The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 29, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . a |THE BOYS DON’T GRUMBLE WHEN SHE ]+02, 90: «is gout is Poi orts| GIANTS TAKE TWOCONTESTS | AS REDS SPLIT Dazzy Vance, Brooklyn Pitch- ing Ace, Is Defeated by The New Yorkers New most at York of bill and to They win took first game Dazzy pitehin f defeated In e « Burlei Orin nt down to defeat, while Bentley and Ryan pitched good ball for p ork, Jacques Four 5. Brook acker, got his ninth homer » season The Chicago Cubs drove Cooper and Lundy off the mound ye: terday t Pittsburgh, 9 to 6 Doak we for St, Louis and AYS “ERROR” | {| poached ¢ | tators. jhand [That the, effect was not wholly have won if the caks hadn't been in his favor. : breaks fell Marston's way at a critical moment when defeat and disaster, like twin horrors, loomed delphian would Jan arm's length away. It was in the semi-finals. Francis uimet of Boston his opponen et had been 4 down at the sixe teenth hole in the morning. Later he found himself and gained steadi At the twelfth hole inn the noon he had squared the match. ¢ thirteenth at Flossmoor is a o t to a cupped green, 'com- pletely trapped. Ouimet drove the honor ball. It came down. like a not more than 18 inches from the pin. Almost a hole in one. Marston hit his shot too ro- bustly, The green was fringed with spec- The ball struck one of them dd dropped on the gre If the Il hadn't hit a spectator it would on into a ston would shot. ters stod reen, though have gone M: still on 40 feet from the That lucky break was a stim- he was the hole Marston proceeded to shock ullery by sinking the long putt a birdie two. The effect the luc the successful putt, break, plus on Ouimet lis hard to describe. As Marston's ball dropped into the up Ouimet winced as if an unseen had popped him on the ¢ COOPERATIVE, MARKETINGIS: | “BIG BUSINESS’ Dollars a Year in Aggre- i gate, Speaker Says URGES WHEAT POOLING Walton Peteet, Secretary of Cooperative Bodies, Speaks in Bismarck , Cooperative marketing has come to be among the biggest business of the country, Walton Peteet of Chieayo, secretary of the National Council’ of Cooperative Marketing ions, told an .audience in Auditorium last night. outhern cotton pool will $500,000,000 worth of ‘cotton this year, he said. The California fruit growers and the southern to- bacco growers pool both run into the hundreds of millions of dollars, -he said. The pooling of wheat in the Northwest is not a bigger business iNow Runs Into Billions off, _ TRADE RECORD | ..... Big Growth In Exports of Manufactures An increase of about $200, 000,000 ‘in: the fiscal year 1924 and $400,000,000 as compared with 1922. [a Fi The share which they torm of cars, motor trucks, etc. $12,000,000 the total domestic exports in the against $6,500,000, passenger auto- curcent year is 48%, against 47% mobiles $64,000,000 against $38,- in 1¥14, the year immediately pré- 000,000, chemicals and allied prod- ceding the war, 45% in 1910, 35% ucts $78,000,000 ‘against $69,000,000, in 1900, 21% in 1890 and 15% in lumber under the title of “boards, 1880, all of these figures relating planks, and scantlings” $56,000,000 $1.344,000.000 in the same months trical machinery in Biports of domestic manulactures 10, Useal, yeas The prospective from the !nited States in the fiscal 086,000,000, is double that of the year. 192% which ends with next J 65; préceding ‘the wat when manu- month will materially exceed those J\tutes totaled but” $1,099,000,000, of ‘the fiscal years 1923 or 1922. sid practically treble that of 1910 While they will not of course equal Which “stood at but $76,981,000, those during or immediately follow- Whiter the total in 1900 was’ but ing the war they will apparently $485 990,000, exceed those of the fiscal year 1923 TP by about $200,000,000, and those of Nearly every class of manufac- the fiscal year 1922 by more than tures except cotton goods shared in $400,000 000, and will also be much this growth in the current fiscal greater than in any year preceding year, adds the Trade Record. Iron the war. The latest figures on the and steel manufactures, for example, exports of manufactures, says the totaled in the 8 months ‘ending with Trade Record of The National City February 1924, the latest available Bank of New York, shows that the figures, $171,000,000 against’ $118,- exportation of the two great groups 000,000, tin plate 14% million dollars “manufactures ready for consump- aganist 414 million, black’ steel tion” ‘and “manufactures for further sheets 1334 milfion dollars against 5 use in manufacturing” aggregated million; wire nails 85,600,000 pounds $1.564,000,000 in the 9 months end- against 45,000,000, -refined ‘copper ing with March 1924, against but $77,000,000 against $58,000,000, Elec- which we have if they made marked progress in recent the same rate during ycars shows a total of practically af the preceding year, and continue at against $40,000,000, gasoline 630,- 000,000 gallons against 396,000,- 000 and refined mineral oils in all forms 2,305,000,000 gallons against 1,770,000,000 in the same months of last year. . This big gain in the exports of mannfactures in the current fiscal year makes itself especially apparent in the increased movement to those sections of the world to which manufactures form the bulk of otr exports. To Asia, for example, the total exports of the 9 months end- ing with “March are $452,000,000 against only $327,000,000 ‘in ‘the corresponding. months of the pre- ceding year, to Oceariia $16,000,000 against $87,000,000, to South Amer- ica $206,000,000 against’ $189,000,- 000, and to North America as a whole $785,000,000 against $750,- 000,000, To Cuba which takes largely of our manufactures the total is $145,000,000 against $112,- 000,000, to Australia $96,000,000 \ ; ot a ! against $69,000,000, while the totals allowed the Cincinnati Reds to win Peet jaginary was shown a second er|than these, ne eee i the remaining three months of, the $44,000,000 against. $36,000,000 ° in eo testy all of the countries of the the second game of double head. | |) = jwhen Ouimet, unnerved, missed his] | Where bitetis ta ers i current fiscal vear they will ag- the same months of ‘the preceding non-manufacturing world show 5 to 8. In the first, with Soth- | | | Totats... 35 {tiny putt. Farmers are the only large class | gregate about $2.086.000,000 for the year, agritultéral machine $37,- greater or less increases in the 9 eron pitching fine ball, St. Louis. Matted for Quinn in eleventh, | Imagine Ouimet, greatest of ama-|of people who sell at the buyer's | fiscal year 1924 against $1,883,000,- 000,000 against $21,000,008, fia- months of the current fiscal r Mice GEE the ‘Reds, 6 to 0. Washingt 012000001015 }teur pute. missing an 18-ineh| price and buy at the seller's price; | 900 in the fiscal year 1923, and chin hole $206,000,000 i yea 4 0) y ‘uoysog, guoq viydjopurtya } [Moston 000210010004 -_ putt! the only class which has no voice | $1.623,000,000 in 1932 > chinery as Sun ‘ole $208,000, 01 when compared with the same mine Rink weing the winning | — Marston won the: next hole, toc, [in determining. valies of the com: | vos sv ont eee against $162,000,000, commercial period of last year, pitcher. Wilson's hot nthe ALICE CAR a and was never headed. modities it handles. A farmer's] — * F F Be lcued Gione ae well, By NEA Servies ro SN ee tne I prosperity is measured. by the dif- | things as the men who spend every] cooperatively—you will come to it| fered by. the Shakespeare club to the In the Americans Boston and! — San Francisco, May 28. Meet the world’s official feminine base ference between what he buys and} day of their lives in the ramifica- sooner or later, or else go out of/student making the highest grade in aan aL UmiEs edatuisolaeae Wali auoraeeecer een lene aes ST Meine tb ha. be sells, tions of the trade. You haven't{business. This is just as inevitable | English during four years of high ele GGcn th @ tie for firet | Whiter On tue wellecetpaner, With us great pro Haniine ABS) Mr. Peteet ‘showed that the rea- time in your life to produce and alsofas the tides. The only question is| school. Mildred was awarded $10 in place with the New York Yank ors, Nits and as as any male veteran suduation she in- | son for the inequalities which exist | ke younselt veauely( in merece whether you are going to decide to| gold offered by the D. A. R. for the Philadelphia took the first contest | tends to continue sport writing under her nom de plume of “Al Carey.” | in agricultural prices is individual | knowledge to those with whom you} market cooperatively now—this year| best gyades in history, civics and a Besos andi Boston the sccond, 1 to - — -| selling. “Other industries long ago | 4¢2 eco aars uate betas aa me) whether you are going to Lae theme on Americanization. 0, with the veteran Jac in| (s 4 Noga o G | adopted poliei selli phic ene 6 £ Sel eee ee NOU eee == Tak ee yaiyen Jack Quen) Carpentier Looks Great, But Like Most Other | eoeeed eotarters: of Noveh Dakeia | employing exports thatthe farmer opportunity — to pitching Detroit divided a double bill, win- ning 4 to 3, and losing 7 to 0, with the St. Louis Browns. Davis pitch- |! ed the shut-out victory. Shaute blanked the — Chicago | White Sox, 5 to 0, but ( lost’ the second gane, Sewell got a homer 13 to Hoyt pitched good ball |#S Well conditioned, finely trained,} the American “400 against Walter Johnson, and the |#nd to all outer appearances, ready | years : Waniees won) 7 to 4, in the first {for the strug of his young ari is inci matter. game of a double header, but New! 4 Y lost the second Washing- | ton, 6 to 1, { i BASEBALL Ame ste {1 oe, St. Paul Louisville th Indianapolis z 6 | fought Dempsey,” | Carpentier undoubtedly takes the Kansas) City 19 18 514 |lay on the rubber in his] Gibbons fight —seriow do has Minneupolis 18 20° ATA Ldressing room after r 1ined conscientiou This prob- Toledo 15, better,” he with ably explains why he looks. so well Milwaukee .... M f confidence th no wise | outwardly. Columbus 15 suse ri But what ab the condition of } a It that Carpengier's [his interior? de s looked great National League ucee ats ut the hands of uly at Reno 14 years ago, but PT Dempsey and Siki have not curbed t punch Johnson landed to y York 14 his innate m. He admits tomach showed that the boiler 16 frankly t he isn't in Demp-| maker was little more than a shell. Cincinnati 18 sey's class. Kilbane trained hardest and look- Brooklyn 17 Don't Ask Them About Mons. Siki fed best for his fight with Criqui Boston 16 The Siki debacis omething fand was knocked out St. Louis 19 that i diseussed at any great} A trim, well-muscled body is not Pittsburg length either by Frenchman or Jalways a positive indication of phy- Philadelphia 20 his voluble manager, Descamps. | sical perfeetion. — You ask, “What about this Siki| Carpentier likes his wine, his cig- American League guy?” and Carpentier and Des-|arets and his moments of nocturnal | Ww. mps shrug their shoulders — in| gaiety. New York unison and answer, “Oh, that buf-| This kind of a life cuts deeply in- Boston foon, to a man’s stamina and vitality, and Detroit | | Your sense of discretion, if any,| there is nothing about the app St. Louis |persuades you to drop the su ly well conditioned Frenchy Washington | You ma mental note indicate that he is an eption. Chieago i = — Gioveland jton, Del,, owned by H. J. Stoeckle,} the future Will old age take its Philadelphia wl was foaled in 1908 and started his|toli or will they succumb to their ae career in LOL, five ont of |younger and stronger opponents? Results Yesterday tive Aeon that year for Herman I It's Nard to tell. eypceenen pee {Tyson, who developed him. — Since eee: an League that y he has raced early and 7 a] Deteolt 4:0. often, except in 1919, se he wa: | BREAKS AID ; Cleveland if ‘i 1 a th NewiVork 71; Washington 4.0. |! oe | GOLFERS IN Ros » PI nhia 2-0. | ry ~ Boston 1-1; Philadelphia 2-0, | inoniters note that as| TITLE WINS ~ he won all of rts in 1911 so} Riper National League |did he win seven out of his seven} i Brooklyn New York 6-4, |starts in 1920, He w » 12} Marston’s Ball Hits Spectator | Philatlelphia Boston 1 lyears of age, no slight x ement | Pittsburg 6; Cincinnati 0- Chicago 9. St. Louis American Asso Kansas City 10; St. Milwaukce 0; Minneapolis 6. | Toledo 3; Indianapolis 7. \ Columbus 6; Louisville 8. | oe | Billy Evans Says + This is the age of youth—but you can't make the harness horses be- | lieve it. | The;teason of 19 willsfind two. notable in Harry J. S, (2:05 old,-tfid eter Coley (2 1-4), 10! years old, both ready for another} grugting campaign on the big-time tracks. for example, } war horses” | . 16 years | P&et: Coley has been campaigned | hard’ and consistently eve since 1916 when he took a tw old record of 2:24 1-4 In 1919, as a five-year-old, under the tutelage of Charles Valentine, the ‘Columbus trainer, he took a mark of 2:07 .1-4\at North Randall, Cleveland, and from then on proved { to be one of the best. He won 10 out of 18 races in 1920. The following years he was obliged to perform in the fastest classes, being forced to meet Peri- scope, Greyworthy, E.'* Colorado Millie Irwin and many other fleet ones. Reet ° Astrange as it may seem, he did ie his present record until 192: toledo, at which time he de- Z mighty mare, -Nedda. se has started in 82 28 of these, was second! d_in’.14, fourth in nine |so hard for wen at | races i the consen opinon | By Joe Williams | among emen atest | ever reach the pur-| of all at Gosher in| p s without an encouras 1917, when he enc re | the gods of luck. Not markable little bl Bin- | t is a game where luck al- ille, owned by George H. Tipling decides the important issues Vets He May Be Little More Than a Shell By Williams at Carpentier ho is Tomn Gibbe best | hv Joc City, Georges o fight » Ame ll which the the traces of the cruel punish nan adminis tere © disappeare in light heavyweights, handsome ocratic oxi Is Carpe as>he | I watehed him do his regal stuff |1o0 s better than] od ainst’ a miscellaneous as-| when he Dempsey, as he ment of urtner ut | says? | neluded the veteran featherweight, isn't any| harley Ledoux, and Paul Pritch, yin the} ightweight champion of Europe. years | Carpentier | filled out notice. ! ou take on ably in th che nd|t not the kind ‘of more ro-] weight does you any good in| bust in ce th ring | “You are heavier tha Carpentier May Be Just a Shell and It Helps Him Win at Flossmoor for a trotter which n raced | While he reat | of Cleveland, and ed to trot | -4, then a new often seems that sheer skill | 3 t quite enough, s half-mile track resord, to | one played better golf than t the Cleveland Max Marston in the national ama- So much for the pasts of Peter|teur at Flossmoor last summer, no Coley and Harry J. 8. But what of one was more deserving: of: victory, TOOK LAURELS FROM EPINARD | 18 times, - And of Will Crozier, iv: Sraord seman, he is ready, ‘and at “em again. J. 8, the poieerot Wilming- laboriously the | Learn Financial Independence at Home by Having an Allowance BY HORTENSE SAUNDERS ‘EA Service Writer The universal problem of preduc- ing harmony ‘between the income and the expenditure is one that should be tackled early in life, ac- ording to Mr ank Vanderlip. So! us soon as each one of her six children was old enough to want to buy, ‘he put on an allowance @ today they are all learning nits of a limited: income., “And as soon as they are old euough to know what they need to wear, and have sonié knowledge of quality, they buy their own clothes,” needle, I believe. “One son doesn't care much for clothes so he buys them very thrift- ily in order to have more of his al- lowance for books and _ electrical equipment that interest him more. “They are soiving their own prob lems much better than I could do it for them and they are learning when a bargain isn’t a bargain. “As soon as one of the children finds his allowance inadequate, must not merely ask for money, but present his accounts and show evi- headquarters Mrs. Vanderlip also feels Very deeply that all of her children should not only be trained for a profession or trade, but should feel an urge to express themselves through their work, want my daughters to be teach- she told me, “because thi 1s a shortage today of good, conscien- tious, well trained teache Th modern girl doesn’t realize what possibility for service teaching of fers, “If I had not married I ave taught geology—that was my dream untl my husband came into life. I hope some time in th future, when my family reared and doesn't need me so much h English, Mrs. Vander! far to do much co: outside her home jor suffrage in has been active as an organiz polities and is prominent in the Lea- gue of Women Voters. “Gets-It” Removes prea ty fot Path to sleep forever. Two ree plied to corn of callous soon Brivels them @ loose piece of tl peeled off with fingers. ‘no bother, no guess pleasing relief. ‘satisfaction absolutely guar: Lawrence & Ca,, aden. Frank O'Neill, American jockey, created @ se) ‘ion -when,,he won from Bpinard, fastest on the: French. turf, taking the race‘at St. Cloud, Paris, by a neck. bs but a trifle, E. “Get Finney's Drug Store, j or jable to sell their products individ- i | she told me. eldest daughter, Narcissa, ly buy to better advan- | I can, She buys a few y good gowns and pa good prices for them. Then she copies them and makes all her simple things for herself. If she had to} she could support herself with her he q dence that he needs an increase from | should | 4 | ip has found time so the campaign days, sold in this city by he said. rmers. of North. Dakota any other state will never be j Wheat. When a farmer starts out \to sell his wheat, hesputs his knowl- ede of wheat conditions against the knowledge of the buyer. But the grain dealer has expert knowl- edge of the world’s market, and the | general conditions of business and commerce, while the farmer has no {knowledge of any of these things. At Buyer's Mercy ‘Until you are in a position to know as much about the value of r products as the man who buys, are really at his merey. ividually your know little of mill- ing values, of finance; you know very little of. the ability .of the warld to consume your wheat; .you do ‘not know. the international fact- ors. that affect pri At least, yo uch about, th 1 pays your dead tissue that i work—just quicl } godise’ cles jot a the whole wasteful practice of blind dumping of wheat on and to substitute a plan of orderly IT mean selling by the farmers in In- J it things — what you to improvements that the n hope to compete with or- t,” pool your w Mr genized grain buying business.” Peteet explained that North ually at a fair value. Wheat selling| M*. Peteet declared that there is] Dakota is among the first of the is, in a way, like trading horses.|* Steet deal of misunderstanding fstates to receive attention in a na- When a man trades horses, he is|*¢sarding the purpose of cooper-}tional way in wheat marketing, 2 putting his own. knowledge | ative marketing. Many are under} Kansas is also in the throes of a s against the other fellow's|the impression that pooling only} campaign and Indiana is successful- 3 © man who knows the most] #ims to save some of the handline}ly organizing a pool, Oklahoma, ac- VaBoutshorses gets) the ibetter’ of the which the farmer pays on his}cording to Mr. Peteet, already has} It is the same way with approximately 30 per cent of the 24 crop acted for the pool, with a possibility of reaching a 60 per cent sign up before harves “The eyes of the’ nation,” said Mr. Peteet, “are on North Dakota. If you fail, you set back the whole cocerative ‘movement—+if you suc- ceed, you give a new impetus to the Real Purpose of Plan “The real purpose is to eliminate the market merchandising. By merchandising, the same way that business “men ] (Crd: HG shiahhe ee ; sell their goods, as manufacturers whole movement; you restore to Self automobiles, or as the Steel] the growers control of their own corporation sells steel rails. We | Dusine: ‘ mean putting wheat where it is needed and in the quantity in which _SISTERS WIN PRIZES __ “is needed and securing the price} Devils Lake, N. D., May 29—Miss- that market conditions justify. You}|es Merle and Mildred Elmslie, daugh- of Devils Lake, were recently award- ed two first prizes offered bv the A. R, and Shikespeare- clubs of avoid criss-cross railroad hauls, and will secure whatever a fair price ise = of whether , De Merte was awarded~$10 gold of. or 5 ae 4 ; : Knowledge You. gain ‘a de ee of satisfaction just in knowing in: i 2s, how radium burns, which kings are still holding thrones. Yet such knowl- edge gives you little more than just that satisfaction. " By reading adVertiséments, you gain knowledge that com- stein believes, . . . that pays you definitely in time, money, fort and convenience. =... i's: Each day in these pages, advertisers tell you of prod- udts devised to tale roan happier. ‘They seek to arouse will enrich your home, lessen - work.. By reading; the advertisements, you can know where to secure the best and most serviceable for you. can avoid inferior goods and uncertain shopping. You can save. ee “ Read the advertisements. “You owe it to the adver- tisers who are trying to serve you*—and to yourself. 19A: DEPENDABILITY ABOUT | THERE enaT - ADVERTISED COMMODITIES \ arcana: SERVICE EXAMINATIONS The Civil Service Commission in- vites special attention. to the fact that in examinations held recently in Bismarck, N. D. and other cities throughout the United States for. physiothera) aide in the Public Health ¢ and Veterans’ Bu- reau, physiotherapy pupil aide in the Veterans’ Bureau, teacher of home economies and principal of home economics in the Indian Ser- vice, applicants were not secured in the number desired, and that these examinations will be held again on June 18, except the examination for principal of home economics which will be held on June 19. Persons interested in these or other examinations should apply to the retary of the United States Civil Service Board at the local post offi ‘or detailed information and applicntion blanks. NTW ERNGERIE It ig interesting to notice how the latest lingerie follows the tail- ored mode, and tucked bosoms and Peter Pan necks are featured on 5 £ ee Pte EA ORE ERNE AN cin 5 BM REAR, aad You

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