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CARDS DEFEAT CUBS - GIANTS BEAT PHILLIES Highly Important Oceasions | to Home Town Fans Cele- brated in Fine Style ted Press) are happy that they (By The Two big lea s a on s “to the hom town turning in resoun When the wo nals took the Louis for their on the home lot, t ant that they . 38 years of hungering for Il to view. the Cards went mmeatrot the hitting, to L victory M. d the sixth to help drive cker from the hill. Detroit's 7 to 0 viet Louis Browns also sion of a first a son in the large crowd that the Tigers, they a shutout triumph. The return of the White Sox was not ded by such suce The Indians fell on Lyons in the sixth and collected enough to win. Without anything particular to) celebrate, the Brooklyn Bobins cele brated it by beating the batting! Braves in a hard fought game, 4 to 3. Bob Barertt, late of Mempnis, was the hero of the day with « that won the game and snapped a seven-game losing streak, » through ball gu uring the When was ed in the N aS a base e bat-| i ible to use Swhat two clubs have continu- been ember of the Na-| 1 League since its organization 4. ously in 18) comprised the cuit? originally What eight clubs National League THIS 1, Sunday played in 1892. 2. In only one year, 1887, 3. In 1886 there was a rule that permitted the batsman to use a bat slightly flat on one side. It was rescinded in 1893. 4, Boston and Chicago. Athletics of Philadelphia, Mu- = Is of Brooklyn, Boston, Chicago, innati, St. Louis, Louisville, Hartford. ——___ + 1 Fights Last Night | —<—<— (By The Associated Press) San Francisco — Johnny Preston, New York, won by technical knockout over Ferdinand Blaplain, France, (7). Waterloo, Ta. 1 Blue, St. Paul, and George Bourland, Chicago drew (10). Montreal—Leo (Kid) Roy, feather- weight champion of Canada, defeated Chris Newton, Toronto, (10). The Nut Cracker ST s baseball was first Ralph: Greenleaf should be peeing | the marines in China ... he has had a lot of experience with’ cues, Clarence Darrow, in an exclusive interview, gives his philosophy of | life and: says it is a continual battle .... which is the logical statement Of a resident of Chicago. The British government announces veut-in the beer tax e now that, | iP Indiana town abandoned its fire | department composed entirely of | ‘women ...they insisted on silk} hose.” ‘Golf: is getting so 80 “popular in New| York even the white wings use the Vardon grip on their street brooms. SOLEMN N DUTY Ifer, when he plays with you, ene speak when he is spoken to, keep his score card free from A At eee: as far as he is able. JACKIE FIELDS |. <i MAY LIFT TITLE FROM MANDELL Los { the season of | goin | round Golfers -s You Have: Have Met by Kent Straat. HE'S HELOTUP MORE PEOPLE THAN TESSE JAMES? ©r44. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF, | ' | i | otball have and how times sever pitch a no! Bros both of two, hy scores ag ght, 1927 NEA Service, Inc.) Bo Angeles Lightweight Is Hailed as Veritable Double of Leonard tenny ult, when 192 thelr meant Gre bout 1 Six| present fighter, with the ¢ A Prediction when Fields was still professional ee | ception of | Cle rd didn’t) Ch on young in the predicted that would wear the If he gets r hiweight crown Mandell] a ould come > Jackie will whip the| c ackie had the Rockford P dd coming in thei Whether they we: in or standing of > better things. T heard flash} nt e fight-! Min Fields) ( Between tol me from r fight he ing ¢ had t Mandell, those short “I don’t know where th ing from!” was the boxer’ Still Talk About It He spoke the truth, Those right! @y nd left jabs were coming in so fast yy was bewildered, person — _walk down Spring street, | hangout, and hear old: ussing the battle. ‘They, don't know whether they were dream- ing or wheth: tually saw Benny Leona’ dance around re com-| reply, bout with the Manhattan| ns and Tex Rickard, such a match | out of the qu ork law prohibits from ighting more than six rounds. Fidel couldn't go over that limit’ fatter Me shuennecaeunte cham-| pion, | Dick Donald, the Tex Rickard of | west, put ‘on the first Mandell-| ds fight. He ngling for th next one -— and has a pretty good| chance of getting it for an Kida eta 1 eeatlok champion ‘on ice? Gorman of St. John, New j Cine wee | Yesterday’ 's Games | PanlasieniG! Orwoll, Eltinge Bldg.. 4 Pennant Progress Geis AMERICAN A: | York Celtics, Games Today wdelphia: on at Boston ONAL LEAGUE Wit sls j team. rklyn innati Games Today +. Louis. Pittsburgh, \held with Holman the distinction of | filling a regular role throughout the Fi Dave Banks, forward, joined the fold ly obertson, newich and Taylo dt and Henline, R n rE 7 0 11 0 Wilson; Fitzsimmons H tnett, Gon- and Snyder. duled, AMERICAN LEAG rn HH ® 8 3 12 0 Grabowski; and Cochrane. Moore ve, Quinn HOE bi 13 0 Schang; ve . Hudiin % Connally and Seha Mthers nat se ched uled, AMERICAN ASS oe ey » Crouse. — nm; * fetter, Me: Baxter and Urban. ough, nneapolis . lumbus Middleton, eeker and F: Maline and Kenna; ell. nnard and MeMenemyt Hop. Beberry, |the most amazing records in the hi } 192 | they {That '90 lest | known, {bone of the elub th | period of success, Three other stars have answered | at $2,400 a year. the Celtic roll-call for at least seven| 228 Prohibition agents, at $2,400 a | Dehnert, guards, and Johnny Barry, "| Joe Lapehick succeeded “Horse” Hag- E 2 1 0 Tincup, Wicker ae THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘Mushy’ Callahan to Defend Title Los Angeles, April | Mushy Callahan’ has: been signed dy | Dick Donald, boxing Promoter, to de- | fend his junior welterweight title in an outdoor bout here June 13. ‘allahan’s opponent has not been se- ed, the choice being left to Don- 7 | | | ata. The | signed | before | Yorts contract. for the bout was by Callahan yesterday just he boarded a train for either will be young son of San Francisco, Baby} |Jee Gans, San Diego negro, Tommy O’Brien of New York, or Spug Mey-| ers of Pocatello, Idaho. Basketball Team Has Eight Seasons of ‘Pro’ Victories By L. 8S. DAYTON Associated. Press Sports Writer) New York, April 21—(#)—One of tory of professional ‘basketball been carried unchecked through its eighth successive season by the New With the recent winning of the last half hongrs in the American league as the elimax to a 36-game winning streak, this basket-tossing hine ran its total for the 1926+ 7 campaign to 77 triumphs in 86” games, and its eight-year mark to) 714 victories out of 795 starts. In the claim to world supremacy have made for the last five the Celtics point to the fact! per cent of their battles have been fought as a traveling An average of more than 70,- 000 miles a son has been covered by the club in its journeys through the East and Middle West. Holman Is Star Outstanding in the array of Celtic talent is versatile Nat Holman, con- sidered by critics as,one of the great- passers the game has Holman has been the back- ppughout its long Sy years—Christ Leonard and Dutch forward. Dehnert is ‘the only mem- (ber of the trio, however, who has long stretch of victories. Recently after the sale of Johnny Beckman, famous forward, to Baltimore, while gerty as center a year ago, Recent Records 21—)—| ew Callahan's opponent, Donald! league ra Jah | bal ever /@t ennant ‘pees of.the team in 1920, 921 an ite after which ‘the club agp re hed sagas tor four years. turning to competition last fall; the Celtics fan| up 15 victories in 18 National etreit | ames before éntering the American | feague. They then proceeded to take} the second half title in the’ Satter | race with the loss of only one coi test. Their lone defeat in-26 was administered by Oleveland’s Rosenblums, the present American league titlcholders, The Celties and Rosenblums, -who won the first half of the American will méet in the basket- vorld series,” April 6-7, at jand, and 9-10 at Brooklyn, a fifth game to be played if necessary to decide the title. The Celtics’ greatest year, in 1922-1923, yielded 102 victories and) ‘only six’ defeats. Positions Open in Prohibition Bureau Vashington, D. C. April 21,—The sion today launched its country-wide campaign to recruit eligibles for the 2509 positions in the Bureau of Pro-| hibition which were classified under | the civil service law by the Act of March 3, 1927. The commission an- | nounced open com: jon. examina. tions for the following positions 1 Chief of field diviston, at $6,000 | a year. | 5 Prohibition at $2,500 a year. 24" Prohibition administrators, at | | $4,000 to $6,000 a year. 24 Assistant prohibition adminis- trators (enforcement work), at $3,300 | to $5,200 a year. 24 Assistant prohibition adminis- trators (permissive work,), at $3,300 to $5,200. year, 60 Deputy prohibition admi tors, at $3,000 to $4,600 a year. 2 Field office inspectors, $3,800 to $3,900 a year. 4 Associate field office inspectors, at $3,000 to $3,600 a year, 18 Senior prohibitign investigators, $3,800 a year. 109 Prohibition $3,000 a year. 53 Junior prohibition investigators, zone supervisors ra: at investigators, at year. 1260 Junior prohibition -agents, at $1,860 a y 102 Warehouse watchmen, at $1,140 to $1,800 a year. 74 Attorneys, at ‘$1,860 to $5,200 a year. Copies of the ‘examination and an- nouncements and application blanks may be obtained from the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. or from the sec- retary of the local board of civil Metropolitan and Eastern league ! R 12 H 12 WESTERN ; Oklahoma City 3. + Tulsa 2. Des Moines 8; Amarille 4. Omaha-Wichita postponed, cold. H. B. LOVE Doctor of Chiropractic Palmer School 3-year graduate Examination Free Bismarck, Better than Many “7 at SSE a, 10° Cigars BISMARCK GROCERY CO., Distributor “Blamiarek, N Dy E 2 7 6 ; Schupp, Swe- championships were included in The in this or any other city. CS service examiners at the post office The ex; United States Civil Service Commis- | amination announcements. give de- tailed information ee Ghd the seope of the ‘examinations ‘the requirements tranee ‘thereto! :Calls For Help Fron’ War Vets’ Families Are More Numerous Fargo, N. 11s for help by aiitren of| world war veterans ‘throughout ‘the | {state are incre ‘accofding to! Mrs. Blanche XK; nd of ~Hatton,| e chairman of the -thid ‘welfare lepartment of the, North Dakota’ American Legion Auxiliary. Commenting on the fact that “the| |help needed in our own “towns and state is much greater this year than has ever been before,” Mrs. Kjel- | land explained that “the results of | the itt? war are beginning ‘to tell men and day after day ‘men | are, soing hospitalised. ‘This means! have to be saken care! bay * Cann are becoming mere num-}| | erous and urgent every day, In many} cases men have been sick efor some ime and have tried to keep the fam-) ly expenses up but with docter bills, | medicine, food and clothes, it is not! i before their funds ate ox: pas and they ate obliged to move he hospital where they will res| | ati until their’ time is: come.” Rolls ‘Wanted Mrs. Kjelland is condacting-a cam- | aign “to induce every unit of the| then ‘ps auxiliary to contpile ‘a ‘cradle roll, | listing the names of alt the children | th | of éx-service ‘men in their eommun- ity. The records will be valuable for future reference on all questions of heirs, compensation and wi ‘Nelson, a campaign for the le of poppies on Memorial day. She -hopes -that the sale of poppies in‘North Dakota ‘this year will be much larger than at be eo in velco ee < se of the poppy sale, Mrs, Nejeow vals ei is: To keep uppermost in the minds of all “nse the poppy is-'worn' as & memorial‘tribute to our soldier dead. To afferd compensation ‘to unfor- tunate -service” men who make’ the Poppies. ‘To provide a fund for welfare-work, Use.of Rabbit Fur - Increases Steadily Washington, April 21.—()—The pocket-book pinch formerly felt by American ‘women ‘when the old far coat simply would not standanother outing without a feeling of despair has been countered with a “rabbit | a unch” “by ‘farriers ‘and the Pederal THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1927 <Editor’s Note: This, iz the lath the -story doughboy who is revialting Franée “as ‘an aatence guard of the “Second A EF. At Mont St. Martin the age-old ab- kewl lead iets | or rather, the ruins of meriean troops cap- fared Hits, teers took this whole batch’ of territory in | one'day, from sunrise vn sunset... they didn’t fool, up her Premont, where the ‘0th Division hopped off after alittle rest, has been rebuilt new city hall . . the workmen are just completing it after these) nine y North Carolinians} were ; and at) Nauroy cooks | steamed up the ruins of the old city hall in Bohain. They'll come back again ne September -with “The ‘The’ pursuit was swift when the southerners occupied Busigny and! equigny . there's the rail-| road that runs from Metz to Lille * and, the pursuit continued the next daysiato St. Souplet . . the enemy concentrated strong forces | but the Old Hickory} division “hurled along « and} in a moonlight attack on Octo-| 17, Mazinghien was captured | ind the next day the battle \iines were established along the heights onthe west bank of the Sambre. more expensive pelts of disappear- ing fur-bearing animals is increas- ing steadily, experts say, and mak- ing possible’ purchases which women formerly were hesitant to make be- cause of prohibitive prices, . “Rabbit far,” ‘biologists declared in a report, “let itself readily to imitation ‘proces: far dressers and dyers have mi tered ‘so well the art of imitating ether furs by modern methods of plucking, ‘shearing ‘and dyeing that the Hage of the rabbit is being of- fered for ‘sale under a variety of trade names’ and in many instances is replacing such costly and attrac- tive skins as ermine, seal, beaver and leopard.” More ‘than ‘100,000,000 rabbit skins are utilized annually, the report says. About 55,000,000 are dressed ‘and dyed, -being ‘made into:fur gar- Ments and trimming for women’s , suits and dresses, Skins: not ible for garments are used as linings ‘for gloves ard in‘the manu- ‘Bellicourt and their iology Survey. ‘Use of ‘rabbit «fur in imitating GIVE.me a pipe and Prince Albert, and winter vacation, I won't envy you for a minute. In fact, I wouldn’e trade places with anybody. T:could even be happy on a desert island with a pipe ™ plenty of P.A. ‘You'll understand my enthusiasm for this prince of smokes the minute yoy open the tidy red tin and get a whiff of real tobacco. Runes aay 9 ees The taste more than ‘lives up to annie ee Tuck a or | saaaanaapn ene lep Hechter facture of felt. Ninety-eight per cent of the skins, Ais . the Americans | Bohain has a! some slum in front of} Second | “tp FRANCE 4 With their last river line ‘taken the Germans Jost hope. And the push from the Sambre on up was rapid. In. g little while came the ‘armistice, that Foch signed at Complegne. Almost ten years ago these events occurred . . . to be exact it was nine years ago in -October the peasants remember still talk about the Americans me the Americans, working with the British and Australians, were their deliverers. . . ‘The veterans coming to the legion convention will find that the fields are under cultivation now . the trade is good in the little esta: minets of Riqueval -and LeGatelet . . the Sambre flows easily through jts glose-cropped banks and the waters of the Scheldt canal, mov- ing turgidly in that dark tunnel, carry much commerce from Cambrai down to St. Quentin and back ‘to Cambrai again. . The guerre is fini—Me’est 1a guer- re”. . . but the American flag, flapping ‘lazily in the breeze from |the tail flagstaff in the center of | the cemetery at Bony, is impressive. For there rest some 2,800 Americans « a the white crosses tell their [names . ’s a sacred spot... a worthy object of a pilgrimage... a spot entitled to the homage of a nation that .refiembers those who went from the Scheldt to the Sambre . +. some of whom remained, and to whom 30,000 legionnaires will pay | their respects this September, . many | i valued at about $25,000,000 is im- | ported from other countries. Pelts of the wild cottontail and jack rabbit are said to be of prac- tically no use to furriers berause of their thinness and poor quality. Every domestic rabbit skin, how- ever, except that of the Angora, has commercial fur value, regardless~‘of* size or color, the biologist say. MONEY T0 LOAN bilge’: oar Oamsa City mee soe ageney Bismarck, Nerth Datreta Representing Eaton @ Eaten Financial Correspondents ‘The Union Central Lite insurance Ce. City National Bank Balléing | sold everywhere in Fag hf red tins, pound end-hel}-pound' tis Serend pound erystel-glass neocons ‘sponge-moistence sop. with everviblt of bite and moved yah yor yond by the Prince Albert“ orecess,