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N d ne ie v a ie r 2 w ti e 9: 19) iv i ® t i a B u e u d e T e ¢ a u e if r 4 ' « i 1 ‘ t 1 i 1 ‘ 1 i 1 ' ‘ 1 : a ‘ ‘ { ‘ 1 1 1 1 1 q i Hi Me f A f i i # j i | 4 PAGE SIX Sports FAST BOXERS WILL BATTLE HERE TONIGHT attling Krause and Joe Moug To Meet at the City Auditorium OTHERS ON THE CARD | Boxing Full 34 Rounds of Offered For Fans By . Promoters The Card rounds—Eekroth kiddies. Allen’ vs. oe rounds—Johnny Kid Timmer. rounds—Bill Kid Sloamer vs. Battling Selinsky. s Baldwin of Jimmy Dona- hue of Glendive, Mont. oe a 10 rounds—Battling Krause | vs. Joe Moug. | The first big boxing card of} the season in Bismarck will be aged at the city Auditorium, beginning at 8:30 o'clock tonight. | Battling Krause, the former Hazen boy, who has battled the toughest welterweights over the ; Northwest, and Joe Moug, former Medina boy, took on t comers on the lron Range, will | ish the feature 10-round bout. | Krause has not been seen in Bis- | marek in a big bout for a long} time. Since the Battler last | here, when he was popular because | he was ready to mix it at all} times, he has improved a hundred | percent in his boxing, and _ still! takes and gives punishment, mak- ing him a dangerous man for the best of the welterweigh' Joe Moug, who has build as any in the ring, feet and alw tion. He also a better man than that he didn’t get a f one bout at Wilton, and is out to prove without doubt that he is the better man. Orrie Baldwin of Fargo, a mix- er and Jimmy Donah f Glen- dive, Montana, will furnish a_fea- ture 8-round semi-windup. Bald- win has been popular on cards in Fargo. Other boxers will furnish a total of 34 rounds of boxing, a unusual! card for one night. will be an orche to entertain the crowd if there are moments of waiting. O. W. Roberts will referee. If the bout tonight is well sup- ported there will be othe pretty welterweights a fast man on his} ST. PAUL AND BIRDS CLASH Meet Again in Little World Series Contest St. Paul, Oct. (By the A. P.) —With its star shortstop, Danny Boone, in the discard from injur- ies, St. Paul renewed dispute with the Baltimore Orioles today to determine which shall claim the mincr league baseball champion- ship. un the Saints were confident that they would reverse Baltimore’s march for the championship on which the a i | \ | | i I; iling the Birds by two games : THE BISMARCK TRIBUND | | | i | | BOXERS IN ACTION HERE TONIGHT JOE MOUG | The feature card at the Auditor- ium boxing show tonight will be fur-] rished by Battling Kriuse and doe} Moug, welterweights, who will mix qn! a 10-round go that is expected to be fast and hot and heavy from start! to finish. ‘Thirty-four rounds of box-| ing are! offeked. NOTED BALL PLAYER DIES Jake Daubert, Veteran Player} of Cincinnati, Is Victim Cincinnati, O., Oct. 9.—Jake Daubert, captain of the Cincinnati Washington, Oct. 9.—Cloudless skies with a temperature just a little shy of warmth to make it ideal for either spectators or play- ers Was the weather in prospect in Washington this morning for the sixth world series game here to- lay between the Washington Sen- ators and the New York Giants. |Coats As Currency Serve in Rebuilding Of Armenian City | Darachichak, Armenia, Oct. 9--Old jelothes contributed by America’s ever-charitable families have literal- ly rebuilt this city, which before j the war 1 prosperous and happy community living within the shadow of Mount Ararat. Scores of shattered buildings have been restored from | the proceeds ded garment which, to the were of greater v ked ue thi natives, gold. Tn a country swept by and af- terwards ri I, build- impossible | to obtain when American relief wori- ers came here to rescue a | vestiges of the Amer Internation! League champions gained a firm hold, by winning three of the four games played in the East. Johnson ‘May _ Quit Baseball New York, Oct. —Walter Johnson Said yesterday after he was be for t cond time during the world series by the Giants that it was doubtful if he would play ball next year. The big pitcher, who waited years to get into baseball’s classic, would not elaborate on his statement but did deny a report that he had | bought stock in the Oakland Club of the Pacific Coast league. “['m sorry,” he said. “I had two chances to beat them but I could not hold them at either time.” Manager Harris was philosophical. “They made breuks and they beat us,” he said. “Life is that way. But we'll catch them tomorrw. Zachary will pitch “Series Summary | 3 “Team Won Lost Pet. New York ... +3 2 600 Washington . +2 8 400 “New York 4; 3. Washington 4; 3. New York 6; Washin 4. ‘Washington 7; New York 4. New York 6; Washington 2. Fifth Game Total Attendance. (paid) £ 49,211 217,774 Gross receipts $191,509.00 $840,710.00 Advisory council j 4% 28,776.35 $126,106.50 Club’s share ? $162,782.65 $385,510.99 Blayers share mares 183) om '9931,092.517] city was in ashes; [Io p|haustible store of vir BAT KRAUSE COAL IN WEST FOR 200 YEARS SAYS EXPERT Vast Inundations From Sea Reds, died early today at Good Caused Coal Bearing maritan Hospital. GE aLaRe :|. Deatir came to the veteran base- ee: ball player after a valient fight _— jagainst complications which set in] Chicago, Oct. 9 CA, P.)—There is | following an operation last Thurs-|enough unmined coal in middle west- day for the rerfioval of his appen-[ern fields to last at least 200 years, Hix. Blood transfusion was resort- | according to estimates | rofessor ed to y in an effort to} Adolf Carl Noe of the University of prolong fe, but the illness had| Chicago. Professor Noe, discoverer so absorbed his vitality that it was|of “coal balls” (fossilized life found of no avail. in coal si as just completed == ae a study of coal reserves in middle Y Day Cloudless, western eval st y But Too Cooljcs ue fas coal seams there, id is of importance both fically and commercially. The pro- fessor explained: “It appears that in a very e period there took place { inun- dations from the sea, which caused the coal bes formations of Towa, stretching from the north- west to the southwest, covering an area approxima from Boone, in the northern part of the state, to the Missouri bounda There a formation near Muscatine which cor- responds to that in the vicinity of Rock Island, Il]. 1 have become con- vinced, also, that these deposits both in Iowa and in the Rock Island di tricts of Llinois, are many thou- sends of years younger than they have assumed to: be. Noe was convinced in his theory of the “marine origin by discovering in the coal of u numerous fossilized remains of 1 life. These remains found in e “coal balls” of Illinois and other regions, tend to prove that the Iowa coul deposits re: from salt ater inundations, whereas those of Ilinois suggest in many instances fresh water condition, he said. The prediction of an almost inex- in coal in the middle west was based by Professor Noe on the fact that in one field, for example, only ten per cent of Professor (e Hess, food was ult to obtain. | | There were 5 daily from | starvation and ¢ : | | In order to rel the situation | |the Americans were forced to resort {to the primitive method of barter. jin return for old clothing they was || fragments of houses from ruin the larger neighboring ¢ of half-starved natives, carrying tim- bers, joists, doors, windows and loads i ks poured into | ak from distant points, and| eceived in return warm coats, blan- | shawls and shoes from the car-| f relief supplies sent from| Police guards became ex-| | Darach ki goes Americ people in line | Some idea of how, fans awaited the ing & smaky |hausted in keeping the hordes of| 1: ‘THEY SURE WANTED TO SE tion of the: fongeline of “sleepe: the -line -when ‘the Washington ticket: window opened the deposits had been worked at all, leaving 90 per, cent untouched, Else- where, he said, it was apparent that the unworked seams are tremendo! “Whereas at one time it was the ceived from inhabitants all kinds of | custom to take out only 40 to 50] in pre-war da of| per cent of the coal in a field,” the | professor said, “leaving large quan- tities untouched and incapable of methods hi hi used ndred per é approaching a nt basis of produc- A clergyman who looked in at a faney dr in St. Pancras, Eng- d, was awarded the prize for-hav- ing ,the second best costume. opening: of the ‘world series m: who’ slept out E THE GAME ay he gathered from this picture show- all night in order BIG LEAGUERS ALL SET FOR GAME IN CITY Brooklyn ational League Baseball Team Now in Iowa, On Way To Bismarck HAVE REGULAR ROSTER | ——— ' Full Brooklyn National Line- up to be Seen Here—Two | World Series Hurlers ‘The Brookiyn National League | baseball club wil] be in Bismarck Monday, October 14, for an exhibition baseball game—the first time in many years that a major league base- | ball team has played in North Dako- ta. narck is thé only city in North Dakota in which the team which battled for the National Lea- gue pennant will pl George Smith, manager of the local club, received a telegram today from | Jacques Fournier, first baseman and | manager of \ie barnstormers,’ giving the players carried and other Qetails of their trip. The team played in Mason City, Iowa, a city of 30,000, yesterday, he- | crowd of several thousand. | rnstormers will play in Mat- | , Wisconsin; Rice Lake, Wiscori- | sin, and Hibbing, Minnesota, before coming here for the game Monday, World Series Pitchers Two pitchers who have been in] world series will be with the club. | They are Burleigh Grimes and | “Dutch” Reuther, the latter being carried instead of Henry, at first, ed for the trip. y”? Vance and Erhardt, Brooklyn’s sensational find of the season, are the other two pitchers. Two tchers, Deberry and Har- | greaves, are carried. The latter will catch for Bismarck und one of the four pitchers will be in the box for Bismarck. The game is to be called here at 3 p.m. Monday, the gates opening at | 1 p.m. The Brooklyn team makes aj specialty on the trip of working out before the game, giving the fans a chance to see many fancy fielding stunts before play is called, The] team also carries specialty men, to provide fun for the crowd. It ‘car- ries its own umpires, : Good natured rivalry among the pitchers carried with the club as- sures fine pitching. Local fans re- Il that Grover Alexander, famous Chicago National League pitcher, said that the best game of baseball he ever pitched was at Mandan on a barnstorming trip several years ago. The Lineups The Bismarck line-up will be, if the pitcher; Vance, p;_ Byerly, 1b; Wingfield, former North League star, 3b; ‘Sorlien, ss; and the outfield will be selected from Sci- bert, Bordman, Blank of New Salem and Lief of Wilton. The Brooklyn line-up, and batting order, will be: High, 2b; Mitchell, s} Stock, 3b; Fournier, Ib; Brown, ef; Neis, If; Olson, rf; Deberry, c; and pitcher to be selected from onc of the four carried. The lineup is the regular Brooklyn team, End of Daylight Saving Increases Theater Going London, Oct. 9.—There are happy smiles» in London’s theatre-land. West End playhouses are experienc- ing the biggest boom in attendance in many months “It’s partly due to what has come} to be known as the ‘little social s sion,” aided and abetted by a | of weather which, if not ideal, is at} least an improvement upon that which characterized the spring and summer months, | “The boom is undoubtedly due “to {the improvement in the weather,” aid one theatrical producer. Also |the evenings are drawing in, Day- | light saving is always a blow at the | theatre. Now people haven't time to | play tennis before it gets dark, and | in consequence they go to the thea- i tre. “It is perhaps uQfortunate that the | standard of plays is not what it was There is a dearth of playwrights. No new names are} \‘coming along. Of course, there is} }an army of those who write high-| Hargreaves, c jever being minéd again, now the! prow stuff, but their efforts ure; ing him was saying to the one In We} write popular | wasted on the general public. want men who can |p” | The most expensive chair in the] world—made of solid silver and| worth about $60,000—belongs to the | pope. ‘heap on the road and had been Manager Smith has his way a | being stroked by ‘to be. near the front of ‘in the’ morning. * ’ d eoresnsmmeroat mere ANTE RE a O0S20990000005000600004 Kiddies’ Evening Story | By MARY GRAHAM BONNER GOLA AAA AOOEE ECE DOTS The Little Red Bird He was a ttle bird and he hed been hurt. Oh, he didn’t know how | badly hurt he | was. He felt as though every- thing dreadful was happening all at once, and as though It were keeping on and on, He was in the road struggling around in’ the dust. He did not seem to be able to get, on | hig legs. His legs sim- ply seemed not to have any strength in them. F Nor -did he “You Poor Little seem to be able Chiat to® stretch his wings, What had happened to him’ His heart was beating.so fast. He struggled one way and then the other. He could not get hig bal- ance. ‘And more big automobiles would lye coming along—they were com- ing up the road now. Dear, dear, this was dreadful. Why hadn't he gone to the coun- try, as some of his friends had sug- gested? The city park was no place for a bird, The lawns had been nice and the trees had been nice. But there, he had gone down | into te. road for a moment and an automobile had come along aud | had dlmost struck him. It hadn’t really struck him, but it almost had, “He wasn’t quite gure whether it had or not, really. For the fright had been so great that he had tumbled down into a struggling ever since to get up. He just couldn't do a thing. He seemed to feel so weak. Oh, how that automobile had come toward him. Yes, he had escaped being hit but the whizzing of the car and the fright had left him there in the road. | Hadn't they seen what had hap- pened? Or were they too anxious to go m? Perhaps they had saved two minutes by hurrying on and per- haps to them two minutes of hurry meant more than the life of a little bird. This was a very sad world. Struggling to get on his feet! | His wings flopping! too dreadful! And along the road came another big car., It was ahead of all the others and very close to him. This would be the end. This would be the end for a little bird. Would they get out of the way Cor one {ttle bird? What would it matter to them if one little bird was killed? There were plenty of birds, they would say, and he was only an ordinary little bird. He was not beautiful. His voice was nothing remarkable. Prob- ably at one glance they would be able to tell this. The little bird had lost a‘great deal of his faith in buman nature. Pcople hurried op. They hurried so that the life of a little bird meant nothing to them. And then— He closed his eyes. He could not bear to seo the end, And then he felt a soft something about him —wasn't It a hand? ‘Surely this could not be one of those terrible | wheels he had been thinking would go over him. He blinked open an eye. And then he heard a voice. “You poor ‘little bird, are you hurt! Well, we'll see what the trouble is.” e opened both eyes. His heart was beating fast. What did this mean? His head was This was just | a soft, beautiful hand,. and he was being car- ried back to the automobile he had so dreaded. It was standing by the side of the road, away out of the cen- ter where he had been. They had gone aside for him. And the one who was hold- He Chirped the Best Little Song He Knew. the automobile: “No, I don’t think he is really hurt. He's just fright- ened out of his poor little wits!” Gently, they stroked him | and talked to him. And then the hand was opened out wide and, with strength which had come tg him, the Ittle bird flew off to the branch of a tree, safe and quite himself again. And there he chirped the best ttle song he, knew of grati- tude. 4@> 4934, Western Newspaper Union) Second Essay - Contest Planned Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 9.—An- nouncement has been made of the second annual prize essay contest to be conducted during the enguing sehool year by the American Chemi- eal gociety. Prizes, as last year, have been provided by Mr. and-Mrs. F. Pe Garvin, of New York. Six scholarships, to Yale ‘university or Vassar college with tuition fees and $500 annually for four years will be awerded in the national coh- test. Six prizes will be awardgd on each of the six subjects pertaining to, cheniistry for each state. Win- ners of first prizes in each state will enger. the national competition. The conteét closes March 1, 1926, Lust y winners are barred this year. | Three golden rules of life ofp man, who died recently at the age pf 110 Five-Room Colonial Has bats | a Simplicity; Is Inexpensive to ui wo... yorch eee nest FLOOR PLAN There is a never-failing appeal about the “little white house with green blinds.” Here is a five-room Colonial one that has many admir- ers. Every detail is true to type, so that although it is small, simple and inexpensive, it can fitly asso- ciate with the most pretentious dwelling in the most exclusive neighborhood. Isn't the front porch inviting, set low to the ground, with its slender porch posts and the decorative bal- ustrade above? Because it is small house, the entrance hall has been omitted, and the front door, glazed like the windows, admits to the living room, and affords a view of a beautiful Colonial stair in ivory and mahogany. All the woodwork should be in ivory in this little house. Standard designs that are truly Colonial can be had from lumber dealers’ stock by careful selection, and in birch or pine that can be painted or enameled in the right way. French doors lead from the living |” room to the dining room. A pair of| *! y : corner china closets are especially | capital of Europe, because of its « appropriate here, since they take up| tral location. no space that would otherwise be used, and greatly simplify the fur- nishing. The kitchen is planned for the woman who does her own house-} work. It extends out from the main house just enough to permit of a door, so that it is accessible from the front of the house, This ell is} on the left side of the house, and dosen't show in the picture. One little luxury has been permit-! FRONT VIEW AND PLANS OF FIVE-ROOM COLONIAL HOUSE. one-third of still about ber lands are in California the cutover ti unproductive. Prague is becoming the airy '|1WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers _ Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Funeral Parlors ted in the bedroom—a delightful built-in dressing table, with ad- 210 5th Street. justable mirrors and a dressing- 0 bench. There are two bedrooms, with ample closets, and a linen case in the hall. If you wish a well-planned five- room house that is both artistic and economical, you cannot make a mis- take in choosing this one. Plans Supplied Detailed plans and_ specifications of this home may be obtained at low cost by writing to the Home Plan Editor, The Tribune. No longer connected with the Perry Funeral or Undertaking Parlors. PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R. —0 — Call Residence Phone Broadcasting From The Classified Ad Page of the Bismarc Tribune will be your broadcasting station—all the pcople of Bismarck and vicinity your audience. The Bismarck Tribune travels daily into thousands of homes. Surely some- body among these thousands will vant what you have to offer. Use the Want-Ads for profit—Read them, Daily : —Get the Want-Ad habit—it pays. PHONE YOUR AD TO 32 “And Reach The Best Result Pulling Medium On.The Slope. ~~ Taste Wants Ger Resuirs were! Never’ to enter a ballroom; never to tell scandal; never to enter a bar. 5 4 4 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1924 . * > G4 , Sb @ sib re eee | { » A Li d | » an“ 1 a if > < \ a « \ a ~ a iS 4