The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 14, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX COLLINS NOT AFTER NEW JOB Philadelphia, Nov. 14. that a deal was pending whic send him to Washin were denied yesterday by lins, captain and second bas the Chicago American League base- ball club, hunting trip in the Maine woods. ‘I still want to concentr playing and not bother cares of management,” said Collins. “{ will be back with the White Sox next sens ‘ Reports would McGRAW NOT MAKING TRADES, 14.--Before ae- | on the stefmship Washington for a, trip to Europe, John Metraw, veteran mana: | declared | ger of the New York Giants he had no ¢ immediately in view for the champions. In baseball circles, transaction completed lyst night by ‘which the Giants obtained South- worth and Oeschger from Boston in exchange Stengel, und Benereft, who is to manage the regarded as the first ’s reconstruction program, SHORT SCHEDULE Is FAVORED". real estate corporation, had leased | B 14. Club owners of an Association at their ting here in December asked to ppt a shorter schedule for the son, Presi- dent Hic id last night.” He has mailed schedula calling for 154 games to the club owners for their approval. Previously the league played 168 games. The proposed schedule sets April 16 as the opening day and September 21 for the tinal games. Presideht Hickey said the shorter schedule would permit better weath- er conditions for the playing of the “little world’s series” between pen- nant winners of the International League and American Association, The recent series between the Kansas City and Baltimore clubs, was interrupted for five days because of inclement weather and this delay caused a lack of interest in ‘the games, President said, Lady Lochinvar Goes East Not West For Success BY HORTENSE SAUNDERS. - NEA Service Writer. w York, Rov, 14.—The latest y Lochinvar to go east, instead est, and make Terself suce ful in New York is Evelyn Vaughan. She left San Francisco to become a Broadway star: She has turned out to be a suc- cessful dealer in real estate and has built up one of the most unique residential districts in Gotham, “Of course,” she confided to me, “1 really knew less about real estate than a teething baby when I arrived. And I had only money enough for current living expenses, But now 1 h acquired an interest’ in ten | houses and a theat Miss Vaughan enough in Californ nt her coming to New York and experiment with the drama, She wanted her own theater, where she could have a hand in producing the type of plays she be- | lieves tle average theatergoer wants to see .* Amd she wanted to act in her own. plays. “But Broadway couldn't see it my way, she goes on. “They weren't at all. interested in renting a theater to an aspiring acTre¢s who had only theories to offer. * Costly “Reason” “I could have made them listen to reason—reason that spoke in terms of two thousand dollars a week for rent and a gross gate re- ceipt of $6,000, or that would have built me a theater for $100,000. But just to let space to some unknown woman who wanted ‘to do slightly different things—that was not to be thought of.” ~ But Miss Vaughgn kept thinkin If she couldn’t have a theater o: Broadway, why not have one som where else? One day, a friend, showing her through the picturesque slums of Greenwich Village, pointed out a group of rookeries on Com- merce street that formed an elbow around a miscellaneous assortment of backyaro7/ She spotted a real old-fashioned barn in the midst of them. Then she knew she had found her theater. So in a short time she hdd formed U Don't Negléct a Cold Seat ce Sins See Bee cet coe anit Fy mae ib is a pure, white ointment, congestion, re! Se lesa _ “ieee op the work of the good “ota: fashioned in a gentler way, with- tba fo a sijeed ered eee raa boca in milder form for small children. is Musterole, National League | | | however, the Cunningham | upon his return from,a WELKPR COCHRAN the 10 houses and the barn, and was engaged in transforming them into ‘the most modern of studios and liv- ing apartments. ‘The backyards were thrown to- gether into a community The fronts were rebuil and soon a bit of old. rid loveliness blossomed right out in the slums. Old World Here. brated artists and. musicians took out leases as quickly as they could be made out. “But best of all,” Miss Vaughan exclaims, “the Cherry Lane Theater ! came into existence—out of the barn—and the Cherry Lane players will open for their first Manhattan engagement. early in December. “And it has all happened in six months.” CALI L FOR WARRANTS CITY OF BISMARCK Notice is herchy given that there funds on hand to pay all regis-! tered warrants of the City of Bis- marcky on the General, Library and Road and Street funds. Kindly pre- sent these warrants to any Bank in the City or at my office and the same will be paid with interest. In- terest will cease on November 17, 1 A. J. ARNO’, deeds on the Ist day of f Some of New York’s most ‘cele- | j City Treasurer. Nov. 15-14-15-16-17, WILLIE HOPPE recent championship tournament at | New York. Both Hoppe and Coch- ran made sensational rallies to win the matches that deadlocked the | The play-off here will be at. 1600| in three blocks of 600, to be! played nightly at the auditorium. It | By NEA Service Chicago, Nov. 14.—The boy won der of old will meet the boy won- der of today when Willie Hoppe and | titie. Welker Cochran cross cues here in 2 play-off for the 18.2 balk line bil-| point urd championship. Heope his way into a tie with young star from the coast, in the champion for years, cucd|is predicted these matches will break | Cochran, | all attendance records for billards fi the history of the sport. NOTICE OF MORTG fee CLOSURE Notice is hereby certain mortgage FORE- iven that that ed d of Minneapolis, Minnesota, tion, mortgagee, dated the of October, 1917, and filed J in the office of the Reg- Deeds of the County of nd State of North Dakota of October, 1917 at » and ezpecred in in National Bank of Waterville a cor- poration, dated the 3rd day of Jan- , 1918, and filed for record in e office of the said register of October, and recorded in Book 175 of nments at page 104, will be e sale of the premises mortgage and hereinafter at the front door of the urt House in the City of «, County of Burleigh and North Dakota at the hour of ck p. m. on the 22nd of Decem- 3, to satisfy the amount ‘due upon such mortgage “on the day of! Adeline sat musing. She was mus sale, The prem described in such mortgage and which will be sold to same are described as fol-j The West Half of the orthwest quarter (W% NW) of Section Fourteen (14), Township One Hundred forty-one (141), North, of Range Seventy (76), West, and situated in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota. Thtre ill be due on such mortgage on the » sum of Eight hundred dollars together with costs of foreclosure. Dated at Bismare y ae mW AT VILLE, jgnee of Mortgagee. ON, for Assignee of Mort- 4-11-18 | As time welds the names of Chopin hd Paderewski closer, it is interesting ain to find two splendid examples i their art on a single record by ritz Kreisler this week, One is a Yow, eternally lovely strain from tho Iving master—the other a curious, Rmost eccentric mazurka from the Pier one, . John McCormack is back in Amer-, fa, but whether or not you get a anee to sce him, you can hear him ain this week on a new double-fuced peord for which he sings two love ‘ongs. They are popular waltz songs, well-known ‘‘Love Sends a Little ift of Roses’? and. ‘Wonderful ne’? both much the same in style, ying to the soft counter-melody of rings, The waning year seems to’ favor the jong of sentiment, for this week’s heord program ineludes two more Mf this order, Frances. Alda. i7 Memory’s Garden’? is rich in color, waltz time, with a perpetual play if connter-shelody against the voice. ts companion piece, ‘'Coming Home’? somewhat like it, and bath melodies va pvarvelous interludes. , ieee Qn the Jazz Circuit, ‘The sitters-out will quit their whis- i and take to the floor again nee they hear Paul Whiteman’s dance record, ‘‘Sittin’ in a orner,”? this eck. It is a rich, it lumber. ‘‘ Maggie’ the other Tide introduces an orches- he new to. us, Hugo Frey’s ett ers, who live up to be in ‘Maggie! (‘Yes, ee eee ” ‘aghin he Manhattan Merrymakors, able record of «Love, | Two Violin Masterpieces by Kreisler—Alda, McCormack and Mardones Among This Weehk’s Features New “Spirituals” by « Bethel Jubilee Quartet One of the wonders of music ia the power of the American negro to ‘‘raise a spiritual, ’? or extemporize g hymn on the inspiration of the mo meh, ‘We have heard fine records of spirituals as ‘‘Roll, Jordan, zor” “*Nobody Knows the Troubla T’ve Seen,’’ and other favorites, ang ‘were interested to find two new oneq among this week’s records. “Hush Somebody’s Calling My Name’? cs Bethel Jubilee artet under the rection of the Rev. T. H. Wisoman! is a really thrilling example of suck composition, with another on the other side, ‘‘You Must Come in at tha Door,’’ ‘Miss Patricola and the Virginiand! go together as’ naturally as waffles with honey. | Their latest _ record, “Struttin” Jim,’? is_ subjectively reminiscent of their ‘¢Lovin? Sam,” and the hero is another such hera celebrated in much the same mannef, On the other side Billy Murray hea up with ‘‘Nabody Else Can Love Like My Old Tomato Can,’’ a study in mistaken identity. oe Sacred Songs by Mardocec Remisiseent of resounding choir and nayes are two splendid solos ix reat af a Lege sae vere by the famous Spanish bass, fardone: The * Canfutatia maledictis’? trom Verdi’s Requiem, composed after tht) very glad I went fngpney it all.” death of his Manzoni, is 4 magnificedt out tpouring. Rossini. “*Pro__ peccatis from . ‘Stabs Mater’? is one of the greatest melo dies he ever wrote, and ‘Sy Bea ‘Heat ts Calling You,’’ a fox trot ‘as cream. On the other side rodke Johns and His Orchestra, ra. play jE Nobody But rey. a wa; mean. j’? ‘achieve rae Sn tno i A “nite ¥ it justice, If you entertain doubts ds whether the accordion is a musical instrument in fact, hear Pietro’s twe} 14 ‘oman. records this week. Tobe sure, Pietro most elaborate instrument, ani s, 'p well-knor Salome’? waltz, ani Peal his My playing,” Pision ” oj ' the | Bitters f¢ tea of pring waite 7 - ‘ What They Bargained for By MYRA CURTIS LANE “Yes, she’s back again, with her husband gone and half her for- tune gone, and a little sense In her head ut last, I reckon.” “Poor woman, she gure ‘| has learned something.” “I should say so. She was a fool to think he wasn’t after her money. A man half her aga, too.” | “Well, we live and learn, auc quite pérky about it all,” _ “Oh, quite!” | The conversation had reference to Adeline Graham, spinster, aged | forty-six, with a fortune in her own | right. She had married a foreign- and ardent wooing, They had gone ; to his ancestral home in Europe, | a sham, and Adelaide had paid him | half her fortune to keep away from her for ever. In Her own home, Ing over the events of those three hectic months. And she was not nearly so disillusioued ax people | supposed. Why does, how can any woman of forty-eight suppose that a man of about half her age has fallen desperately in love with her? Has it ever occurred to the innocent -by- stander that ¢he woman, unless she | is a fool, is not nearly so. disillu- sioned as is generally thought? Let us listen to these conversations. First, Adeline to her chum, pray Sturt: “My dear, I know you think rm a fool to marry him. But he says he loves me, and the others who Rave paid ite that ¢omp!iment have all been just as desperate after my money. Why shouldn't I give it a trial?” “You're so happy now, Adeline. and he'll make you miserable, A foreigner, too.” “I don’t see why you should grudge me a little happiness.” “Oh, well, if you put it that way, Adeline—" , Second: Adeline and her suitor: “Ever since the moment when I set eyes on you first you have been the star of my heart, the light of my ways. I adore you, Adeline. If you won’t marry me I shall blow my brains out.” “Do you really care as much as that?” “T can't ive without you.” “Then I will,” Adeline was really moved. But underneath something was watching in an amused sort of way. It knew all right. Third conversation, two months later: “So this cottage is the ancestral castle?” “Well, what about eg “You seem to have exaggerated things a good deal, that’s ail.” They had come to address each other sarcastically by now. “You got your bargain—a hus- band.” “And you got yours—money.” ~ He glared at her. “If you're tired of it I'm quite willing to make ar- ! rangements.” “What do you mean by that?” “Give me enough to live on and I won't trouble you any more. I did care for you in a way, but you can’t expect a man to love an old woman of fifty forever... aoe you'll be sixty soon.” | Adeline laughed a bittér “iittle laugh. “That's the best side of your nature that I've seen .as yet,” she sald. , “How's that?” “Why, I like you: better when | you're frank than as a ‘creeping | hypocrite, But I don't like you anyway—much. Suppose ‘I? giv; you half my capital—Will you agree to a premanent separation?” He was frightened, he was so eager. He was a little touched, ‘too, be rey agree to that, of course, but- hy it’s worth ft. ‘I got my bar- een months later Adeline was back in Ameriea with her maiden name and her diminished fortune, And her shun, geet wag sit- ting with her fn h olise; Amy —didn’t tay-“"T_ told you™so,” She was a real chum, “ “My dear—” “Oh, don’t pity me, Amy. I'm “That awfal man {” “I don't know about that, Amy. He wanted my money, ‘but ‘so did the others, And I'saw th-ough him dones doe} an the tims, and I knew how it would end. » you see, EF was | tt] forty-six, and T ranted the Se | add ence of life ot Mg he bargained for, aay Teoult afford fo pay fpr my a ers ‘Western Mewspaper Union.) oy er, aged twenty-seven, after a brief | | which, of course, turned out to be | |fi WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1928 agic Moc casins When Hiawatha strapped on his magic moccasins he gould measure a mile at a single stride. But, 4 best, he traveled at a snail’s pace com’ pared to the speed you can make to- se day. Glance through your paper and in a few moments you have covered the earth. You jump from New York to San Francisco, Pittsburgh to Lon- don, Toledo-to Timbuktu. You know what is gong on the world over al- most as soon as the events occur. Turn to the advertising columns, and you are transported té.the gro- cer’s, the | clothier’s, the musi ic. store; you visit thi factory of a manufac: turer, or talk with the inventor of a new household appliance. Right iniyour own armchair, ‘un- hurried, unworried and. without ef- fort, you can make. your choice of good merchandise, check up. values and compare prices. . Merchants and manufacturérs who put ‘advertisements in thi $ paper must give good value. They know that advertising, by increasing the number of their aales, will. evfable them to oe prices and give you more for your money—and at the same time increase their own income. Re id the advertisements ot he em, a) ad of the

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