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- © PAGE FOUR, "AS BABE RUTH GOES, 80. GOES | | THE YANK TEAM Huggins’ Prediction, ‘If Babe! Starts, Others Will Fol- | | Waiting | 4 } low,’ Comes True pecan ' (By Billy‘Evans) St. Louis, Oct. 7-—As » $0 goes the Yanks. That has long been a Yankee truth. | it was proved beyond a doubt in the fourth game of the world series. Dropping uround to the New York! «:bench while the Yanks were taking | batting p 1 engaged Manager | Miller in conversation Babe Ruth Huggins When do you expect your noble | letes to start hitting?” \ in been wondering about that} same thing for a month,” was; reply | If the B: will only start, the | of the b will follow suit.’ You row he alw shows the way when! the Yanks a slugging mood.” — | Ruppert Was Peeved | Colonel Ruppert, owner of the New | York club, was in far from an opti- miatic mood. You can tell the boys if batters are : { think I can do the job j is some of the players, Ruppert. The Colonel talked rather loudly and the irony of his opinion of Yanks’ batting apparently “s However, there was no need of call- | ing on the Co Babe Ruth per-) sonully took eare of t | The only I's great-} Robert Bannon of Glenns Falls, N. est slug; extraor-| um, New York, first in lin ‘ dinary of tong distance | was taken, there were 900 odd behir hitting every seen in a world series time the Cardinal pitchers got | Il within socking distance Babe | gam proceeded to hit it over the garden! no surp: wall, He did it three times. | beat hin. the under-| strangle hold, All Were Real Clouts ! taker in t hibit. There was nothing synthe Bube’s homers. The first ¢! ed the; One of the boys was named Dou- é ‘ right field bleachers by a mile, the| thit. He was hit squarely in tne| = second was a line drive over the right | cookie crate by the other boy who enter stands, while the third settled | was named Hafey. It may have been | @ far up in the extreme center field | aun accident, by Hafey, but Douthit ‘ seats, the longest distance in the! doubts it. |Z park from the plate to the fence. | — | On the other two occasions that) We are beginning to think these! Babe stepped to the plate, he walked, | series nes are being subsidized b “He Id have need a fishing pole! th ulists of the i to have hit any of the balls served! the Pirates flas' him, | pitch With Babe cutting up, the rest of | terd: he team followed suit, as Manager | hitter who wore Hugyins had pre . Aside from | 4 Ruth's home runs, nd doubles | he a WS eos Servi rattled off the Yankee bats with| of s! e in the fourth innin en, ronotonous regularity. In addition | and couldn't throw a runner out) wil) be withou the St. Louis pitchers issued ten| at the plate. f his is outi ¢ i'r, 5 tses on. balls. f using it for 1 winning The Cardinals ma put as | 8 ha eee There was no shooting in the 3 | streets last night, no frenzied hoopla Aer paidtace mice cox rete | —heoply—hooplaing, ne Lcllowing o| Bier came, ent cont New York an: cong and clattering of drums. ‘The Koenig Slips Up Agai | town was strangely quiet. With the Yankees lending, to 1) Reing Missourians they had asked could have re, t2 be shown. And T'll be gosh derned tired the side, let the ball get away if the, Bam didn’t step right out and ind both runners were sat Before ; Show “em. the innning was over the Card Hl PO eae RENTS 7 had scored three gift runs and had|Gpidders Preparing ‘ gone into the lead. That was in the! ’ 1 fourth. : For Saturday’s Game However, Reinhart, who had been substituted for Rhem, immediately re- lieved the tenseness of the situation | for the Yankees by putting on an ex- hibition of wildness that made you think of Ranch 101. Vive bases on balls and one lone! two bagger resulted in four runs. That settled the ball game, the rest was a procession. Light workout the Bismarck h yestere be followe having been b: Collins following trdus pri ‘ Gridders are still being « berth o is Ki, "| * ensive rk c| s is} The Yankees ‘ure feeling much |Worcral Ghat sevaul at the eins A eee thank you. Looks like Pen-|sured in Tuesday's practise will be| or ‘or the fifth game ith Horns-| ble to report by ‘Saturda: : : coming back with Sherdel. eport by Saturday. NED (By Joe Williams) | St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 7—Blovie, ko- hlooie, koblooic. That's the Bam, hamming out three home runs in yes: terday’s chamber of baseball horrors. Yankees Favorites | in Betting Today) New York, Oct. 7—(P). -Speculatior on the world series took a new tur Mickey) } and Clev today. Prices of five to four were| offered on the Yankees to win to-| National Hock day’s game and 10 to 9 they would| take the series, Before yesterda game the Cardinals were slight favor-| tral league. ites. i There were odds of 12 to 5 the Yankees winning the ne | tw games and 1@ to 5 against the Cardi- aals taking two straight. | It used to be St. Lovic, but now its St. Blooiec. San Francis Joe Stecher Wins |Anugles tural Match With Pesek ‘= (- Toledo—Ben: Somebody complained the Yanks needed a shot in the arm, but all they needed was a shot in the stands, Angeles, Oct. 7.- Stecher, claimant of the world heavy- (1). Ward Spi eight wrestling championship title,! die Bowen, C! When the returns from yesterday's came drifted into Broadway the spat ind cane gentry busted right out in iarmony, ‘singing “The fam. Bam Hammy Shore.” MEANS LOTTA FIGURING SB WwW 1 MUFF Ws ONE TLL HAVE 70 KISS “THAT WORLD SERIES DOUGH _ GOODBYE | For three days the Bam was quieter than a Sunday afternoon in Minooka, Pa., and twiee as uninteresting. He! looked so bad at the bat that Col.| Ruppert climbed into a working suit and demanded to be used as a! i pinch hitter. The Colonel was definitely irked. | 5 “Why should I pay that egg $52,000/ to make infield outs, when f can do no worse myself and for nothing?” But now, however, everything is all Jacob. The recrudence of the Bam—M ‘Tunney, here’s a good word for you just goes to prove that you never can tell when the confederate war cannon! ‘on the public square is going to start blowing off. And it is also a matter of histor record that these shaggy old lion: ihe boys use in film comics, will! aw their autographs in the seat of your breeches if you get them grouchy enough. SEASON THE LADS ARE Of course in the good old days the WORKING ONDER A Tam never would have made’ three! 1 RERRIFIC STRAIA. home runs in one game. A: pop bot-! « tle have stiffened him out like| ateak after the first one. ps selon , ¢ eneby used fi iteh- Feained tb nee for himeeté of every five it. 4 ‘evel : feb experiment Nowe of his tive had stead: time thi NS —- cay is’. outfielders ball i CHUCK KASSEL Imirers are predicting he'll igned, to play this season with the Pittsbirgh professional club of the McGuire played Minneapolis, champions of the cen- PUI cre re ’ FIGHT RESULTS | ee e knocked out Ji won his match with John Pesek of | O'Neil, Cleveland, ';knocked out Al For Dawn—and the World Series _ Y., arrived at 9 p. th. before the bleacher gates of the Yankee Stadi- ‘ee the opening, game of the World Series. nd him. No, not crazy, just baseball fans, t night, after each d Pesek, in doing ond time, used a { troit (6). the rules pro- technical Ss, the “ the fi Minois ce. ML, Oct. noi: t the services of “Red’ trl Britton this season, i d never- s with the erial on hand. One of the out- standing players on the 1926 squad | is “Chuck” Kassel, captain and. end. new course for ht. Mrs. heare She ad on the rugs. word, being strong] on defense, a dead- ly tackler’ and an expert at hauling in passes. | i | Last year Kassel was named by many as the great- est flanker in the middle west. He was just abou that, too. This on the sel's f tom of a modest veritable omerraes the Mini's lucky leader. Constantinop! districts. Frank er Minneapo- land hockey star, has the Fez, are fi ing illegal headgear. Boston—The n ey League. last year with Bray, 32, to 2 over them, in the Briggs. highly paid 19-y, co—Benny Marks, Los ight, beat Bobby Burns,| ley wa Talley sin Each wish the other's s Gershe, Cleveland, e Ortez, Milwaukee arks, Detroit, beat Ed- Jeveland (8). Tommy Shortly before dawn, when this Marchant, Detroit, (2). Battling Mor- | dent. | gan, Toledo, defeated Joe Cutler, De- Oakland, Calif-—John Lester John-| tempt at suicide, | son, New ‘York negro heavy weight, knockout , ll | George Cook of Australia (7), 8 a |Men Dislike ‘Neat’ ‘Women, Brides Told at ‘Training School’! | » Boston, Oct. 7—OP)—Brides should be orderly but not neat—men dislike] down? ns given students] spending c: t the opening of Boston Universit; ‘4 : prospective bi eatness has broken Elizabeth authority on home maki ed gi | their husbands to enjoy their homes, blotchy youth. “Th | even to the extent of dropping a#lies}'#0, but I wouldn't “Be such a clever home maker that! imagine I could think most anybod: ‘our husband will never su "| house takes a lot of time Just do the: work so efficiently that when he is around you will have suf-{ careful ficient leisure to look charminy — i Flashes of Life | Halifax, N. S.—John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has shot a moose in the hunting ‘ountry near Saledonia. Mexico City—There should’ be six inches from the ankles to the bct- kirt, in the ‘opinion of Archbishop Ruiz, of Michodean, 5 Students did it at the closing n European. union. There's a erable hat hijacking in the country Tricksters, claiming to be inspectors enforcing decrces against ining villagers for hav- se of a jazz orches- tra from a nearby dance hall was sufficient reason for Miss Marion glass where the leaders would run view of Judge’ medieval He fined her $10 and. sen-| moueyal Bi tenced her to two months in jail. ut nails and -broken| made up six hones ut summer erho Des Moines—Marion and Gertrude,| 312! id stars, are a bit envious of each other. sto see Miss and Miss Ederle wishes to hear Miss They have just met, she could do’ some of tuft, Ederle swim, lean, and his clothes, while a was lean, feet ot Montclair, N, J.—Nothing like an autographed baseball from Babe Ruth 4 idden, is fendy.- The ball nrrived by airplane’ ing rom, St. Louis the same day mi senf sundry balls on flights| self-consciousness. that broke records, Judith’s cye | Heta Kappa «~~ eiyia Geib nae | Vea nd 1 NEWS BRIEFS | gl Queen “Maric und Mrs. Woodrow! “noueh Wilson have tea together in Paris| and will te shipmaces Leviathan, very likely. ering his’ lady’ Mexican police magistrate fines a dozen Catholic women chirged with holding a religious meeting in a. through the outs | private residence. Th lame sides, and ey Ried auaate pecial session of ‘Texas legislature requesting resignation of ae, ah Resolution is Ferguson. Simon Bambetger, 79, Utah's war governor, dies at Salt Lake City. | ™urmur ran Bein: Grand Forks.—March 1-3 was se-|™8% lected by” executive “board of ‘North Dakota Farmers’ Grain Dealers’ as- sociation for next convention at‘ not. * —_ East. Grand’““Works, thousand persone” attentied dedica- tion of new American Beet Sugar company plant’ here. Florence, Colorado,—Mrr: Bernice Konick of Virginia, Minn., swore out a warrant, charging Thomas J. Tinan, warden of Colorado state peniten- tiary, with attacking her. youth. was. the onl: coach: ‘who jonely, . . : The whooping, gi sengers io Wi Fargo.—C. P. Stone, “wet” candi- date for United States senator, open- The ed campaign here with statement that) on “no relief for farmer is in sight un-| the til Volstead act is modified.” rand which milled fused thund cre’ was the: pi irl ‘Tpedcration ot Wa bs bal coe F ce \ ", Federation of Women’s Clubs bayquct. ut annual conyention with 160 delc- pean. be gates present. Idose-fitting 1 ‘ hcg a himself, f Grand Forks, N. D.—Inga Ryan} '' I amen when struck by ai utomobile bid secdtn driven by Mrs. Arthur lery. The latter was ‘prostrated-after the acelc| 3té" e did ‘not sec Fargo—Lawrence O’Brien, trans. | Ordinarily brond. ient, near death after suspected at- ee The next moment and ban saa Campus Rebels | meee nara eaneaaeananieainteinily herself wine Her moutl (Continued from page one.) dee ‘n’t mean to let anybody else know; Yeah,” the girl said, still pecking) RAS,* merry light in e: at her mouth with the er of her’ handkerchief and staring into a look- ing glass in the top of her handbag. |) othy’s pretty sour.” | ‘you hear Eric Waters is coming Yoy. ki Princeton one of; eclebrity. ey say his dad’s sick of: Princcton ’s|and has sent’ him down hete on an 8) allowance of a hundred and fifty a| ,. ‘mont t man: The girl closed her bag and licked Donald,| her lips carefully. “That's tough, fold her| she said. “Is he good looking?” to allow} “Couldn't si answered the irls-seem to think ye surprised if it ‘was a case of money making the man. She struggled fecb!; giant kissed" her ‘mouth. le de ha 1s you directions.’ Then he a (To Be Cont that our] W#s handsome if he hed. John D.) Ui fd care.| Rockefeller's money.” a The girl shrugged, and: essayed-a mile, as if she were-afraid her heavily made up lips ‘were'going| CARDS * to crack.- “I could myself,” «she ‘ agreed. “The shciks of Pendleton will shave their work cut out for them|- te from. now on, with Eric: Waters -@| providing the competition.” . Their conversation drifted on. . . .. dudith had been reading one para. ph over and over while the chat. of ‘the youthful pair invaded her left ear. She perked angrily and con- centrated’ on her book, and’ a tiny| frown furrowed her brow. ke girl beside her glanced her, ‘way; and then, as if she seen something unusual in. “taking Ju in.” ‘The blotehy. youth, too, seemed to find the sight of ithe red- hatred girl not uninviting, and per-' mitted himself to stare*and then to| exchange a knowing look with his companion. t <-Juplith, aware-of their regard, shift- hem incomfortably, anda slow wave! A! of color suffused her pale cheeks. She closed her book with a snap, and the ide her, apparently ‘con- scious at last of their rudencss, turn- ed ir attention elsewhere. Judith | heard: vague ‘snatches of their’ mur- mured talk —“majoring in English” — Iteh out-of the Pithe fifth ee pected to-turn back! game nock consid- or, and while experts. ys held the Cards to Fy: course.’ dudith was suddenly aware of al chee! tall, gtay figure moving down the! roads under ter Je was’ the nr brenda, and; Howed herself this time a good look her knight .of the‘ hat bex.|to New York: to Miss Tal-| His face, like the rest of his figure,| file for the parestly new, gave the of) efter today’s looseness. He had‘a small mustache.) Néw York e Apparently, Judith thought, he was: one of those men of whom tailors despaired of ever presetiting a “nat: ty” appearance. He passed Judith without « glance, introduced five teni T'LL BUY A LOT OF SWELL DUDE DUDS ANID A-LOKURIOUS LIMOUSINE AND ROLL INTO THE HOME “TOWN LIKE “The PRINCE OF WALES. ers’ box Wancy end #0 bases .en. we WORLD DOUGH—| to make..room for to Ki¢-® sacrifice:f! mba cagaht the pih danglin nodded her head Just as she thought—an in Or maybe a prefessot,| je did look young for it 5 Imost in,” said the blotehy young ‘abourd the ey ane still half draped oxgt ind kisses, ntative transport both: ball clabs interested in the current medicine. Johnny Sylvester, 11,: his tanned-face-a trifle averted- feeling much better al-! her, and she-experienced of amasentent, not w the/a little pity for ar ies obvious inbred went int OF a Phi from his! ‘sagely, | it. He begai sorted bi Through the window pan could see that the-train- was i of a town. ere were squalid gray houses on ali fadith’ crooked, muddy streets, with gas lamps just beginning to glimmer in the twilight. dder ran through her. people détach themselves from their seats and begin to assemble ir Ld suitcases. n involun- She A confused ” yelled a brake-| nd there bagging’ open‘a door, wat “gene scramble. Judith assembled her belongings} ® and stood back to‘await her chance to get owt of the mad press of noisy = ene any, tweeds Hel best! ici peared, and she s#w not a trace ot Mian Tre" the mouse-colored. Wetherel. She young woman in the| lacked a squire to en-; gineer her bandbox. She felt suddenly ling throng filed er. it. the epped beside her and had s1 dbo: the They: seemed to -be- laughing out. Judith was one of the last pas to step from the instantly engulfed more ¢lamorous thron; about her with a con: r of) noisy greetings strenuous backslappin; f. the young men, ; greeted one another with For a monient wave of helpl paar A" swiftly, though A young. giant in. a ight "Lon Zoek detached | Pet the, crowd and: took owand hi Ing about his lips, though latform. in A smile indeed, all "I she notieed: was that ‘the shoulders| beneath ‘the top coat scemed extra- A football “hero, probably, was her thou ee i f ite! His free arm wént. around her and she’ felt carried along. opened to voice a pro- test, but she was ‘suddenly crushed | i; against -the topcoat and staring inte is pair of strange green cyes. ‘hece ean eyes, her. and then the undly on the Warding off the mob, he nalf puill- ed, pushed her toward the taxi sand. , Judith was too dazed to speak. \opened the door of:a cab,'thrust her) and then slammed it shut. ‘What—” Judith: began; but the oung giant had turned away, She sdw him toss a bill to the driver, heard him say, “The lady ‘will give el.) Who in the strange ‘young welcomes Judith to Pend >LAN (Continued from page one.) thing to shoot at we letting another ar ean promishd fair weathet with rising ‘temperature. Pennock and Sherdel a For pitching-choices today Mai ers. Huggins and Berm ‘were te the page of the score hook showing th. i of the series when Hert Pent downed ‘Willie Gherdet, ‘2 t0 There was a possibility that Horns. by might call on. Grover Cleveland Alexander a was régardes mine: with eviee sat the r Yankee ‘Etadiohe turdays! has a slow curve in ontca bit -slow- of | Reinhart was generous 'to s° fault. He sat inom see as tn the fifth after Blem fife, sithoapic teckatealiy' moving e cast. Bell, wha’ alacrity to a ;, Waders out, did two of the outs were cost of New York ‘rans. * pons wore on. developed aos the* game Hoyt, serving forthe longue entry, w: with hil baw vtiney ick cuss fie: porml ction ‘ae tds viclded bat Ings; kept-them Sherde) agreed curves can be hit-into the right field| graom stands, they seid such a feat is not Pennock is rated among the it of American league pitchers. He three hits in the opening wame of this world series. Yesterday's result drew the loud rom representatives of contract to ‘and others “back. play BeBe BA trai 4 A S ina | were schéduled'to leave‘immediate! cand due to rea «Friday bray ray me ath and merits |. pitchers. is | ing: him. dm: merit deme! sh the pitch> for ‘briet of four ‘of Ruano aistribated aR, BP 1 P wi tthe in: anions ee! but vat te Yan= Americ t in pe ed Fadvertisement cover! Hel, t | Htalian: gtammar,*"~* FOR STOMACH MEDICINE i . * ee ee. “I was a sufferer from indigéstion| cause of,sour stomach, gas bloxting unti}'a druggist advised me to try Ad-| nervous dyspepsia and restless c+ ‘The results have been woft- ~~" Dectors Praise Adlerika Kost sayering, ene ices ter Dr. H. L. Shoub, New York: “ Ys work without feeling tired. sit] lertka, ii ition to its intes dithont Cc. at cldpasing, el ma the growth oe a tI , Culver. testinal bacteria.” Uallike most medicines, Ader| | Drv A. C. Gari: “I prescribe Seta ins, eetnt Be lettka with “Righty satlsfuctory “and bfinging ene : noma J. Weaver: ““In my 50 years’ ft ae ieee Even ice Ihave found nothing to vx P daily, you will be surprised how much | cel-Adlerika.” J. E. Puckett: ‘more old wget obeys bri out lerika, I feel better trouble. "In disot rs, oc. Peto M plaiinigaa tion, GAS bloati: irom my system.” indigestion or’ sick headache, O Dr. F. u P. (name withheld by r- spoonful always brings relief. ‘T use Adierika in all howe! Adletika is a compound of the bes! Some require only one dose saline intestinal cleanser with gly-/ No matter what you have tric’ ‘. cerine, buckthorn, cascara, and other| your stomach and bowels, Adlerikn s-expelling and detergent elements.| will #utprise;you. At leading druc : fr is oxcellen$ for Intestinal Stasis,| gists. disease due to modern ways of living. and which is often the truc Ad he. “After ‘using Ad- than for 20 years. * were climinated In Bismarck at Jos: Breslow other druggists. and form his principal ellents in fashion 4 when he hits home runs| able divorce cases, (Rerey Marmont), is mates may be depended upon to| and’a manicure, girl, from Minn at it drive out singles. olis, who has matrfed and gon Cardinal supporters-countered with | live at # Canadian woods tradin;: p: the observation) thatthe National} and who finds life pretty boring. ry = Fes teach bow eek sictloe at 8 camper (Eugene Pallette), who a ie Had donernd Hesse ren Hitting ab Ue | catteat the Rearts of Sil compere expense of either. n v : may have met, this post while or 4 Hasup/sousy: camping expedition New York | eR | ‘ ' Holm, c¢! Reus, Ss Southworth, rf CAPITOL THEATRE Ber lover and happin b| boy's. future and a drab exit nt herself, These were the ings that Wanda Heriot, the ful heroine of Fox Films “May License?” had to choose between her choice from the smashing eli: of the picture which will be si at the Capitol theatre for two beginning tonight. Alma Rubens of his team’s attacking splendid as the beautiful Wan; Walter McGrail is Marcas Heriot who divorces wife*shortly after the birth of disowning the child at the time. Walter Pidgeon: is Paul Lan: with whom Wanda falls in love whom she wi to marry, unti! he» marriage stands between her son : his heritage. “Marriage License?” from the stage succes: by: H. M. Jesse, pa the female pelican who pluc feathers from her breast to f¢ fledglings her life blood. » Besides the principals, th: includes: Richard Walling, Fitzroy, Charles Lane, Edguy ton, George Cowl, Langhorne Lon Poff, Billie Latimer, !. ‘O'Byrne, Eric Mayne and inkin. Frank gotiyn id directed the pro duction, ytilizing every dramotic incident to its full value. North Dakota Wheat Making Fine Bread Exceptionally high quality i: wheat crop of North’ Dakots i cated by bread baking tests consi: ed thus far by Thomas Sanders: miller for the experiment. st:: ben North Dakota :Agriculturs! ¢u! i a ans bey! carl texture of uals: that’ of ‘pistols. In the first] O81 the samples we have hake: nine ‘months:of 3986: whisky: killed } "Ve, scored considerably above 190, in the past nine months whisky Pr has killed 228, Victims of modern whisky included several. old‘ men and pne girl baby, * Goktin ‘te excessive,” but it ‘The Los Angeles Examiner circu- lates 400, st circulation west of the Mississippi river—and When heard. Chicago contributes to bootleg folk lore the interesting history of Rich- Evans, ee 4 pe og eo inten minutes as. jury iked~ what ic ‘corner, replied, severe (in v’ of m ” He was was half drunl ‘when he put a revolver,to the head of a policeman, driving-him to the lock- up, and blew out the policeman’s brains. If..anybody is . to ~ hanged, hanging «that young sbarderer® is correct, but what-of the bootlegger $hat sold-him.the whisky? hang him beside the murderer? He had more to do with the’ killing than the 19-year-old boy that pulled the trigger. i oChi statistics: show that boot- lex ‘awiaky’ killing record the jorption, the samples have 1m ery satisfactory showing for flour.’ The number of samples tested ior baking quality thus far is 88. @re'composite samples from 25 « ties scattered all over the si are believed to: be repre that part of the crop that ed..prior tothe recent rains. “Baking quality of the whe: femains to be threshed cannot termined until further tests are made,” Mr. Sanderson declares. “I'r longed rains do'not always have the nit gd on wheat which is in the voek.’ “Flour from a Kota wheat a te, Mouse: county produc: largest of the 3B samples tested. The valume was 2,905 ae , ters, color score 96, and texturs <co 92° The average volume for the samples is about 2,400 cubic cvstim ters, in comparison with KY cubic centimeters, which ix ggneraliy cor sidered a good loaf volume, accurdin to: Mr. Sanderson. new fae Ti Fate? tlpae ve has -srrai ve: comi etree wi jich“theans also, inevitably, in whisky deal re. Roreign pas:it is, kills less quickly in whisky made f di atured aleohol, bought stations and redistilled. Joseph Conrad wrote that hé:was 19 when’ ‘he :JearnedEnglih, That rear] Conrad's letter also a “Ihave never’ arene an English “life.” --Nothing: re- which le mple . ‘he: work: peare is not based on any Engli: grammar. nor is that -of: Dante, cre- ator of modern. Italian, based on an 44 Homer never. looked: into « Greek becau: ‘oday’s Offer— Stomach eject G nes And still there‘are gtubborn peop! tight. in this part of country who }won't actept this » but contin: to’ suffer ftom ‘on. stomach, beiy i The first balt. game of the cham- pionship: series:'was -watébed: by-61,- 658° men, ‘wo ing $198,976 to 5 throw a ball, bat and run. bh m ses as Rayon) fel to ir. ‘Tunney remove championshi from « brow. The world 'p * The way of an shrezise “ahcient louiton,. flying across Nev: gol Ly tht feet: f: sieht fet tram tp | ie sieathe gies cane el peptic agony in five’ miputes conquer ‘obstinate caten (08 indige to | tion, and:torn the old stomach into f a 4 spen by Finthyrs Ds P sto \ lv.