The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 2, 1923, Page 6

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i SEVEN TEAMS | \ District Results to Settle Slope " March 2. Missouri § tified their intenti annual fourth 4d tournament wh « Friday and Sat- auspice of the mal School, N. L, Lan- ntention of com nt which, if it does, 1 tournament with of eight teams com The tea which have certified oming to ch Butte. ter over the would probably y sted the coming Biestiintiat six applicants. More Sad Tidings For Babe Ruth— Pruett in Shape |! faced the summer houlder arm, with ently Pruett was ‘it that is wasn't arm that He was of rding to Fohl, that could the win- o Pruett. id live in the open et a job dig pick or pady for nine innings omorin Pruett strong enough to pitch every fourth or fifth day for the Browns this season St. Lou: may have her first pennant in 35 years Billy a Says— | o—____“ Charley White is the mystery man of the ring. No fighter in the history of the sport has had a more erratic career than the Chicago lightweight. The possessor of the id 1 build for a fighter, packing unch in the left hand, able punishment and endowed with plenty of courage, White has been the Dr, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde of the ring, The fighter has been more touted as a ch ship possibility than White. itherweight he was champ. When he ision without hav-~ d the title, the fistic ex- nediately began to hand over to him Bie. lightweight laurels, Freddie Welsh was the holder of the lightweight title when White warded at the top of his game. Welsh, clever, and’ a great ring general, never won much fame as a k t artist. White in those s now, “knocked ‘em dead hit them on the but- ton,” to use the slang of the ring. ataes Tt was felt that the first time White got into the same ring with Welsh the title would change hands. White was sure to wear Welsh . down, and then slip over the knock- eee QUIT TOBACCO _ So Easy to Drop Cigarette, |3 Cigar, or Chewing Habit No-To-Bac has helped thousands tv |’ break the costly, wacco habit. Wh _ longing for a ~ place a-harml your-mouth instead. All desire stops No-To-Bac tablet in | Shortly the habit is completely bro- | ken, and you are better off mentally, ysically, financially. It’s so easy. - simple. Get a box of No-To-Bac id if, it doesn’t release you from eraving for tobacco in any form, druggist will ARE ENTERED | Basketball 1] a fine physique,|q Luis Angel Firpo, champion heavyweight of South America, is shown ‘here on his arrival in New York from the Argentine. ‘(Demsnev' '8 crown. Pruett haa} ‘T° the first 13] * tributed at de; all The y re on Having been Be is seeking *| Loses s Pocket Billiard Ghemporstin, Shoemaker Seeks Snooker Title deposed as Hs is the new cham. ired that honor in ment at New York, » he defeated jayed on a 6x12 table The | inches in di- sed balls may he med 5 ie brown, blue, black—are dis d- points, The d is white. ellow, byown and green ball] e the D or balk, line at the k | which between foot ra Pock the blac ble in Until pturned inJed” i tive is brown 2,, uble po player is “snook an opponent and involves alties often decide a game. The blue ball is nter of the table. the py 2 1-2 inches from the ra red ball counts 1, the the green 3, the the pink 6, and pr must first | P Red balls off the ta- n off. re off the cketed “colored” balls are to the table When the ared of red balls. “color all the hidde id being “snook- Nl Hd tact Pen- out pune ity of the & White the view of stic experts, a major- got the big cha a couple of ch the many big things that were pre- dicted round for him. White, Welsh waltzed gently tapping him F gave White Hit oa oe Benny Leonard won the title from Welsh In due time White secured a | A bout wit old op} out. the good his fine h Leonard. He was given de chance by the experts. of the fight he had the champion- each, but he let ip away. A few rounds later Leonard Knocked him Having worked himself back into of the promoters by ving. White was in a ond meeting with he took a bout s to fill in, Kan- ¢ 1 Handicap -} ter Transfer Co. Leonard at Michigan City, Ind. White figured on disposing of Kansas in handy fashion and then forcing Leonard into another cham- pionship bout. Kansas decisively de- feated White, who was a 3 to 1 favorite. White, who has had~ a half dozen shots’ at the champion- ship, sees another opportunity gone glimmering. White’s real trouble is lack of co- ordination. The mind and the hand that packs ‘the punch constantly clash He gets an opponent on. the ropes and then lets him recoger. Co- ordination would have made White one de the great fighters in the Lacking it ne a mere possi- ship honors, bility TE Neha bgp oe Bowling Score >—_________-—_4 The Capitals took the hofors a the local bowling Alley Wednesday night when they collected a total of 2517 pins and took two out of three games from the Night Hawks Pat Donahue of the Capitals high ‘man for the evening gettin, for a s C. White . Joe Patera P. Donahue C. EB, Thomas ..168 182 Geo, Smith ....140 136 Handicap ...... 31 Totals ~~ THE BISMARCK: TRIBUNE sas, last summer, was stopped vy | A Schneider 158 L. Shubert ....143 150 Art. Bauer ....176 155 aeenes 41 Totals .. BEULAH COAL now $4.75 per ton delivered. The Wach- Phone 62. RHEUMATISM A Remarkable Home Treatment Given by One What Had it r attacked ever retu it toa. number. who fflicted, even bed- them’ seventy to ears old, and the results me as in my own case. sufferer from any sub-acute great value of my im ion Treatment” for it: T will send it free uu have used it, and “Tt has proven Itself to be that iong- looked for means of getting rid of such forms of rheumatism, may send the price of it, On lar, but understand 1 do not w. unless you a! t. ee oo secu LAL © : Sstores 3 Tribune Want Ad Page The Sultan of Turkey abdicated and left dozens of wives The -new officials endeavored to dis- pose of them through the American newspapers! : We can’t promise such results from our Want Ads—but if you have anything else you wish to buy, sell or ex- change, they’ll surely help you accomplish it. : unprovided for. If You Want to Buy or Sell Use the Want Ads accepted over the ’phone. The Tribune, Bismarck Coyers the Slope Like the Morning Sun. NVALUE HUA HHL nl TT ey = = = = = = = Things We Have Always Known , The recent’ business condition has brought to the forefront of thought many fundamental considerations that have always been known but have been damned with faint praise. Human nature in the mass is very much like human nature in the individual. One of its dominant charac- teristics has been summed up in the observation, “You never miss the water till the well runs dry.” We never appreciate fundamental things until we have occasion to do without them. This observation has a special application to the De- mand of the public for the products of industry. While the Demand was'at high tide and everybody was busy trying to supply that Demand at a profit no one, seem- ingly, gave a thought to where the Demand ¢ame from, how long it might last, or what would happen if it should fail. We merely assumed the permanent existence of the Demand, just as we assume the presence of water, air, and fire. But a day came when Demand began to subside, and in many industries it came almost to a full stop. And then we missed it, and realized, as never before, what an important thing it was. - And we began to inquire where it came from in the. first place, and how it might be restored. S We always knew—everybody knew—that Desire for things made a Demand for them in the market. That people desired things we accepted as an elemental fact. But when we discovered that Desire fluctuated we be- gan to appreciate that Desire, as we know it is a thing created by the art of man. It is a highly specialized form of an elemental need—just as a Louis XVI chair is made out of. a tree. { This discovery led to another equally important dis- covery that the-means of refining and specializing that Desire avas Adyertising. The gigantic work that has been accomplished by modern advertising now Stands out in bold relief. It has been the means by which the the refinements of tivilizgtion have been made known and made desirable, and this desire has been made into De- mand. It is a simple fact that a million profitable forms of industrial activity owe their very existence to the fact that Advertising upheld the standards of living which in turn provided the demand for their products. e ~ ‘ Published by the Bismarck. Tribune, in co-operation with The American Afsociation of Advertising Agencies =_ \ / AoA a

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