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TUESDAY, AUGUST | Sports ; MAYS SET BACK BY NEW YORK Cincy Pitcher Loses After . Five Straight Wins Chicago, Aug. 12—Carl Mays, form- er American League pitching star, turned adrift by the Yankees and \ Picked up by Cincinnati, lost a game \yesterday after having won nine straight contests. The Giants fell on him, and took the game, 4 to 2. Watson pitched the Giants’ victory. Pittsburgh took two games from bi esd 7 to 3 and 6 to 4. Tony Kauffman’s good pitching enabled the Chicago Cubs to beat Boston, 3 to 2. Brooklyn beat St. Louis, 2 to 1. Grimes and Haines were the opposing pitchers, In the Americans, no games were played, all teams having open dates. « | BASEBALL | 1 o—___________. AMERICAN LASSI w. Pet. St. Paul . ot it toed Indianapolis 62 47 569 Louisville 62 61.549 Toledo 54 59.478 Columbus 54 59.478 5 Bl 60.459 49 62 441 Minneapolis 51 65.440 NATIONAL LEA Ww. Pet. New York .. 38.648 Pittsburgh 44581 Chicago 48 551 Brooklyn 50 Cincinnati Ba St. Louis . 45° 63 AIT Philadelphia . 40 66 377 Boston .,. a9 68864 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. iL Pet, Detroit ... 41.565 New York 48.664 Washington 60 50.545 St. Louis ... 87 51.528 , Cleveland 52057477 ‘ Chicago bl 56.477 Philadelph' 46 63 423 Boston ..... 45 62 .420 RESULTS YESTERDAY NATIONAL LEAGU Pittsburg 7-6; Philadelphia 8-4. Chicago 38; Boston 2. St. Louis 1; Brooklyn 2. Cincinnati 2; New York 4, AMERICAN 1 Open date. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul Columbus 12. Minneapolis 7; Toledo 8. Others postponed, rain, GOLFERS FIELD I$ NARROWED Five Out in Front in Field of 73 / Fargo, Aug. 12.—Five of the Ry of seventy-three North Da- kota golfers were well out in front today when the second day’s play in the qualifying rounds for the state championship was opened. These five, R. T. Barnard, John Martin, both of Fargo; Bert’ Nier- ling, Jamestown; tied with 82 each ate the first 18 ares ow eal ‘ying andsTom Hul ‘ar- £0 ead ay Antler Merson of Grand Forks With: 3a are battling today for medalist honors, the balance of WISCONSIN GIRL JUNIOR CHAMP DOROTHY PAGE By NEA Service Madison, Wis., Aug. 6.—The new junior champion of the Women’s Western Golf Association is Dorothy \. Rage of this city who ascended to the title in the recent annual tourna- ment, Miss Page played a remark- ably steady game and scored a de- perved triumph, ( g| build, a lofg body, lean flanks, fra- 12, 1924 By Joe Williams “He’s built like a sprinter.” What are the standard specifica- tions of the sprinter? If any. Speaking of horses and human Man o’ War was one of the gr est sprinters ever foaled. Like one of the most beautiful that ever faced the barrier. War had the perfect race Man 0’ horse gile legs that tapered off to pipe- stem proportions. And he was a blue-blood. Morvich followed Man o’ War. Morvich won the Kentucky Derby and other notable events. Morvich looked as much like Man o’ War as jan ash heap resembles Gibraltar. He was thick and heavy and un- symmetrical. But, Gus, the old nag sure could step! And there’s Black Gold, this year’s the field being four strokes behind. Match play in the first rounds of the various flights begins this afternoon. Bismarck golfers made the follow- ing 18-hole scores in the qualifying rounds: W. F. Gettleman, 103; Phil Meyer, 95; E. B. Cox 87. Charles Wattam of Fargo, formefly of Bis- marck, made 95 in the qualifying round, JACK RENAULT BEATS MADDEN | New York, Aug. 12.—Jack Renault, Canadian heavyweight, decisively out- pointed Bartley Madden, tough New York Irishman, in a 15 gound match at the Queensboro A. C., in Long Is- land City last night. The Canadian bested his opponent in every ex- change but his blows lacked the steam to knock out Madden nor even to send him to the floor, The Irish- man was badly cut about the face at the termination of the contest. HEYDLER FINES FLETCHER $100 New York, Aug. 12.—President Heydler of the National League today announced that he had indefi- nitely suspended and placed a fine of $100 on Arthur Fletcher, man- ager of the Philadelphia Nationals, as a result of the latter’s row with Umpire Pfirman in the game with Pittsburgh yesterday, ! ROSEN TEAM WINS The Alex Rosen and Brother team of the Commercial League defeated! the Hardwares, 11 to 3, last evening. | DAVIS CHARGES SCANDALS ARE G.O.P. HERITAGE (Continued from page one.) vention which nominated him, the candidate said he would not be ex- pected at this moment to discuss them in detail or to outline the me- thods by which they are to be car- ried into effect. “There will be time enough for that,” he said, Much of his address was given over to a measured attack upon the record of the Republican party dur- ing the past four years. Recount- ing what he termed “the multiplied andals: of these melancholy years,” Mr. Davis .assailed the Executive Branch of government for “hurried efforts to suppress testimony, to discourage witnesses, to spy upon investigators and, finally, by trump- ed up indictment, to frighten and deter” the investigators from their pursuit. He charged that in the enactment of the present tariff law there was “an unblushing return to the evil days of rewarding party support and political contributions with legisla- tive favors?’ Also he charged in- ability of the administration to function due to disagreement be-; tween the President and the Repub-! lican majority in Congress to agree! on. public questions. World Affairs \ Declaring that it wag not in do- tmestic mattera’alone that, the symp- toms of this “creeping paralysis” have appeared, Mr. Davis said ‘that not only have Executive reeommen- dations for adherence to the World Court been “flouted and ignored, but no evidence is in, sight that the Re- publican party as now constituted can frame and carry to its conclu- sions any definite and consistent foreign policy.” Derby winner. A tramp hors¢, a product of gypsy rings, a mongrel breed. Black Gold looks more like a race horse than Morvich did, but he lacks the class and aristocracy that w: written all over the per- fect running horse, Man o’ War. Pipe Stem vs. Piano Legs And yet this hobo of the turf has run to record time in a number of o much for the hors Consider the American rélay team which won the Olympic 400-meter event in the world’s record time of 41 seconds flat. A relay team is composed of four sprinters. One man must be a: the other, if not faster. magine that such a t made up of men of You'd m would be ilar build. But the most conspicuous physical unifor Amer ity about the four ns—Hussey, Clarke, young Murchi- terruption of world commerce; with the agricultural regions of the West the loss of their foreign markets we have stood by as powerless s tators, offering to the world nothing but private charity and individual advic Moving from this attack on the oppositio® to a discussion of othe issues, Mr. Davis saved to the las his utterances on the subject wh was the basis of a bitter fight in the New York convention—religious freedom. Without , referring by name to any organizations, the nom- inee said he wished to “denounce bigot intolerance and race prej- udice ‘as alien to the spirit of Am- erica” and promised that when elect- ed, he would “set up no standard of religious faith or racial origin” as a qualification for any of the thousands of offices he would be called upon to fill. For the aid of the farmer, Mr. Davis said the Democrats proposed to see to it that the disc tions which the tariff makes sc him shall be removed; that this government by doing its share to- ward a European settlement — shall help to revive and enlarge his for- eign markets; that the forces of government shall be put actively to work to lend assistance to endeav- ors for extending the principle of cooperative marketing; that when widespread distress has overtaken him, every’ power which the govern- ment enjoys under the Constitution shall be exerted in his aid. “He is entitled, too, to demand an sinking into bankruptcy because of | HEADS, LEFT TO RIGHT, HUSSEY, CLARKE, MURCHISON, LECONEY. “With the reconstruction of Eur- ene weighing heavily on the world,” he said; “with American economic fed and stunted by the in- BACK TO GOOD OLD U.S. A. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FOR SPRINTING: PIANO LEGS OR PIPE STEMS? America’s Record - Breaking Relay Team Found Both Types Useful A Variety of Legs, All Gaited for Speed LEGS, DITTO. son and Leconey—is the orthodox manner in wi they wear their ears Hussey is built like a smashing fullback. Clarke suggests’ a tall, thin left-handed pitcher, Murchison, you'd guess off-hand, to be a weight thrower. Leconey reminds you of middleweight boxers, you've seen in gymnasiun No Uniformity in Build How about their legs? No uniformity in build exists there either. It is fifty-fifty be- tween the piano legs as represented by Hussey und Murchison and the i and Lecone: _fast with Leconey with a short, stocky legs a his trim, greyhound L Sprinting speed, obviously, is not matter of standard build. More ely it is a matter of form, stam- inapand heart. adequate service of transportation at reasonable rates,” the candidate aid. “In spite of the failures’ and hortcomings of existing laws, this s an ideal which I can not believe to be beyond the reach of attain- ment.” 1 ‘FIVE MINERS ARE AMBUSHED Non-Union Men in Oklahoma Coal Field Shot Wilburton, Oklahoma, Aug. 12.— (By the A. P.)—Ambushed on ‘their way home from work yesterday even- ing, five non-union workers in the Bull Hill coal mine, 18 miles cast of here, were shot down and one s iously wounded by gunmen hidden in an ambush, No less than 20 shots were fired, the men informed Sheriff Park, who reached the scene an hour after the shooting. rett Edwards, 26, the most ser- injured, received two charges of buckshot in the abdomen, chest and face. Physicians believe he will recover. The others, all between 22 and 28 years of age, received face and chest wounds, but none of a ser- ious character. One man, who crawled behind a knoll after being shot down by the first charge, declared he saw three men run from the scene. The Bull Hill mine employed 50. men and has been operating as a non-union mine several weeks, Last week a non-union worker fish- ing near where the shooting yester- day took place, was fired upon from ambush and wounded in the neck. Saved by Roosevelt's Idea of Square Deal When Roosevelt was getting ready for his African trip various Sportsmen friends, a8 a matter of course, volunteered. euggestions, “When you get to Nairobi,” said one—a Mr. Blank, .a hippy-go- lucky, careless, prosperous chap, Who had dived into the jungle and out again two years before—“what- ever you do, don’t hire a guide by the name of W——. He Is capable enough, but not trustworthy.” The day Roosevelt reached Nair- obi he inquired about this partic ular guide. He sent for the re Pudiated guide and got his side of the story, says the Milwaukee Journal, Just as Roosevelt had divined, it was a mountain made out of a mole hill, The damning word dropped by Mr. Blank without war- rant had left stark misery in its wake for the guide. After that he could get no employment from any hunter who came to Nairobi. Roosevelt heard all this. By way of rejoinder he smashed his Itin- erary. He rearranged it over night to thelude a ten days’ expedition Turning to the field of foreign} never before dreamed of. in that affi , Mr, Davis told his audience] section of the country. He hired that the Democratic party favored} the Nalrobl guide to take entire regarding it as a real advance to- ward the peaceful settlement of in- ternational disputes” As to League As togthe League of Nations, candidate declared that “we do and can not accept the dictum un- authorized by any expression of popular will that the League of Nations is a closed incident so far as we are concerned.” Adding that at no time had he believed that the entrance of America into the League could occur, would occur or should occur until the common judgment of the American people was ready for the step, he said he was “se- renely confident” that a day would come when the voice of public ap- proval would find means to make itself heard.” Promising that if he became Pres- ident of the United States America would sit as “an equal among equals whenever she sits at all at interna- tional gatherings, Mr. Davis said he could not reconcile it with his ideas of the dignity of a great nation to be represented at such gatherings only “under the poor pretense of ‘unofficial observers.’” Two of the’ water emohe AAS made history at the Olympic games ‘wave their welcomes to throngs on the New York pierg as they ‘return with the 240 triumphant Olympians. They are Helen Wainright (left) and Aileen.Riggin. Parades, presentation of medals and other cere- ‘monies marked the return of the conquerors. he World Court ‘in sincerity and] charge of the trip. |not merely for campaign purposes,” When .the expedition got back “in Scheduled time Natrobi's housetops heard. from Roosevelt. He said: “That guide fs the most intelligent, the most industrious, the most re- the| Hable and the most satisfactory not | guide I have ever had.” The rehapilitation of the wound- ed guide dated from this utterance and this act of Roosevelt. Again the man began to be sought after by.hunters. Outlaw Queen Could Be All Feminine at Timea Belle Starr, outlaw queen of the old days in Texas and Oklahoma, wore her hair short and was par- ticularly sweet to women, says the Detroit News. She lived for years on the proceeds of loot and lined Up @ gang of the meanest looking, hardest cursing, wildest riding and shooting hard-boiled customers. in her particular part of, the cow country, ; She used to call at women’s houses on her way home from lead- Ing her band on a robbery, and she would talk feminine things with them, sing religious songs and tell | Stories to the children. Several stories are told of the way Belle Starr met her death, The generally accepted one is that she | was assassinated by a man named Edgar A. Watson, who had gone to Oklahoma in the '80s and started farming near her place. It is, told they became enemies, in a dispute over land rental. Anyway, Febru- ary, 1889, so the version has it, a fouble-barreled shotgun did the work. Flowers of the Desert Arizona deserts have their own flowers. In places the supply.ds abundant, the growth large, the flowers when in bloom of marked beauty, the big yucca and the sotol, both members of the lily family, showing beautiful bloom. on tall and stately stalks. One of the most interesting des- ert growths is the water cactus, so named because its great stalk, from five to ten feet high and as large in circumference as a_ barrel, has a heavy pulpy covering from which it is possible to squeeze lly amounts of water, and In- ians and travelers are quick to turn to the cactus when water sup- | plies are short, says the Detroit News, Free State Pleased *When Washington Accepts Envoy Dublin, Aug. 12.—The official noti- fication of Washington’s acceptance of an Irish minister empowered to deal with questions between the Free State and the United States has giv- en much satisfaction in Ireland, where it is regarded as “tangible proof of the United States’ recogni- tion of Ireland’s new status.” “Washington,” says the Freeman’s Journal, “is not frightened by the spectres which a certain section of the English press is busy conjuring up. Free State ambassadors have no intention of playing the part of a bull in a china shop as English die- hards. profess to believe. They can be trusted to handle their business ‘on business-like lines, keeping al- ways well in mind that American friendship, is not the least valuable of Irish assets,” MARKET NEWS WHEAT TAKES — UPWARD SWING Gets Good Start ‘in the Early. Dealings ; Chicago, Aug. 12, ( (By the A. P.) —Wheat took a decided upward swing early, today, influenced . by strength of Liverpool quotations and by a bullish construction placed on the Canadian government crop report. Frost in Canada,and cold weather in Argentina, also were regarded as bullish factors. On the huiges here, however, pelling en- larged and demand Jacked volume. The opening which ranged from 1 to 23-8 cents higher with Sept. $1.273-4 to $1.28 1-2 and Decem- ber $1.315-8. to $1.82 1-4; .were followed by :a moderate sag from initial top figures,and then by a fresh upturn. ‘ Subsequently reports of frost from Manitoba led to additional gains, September $1.28% to $1.29; December $1.22% to $1.23%. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, Aug. 12, (U..S. Dept. Agr.)—Hog receipts 30,000. Un- even, 15 to 25 cents lower than Monday’s average. Top $10.00. Cattle receipts 8,000. Yearlings and handyweight steers more ac- tive, strong to 15 cents higher. Sheep receipts 20,000. Early sales fat lambs fully steady. Na- tives mostly $12.00 to $13.25. CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, Aug. 12—Butter un- changed. Receipts 19,725 tubs. Cheese unchanged. Eggs un- changed. Receipts 15,097 cases Poultry alive higher. Fowls 19 to 24 cents. Broilers 30; springs 30; roosters 161-2. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK So. St. Paul, Aug. 12, (U. S.. Dept. Agr.)—Cattle ieee 1,600. Slow, steady. Killing quality very plain. Dry-fed she-stock very dull. Largely common, medium grade saleable $8.00 to $9.00. Grassers $6.00 to $7.50. Fat she-stock dull $3.25 to $6.00. Canners and cut- ters $2.25 to $3.00. Bologna bulls very slow, practically nothing done. Bidding unevenly lower. Stockers, feeders steady. Bulk $4.00 to $6.25. Calves receipts 2,200. Steady to 25. cents or more higher, quality considered. Bulk, best lights and packers $9.00. ; Hog receipts 6,500. _ Several loads unsorted 150 to 180-pound averages to shippers early $9.50 or 10 cents lower. Largely $9.25 for better 150 to 300-pound averages, $7.75 to $8.00 for packing sows. Pigs steady. Sheep receipts 800. Fat lambs mostly 25 cents higher. Others and sheep about steady. Bulk fat na- tive lambs $11.50 to $12.50, Culls around $8.00. Lights and handy- weight fat ewes $6.00 to $6.75. MILL CITY FLOUR Minneapolis, Aug. to 25e lower, $7.45 to $7.60 a bar- rel. Shipments 41,000 barrels, Bran $23.00, MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Aug,:12—Wheat re- ceipts 156 cars compared+with 194 a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern $1.29% to $2.86%; No. 1° dark nor- thern spring choice to fancy, $1.45 % to $1.52%; good to choice $136 % to $1.44%; — ondin: to good 31.31% to $1.31%; ald May $1.37%5 new September $1.29%; old Septem- ber $1.29%; new Detember §1.32%; ald December $1.82%; corn No. 3 yellow, $110 to. $2.11; oats No. 3 white 48%c to 49c; barley 64c to B0c; rye No. 2 84%c to 85%e; flax BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished: by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Aug. 12, 1924. No. 1 dark, northern ..........$1.26 No. 1 northern spring ........ 1.22 No. 1 amber durum 1.05 No. 1 mixed durum 1,02 No. 1 red durum 29 No, 1 flax ...... 2.04 No, 2 flax . 1.99 No. 1 rye ........- : 68 We quote but do not handle the following: Oats Speltz, per cwt. No corn listed. 1 cent per pound discount under 55lb, . Ear corn 6 cents under shell. Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—5 room partly modern house. Good location, Phone 538- a. 8-12-3t CHIMNEY cleaning, furnace cleaning. All work first class. Phone 8-12-41 NOTICE This is to notify that our Elevator at Bismarck is now -open. We will receive grain as in the past. Russell-Miller Milling Co. 8-12-1w. KNOCKED FROM AYSTACK; DIES Steele, N. D., Aug. 12.—Haugen Peterson, a farmer living 12 miles southwest of! Steele, was knocked from the top of a hay stack and kill- ed. Peterson was in the act of top- ping the stack when a‘load of hay in the hay fork was sent up and he ap- parently was unable to get out of the way. He was hurled to the ground, some 16 feet, and struck onthe top of his head, breaking his neck, So FOR SALE Nelson’s Loose- Leaf En- cyclopedia: cost new $148, will sell for $65.00. A bar- gain. ‘Write Box 697. * Bismarck, N. 12.—Flour 50c PAGE THREE JURGES ALFALFA ALONG TRAIL Advertising Medium for Bur- ‘leigh County Suggested An Towa banker, in the city touring east on the National Parks Highway Association, suggested a movement for the Association of Commerce to advertise Burleigh county. He said that in. some counties in South Da- kota, along the Yellowstone Trail, lo- cal bodies had asked farmers, in. planting alfalfa, to plant fields along the trail, The result is, he says, that tourists see fine alfalfa fields, and nothing impresses the prospective immigrant farmer from farther east so much as alfalfa. The fields also make an attractive border for the trail, it is declared. Through South Dakota the tourist may travel mile after mile with al» |falfa fields flanked on either side, he said. | RUSS JEWELS SAFE | London, Aug. 12-JPhe Russian lerown jewels are safe in state keep- ing. Rumors that the precious gems have disappeared are unfounded, ac- cording to Sir Martin Conway, noted art critic, who says he saw the jew- els on a recent visit in Russia. Famous Osmandthorpe Hall, an old building of the Tudor period near Leeds, England, was destroyed by fire recently. Girls! Use Lemon To Whiten Skin The only harmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with three ounces of Or- chard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents, Shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin. whitener, softener and beau- tifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands, It can not irritate. Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear youthful skin and rosy- white complexion; also as a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It ean’not be bought ready to use be- se it acts best immediately after o it is prepared. No need of sending your Arch Preserver Shoes to the factory to be resoled. The Bismarck Shoe Hospital can do it. Either whole sole or half sole. H. Burman, Prop. 411 Broadway TAN TAG TAG TAG TAG TAG TAR TAE TAG TAG TS Whatever the first advertisement, adver- tising is old as history. When folks know something worth talking about, they nat- urally talk about it; and folks were folks ten thousand years ago. Verbal pictures be- came pictures on eave, totem pole, tent — then on paper. © Advertisers today are folks too. They want to give you easy knowledge about something worth knowing about. They let you take in, with one sweep of the eye, the meaning of an advertisement. Product, style, size, price. What they tell through advertisements has made all the difference between you in your comfortable home . . . and the cave-dweller in his stone. Do you read their messages — always? They can lift you to greater progress. ° THERE Is ONE WAY TO BUY WITH ‘ASSURANCE—LET THE ‘ADVER- / e