fohl. Such rumors | were soon set at rest by the quick anhotneement, from _headquarters that Foh! would again be in charge. However, it seéms certain that when Fohl ‘gives-way to'a suéeessor at St. Loiis, Sisler wijl be the ma: It {a a well-known ‘fact that’ he was offared the monagement of: the, ‘club when Fohl took charge. Bes h v4 arn no Speed a ors a is. time, was jer’s »Te- Shak “The’ worries of the: Sob would. certainly affect ‘my play,” 1 feel tat I can be of the most’ the management in violation of the transportation act. ——__—____ “THE PRINCZSS’ | Asking for you to be my sweethear#, Life shall forever help you be smart, When ‘my day dreams have faded Ho’ you depart, — For you see she is’ the Royal Prin- ce T'm only a silly bey that’s true, | It seems to me\of what I can do, In: love ‘day dreams I'm asking for + you, For you see she is the Royal Prin- cess, To me dear those two lips are tender, With life that. is splendour, }And.tmy heart is in sweet surrender, For you see she is the Royal Prin- burning love's My two eyes of love are now search: HAR, ; With: ‘wisdom that is, at lif? burn ing, Think ore. break of:day I am yearn- o* Jing, J For you see she is the Royal Prin- vy, Cene, Ih. the: mean time I bring her roses, ‘As’Mesire on her breast reposes, Wat lor her as the day closes, For You tee she is the Royal Prin- playe: cess. és AThat, for the time, Written by an Author ‘Oxgnown, iF wnanagerial boom, -b ¢ a RR aE, in your notebook thi 3 successor when out of the picture, GEORGE SISLER to.the club at this time as a mere ed out there were two kinds of rain- | ‘Farm Bloc Here to Stay Until People Realize HH” HER; BA. j if ! not not return. e SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1928 Ss COOPERATIVE AGENCY URGED New York, Jan. 27.—Establisn- ment of an international cooperative exchange agency, in which all~ na- tions would be associated as a means of solving world political and socia] difficulties, was proposed to- night by Senator Smith W.,Brook- hart, of Igwa, in an addres$ before the Council of Foreign Relations. Such a program, he said, would njeet with tne approval of the farmers, la- Clayde Wyant was brought before a Chicago judge charged with at- | tempting to flirt with Vivian Twining, 19, shown here. pended sentence if Wyant would promise to leave Chicago in 24 hours borers and war veterans of the United States. “These three great blocs have all reached - one. conclusion,” Senator Brookhart declared, “and that is that our’ policy of international statesmanship is a complete failure. Tiey believe the present statesman- ship is guided solely by economic power and greed, and they oppose a League of Nations or cancellation of war debts.” Appealing to the Council to sup- port the program he advanced, the Senator further proposed that all in- terstate and foreign commerce be transacted under federal charter on the Rocadale cooperative plan. He advocated the repeal of all anti- trust laws as soon as this was ef- fected. Farmers and laborers of the Unit- ed States, said the Senator, repre- sent approximately seventy-five per- cent of the total population, rapidly are reaching accord as to economic thought, and favor the establisa- ment of/@ cooperative plan between producefs,and consumers. He cited the success of such cooperation in England, and said that the move- ment already had proved a success The judge sus- \ | By NEA Service : | Washington, Jan. 27.—Until the nation accepts a policy based on recognition that tae soil is the foun- dation of all real wealth, the “farm | bloc” in Congress is here to stay, ac- ‘cording to its leader, Senator Arth- | ur Capper of Kansas, in a new book, | “The Agricultural Bloc,” just off the | press. : | “Since the foundation of the Unit- ed States,” writes Capper, “the fixed j national policy ‘as been to foster the opportunity of the man on the land.” But while\ professing great |faith in this ideal, “‘our people,” he | adds, “have \ developed an apathy | toward the real needs of agricul- ture. By Century’s End “It is conservatively estimated that by the close of this century the population of the nation will exceed 200,000,000 souls. .And the United States * * ® ‘will either have to depend. more largely on imported foods or reorganize entirely its na- tional life.” | Agriculture’s Needs, Senator Capper Says here, althouga as yet dn a limited seale. Workers and farmers’ of -the world realize the manifest injustice in the difference between producing and consuming. costs, .The solution of this problem will mean the set- tlement for all time of world un- rest,” the Senator concluded. FRED WOOLWORTH DIES IN LONDON London, Jan. 27.—Fred More Woolworth, prominent American business man, who has been serious- ly ill in London for sometime, died at the Ritz hotel today. Mr. Woolworth was the London director of _the chain store organi- zation subsidiary to the Woolworth store organization in the United States, After; recognizing the general principle! that “only through furter- ing continued production from the soil can national growth be assur- ed,” Capper enumerates tae follow? ing: considerations in order of im- portance: 5 1. Financing agriculture. te 2. Education, with a view to in- creased production, “\3. Transportation, including de- velopment of railroads, highways and waterways. Question of Marketing “Better marketing,” he says, “fol- lows in the logical order, though at the moment it stands at the top of the list,- * eliminating ~ ex- cessive costs, regulating taose who make unreasonable profits and avoiding waste.” The movement, concludés Cap- per, is not a “spontaneous outburst on the part of a few, put the culmin- ation of a steadily growing convic- tion on the part of that third of our population who live upon the land—the American farmers.” Turkey and Greece To Reach Agreement (By the Associated Press) Lausanne, Jan. 27,—Two separate MAKE PROVINCE INDEPENDENT IN FOOD PRODUCTS Vladivostok, Jan. 7.—Measures are being taken to make the Primir- ia an independent food producing unit. Up to now this province has been dependent on Manchurja for food, but since 1918 the cultivation of rice has been growing steadily, until now tnere are under cultiva- tion 40,000 acres, giving 2 1-2 million | pounds of husked rice a year. There is also a tremendous increase in the cultivation of flax and the har- vest of 1921 gave 1,300,000 pounds. “The country is ideal for the cul- tivation of the opium poppy and thousands of pounds were former- \ly produced here. Chita and Mos- cow, however, are against opium cultivation and this year ‘strong measures wil] be taken to suppress its growth. i GUARD OFFICERS TO RETURN SOON Two North Dakota national guard officers will return to the state. from Fort Benning, Ga., at the end of this month, after having finished a course in the infantry school there, according to the adjutant general’s office here. . || They are Capthin C. E. Anderson, ‘commanding officer of the headquar- ters company at Fargo and Ist Lieu. [tenant Roy D. Garrett, Company G., Valley City. ST | 102, STILL TOILS ugh 102, Charles Quick, Vap! (B.C): aadalers we daly fo , “And I shall be until f he says. “It's work . that’ ge Ten states had’ one’ officer ench at the school; ‘16 states had two; four states three; three states, four; three states, five and one state (New York), six. Eighty-seven of these officers were national guard and 18 reserve. conventions between Turkey and Greece will be signed next Monday, it is announced irrespective of the fate of the general peace conference. One provides for the mutual return of prisoners of war and hostages and the other for compulsory ex- change of minority populations —————————————————————, = COAL COAL The coldest part of winter is still ahead. End your worries by filling your bins with The Famous Wilton Lignite Coal. The Coal That is All Coal. 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