The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 14, 1924, Page 6

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~ the 800-meter run and the 400-m Ate PAGE SIX ~~ “__.__THE BISMARCK TRIB NEW CONTESTS + WILL FOLLOW FIBLD EVENTS Sturdy Sons of America Take Victory ifi Week’s Gruel- ling Track, Field Events TENNIS ON PROGRAM Swimming and Other Events Are on in World Contests During This Week 14, (By the A. P.) | \ | | | | 1 | U.S. CONQUERS FINLAND America—A Happy Moment in Stockholm Olympiad—1 - 2.- 3! CE A SO IN nNOS Other games postponed, rain. Games Sunday Brooklyn 9; St. Louis 4. Boston 4-0; Cincinnati 0-6. New York 9; Chicago 6. No otker games scheduled. ! American League Games Saturday New York St. Louis 3. ‘eveland Washington 1-9. go 17; Boston 8. Philadelphia 1. ames Sunday New York 6; jis 2. Washington 15; Cleveland 11, No other games scheduled. American Association Games Saturday f / Detroit 6; Minneapo Louisville 3. Toledo 8; Milwaukee 2. St. Paul Indianapolis 2. Kansas City 4; Columbus 3. Games Sunday ; Minneapolis 5. 7; Indianapolis 5. 7-8; 13. innings; Toledo 6-9 (f game 2nd game 8 in- ni » record-breaking track | Kansas City 5; Columbus 1. and field battle is over, with the! pea sel United States victorious after af 5 sensational contest with Finland, Whose sturdy sons gained an unusual | Kiddies’ Evening share of the laurels, the interest : ; Ri ike Olympic which has been eon, ‘This is a photographic thrill from tie Stockholm Olympics of 1912. It shows America making a clean Rentrated’ oni a aitgle sport the sweep in the 800-meter run, with the noted Ted Meredith winning in world record time, and two compat- Story : ia elant today found seven Tots, W. M. Sheppard and {.N. Davenport, finishing in a tie for second. Lt RRS Ap ae it This is one of the few times in the history of the games that any nation ever monopolized first three is of the competition in full ouots, oe s ; y polized ah | By MARY.GRAHAM BONNER Bartiiieninyengitne wlurictions téday Meredith, incidentally, was only 18 years old at the time and had not yet been graduated from Mercersy fron the Awecicna viewpoint, are the Burs Academy when he made the team. No one expected he would do more than run a creditable race. Fee ee eiee ect, in| Sheppard and Davenport ranked high above him, as did Braun, the German s s Poison Ivy Again tei trong teame trom the United |, But Meredith ran a corking race all the and set a new world record of 1:51 9-10 for the event, gol-| once a year,” sald Daddy, “I Fes dao, 3s lapsing in a dead faint the moment he hit the tape. v Deal States are picked to go through to) "7 sn eet Secs Rune ase en aa _ usually like to tell everyone that the finals at the end of the week. | oh ee Pare ae, the mean poison {vy family will In addition there are the catch- ® 9 y J} Cleveland 15 to 11 in a boiling sun | never mend thelr ways. n addition ure the eatch- GOLF MUD HORSES CLEAN UP IN RAIN ¢'* Oe RA RE HRs ey ites is repre- | and A Sa ue keep away from It ff we can. sented even finals | Gone = ——e ry 5 «Harris was banishe: y mpire | Poison ivy has three leaves, but no ihe hah seven finals) Cyril Tolley Is Great Mudder and That Helped Him Win Holmes and the crowd surrounded| mutter how much you describe ‘Amer Aesiabrontlys erenye-t| npr eee ete) ee - ” Holmes after the game. One fan} tRese leaves people will still con- eiiiistivccrowing competition. | French Open in Squally Weather struck him, but Umpire Moriarity, fie them with other plants which Yachting and fencing conte i y Joe Williams zble, For one thing, the ball stops, and police came to the rescue. | hate three leaves—or they will are on the calendar of activities in There are “mud horses” in golt, |W here it lands and the benefit of the ew York beat St. Louis, 6 to 2. even call something poison ivy be- s and enviro: The western hemisphere has con- queted the old world so far in the majority of the Olympie contests, | and has ‘high hopes of continuing | esses in | the events before the official closi two weeks from now. 2 etal hing rain. Yet Tol- at Brookline two 1 ley’s remarkable both f0 American's Lead | eaneints : illiancy The final point score showed Thejicoenrae fe a WI EMS United States 255; Finland 170. cong read (pra Beviuace a enya fol; aT Citie ; ee Hoenn aeecg in| StS are able to keep that close to} Most of the stars were struggling en other nations figured im 4 even when the weather is idel.| to keep close to 80. Tolley. fin The ireat Bri- rance uth were 0 New Zealand 4, Esthonia 4, Holland | 4, Denmark 3, Japan 1, and Chile 1.| meriea came out of the games with | irst places st 10 for Finland. | England took three on the tra nd | Australia and Italy each one gold medal. | The American Victories The American victories were scored in the following even 400 meter s, high jump, broad jump, shot 110-meter hurdle r te h, hammer throw, pole , de- ithlon, 400-meter relay, 1,600 meter relay and the d . The Finns too t in the 10,000- meter run, the javelin, pentathion, 3,000-meter steeple chase, 1,500-meter run, 5,000-meter run, 10,000-meter and asked if I thought his son, |¢cived withcut much trouble a good cross country team and individuts/ who had passed 16, should take| illustration of what he could get 3,000-meter team race and the marla-| yp tennis in a serious way. The {out of his own elemental strokes. thon. En; d won the 100-meter ¢ run. Italy took the 10,000-meter walk and Australia the hop, step and jump. To its 12 first places the American athletics added an imposing total of ond, third, fourth, fifth and sixth places. They scored in every event except three. PRISON TEAM BEATSINDIANS ;; IN GAME HERE In seven innings on the local dia- n.ond Sunday afternoon, Millard Scott, star moundsman for the Groves, turned ‘in the thirteenth straight win of the season, easily all club Pitching effe defeating the Cannon! 3. score of 10 to ively all the Scott let the visitors down with six scattered The Grove gang gathered 11 hits from the offegings of Bear Goose, one of them. being a long drive over the wall for a homer by Peoples in the fifth frame, with one man on. The visitors played loose ball all the way, committing five errors, while the locals played nice ball behind Scott, only making two errors. The locals again had their big inning in the fifth, count- ing 7 tallies during that frame. The fast Courtenay club of the New Rockford League comes to Greve on next Sunday, and they are reported to be the fastest club in their sec- tion of the state. The game is sche- duled to. begin promptly at 2 p. m. mR OR 8 B88 Cannonballl 3 Grove 10 11 2 Batterie Cannonball: Bear Goose ‘and Young Bear. Grove: Scott and Snyder. Tom Shanley _ j Leaves Hibbing Hibbing, Minn., July 14.—“He said he wouldn’t leave us but he did” is the refrain. of local baseball fans apa Manager Tom Shanley of the Hib- bing club to Great Falls, Mont. Shanley. withstood the offers to go to Montana “unti) the inducements were made so strong he finally gave in, and is now on his way west. President Edward Brennan will pro- bably take over the manggernent of the club. ‘Hibbing fans are showering com- plirients on Joe Fautsch, ‘Star short- stop of -the team, who refused -an offer of $4,000 a season to go to Great Falls. *Shanley, was manager of the Bis- marek ‘North Dako’ gue. team iat AER OTR ; tl -jnot face the net when he swung. tromple the Chicaxcans, | That is, his play was at the ball,|9 to 6. Jackson and Wilson made} standing sideways. home runs. After all the good and bad points | In Cincinnati, the locals and Bos- were taken up, he was handed | ton broke even in a double header, tennis racket and told to-go ahe the first 4 to 0 and and swing, first with two han second6 to 0. Roxey ithen with one. He used a swing | pitched the Cincinnat: shutout, while ‘that was based upon hitting an im- amara hurled that of the Bos- when they talk of the departure of | voll is lost. This means longer and rder hitting. the build ef a Hercu- too. Cyril Tolley, giant Britisher. | is a mudder of the most virulent | type. Tolley has just won the open lainstorms and such, there- championship of France with, a . mean nothing in his life. The fine total of 290. | finest round’ of golf Tolley ever The championship was played in| played in America wag in a torren- Tolley’s victory To begin with he as a sunprise.| ed with a splendid 74. . We sti san amateur and] have a mental picture of him lying e field he faced was thoroughly | tull length stomach in water presentative. Walt agan,|up to his aristocratic ears, getting t-|the “line” for hig last putt on the | home green. | That the matter of heft and bwk and) is really an important considera- | tion in stormy, golf weather 1 he judged by the fact that the lo t score made on this particul at Brookline was 70 and it was wade by Jesse Guilford, New Eng- in it. zen and other Ameri well as the pick of Bri ottish fields, It is conceivable that Tolley j might not have won had the weath r been any different than it wa The big Oxfordian revels in mud-| dy going. The ph in in| iand siege gunner. golf is undoubtedly strong when Guilford is big enough to fight | weather conditions are unfavor-| Dempsey. Stir Tennis Interest i | Uses Golf Swing To BY MERCER BEASLEY The A-to-Z Man of Tennis The other through, with plenty of body weight on the shot. ‘Thus, this young shap had re- | 1 man came to me The idea that I had in mind for him was to interest him in tennis htro guhihaslr aed ycquaclri tain through his already acquired in- terest in golf and baseball. 36,000 FANS SEE CUBS LOSE fake Sunday Game) |gentleman said that his son had! around at it for about two | ears without making any notice- lable progress. | I asked that the young fellow come down and play a few sets on (our club courts. I found, as I often do, that I had to deal with a husky lyoung chap, in perfect condition. (There was not a reason in the:world iwhy he shouldn't be abie to play | good tennis. It developed that he played base- ball and golf. Therefore we took up the swing: employed in baseball and golf, first using a baseball bat, and then some Giants From Chicago Team, 9 to6 | jgolf sticks which I always have | nearby for such cases, eee I was curious, the way this chap July 14.—Ropes made the swings. There was a r a crowd of |pretty follow throuzh, not too much | Which crowded into the Chi | wrist work, and, best of all, he did aginary ball about waist high. Hit- ting the balls and perfecting the timing came next. In a very short |time he devoloped a natural follow ton team. Fournier hit hi: poklyn beat St. In the American |'HIGH SCHOOL STAR JUMPS st homer when Louis, 9 to | TO FAME IN OLYMPIC TEST|* | \ HENRY COGGSHALL Clearing. the bar at 6 feet 2 inches in the Olympic tryouts at Los. Angeles’ recently, Henry Coggstiall, a high school youth, not only won ‘fhe high jump event, but placed himself right up among the nation’s skilled. artists-in. this line of athletic endeavor, WINOT TAKES Wins Over Locals, 7 to 2, in from the Bismarck Independents be- y| fore a large crowd Sunday afternoon visitors were credited with nine hits to cight for the loc but Bis- errors let the northern team | win. Byerley, Fuller, Fetch and Thompson ptayed good ball for Bis- ! marck. The work of the visitors | was clean and: fast, — cause it has three leaves at the top of the stem. “Or perhaps it is a plant which has lost some of Its leaves and which people will call poison ivy. “The Brownles and the Elves, the Fairies and the Gnomes have not been able to do anything with the mean Poison Ivy family. “They simply won't change their ways. It is hard to, I suppose, when they've had those ways all ther plant lives. “and when for years and years, too, the family has been the same. “Plants can’t mend their ways, though it might be nice if they could sometimes. ‘ertainly in their case it would be nice, “The Fairles and the Brownies ‘and the Elves and the Ghomes VICTORY HERE IN BALL GAME, Game Which Errors Hurt Bismarck Team t Minot’s baseball team took victory didn’t mind the looks of the Poison the local ball park, 7 to 2. The e, however, was faster than the upport should have won. Manager George Smith expects to} © other good Sunday games neduled before the season end MINOT AB RH POA tush. ss .. a2 1 0 0 Parish, ef dn 2in2 Worner, ¢ .. 2.8 8 Boardman, 1b. 29 0 Kennard, 3b 110 Amundson, 2b 08.0 4, “Peleen ivy: Mas Threpiceaven, Bowlby, If 0 2 0 O!Ivy family. Their looks are quite Foster, rf o10 nice ‘and they dress neatly and in Swen, rf 1 10 smooth, nice three-leaf costumes. Morris, p 10) 3 “But they wanted them to stop BISMARCK Fuller, De Tiffen, rf. Sloman, Fetch, ¢ Sorlien, p 'Thontpson, 3b |B poisoning people with a rash and they said that was impossible. “Some people they didn't poison | because some people were not pol- soned by them. “It was just whether a person were apt to be poisoned by them or 2b Rochford, ot. “They couldn't tell, they said. “And they didn’t have it in for ; One person more than another, they sald. | “They were there and if people were poisoned by them they were | polsoned by them, and that was all there was to.it. e “So the Brownies and the Fairies (Batted for Chris! P 8 27157 ‘Three base hits—Byerley, Board- | 2nd the Elves and the Gnomes man. Base on balls—Off Morris | Couldn’t make the Polson Ivy fam- (By ); off Sorlien (Morris). Hit | ly change its mean family ways. by pitcher—By Sorlien, t (Ken. | “It 1s for that reason that every ners] aur aE, Gea | Year T'tke to tell everyone that the Sorlien to Byerley; Amundson to | family will never mend. thelr ways Boardman. Fetch, Rockford ( Washington beat) § Fr Morris, sville 33 .598 | recognize polson, tvy let -him point Indianapolis 35. 5T3 | It Of from a little distance away Paul 37 .570 | when the wind is not blowing. © 41 Aga “But-there will be o picture of Columbu' 44 463 | the ‘plant here fo show you now ity 45. 458 | whatit 4s: like, though ft. will not Milwaukee \. 46.432. | be able to show you the color. The Minneapolis . 48 .422 | very best. way is to have someone once point {t out to you so you can-{ National League not forget, it, 5 . Pet.| . “This year, though, | want to tell New York 26 669 | You something that will help you.tn Chicago 33 ‘571 | case you get poisoned by poison ivy. Pittsburgh 4135539, “A great woodeman told: me this Brooklyn 42 36 "538 | cure and he wng used to the woods Cincinnati 42 “494 | and had lived in them inost of his; Boston 45 4g | life. He knew all about the woofs Philadelphia 390 | People and the wond plants and St. Louis “377 | What was good and what was not . e'1 7 #sWash with. very, very tot | SRI ga utter dolng that, he add .* ‘And nfter doing that,’ he added, i Wane We L Pet. | Gvaate with hot salt water, Washington 45 30 cee | Bitte ‘will help relieve ‘the sting «556 | Detroit 4437. 543 an Fer burn, and tt is,a simple ehieago, 39 39600 “Tam telling you this, this year. Boston 39 41488 | ag gbverat ot Oe tHlendy have wile St. Louis) 8 40.487 ten and have said: Pleveland’ +++.38 42 475) Eg there anything we can dq Af Philadelphia 49 — .388| we do get poisoned by poison }ys and If we do get a poison Ivy rash?’ |. ot Results Saturday “and this 8 the - answer to | < —National League thetr question ns it-was told me by- Pittsburgh 6-3; Philadelphia 5-2. |‘n Tamous woodsindt.” . New York 14; Chicago: 3, (@, 1934, Westera Newspaper Union.) a ' and to be on the lookout for the three leaves which will poison. “Of course the best thing to do i 1s to look in a book at the lbrary or to get.a book with colored ple- | tures Showing all about plants and | see just what poison ivy looks like \and then to beware of It. RASERALL “a, botany book which would Struck ‘out by Morris —| Christianson, De Fuller. Struck out by - (2); by Sloman, Foster and Kennard. Umpire—Loubek. Sorlien, | |} show just how, It. lookéd, or one eno me -—--—-® | which showed the color arid quality American Association (of the leaves, wogld .help. Or. if L. Pet. | mnyone, knows a person Who. crm cee MONDAY, JULY 14, 1924 OLYMPIC CONTESTS * ey Earl Cooper, Pilot of Studebaker Special, Grooms: ° Car for Desperate Race at Kansas City, July 4th A close-up view of Earl Cooper who is now tuning up his Robin Egg Blue Studebaker Special for the 250- dust an Error of Judgment ‘ By MARY RUHL It seemed like a dream to Arthur Lessing to be back again at Squjre Brenner's house that afternoon in | early May. It was four years since he had left Wakefield, to make his way in j the world. It was an open secret that he had come back to agk Madge to be his wife. When Madge shook hands with him he felt the same subtle touch of sympathy. And Edith, her sister, smiled as she greeted him. She seemed to know. “The man who gets Madge will be a lucky fellow,” Squire Brenner said. “She is a girl of sterling merit. And she will inherit a good deal of money.” In the old days he and Leslle Carter had been rivals for Madge. Leslie had borne no malice when his suit was gently declined. Les- sing had hardly expected to see Carter there, but he seemed to be on intimate terms with the famlly. He, too, was a week-end guest at the Brenner home. During the dinner Lessing no- ticed with a touch of old Jealousy that Carter seemed to have estahb- Ished a brotherly relationship with the girls. And this was all that was needed to kindle the young man’s determination. He would ask Madge that night. The opportunity was easily ar- rived ‘at, for the squire retired to his library, and Mrs, Brenner nod- ded over her sewing. The girls and Carter had gone out into the garden, Lessing lingering behind to settle Mrs. Brenner in her chair and put the knitting needles In her Jap. Then he hurried out. Madge was walting for him! The night was dark; he could only see her white dress shining. He went softly toward her. “Dearest,” he whispered, taking her by the hands, “I love you. Will you be my wife?” “Yes,” she whispered, and pressed her lips to his, And the:. he found himself looking’ into Edith’s dark eyes. It was well for his training that he had been schooled in a difficult world. He did not start or betray himself. He linked her arm through his and they started back toward the house together. And at the door, stood Madge and Carter. : “aren't you coming out—?” Car. ter began; and then the sight of Lessing's face checked him. “I want to tell you all,” said Less- ing, “that Haith- has promised to be my wife.’ .. He kissed her again at the foot of the stairs and went up to his room, } He sat for hours’ in his chalr, thinking, All the rules of his ‘breed- ing told him that the mistake must never be acknowletiged. Abd Edith loved him! , There was no possi- bility. of misunderstanding what that. expression tad meant when she kissed him. /A man who lives by a code ts bound with silken threads: strotiger, than steel.. Lessing knew that.there was. no way out of the entangle- ment With honor,. ees He was the first @own in “the Ing. but after he had paced the grovnds tor’ Saw smundte Gare “{@idn't bh¥e much ghahes’ to ratulate you 1 night,” ‘he aa atratiog iis ‘nan. % eneate” Ks contin me a stort Tat “Do you know, I alway! thot t it was -Madge you cared or.” , Léssing, tore himself away, be- cangp he could not neste, to. speak... ste , i ‘As he entered the breakfast-room Madge. passed -him. sto and looked at each other ‘for an in- stant, ‘Then she jeu 2 ter wend slowly and wag about.to pass him. weMadge!” -evied Leselng,” que: denly. © RG eae har eee He touched fier ‘arm. ““Won't you come here ‘a asked, drawing hér t “Madge! I thought—’ bey, tried to. pass. hii done Wo often in had nevér done in reality. “Why—why?” she stammered, 04 5 iy cried 29H iNought nee walth white dresses, you hoth wore Meaperst ‘was yon.’ It was quite dark and ‘ou ¢| Collins, who ‘died 4 years go. Mile race at Kansas City on July 4th. Ss WHY BANKS? LESSON X By J. H. Puel PASS BOOK: an entry amount. — in which J. H. Puelicher depositor’s account. The the person to whom he w: wishes paid, and then si, icher, Chairman Public Education Commission, American Bankers Association When opening a commercial account the bank furnishes the ‘ depositor with a pass book, deposit slips and blank checks. COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT=Account in bank used in connection with funds employed in business transactions, withdrawals are made by checks. from which =A small account book in which the bank enters a customer’s deposits; serves as his receipt for that DEPOSIT SLIPS=Printed blanks with-spaces the depositor writes the amount’ of cash and of each check deposited. BLANK CHECKS=Printed forms for orders on the bank to pay put money from the depositor writes in the name of ants money paid, the amount he igns his own name. When the check comes to the bank it pays the sum of money as indi- cated, deducting it from the depositor’s account, and keeps the check which.it cancels, Cancelled checks are each month returned to the depositor and serve him as receipts for the payments made. About ninety per cent. of all business transactions are finally paid by bank checks. They facilitate business and are a safe way to transmit funds in paying bills, wages or meeting other obligations. thought tnat you knew, and that you had gone there to wait for me.” “You thought—it was I—?” .she exclaimed, looking up at him with staring eyes. “I made a bad mistake which I must atone for the rest of my life,” he answered. “Edith loves me, and |,8he thinks I love her. You remem- ber the old days?) This must be good-by, Madge, forever, my dear.’ A silvery laugh from the break- fast room startled them. They spun round, to see Edith standing there. “I coufdn’t help hearing you,” she said, laughing happily. “Oh, Arthur, how foolish we both were! I could never have found courage to tell you—” at I thought you were Les- lie,” she replied. is - -And then, in the revulsion of it all, Arthur kissed Edith again. But Madge did not seem to care. (@, 1924, Western Net Union,» ¥ MANDAN NEWS LEAVES HOSPITAL; INJURED ‘Adam Miller, local employee of, the orthern Pacific was painfully bruis- ed Friday night when he was struck by a speeding auto as he stepped from another car. He was thrown heavily to the pavement and ‘sut- fered ‘severe bruises about the left arm and wrist, a ting on’ his ‘left ring ‘finger being pressed into ‘the flesh of the digit. He had just re- turned Friay from the Northern Pa- cific hospital in Glendive where ‘he underwent an Operation for removal of ‘tonsils ‘and treatment: for ear trouble. Mr. Miller was ‘taken to ie Deaconess hospitaland ‘his in-' juries dressed, leaving Saturday. The driver of the car is. employed as a bell hop at one ef the hotels, he said, but did not know the youth’s name. FS . RETURNS TO DULUTH “Carl Quinn, who has been spending the past two weeks in the city, visit- ing at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs;.T. B, Quinn, left Sunday for Duluth, Minn, Where he‘ig making his home. F dé & SERVICES Funeral’ Services were held Satur- fri st. Josephs Catholic church lantiah Collins, aged 53, | who diéd ‘Thursday morning at For- rsyth, Monti, following a year’s: ill- ness with tubérculosis of the inte: tines, Shé was ‘the widow of James In- terment took. place in the family plot at the .side of ‘her husband ‘who Was buried here.. Rev. ‘Fr. Cle- meht Dimpfl conducted the services. Mrs, Collins‘who was the danghtér| [jof. Mr. and Mrs. Phil McCormick, pioneer, residents of Mandan, her husband and family left Mandan about ten 0 for Forsyth where Mr, Collins was in charge of a pumping station of the Northern Pacific, OES TO LAKES Miss Cecile Porter left Sunday for [ Detroit, Minn, to spend a few days as a guest of Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Jehnson (Genevive Haas) at theic summer cottage. SEEKING HORSES Daniel Hopkins, an Arikara Indian from Ree, N. D., who was here for the Round-up, returned to Mandan Saturday in search of two horses which disappeared from the — fair grounds the last night of the rodeo. He thought they might have gone home, but after searching there, re- turned here to renew his search. Hop- kins is a former service man who saw. much action in the world war. NECK PIERCED Donald, six year old son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Leubke of Flasher, is in the city at the home of relatives receiving treatments for an infection of the neck which threatened alarm- ing consequences but which, howe responded to care. The boy was rid- ing a tricycle last-Monday when he fell und one of the hindle tected by a wooden guard pi neck te: the esophagus. now recovering nicely. ced his He is FROM JANITOR TO PROFESSOR * Back in 1916, Rollins A. Seabury’ ‘of Mays, Kas., was a janitor in i school at Beach, N. D. Today he’s Professor of theory and history of music in the Kansas State Teachers’ College and conductor of the larg students’ band in Kansas. How'd he do it? Worked his way through ¢ Universities of, Maine gnd-North;Day kota 1nd saith Syn ‘as insthubtor. of« Thebsad ot the University of Porto’Rico, From then on his rise in music was rapid, unpro- f, Yn i { a cf : i 4 if : Be ) 2 1 1 3 a

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