The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 15, 1926, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

mL | & S82 1277.1 red. gF rr i ~ “Montreal, LEAGUE RACES CLOSER THAN INMANY YEARS Interest in American, How- ever, Centers on Fight For Second Place | HTT UH Ty Te AUNMfun! i history both | rt been | jay. In the} appears | JOHN AEGRAW ¢ Nationals, 4% | But the | pe and in be oe ela GIANTS—2b STRAIGHT” ONE. TIE sept 7—New York 4, Brooklyn Se B New York 9, Philes Spe ONew York 4, Philes 4 € cago and New York 3, Phillies 0 on es Yok 9, Philes 4 ' we York 5, Cincannate 2 ; Gi ei . Bid on : a ‘i ac Yous, Cineinnat 0. again have ie threatening anc ‘ have traded Billy Southworth, out- j Sept New Yell . Louis Heinie Muel- | Sept WtoNew York 3. Cooma chaser, licked Cinvin- | Sept 1o—New Vouk 8 Pause nati again, this time 4 to 3. | Sept Vo—New York 4. Pan a Heavy hitting by the Brooklyn out-| Set 1B—New York 2, Parsburgh O fit set back the St. Louis Cardinals, | Sept New York 1 Fitsbureh 8 to 5. Herman, turned back | i (The, erght ennungs, cain. by Minneapolis: this season because | 19—New York 9, Patiburgh 2, there was no room for him, inserted | Se No New York 9, Pattburgh u valuable double and later a home| xP iy oNew York 4. Chicaate 2 idee os | er Di New York 4, Chiage 0 Boston Beats Pittsburgh | St New York 9, Chicagy 0. Pittsburgh, with Emil Yde left- Se ee Ne York 6: Chica ¢ handing, ran into troable at Boston, | St Ne ee it three singles and a triple giving the! Set New Ven ee Braves three runs in the fifth while | Sept 25—New York I. 9 the Pirates could score only twice. Sept 25—New York & > wo Cubs, Sept 26-—New York ©, formerly of | 27—New York 3, St Lanio 2 ne each by Wilson | 2B-New York 2, Boston U. punted for a victory | Sr 28 New Ye 6, Boron 0 Sept 30—New York 4, Boston 0. second place in the league by taking the third in af row from the Athletics and th seventh out of nine from eastern teams, 6 to 5. The Boston Red Sox scored seven runs in two of the late innings but Jost to Detroit, 8 to 7, because the Tigers also staged a four-run spree in the eighth, em to come in 10. For instance, b had charge of hi: ear period: in 1906 record by winning stands. 19 games 118 GOLFERS o -_——____| Long winning streaks in major league baseball famous “hitless wonde Chicago White Sox established an Ameri ne | | Pennant Progress Sisliisrsiasinmarie cee VANKEES—16 sTRaucyy Mer 'O—New Yor. 13, Dares 9 Mey New Yost 6, Chad 5. Mey New You 13, Conan May 14—New York 2, Cevetand 9 Moy '5—New York 10, Gage 4° , Mey '7—New You $. Creag, 4! Mey '8—New York 5, Chcagy 4! Mey 19—New Yor 6 5 toay oh May 20—New My 2'—New Ya 2. Se Laan 2 Mey New Vote 2. 5.'Taus | WHITE SOX—19 STRAIGHT ONE TE Aug 2—Chicagu 5, Boston 0 Aug $—Qhcago 4, Boston 0. Aug 4—Cheago 1 Boston 0. Aug 5—Chneage 10, Athletes 2 Aug 6—Cheago 7. Athletes 2 Aug 7—Cheagu 4 Athtenes 0 Aug 8—Cheago I, Athletes 0. Aug %—Chwcago 5. Athletes 2 + Aug 10—Chicagy 2, New York 1 Aug 1'—Chweagu 8, New York Aug 12—Cheage $, New York 0 Aug 13—Checage 0, New York 0. (Tre, eine mnngs. » aan Aug 15—Cheago 6, Boston 4 May 23—New Yor 2 Aug, 16—Chicago 9, Boston 4 May 24—New York tlle Aug. '7—Chieage 4, Boston $ May 25-4 © Bowen 2 Avg 18—Chieagu 10, New York 6. Yooh 5, Basten 3, : Aug 20~Chicago 4, New York 1. Mey 25—New York 5, Benton cme Aug 22—Chicage 6, New York | May 26—New York, 4 : ‘ ‘Aug. 22—Chcago 11, New York 6 Wieser) N Aug. 23—Cheago 4, Washington t) A decade later, or in 1916, the New York Giants | under the crafty John McGraw turned 4n the great- Jones | est winning streak of modern times, bagging 26 tilts phen s elie ne® | without suffering defeat. ad | . This on the Yankees, piloted by Miller Hug- n an League | gins, c ed up 16 victories in succession. for the in a ro’ It still | third highest mark, equaling a Washington achicve- | ment of 1912. AMERICAN eae es and a single, scoring three runs him- | Columbus Werte self and driving in three others. ! med all the v jand don’t look for trouble; alwa @| dance. TEXAS BOOM BRINGS BACK ; Towns Now in Existence Which Weren’t Even Heard of Six Months Ago itor’s Note: This is the cond of a series of articles by Charles M, Hall, special corre- dent for NEA Service, de- ibing boom conditions in what expected to become the world’s grea it oil field—the newly de- veloped Panhandle field in Texas. BY CHARLES M. HAL Special bead ebilednn ad for NEA Ser- vice Copyright, 1926, by Ni Amarill§, Texas, June 15. o'clock town, wickedness was overrated; the newest candidates for the rain of blazing brimstone are the newly born boom towns, sprawling under the hot sun on the, broad plain of} the Texas Panhandle, These towns weren't in existence six months ago. They grew up over- night when oil men discovered th the Panhandle contained potenti the greatest oil field in the worl And into its short compass are jam ces of the bad old western frontier. Let it be suid at the start that sev- eral of the oil boom towns i anhandle are highly opled by working men who ut in others the old west! Take the boom town of} Borger, for exampl Old Time Dance Halls see dance ed in the California and da mining camps generations ago,! mining camps that are now pictured on the sereen but seen no- s ‘ an find t gambling halls, regu- lar old time wild west saloons, fero- cious bad men who go about. shooters strapped to their hips. | If you go there to see the sights j Island, (Editor's Note: This is thtsecond of two stories by Roy J. Gibbons, spe~ cial writer for NEA Service and The Tribune on the unique eonimunity of Washington Island, Wis.) BY ROY J. GIBBO! Washington Island, Wis., June 15— Imagine’a telephone company that, failing to make a penny in profit for its stockholders, refused to raise its rates ‘because it wanted to give the ‘best service possible! ue It sounds impossible. But this iso- lated Lake Michigan community of fa: and fishermen has such an ization. ¢ cooperative telephone company is probably like no other commercial Service, Inc.| ¢ property has incr vi ‘50 per cent. The rates have always remained the same, and the concern just pays for its upkeep. Buy Own Instruments Substribers ‘buy. their instruments and the company rents them at two dollars a year and suppiles one set of batteries free. Subscribers pay nothing for calls up until 9 at night, and after that pay 10 cents a call. This extra dime is for the operator— the company has only one—to pt her for being awakened. tors to the island pay 5 cents a call before 9 p. m. and 15 cents thereafter. The operator knows when a visitor is using the phone by the sound of his voice. That is her only y of telling. She gets her home free and is given all night tolls plus 50 cents, a.month on cach tele- phone as salty, m i The service ‘good, too, and & cable connects the lines here with the mainland. Not long ago a state in- spector came here and remarked that the rate of $1.50 a month was ridiculously low. But the islanders voted down his proposal that rymen, too, have a cooperative society for thes breeding of’ their blooded Holstein tattle. Washington the way, was the second community in the United States to havo its cattel tuberculin tested. you'won't get hurt if you keep quiet ed you remember one thing: mustn't wear a white hat. hat is the symbol of angers, and the Texas} popular there as! mber of Commerce ‘ou wear a white hat} pt to take a pot shot at post. But! ht. conventio} someone is you from behind a hitchin; otherwise you'll be all ri s the sun goes down the big busi- starts. The workers start com- ing into town in droves, and soon the thump of unskilled feet shuffling da rough planks to the tune of wheezy ragtime mingles with the hum of voices, loud laughter, a few curses and—-oceasionally—a shot or two. A Challenge to Dance You can go to “Ma's” or to “Mat- tie’s” dance hall, where there are 200 ladies of the kind known lance hall girls.” If you do the girls will challenge you to dance, at 25 cents a Of this sum each girl gets a dime. 13 2| The 17 runs in one inning; the e- i Kansas Cits i Stezer: ume] total of bases, and Brandon's "feat fi cth, Harris and Meuter; Dumo-| were claimed as records. AMERICAN LEAGUE vich and Wells, 3 Standings ——— | Ww. Pet. R oH E J N TOURNEY): Yorke cveescose 40 Indianapolis ......... 6 tM lf Lemperatures and |, jeveland .. i St. Paul 5 iti aa Cah eaes ea ‘wort j| Road Conditions | Philadelphia . epee [Senne shennan 0d PY # = Washington as Unfavorable Weather Greets Berit ‘ HE] ‘(Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) it. Lor .. Pe 11 1] Bismarck—Cloud good. Players on Majoriy of Boston inne in 8 St c loud “Clow roads Hate Nee : “ullop, and Mey-| Minot—Cloudy, 56; roads good. the Courses Games Today er, Midleton, Hollings-] Duluth—Cloudy, 54; roads good. New York at St. Louis. worth and Byler. Jamestown — Cloudy, 68; roads good. ew York, Jano a6-—(—Fuirest| Philadelphia at Cleveland, (Others postponed, rain.) Fargo—Purtly cloudy, 53; roads lest weather greeted the more] Heston at Detroit, TERN LEAGUE roads good golfer: owe » the! shington a cago. Seat - a , : mn 600 golfer sche me inte the | Lidasbe Neen Omah: Joseph 6, Forks—Cloudy, 67; roads open ch » on 17 widely seat- NATIONAL LEAGUE sleet, und a cold tL Otacinamtt 5 o while in the; p, net rom recent downpours. Al Chicago of large proportions dampen-| prookivn fe the spirits of many a candidate in} Viny Yor the east. 2B : But with all, 118 players qualified, nein : although the rain at Chicago made]. ' Seria + ¥ Necessary postponement of off in which two must be Games Today six who finished with St. Louis at Brooklyn. ‘There were few u . The! Chicago at Philadelphia. veteran” Alex Smith, an oven cham-| Pittsburgh at Boston, pion of years ago, failed to reach Cincinnati at New York. the select list in the New York d trict. John Black, who tied w Bobby Jones in 1922 for the AMERICAN ASSOCIATION up position to Gene Standings Skokie, went down in the Jimmy veteran amateur, Trouble ! Milwaukee... | Louisville Indianapoli Kan City Minneapolis | Columbus . Games Louisville at Minneapolis napolis at St. Paul. umbus at Kansas City. Toledo at Milwaukee. ippi title holder, gained the places at St. Louis. D more Shute of Huntington, W. V scored at Cleveland, and Max Mars-| ton and D, Clark Corkran at Ph phi NATIONAL LEAGUE die Held of Johuston of St. land of ott w Y well known ar ’ Donohue and Pie nd showed by far the best | Qui are id qualliNts under | Suen ayes Harrison dack West- vere other Cincinnati ........... with all Dempsey Acquitted St. Louis .. Brooklyn "= MANY GOLFERS © EXPECTED IN +185 KB. Hull, president of the association. a Yesterday’s Games ee Me- ve jdetermining a woman title-holder as: a 10, scheduled.) , 56; roads good. . 62; roads good. cloudy, 58; chester—Partl. Winona—-Clear, 62; roads fair. "SUPREME COURT | ! ° > From Cass County Morgan JmFord, as Trust the estate of Rolland R. Bankrupt, " 1926 TOURNEY | New Plan Gives Teams out! side of Fargo Better Chance to Win Honors Plaintiff and Appellant. v J. G. Brown, Rolland R. Gill and Charlotte Gill, Defendants’ and Respondents. SYLLABUS: ~In an action to set aside a conyy ance of land, as a fraudulent conve iance, when it appears from the land sold was not at H i worth more than t against it, and 7 ale was made for the purpose ng interest and taxes und preventing th mortguge thereon sons stated in the o; E h transfer not made with intent to defraud creditors. Appeal from the district coutt of Cass county, Hon A. T. Cole, Judge, AFFIRMED, Pros- fdr a large entry list Il parts of the state ke part in the ent of the North Dakota to he played here according to Thoma If 1) August 2 to 6, |. Mr, | forthcoming, tourngwent in the hope, jot making the state has lever seen. is being made [to enlist ndweera members of the} jassociation so that the tournament} |may be truly representative of all! “p ‘devotees of the putter, midiron and Was in the state. | Hull now urke, J. Bismarck, North r & ' Lauder, ‘Wahpe- ota, Attorneys for Ap- Laud ton, North peliant. W. H. Barnett, Se Fargo, North Respondents. The tournament program provides for a qualifying round of be played on the opening day ‘ounds will be played on s days with the semi-fi day of tournament » finals on F This year’s h W. Richardson, ota, Attorneys for Mitts and the week Flashes of Life | o—___________» Washington.—The woman of today wears fewer clothes on the strect prégram provides for | well as a male companion. E| New Plan Devived =~ 2! A new plan of determining team 2 play honors provides that each club ej H. Bell, Reinhart, tunt- Pating shall designate its team! than her grandmother wore to bed of Speeding Charge ringer and O'Farrell; and Prior to the beginning of play. Here-| says Senator Norris of Nebraska, The Pej olla tofore the low five scores turned in| obvervation was made during aise ; petra by the. players of the various clubs| gion of farm telief in the cena e Chowchit a) RH participating in the qualifying round - ae ae y was acquit-| Chicago 9 14 1 have been used in making the team| phijadelphi - er i <A ade ’ i : ie " phia—“The “domestic in ted of a charge permitting his! philadelphia Vee Seen yt lay award. . England uses better English than the chauffeur to exceed the speed law! Bush, Osborn and Hartnett; Be: last March. xy, Ulsieh, Knit att ME Merch st the court he was{ [0% Ulrich, Knight and Henline, talking to his wife, the former R Estelle Taylor, screen’ star, and paid! pj : no uttention to the speed’ at which| fictprtree - et Cie his automobile was traveling. A traffic officer testified the Dempsey | ands. Taylor gar was making 70, miles an hour.4 20" 2 jaa fe chauffeur previously had been en fined $50. SEAN IRAOUE | New York 3.8 St. Louis | FIGHT RESULTS |). 2, 10 raxton and (¢ Pennock, 6- 2 lins; Robertson, Wingard, Vangilder and Dixon, ndon.—Harry Persén of Swe- won the heavyweight champion- of Europe by knocking out Phil Seott, English champion, (11). chet “Canton, Ohio—Henry Leonard, bantamweight, and Young Providence, R. 1., boxed a draw (12). Philadelphia . Cleveland Rommel, te 0. rane, Fox; Bostoi id round railway” o! Waray listed 3111 seats: ‘and conductors who helped escaping, slaves,» - Ht. Others pos! ed, rain.) 3 Yas and Gooch; Benton, Mogridge POG aa est hnizer and Bi juss, Collins and Under the new plan teams from out- side of Fargo are expected to have a better chance of bringing home the g bacon~-and ‘the team-play honors. In 3 Previous tournaments a large entry list from Fargo has given that city the edge. Portsmouth Team Claims Three New ‘ Baseball Records Portmouth, Va, June 15.--UP)—The | average American. girl graduate,” ac- cording to James M. Beck, former United States solicitor general. He was telling Drexel Institute graduates why they should endeavor to speak correct); Rochester, N. Y.—While some oth- er-portions of tle country sweltered, snow fell here early today after a rapid drop in temperature, E 2 0 Detroit——“Seven-eleven, come sev- en-eleven,” entreated 17 crapshooters they watched dominoes Hop ross the green board. “Here ie 2: ‘ol n go into any one of a anything to Or you e dozen saloons and buy drink except run that way word—at anything from three-card monte to stud poker, played at a table that is surrounded by barbed ‘ire to keep the kibitzers from peek- ing over the shoulders of the ers. There are figh' places. “Usually there are ordinary fist fights, with feet and teeth used as a secondary of defense; but gun fights are not infreque: majority of the bad men are poor however, for in all the shoot- zs to date no one has been killed. Three home-made policemen with pearl-handled_pis' about the strects, but th evil and hear no evil. T decorative but that's about all. The whole thing is like nothing so much as a Turid movie of the old west. It is true to type if not to life. Swaggerers with revolvers, short- skirted dancing girls, cold-eyed gam- blers—they’re all there. enuine bad men ure scarce, how- ever. There were a few attempts at highway robbery and the like, but the Texas plainsmen and cowboys are too well used to handling weapons themselves. Most of the would-be holdup men got shot up rather badly. and limb aren't in any — real gpuger if one doesn’t look for trou- je. Instant Relief From Bunions--Soft Corns cee 4 No sensible person will continue to suffer from those intense, agonizing, throbbing bunion pains when the new powerful penetrating yet harmless ‘antiseptic Emerald Oil can readily be obtained at. any well stocked drug store. : ‘Apply a few drops over the in- flamed swollen joint and sce how speedily the pain disappears. A few more wupplications and the swollen joint is reduced to normal. So marvelously powerful is Emerald Oil that soft corns seem to shrivel right up and drop off. All ‘druggists guarantee it and are jispensing it to many foot sufferers. WV. |, ortmout Virginia E laid claim today to thr 1 sional baseball records:as a 2 yesterday's game with the ch-| N.C, team of the sal In’ pilin id Patrolman “711,” otherwise Wil- ingston,| fines. , league. \ Freya raga HUNT BALLOONS up a ‘seoré of 29 to Portsmou! ight home run: E two-| and 93 singles}, Calgary, Alberta——Weather balloons, for a total. of 3 bases, In the fifth] with delicate recorders which register inning 20 men ‘came to. bat and scor- ssure and temperature at higher levels, are being / sent out by the of an error or pass. Catcher Hilton meteorological stationtere. Rewards Brandon was up three. times in this of the. inning and obtained two home runs ed 17 runs-on 17 hits without the aid ‘the finders gre ~ pail to ‘balloons, Hundreds hunt them, 4 ! in plenty of these _ A Community Doctor There is a cooperative-creamery and cheese-making plant. There is a community doctor, too, who is guar- janteed $5,000 a year, and if his fees fail to reach that amount the island- eas ra TUES WASHINGTON ISLAND PHONE COMPANY WON'T BOOST “RIDICULOUSLY LOW” TH WILD WEST RATES, DESPITE LACK OF PROFITS home burned down his loss wax paid within a few hours, and the islanders got together immediately there- after, took a collection and pre- sented their neighbor with a purse of several hundred dollars, The island spends about 50 cents of every dollar collected in taxes on education. There are four schools and 357 pupils. The roads are ex- ellent, and when the island treasury is shy of cash the residents chip in and pay for repairs out of their own ading citizen here is William Jes He is town chairman, school board clerk, treasurer and general manager of the telephone company, secretary of the insurance company and half a dosen other things. Hi son, Harvey, is the telephone ¢ pany’s sole lineman. Good Vacation ce While farming and fishing are the chief industries here, in th mmer ‘time the island does a thriving re- sort business.. It makes an_ ideal vacation spot, with good fishing grounds and excellent bathing beach- es, and a number of people come here year after year. The islanders don’t ask where you are from, how long yeu are going to stay or where you are going. Thi only say: lake our island your home while ers chip in and make up the differ. ence. A cooperative insurance company also thrives here. When profits and reserve are great enough premiums are cancelled. of red tape in this organization, too, and recently when an | There is an absence’ islander’s | cee Com; the profits of the botigiens: Under this plan, initiated five years just completed, the Company added in by the emplo: Company’s s 4 to every dollar paid tthe purchase of the This liberal arrangement met with enthusiastic response. By the careful thrift it encouraged, the employes were able to save $11,800,000 to invest in Standard Oil Company (Indiana) stock. $29,350,000, r dividends. Thus five years of installment paying on stock of re sitet ese (Indiana) prune employes of the Company an appreciation o! $13,550,000. ae e The only stockholder share of Standard Oil Company (Indiana) profits is Sreabiea iene a philanthropic Foundation—estal the total dividends, ceive 4.2%.’ The fact that the employes of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) receive the second lar; share of its profits is highly appropriate. ‘ \ employes of the Standard _Oil Company (Indiana) is of a kind deserving \generous encouragement, worthy of reward. tically, secure in the knowl- edge that their efforts will be appreciated. They work enthusiastically, certain of friendly helpful The work of the lo; They work et co-operation and the management. ‘3 a single united force. as devotion. _ It must. delight in doi 4 eu Sey eye the First Stock Purchasing Plan, beac Seth owners of the ly Recently they received stock to the value of 0,06 resenting, in addition to their subscriptions, the stock added by the Company under the terms of the plan, plus the ordinary y stablished “‘to promote the well- being of mankind throughout the world.” * , The Rockefeller Faundation receives 5.4% of work harmoniously together, conscious of “the high creed of seryice The work of Standard Oil Company eet saree to tactic! lr Soh human thi in doing things well. Standard Oil Company. r ‘ Goer tinoos' oh i settee by. a vast army of DAY, JUNE 46, 1 you are herg.. If there is anything you want and can’t find, ask for it.” Prices are moderate: and no man ‘tries to ‘outdo ‘hix- competitor. In’°* ' fact, whon a storeke i any commodity he can go to rival and borrow what he needs wu ‘til the noxt boat arriv And though this is a rural community, all four stores make di deliveries from one end of the island to the other as The islanders are always anxious, . ’ for visitora to see the monument’ they erected to the 40 island boys who ‘went to war in 1917 and 1918. Four of these lad s did not come back, The islanders have never for- gotten them. ‘ AN in all, a unique community. The islanders aren't saints, of course. But it would be mighty hard to find ; \ anothér conimunity of 1,000 souls that actually practice service and neigh- borliness and let profits come second, Half way across the Continent on a’ GREAT LAKES CRUISE All the thrills of an ocean voya; plus vacation pleasures in America’s greatest playground. Lakes Trdnsit Corporation. Un- commodations. Dancing, games, ed in fare, cra : and reservations call any R.R. Ticket Agent, or Sail F Cae Superior. Tourist or C. Williams G. W. A. Great Lakes Transit Corp., 101 Palladio Bldg., Duluth, Minn. ndiana), sharing in cents toward receiving a larger ‘ockefeller while the employes re- ‘gest encouragement from which binds them into (Indiana) deeply ty and faith and true a by.a ~ (Indi owes its ; calibre, eae ’ io !

Other pages from this issue: