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PAGE SIX ANSWER WILL BE PUT UP TO CITY'S FANS Proposal Is to “to Subscribe $5,- 0CO Steck to Incorporate Baseball Association TART OUT TOMORROW Bismarck fans will answer the questi« Do we want real base T this year? They answer it in the nest and business men met at luncheon at the Gr cific hotel ut noon today to decide final action on the proposition was decided to form a stock to be known the Bi Athletic association, with a It will take mi four-team North Dakota league for this year. Certificates of stock will be issued, a board of directors elected by the st officer chosen, a playing and everything run on Representatives of Jameste and Valley City will meet her adopt a schedule and articles for the Dakota Bismarck must be able to by that date. vr of the Internationai ter company agreed to take adership. He will be assisted rganization of teams by Henry John A. Larson, R.A . Meyer, V. M. Dresbach, , . Wm. Kontos, R. B. Low bek and others The plan is to start teams out morrow and to be able to give answer Thursday that the le will be organized It believed that with a well- balanced, four-team league, such a is proposed, playing under National association rules with league u pires, the four teams in the league can be virtually sustaining, ‘The profits of the Dakota league towns eaten up in the big Tha season Id be two 1 he plan for th 1 tea ing drawn upon lines sugg ced business men swer is to be up to all the basebali | fans of the town. a STANDINGS —- ———__—_ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, Ws ry Pet 1000 | Columbus Minneapoks Toledo : Milwaukee Indianapolis Kansas City NATIONAL L! Cincinnati Philadelphia St. Louis Boston Brooklyn Pittsburgh AMERICAN LEAGUE, Ww. L. tL. New York . 4 0 1000 Cleveland .4 0 1000, it $ elphia 3 » Louis ashin| Boston ......... 0 “ooo | -——e! RESULTS SUNDAY GAMES AMERI St. Paul 9 3 Minneapolis Milwaukee Columbus 8; Toledo 3. Indianapolis 15; Louisville 2 NATIONAL LEAt on 14; Philadel! York 7; Brooklyn 0. Cincinnati 12; Pittsburgh 6. Chicago 10; St. Louis 8. LEAGUE. New York 7; Boston’ Washington 6; Philadelphia 4. LEAGUE. Denver 6; Wichita 3. Sioux: City 13; Tulsa 9. St. Joseph 16; Omaha 7. Oklahoma City 4; Des Moines 2. SATURDAYS GAME NATIONAL LEAGUE. Brooklyn 0; New York 10, Chicago 8; St. Louis; 7. Cincinnati 9; Pittsburgh 15, AMERICAN LEAGUE. New ‘York 3; Washington 4. Cleveland 1; Detroit 0. St. Louis 3; Chieago 4. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, Kansas City 11; St. Paul 9. Milwaukee 2; Minneapolis 5. Indianapolis 4; Louisville 5, Toledo 4; Cdlumbus ‘3. KRAUSE, MOUG - BOUT URGED — Krause ys Joe Moug, 10 the card «number ' local are‘suggésting for a fistic smarck in the ‘Rear future. Krause, here from Hazen yester- day, said he was ready to meet Moug, Here Goes Your , Eddie Collins steals home in an Sox and the ball ers were so cold and sti nts at the Polo Grounds, Ol Well’Known St. Paul Fireman, “ASSéfts Lumbago Com-' pletely Vanished With Tan. | lac Treatment. “Tanlac has built me up twenty | pounds, and I am now eating, sleep- | ing and feeling better than in years,” declared John” A. . Lehman,| 794 Jackson St. Paul, Minn., well | | known stationary fireman for the ! | Great Northern, Railroad, recently. “I was suffering from lumbago and just full of aches and| so sore and stiff it would} kill me to bend‘ over,- My ys bothered me a great deal, and the sharp knife-like pains in my j back mide me suffer almost beyond endurance. I lost weight and was‘ | weak, and run-down all over, exhibition game between the W | Fans wore overcoats and the | they could hardly throw. 2 | lumbago has gone away entirely, I/ A ROUGH AS FOOTBALL This action photo taken during the Junio Jacrosse game at Stevens Institute, heads or hearts. is net for soft hands, Hoboken, , shows the game WELL, WELL! | The loser at each hole doffs an article of clothing. 1 at about the 17th ho! + found it quite necessa Golf Club, Long {sland. STRIP GOLF NOW! It’s best to have That's whe hirley Vernon, or the continuance of the game. Notice that Nelle lost her shoes and stockings. |- E |whése backers believe he Kraus j Kraw been matched tom | Johnr isin 2 romoter Jack Hurley wrote toc | was off because of Knauff's thumb. RUTH CONTINUES an beat »| HITTING STREAK ed the Yankees to make it | straight from Boston, 4 to 3. Ruth came up in the ninth with [the bases full, one out and New York needing one run for a tie. | Piercy pitched three straight balls and followed with two strikes. Ruth then hit fax over Center Fielder Col- iMins’ head, scoring Haines and Witt. | Ruth, hitting featured the game, jas he hit a trible, a double and a | single, scoring two of New York's jruns and knocked in the other two. eby given that been made in the terms of that ‘ain OATS & d_ by i dated June ord in the office of the Register Deeds of Burleigh count kota on the 8th day of June, 1916, at 2 o'clock p, m., and recorded in book 140 of Mortgages, on page 71, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in such mortgage and hereinafter described at the front door of the court house in the city of Bismarck, in the county of | Burleigh and jstate of North Dakota at the hour of 10 o'clock. in:the fore- noon on the 31st day of Muy, 1923, to satisfy. the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. Tne | premises described in such mortg: (and which will be sold to satisfy the {- |same is described as follows, to-w ‘the south half (81%) of the north- east quarter (NE% 1), the whole ot ithe northwest quarter (NW%) and \the whole7of the southeast quarter (SE%) .ot section th: rey four (34) \in township one hundred and thirty- |nine (139) north, of range seventy- 'nine (79) west, of the 5th P.M, and i containing, according to the United States Government Survey thereof, four hufidred acres of land, more cr less. at. said above described tracts of land or any part thercof is not-part.of the homestead of said C. ©, Hibbs or-of any member of his family. The above described land all being situated in Burleigh county, Phere will pe due on t the date of tne sale the to the costs and’ ¢ penses of sale ine MAY, Mortgagee. BISMARCK GRAIN. (Furnished by Ru M Bismarck, April No. 1 dark northern . 1 northern spring . Xo, 1 amber durum No. 1 red durum APOLIS GRAIN. . April 23.-—-Wheat re- ceipts, cars, compared with 207 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern, $2.26% to . 1 dark northern fancy . 1 dark nort orn, $1.28% to $1.36%; May, $1 July, $1.281%; September, § Corn No. 3 yellow, 76 to 77 cents. Oats No. 3 white, 417% to cents. & Barley, 55 to 63, cents. Rye No. 2, 81 cents. Flax No. 1, $2.41% to $3.44". TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE—Household furnishing practically new, good bargain. 622 | brd ‘St, 4-23-46 FOR SALE—Cheap. Ford Truck. New wheels and tires, dition. Phone 678W. A CHANCE to buy good furniture cheap. 'Must-be' sold this week on | account of Teaving city. 980-tth St 2nd Flodr, 543K, 4-23-41 | WANTED—Sales . ladies, apply at’ once. Mr, Frazicr, Hotel McKen- nie, 4-28-1t FOR RENT--5 room modern house | furnished or will also rent part’ of house if desired. Also 7 soo bungalow for sale, cheap. Write Tribune. 447. + 4,23-Bt | CITY BOARD ORGANIZES | Marmarth, April 23—At its first! mecting Monday ‘afternoon, the City Board re‘organized for the succeed- | | | my_ twentie: i feel right “T often heard that Tanlac was a great blood purifier and system builder and now I know it is. The can now bend over and straighten | up as easy as a schoolboy, and I am} ay strong and energetic as I was in| For making “# man nlae can’t be beat.” lac is for sale by all good drug- jxists, Accept no substitute. Qver 87-million bottles sold, ing two years. Chas. Nath, elected | | as city president presided at the! jed as follows: meeting and the Board was organiz- | Bert King, comm sioner of water and sewer, E. M. | Middleton, commissioner of streets »phomore interclass |for 5-year-old Lucill ja local hospital. * | P, Allison, comni 149.01, in addition | Excellent con-! and sidewalks and public health, C, ioner of finance, [and Harry Shields, commissioner of | fire and poli ‘MINOT GIRL, 5, 1S VICTIM OF STREET FIRE Lucille Rhud Di , Pushed in Bonfire, She Said Minot, April 23,—Injuries sustain: fell into a bonfire re Rhud, daugh- | ter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Rhud of Minot, who died Sunday morning at The girls hands, arms, face and upper portions of het body were badly burned by the flames. Daddy, 'm burning up,” screamed i the daughter as she rushed a the street from the bonfire to he home, her flaming clothing being fanned by the wind. “The boys put me into the’ fire,” the little girl exclaimed, her father said, when he questioned her as to how the accident happened. Not until he carried the girl into the house and laid her on the bed did Mr. Rhud become aware of the fact that the victim of the accident was his own daughter. a [ GITY NEWS Baby Girl Mr. and Mrs. Fred Seallon of Wing are the parents of a baby daughter born Wt the St. Alexius hospital Sat- urday, Not Seriously Injured Bobbie Murphy, son of Mr. and Mrs, J. W. Murphy, who was injur- ed when some lumber fell on him while he and a group of children were playing hide and seek in the lumber which is being used to con- struct. the Hughes Apartment is reported not to have been seriously Hingured as was feared at first. Boliby w: hiding under some lumber which was loosened and fell | upon him when some of his play- mates “walked over it. Alexius Hospital Miss Evelyn Hoover of Dawson, J. W. Bull of city, Miss Alice ( of Mandan, M. Hl. Cook and Miss Anna Judt of city, and Kasper Schafer of Glen Ullin have entered the SI Alexius’ héspital for treatment, M Frank Gabel and baby girl of « Miss Dorothy Huber of c: Anna C. Westin of Irwin Tschaekofski liam Marland of city,’ and James Hardy of Sentinel Butte hay. been discharged from the hospital. Mer 0° cde Nuelta Ha- A vana filler ed and mellowed in wooden casks.Wrap- _ ped in .im- spel by Bismarck Grocery Co. ical sii ais ii ai ann bas si Every manufacturer appreciates, in some degree, the importance of helping the retailer sell his product. And yet in,many instances that degree is very small. It,ean hardly be compared in importance — so thinks q certain type of manufacturer — with selling the prod- uct to the dealer. It is nothing short of a.false assumption, unsound and untrustworthy, to think that merely stocking up the dealer with a product constitutes effective distribution. Effort of that kind, it is true, may dispose of a lot of goods, but it does not.sell them. Unless the consumer comes in prepared or disposed to buy them'they will re- main non the shelf of the dealer, re-orders will bei impos- sible. ¢ ‘and the \ whole e product will bea‘ be a failure. The safest alternative is for the manufacturer to create a consumer demand through Advertising. This will help the dealer move the goods, and then he will order more. ‘Adiartising | is as much abasic part of ra business of * the manufacturer of any specific trade-marked product as is ‘production and distribution. It is not something that can be considered merely as an expense to be cur- - tailed to the minimum. It is a creative influence which, more than any other thing after the merit of the prod- uct, determines the extent of the consumer demand. .. Too often the manufacturer thinks of his advertising as a clever means of impressing the dealer with the de- sirability of stocking up with his goods, and he does enough to.accomplish that effect, and then expects the dealer to. move the goods. This is a.mistaken use of advertising and. it’ quickly reacts upon the manufac- turer. It is the business of the: dealer to provide the goods * which the pu public demand. “He would be ‘be’ > foolish to do otherwise, and would soon cease to be 2 be a “dealer It i is the business of the manufacturer — meaning specific- ally, the manufacturer of a trade-marked article, er one that might be trade-marked—to create a. consumer de- mand by means of Advertising. Published by the Bismarck ‘Tribune, in co-operation wiete The American Association at Advertising Agencies RR TT IUVTUOACECOLECLOCE AATEC 00 CRRAETAUAUEOEOUUGSOOUEOG HARE UPROAR z