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F jline on the first play. p PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE JACK FOURNIER LEADS PLAYERS ON LOCAL LOT, * Club Arrives in Bismarck To Find Sun Shining Bright- jy For the Big Game ; Baseball was in the sports lime n light in t k today - The National Leap ra J £ baseball club rnstorming h tour, was in tu meet 5 ional team in a cont The ack 1 ands at headed 1 on the ived hh 30 or the furn a perfect Indian and Vance and Bur ried b, Brov Brooklyn ¢ ed by ; port-sid “Dazzy" other he was annou Fournier 2b, Andy H Johnny chell; 3b, Fournier; cf pre Due stand nier wa le tof h the lub only with a piteher, hort t marek tw bere exactly ¥ the the local « would | i i i i | | I the ¢ bat- ting The n club, runners National I Broo the pennant in the tarted on its bart w York The club where —preparatic a bi forced and watch were happ: tel The hen they arrived in rek and saw the sun shining brightly. The club goes from he man, Mont Gre osing Oct. LOCALS FIGHT HARD AGAINST | MINOT'S TEAM Bismarck Plays Veteran Team} To a Standstill For Virst | Three Quarters : elab, TO JORE 20 D., and he: pith ore high schoo . 13.—Playing on d which we! feated Bismarck hard fought until the fi For first three é ed on pract ard run made quarter by Irvin Dunnell of Minot, last year all s A touch- down resulted run which} followed the interception of r ward | Bis duplicated play v ecover r field sprin e Minot goal line,} Bismarck again threatened in the t rd quar- ter when two compl ard passes and a* off kie d divanced the ball to Mine ve ard line, where the invaders were held. Secon! Score Minot’s second score oceurred on lineup after Minot obtained the pel y Olson yard line. Minot fa “formation and thé spectac: _nell raced around right end +for a touchdown. The same player placed Minot in position to score late in the final] quatter by yard dash around .the left flan mn Bismarck’s ‘mick plunged through 5 yards and over ae + The locals handled their plays with {much more precision than on pre- vious appearances this season, des- pite the fact that the ball was mud covered and heavy and the footing > uncertain. One deeided advantage which Min- ot realized resulted from the gains ;made in exchanges of punts whicn Swere frequent occurrences during ithe contest. Both Myron Dunneil Zand, Olson gave splendid exhibitions “of kicking in view of the circum- jstances, but the Minot ends and G tackles‘ were down the field nailing io runner much faster than their opponents, Each team resorted to the use of ihe forward pass frequently, selecting the third down for the at- 4 Sorel usually “tempt.. In this department Minoi had a clear edge, completing four A passes out of 10, for 65 yards whiie Bismarck met success with three out of 11 for a 40 yard total. : Dunnell’s Good The Dunnell brothers and Ward 4 displayed the best ability of any par- ticipants. in carrying the ball with Irvin Dunnell a shining light. Mc- @ Cormick and M, Dunnell were espec- f iélty gpd in line piste: PPAR BPG LL GPL APL LL LSD APDD RAS PLL I A Pt PPD ALDI LLG PDE SLOP DAT PO ip i ga, gn LEAGUE BASEBALL PITCHERS HERE ‘TODAY : line opened give B but invariably sion dem anded. held when Most of th wide method of cutting in with ends performing in more style. xt Satuzds ay the Minot in view. of the fac routed- Westhope highs a_ victor: er Minot's ne ent. The victory over Wes! considered by local contributing | y to the Devils Lake a week later, the creation of over the Flugmen. enthus confidenc th v orthodo tean ro oppon- thope Frequent offside plays on the part! of Minot linesmen brough toll of penalities to the The lineup for Sat Vandersluis Kelly Hills Glaze Stearns Ward 1. Dunnell M. Dunnell McCormick Peterson Substitutions, Minot: for Glaze; Bowlby for Thoreson for McCormick; ta heavy eppard Anderson Bender LeRoy Russell Olson | 4 Boelter | Lofthouse | Moses Répidow Talvorson ard and Bismarck: BURLEIGH GRIMES Touchdowns: 1. Dunnell, 2; Me 1; Points after touchdown, s: Minot, 3 out of 11 Fred Chicke! linesman, 4s out of umpire, Dan Lam- | Epinard, French Champion, Again Is Defeated Ky., Oct. 13.—Smashing all existing Kentucky track record mile and a quarter, Sarazen, ear old chestnut gelding own- ed by Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, I, Sat- | urday vanquished Epinard, pride of the French turf, in the final race of |the international series before a : ,000 to 60,000 spectators. ineligible for the previous tional races because he « gelding, flashed aeross the 2 length and a half ahead of the gallant Franch horse in This was within ried 135 pounds while Sarazen, wa burdened with 120 today. Sa stepped the Tastest mile and a and # quarter ever run on the La tonia tr He: was clocked at th mile in 1:36 4-5, clipping a frac of 1 second off the track reeord, Of the four vitchers here | today with the Brooklyn Na- | tional League Baseball Team, two i have participated World Series games. Bur i leigh Grimes, veteran pitcher’ of the Robins, huried ball for Wilbert ‘Rebinson’s team in, the big game, and “Dutch” Reuther was with Cincinnati; ST.PAULON EVEN TERMS Rattles Baltimore For Minor! ‘League Championship St. Paul, Oct. 13.—Comi hind St. Paul’s Ameri ation baseball team was terms~ with Baltimore today they entered the ninth and Ae contest of the junior world Qut of apparently hopeless | depths, St. Paul arose on the wings of two successive victories and stood a ware with Balti- more, each h four victories, with the fifth victory and the championship waiting for one in the game today. Winning peteaiay 3 to 1, the American Association title holders, made it three out of four in the games played | here ven di Dickinson High at Mandan Saturday, 6 to 0. Owens for Mandan fell on the ball in the third cored 2 touchds venly matched, sides forced to punt a grea GROCER CHASED | ymouth, England, Oct. 13.—| a hatchet overhead, ) Hakwins, 81, crashed Wald ee tion) through the glass dcor of a groe-|by the 23 ery here, drove the proprietor and ja until ‘1742. bad aall MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1924 (ee i Football Saturday | -- HIGH SCHOOL Devils Lake 14; Grand Forks 12. Fargo 50; Jamestown 0. Bismarck 0; Minot 20. Fergus Falls 0; Wahpeton 42. Westhope 54; Mohall 0. Moorhead 35; Alexandria 0. Ipswich Faulkton 0. Winona 6; La Crosse 0. NORTH CENTRAL N. D. A. C., 20; St. Thomas 0. Nor Dakota 0; South Dakota Des Moines 0; Creighton 25. South Dakota State 14; Eds Wesleyan 0. Cotner 3 Nebraska Wesleyan 29. MINNESOTA COLLEGE ' Carleton 11; Beloit 12. St. John 0; ’St. Olaf 23. BIG 7 Michigan 7; Michigan Aggies 0. Purdue 41; "Rose Poly 3. Minnesot: 20; Haskell Indians 9.) Wisconsin 7; Coe 7. Ohio State 6; Towa 0. Indiana 14; Louisiana 20, Chicago 19; Brown 7. Illinois 40; Butler 10, Northwestern 42; Cincinnati 0. SOUT! South Carolina on North Carol- ina State 0. Susquehanna 13; Bloomsburg 6. Washington & Jefferson 25; Grove City 0: Geneva 10; Bethany 0. Bucknell] 33; Muhlenburg 0. Florida 7; Georgia Tech 7. U. of North Carolina 6; Trinity 0. Washington & Lee 8; Wakefor- est 10. U. of Niteinia 26; Randolph Ma- con 6, LaFayette 30; Hobart 3. King College 6; Georgetown 21.j Virginia Polytech 0; Auburn 0. EAST Depauw 27; Hanover 7. John Hopkins 21; Mount St. Mary 0. RUBE EHRHARDT when the Reds beat the Chi- cago White Sox in the 1919 World Se “Dazzy” Vance is the Brooklyn star, and champion pitcher of the National League this year. Erhart, a young pitcher obtained. from a southern team, made a fine record with Brooklyn. all the customers gut of the store, and presently emerged quietly with a box ef butter her d held for edical examination. Wisconsin Forbids Headlight ght Dimming Milwaukee, Oct. 13.— Contrary to genera! regulations throughout the country, the state of Wiscon- sin forbids motor’ from dim- ming their headlights. The reason riven is that dimming causes more accidents than glaring headlights. “Everyone knows that bright llights shining in the eye blind a person and cause accidents,” reads a bulletin from the state highway department. “Not so many. people know that suddenly dimming the headlights procedure caused justi as many highway accidents as glaring lights.” The process is compared’ with Stemi trom a brignt room into a piteh-dark room. “If memory of. what he saw just before dimming were not a helpful factor to the driver,” the bulletin goes on, “the number of night ac-. cidents due to dimming would be appalling.” Yet. Wisconsin has a strict law. against glaring lights. The proper kind of lights are those. that can light up the highway 200 feet ll net rise above the he lenses. ‘Thus the head- lights would be bright and stilb should not gl: into an approach- ing driver’s ey i d executions Laws arti h peri x pealed in Eng: Haverford 20; Stevens 0. N. York U. Union 6, Bowdoin 16; Amherst 14, Denison 7; Wittenburg 17. Case 19; Otterbein 6. Georgia 6; Yale 7. Army 20; U. of Detroit 0. Harvard 16; Middlebury 6. Gallaudet 7; St. Johns College 6. Tufts 12; Bat 6. Colgate 41; Clarkson 0. Carnegie ‘Tech 54; Toledo 0. Pennsylvania 25; Swartmore 7. R. P. I. 9; St. Laurenee 5 Syracuse 24; Williams & Mary to Exeter Academy 9; Yale fresh- | men 7, Columbia 35; Westleyan 0. Hughes 35; St. Bonaventure 7. ; Yale 7. ; N. York 1 y Hobart 0. x Durmouth 38, Vermont 0. Centenary 14 ‘Trinity_7. Carroll U. 30; Canisus 10, Alfred 16; U. of Buffalo 0. Richmond. 0; Maryland 38, | Doctors 19; Cumberland U. 0. Penn State 26; Gettysburg 0. Dickinson 20; Eranklin & Mar- shall 7, Pennsylvania Military Institute 20; Albright 0. Princeton 0; Lehigh 0. Springfield ‘College 2; St. John.0. Ursinus 0; Delaware 0. Defiance College 13; Findlay 6. Miami 6; Mount Union 15, Mercer da; Furman 0. * Citadel 7; AY lethorpe 10. WEST St. John’s Military Academy 29! Great Lakes 3. Columbus 30; S. Dak. School of Mines 0. Eastern State College 21; Huron College 0. Supericr Nowa)’ 0; Northern Michigan S. N. Whitewater Nota 14; Mt. Morris 2. Stout 7; Stevens Point Normal Oshkosh Normal 48; Northland 0. West Virginia 7; Pitts 14. Notre Dame 34; Wabash 0. Colorado 9; U. ‘of Utah 0. U. of Oakland 14;_U. of braska 7. Li meher College 7; U. of Dubuque Ne- La “Crosse Normal 52; Platter- ville Normal 0. Milbank 10; Bigstone 0. Oklahoma 14; Nebraska 7. Williams 14; Cornell 7. an 3. Montana State 13; Brigham Young U. 0. River Falls Normal 6; Phalen Luther 0. Drake 19; Knox 10. | alester 6; Gustavus Adolphus } Ohio Northern 2; Ohio Wesley-, Earlham 21; Indiana, Central 6.) The Brooklyn National L here today, is led by Jack Fou eran start of the Big league: leading four-ply a of t big factor in Brooklyn’, STAGE | THE NEA PLAY JURY'S TEN BEST The Show-O Expressing Willie Cobra nate Miracle Rai What, Price Glory Mini Dancing Mothers The Best People Havyee Ry THE NEA PLAY JURY New. York, Oct. 13.—At the mo- ment in which Margalo Gillmore steps to the very front rank of our | emotional actresses, _ lovelin i} 's to earth with broken win “Damn yeu! Damn you all!” she © out in the second act of “The Far Cry,” recently come to Broad- way. It is the feverish climax of a scene Mtween her and her f and the young man’s mother. Father and the young man’s moth er have Floren snatch i JACK FOURNIER ily that the r PLAYS lista coal |who wrote “I ‘tion being by Guy Bolton. ‘ather ; {BROOKLYN BASEBALL CLUB MEETS LOCALS HERETODAY ~ VETERAN LEADING CLUB HERE eague baseball team, pla) irnier, first baseman and vet- s. Fournier was one of the he game this year, and was a dash for the pennant, Everything she dces on the stage counts. is an efficient actress who wastes no motions and gets value from her slightest expendi- ture. And you watch her so close- st of the cast can go its unmolested. You in- ter only when she is on the stage Ernest Vajda, the Hungarian ‘ata Morgana,” is the nslation and adap’ It i typical continental drama with at- tention on drawing room manners, fine cloth id triangles. auther, the tr A flapper of the 1840 vintage is the herome of Vajda’s other com- Little Angel.” This » moron lived to res » losing or hn belief in the Santa Claus. At her fi jshe mace what old-fashioned au- thors used to call the fatal mis- step, but she was quite as inno- {cent in the matter as Bt Odile. The play is reaily the Marie {Odile story made into a farce in- stead of a tragedy. It is interest- ing in spots, risque in others, and dren from their unconventi liaison. Parental interference resented, scene no more than other playwrights, mcre or less, have written into conflict between self-willed youth and _ self-willed ; jmaturity. But Margalo brings. to; the ne just a bit more vi a bit more spontaneity than the | juror has seen in similar situa- tions. Gillmore is thundering up and down Broadway, the illusion, held through “The Remantie Age” and “Outward Bound,” that wings were j| already sprou under tume has been dixnel!« After all, Marz —and not immort. | ope to live as they please get pret- ty far from the American ideal of | life. That’s the moral of “The Fa Cry”—if you must have a moral. The allegory of romance in con- flict with reality is-followed most | fantastically and ironically in “Be- | witched,” National theater, by Ed- ward Sheldon and Sydney Howard. It is built upon two themes: the fate of romance once the grand gestures have been made, and the dissimilarity cf male and female views on love. Thus a young aviator falls into an enchanted wood, meets a lovely soreeress, goes through temptation and torture for her and, finally achieving her, finds poetry most monotenous and rushes away to Boston. Florence Eldridge is most beau- tiful to look upon as “the girl.” The witchery of Lee Simonson’; stage sets is more potent even thin the play. “That Awful Mrs. Eaton,” at Ames 13; Kansas 10, Lake Forest Academy 27; Mar-| quette U. Freshmen 0. Missouri 14; Missouri Wesleyan Hamilton 30; Rochester 16. ec Colorado 39; Regis College Idaho: 40; Montana 13. \Laurence 55; Northwestern Col- lege: 0. St. Norbert’s 6; Rinon 0. Carroll 27; Milwaukee Normal 0. PACIFIC COAST Grinnell 14; Washington U. 0. University of California 28; Pomone 0. Washington 55; Whiteman 0-~ Oregon 20; Pacific 0. U. of Southern California 29; Arizona 0, FUEL INVESTIGATIONS The U. S. bureau of standards is making several investigations into the use of fuel:for automotive-pur- ‘pos case oil dilution and other oit-prob- lems are taking up He attention of alee experts, Volatility of fuels, crank-| b; |the Morosco, narrates how ‘Old Hickory” Andrew Jackson foreed a snobbish society set to xecept Mrs. Eaton, the wife of his secre- tary of war. Katherine + n- der, as Mts. Eaton, by her’ viva- city and sincerity invites attention to her future stage carer’. Frank McGlynn is industrious and able in his role of General Jar son. Ex- cept at pcints where th. historical figures lapse into the stiffness of costumed pagentry, te acting is above the average. . lew. York re- viewers could find little good in the play and drew from Producer Wil- liam A. Brady one of his scolding curtain lectures. The’ authors are obi Rare and Stephen Vincent ene “Grounds for Vivorce” is not a particularly gocd farce. The pat- tern is old, and the situations are obvious. But it has the very fin- ished Ina Claive in the leading role and you can count no eyening lost in inten you have been amused ry. Miss Claire segms a bit unfor- tunate as to plays. Always you feel. she is better than the play, nal | is} Arthur Richman wrcte into this | a thousand | Although the triumph of Miss | her cos- | ilo is-only great! These Americans who go to Eur- bs 2 elaborate a irritatingly dull in others. The outstanding feature is the excel- lent characterization of the maiden jaunt by Claire Eam | Laughs abound in “The Bu ""Humer of _ situation ction, of vaudev repartee and of Ada Lewis’ co tinuous “Mrs, Malaprop” langu mmed into this faree. It is oxy of Minerva, superior and é the |dominecring daughter, who is jbrought through squabbles and misunderstandings to sweet rea- | sone Mildred Florence is 1a. s satisfactory Miner arious lead be- longs almost exclu ely to Mi: however, ith Josephine blonde, bulky and bland. Drake, contributing an agreeable change lof pace. . it the Knickerbocker, ion of caliphs, ers, hes and veiled ladies, to cast and setting, withal. I rajahs, der’ j but slo ; thor w: |poet once in the British consi service at Bagdad. Among the names adorning the cast are James Dale, Murray Kinnell, Mary Nash and Violet Kemble Cooper. Self- mela is the keynote of {a successful summer camp, accord- ing to a Boy Scout leader, RED WING MAN ADDS EVIDENCE William Henn Tells ’ Tanlac Health. 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