The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 29, 1924, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “ [HE PULLS AN INSPIRED OAR FOR OL | ‘PRINCETON por KRAUSE WINNER IN TEN-ROUND BOXING MATCH “Battler” Shows He’s Differ- ent Kind of Fighter by Win Over Cunningham T FOOT WORK | SHOWS I back different Krause night, a that 1 cen in Bis! he had a reputation for taking pun ish known as a fighter, Last nig wi to ! use onth other CAPTA was rely Princeton look sht-oar races this season paddlers worked up t workit ut daily at 1 A and wa he showed he and fast on his feet, a box clever nd IN C to Captain ( usten yan « I, 1 n for San nthusia rnegic he Princeton carrying Krause to dn uno Cunningh and the punch he always boxed ad and fought his way cial decision over Bate St. Paul welterwe ble-mate” Buddy He through hi siveness and outpointed Cunningha by a small margin in a rattling good! bout. m, ld ald wor The boxing card—42 rounds in all | scheduled | to the racted a packed house o theatr d was pro bably hest d seen in Bism Krause will fight Kid Jackson, negro battler, at Beulah Sat urday night, About 10 Bismarck fan will drive there for the bout, is billed to fight J Paul in Aberdeen, he probably wil bout sometime thi boxi Krause 1 Van Ryan of . D. May 14 return here for during May, Phe fans were surprised at the Krause showed in the ring, as pmpared to his oldetim’ form, He showed them he had learned a lot about the game in the last year. At] times he pulled his old stunt of | sticking out his face and letting. his | opponent smash him, and then laugh-} San Francisco Bi ; ed. |So that justice may be exper Krause iprought into court on stretche for running them down, Here Justice, and | a great deal to avoid uppercuts. However, Paul boy cut loose and drove K back. Both of them drew blood : various times during the furious fighting, It appeared at one time} that Referee Roberts would be fore: ed tofeall a foul, when Cunningham accidentally hit low, but Krause went on fighting. MeMurchie ted Kid ha cre When one run off J in bunches. No pitcher to his the other s on they're scor' The Hurling Hurricane never to develop any trick delive you hotd the aces you’ don't hav worry where the ten spots are. of Fargo Christi on Bismarek in an 8-round semi wind- MeMurchie forced the fighting most of the time and out boxed| Christianson, Harold) Armstrong and Young Wriekson engaged im a four-round put, Armstrong knocking out Erick- gn in the third round. Steve Ha ad Ralph McCann, in another four- vund bout, we out even, while uster Rosson knocked out Mike ohn in the second round, Two oth- : fighters introduced Kid Me lure;and fought yur founds. ‘Two others introduced | s Pat Flannagan and Harry on fought one of the best ma f the evening. Both were husky cllows, and they went at their trade rard, i The Eckroth babies of Mandan] rave a four-round exhibition, A lot of local fans want Kraus yet Bud Logan or some other fj welterweight here for a bit bout dur-| je do ing May at the Auditorium. Dugan cs. baseman nley RICHARDS s this will be his ame and Johnson s year in the won't miss him lowa would mis: RICE AFTER FIF Sam Rice, speed 1 Washington Nationals, kn that as “Man aims to steal s this year got away to a gooe than nt 0 wn JOHN} ‘Muddy’ Ruel handl s any catcher I ever had n cally better yet, his judgment o batters cou is the way Walter Johnson sy of his battery pa | 3 CHANCE PRAIS ank Chance Kamm of the White Sox better than last Kamm will vie the most in the Johnsoni: I lie points to with able 1 orga [lief pitcher. Har figures jsiven three : 5 should the rs of his New York . son chards, tennis med th rumor that he had resigned from the American David Cup team. His nection was t causeof a d ion in charge of the event not to allow plavers to write for newspapers after Jan. 1925 Vincent Ri- ve career, i LEFT-HANDED TRIO With Goslin and Fish jthe outfield, Washington prese: trio of left-handed hitters. ter two are hard hitter }mixes them up. Rice, while | ‘The Nut Cracker _ ims that in Combs Hendr substitutes, he the he MR. W. JOHNSON hitters in the American Both are left-handed batter Walter Johnson has seen his best day and now is up to his rugged ears | in an estatic frenzy of worst days, | a allowing everything but hits and |j winning nothing but ball games. | and ha t Le: The Big Swift is in the twilight} of his pitching career. The | kind of twilight that shrivels red | geraniums on the front lawn and | sends sky oglars scurrying for | Milwaukee Columbus smoked glasses. ; ‘ on 2 | Minneapolis Louisville St. Paul | Toledo The Washington Ace is on his last legs... . The kind of legs that support the Brooklyn bridge and hold up towering stutues of in. | National League celn. ere of |New Yor The Smoke Sereen has gone back | Cincinna in a manner reminiscent of Heury | Chi | Ford’s dwindling fortune and the poston .. waning popularity of blondes who! Brooklyn | effect black silk hosiery. | Pittsbure : St. Louis The Pig Bullet used to depend! philadelphia solely on his fast ball. Now that he | has lost that he has nothing left | but a faster one. we bbkae nee Ametican Ledtac Detroit . In the old days the hitters would} New York . ‘just swing at Walter's whining | Philadelphia whizzers and trust to luck. Now/Chicago . they just swing. Cleveland Mr. Johnson has been pitching | Washington since Pop Geers*was a stable swipe | St. Louis and he’s stopped more guys with ‘} strikes than Sammy Gompers ever * thought of starting. i The Fire Ball is little: m@e thar a shelb-.of-hie formersself;~and “is: 7 hardly distinguishable from_ a. well, set up pyramid or a stretch of aercamton National League rg) 7;Chigago 4. "@; New York 4. StuMeonie..4;Cincinwati 5. American Leag: shutout Washington | War,” IN PRAISES RUEL n't be improved upon, on. The lat-| ks, two! re pe: diten, 4 is on ever ohn: | i | | tried At} e to} Pav- | f the| tot r. He f the| peaks | | Joo! third | niza- | ting all the bumps t UP RELIEF WORK | | of the} in Walter; M s re-} that | John- in- | best | | | er in pts a Rice} Out pinch auc. rain, dane PEEDING UP JUSTICE no del i f even motorists accuse nto the Hall of 2 -cainst ne being carr eee Cleveland 3; St. Louis 4. Chicago .2; Detroit 7. Boston Washington seventh.) can Association Columbus 1M. Louisville Toledo 1. ; Indianapolis 7. (Called Milw Minneapol THE ELTING ure the EIti and Thursday is Husban with Earle Willi Novak, Bull Montana and prominent in. the ums is the jealous hus » Novak the wife and Ben the boy: Ben was cn in “Boy of Mine”, twelve of the Fighting Blood serie also on thé program, This chap ter will be viewed by many pleasure because it is the las’ The Wednes: at ber CAPITOL Viola Dana's newest Metro , “Don't Doubt Your Hus y Harry Beaumont, moat e for two days begin: It tells the story o: ave been hit 1s ate ing tomo a young couple who FOV das itvexist: n us wife wh on the matrimonial roa smart, swift sub s Dana is the suspic notic terested in nkles than stirs up ment, The Winifr lard Louis, Adele Wat Dunbar. The story was written b; ada Cowan and Howard Hig the interior dedbrxvor’ in the deeo storm of ra includes iShip Brews Own Beer Supply a Piymouth, Engla April 29.-Th Nongh, German Llovd liner Stuttgart Raseebleto manufacture 1800 quart of heppesingtheyshiv’ ite The beer was all cofsumed on th sentative success in the and fas his | AT THE MOVIES | cast. Chapter with pie- 1B the at can be found society. | that her husband is more in- and entertain- Alan Forrcst, 1 Bryson, John Patrick, Wil- on and Robert ping brewery during ntwtoyige from New York Witlianf’ David Upshaw .of Georgia; teHs you him- self fe often, has ‘Deen called the “reincarnation of the spirit. which bined witches.” He is outspoken- +l proud of-this. Upshaw is a life- leng cripple, though anything but ie helpless one, cal convention could find none but a dark-horse, The convention adjourned to the air of “For He’s Going to Marry Yum Yum” converted into a patriotic number. President Coolidge, Sir Esme Ho- ward, the new Ambagsador of Great Britain to the United States, and John W. Davis were the speakers at the dinner, Under the Gridiron rule j that “reporters are never present” their remarks were not published, When Representative Clifton Woodrum, of Virginia, known to his | colleagues as “the troubadour con- Bressman” because he “sang his way into Congress,” was called on to! spexk he burst into a song full of; significance to seekers after public office. | ¢liminative system, improves the appe- tite, relieves Sick Headache and Bil- fousness, corrects nstipation. | Satire Includes Many atire of the dinner ran the} of the “Bobbed-Haired Ban- ” to “Hamlet in 1924,” the “Color- ed Dclegate” to the Republican con-| vention, Soviet recognition, the “mur- | der” of the World Court, Hiram Johnson, Secretary Mellon, the re- | cent Cabinet changes, and “Miss NR JUNIORS—Littio Nts One-third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults, SOLD BY YOUR oRUCCIBT, GRIDIRON "CLUB HOLDS CONVENTION spaper Fraternity in hington Turns Satire Upon the Candidates dramatized | the Third Party idew in the form of day politics were two grave-diggers | —a Nonpartisan Leaguer and a farmer-Labor Partyite—who were prepiring graves for the coffins of the * Old Party” and “Miss Den ble in the shadows . After one grave-digger had abjured the other to “get thee gone to the bootlegger and fetch me a stoup of likker, but be careful or you may be shot for a Senator,” he turned up a skull, which proved to | be that of the “poor old Bull Moose” and gave Hamlet an opportunity to |} soliloquize appropriately The Bobbed-haired Bandit, a furore. Before Brigadier Smedley D. Butler, director of pub- afety in Philadelphia, could! an arrest, announcement was|{ made that the Bobbed-haired Bandit had departed with an apology “she had been pursuing Frank A. Vanderlip for sometime, to get him to give her a job, and she thought she saw him coming in here”, it was explained. |BANQUO'S GHOST THERE Washington, April 28.—For ainment at its s night, the idiron Club of Washington newspaper _correspon- dents held a national political con- vention with music. It was replete with a hodge-podge of song and sa- tire in which no political party was. spared, he Republican nomination was ac- corded to President Coolidge but the | democratic standard-bearer \ proved | to be the most famous dark-horse in| history—“The Man in The Tron Mask.” The Gridiron singers sang | the keynote of the dinner to the tune} Jot « Seconds Ev'ry Minute”: FIGURED HALF We've turned that one to the wall;| Assistant U. S. District At- ‘welll display, instead, a good old peat ‘thatéfentime can’t spoil, torney Tells Mrs. Pres- ton Of It “Smiling still throug di! enter- ring dinner Satur- HOW STATEIS ture atric: “Is your Uncle Sammy’s picture~ “It's a portrait scandal cannot soil.” attling chorus brought out, other things, the snappy Fargo, a recent letter to Mrs. Bhizutt—!" ton Anderson, president of the W.C. 7.U. in North Dakota, Mable Walker Willebrandt. tant United States | attorney general tells how she arr ved at published percentages of li-|+ quer law enforcement for the vari- at e percentages were used in connection with certain maps pub- lish in Collier's Weekly and other magazines. h state was shaded to represent a degree of liquor enforcement and was given a certain | percentage. Enforcement in North Dakota was set at 50 percent. South Dakota was | | given a mark of 80 percent. The map, says, Miss Willebrandt, was an expression of her opinion merely, of the conditions as they existed in the summer of 1923. It however, she adds, being based on “numerous facts gleaned from cor- respondence from traveling and from personal contaét with a large num- ber of officials from all parts of the country.” These facts she adds deal with fed- eral activities, state enforcement, facilities for evasion (such as the long international border of North Dakota) and political conditions. Kansas at 100 Kansas was used as a “sort of a common denominatot” and given an arbitrary value of 100 percent, ac- rding to the letter, which adds that the state does not have, propor- tionally, any mire violations of pro- hibition’ statutes than of any other criminal statutes. This latter statement is very hard to believe, according to A. A. Stone, in charge of federal prohibition en- forcement in North Dakota, Liquor | offences from 80 to 90 percent af the offenees in North Dakota, he said, and it is doubted if any state in the union has liquor offences only in proportion with the general run of offences. —SSSSSS—_—_—_—_—=—=—=—=— OHIO METAL WORKER A VICTIM Ray S. Ball, Huron, Ohio, was a victim of coughs and colds. Both he Land his sister suffered with them, but found “speedy relief” through the of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR OMPOUND, the old favorite cough remedy. He writes: - “Ihave found FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR COM- POUND a most excellent remedy for coughs and colds.. My sister had a severe cold and cough a year ago and found speedy, reief in FOLEY HONEY AND TAR COMPOUND.” a na jam—don't get the blues, don’t give a dam; “The country’s safe—Three cheers for Uncle Sam. Robert L, Norton, of the Boston Post, was initiated as a new mem- ber of the Club, and William E. Brigham, Washington correspondent of the Boston Evening Transcript, was inaugurated president of the club. Picking G, 0. P. Nominee The club had little difficulty in picking the Republican presidential nominee. The problem of the Demo cratic convention however, was much more perplexing. From his place an inquisitor-general was called to issue subpoenas for a number of distin- guished personages. He Lrought with him his executioner. The first wit- nesses were ‘Fhe Three Musketeers.” They proved to be Charles F, Mur- phy, of New York; Thomas Taggart, of Indiana; and George E. Brennan, of Chicago. The trio identified them- selves “expert political swords- men.” Asked what they intended to do in the forthcoming campaign, they nounced in chorus: “McAdoo.” A cowboy, who proved to be Wil- liam G, McAdoo, rushed in, to in- quire, breathlessly, whether the} Three Musketcers had departed. He erted he was “William the Con- queror,” appearing as voluntary wit- ness and announcing he would be nominated on the first ballot “even if I have to claim residence in every state in the union.” James the Just” turned’ out to be James M. Cox, of Ohio, “William the Silent” was identified as William M. Butler, the Coolidge campaign mitnager, who spoke not a word, bat offered a deposition in the form of & weather forecast for Cleveland in jJune: “Coolidge—fair and eaim.” “Frank, the First,” was Frank H. Hit¢heock, Hiram Johnson’s manag: cr, who was unable to produce his, candidate because the latter “missed his train.” Convinced that the “Democratic ticket to” date reads, like a John, Doé warrant,” the, inquisitor-general sub- poenaed “thesmest fermous Jebn Doe |.0! in history The Manin the fron Mask,” who said | “Some men think I am Samuel M, | Ralstof and sezenade me ‘withalihe Moon Shines Bright Tonight ‘Meng the Wabash’; I have been addr¥ssed as John W. Davis, and asked to trade fat retainers for @ nomination, Some jcnll me McAdooand ask whether I am from Mew. York or Califorhig. } 1 {Have been toasted as James Mi\Cox' land assured that seven mifiton wren’t so many after all, Ty have i Been feted as Oscar W. Unddrwoed, jwhile the band played ‘Dixtefi ‘some others said ‘Hello Al,’ ard, song | ‘The Sidewalks of New. York.’ Some! believe my name is. Hopston, and dub | me the léading residuary ‘legatée! I adm identified also as Copeland; the | medicine man of the Tammany tribe. Wester ng | Colonel Harvey, thinks I am Senator eagerfy welcome such positions be-"; Joe easy of Bets 'fhey causd ghey lead to, court geporting, | oncé Called me Reed* before ; Jim i i ai | tried to’ shdw. "em in Missourj, Some the Wipes raid sano Gouda n thinks’ Ilége" president, i [ENC itNetae bib name, I have on D. B, C. graduites recently placed: with Jawyers, are: Myre’ tke {ly one consdlation. Nobody has sug Pies ace Bryan. aaa assel,,-with Atty. Lacy of Mot e Indaisition was’ dissolved when Mae Tr tty. Mea Banquo's ghost entered as the Third and Mae Peterson with Acty. : Failing to solve the problems of Wijat to.attenc the cdmpaigh by the methods of {4 quisition, the clab borrowed the if . Watkins, tuneful strains of Gilbert and: Sull- pene bbl Fg Ne D. | PY i Be at > Th t! b o n 1 t t f f 8 of y 8 ° Adv. ———— GOOD FUTURE FOR LAWYERS’ STENOS ay For years, Dakota Business Col- lege, Fargo, D.,’ has supplied stenographer for well-known north= attorneys. . Young’ ladies ] Party’ movement. ‘of Lisbon.....Doesn’t, this. tell. su | i low the Succe$$ful.”? Enroll ivan’s “Mikado”, but even the musi-t hat W. J, Snow wi was killed crushing him causing death instant- ly, & short time ago. Campaign For paign for peace to be a part of the league’s program, was presented by Miss Ruth Morgan of New York be- Uncle Sam, doesn’t mind it in the le: TUESDAY, -APRIL 29, 1924 When ‘Pouring AMAIZO hold the opening in the top of the can upper- most, as shown in the illustration. In this way the Amaizo will flow out smoothly and easily. Word has been r of Seatt! ho’ will be remembered by er of the older residents of the city, instantly while working n a concrete wall, which caved in, embot® reports: day's s mended cular study of wane ™2 cluding Peace Inaugural By Women’s League Buffalo, N. Y., April 28.—A cam- with p, the eign Me fore today’s session of the naticnal its cold in Alsdka, Mechanics in Rome, Ital: plorer, will use in his @light:to the north league of women voters convention here, Miss Morgan is chairy frommittee on a tions, the league 0: ‘ peace plan; of internation: course and 2f stitutiona’ amendment in relation tO), aemte of tw thirds majority in treaty ratification and a yeview of the American for- policy, ods: But Pilot Eielson,. who carries Here he is getting set to take are working day’ and -night AMAIZO Fries beautifully, thoroughly, qu Is excellent for Shortening. Makes delightful Salad Dres“ “Y thd d speakers schools on Morgan include and institutes on prevention of war international questigns. : Chairman of the ‘various commit- tees addressed the delegates today on methods of carrying out the lea- gue work, The program which they Butlined will come before the dele- gates for approval Monday. It al- ready has been approved by the com, mittee heads and directors. | annual it n of the ; oper- internat! coer prevent war, ® an address & one of #e cout cagommitte heads at that.t. Margan recom- ke a parti: ration, is repara- and Bob ty making mach¥te? disarmainent Pe) f natioh. rtxular attention to a requirements of two- “of work outlined by Miss Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a, little “Fyeezone” on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, suffi- cient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without sore- ness or irritation, =——————————— _LADIES ATTENTION | Bus fare refunded on all ‘mtilinery purehases over $10. At Moline’s Milliner Modes, Mandan, N. Dak. cae g the mails for e giant planes Roald: Amundsen, “Arctic exe le,” Amundsen;expects: to hop- off within a month,:

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