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. PAGE SIX ™~ Sports! GIANTS MAKE IT'3 IN ROW Beat Chicago Cubs ‘Again By| Hard Hitting Chicago, July 16.—Again the New! York Giants trompled on the threatening Cubs, ‘defeathng the Chicago team for the third time} “ yesterday, 9 to 4. Kelley, Dean and | Hartnett made hom runs, it Cincinnati scored a 7 to 0 shut-out | victory over Boston, behind excellent pitching, trimmed Philadelph . Brook- | lyn hammered Sothoron and Bell | from the start and beat St. Louis. 7 to 4. Hornsby made his 10th and | llth homers of the season. | kees beat Louis, 5 to} er again being a victim of | New York club. The game was | ed by wrangling. Babe Ruth d the winning run, Walter Johnson held Cleveland to five hits, and Washington won. its fourth straight game, 4 to 2. The Chicago White Sox beat Boston, & to 6, being the third straight victory for the White Sox. Detroit came | from behind to beat Philadelphia, 11 | to 9 | f— BASEBALL ——— Dear old Yale did quite nobly by the memory of the Merriwell boys— Frank and Dick of yellow ‘back | ton, on July 18, according to word fiction note- this. year. received by his brother, J. J. Barth. The Blue climbed back from the depths of athletic mediocrity and re-established itself as the collegiate | Conley will be in Bismarck July 20 headliner of the works. The te ty one of the g AN’ EPOCHAL YEAR FOR THE YALE “Y” ssfully up and down the football tean 150n, possibly the greatest. pines of sundry victims last fall. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE It was rest of perhaps eight he was never quite the old. lose seven games. One year has passed and Naylor, the pitching sensation of* the stages of last year’s to the minors. an injury that ruined his career, year in -bascball Argenteuil, France, in the original heat.- LAHR MOTORS — 11 to 5, in Commercial League game last night. CONLEY COMES - HERE JULY 20 Billy Conley, former Mott, North Dakota boy, will box Frankie Mur- phy 10 rounds at Spokane, Washing- or 21 and will be ready to box any- one that shows up. n ho eradie ailunfeld team: cared y top hono:s in the intercollegiate games, much to the surprise 1415 . American Association | of experts, and dismay of the Californians, who were confident of repeating. Soulful Fidelity of ~ LL. The crew not only disposed of its routine opponents in the big event of year but paddled out and ; Louisville 48 threw cold, wet spray in the faces of an all sregation which aspired Olympic glory. Sydney Blair Indianapolis +48 The Yale crew, now abroad, is a heavy favorite to out-stroke the world’s foremost challengers in the St. Paul 49 Olympic row. By GEORGE ELMER CODB Toledo .. 40 “tts y the greatest crew in the history of Ameriean rowing,’ is the estimate of ofe of the Golumbus 1044 country’s best qualified observe : Ail winter long Sydney | Blair Kansas City 47 Yes, this has “been an epoc year for the Yale “Y.” ed in a 6*by 10 room in’# poor Milwaukee 46 The Merriwell boys themselves could hardly have done any better. cae e etree st ideeli “an to tite Minneapolis 48435 | — = wae ee - - a a ? BEET 7 ; effusions, only thrice in his fe had : Masia |ANDERSON WINS ON ramige Mga Telay he ls back he Feel eal pay fom a rea Ww. nl \ Tebow publication. B New York 34 THE HAGEN SPIRIT = i Once a year his soul swelled. It ‘ew York . 25 For years Connie Mack carried |was when, as now, ‘he turned his Chicago u u SS Naylor in the belief that he had | face from the turmoil, dust and hol- £ Pittsburg Oe 4B i re 7 4 _ is . _ + _| the making of a great pitcher. Year | pow eal Brook 43 33, American Who Won French Amateur Title Is No Genius) as, Naylor showsdoeiauiveler dow ex etter PE ieaaioaiedat® Ginstnn: 5 But He Knows Hi ht greatness, but lacked a certain some. |1y strung across his stout walking, Boston a ‘ thigg that kept him from reaching | stick and containing a change of Philadelphia By Joc Williams ye His outstanding ygolf | the realms of stardom. Hnen and a blanket, Sydney Blair 2 St. Louis Johnny Anderson, veteran New! ¢ is his fighting ability} Last season, in the early spurt|had one other possession of some i yr has won his first. national ument, What Hagen is to| that carried the Athletics to the to. | utility and value, This was a piano Fy American League mpionship. nal field in this respect | of the race, Naylo® did his part by |tuning key. From the profession Bex. i w. ct.! over Cyril Tolley in the ama- to the amateurs. winning seven straight games. of poet in winter our good friend , New York 2 AB 8] teur tournament was only mildly| Chick Evans once told the “Naylor has finally arrived” re- | enacted a broad transition to piano = Washington AT urprising. he would rather marked Connie Mack to me after the | tuner at summertide. Detroit 45 | Anderson hardly ranks with Jones| er in the game than Anders pitcher had turned in one of his} nce, ‘at dusktide, Sydney, rest- H cago at or Ouimet in form and skill but) “It isn’t hard to beat him,” good games. “He's overdue ut it | ing under a great gnarled oak, was St. Louis 39 he is a star just the same. Since “but it is hard to make him| Was worth waiting for.” aroused by a shrill echoing cry. He Cleveland 1910, when he qualified fi 3 al s beaten” 2 jran toward the highway to observe Boston national tournament performer, beat- ; from five to| A few days later Naylor was the three rough-looking fellows dis- Philadelphia ing, among others, the noted Welter | cight strokes stronger than Anderson, | Victim of an accident that probably | uppearing in the dim distance, He Results Yesterday National League Boston 0; Cincinnati 7. New York 9; Chicago 4. Philadelphia 1; Pittsburg 3. Brooklyn 7; St. Louis 4. American League . Louis 4; New York 5, . 25 Detroit. 11; Philadelphia Chicaga 8; Boston 6. a) hington 4, 9. ‘American Association polis 6; St. Paul 4. le 4; Minneapolis Toledo 8; Milwaukee 9 (10 innings) Columbus Kans City 0. l The Nut Cracker | oe —————+ | A collegian named Skillet is com: ing to the big leagues. . No one will be surprised if flash in the pa he’ One punch O'Goofty was not dis- turbed to hear Walter Hagen started out to be a taxidermist. “All kids want to be either chauffeurs pr firemen,” he says. It begins to look as if it is Sarazen the golfer, not Sarazen the runner, | who needs the horseshoes. Andre Anderson who is going to! England to fight Joe Beckett is one of the fistic 400. That is, he is one of the 400 Dempsey knocked out. | ‘| How many af you bright-faced | youngsters sitting there in the first row can tell teacher whogwon the Olympic ski jump last March? Quick now! The Phillies pulled a triple play | the other-day. . . Tt was the | first time in seven years that three | players on that team were found awake at the same time. “The tfouble with Siki is that I | can do nothing with him,” says Mr.| Levy his manager. . . . Mons. | Carpentier.foind tnat out long ago. They say everything from soup to nuts was served at Jack Dempsey’s birtiday party. . . Isn’t that a fine way to talk about One Eye | Connolly? cd ; The highly touted Bishop has been benched by the Athletics. . . Contrary to all expectations didn’t even have acprpyer. he Having been beaten three times, *Helen Wills knows by now that it takes more to make a super-woman than a head-line writer. KREMER SAVES PIRATES Pitcher Kremer, a rookie ftom the coast, has been a lifesaver for the Pittsburg Piratts. - has partly stoned for the failure of some of the veterans. Kremer has a deceptive move to first. that makes base runners hug that bag. ; PITCHING PASS UP RELIEF Both Walter Joi: av In 1913 he was good enough to go | certainty to the finals before Jerry Travers | It took all the ski and science turned him back, 5 and 4. Again) Evans could command to win from in 1915 he reached the finals, losin nderson at Brookline two “ this time to Bob Gardner by the| by a single hole. It w oe same score, | match clear to the finish, Anderson Anderson, incidentally, picked s out of the national cham- to win from Gardner, f youth had been carried to the seventh green the day before by Marston and the experts figured he had spent most of his energy. Anderson , Anderson has conspicuous fi is poetic rhythm in acti take him for ure in American gol a stuy been a fairl yet the struggles between the two | have always been fraught with un-| the majors. the back in 1913. This was 1 cat and dog fight, the end ing on the thirty-fifth green or does Anderson happen to be vans’ particular j Anderson is a picture of] tough for all stars. They can beat n. You'd never, him all right but they can’t make nt of Vardon-° him enough. x work, hard Huggins Says Yankees Are About “Shot” and Insists 1925 Will Be His Last Year as Boss "By NEA Service. New York, July of 1925 will reer as a Millet York Americans, three-time pennant winner, star pitching staff that has done “{ intended to retire at the close | hig things for my club are begin | ein” “Ho's of this year. Possibly would if my] ning to slip. The fact that a couple | OU" bas club was going as “Good pitchi. 2 ade B - . Gut een pod pitching has made the! bench, next to Connie Mack, when Hy 1G The season} Yankees, been a big asset in win-| the news was brought to him, His or league manager,’ | RNs three pennants, but piteners| face became serious and he It was that he was he veteran members of the all. well as it was a] cf the vets are going back is very bet right now. sl year ago, but it isn’t. pronounced, a “The Yankee team is beginning to ; hey thi break, I don't like to get out while Pitchers Have Run Their Race pitcher.’ it slipping. td hand over a strong club to my veral I would much perfer Ren “Hoyt, alone of the Yanke staff, iv a young man, and he a veteran departments of the been picked up. Conditions ‘pitchers say thi > pressure relief work takes ,as much | veai game. } major; triumph, | out-of them: as the ordinary His fine work |" , JOHN . ANDERSON America did well in the golf cham- ip abroad this ycar. n.'won the British open title a: great field Anderson sprinted away with the Frotich amateur title. Anderson is » tar | veteran. New Yorker who. has: been ~ | playing’ inv the big, tournaments: for This, howevi Blonship Ht from FRENCH TITLE _TO AMERICAN game the club must be rebuilt, not- | ably in the pitching. have reached the point where the |q owner of the club must go out and buy up the best pitchers the minor league market affords. The pitch- ing staff of the Yankees must be] overhauled. “Thought must also be given to e position of shortstop. Everett cott, one of the greatest infielders of all time, is fast slowing up. His eat endurance recerd has exacted a certain toN. Everett Scott on His Last Legs “Looking to the future, shortstop is one, position that must be con- dered. A successor to Scott, who in step right in and fill the bill, is very necessary if the club is to :Jecntinue a pennant contendr. “As a matter of fact, the Yankees as a team are aging and must be given an infusion of new blood to as on, “It is going to be a tough battle to win this year. If my club “goes Jever, the great strain isn’t going to help the condition of the. veterans, particularly the pitchers. : “The Yankees are liable to be stag: gering at the close of the present don’t want to quit a club‘ when it's groggy and on the ropes, otherwise it would be curtains for me at the finish of 1924.” ; —_-____—_ | Billy Evans Says | n i bi 2 One year often makes a lot o difference in the career of a bal. Blayer. “ Often some seemingly minor hap- pening plays a prominent ‘part in |* shaping the destiny of @ player's fu- ture. The case of Pitcher Rollie Naylor, late of the Philadelphia Athletics, is @ striking example of such a truth, Aeyear a go'at this time Naylor was the one best pitehing bet of the Athletics, not excepting. the briliiant Walter and: Johnny » is his it inches, was the cause of his passing from Incidentally it started the Athletics on the road to run. With seven straight wins to his credit Naylor, anxious to keep fit, of'days working in the outfield during batting practice. With an overflow crowd in attend- ance, watching a double header with New York, Naylor suffered a seri knee injury during the preliminary | Chasing a fly ball, he saw he was about to come into Gontact with low rope that had been stretche1 to keep flie fans on the field ii chee! He tried to jump the rope, fatlei, took a bad fall and injured his kne necessary to carry him from the field. Later it was learnea badly injured wouldn't play for weeks. I was sitting on the Athletics’ “That is probably the beginning of the end for Naylor and my ball my one best pitching The club is going to If he is as badly hurt as y think, it may ruin him as a Naylor came back after a RECORD Unusual action picture and study in expression as Miss. Ethel Lines of the London ‘Athiétic Clab breaks the world’s. amateur, record. for. wo- men. by jumping 16 feet and 11 1-2 ana re- long ‘stumbled over a prostrate form. It ‘was that of an old man. There was a cruél gash at one side of his head, A buttonhole of his vest was torn apart, showing where his watch chain had been torn from place. | Evidently footpads had robbed this victim. Sydney ran to a brook near at j hand. He soaked a handkerchief tn water, and did all he could to re- move the traces of violence from the insensible man. Finally the lat- ter sat up. He put his hand con- « | fusedly to his head, his eyes were somehow glazed and unsteady a8 he surveyed Sydney. “See here,” spoke the latter, “wito dre you and what has happened?” The victim seemed to make a des- peraté effort to concentrate hts thovghts, failed and shook his head blankly. “H’m!” sollloquized Sydney, “a bad blow. See here, old friend, I must gét you to a doctor.” The victim placidly allowed Syd- ney to lead him to a nearby village. There a doctor looked him over, plastered ug the wound on his head and quéstioned him as to his home, “I don’t know,” was the monoto- hous response. With the morning the same cloud of haziness hung over the victim. All that morning Sydney led him about the vicinity, No one knew him. He was an utter stranger to the district. sb “See here,” said Sydney, “what am I going tojdo with you? What do you want to do?” “Go with you,” replied the old man, simply. “I like the sunlight, the woods, the birds. I feel rested, I feel happy, only—I forget what was.” “AN right, I make you my part- ner,” said Sydney. The old man grew quite blithe |and’ talkative during the next day of idle wandering. He was like pleased child. Some injury to his brain, it was apparent, had blotted out the past. Sydney observed that he was an educated man, his attire evidericed respectability. Thére was, hot a mark on. his clothing, not a scrap ‘of paper found to give a clue to his identity. Every morning and evening, how- ever, the ‘old man took from an in- ner pocket an exquisite little me- daliion. It held the portrait of a beautiful girl, He would gaze at it raptly for nearly av hour, And then Sydney got to sharing “His mute adoration. Like- nomads, those. two passed along the flower-fringed byways. with the careless, joyous lifé. little wayside inn, Sydney struck up an acquaintance with a eration, ‘The or had predicted rightly, see but jaylor of During, the remainder of- the season he managed to win five ana arly, race in the American League, has been shuntea 0 much enthusiasm resulted in A lot of things ean happen in one CANADIANS. .. - MEET YALE July 16.— The Canadian 8-oared crew today won the right to compete with Yale in the finals of the Olympic com- petition by winning the race of crews which had finished second TEAM VICTOR), The Lahr Motors baseball team defeated the Transportation team, Each day. the old man seemed to grow happier and more contented One. evening; while seated to ‘a ‘phys cian, He told ‘the story of the old.) ~ | man. ‘The dlocter. peste, snverget Mine n the coer. ed. He examin ie patfent.°~ 4 ¢ ust? been” ex- “there Is <a depregaion of ‘the donne, Be Seige: Se ee skull,” be sald/ “This man’s mem- kad toigive in, sie at last, ory can be..restored by. surgieat aot for *“explaiiation, operation” *o. * “ * 2 | owtied’ that the“ same: thing had It, would «cost. fifty Soller, Com “tooth 1atomers; doctor said, for fe, would have fo ‘There Was, hoo explana- callin a surgeon, ‘Sydney didde Ar) tush, ‘beyond: the’ fact ‘that’ a: gitl rangenients, fon ei ne ae Na| geiehred hair whip used until-lately vl iD, * hen Re | to beremployed there had committed stavtel oe tuising: plato . suldfde, and’ that“it was possibly It_ wae a’ gird, proba day. tor his! her uneasy spitit- thet still re- good, Kind heart when he returned: with the money to‘pey-fer,-the gp- : ‘The operation coficluded, ol man fose up, a new Ictelligence in his face. He listened to the story of the doctor. His eyes were filled with gratitude and love as he was told of the noble sacrifice of the tramp poet. “Bring me a check book,” he sald, “and a pen. His apparent whim was gratified. | He scratched out “Bank of Bilton,” substituted “State Bank of Ware- ham,” signed a name—Henry :Morse —and handed the check to Sydney, filled in for: five thousand dollars. Then came his story of visiting some land at a distance, of being assaulted and robbed. Sydney must accompatty im home. A sorrowing | daughter, who mourned him as dead, greeted him at his own pala- tial home. ‘She was the original of the cherished portrait, Eva. Morse. When all the beautiful story of the soulful fidelity of Sydney Blair | to a stranger was told, gratitude shone in those lovely eyes. And then love, and in the golden days that passed by as a joyful dream the poet knew no more of loneliness, and deprivation and neglect. (@ 1924, Wortern Newspaper Union.) American Firearm ‘The Kentucky rifle, Colt's revol- ver and volcanic or repeating riffe of the Winchester type are the most distinctly American firearms, The rifle was evolved from inaccur- ate “boar” rifles brought over by Swiss and German gunsmiths about 1650, These men were fine work- men. For the most part they set- tled in Lancaster and Bucks coun- tles, Pennsylvania, where among hunters and Indian fighters they at once found ready sale for all the arms they could produce. Work- ing in small crossroads shops, they made entirely by hand, from iron mined and melted in a most primi- tive way nearby, such modifications of their own “boar” guns as de- mands required. No Cold-Weather Bird The ruby-throated humming bird, which is the only species of the humming bird found north of Flor- ida and east of the Missiasippi, spends the winter fi subtropical re- gions such as Florida, Mexico and Central America. Altogether there are about 200 known species of humming birds in North and South America, although only 18 different species are inhabitants of the United States. The ruby-throated hum- ming bird ts of a bright shining green color with a beautiful ruby- red throat. It is devoid of song, its only noise being a little squeak without definite tone which the bird utters while draining the nec- tar from flowers, , Pulverized Coal Raflronds in Australia are expertly |-menting with pulverized: coal for their locomotives. Engines have been equipped with special devices and the fist trials have proved quite satisfactory. A soft brown coal is used and by pulverizing it this fuel will develop heat in great- er quantities than when burned in its natural state, and likewise a tender can carry more, and the waste will be less. Blackbirds Eat Trout; Cows Are Fed on Fish ‘Those who etudy Nature find that age-long traits and: habits are being in some cases modified and in others entirely changed, The writer knows of a case! where a bird had its habits ‘changed by altered: conditions, f A trout fishery was established on an estate in Scotland, During certain seasons a large number of the fry or young trout are crowded together In shallow ponds, as their | inclination is to keep together just where the water enters. One day a blackbird, drinking at one of these ponds, got hold of a young trout, probably accidentally, but found it was excellent feeding. A blackbird does not by habit get {ts food from the water, but this particular one, having tapped a new source of food supply, re- turned to it again and wgain. The following #eason this bird had by some means been able to {impart its newly found knowledge | to all the other blackbirds on the | estate, and instead of one bird stealing the young fish, all the birds got into’the way~ef doing 80! The owner had seither to shoot the blackbirds: or give up trying to rear trout. That an entire change of food fs not detrimental may be proved by the fact that many of the cows kept in Norway are fed on fish, yet who will say that a-cow’s teeth were made for dealing with. a diet of this sort?—Philadelphia In- quirer, . Ghost Gives Shampoo to Women. Crstamers ‘The curious story of # ghost that occupied itself in shampooing cus- tomers in a Kensington hair- dresser’s shop is. told ty Mary L. Lewes’ in “The er Side of Things recently published here, says a London correspondent of ‘the New York World. | — 4 woman who entered the sliop in a busy hour was tet¢ she must wait until an’ assistant-was free, the story goes,” Very: \soon*a tall girl. With red Hair and’x velvet bow m her: head cate to the customer and set to: work to’ shampeo her. “Bho ‘bulainess,-6vér and ‘the lady Teady. to put on her hat HD, stie } taried aroind to ask the adsistent for -ber bill, ‘but to her surprise the. girl had gone. Just then an- other’ attendant came in‘and sald: ‘New, madam, I um ready.” “Bat I have just been’ sham- turned to the scene: of’ her former oeeupation,. ?. ‘Read Tribune. Want A Samuel Gompers, president of the Amer facing: his greatest fight—his fight for health. the trade union movement lays seriously ill in his hotel suite on Coney lown that came while he wi onal Convention. re growing ‘more’ encouraging daily. Islam, N. Y., following a br the Democratic ‘Nat ever, ‘WEDNESDAY, JULY 16,1924 . FIGHTS, FOR HEALTH, ~ : ican Federation of Labor, is “The grand old man” of tending ‘Reports from his bedaide, how- Hardly a day passes tha and psychiatrists. Nathan Leopold Jr., and Richard Loeb, con- fessed slayers of Robert Franks, Chicago schoolboy the Cook county jail iaboratory for further ex: ‘Here Dr. James Whitney Hall, extreme right, hay ‘come with Walter Bachrach, one of the defense counsel, to question the youths. re not called into nination by alientsts, Is Marriage Journey’s End Modern Couples? ei . to Some Feminists Disagree With Famous Beauty, in Discussion —_—__— ° Gloria Fo¥,°a recent addition to ‘Broadway's glittering constellation, / has-unloosed a violent. debate: upon the Rialto by asserting that mar- riage should be “journey’s end” to modern !couples: a8-:it; was to their fae a Lucy Stone Leaguers, femin- ists, professional and even home women: ‘have all taken issue with the pretty star of “Up, She Goes”. 1.3) Manatace Nor Anctor “Their unanimous opinion | seems: to be,” complains Gloria, “that mar- | loons! | mS ey een mele al riage is not journey’s end, but a step in life of, little ‘more. importance than’ the purchase of a new frock or the obtaining of a new job. If you do not like.the frock, you caf return-it, If the job<doesn’t suit, you can give it up. That's exactly what they do with husbands. Journey’s Enp “Now: I. was. trained :in another school and I agree with the song, ‘Journey’s .End’, started the whole argument. » Ddelieve: you should first be. sure’ you: have’ the right man, ‘then Gf-he stands’ the test that all girls who have been trained, by good mothers know how to apply, marry him, build:a home: and stick until death do . ‘Journey's End’?