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Break Tie by Defeating the Cleveland Indians, Six to Five Chicago, May 4,— The Detroit Tigers broke the tie for first place in the | Cleveland India American featine t B, and fou way to the top rh their vietory into Speakers’ Cle sing in third, Loui giving: the won on the uming the f the inter-borough tt, Giant world walloped out of the cy" Wil hit his sixth home- min of the year with on@ on for Philadelphia and won the game for the Quakers ever Bo: n, 6 to 4. Jim Bottombley’s two hits scored three buns for dt. Louis and the Cardinals defeated Chicago, 8 to 2. Grover Alexander, veie of the Cubs, is showing wonderful control this year, Me has pitched four c 1 innings, without walk ing an op nt Geor I ns of th Red So: doing some heavy hitting these days. He hy perfect day at bat against Hasty of the Athletics, cracking: out three hits in three times at bat and ran his average to A426, See | STANDIN oe ICAN ASSOCI W Louisville 9 Kan c 6 s au 6 Colun 8 Milw 6 Toledo a Minneapoli Indianapolis 5 Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia 6 Cincinnati. een 4 Brooklyn AMERICAN LEAG A Pet. Detroit Ges cau sal 688 New York 10 667 Cleveland 10 6 2 Philadely ett 248 Boston (is G38 Washington qo 8) —_—_—_—_—_— RESULTS |. ICAN ASSOCIATION. 6; Indianapolis 4 Toledo 19; Louisville Kans ity-Minneapolis, postpon- ed, rain. Milwaukee-St. Paul, postponed, rain, NATIONAL LEAGUE, Pittsburgh 3 Cincinnati 1. St. Louis 3; Chicago 2. Brooklyn 11 New York 6, Philadelphia Boston 4. ‘AN LEAGUE. Chicago 3. St. Detroit Cleveland 5. New Yo: Washington 2. Boston 3; Philadelphia 1. WESTERN LEAGUE. St. Joseph 7; Denver 6. Des Moines 4 Oklahoma Cit EST COLDS... ae KS VAPORVBA Deer 17 Million Jars Used Yearly Sioux City, rain, js reeogn! ost n xterininator for Rats, Mice, Ants, . Cockroaches and Waterbugs. vy to theso ae yn St : Vermilion, U., May 4. Just side of this little town, on his splen- | ‘aid e estate, Johnny Kilbane, {icing of all featherweights, is train- | ing busily’ for an active summer of | fighting. Two fights seem certain ~~ those | lot of attention to all that has been \ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SAY JOUNNY KILBAD | STACK ON THE A PLOW. ILS DAT BOT’ 2AT POLI ¢ HOW JOHNNY Has! MANY CHAMPIONSHIP ROM OPPONENTS. | FAMOUS RIGHT JAW. JOHNNY IS RON RIGHT, | ACTING AS} | By NEA Service, Eugene Criqui and Johnny Dun- But before delving into John- daily life during his training period, it is well to give you, once 1, his own thoughts con- New Yo “Frankly,” Johnny told the writer for The Tribune, “I haven't paid a said, “But gét this straight: I have never refused and never will ‘refuse to mect Dundee so long as I am in the game. All talk to the cont is rot. |The only time I was slated to meet him, since our fight 10 years ago, I was ready, but \something came up on his part to prevent: it. Signed for Criqui. “But as matters stand now, I have signed to meet Criqui in New York on June 2, That fight is all set. 1 am in training for it, And moreover, ! I am working for Tom O'Rourke, and will play square with him. What- ever he says, I will do. If O'Rourke tells me to fight Dundee, I will do so, if my terms aré met. I don't give a rap who is put against me. I never did, and I never will.” Johnny would like to Criqui fight go through on its se! ule, there is no doubt about that. Then he will be willing and anxious to meet Dundee—at 126 pounds there also is no question about that. It is diffieult to see how Chairman Muldoon of the New York Commis- sion can say arbitrarily that Kilbane must meet Dundee first and then Criqui, if O’Rourke wants Kilbane to meet Criqui first and then Dun- Boston > (“PLL FIGHT ANY OF ’EM,” $ CHAMPION KILBANE cludes some ‘of the richest tena this part of the country. ‘his ‘ground is being cultivated, and next ‘year he will ‘have a healthy crop of | potatoes, tomatoes, radishes, and the struck gas which he uses. He also has his own electric light and water | pumping systems. In other words, it is a complete little world, and one ch will find gohnny every sum- ner for the rest of his life, Kilbane fondly hopes to retire from the game this year. He adds with a chuckle that he has said this before, but that this time he means ‘it. Al Ziemer will probably be the ‘yecipient of the title should this }come true. And Johnny is schooling Jhim to protect it in true Kilbane | fashion. PRIZE ESSAY ‘The prize winning essay on “Parks itor Bismarek, Where? When? How? written by Vera Person of m Moore school reads as fol- Since cities no longer are built round forums or market place it has become necessary for groups to and find places for them- with their neighbors; get new ideus and a better standard of what is acceptable for those gher up” Only too often’ do’ our American villages grow into great cities before remembering to set a- side a place for a community cen- ter and real estates have swallow- The time to guard against the re- | | | \ like that which threw 4,000,000 Americans out of work in 1921 during just such periods of business expansion as the country now ex- ed up the last vacant lot. When periénces, according to the report the family stays together then we of the commitee on Unemployment have wholesome conditions. We und Business Cycles appointed by must have parks for Bismarck. The Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Com- work is done by groups not merce, in his capacity -as-Chairman of the President’s Conference on Un- employment. After four months of exhaustive study, the committee, headed by Owen D. Young, president of .the General Electric Company, has re- ported to Secretary Hoover that un- less the individual business man in- forms himeslf constantly as to the rounds must be st essential is a inite plan. here are three classes of parks; first we have the large natural here we class Sibley Island {rest of the vegetables that go to ‘make a successful garden. id A Has Own Gas Plant, Guar ga He has drilled his ground and ee currence of a business depression | €V' Pitfalls eeiatecanae’ ot inst cecgnacet HERBERT HOOVER ‘ his particular commodity line he in- ably will be led to over-buying |again at high prices, and that means a dangerous and costly slump, drain- iz the dollars earned in “good times.” General measures recommended to aid the business man in safeguard- iag himself from inflation include control of credit expansion by banks and the Federal Reserve system, control of private construction dur- ing peaks of building, avoidance of competition with private business during boom times by control of governmental construction, and per- ‘haps the institution of unemploy- ment reserve funds. The committee’s report asks for comment by business men on the findings it has made public. It urges enlargement of such current FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1928 Business Cycles Committee Reports — Expansion Period Is Proper Time To of Depression i OWEN D. YOUNG Current Business, issued by the De- partment of Commerce, and it ple: for full co-operation from the busi ness public in the matter of furnish- ing governmental authorities with full and up-to-date figures on com- modity stocks. Besides the Chairman, the investi- gators included Joseph H. Defrees, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce; Mary Van Kleeck, of the Russell Sage Founda- tion; Matthew Woll, vice-president of the American Federation of Labor; Clarence M. Wooley, presi- dent of the American Radiator Com- pany, and Edward Eyre Hunt, secre- tary of the President’s Conference on Unemployment. Economic ex- perts say that the report points the way toa safer future for the ket- book of every citizen of the » and it atrical work, et ‘y | will fight # these are the many deer, tame nited true state of supply and demand in’ fact-giving organs as the Survey of States. | birds and lesser animals, There are 4 | ngificent oaks and elms inter- i with vines and bitters t, ache Ra rae there, when | swimming. There is large open| values have never been so low as to-| A dpmen. Breaking Foundland to the Azores. In July, and Clark came up the river, | tract of land which can be used forlday in the history of the state, | > = 1919, the British dirigible R-24 estab- only difficulty is the way of| Playground | apparatuses. Whole |g definite plan is our first es- World Reeord in lished a non-stop flight record Hal proach but a pontoon bridge ean| families could cogie here for WEE! ‘i is S, a i + arreee eee at Le iits et Fae ee crise a gavtner to| sential. Second we must have al Crossing Continent) crossing the Atlantic from enst to constructed at very little expense. Dr, Walton of Fargo knows of no j more beautiful sight, than the Mis- souri River cliffs beyond the coun- try club, Here are many Indian sights. The second class is composed of the smaller parks, here we place “Custer Park,” it is within walking distance of people who have no cars. ; Gymnasium apparatus and piles. swings and camp ‘fire grates could {he provided. It is near the swim- park commission elected by the peo- west and return. ple, people with high ideals and who are all working for the same princip- al, There are two ways of getting a park, First by a gift from a citizen. Second by having a park commission levy taxes to buy land for park But a park commission, duly elect- ed, may buy (by Iveying taxes) and direct parks under the law, for the law dpes not give the city commis- find nature. i The third class consists of parks already existing such as the school grounds, and the capitol park with its beautiful landscaping. “When ” The answer to “When” is “Now. It does not mean that a huge expen- sive program should be undertaken at once, but that 1 beginning should he made that ii definite policy presented, a commission (Continued from page 1) cult, because of the 780 gallons of gasoline, 32 gallons of oil and 26 gallons of they weight of more than 5,000 pounds. The officers’ feat established a new non-stop record for all types of air- planes. Caniain John Alcock and Lieutenant Arthur Brown, British aviators, crossed the Atlantic ocean in June, 1919, flying 1,960 miles from English firm of bacon-curers paid $50,000 for the recipe to cure hams by the Brandenburg ‘method. McLAUGHLIN, X ON A HAY-{ O SHOWS HOW , PAT McDON- water carried, a In Iceland men meet, but a man woman. TOMMY SY REL kiss when they rarely kisses a CEN PATH i TOM JOUNNY DOG First steamship to cross the At- lantic was the Britannia, July 4, park ming. pool. chosen, and a system planned, Great | sion power to. levy taxes on parks| New Foundland to Treland. peav Apple Creek would make an ideal| buildings ean be constructed in a few| or direct them, -2 of the United States navy eer: Treone park. The grounds being used for! months, but it takes yenrs to con-| The joy of the doing is the great- 1919, made a flight of 1,219] | Mexico Nas. carta inown to camping, and Apple Creek used for | struet sprubs and trees, Real estate | est joy of all after all. rossing the Atlantic from New wwaere vain has never been known to. | Standing Back of Your Mousetraps A shoe manufacturer whose store in New York City is in a rather out- of-the-way locality recently called the attention of the reading. public to the familiar lines: sure—for this manufacturer is a con- sistent and regular advertiser, and when he has anything to say, he says it through his advertising. It may fairly be assumed that he would not = look for a thriving business in the N best of mousetraps, or shoes, if peo- ple were not told about them as peo- ple except to be told — through ad- vertising. : : ‘ “If a man, can write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a | better mousetrap than his neighbor, | though ‘he build his house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door.” Hasn't “Capitalized” Title, | Johnny, it must be pointed out, is porn American citizen in free d has all the powers of at his command. He doesn't ing about this side of it, s hoped he won't have to ey hibit a test of strength. Moreover, ho hasn't capitalized the title by the- | Of course, people do find out which are the best mousetraps, the best shoes, the best tires, the best break- fast foods, and buy them in prefer- ence to others. For many years people have beaten a path ‘to 'this shoe manufacturer’s door. He has proved the truth of this famous aphorism. : Bot one thing seems certain. He both Criqui and Dundee ! this summ nd to quote him as to ; bouts after that, “why shouldn't I| take on some more as long as 1 am in trim? ! The game little champion, 33 years old, and with a head of hair topped with s! of gray that belie his | husky frame, is only one pound over- | weight. He looks té be in excellent shape, and although he is not given to boasting, nor gven predicting, ‘he still expects to be the champ after his Criqui and Dundee meets. Johnny and his helpers, And ‘people today are pretty well aware that when a manufacturer puts:Advertising back of the thing he makes, he is telling the world that the path to his door,is a broad highway. And where did he publish this quo- tation which he appiies with such pride to his business? , Why, in an advertisement, to be among. them Al Ziemer, Tom McLaughlin ; A e and O'Malley, get up about 6:15 Published by The Tribune in co-operation with The Amer- Pre a m. A light breakfast of eggs and a ican Association of Advertising Agencies. ' as toast follows, and then about six miles on the rond about his large / tract of land. His luncheon, is equally light, and he follows this with.a nap. At 4 p.m the gym workout comes,\then a Mtle road work, and supper. A brisk walk | after supper and bed at 10 o'clock, completes the day. Kilbane’s estate is one of the most beautiful spots in northern Ohio. It is directly. on Luke Brie, and in i