The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1926, Page 11

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§ i ' ‘TOHAVE BEST FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER. 10, 1926 BILL ge BEATS FRENCH THNNIS STAR! Ameticans Need Only a More Victory to Clinch : Hold on — Cup “Ae Phitadetphia, “Sept t. 10—UP)—Shar- ing once more wit! R Little Bill John- ston the task of making the Davis cup safe for America, Bill. Tilden;! guunt wizard of the courts, has util. ized his role to dispel any’ lingering doubts of his return to the form that has kept him at the tennis pinnacle! for six yea The crushing manner of the natioh« al champion’s straight set defeat of the French ace and Wimbledon titte-/ holder, Jean Borotra, was the feature of the opening day's pa y‘in tHe chal. lenger round for the Davis ae at the Germantowy cricket club. It over-| shadowed even the decisive triumph of William Johnston over Rene La-| coste in the other match of the day. Fragce’s widely heralded threat, as a result of this twin disaster, all but; faded from the 1926 competition for the world's team championship. Beats Three Greatest Rivais Within the space of a few weeks! Tilden has disposed of three of his) greatest rivals in convincing fashion. His defeat of Borotra at 6-2, 6-3, 6. following triumphs over Johnston and * Vincent Richards, has heightened the: prospect that he will retain his crown in the national singles tournument| next week at Forest Hills, N. Y. oy beat Lacoste 6-0, 6-4, 0-6, ith only one more victory needed to clinch America’s hold on the Davis cup for the seventh successive year, Richards and the American capta Richard N. Williams, faced the op. portunity to settle the issue today in the doubles match with Henri Cochet) and Jacques Brugnon. These Amer- icans beat the French pair in the , doubles last week, ’ MIDDLEWEST 6- JACK REALLY WATES BUT Two PIGHTERS_FRED FULTON, THE ST, PAUL PLAS: || TERER, IS ONE AND HARRY WILLS IS THE OTHER Bes Jack Mean Business? Look These Over New York, Sept. 10— today's the United States Steel last month. Pools suc vating nearly a score tions they had diffi ¢ following. A) Corpora opened strong on influenced New York, miuny' ‘pf’ the running from'2 to''b ‘noi feay Mack Trucks, which points, brought about sympathetic reactions in low radually spread liquidation of br nearly five priced motors which to other sections of the Despite the simetiteentoe increase in certain grades of crude by the Humble Oil company, petrol- cum shares were pressed for sale, 500 shares of Texas one block of by th rly company changing hands at 55. but the oth Warn standing individual fea er seven points to | hien. Great Northern added to the list high of tur referred new railroad moraren mt crop The closing was heavy. f further price cuts in the 1 dustry, heavy liquidation ¢". ul Buking issue of oil shares and weakness ¢ brought general selling counts in th Baking points and the for jacking and filling movements continued to stock market, J industrials and. rails inclined to heaviness after midday on the announcement of a drop of over 40,000 tons in the unfilled orders, of ion| eded in ele- sues to new Is for the year during the morning, but with one or two excep- Ity in attract- ore reten- our per cent re-discount ¢ federal reserve bank of gains, of an Colt orado Fuel was lifted to a new high, were backward. es was again an out- soarin, a new record, { was tr ental Pressure on the market. than, five, pee i MARKETS MARKET |. IS UNSETTLE Backing and @ Fitting Move- ments Continue to Charaec- terize Today’s Trading By SARE ene WH | Wheat— mee Moy y Corn Sept. Dec, May Oats— Dee. Bellies — Sept, Oct. 19.45 ropes “esgic! PAGE FIVE. FINANCED * - Toda! Low sar 1.32% 1.31% 131% 1.35 1.34% 1 1.40% 1.39% 19% WHEAT CLOSES STEADY TODAY Good aig Gives Minrk et Firm Undertone—Velume of Trade Is Slow m0, Sept. 10-—-()—Good buy- ‘ec wheat a firm undertone to- he purchasing was believed to| w! f backspread f hedges against ¢ volume of speculative jow, with most report this after- =! as yesterday's finish as unchan ithe UP, oats advanced %% to b to 30 cents igher with T . which veraged ly true of Septem! Sake was bid up by scattered commi: GRID SEASON: on a major hostile at the ver; start, Several Teams Have Practice! Games on Schedule For \ Late in September Chicago, Sept. 10. ()—When the grid stars hit the ground in their iirst fall training next week, thel appt } a” ti middle west will begin what promises) sha: that seobably eeane, the, teams to be the best football year in h s a unit, while the star kickers ani tory. passers may practice all afternoon, | WEST TODAY games, some of the greatest perform- + ers of last year still in the game, and with the inceamenalie Army-Navy (Four vision Téams Eastern Ground to Battle For League Pennant class at Soldiers Field, Chicago, in The west has invaded the cadt with tice each will not be easy to get their teams in shape. How- ever, this rule a interpreted by many Prospect for November 27 as the smashing finale of the season, fans are agreed that things ure indeed looking up. The boys who have been drivi ice wagons, mixing concrete for their new stadia at so. much an hour, or juggling the golden sheaves in the torrid expanses of the wheat iit, | have forsaken their summer training jobs and are on call for the first formal training September 15. The Western Conference season officially have tuni: up games arranged for| National league pennant. the last saerear ey of vaeenper St. Louis leading, three full games Games ahead of Cincinnati, has engagements Pardue will_meet the navy eleven| first with the Boston Braves, buried at Annapolis October 2 in the fi deep in the cellar. Chicago, in fourth important intersectional clash in-| place but with hance, meanwhile velving the Big Ten, Michigan will} meets Philadelphia, Boston's rival for take on the middies four weeks. later,| the foot of the |: The Pirates also in the Maryland Free State. | will entertain Cincinnati in a double Chicago and mnsylvania have a} header. return engagement on their books, | Cineinnati scheduled for Urbana, October 30. | by and his inal piteh « _,The traditional Michigan-Illin perched in the Yankee rivaley. mill be conte = Ar. aint probable world sei por, jetober al jcago- Meanwhile Illinois feud will be Rashed over at Pilar eerie oe the Maroon field November 6. place, but spPit two games When the athletes: swarm on the! dropped a lone point euch’ to the lend. field September 15 to brush up on} ers. the tricks of their trade the coaches) Bush Win; Own Game sh hooked up’ in- a pitching will start drilling their charges to! ight ,through a schedule which, rage with Pprey Jones of the Cubs} trouch it bristles with attractive e mie first game and made sure of also contains one feature] his Letore fetory by doubling in the beck to the day when sacat to chai ‘Traynor an players wore their hair long, sported/ across the .ptate. Then Pittsbu shin guards, and protected their over! made five errors in a 10 to 1 debi .Size nasal equipment with rubber! PRi cups. Bi lyn, i General double headers aré a. be j score Eng played in the Big Ten‘ due to a cy » Tuliyg requiring that each gant take a Ae on at least four cot games. | ened Double pee ‘When the coaches din Cl cay ie lass fall te, i ‘a ee Tone’ ys me ‘4 schedule, many inainns ace selves tied up with Bees et ‘showed Ci iega ten 12 to 6. The Robins in. the final frame. a -homers, making: Fg? sore nah eee and the traditional games, but, worked thro fhe new rule wi the home-and-home idea wit} bs the result that in, the 1925 : oe sane, sae iar geared lis | eee st, Louis mere ost two to] sires to bi hi . nesota both at posers ig, 0 | sires to bring De rs Aree other Cplenite 3 to 1 and 5.to 1. 191, He ae between eciiinestorn avid I athe interseetional idea has hit the * equtereate with a bai srochedeles srt fearon | a oar scl ule, Wi journs - adelphia October 16 to’ me fare The bg ge were pieer " ry A year ihe verdict i Pe inipis ab} Bill py came aft the aa eeey uae PTE ca at ; fee fol et ¢ tl last ing will "The champion of Australia remain- in Al meet the Middie: game year to be played in on mu- nicipal stadium af yee riy De. Wilea's ent arf 4 led by il Marek, will a Colum tc a trimming. it Col faints Bibets journeying to Annapolis to play the| belligerent knuckles at his neighbor Bill Phelan will have just 12) he does so because he has becomé da vd to get his men ready for this| provoked to a point of fury. The coaches’ union last fall passed | CAP, for him to a rule allowing Ee two hours prac-| busters bring to their business. | battering to the floor. opens October 2, but several teams| four fighting teams to battle for the a Cronin |g this. closed the season with|,trip to Colma. es is yi chawn to His three day vacation is over, Jack es behind| Dempsey, sunburned: and thoroughly fwon, al of 1.) rested, inten i oe on. apes of Jef- Er a ee an UES Poa position oot ins the licetsed Y JOE WILLIAMS) When the layman tosses a set of It’s rd for him to understand the im- rofessional nose- It’s particularly hard for him to undestand the strange contrasting emotions of Jack Dempsey, mild-man- mered out of the ring, yet a. enarling Dempsey leaps to thaumtiack ith b faroelty that seem born undercurrent of hostility. Yet Dempsey says he has fought only once against an opponent whom e took an -like delight inj That man was Fred Fulton, the coilapsible St. Paul heavyweight. Fulton had’ put y on. the toaster, calling him a faker, a pro- duet of the ballyhoo and # candidate for the heavyweight crown whose pretensions were as false as a three- dollar ‘blue white diamond. “I socked that baby a beaut!” chuckled Dempsey. “I feinted him into an opening with my left and then popped him with my right and he rent down like a load of hard oa Less Than Two: Minutes *“F didn’t even stop to look at him when he went down. I knew when a deep that punch landed he was through for the night. I had put everything| I had into it. If I ever hit any- body harder wasn't because I ight Dem: lace in oie an it sey refers to took ad Fulton was count- ed peri s Horns-| ed Sut Wn the first round after less co mat than two. minutes of fighting. The only other fighter in the ness Dempsey hates is—you, gue it, Harty Wills. He may not admit | cago resumed the fight for third! it’ openly but he dislikes. the sepia- and|hued gent only slightly less enthu- niagtically than pignicker does red ‘ants and showers. jan chatzpion aj {Phu he, was cer- tainly a “false alarm.” —« There was nothing in the grand to hough the going was not good, nine thousand persons made the song Dempsey’s. sey’s 3-day | ,, Vacation Is Over Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 1 a bristling| m ing mates from now to work within the pert 10 days as he never has worked before. Weighing around 197, he de ie poundage to about flashy ing | pace for his see! He promi trunks and a his business be While the “ been} loafing around ae naenne his Fring i partne ve been’ ing their bruises Yor, the punching re is now coming to them, Charley Am- deraon, 121-pound negro from C cago, and Big Bill Tatg, veteran ne- fecer shock absartere oe oo too: appy over what is al 10 ‘wing eonriteration el the oeiee the tion of the referee tel i 3 for his fight aa Benign ink Werner, chairman of "the Pennsylvania state athletic, commis- has asured Dempsey that care Dow be exere ie ee eclctione | submitted the names of six ined referees acceptable to him. Grid Squad tu: 8 have been completed for a ing table for pest Bison — foot- ed | his ‘opponent he ever felt sort I've never been able to decide in own mind whether Dempsey is giving Wills the run-around on ac- count of fear.or what. Last spring he told me he would never let Wills make a dime by fighting him. Then in the next gust of lung breeze he said he'd welcome a ch to punch Wills around in a privat rough-house “Some day ight. ‘ il get him in the same position that Jim Jeffries got Jack | typ Johnsow and-I'll see what he'll dv.” was so Dempsey told me how John- son had drifted into Jeff's saloon out in 'Frisco back in 1908 or there- abouts and Jeff dared the negro to go down the basement and fight with bare : ated he would wel- d of a,battle with Wills. I thought this was a lot of okra soup at the time but his subsequent action in asking Wills to cover $150,- 000 ‘and to battle on a winner-take- ull basis gives jt @ note of sincerity. pamoun asutt Oddly ote one of the fighters Dempsey likes best is Firpo, the bull, and this in spite of the fact that the bull horned him clear over the ropes and out into the crdwd, giving hist what has easily been his most em- barrassing moment. “It was fun fighting ‘that guy,” s. “It was fun* because it and he was always That put*it up to na to get him quick and to be careful about how I got him. There was a spirit of high adventure in that fight Another of Dempsey’s favorites is Georges Carpentie: He lauds him 3 a “swell ‘ i and. “nobody's sueker in Jes: ill rd is "the only eee ot for. “I still have mind-flashes of old Jess sitting on his stool at Toledo wi his eyes closed and his lip spli hiner empsey. “I hated to look at im, at the Ae Y. M,C. A. It was ex- pected by thg coach that the number {of Bison regulars will gradually in- crease to the 40 mark before the opening game on September 25. In. mentjoning some of the fine features of the new traini: table ind quarters, Coach Cortright states wu new He mattresses, will able. for. the sleeping bunks and that therd will be plenty of fire wood handy, for the fire-place. 0, J. Catlin, Moorhead, Minn., coach of last season, will ‘be with’ the’ yearlings this He looks 'for a promising yeai ro Co athletes: ameng: the: fresh- | 5. University iy BE Ti i Ae one time faafialt Jetter- man, will a rtright. pep ae hel erase Ww » be: erat ah be is cay eigt a en at john Pat- Caer snd. defeated ; 18,6) z Vinee ‘won from\, \Charlie B For Busy Week-end Stroudsbiirg, “Po,, Sept. 10.—U)— ‘of: nefvous soarny by by re- ich is Gene Tunney’s F loafing: is preparing r for 2 week-end of tom: tion wi Riba tone morrow and Sunday. Today he w: povided with Lay to walk and soe aa nes to go to be pre- of the 8! boat. The th le aired to box to- sales appro: CHICAGO L Chicago, Sept. 10 —Hogs 10,000; ve demand for weight PERE) cv, ican Legion. He shied from mount of handshaking involved. His chief worry is the informal en- tertaining he is forced to do, A estion that a , woman or child hus driven 100 miles or more o‘see him has thus far brought him ters to shake hands. trainer, und Billy Tunney’s manager, will be of the three hand in Tun- fiey’s corner for the championship! selected.1 5 cents higher; | to 40 cents up; general advane pounds down 1 to 250 pounds 1 slaughter pigs 14.00; hogs 11.60@13.75 hi PETROLLE AND [2.8 SIMMONS WILL MEET TONIGHT Roth Fighters Declared in Fit Condition—Fargo Ex- press Is Favorite dominating in 8.26@9.15; weighty 1015; f no ch lings steers 11.00; other classes uct strong; most medium 5.50; 13.50 to packers. Sheep 25,000; stro bulk feeding lambs sa western 15.10 ——— Fargo, N. D., Sept. 10.—()—Billy Petrolle, the Fargo Express, and Alf Simmons, lightweight champion of, Great Britain, will meet here tonight in a 10-round bout, the winner of which will meet’ Phil McGraw of De- troit in a 10-round bout at the Coney Island Stadium, New York, October 1. Both fighters finished their train- ing programs Thursday and were declared to be in fit condition by their handlers. Petrolle hag been in- stalled as a slight favorite, {William (Kid) MePartland of New your will Feferee. Legion Junior — Ball Teams Meet at Sioux Falls fat fully lambs 15.10; 80. ST. PAUL LIV! South St. Paul, Sept. of A.)—Cattle 2,200; generous supply and feeder cla: yearling steers fat steers 6.00@’ 4.50@ all cutters ing lower: 5.00@5.50; heavies 6.7: lower on lightweight: stockers slow in liberal bulk good lights 11.50, than Thursday general desirable lightweights ers scarce; packin bidding mostly 13. cost Thuraday 11 Sheep 1,500 fat lambs ‘12 to stron; western ewes, s. on Four state championship teams will engage in the preliminaries of the regional junior baseball tourney here today, sponsored by the American Le- beton. The winner of the tournament will represent the district in the na- tional meet at Philadelphia. Eldorado, Kansas, and Crosby, Minna, will meet in first contest with Decatur, Texas, and Beresford, Chicago, changed; receipts 8,619 Cheese une! anged. ROXY STINSON IS. ATTENDING ‘BRIBERY TRIAL 31! (Continued trom. one.) ed the transacti et fore Augu: svinter 1.36 @137% 1 hard amber meiaad wheat 1 1,34%@1.38' Corn No. 8 white 79. Oats No. 3 white 37% : re No. 1, Flax No. 1, after gave King putenee it drawn on the ‘Chase Notional } said he had oe n the check, but he nat pten it ee to fanc: Reduces Expénsen said he obtained: the ser- King because he it te less expensive thaw Wirin) wv AO: would er o law; King was once Republican] May 1.44' Sea Ring se ono opablicny eptember jeintee 1:30, necticut and one of the most influen- fo. 3 yellow 81@82, tial men in the Republican party. Telling of the actual ttansfer. of oole ke. 3 ze ano Byes eo. 2. 00 x Flax N y uneven eral ewes sows 10 vi weight market steady; bulk steady] .25@13.78; shee 650 bid’ for. best. fed ship) irable buik desirable. quiet with Septemb few} ‘210. of bulk 2 oe the outsid houses having small buying orders, There were 10,000 bushels of corn posted as out of condition in a local y! public elevator but this failed to af- ‘fect the market and the undertone inden ing was firm the greater part of the day. pounds and light packing sows broad, aa Top early 14.40; best light hogs held ee ES TAKE DECLINE general market 10 to ht lights and p heavy butchers futures finished a dull and uninter- slow, very vance ta aly sales at esting sossion with net price | alk. « IN MINNEAPOLIS MARKET ae ees is, Sept. 10— %@'% cent. Sep decline, ther grains were ber showing irregular and feature, fairly Cash wheat offe 0; best! large, alth 9. heavy wel medium, 13, 3 light p sows 9.40@ pigs 12.50@14,00, southwestern steer run steady; bulk) upward to} fed steers 10.00 upward; ice heavies offered; fairly active; fat! lambs. Tuliy steady early sales west- erns upward to 15.00; top natives to small killers 14.90; few loads 14.50; bulk around 14.25; culls strong at 10.00@ 11.00; most sales 10.50; sheep 6.00@7.00; steady; early} , 14.00@15.00; late Thursday ton bulk 14.75@ TOCK 10—(U. run 10.3: some supply 1@7.00; few odd lots 7.00@7.25. Caives 1,300; market steady with Hogs 5600; market f{My-25 higher trade; bulk 13.75; CHICAGO PRODUCE Sept. 10—(#)—Butter, un- tubs, y i 6, a ote sees Sa RANGE OF CARLOT §, SALES 1.50% 5 1.42%; No.” 2 ditto 1.80% winter 131@ 39%. @: 1, Wee 2, Maou a ge hg GRAIN Sept. 10—(™—Wheat pe Compared ‘to 675 al Ne Cash No. 1 northern 1.36@ No, 1 dark northern spring 48; good to pre- too vear- and mixed yearlings e; steady to bulls 5.25@) vealers 13.00@14.00; largely. Ni inclu of cattle in stocker) 38; odd he: 10.25@: * eligible to about 8.00@9.00; bulk grass bulk she stock 4.25; tend- most medium grade bulls, sales) feeders and butch- }@11.00; average] 4 1- 256. ti include conside 5@ rect to store without ¢ ight Corn was in good demand ferings fairly large. ie. were in fair to good demand trading basis steady. Rye was in fair to good demand. Barley was in good demand and firm to one cent higher. Flaxseed was easy. CHICAGO GRAIN Chicago, Sept. 10—()—Cash wh N 1@. . 2 hard I mixed 80%; No. 4 white 39@41; No, 95%. Brien aero, Timothy seed 6,35 Clover se OT. Chicago, Sept. 10—()—Potatoes; receipts 32 cars; on track 7. al S. shipments 788; tradi rather slow; market firm; Wisconsin sacked and bulk round whites 3.15@3.30; Min- nesota sacked sand land Ohios 2.50@ 2.75, according to quality. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, Sept. 10—()—Flour unchanged, | Shipments 49,413 barrels. ran 21.50. FARGO BUTTER Fargo, N. D., Sept. 10—(#)—Butter k fat, churning’ cream 41; packing} s; stoc! u New York, Sept. 10—(#)—Liberty | bone closed: 3 1-28 101; 01.4; fourth 4 Irs 102.2; 101.14; U.S. G. 4s 103.28; U. S. G. 4 1-rs 101.22, MINNEAPOLIS RANGR Sept. 10 High Low 1.36% 137 1.36 140% 1.40%; 1.39% 1.44% 1.44% 1.44 90% 90% 3 93% 89% 92% 39% 39% 39% ABN 43% 43% 2.34% 2.36% 2.3454 237 238 2.36% Ping 64% 87 64% 66% ean RCK GRAIN (Fornished by ‘Russell-Miller jsmarek, Sept. 10 No, 1 dark northern...... we 1 northern spring. 4) No Montana on @37%. 221k @iT%. 403. ‘Ne. hay | track be fac to Bertve 1.32@1.39; ry | Rovernment and MOB SCENES IN ATHENS CAUSE MANY DEATHS (Continued from nage ) +| Republican guard was defi dis solved, The men are being sent to ” different islands in the Aegean Sea but the officers will be promptly court-martialed, { : TODAY | en ‘ontinued from page one.) the railroads get the hundreds | of millions more and have the gov- ernment and its Interstate Commerce Commission always ready to force the public to pay higher rates if railroads need them. The government compelling the * blic to pay more for railroad serv- without giving the public any- say ubout it, should also’ * compel railroads pay more to it giving rail y about it. But s workings are ar- ranged by those that own the rail+ roads, not by those that work on the railro: Fifty years ago, fewer than 2 mil- lion women worked for pay in the United States, pris re them in do- ie practical mind, to see the horses and German farmers harness the co: Our boasted “gainful occupations for women” take women out of their only vccupation really yaintul to civilization, the production of good children A splendid s womanhood, M returns from Ei imen of American s Clurabell Barrett, pe in the steerage, aften an unsuccessful attempt to swim the channel. The plucky publi school-teacher actually swam 22 how in the cold water, through the dark- ness of night, and through thick fog after her bout had lost her. Prop- erly guided she Now she returns with no money, iw debt $2,000 and fir: ra .J2 magnificent woman, she ought to be married and be the mother of at Jeast twelve children. One Abraham Lincoln would be worth more to this country than all the “gainful” women in creation. And Miss Barrett is the Nancy Hanks type, tall and powerful. Brothers and sisters, the war ap- parently is over. The kindness of Prussia, after long negotiations, U.| delicately feeling its way, asks a loan of 20 million dollars in the United States, and will get it. vould have greeted proposition se or eight But business is business, interest and good security are always acceptable. 3 “good man, your story seems to have such a hol- Well, that’s because I’m g on an empty stomach.— Webi London, 4 “Shop open n until 9. | vanes Saturday evening. Candy Sale Saturday W. LUCAS CO.

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