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Rann races PAGE SIX ™ Ky, | < S , HERO WORSHIP ee | CINCINNATI =| | j BEATS GIANTS | | i Takes Wild 11-Inning Game, e 8to7 H ——— | Chica July 22. — Cincinnati halted New York i hectic con- | test yesterday, winni n ait innings by a score of 8 to 7. New York used five pitchers and two catchers, while Cincinnati used four pitchers. and two catchers. Réxey was scored on by the Giants after he had pitched 33. inn without allowing a run, In th t half of the 11th, Roush of Cincinnati reach ed third on a pass, a balk by Jon nard and an out. With two out, Kelly took his foot off the bag before receiv Jacksoh’s good throw on Fonseca’s grounder, which would have retired the side with out scoring. The error allowed Lhe titally nt Ponsear over with | ‘The youngsters of Great Neck, Long Isk are getting a lot Sebrnieite right of pointers.on “right and left hooks” these days. Georges ( Milstead. started his first’ game| taining there for his bout with ‘Tunney and his training | for Chicage mand won, | Way's surrounded by young admirers, ho pitched | = — week, was hit|the edge on the American ‘League nois, and Michigan games; 35,000 nd St. Louis | field. | tts cach for the Haskell Indians and nd Dodgers | Opposing teams faced gov nderbi 1,000 for Ames and divided a double Brooklyn | Ditching in every game againstethe | 15,000 for North Dakota ne the. first, nd Pitts-| Yankees, while the New York ‘lub | : ~ : D rh the second, 5 jin return was up against the me Eel ie esonds 4 te 2. aead| brandlot pitenine quae abeut Haie| VV A SEs ORUN TO New York's lead in the Americans the time. ae | PLAY IN CITY to half game, defeating the world’s| Lik i great pitching staffs, the | umpions, 9 to Both Joe Bush) “fi r’ combination of the | shburn will oppose the Bis: and Hoyt hammered hard.) Yanks cannot go on f Phere | arek Independent Baseball team Washington t Chicago 16 to 2.}must finally come a break. When | jore next Sunday, -Manager George Uhle pitched Cleveland to a 2 to -pit comes the club will suffer, as|gmith announces.” HED EY: y Boston, and St. Louis| have all other pennant-winning delphia, 4 t i BASEBALL Louisville St. Paul Indianapolis Columbus Toledo ‘. Kansas City ........41 Milwaukee 2040) 750 Minneapolis . alli) 452 National League New York . Chicago Pittsburg. Brooklyn Cincinnati . St. Louis Philadelph Boston American League Ww. L. Pet. New York .. 38 578 Detroit i 38 Washington 39 Chic 44 St puis 44 Cleveland . 4a Od Boston 50 oh Philadelphia 58 al Results eCsterday National League Boston 1; Chicago 7. Brooklyn 6. ittsburg 2-4. New York 7; Cincinnati 8 (11 inn- ings) Philadelphia 7; St. American League St. Louis 4; Philadelphia 2. Cleveland 2 Boston 1, Detroit 9; New York 7. Chicago 2; Washingcon 16, American Association Toledo 0; St. Paul 1. Columbus 12; Minneapolis 0. Indianapolis 5; Milwaukee Louisville 9; Kansas City 1. Louis 4, —— | -Billy Evans Says | > - When ‘the pitching staff collap- ses, a ball club loses its best de- fensive weapon. Few clubs have ever won a pen- nant without the aid of great pitch- ing. It is most necessary over a long campaign of 154 games, John McGraw is one of the very few managers who has jockeyed a team to a pennant and world series with just ordinary pitching. Several times McGraw has upset the dope of the critics who insisted his pitching would fail him in a pinch. Ait eee Go back over the records of the} pennant winners and world cham- pions-and the fact stands out when the pitching fails the team invar- iably. breaks. woit, won a pennant in 1907. 08-09 with an all-star.pitching staff thaé-was backed by, much batting strength and a fair| defense. A m the late Bill, Donovan, 5 Mullin, Eddie Summers, Badger Willetts and Ed Killian be- gan to slip, the club did likewise. The Chicago.Cubs, the big noise of.the National League from 1906 to 1911, fell back the moment Over- all,\Brown, Lundgren, Pfeister and the rest of the staff, began to wilt. Pitching means much to a pen- nant winner. When the Boston Braves copped in 1914, superb itching by Rudolph, Tyler and james made possible the club’s un- expected success, ‘For three years the “five-star” itching staff of the New York y, has dominated ‘the Am- it League. Qnce upon a time it consisted of Mays, Bob Shawkey, Joe mem Jones and Waite Hoyt. | passed out Southpaw {season, but there is still plen pitching arms | § ADMITFIRPO | AS“VISITOR” »:; ae THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE aggregations. The failure of the Yanks to be cut in front at this stage by their usual comfortable margin has lieve the pitching staff of the world | champions is cracking. True, it has lacked the cons tency of former years so fd of dynamite left in th of the men who c the New York Ameri y the hope of ns. ig| Rules Waived by Immigration Board of U.S. bi ew York Luis Ange Firpo, Arge nt, whe ot, arrived in the United States yester- ter having been Isl ained at E board the next bo: after having be o'clock yes en held since terday morni Order 215,000 Minneapolis, July 22.—A total 0: y for the six home ames at the Unive y of Minne: sota’s new stadium this fall. Thi is dbta before. Fifty thousand tickets, the ful seating capacity of the stadium ha been ordered for each of the III footbal jock was. added to the | oppor nént tothe mat, shoulders downward, all-in, one movement. One of the biggest thrills in caused some of the experts to be-| Fargo, N. D., July 22—Future Fargo high school football teams {will wot be aided by the coaching -|of L. W. “Litz” Rusnegs. The Gate City mentor will go to the Univer- |sity of North Dakota this fall to day on board the Ame n Legion = to fulfill) an engagement to meet| Turtle % Harry Wills, negro challenger, was} Washburn was unable to do any nitted tg eke” Shallensery WAS) ching with Sprout’s curves Sunday or” by immigration authoritic Gil Tose The G Geos OF 8 to 2G 3 Washburn _ Turtle Take nd in company with other mem- Sgu hice euiucanaea TMG burn, I ving eae the team pre Blanca Lourdes, who says she isj/i°Us!Y in ® ninth inning rally, 6 a friend the South Ameri ae heavywe but not one of b}s Sees a —_______--_—_+« part inno cand) Miss) Toutes ware | The Nut Cracker | committed to Elis Island after ne —- —> failing to satisfy the immigration rpentier promises to retire from officials aboard the liner concern-j| the ring if Tunney whips and ing the visas in their pass-|Tunney ought to if he doesn’t. ports. Eduardo Carbone, listed eee Firpo’s seeretary, and Milguel Fer-| Mr. Mack can truthfully sert rera, a sparring partner, were de-| that none of the customers who at- tained as “material witnesse tend his matinees ever debase the Firpo was released a a sit-| fair name of baseball by betting on ting of a special board of immigra-| the Athletics, tion inquiry appointed to review his 2 case, but Miss Lourdes was held| Miller Huggins says he will retire until today, when, immigration] from baseball in 1925. So far as officials he would be liberat-] the seven other American League ed upon deposit of $500 bond,| managers are concerned his retire- } guaranteeing her ippearance on for Cuba, for which her ticket ds. iba Commissioner —¢ Immigragion! America has won the Olympiad Henry H, Curran said that the tech-] so man ‘aight times that the nicalities which involved Firpo’s de-| other nations are beginning to think Itention were waived by the board and he was admitted at 4:40 o'clock 10:30 Tickets Printed Tees 215,000 tickets was ordered printed than twice the number ever ned for the Gopher institution EVER SEE FLYING FALL?: °:' Rees HOW IT’S WORKED | | RUSNESS WILI COACH AT ‘U ant to P.d. Davis, announcement re- ‘orum Saturday from | the pr . | “Mr. Rusness will undoubtedly |have charge of the freshmen foot- | ball te il school next fi Fargo will miss Rusn Midgets to gridiron champion- in 1922 and 1923. During his two r coaching reign at the local high school not a single North Da- kota eleven could withstand the vaunted Gate City eleven’s attack. Turtle Lake 2 Beats Washburn n| ment will be just about five years too late, omething is crooked about it. Ducky Homes stopped another fist with his jaw in Washington the other day. It’s clear they don’t call him ducky on account of his ducking ability Belgium's champion Wrestler is an f|aviator....and, of course he’s a star at the flying fall. ry An effort to oust the Cardinals from the St. Louis ball park failed ..The fans might have been more interested if the effort had been de- signed to oust them from the state. Japan was last with one point in jthe Olympic finals, if you want to is|Was convinced that some of s|storm sewers are packed full of know what is meant by all this Jap- anese exclusion stuff. Leonard and Walker have ‘finglly been matched. Now all that remains, to be done is to get them to fight, America’s athletes did not .fare very well in the water sports in Paris. It may be presumed, how- ever, that they did nobly in the joy water events, MANDAN-NEWS NEED APPARATUS , Purchase of a sewer cleaning ap- paratus at a cost of about $1,000 is | the imperative need of the city at the present time according to Dr. A. O. Henderson, president of the board, and other members and such an apparatus will be received | in the city within the near future | for a demonstration. Mud, washing from the hills down on to the paved streets and thence into the sewers, has result- ed in a total choking of several of the storm sewers of the city, the officials y, and it will be impos- sible to. give adequate protection | against flcoding streets until the} rain Sunday night rst avenue N. W., for aj distance of two blocks as well as} other points in the city and Dr. Henderson declared the city po the mud. es The board is in communication with a manufacturing company at Milwaukee which builds sewer cleaning devices, TO LEAVE CITY Mrs. A. P. Gray will leave this evening for Hackensack, Minn., where she will spend several weeks at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Keller. Her daughter, Mrs. Lynn Hirsch and son Lynn will also leave the same evening for Los Angeles, Calif., where the former will join her husband and make their home there. Lyle Gray will reside with them and attend the } university of southern California. They will be joined later by Mrs. Gray. i | | | | RETURN FROM EAST Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schafer have ret turned from a three weeks trip in the east, the former being the | delegate from Mandan Icdge No.'| 1256 to the national convention of | the Elks which was held at Boston. | Enroute east they visited Niagara Falls. BOY SHOT | Einar, aged 15, son of Mr. and | Mrs. Oscar Edwards, 501 Seventh avenue N. W., was shot through the left hand Sunday afternoon when he attempted to empty a .22 caliber revolver with which he had | been shcoting at a target. | SEVERE STORM HITS COUNTY: Forman, N. D., July 22.—The severe storm in years struck this sec tion of the country Sunday night at 11:45 after a hot sultry day. The storm approached quickly from the southwest with a brilliant display of sharp flashes of lightning and neavy peals of thunder. It struck suddenly with tornadic fury, many solid struc- tures were shaken to their very foun- dations and many residents suddenly aroused from their slumbers sought refuge in the basements. The elements spent their fury in 20 minutes. A large volume of tain fell but no hail has been reported. The maturing crops are said to be safe. No human lives were lost and the loss to buildings Ts confined to barns, garages and other outhouses. Considerable havoc resulted in For man and the tributary country such as unroofing of light buildings, wrecking of garages, smashing of windows and breaking trees. Casper Smith's dwelling house had a close call, being swayed and twist- ed with walls bulging threatening to cave in at any moment. The windows were forced in, one window being smashed by an auto pump picked up from Attorney Leslie’s lawn .two blocks away. The house is badly damaged. The sargent county garage, Walloch's machine shed and private garage, and Attorney Leslie’s private garage, were torn and large parts lifted high over tree tops and build- ings and strewn in shreds — for blocks. A new threshing separator was tossed over on its side. The Thomp- son Yards is lacking half the roof which was strewn over the adjoin- ing block into Gust Isackson’s gar- age, demolishing the west wall, one e of board penetrating the auto side. DEMAND: inter tod spectator at the olympic game: grandstand, surrounded by a group of American: ‘SSSCSPOCOOSCOSOSOSCO POSCCOSSSSSSOOOOSD Tree Kangaroo and life to him wa! very pleasant. was of thick, long fur and the color of it waistcoat was of white, though he wore a front belt of a pale yellow shade. his forehead he had a grayish band and his ears were black on the out- side and yellow inside. yellow stockings he would said he wore—and his paws were black. and his body was of good size. dressed like the ladies of the fam- ||kq {il in grayish suits, which were | |Z B le Kangaroo, “is for sleeping and eating. Ss “Sometimes a fly or many files | im will disturb my sleep, and I have | | te kill them to have peace and|ff rest. too. i not be happy in any other kind of a AT THE GAMES Here he is seen in the Kiddies’ Evening Story By MARY GRAHAM BONNER A Tree Kangaroo Far away in Australia lived this He was very handsome. His coat was brownish-yellow. His His faee was black though across His legs were of a yellow shade— have His tail was as long as his. body, The children of the family imple and pretty, “Thé daytime,” said the Tree “I give them good, hard blows, “But I like to sleep during the | day, and my place for sleeping is in a tree. “That is why I am called a Tree Kangaroo. I am devoted, to trees. “My home is in a tree. I would “| Like to Sleep.” home. I like a nice mountain home, but a tree is the place in which to be cozy and comfort- able. “At night, when it is dark, I go out to travel and do my market- ing. 1 can jump from most enormous heights, 86 a tree home does not bother me. . “People who live in houses al- ways have to go out of them from the ground floor, “But I can jump from my tree home right to the ground without any. bother at all. “If I lived in a house I would not’bother to go downstairs to get }, out.of doors, “I would simply jump down from }} a window. But people can’t jump | as I can. « “They wouldn’t make- good ;Tree }# Kangaroos. I= “I don’t mean to hurt their feel- |} ings;when | say this. I hope they do not fee] badly that they can't do more than they can, “I hope they do n‘ spend their time. saying: “‘Oh, dear, if only we were Tree ingaroos, how nice it would be.’ ‘I hope they don’t say things such s this, for as long as they are peo- ple I suppose they musi ‘make the best. of it. But how thankful I am that 1 am;.really and truly a area Kan- gare, | “Of cotirse they muy, say that as;long.as I am a Tree Kangaroo it Is a iat thing. that I .make the best of it. “But I'm not making the best of it for I love being what I.am. “And It is so splendid to have a tall as long as one dy. “that ts such a ‘help“#m balanc- | |i ing; when one is ‘jumping. Now, maybe” people could jump trom th thelie upstairs windows If they could balgnce- with’ tails, | it they ‘haven't tajls,. tone deata? “Oh; ‘weil, 1’ will ‘not -teel weer} for5.them ‘as - probab aan happy enough. ~ Tliey the Joy of being a ec ‘angaroo, angdss0. they don’t know apna they TD SEEMS mise. » “As long as they fre “nappy in their own way I shall Net try to upset them, rewedty to go wrestling is the ‘flying fall, where a fl wrestler shoots through,space, gets the desired hold: and flings his This action pieture Sanur, two English wrestlers’ executing «the ver:in_spectacularman se I must im for ® Ut ei fa aa e"'sleep.” cs sltatlbe Nowsason i A Sara née Man Whom the Years Fovgot Sew - TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1924. ,, TAO Te TAG TAG TAG TAG TAG TAGE TOT AO TACT ATTAW AE DAET AOTC TAT TAP He ran a successful business 20 years ago. os He had built up this business by hard personal effort. ‘ Those who dealt with him knew that he could be relied upon, and anything which he sold was well worth the \ money. : { : : And he had a fine group of customers. But customers change, Some of them die.. Some go away. Some get restless and turn to competitors. So it was with his customers. And not enough new ones came to take their place. : - This man worked harder, He studied his products. He kept them up. to PYD7 Wary date, In many ways he was the best posted mani in his line of business. Bl , Except for one thing — and on that a one thing his competitors passed him. iS He did not keep in touch with old cus- tomers and attract new ones with sufficient energy. He believed the old “mouse trap” say- ing, that. people would beat a path to his door. wi But competitors set up along the beaten path, and the customers were diverted. ! 4 i What this man forgot was printing— and so the years forgot him. ‘He forgot to study the progress made in ‘merchandising. . He failed to see or find out the methods used by oth- ers in his same ling of, business, who were, continually in eommunication with his customers, telling them the advantages of, other merchandise, building confidence i in other business institutions, winning away the people who had made this one business suc- cessful 20 years ago. é Z| ‘al al Saran Wirt ars Wee a ‘al al * * * Pie Warr rer eee Soe re Nr Sore NS This is, not fhe, story, of any one busi- ness, It is the story of scores of busi- nesses, onee successful, but today dis- * ‘appeared or disappearing from the field. ‘Don't det. ‘anyone foseet ‘your. busi- ness, Keep in touch. with your pres- ent jharket, and open a larger and | . larger market by using ‘printing. -We'll gladly show .you,,examples ef how many others are doing it.’ Call on.us. $ awe ae bya. wv Pe [MPa are eee ie Steer Sr atck Tribtine a "Phone 32 i a FINE JOB PRINTING