The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PROCESSION INNATIONALS | CONTINUES Cincinnati All Turn In Victories The cing in the Chieazo, June procession pnal 1 » Pitts- id Phil- | ouis and Chicago lost when New Yor Cincinnati won. oc #, INTENDS TO SHIP TO His’ FARM IN OTAH JACK DEMPSEY AND HIS” 10,000 BULL WHICH HE Jack and His Four-Footed Friends JERRY, A BULL TERRIER, AND Logo, A TIMBER WOLF, ARE PLAYMA! Rain prevented Boston’s game with Brooklyn. It was tho eighth consecutive vio tory for the Giants, The Quaker made noble pretentions for eight in- pings ang then flopped in a manner as flat as a flap-jack, six to three Pittsburgh has had an easy time with St, Louis. ‘vhe team sup posed in the pre-season dope to keep the Pirates out of second place, The Pirates used three of their best pitchers and killed ow a ninth in- ning rally to win, 7 to “Bubbles” Hargrave made a bit contribution to another Cincinnati victory over Chicago, making the winning run of a 14-inning battle, four to three, by knocking the pill into the bleachers. ‘The day fore his home run blow was what rea won for the Reds. The Reds now have settled the third place contra versy. Olg Jack Quinn, scored another per | ona] triumph over the Yanks. He had lost to them only once since Mil ler Huggins sent him to the Red So two years ago. With the help of , Fewster, another Yankee castotf, | Quinn scored a triumph over league champions three to on Philadelphia crushed four W: ton pitchers, winning 16 to By Mike Brady j Yank lead was cut down to five | Western Open Champion game | Sometimes it strikes me as non- Ceveand defeated the St. Loui sical for a professional or any- ® fo 1. b else to try to teach another it closeq its White Sox series | y r how to putt. by settling the controversy over | There are experts, amateur and leadership of the second division, | professional, who can go out and de- winning seven to six ard sticking. | monstrate how any shot between tee TESS and green should be played, but MG SAG (when it comes to the putting end | STANDINGS [for the game most of them are erra- —————_—_—-- aye | tic. Walter Hagen this last winter New York | Pittsburgh {3 Cincinnati Chicago Brooklyn amateurs who could give the tep- Seuauia notch professionals cards and spade Boston on putting. But even in their case nidadelahiny 3 [there is al the lurking suspi ' oy cion that th ight not be so good AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. with the putter if they were top- eeins 8 notchers, playing under the severe 18 | mer strain of championships and Louisville Columbus .. Ind Milw: Minneapoli Toledo LEAGUE, jful putting and he his off re Putting Is Trick Golfer Must Learn For Himself ind spring had a stretch of wonder- always has been 1 good putter, but even he wi:i have I have seen third and fourti-rate that a might lizings und there wasted here the dif- putt mean all \Gibbons, Like Criqui, Always Been Able To Put ’Em To Sleep By Wilson Ross Wie ek: NEA Fight Expert 39 22 shelby, Mont. June 27.—Tommy | 27 pbons, who fights Jack Dempsey] 29 on July 4 in’ this western boom- St. Louis .. 31 town, has been a ring-fighter for 11 Detroit 33 years, but it wasn't till the last ci 30 |four years of his career that he de- 34 veloped into a knockout fighter. 33 And there you have a startling! ror parallel to the case of Eugene Cri-! AMERIC. SOCIATIO} qui, the doughty little Frenchman, Kansas City 6: St. Paul 5. who s! i the greatest fistie up- Louisville 5; Toledo 2. set of many moons when he knock- Columbus 14; Indianapolis 9. Jed Johnny Kilbane cold in the arena Milwaukee 7; Minneapolis 6. jat the New York Polo Grounds and grabbed off the world’s feather- NATIONAL LEAGUE. weight crown. Pittsburgh 7; St. Louis For this Criqui, like Gibbons, had New York 6; Philadelphia 3, I been a fighter for many years be- Cincinnati 4; Chicaga 3 (14 in-]| fore he developed into a knockout nings). puncher. Criqui had been merely a Boston-Brooklyn, rain, | AMERICAN LEAGUE, Cleveland 9; St. Louis 1. Philadelphia 16; Washington 7. Boston 3; New York 1. Detroit 7; Chicago 6. ~ JAMESTOWN HERE TODAY Bismarck and Jamestown open a baseball series this evening at the local park, The game ‘today and the rest of the week, according to pres- ent plans, will be called at 6:15 p.| m. , ‘The Jamestown team is in fine shape and going fast now, and the series is to be a battle for \ second place. : Lafe Safro, wil umpire the series. abihe Batre, Wee @ BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Known all over the Northwest for Quality @ MAIL US YOUR FILMS ©, MOTHER, 84, BY BILL BREITENSTEIN. NEA Service Writer. Great Falls, Mont., June 27—Jack Dempsey will step into the ring at Shelby on July 4 with the blessing of Mrs, John Coyle, octogenarian of Peru, Ind. S “Mother” Coyle, 84 years young, en route to Seattle from her home in Hoosier land, came 177 miles out of her way to wish the champion] luck. 2 Sitting in the shade of the old poplar grove, planted years and years ago by old Brwer Volk, Mrs, Coyle ‘watched Jack work out, She's a firm believer in athletics. GOES OUT OF ! WAY TO WISH JACK LU! THE CHAMPION AND “MOTHER” COYLE ference between winning and losing a championshp. I can say about putting, however: The man who will learn to hit his putts with all the firm- ness that the nature of the putting nis surf. will allow, and who will keep his body absolutely still during the stroke, much more chance of yecoming a good putter than one who allows his body to move with the ‘kward and forward swing of the putter. Some golfers use a wrist stroke almost entirely in putting and some e ita still-arm, pendulumlike roke; some stand firmlyson both feet and some set themselves well forward on their left foot. To my way of thinking, it is entirely up to the individual to choose what to him is the most natural way to d and to use his putter, Putt your own natural w don’t sway, study the green to make up your mind whether it is fast or slow, then try to think the ball is voing into the hole and your chances of becoming a good putter are at least fair. 1 tapper who outpointed his man un- til the last two years of his ring care Then he suddenly broke forth with a hay-making wallop that left a trail of victims helpless on the canv: Criqdi’s string of kayoes is hardly as impressive as that of Gibbons, who, like Criqui, will go into the ring for his bigest battle very much the under-dog in the dope. + No Two Alike Gibbons has fought 37 battles in the t three years and has won all but four of them by the kayo route. Before that “his sleep-wallops were only about six in all in eight years in the ring. So naturally the first question I, put to Gibbons on landing here was how he accounted for ‘is sudden blossoming out as_a kay# battler. 1 CK A family of husky boys testifies to that, “We always had the gloves and the punching bags and the dumb- bells in our home,” she says. “One of my sons, had he lived, would have been about as big as Mr. Dempsey.” Jack ‘showed “Mother” Coyle all about his camp. A photographer snapped: him hg was pointing out to her some of. the signts at Demp- seyville. RASS SS “Mr. Dempsey, I am stre you're going to win,” “Mother” Coyle told thim as she ‘sniq goodby. “And I’m going to pray hard for you.” ee and he told me that it was bee American fighters’ style of putti TES”, had asked Criqui the same question before this big battle in New York, | USC | he had learned the American sysiem | of infighting and had copied the the shoulder and body. into his punches instead of merely tapping his rivals, With Gibbons the answer was dif* ferent. Said Tommy: “Until four go I was fighting under the | style and system of another fighter, my brother, Mike. His favorite blow is the right cross over the othcr| fellow's guard aricr feinting his| rival into a lead. Loses Only One Decision “But one day I was up in the Uni- versity of Minnesota medical college lot of *human| where they had a bodies d cted to show the dif- ferent part and muscles and I be- gan to realize that no two human bodies were built exactly alike and that the blow that might be fine for one fighter ‘to use wouldu’t be as effective for another, even if that other were his own brother. “I found that Mike's favorite blows got my body out of alignment and that I didn’t get the force be hind them I should. I confirmed | this by studying Mike’s fighting | Posses as shown in his pictures and I found that those poses didn’t come natural to me. They were’ forced when I assumed them, “So I began to work out the blows that came natural to me. I had been told before that that I could develop a knockout punch, that I had the power to deliver haymakers, but I just laughed for my knockouts had been so few in all my’ years: of fighting. “But when I began to work out the blows that came natural to me, I be+ gan to fee! the power. I could put in to them. I found that my left hand was the ene with which I could do the most damage. I learned it was best to hold my right in reserve and use it for defensive purposes and to finish up the job after my left got my rivals in distress, “And thus I developed the knock- out stuff.” The only times in the last three years that Tommy, has failed to knockout his rivals were two battles with Billy Miske, who was in dis- tress on both occasions, one with Bartley Madden and his fight with Harry Greb in New York in the spring of 1922, the only engagement in Tommy’s whole career in which he lost the decision, either by referce’s or newspaper verdict. ¢—__ ._______ Billy Evans Says | co Of allthe major sports, golf is per- haps the least strenuous. As some- one has said there is no age limit to it. It can be played from the cradle to the grave. Golf is more a sport of relaxation than one involving strenuousity. It is a tonic for the tired business man, Incidentally athletes ‘who star in more strenuous sports often mix in a little golf to keep them from going stale. eo 8 8 Of late years golf has taken a strong hold on a majority of major league ‘ball players. Some of the stars of the diamond play an excel- lent game. Most of them are long hitters. A-weakness on the greens is the prevailing fault of most of the star ball players who have taken up golf. They like to hit them. The. short game Jacks appeal, consequent-” ly suffers. During the last two or three years golf has stirred up a lot of agitation in major league baseball circles. On some clubs it has been rumored. that golf came in for more consid- ‘ration than baseball. That the players paid more attention to their | ]'score for.18 holes of morning play ‘on the golf course than their batting average in the afternoon's ball game. oc acys In fact some managers took the stand that golf was detrimental to during the major league season. The objection was not raised “because Jit was thought that the game itself was harmful but rather on the grounds that 18 holes of golf in the stamina of the player from the ball game, Some managers have gone:-so.| far as even to place a ban on‘golf. - eo aan Apparently Manager Tris Speaker of the Cleveland club doesn’t také’ such an attitude. During the first two months of the campaign Speak- er slumped in his hitting, got away | of their titles. | | more than any other sport numbers | among |the cup he is jlift or play without, being the’ best interests of a Ball player} morning tended to tale much ,of the, to a bad start. Instead of being well over the .300 mark as 1s customary jwith khim, he has been under that {charmed figure most of the time. | Naturally I was interested the other iday when I read that Speaker, in |order to brighten up hts batting eye jand help his timing of the ball, was ‘playing nine ‘holes of golf every |morning as the required tonic. It jis an interesting fact that his batting |has perked up considerably, since he began playing nine holes of golf |- | regularly each morning. | A number of the champion fight- ers are strong for golf. Jack Demp sey plays a lot of it, although they | do say that Walter Hagen and Gene |Sarazen need have no fear of the champion heavyweight grabbing any Which mefely proves that golf its devotees the shining lights, the champions of other sports. There is a question constantly arising on the putting green, which seems to be complicated with vari- ous definitions and rulings. Two players are about to putt, one is ly- ing nearer the cup than the other and in a direct line. One: player says “the ball must be lifted to al- low the other player to hole out.” The other player says the ball must remain where it is, and if the one ho is further from the hole, hav- ing the honor to putt first, should strike the ball between his ball and penalized a stroke. What is the correct ruling for this pl The above situation depends fully on whether it is medaYor , match play. In medal play before putting you may ask the player to lift or play, as he may choose, when the hall iv nearer to the hole, or he may asked. However,’in medal play if your ball strikes that ‘of your opponent, you are penalized one stroke. Also his ball, if struck, must be replaced. In match play if your ball strikes that of your opponent you do not incur a penalty and he may replace his ball or not as he chooses, before another stroke is played. - Is it correct to have the player watch his ball in the event that your putt will strike his ball, with the lea of having him push his ball to one side for fear it will be struck? LIFE AINT \ WORTH LIVIN’ _WilhouT T BY WM. PHILIP SIMMS. NEA Service Writer. Wounds laid open by the World War are not healing. They have only turned inte sores, with nerves ex- posed and in danger of becoming chronic. Europe and the world is farther from peace today than they were a year ago and much farther from peace than they were the day the armistice was signed in November, of All the elements for bringing on a crash of terrifying proportions are present in Europe. I have just landed baek in Amer- ica after visiting 12 different Euro- pean countries, where I talked with presidents and chancellors, prime ministers and dictators, generalissi- mos, business men and just plain folks, and what I heard—not al- ways for publication—from all these is enough to make your flesh creep. There is scarcely a country in Europe where the people are not in a ferment of unrest. Before the war, Europe had a “Balkans”—a troublesome little war- breeding“section down in its south- eastern corner. Now all Europe is a Balkans, The principal reason why hostilities do not commence at once is that most of the powers are afraid to make the first move, because of their size, or internal conditions, and the rest do not think the moment propitious. «Europe is like a room full of big and Kttle burglars quarreling over a small amount of swag. The little fellows are afraid to start anything but if somebody throws a brick at the lamp anq puts out the light, they are all ready to pitch in, hoping, in the general melee, to get away with It is not correct to have him watch his ball to eliminate the dan- ger of your ball striking his, be- cause, if during medal play, he should move ‘his ball while yours is in motion, he is penalized one stroke. PREDICTS TWO MILLION COAL OUTPUT IN N. D. (Continued from Page One) believe that it is the duty of every patriotis citizen in North Dakota to use coal mined in North Dakota, and let his good North Dakota dollar go into a North Dakota bank for the use_of North Dakota farmer indus- try and tradesman. “Put your shoulders to the wheel,” to urged, “and during the coming months North Dakota will turn out more than 2,000,000 tons of coal and we will see the first steps taken toward the development of lig- nite coa} in North Dakota, its greatest potential asset.” INCORPORATIONS Articles of incorporation filed with the Secretary of State include: Wixom Coal Company, Columbus, N. D.; capital stock $30,000; incor- porators, R. J. Wilson, A. H. Truax D. L. Truax., Wilton Ukranian, Building and Land Co. Wilton; capital stock $5,000; incorporators, Mike Gre- goruk, Mike Garousky, Peter Zohor- odny, all of Wilton. Donnybrook = Mercantile _—_ Co. Donnybrook; capital stock $50,000; incorporators, H. J. Schmidt, P. A. Johnson, Donnybrook; G. C. Schmidt Ft. Benton, CORKS - Lift Off with Fingers something. All Want Peace. The one great yearn of Europe is for peace. The people want to go back to work with a feeling of se- MANDAN NEWS St. Anthony Farmers A number of farmers of the St. a result of the storm. Losses in some instances dow in the house. The men also reported that light. Sunday morning about 8 The bolt knocked a part of the chim: Doesn't hurt a bit, Drop a little “Freezone”, on an ‘aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly. is sian ‘our druggist sells # tiny béttle “Freezone” for afew cents, suf- mt to remove evéry hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toqs, land the calluses, without, sorené: 10F irritation. v curity—without the canke™of fear of war and invasions gnawing at Have Hail Losses Anthony district reported hail loss- es’ at the court house yesterday as Sunday morning were 100 percent, but no definite reports have yet resulted because the tele- hail knocked out almost every win- ning struck the St. Anthony church o'clock. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1923 Europe Farther From Peace Now Thani" When Armistice Was Signed — Simms their vitals by day and by night and keeping them from daily bread, The one great obstacle to peace is the legacy of hate left to every man, woman and child in Europe by the World War. This and the natural suspicion each nation has for any peace project put forward by any other European nation. The one great need of Europe is for some great moral force to make its presence sfelt among ‘the hate- earning their | C. E, Dorfler, Mrs. Wells ista sis- ter of Mrs. Dorfler. A. Rossback left Sunday evening for Alcester, S. D. where he was called by the death\of his mother, Mas. Elizabeth RossBack Saturday. John Ressler left last night for Glendive where he will receive treatment for an injured foot which he sustained about four weeks ago when a blow-out pipe broke and machinery fell on his left foot. Jane Ann, daughter of Mr. and ! Mrs. E. A. Willson of Fargo arrived of yesterday to visit at the home her uncle and aunt, Dr. and yrs Nickerson. Mrs. W. E. Fitzsimmons, daugh- ter Hope and son, William, of St. Paul arrived Monday to visi A. W. Furness home. mons will arrive in round-up. Mr. Fi time for gihe Mr. and Mrs. Anton Haider of St. Anthony are parents of a/ daughter born in the city Sund Declares Nash Appreciated On A Long Tour In an interview today I. L. Berke, Nash dealer, stated: “When a Nash owner takes a long cross-country tour he begins to ap and-suspicion-filled countries and |preciate in full the wonderful net- point out a road to settlement. things stand now, there is not a disinterested power among them. Each nation is out for itself and itself alone, and al] the rest know it. Look to U. 8. The League of Nations has done much good in Europe despite un- heard-of handicaps. But it is power- less in this instance for the simple reason that there is not one out- standing member of the league which is not, at the same time, up to its eyebrows in the quarrel itself. No impartial observer can journey through Europe as I did, and talk with politica) leaders over there, all the time retaining a perfectly open mind, without realizing the latent ; HAIR STAYS , influence the United States has for peace in Europe and the world—in the league or out of it. Everywhere I have .been I have found people watching the United States and trying to guess its next move. Europe is unanimous on one thing at least, and that is if America “had remained in Europe until real peace had come,” using her stu- pendous influence as an arbiter be- tween the more selfish powers, the world would long ago have settled down to work, x Most men with whom I talked still believe the United States could bring the nations together if it would take the initiative. But most, to be perfectly honest, have about lost faith in this ever nappening. ney down and struck the tower of the church tearing off some of the board. No fire resulted. After nursing a son and a daugh- ter through a siege of typhoid Mrs. Phillip Schmidt of Hebron;.age 42 succumbed to the disease, passing away shortly before noon yesterday at the local hospital. ‘A daughter was stricken with_ty- phoid fever some months ‘ago; then a son came down with the same dis- ease. Mrs. Schmidt nursed them both through in addition to caring for a nine months old baby, but the strain was too great and when she phone lines are out of order. The| herself was attacked with the fever, John Mann farm suffered a total]it proved fatal to her in a_ short loss while at the Tony Manh farm|time. The body will be taken to Hebron for funeral services. Mrs. E. E. 0. Wells and daughter, Genevieve of Area, Iil., arrived Mon- day and: will be the guests for some time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. qi Visiting Bankers | Are cordially invited to visit our printing house —the most modern and complete in North Dakota. We Specialize in BANK AND LEGAL PRINTING Blank Checks, Check Books, Deposit Slips, Bank Ledgers, Letter Heads, Envelopes, Pass Books, Legal Blanks. The TRIBUNE GOOD PRINTING EH As | work of Nash service stations that reaches from coust to coast. “And even though he may never have occasion to call for assistance, it is reassuring to see the familiar Nash emblem in strange towns far from home. “For he knows that in any one of these Nash service stations he will receive the same skilled, courteous and prompt’service that he commands in his own neighborhood.” The rarest postage st world is the one-cent Bri fe ana, 1856, which was recently sold to an American collector for $38,000. p ip the Gai COMBED, GLOSSY “Hair-Groom” Keeps , Hair Combed—Well-Groomed Millions Use It—Fine for Hairl —Not Sticky, Greasy or Smelly A few cents buys jar of “Hair- Groom” at any drug store, which makes even stubborn, unruyf or shampooed hair stay combed alll day in any style you like. =} wn iu

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