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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1923 PAGE SIX CAPITALS RUN WILD IN GAME WITH “TWINS” Hitting Fever Continues and | Locals Take Seventh Out Of Last Eight Games SOME NICE PLAYS Good Vielding at Times Con- te The Second Series Game acts One-sidedness of ATTE The present series p last time you s baseball in Bis- marck this month. After the series, Bismarck goes to New Rockford ard then Jamestown hefere returning here to play Minot July 4. Boardman will pitch Sunday, The Bismarck baseball elub con tracted a fever in’ Jame vn. It ie persists in Bismarck, Virulent, but plants, for instance, may be developed by our botanists and grown net criow No doetor been called in, Some of hope it continue by in curious desire on art of and we will drive our factories every player to make Sometimes commonly called fever The fever last even | to follow magnetic waves around ing gn the Ie raged. be- Wherever there were receiving sta- cause the Ne Rockford pitchers | gions built and equipped to tap that farted out to counteract it by not | wave, actual power would be tra: giving the Capitals a chanec to hit | mitted to commerce and industry at ball. Wanted to walk them all. | that point. Such a development would But the pitchers found the cure fatal| require international agreement but to the operators, and finally bean its practical development would quick- putting them over. ‘This operation | ly secure the co-operation of every na- proved fatal also. The patients came | HOR u ling In that way the botanist could cut core was 13 to 1. Better luck, the coal bills of the nation until not is promised the “Twins” tonight H ities but the luxuries of tomerrow. ‘The weather man turned chilly breezes on the baseball park last evening while kiddin the folks into a horrible doubt as te whether or not it would rain. It rained first the ball park et i y breezes affected the “Twins pitcher ning nd Ryan who to- xether struggled through a whole inning. They couldn't locate the rubber, Runni passed three and Ryan passed four. Then Ma sion. There is available in that state Pickering went to the mound. The | ¢a@0.0nn horse nower. of a saving bet that may be said of his luck Oe = is that he d his other pitchers. after the season opened an in- ; Start in High fielder and outfielder, th Condon, first man up, went out! ley expected to use him in the out- before Running's wildness beeame| field, When Oates failed he went to acute, Randall walked, and stole] short. He's been — gettin 5 Shanley walked. Dougan] right ale He made a_ nic Running went to the| yesterday when he scooped up Ryan walked Bernier, and] grounder close to second, with ked home. Board hit} Myérs on first, touched the bag went out at the ed out a single Noll y nand | purposes and — Charles Proteus Steinmets, one of the great gen- éuses of the world, came to America an immigrant in the steerage, 34 years from birth, as his father had been before him, but > he brought from Breslau, Germany, a splendid ed- we a os * 7. ss Sun Energy is Boundless if Used by Mankind Intelligently. p ucation, and a mind trained to hard application. ago. He was a cripple | Steinmetz laid the foundations upon which the marvelous development of modern electricity has been built. Every great electrical power plant in America is a monument invented literally hundreds of improvements and adaptations in the use of to his genius. He has the electric current, but the thing that has made his fame world wide is his penetrating knowledge of the fundamentals, his philosophy of civilization, and his sympathy with the needs of humanity. on vast acreage by the farmers, to be burned and turned into energy. It only needs someone to find the proper electro-magnetic wave © hits. Picture a great power plant, fed by some scientific and inexpensive battic “gue, hurling immense, waves of electric power into the air, tuned only the nec Hi may become an actuality. The wider development and use of | ‘water power and its broader distri- bution must come about in a few years. The state of New York alone could cut its coal bill for industrial the use of public ds by jing water tatilities two-t power, even * By CHARLES P. STEINMET IS POSSIBLE for us to heat our houses, cook our food, run Tear great industries, recharge our automobile batteries, and give energy to our radio sets by sun energy. The great source of life on earth—sun power—will be used more fully as mankind is forced by necessity to seck new means of generating heat. More than one way may be found. Crops of new and rapidly growing life were within the reach of all. Such radio distribution of water power also is not merely an alluring vision but ie i by power transmitted by radio. the world, «meen of 34,000,000 tons of coal annually, for you must remember, coal is a very wasteful commodity. A great deal of heat goes up the chimney and a great deal more radiates from boi and pipes and never serves any useful purpose. At present the consumption of fuel New York is $4,000,000 tons yearly. Recent strikes in coal fields and on railroads have shown that neither of them can be relied upon and that the only real solution of the matter is to become independent of them both. Water power developing 1,300,000 horse power is now being used in New York, saving annually 10,000,000 tons of coal. The United States uses 10,000,000 horse power generated by horse power of 50,000,000 more, or a ving of 400,000,000 tons. It would still be necessary to use 100,000,000 tons of coal a year for heating. water, a ing of 80,000,000 tons of coal annually, and there is a latent Must Stop Waste Our present form of government is ap- parently successful for the main reason that United States is a rich country full of great natural resources and we have been able to use them wastefully for many years. The time is coming when we cannot longer use them so recklessly. We must make the best use of what we have. We must do things, bigger and better things than we have ever done before, but we must do them by using ‘intelligence. One of the most wasteful methods we have now for instance and one that is responsible for part of our high prices is the way we have of deliver- ing goods. Some even think that the small retailer will in time awake to find himself passed in the race and that there will be no place in the com. mercial fabric of the nation for him any more. I do not believe that is exactly true. There is certainly a frightful in- efficiency among the individual small scale distributors and a great loss in the high prices that they pass down to the consumer. And I do belicve that either our industrial progress will .o go backward, or else we must adopt the same methods in the field of distri bution that are already being used in Id of production. possibility that efficient distribution on a large scale will wipe out the mass of small distributors unless they, too, become efficient. The elimination of the conservative middle class would spell disaster. i So the small distributor must give earnest attention to keeping down costs. He cannot afford to deliver by old- fashioned methods. ea vantage of the power of electricity, not alone in the proper lighting of his place of business, but in deliveries as well. The electric delivery truck will gut the costs of the distributor, and cut the costs to the He must take ad- 1 ; warns \Ninard Stenmet? Great electrical inventor sees sun-power { and water-power broadcasted by Radio. Humanity must. none food,at lower cost by: more intelligent de usé of coal. But it behooves us to make, the beat and fullest use of such things as electricity has to offer in the present. . It is possible that the future of the world lies in the hands of the botan- ists who will, sooner or later, tell the farmers what erops to grow to gét the most out of the sun’s energy. But the present of the world, ahd particularly America, lies in the intelligent eco- Romical use of what we already have. There is no ultimate benefit to the consumér if the great factory turns out goods at an écorforfital price’ and | ¢ 0 them the delivery charges added to] in the United States every year. Water consumer. It is foolish to merely predict great’ things for the future of electticity while there are so many ways of solving our problems by it now. AVe are on our way to great discoveries as to new and simpler means of | creating electrical ene.gy without the and completed the double play by nd/ whipping the ball to Boardman. rnier scored, Jennings | grounded out to first. The team just} NEW ROCKFORD—CARRINGTON { batte Th inning is a longer stor not to be sto ped this time and opened with a single. Randall sacrificed but his Myers dropped the ball and both he Condon were safe. Sha walked. Dougan walked, and Con- don strolled home. Bernier singh and Randall and Shanley — score: Pickering into the box. Bo: hit a three bagger to right-center and Dougan and Bernier scored, pl | was safe on Rama error. Nord | ed to center. Jennings went out, | Meyers. Condon up punder went through | ABH RPOAE | Kennedy, 3b 41 0 0 8) O| 0 0.2 0 2) auber, If .... Oo t4°4 1! DY (OZ 10. 0 Myers, 1b 0081 Ennis, 2b 0121 Lupe, ¢ 0030 Running, p Pickering, p poe ck ESL eG) Totals 4 1 321 5 5 | cording to COLLINS GOES ’ RIGHT AHEAD | i ~ IN AMERICANS ‘Veteran Still Is King of The} | Keystone Sackers, Rec- | ords Show Collins eman of the White of the ystone the American League so upset the dope who*pictured him an old anding back in awe. Ac- res compiled which inelude games of last dav he has stolen 19 bases, just man, ae lone less than he pilferred for the ~lentire season la ar. By Randall pushed out al, AOE) Tie out oleven’ hits ani i three base hit. Shanley flied to| Condon, ss 5 mes Collins has boosted hi right. The inning was over. Eight | Randall, 9 » from 370 and is pre runs for Bismarck. (Shanley, ao they nae There were only two scores after} Dou! c 0 ¢ that, which in a game like that of | Berni es Bos 0 last evening are not worth speaking | Bowrdman, 1b, 9 about. | Noll If- a The “Twins' H Kennedy was safe when Nord didn't | stop his drive. Lauber sacrificed. Ramage hit a two-bagger and Ken-| nedy scored. That was all, | Tom Jennings, Bismarck’s _big| smiling right-hander, looks like a warm weather pitcher, but last even- | ing looked like he enjoyed the North! Pole breezes. He was in fine form. The game boosted Bismarck's per- centage to nicely sbove the 50-50 mark, It looks like the locals would have to ‘wait for the Minot series | to pass the North City gang, how-| ever. Bismarck has won 7 out of the last 8 games. Kennedy made a pretty, play on Condon in the first inning, when he picked up Conny’s bunt with his bare hand and threw him out by a hair at first. The bleacher fans Kicked on the decision. + Manager Pickering has old-timer and a youngster-in Jude and Ennis. Frank Jude /eavorted in the field for the Cincinnati Nationals for five years, after two years in the As- cored in the first, Nord. ‘ Jennings, p-lf sociation. Cato Ennis, at second, is! nid, Totals ......../31 13 1 Score by innings: New Kockford-Carrington— 100 000 0. Bismarck «+» 881.001) x— x gamee alled end 7th, ¢ Summary—Two base hits, Ramage. Three base hits—Boardman, Randall Double plays —-Laubers to Myers.|Cleven. He also leads in total b: Condon to Boardman, Hits off Running, none, in one-third off Ryan, 3 in two-thirds inning; off Pickering 8 in 5 innings; off Jennings 6 in six innings; off Shanley, none in 1 in Base on balls off Running 3; off Ryant 4; off Pickering 2; off Jen- nings 3; off Chanley none. Struck out, by Jennings 4; by Pickering 1. Wild pitch, Jennings. Sacrifice hits, Lauber, Randall Noll.’ Stolen bases Condon Randall. Time 1:35. Umpire Pleva. MINOT WINS HARD BATTLE Jamestown, N. D., June 9.—James- a 17year-old boy out of Central/town and Minot played a hard game High, Minneapolis. He's mighty fast. Newt Randall continues to’ be the old fox on bases. Manager Shan- ley predicted he'd lead the league in base’ stealing, ahd he may, be right. tae Ramage, the flashy ‘shortstop of the “Twins” made a great stop when he ran beyond second to knock down Nord’s hot grounder. He prevented im extra run, , » Condon has been a delightful. sur- prise in Bismarck. He came here yesterday and though Jamestown {totaled more hits, they were not as long or bunched to advantage. The seore was 6 to 4 for Minot. Hester, Minot’s manager, was sent to the clubhouse for protesting a decision in the third. Dennison hit a, home run. i Score "i ! Minot ’..... ‘ .010 020 012-6 6 1 Jamestown Batteries: Dennison and -Warner; Repola and’ Clafk.” a le Dyeing, Repairing. ‘Call 6 Tailoring. jton .370; J ) | ing the leaders, who have participat- din 30 or more games. He is now Heilmann, of the nues to top the resul- 6, with “Muddy” Ruel, of Washington, the runner-up with 382. Dick Reichle, the former Uni- Mlinois, star, with the Red trailing Ruel with .375. Col- so pressing Wamby of the ourth, {Indians for the honors in sacrifice Wamby is leading with 16, and Collins has 14, Babe Ruth, failed to add to his ring of homers during the past with 107 and in runs < Other leading batter: ored with 42, Burns, Bos- Cleveland Myatt, Cleve 347 8. Ri St. Louis J 36; Severeid, St. Lou Detroit .326; Williams 'Cobb, Detroit . j Philadelp |.331; Haney St, Louis .3: Johnny Mokan, of the Phillies, is ichallenging the leaders in the Na- tional League for the batting honors and along with Jimmy Bottomley, of the St. Louis Cardinals, ate Zach Wheat of Brooklyp and-Char- jley Grimm ot the Pirates an inter- esting ri from .373 to ..390 during the past j week and Bottomley is hitting 383 compared with .3876 a week ago, The {slump and dropped from .424 to .405 but still maintains the leadership, with Grimm the runner-up with .392 011 000 200-4- 8 2 led out a brace of homers and ran } Philadelphia eni \away from Bunny Brief of Kans [City and is also near the top of the pli s of the Am-| Toledo, » < |Dressen, week, but remains out in front with) of ng! . Mokan boosted his mark, | veteran Wheat, suffered a baiting] Cy Williams, of the Phillies, crack™ come to a standstill and we will begin }#hat wilJ ultima: ue aac McInnis, Boston, Roush, Cincinnati ; Neis, yn 343; Barnhart Pittsburgh 1 Kast of Minneapolis is threat- to take the home run lead list. among the batt n Association. I ed nine four bagge is setting the pa is batting in third place with compared with .357 a week ago. Brief has 402 and J. Smith of Toledo, with .385 is the runner-up. Bunny Brief also is leading in total with 105 his blows besides the four baggers including ten doubles has obtain- and three triples. He also leads the} {run getters with 43. Eddie Murphy of Columbus is lead- ing the base stealers with thirteen. Other leading batter Lamar, Combs, L ille .360; E. Murphy, Columbus | Brown, | 7; Campbell, Indi reiber, Columbu Paul 330; M. Shanno ; Hammond, Kan Louisville City .329. gers, 7 to 4, although Manager Cobb rushed 18 players, in~ cluding four pitchers into action, Brooklyn and Cincinnati were not} His training quarters will scheduled to play in the National the big) a League, while the Boston Red Sox |championship fight is to take pl und Cleveland Indian game was called ;2"d_is being built under directions jof Buck Pape, head of his training! he is in the| ving been in! off on account of rain, while Brief; with a dozen.! N. D. STATE LEAGUE Pague ” ietesinaie wll nvemmeccais aMtonts Carr-New Rockford AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ' 2 » Pct! Mandell, both bantan Kansas City .... 789 es a 1844; Krueger Indiana-| Columbus | Minneapolis CAST-OFFS OF Halts St. Louis Chicago, June 9.—Two Giant cast- offs, both twirlers and of the much demanded southpaw type, turned in brilliant performances for their teams yesterday when the New York Nationals went down to their third ; straight defeat due to ineffective pitching. Mike Crengses, pitched the White Sox to vict6ry over the league-lead- ing New York Yankees, 7 to 3, hold- ing down the hard-hitting champions to eight hits, ore a homer by Babe Ruth. The other “Rube” Walberg of Philadelphia relieved Hasty in. the third after St, Louis had scored five runs. and held the Browns scoreless for thé next, six innings, the Athletics winning, 6 to5. This victory. put the | Connie Mack aggregation four full | games. behindthe Yanks. Bagh McQuillan failed to check the this string. to 20, and brought his|rushing Pirates and Pittsburgh de- total base record to 145, which be- jen doubles ard three triples: . Bancroft of the Giants is the best dozen thefts, { Other lending batters: Young, New York .382; Southworth, Boston .364; Frisch, New York .868; Williams,] series with Philadelphia by defeating | round ‘go-with Jack Dempsey, heavy-| to $1.11’ 1-4 and September $1.09 7-8 Day Phone 108 feated New.Xork,9 to 6, putting them R. H. E.' Sides his four bagzers includgy.eley-| a game closer to.the league leaders. / Ware O’Farrell’s hitting practically cinch- un getter. with 45, and Sammy| ed the victory. for Cnicago over Bos- Bohne, of the Reds is showing the|ton, The Cub catcher drove in three wry to the base stealers with a}runs and scored the other himself with a Circuit drive. i . Pet | ‘New York | Pittsburgh GIANTSTURN 5 + Cineinn IN VICTORIES ‘sic: pase \ One Pitches Chicago White; Sox to Victory Other | Phite ! Cleveland {today for 200 s 3 | Indianapolis 7; St, Louisville 4; -Min i | One of the discarded lecchanderss| | | | ! AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 6; St, Louis 5. Washington 7;, De! coit 4. ago 7; New Yok Cleveland-Boston, v N. D. STATE LEAGUE Bismaiek 13; New Rock. Minot 63, Jame town: 4. GIBBONS CAMP ___ |: ‘YS LOCATED] fitine tn tne adgunce led'to 2 ined. — % Then. the’ market Shelby, Mont, Jurle 9.—Tommy | rose in some Betting located in his}before, opening prices. ranged: from 3 to 1. The Senators |weight champion of the world, July! d today put in his time with} July and sparring enough} 4 jhight read w ito keep himself “loosened up,” h Jreal training grind not commencing |self in shape for the big, fight. n in which the worid jeamp. Gibbon jbest of condition, h training right along and only two s will be required to get him- sfle in shape for the big fight. His list of sparring partners, all Bud Gorman, overs mmy Delaney, St. Paul heavyweight; Joc Burl Clifford, heavyweigh | been with the challenger; | Martin Moore, middleweight of St. |Paul; and Bud ‘Taylor and Sammy ‘$450,000 SALE OF BOUT TICKET: Spokane, W. ifor the Dempsey-Gibbons fight at |Shelby, Mont., amount to $450,000 to jdzte, Mike Collins, promoter, an- d here today, He-s | noun aut | WOULD BATTLE FOR NOTHING | Chiengo, “mL, Sune’ 9.—Charity, v! profited to the extent of in the $55,000 fight between ie Leonard and Pinkie Mitchell be given nother chance. Billy Gibson, Leonard’s manager, sent a message from New York today as- serting that Leonard was willing to |¢ome back to Chicago and box for {nothing for the benefit of the west side boys club, which was to have profited by the bout two weeks ago. | MARKET NEWS. | WHEAT TAKES UPWARD TREND Partly Responsible Chicago, June — Srabaltey: aspects of the governinent crop feport to- gether with’ heavy damage said to have been done by. excessive. rains in Kansas, and Oklahoma brought @bout at the outset a decided ad- erate rédctiol esto higher than St. Louis made a’clean sweep of the | traitiing quarters here for the 16-11-2 to -15-8-cents higher, July $1.11 fp / 000. Around steady with Frida d close or, 10 cents lower than the av-;25 cents lower. Bulk prices at close and| who} Minneapolis, June 9.—-Wheat re- ceipts, 138 cars, compared with 134 Cash No. 1 northern, §1.131-8 to $1.23.1-8; No.1 dark northern spring} : id he re-| choice to fancy, $1.30 1-8 to $1.361-8: (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) i jeeived a request from New York! good to choice, $1.23 1-8 to $1.29 1-8; ordinary to good $1.15 1-8 to $1.22 1-8; July, $1.141-8; September, $1.143-8. | No Corn No. 2 yellow, 77 cents; oats|No. 1 mixed durum No. 3 white, 403-8 to 413-8 cents;|No, 1 red durum . barley, 52 to 60 cents; rye No. 2,'No. 1 flax .. 681-8 to 685-8 cents; flax No. 1,}No, 2 flax . $2.83 1-2 to $2.85'1-2, No. 1 rye i a ST, PAUL LIVESTOCK: , ? So, St. Paul, June 9.—Cattle re-}|_ Dance at Riverside tonight. | r which ended in a free for all, may | Government Crop Report Is; livery methods. —_; times and cut his costs to a minimum. Through its use prices to the ultimate a purchaser will drop. We are hearing the edges of a new geological era, Codl and oil are not going to last forever in quantities tha make their present wastful and extra- vagant use possible, Even water power is not so plentiful as many suppose. When all the water power of the United States is put to work from the smallest static head to the greatest cataract, the horse power produced will only equal that now produced by the 900,000,000 tons of coal consumed power alone will never give us enough, energy to maintain our present indus- trial life and leave any room fory growth. We have got to make the fullest and best use of the energy we have at our command while experimenting with new ways of producing more. One of the first ste] aiting to be taken is . economy in distribution, 66 love America,” says Dr. Charles I P. Steinmetz, the great scientist and philosopher of Sche- \ nectady. “It took me, a crip- : pled boy, and gave © me a chance. I have faith in it and, through : my electrical inven- tions, I want to help the America of the Le, , future. ~ ‘ : 4 - é “We will succeed them make them so costly that only a ivi few can possess them, soonest. by, giving Heat and the ability to move rapidly || Everyone a chance. from place to place are the two great eas) necessities of progress in this climate. Prices must be lower, ; But much of the problem in delivery || the waste of industri- , of goods to the house holder liég not al life must be less. fi alone in speed, but in speed at small $5 pee i i cost and with the minimum of repairs. || We must do things in I see in the wider use of the clectric the most economical : I delivery truck a very great step inzhe ” ght direction. By its use the small way. strihutor will keep pace with the | es pe ee 10. On a subsequent bulge] week ago. Better grades of grain- ' F fed fat steers, yearlings and she- 23 stock steady to strong. Others most- i CHICAGO: LIVESTOCK ly 25 cents lower. Cutters, canners touched $1.115 Chicago, June 9 Hog receipts 9,-| and bologna bulls 25 to 50 cents low- er. Stockers and feeders steady to Top $6.80. Estimated hold-] of market: Fat steers and yearlings, - r 7,000, $7.50 to $7.90. Fat she-stock, $7.40 Cattle receipts 500. Compared | to $7.50. Canners and’ cutters, $: i with a week ago) strictly choice] to 3.50. Bologna bulls, $4 to $4.2. : i and better] Stockers and feeders, $5 to $7. Calves 10 to 20 cents | receipts none. Market compared with higher. Lower grades unevenly weak | week ago veal calves, $1/or more low: 50 cents down. Lower gradejer. Best lights, $7.50 to $8.50 o heef steers and yeurlings 25 to 50] higher, cents off. Extreme top matured] Hog receipts, 1,300. Market aver steers $11.25. Best .| aging about steady with Friday. Bus. Calves uneven. Largely 40 to 75| mixed lights and butchers to packer, , cents lower. Plainer grades stockers| $6.40. Rough or heavy packing ioe unevenly lower. Country demand] at $5. Stags, $4. Pigs, $6. 4 4 slow, Sheep receipts, none. Market com- j Sheep receipts 4,000 Receipts most | pared with week ago, all classes clos. ‘ direct. «et for the week | ing about steady. ; lambs and yearlings 25 to 60\ cents a ambs $14,00 to $14 McKenzie Orchestra. a . MINNEAPOLIS FL/ MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR. Minneapolis, June 9.—Flour un- changed. Shipments, 49,422 barrels. Bran, $22.50 to $24, a year ago. . BISMARCK GRAIN Bismarck, June 9, 1923. No. 1 dark northern . No. 1 northern spring . . 1 amber durum + $1.07 - 1.02 86 ceipts, 200. Market. compared with | McKenzie Orchestra. | If you want a cool drink insist on GREEN RIVER The snappy Lime Drink “CP Brewnte’s Root Beer | ‘Aunt Nel?’ at \ It's G a. ] { lell’s Ready Punch Maker In all Fruit Flavors, a Gineen a ‘or Home Use. ‘With a Mild ‘Twang. ‘At. all Fountains and Stores, ~ Ask your grocer. - American Fountain Supply & Product & Distributors of the Famous Green Polar Fouritains, "3 Fixtures—Glassware—Supplies. 818 Robert Street Saint Paul, Minnesota —— — (EBB BROTHERS ~~ yer ri "NIGHT PHONES 246-887