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_ghampion, and Major L. 0. Hezlet de- : feated Bobby Jones and Jess Sweet- oN, Y, PAGESIX * ~ JACK QUINN GIVES TIGERS ONLY 6 HITS: 41-Year-Old Hurler, After 23 Years in League Baseball, Can Still Pitch Old John Quinn Picus of Pattsville, f Quinn as he is know te way for the Phi phia Athletics after 41 years of life 3 years in the — professional through the last he losers, De- med him them comi nthe ninth inning for his victim only run, He won, 5 New York Yankees carried second winning streak of the senson to six straight with the Chi- cago White Sox on the losing end, 5 to Tris Speaker hits to smother Was' Cineinnati’s winning string ended at six games by the New York Giants, who jammed across four tal- lies in the eighth. Pittsburgh down- ed Brooklyn in 12 innings, 7 to Another ninth inning rally, scored two runs Cubs ietory to 6. The Cardinals annexed th consecutive conquest with t ton B: is victims, 8 to ch ave the Chicago er Philadelphia, 7] BEATS WILTON Game Was Played on the Wil- ton Diamond Sunday— Final Score 24 to 9 Tule Lake, exhibfion of Turtle Lake de ’ Iton diamond with a score . Te Turtle Late stickers | Managed to get 26 hits with a num ber of home-runs, three-haggers and | » D.. May 18--In an two-baggers. With the exception of {17 the seventh inning when time it~ Is al- re six runs, John-| rtle Lake, had the | son, pitching for 1 game well in hand. Box Score The box score follow. Turtle Lal , continues on his youth Julia Aman can Charleston as well as she | Pennant Progress St. Louis at Bost Cleveland at| Washington, Chiengo at New York. NATIONAL LEAGUE klyn at Pittsburgh, k at Cincinnati, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Games Today at Indianapolis. ty at Milwauke. at Minneapolis. | Yesterday’s Games | 6 NATIONAL LEAGUE R Bit Volkman, ef. “Michel, s -Krush, If. Gillmore, rf. : 5 1) 40 9 8 Turtle Lake ...401 7320 Wilton ........0110116¢ by Johnson, 5; by FI 4. Base on balls: off Johnson, Flinn, 1. Hit by pitched ball (2), J> Leif, P. Leif. Olson (2), Sherer, Li Three-baggers: Johnson, Olson Two-baggers Weinberg, Krush. On Wednesday, May 19, Turtle Lake plays the Denhoff team on the Turtle ‘Lake diamond and on Sunday, May 23, ‘they play the penitentiary team at the state prison dianiond. “Walker Cup Stars “Lose All Foursomes * Woking, England, May 18-—(@)— The American Walker cup stars lost : all five of the foursomes played here ‘this morning against a team of 10 British golfers. known as “The Moles.” Robert Harris,’ British amateur ser, four up and three to play. T. A. Torrance and J. B. Beck de- feated Francis Ouimet and Jesse meet ue up.. N. Layton and mer and Watts Gunn, three and one. ..W. A. Powell and W. A. Murray de- feated George VonElm, and Roland MacKenzie, four and three. F. L. Fairlie and G. D. Roberts defeated James D. Standish and CG, G. Waldo, five to four. ‘The Americans fared better in the matches and halving one. f ‘FIGHT RESULTS | New York—Phil McGraw, Detroit, nil Stanislaus Loayza, Chile, fought ‘a draw (10). Jack Ziviec, Pittsburgh, and Willie Harmon, New York, fought Oldham, Kremer, AMERICAN LEAGUE R ti Shocker and P. ¢ and L, Sewell: Ructher, Ogden, Ferguson and Ruel. is, and Bassler; Quinn and Cochrane. (Others postponed, rain). AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ™ R ‘A F| make a great pitcher for Cobb.” 2 Benton, Francis, Wilson, ton and Krueger; Kolp and Hoff- Baars I ams afternoon play, winning three evormer; Henry am =e Tunney, Johnson, Canavan, Thomas, eereme rs Woolfolk and Urban. firaw (10). Bushy Graham, Utica, over Toney Vaccarelli, New'Yerk- (6). ~Kelly, Scranton, Pa., fought a ww with Joe Jacoy, Yonkers (4), Ohi: Bryan Downey, io — : put Edide Welsh, eae Reeser Sasta Fe )1| Billy Evans Says | yhurch Burns, San An. > Knocked. out) . Frankie Genaro, New| Milwaukee .. + ¥ork (10), Ruby Goldstein, New} Olsen "York, scored a technical knockopt| ers, Coggin, ietz and McMeney, > WESTERN LEAGUE Omaha’ 5; Des Moines 11. fWliee! Some High Stepper! er Owen Carroll, Holy Cross star. was an event traordina England folks flocked to the to see the young man As a college pit years of play, Carrol! hi think lik 0 games al two. ction, ters on their heads just as he did the collegians, It so happened debut of Carroll Detroit t ut T umpired the me! in his so-called home Boston, also his first ap- eat Detroit. Were flops,” as they say in cireles when an act fails ras Carroll did not finish either game. Big Handicap While Carroll failed to go the route rst two starts, I ventured ction that he was a great looking pitching prospect. In a sense, Carroll’s failure to get away to a good start in the majors Jast son might well be attributed ‘to a matter of finance, Feeling that Carroll should have a year of minor league experience, Manager Cobb consented to let him make his debut in Boston, a few days after he joined the club, rather than nurse him along for of weeks as is custome cruit pitchers. It was asking too much of Carroll to come through under the circum- s but, at that, he pitched as kis team played behind him, , anxious to help put the youngster over in Boston, didn't play up to standard, About a week later he made his Det t debut and it was no more auspicious. However, both games were played to standing-room on that Car- roll soon brought back at the gate much of the money that thad been paid out for him. a number with re- Plenty of Courage In some quarters the opinion was that the ‘rather forced s of Carroll, which result- ed in two defeats, might take some of his confidence and possibly ruin his_carcer. That thought never appealed to me. Carroll wasn't quite ready when he came to the majors. Pitching to hig league Matters for the first time, | he had no knowledge of their weak. or strength, aving plenty of courage, the se- test he had been put to, with panying failures, in no way capped Carroll. ‘ is all so diffrent up here,” re- ndic marked Carroll to me after his sce- ond game. “It looks as if there is a lot of pitching that I still have to learn. “The batters wait you out up here, They don't swing at everything that is near the plate, as do many of the college players, and; when they get you in the hole, they murder the cripple.” iz Great > This spring I watched Carroll for a couple of days with the Detroit Tygers at Augusta, b ige Manager Cobb had then practically decided that. a year in some big minor league. would give Carroll the polish he needed to he a major league star. He was to he sent to the Toronto clu of the International League. Catching for that team was the vet- eran Steve O’Neill, for many years Indians. “What about Owen Carzoll?” I 4 d Steve, valuing his opinion ig. sé Ste’ looks great,” replied Steve. “Has a fine curve ball, a good fast one, and there is style to his every movement. He has the class, will Handled by O'Neill, the collegian Carroll won his first six starts in the International League. Which makes Manager Tyrus Cobb of Detroit smile blandly. f . Helpful Hints by if | Golfing Stars | JOHN DUNCAN DUNN— The feeling should be ever present in the mind of the ambitious golfer that a thing tan be dane and that) he can do it. The things which will, contribute chiefly toward ‘his doing it well are intelligent practice, plenty of it, and @ ‘clear and comprehensive .knowl- cdge of what his faults are and how ho is going about eliminating them. We“can all remember ‘at cases of where the tortoise has beat Joseph (Others played Sund \ geiica: me: re, majors more highly touted than Pte: ‘the hare/ metaphorically speaking. ‘We can remember, boys who seem-' ed to learn everything right away and other “boys who seemed @)most stupid bat’ who were plodders end when it came to éxaminations the plodders ‘ing colors. and he bri ones vee plucked. | ‘ul That ii if. at is ae Oe oy an high jump. After win- leston contest at Washington, D, C., here she hus gone into training to represent the Capitol Athletic Club at the annual Washington high school athletic meets. When he joined the Detroit Tygers at Boston in June of last season, it New yard over four won some- 1 lost only A big sensation in “Rah, Rah” circles, the supposition was that Car- roll would stand the big league bat- mber of the STATE TRACK MEET SBT FOR "THIS WEEK-END i This Year’s Event Expected to Draw More Athletes Than Any Previous One |. Grand Forks, N. D., M “The , twenty-fourth annual Dakota state high school track’ meet which | will be held here Friday and Satur. |day, promises to be the largest ‘and jfastest prep cinder gathering ‘the D athletic director at the Uni- | versity, who ‘has been in charge of {the meet and has buil#it up to its ; seven years, Coach Davis believes this week's meet will draw more schools and more athletes than ever hefore, be- {cause of the remarkable interest jbeing displayed in track competition |this year throughout the state. He | Pointed out that six major track meets were held last Saturday at Fargo, Dickinson, Langdon, Devils j Lak Bismarck, and Pembina, jand that the majority of the entrants at these affairs, would be hete for the state classic. Fargo Won Last Year Last season there were 42 schools entered. Fargo ran off with fi ‘place with 42 points, and Valley City second with 22. Devils Lake and nd Forks tied for third with 12, and Pembina and Bismarck were next in line. These schools are all strong again, but this weck’s meet promises to be much closet than last year's, because many of-the 1926 point win- ners have finished schooly Records should crumble before the| jonslaught of the Flickertail horde, agcording to Mr. Davis, who pointa out that the University 220-yard straight- away and quarter-mile oval has never been faster. The cinders have been packed down, until the runners will have a hard glass-like surface to work upon, and the jumping pits are ‘also in good shape. Schools can enter the meet up until Wednesday of this week by wiring, phoning or writing to Coach Davis ‘the University. The prelimin- to be held Friday afternoon, oe ‘Michigan Gets Firmer Hold on the Big 10 Lead Chicago, May 18—()—Michigan has a firmer hold on the lead in the Big Ten baseball race while Wiscon- sin now ranks second and above Ii: nois, as the result of games yester- Michigan downed Iowa and Wis- consin won from Illinois, while Ohio State and Purdue played to a tie. Dodge Nine Loses to Stanton, 16 to 0 nton, N. D., May 18.—In ‘the opening game of the Mercer, and Dunn county baseball league’ here Sunday, Stanton defeated the Dodge’ nine, 16 to 0. Dodge-used two pitch- ers in an attempt to stem the. tide of battle, but the oferings of bots were roughly treated by the Stanton batters, Larson. for Stanton allowed only; and Stanton made only orie error in the game. it ic | AT THE MOVIES Ui haha cue ' © ELTINGE THEATRE the star backstop of the Cleveland Cupid,” Fox Films’ PSYCHOLOGY, “The Dancer of Paris” with Doro- thy Me 1 and Conway Tearle fea- tured will be shown at the Eltinge for the last time tonight. What sort of girls are show girls? he mask they are presenting from back of the footlights show bewitch- ing eyes, alluring smiles and capti- vating mouths. But that is the mask of the show girl. They have generally been assem- bled ‘into one froup of glittering artifical beauty by the observer who nevep looks back stage. Practically each one of them is leading life that in itself tells a striking Ir - ~ In bringing “Sally, Irene and Mar; to the Eltinge Wednesday and Thu day gives a glimpse of what is ba of the mask. The three girls in the story are each of a distinct personality, cach leading widely different sort of lives when away from the ‘heater. Sally is played by Constance Ben- nett. Irene is enacted by Joan Craw- ford. Mary is portrayed by Sally The story is adapted and scenarized by Edmund Goulding from pawarA Dowling’s popular. stage play. AT THE CAPITOL Anita Stewart is to be seen at the ¥ 1 Theatre tomorrow, Wednes- day and Thuraday. She is cast as Hamilton in “Rustling for Jatest production to reach the screen. George O’Brien has Ahe masculine lead as Brad Blatchford, in this. Peter :B. Kyne drama of ranch life. Miss Stewart and O’Brien give the picture a good laugh at the start as they are just across the aisle in a Pullman bound for Sycamore Creek, New Mexico, where she is to teach school, and near which O'Brien’s V “NO BANDS NO LININGS =~ NO STARCH WILL NOT WILT BCONOMICAL 12 Styley, 30c Bach Phillips-Jones, N.Y. “THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | |state has ever seen,” said Paul J.{ Present proportions during the past | finals carded for Saturday | tudes to an “all’s well that ends wel finish. | Sid Jordan and INDIA’S ONLY Female Rule in the Little State of Bhopal Zada Hamidulla, céded to her desires. The abdication of the Begum brings to an end 25 years of femate rule in the little state of Central In- dia of 6,925 square acres with a popu- lation of about 700,000. She had rul- ed Bhopal with vigor and statesman- ship. Although now 68 years old, she still is mentally and ‘physically father owns the famous Swastika ch. : The porter exchanges their grips, and starts the romance, which runs through a lot of heart throb vicissi- Others in the cast are Russell Simpson, Herbert Prior, Edith Yorke, Frank McGlynn, Jr. | WOMAN RULER ABDICATES jEnd Brought to 25 Yeats of Parties Implicated in Recent London, May 18.—(@)—India’s. on- ly woman ruler, her highness the Begum of Bhopal, has abdicated her throne in favor of her son, Newab For a long time she had contended for the Islamic right to name her successor, who, under ordinary procedure should have been the son of her deceased eldest son, Newab Nasuralla Khan, The itish government finally ac- ery at Great Falls, Mont., of $12,000 in bonds of the $20,000 loot obtained in the robbery of the Viper-Howe Lumber company offices in Minot on the pe late yesterday, according to word received in Minot today -from 4 Sheriff A. S. Spicher of this city,| Watch the antiloxin. who is at Great Falls, which preceded the burglarizing of the Piper-Howe offices, will be solved within a few days as a result of the recovery of the bonds which were in denommations of $1,000, accbrd- ing to Sheriff Spicher's telegram.|] was made in France. - Op n one Nevertheless she long had id to see her only son estab- das her successor before her yeats old; He has been trained i smanship under his mother’s ction. He was on the staff of th Prince of Wales during the Prince’s visit in India and also served in the world’ war. He has a splendid repu- tation, PART OF MINOT ROBBERY L001 IS RECOVERED Series of Thefts Known, 4 Sheriff Says Minot, N. D., May 18.—()—Recov- ight of Friday, April 2, was Nearly a dozen Minot burglaries, { i 3 t CAMELS are made of the choicest Turkish and Domestic tobaccos grown. To prove what we say about Camel’s tobacca quality, Take, a Camel and any other the flies barked like dogs or had bells around their necks like cows. “All the parties, are known,” the sheriff's telegram . Minot Man In Castedy In a telephone mess; Minot 1 night, Sher! strueted his deputies to take - into custody Norris Forrest of Minot, to be held for questioning whén he re- turns from Great Falls. The sheriff also gave instructions to~obtains a warrant for the arrest, on a charge of burglary, of another young man whose present whereabouts are un- known. Forrest was not placed under arrest, but is being held in the coun- ty jail awaiting the ‘retarn Sheriff Spicher. None of the cash which was ob- tained in the robbery, and which in- cluded \$3,800, the life time savings of Louis Gikling of Minot, a street laborer, has not been recovered, and the sheri telegram does not state whether such recovery will be po: ble. Neither did he state in his tele- gram the details surrounding the re- covery of. the valutbleg. Teall Found In Wirgonsin The trail to the source of the stolen bonds in Great Falls led from New Rochmond, Wis., where a $1,000 bond stolen from the Piper-Howe company was recently traded in on the purchase of an automobile. The bond, a Kingdom of Belgium instru- ment, was cleared through_a New Richmond bank and was sent to correspondent bank in Minneapolia where it was recognized as being part of the loot of the Minot robbery. Mussolini, that Ital is sounding ‘the em ‘toesin, but he had better Things could be worse, Suppose The first successful attempt to produce artificial sifk commercially one up! The tobacco fells its own story — You will at once notice the rich, * fragrant aroma of Camel tobaccos not found ini the other. This marked difference is even apparent when you “taste the smoke.” ‘It is solely because of the quality of the tobaccos and the that Camels never tire the' taste, never leave a> . more ap skill of the blending cigaretty after-taste. Camels are so good that we know ive them every uty cigarette regardless of price. Have a’ TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1926 in Chile grow Wild about as big-as