The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 30, 1927, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Defeat of Cardinals Proves Help to Bucs | | Cincinnati Claps on 3 to 2 Beating to St, Louisans—Reds Get) to Frankhouse For All Runs in Fourth—Are Held scoreless During Rest of Game UTM TIES 1921 RECORD OF 59 HOME RUNS THURSDAY Earlier in Game—Last Cireuit Clout Comes With Rases Loaded in New York-Washington Encounter Thinks He Can Get a Couple More 5sth Ry The Associated Press t was divided between Babe Ruth's effort} me run record and the closing maneuvers race, where the Pittsburgh Pirates need 1} Leagu not allovether out of the running. uy tied his 1921 record of 59 home runs when ut of the stadium in the fifth inning of the eee al Hop- Ruth’: ¢-———— —+ Dempsey Comeback | ; ' to Be Difficult t use ' pt and 2 <i en ia New York, Sept. 30.—(AP)— Vf Jack Dempsey wants another match with Gene Tunney he must eliminate every serious heavyweight contender in the boxing game. i That is Tex Rickard’s com- nt on a third meeting be- tween the heavyweight cham- pion and the Manassa Mauler. “There are about six con- tenders who want to get a shot | { dent at Tunney,” Rickard said today. 1 before s » willing to give Dempsey 7 r th lus chance but Lam going to ask oat i him to go up against all these fellows, He can have as many fights as he wants. If Dempsey can't beat Jack key again his challenge won't stand up. If Sharkey not clear up his foul claim he ought to step aside.” ‘ABC’ OF POLO | IS ELUCIDATED | en P. feet nton fie ames to pla Cardinal in. the Frankhouse, Cae ill therr Aside from that who had won b 1. fast compar fuaning che Ti) Writer Explains What ‘Rich hi that highly ime) Man's Game’ Is Like—It'’s c iT he Gia : “e gee eae Plenty Expensive ty ve left te punnern ive Sy ree t vid be in a! BY JIMMY: POWERS 30.—For . | New York, Sept. the 11 ¢ irethat | honefit of these unfortunates not ; serie ot nine horn with a silver spoon in their be played ty determine! mouth engraved “Hotel Ritz,” we rat Wot ld hold up the! are going. to explain the dubious ridda s eae | pastime of polo. : 0 sere layed yeS-|" We say “dubious” heeause polo fot a 1 the faajor i, Bn he Amer | actually is not a sport. It's a 7 i aM sahtatle Juxury t : } » Eastern uel Te hegin with, it costs the aver. the Boston Red ace player the nifty little sum of $100,000 a year. | Californian ‘Wants to Make lye o ctory to elinch the flag, although St. Louis} ¢ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, ‘ SEPTEMBER 29, 1927 PADDOCK NOT YET FINISHED WITH RUNNING No matter how noisy a bowl- ing alley, you can always hear a pin drop 1928 Olympic Team, Break | Locke’s 220 Record IS STARTING TRAINING Gives Five Rules For His Track Success—Has Been in Con- tests For 14 Years Los Angeles, Sept. 30.—It seems as if Charley Paddock, who has been running for 14 years and who holds 13 world sprint records, would have enough of the running racket—or at least would be slowed down t an extent that he couldn't be c ered dangerous now against a strong field. Strange to say, Charley is not through. Neither does he think he IK AME | is so terribly slow. Far from it, if) A | you will only take note of his plans| f eae) for next year. The smiling young man who i generally termed “The Faste tt ua wants to ae Rte Sam’s | 1928 Olympic team and he wants to! pan. nl ra u break Roland Locke's mark in the|Fans Hope Rain W ill Not, 220 before he calls it enough. Again Halt Contest Between Once Held 220 Record | alo and Toledo H Paddbek orca held thesrecovd for| Buffalo and Toledo Hens | the 220 that Locke now ‘holds. That me a then was his-14th world record. And| Toledo, Ohio, Sept. 30. he prized it highly, as he does the! After a downpour during the night, other ones. But Lock® came along|the skies cleared here today and JA. SLEUINS, | AND StoDLA, MONT: ry (FP) =| in 1926 and covered the 220 yards} brought hope to baseball fans that in 20.5 seconds to shatter Paddock’s!the junior world series opening} mark. game here, twice postponed on ac-| From his home in Pasadena, Calif, count of rain, might be played to-| comes word that Paddock is going to day between Toledo, American asso- | start an intensive training campaign | c on pennant holder and Buffalo, | league game wa: International The openit Wednesday it in February for a place on this coun-| try’s next Olympic team. Nothing,! says Paddock, is going to interfere with his siege of training. Not even the movies. | A sprinter who has been keeping up with the best of them for 14 years must seem an “old man.” In years, champion. | called off ; | the ” pennant, which was Yoledo in the very last | season Sunday, the 10th | clinched game of the Paddock is still young, having cele- Victory in row. “Buffalo Bill” | 8? brated his 27th birthday last Aug- Clymer, manager of the ons, Was ust, but as a runner he is stamped a much less keen about the delay veteran. |his team had made its first, Inter- His first race was in 1913, Like-/ national a a certainty three wise, that first race was also his Weeks ago. : first. championship—he won the To Be nsferred to Buffalo The series will be transferred to southern grammar school champion- ship. In 1915, he won the hundred in the Far-Western meet. and_from then on, until he enrolled at South-| Mudh ern California, he competed in high pine 8 ts with success. ake car school meets wi' | ove Buffalo tonight, Sunday game root¢ for irday and ith a train load of accompanying the is an open date to return- Makes Enviable Mark ling b to resume the ssion followed en- f ia in the inter-allie games in Paris, the 1920 Olympic rf; Maguire, games, and other important mects, |: . 8b; Veach, If; Grimes, until he began shattering world rec-| 1h; Kohler, ef; O'Neil, ¢; Cote, ss} ords as a Trojan runner at Southern! Barnes, p. é California. _ | Buffalo: Tyson, ef; Carter, 1fs| Paddock has created 32 records in| Fisher, rf; Bissonet 1b; Cohen, Malone, 2b; Huber, his career, 14 world records and Mangum, p. a 3b; Devine, thirteen of the latter still stand. His MEET TUNNEY- SO GOOD THAT IT IS PAINFUL Champion Fails to Click With Majority of Fans—Several Reasons Given HE 1S TOO RESERVED Brain Food Like Eggs, Not to Be Gulped—Gene Left Stains on His Chin By Jimmie Powers Chicago, Sept. 80.—Just why is Gene ‘Tunney unpopular? He is honest. He is clean- cut. He likes little kiddies and he probably wouldn’t push over an old lady with bundles. But that is like saying a boy is good to his ‘mother. Hej ought to be. This tall, blue-eyed, blond athlete is unique as pugilists go. Even in this day when most of his brother nose - busters use tooth brushes, wrestle golf clubs and wear clean w He re of a vaguely nerv. ous young whe, as life tions £0, ly finds himself in a drawing room. He insists on re- maining there and looks for all the world as if he fears his garter is down or hi hirt tail is out. has failed to ajority * fans ood at the out- this alleged personality that that failure is not Lo be it the same light as a se mental, moral or phrsical deficiency MK then he has a y handshake. As thaws out a set of les, one cannot help r of China blue eyes with ¢ Yr but note ar minus the u le, calmly n come words, Choose Words Carefully He choses {gather th lof m: error in speec I whieh he sionally docs, the best of men will, But, somehow, when Gene errs, it comes unfortu- nately in the s.me sentence that in- chide. hose kind” with “re srehen- 9 “amphibious. well, He eats simple levoutly religious, He y when you get real close to n you see the sears of brutal battle. He a slight bulge to the starboard in his nose, the result of a compound fracture (01, yes, even Gene forgot one night to duck). Mis right ear has a tiny puff and around his Puritanical chin are a y lacy white lines—healed cuts that once spurted bleod on rings here and abr marks cover distances ranging from Umpire: Guthrie CA, AL); | 50 yards to 300 meters for turf as;neran, (I. 1..) well as regulation tracks. Between Time of game: 9% p.m | 1921 and 1924, he ran the hundred 11 times in 9.6 seconds. Paddock created his 9.5 mark for the hundred on May 16, 1926, just two years after a pulled muscle dur ing the Olympic games had caused Another Yankee Record | It is a rarity when a day passes! many predictions to be made that) withont the New York. Yankees he was through. breaking some sert ef a baseball But he's not through yet—and! record, | “The Fastest Human” hopes to prove| ‘ The most reeent record-breaking | it next. year by again being a mem- feat came to pass en Sept when ber of Uncle Sam’s Olympic team] Pitcher George Ping the | and, perhaps, setting a new world) Yanks shut out Detroit, 6-0, m: mark for the 220. jthe 106th victory of the Paddock says he credits his suc-|the New York club. ‘although I think it is rather hard to just when (if it’ so happens) arrive at the conclusion that Gene is not the best lil’ pal in the world. Seldom Leads Seme fans first hold their r a quaint custom signifying disap- proval, when they watch his dull boxin tyle. Gene seldom leads. Ile bounced out of several rings for putting up what that bozo there in the front row of the gal- lery would cali “a lousy fight.” Jfe is independent. His business C, s are usually of the best he said he did sign ap- proval of a contract under a fake cess to these simple rules that he) The best previous name, ‘The contract had dealings follows: League mark was wr 2iwit 1 notoriuos gambler and Never permit yourself to go stale,/ when the Boston Red won 105] “fixe: one Abraham Attell (who games to win a pennant. The major! Never overdo your work and al-} ve record of 116 games made ways maintain a goal toward which by the Chicago Cubs in 1906 was, tometnics |however, too big a task for the Follow training rules rigidly. men of Huggins to overcome. physically or mentally. é colaaeih Ne plonal:) Polo is a combination of golf, z Fe Peron Bravess “Thockey, | eroquet, basketball and Duakiers pounding him: for| renee chase. Tiding.. Its reawines PE an rite incthe test killful horsemanship, scientific mon Ray. Miller, voune | 2tteking. ability to judge pace and pitcher from Syracuse, kept the hit. | 2ccurate marksmanship on the fly. Peal ceatten 4 | It's origin is lost in the frozen fastness of Tibet. The Persians - os Reon yed it pbetors the Cracuian era , 1 “land even India and Afghanistan Comment | hive made their contributior to its oo - _ —— progress. The ancient Chinese fn teams awill meet teams | Knew.it and everywhere it stood for Beart every section of the country | Uperer norsemanship, ion the gridiron this fall with the ex.| 1,1 ‘s.Played on a field 900 feet Milo at tha Pacific coast, Na | LOnEs 4150 feet. wide, with goal posts Daeific’ coast representative willl apres teres Ot the middle of ee Gah term thie sece cn jewther end. American fields have itedito the annual Tournament of | see Ho not si ee ees in Janna 9 ‘our Men to Side eas fron tic east, tha There are fozr men to a side, des- BA Te cotter ae ee tbe fignated No. 1, No. 2, ‘No. 8 and Btauntaing AS i Na ana the| back Each is mounted and carries Pais of the Bix ‘Ton nienbers |a mallet 48 to 53 inches long, The cast 1 fill, the Penn: [te etine seu Eveapaunie., | ADEE, Chie 1 hd-Indiana,, Nave. |i2us, ever lovers and admirers of Riciicai.. Prince Oliis Stats end the slugger, carry.a heftier mallet than the English. The ball weighs Harvard-Purdue eight ounces. The only ames, southern conference - ae Jt. requires six years’ playing to feam to play a Rig Ten member is|season a rider and four years’ play- Kentncky, who meets Indiana, ing to season a horse. The ponies, Minnesota meets both Drake and Oklahoma A. and M. from the southwest, while Chicago meets Oklahoma, Northwestern you may possibly note, learn more quickly. The average stable consists of eight thoroughbreds, although most Get plenty of sleep, eat lots of| In winning the 1927 pennant in beefsteak and drink large quanti-|the American League, the Yankees ties of milk. Have little pastry on|have definitely proved they are at the menu. least 20 per cent better than last Get “pepped up” for every meet| year, when they were good enough and never take an opponent lightly.|to win the pennant and just be nosed out of the world series, fmgrermaaae G@arcn | 5 G Pia ed by Hoyt ang) Wiley Moore all season, fine work until | Yesterday’s Games [represen tikes ree of ane cael aay ° !a much improved Lou Gehrig in all framed a world series) and one Max (two-Boos) Hoff. 1 do not think the fans perfection of morals. He seems at times to be so good it hurts, And I do not defend satirical seoffin t hir clumsy attempts to elevate himself. Gene seems to be living in a make-believe world of his own in which culture stalks ma- jestically about, with cauliflowers for a hackground. But brain food has a lot in com- |mon with fresh eggs. They may be of exceltent gree but they resent his pedi- should never be _|differently. ;|forearm, hands and body, giving the Cleverness in handling forward | stoop to catch it. This slows him} passes, as far as. the receiving end | is concerned, is. more or less an ac- quired art that can be brought about ; by practice. As in any other sport, the receiving of a pass comes more natural to some than others, but anyone with the old determination and the willingness to stick to the task can become proficient in han- dling passes. Each type of forward pass must of necessity be handled In some passes, the receiver turns and faces the passer, standing mo- tionless until he regeives the ball. To receive such a pass the receiver should make a “pocket”? with his passer a bit of a target. A majority of passes, however, are thrown to a player who is on the dead run. He must be prepared to catch the ball and continue his run without any break in stride or slow- ing up in speed. The passer is taught to throw the ball as far ahead of the receiver as he possibly can reach by the time the ball arrives at this point. It is also well to throw it as high as the receiver can reach. When the ball is thrown low, the receiver must FOOTBALL FUNDAMENTALS As Told By Famous Coaches TO BILLY EVANS Pirates Now Need Only One Win to Gain National League Pennant up, often causes him to stumble and makes it easier for ihe tackler to catch him, The signal sends the forward pass receiver to a certain point on the field. At the proper time, while running at full speed and straight ahead, the receiver turns his head to right or left, according to signal and looks for the ball. reaches his hands as high as he can, with his forearms fairly close to- gether, his arms bent, his palms fac- ing the ball. As he runs, he pulls the ball down into the “pocket” of his arms and stomach, instantly shifting it to the hold under his armpit as he keeps going, moving now as a broken field runner. Most important handling the ball is to “fade” with it, as the players and coaches put it. One must travel with the ball, fight it. When fighting the ball, the arms and hands are stiff ané moving against the ball which is advancing toward the receiver. Such handling of the ball makes for fumbles. The receiver should run in the same di- rection the ball is traveling, cat-h it relaxed and “fade” with it, instead of bracing against it. Wabash vs. Georgetown at Craw- fordsville. ii Franklin vs. Hanover at Frank- in, Butler vs. Louisville at Indian- apolis. Rose Poly vs. Indiana Central at Indianapolis. Earlham vs. Antioch at Yellow Springs. Evansville vs. Oakland City at Evansville. Otterbein vs. Miami at Oxford. Findlay vs, Daytor at Cayton. Ohio University vs, Michigan State at East Lansing. _Denison vs. Muskingum at Gran- ville. _ Cincinnati cls asl * lowa Wesleyan vs. Graceland at Mt. Pleasant. # 7 _ Des Moines vs. Hastings at Hast- ings, Neb. Morningside vs. Western Union at Sioux City. Parsons vs. Tulsa at Tulsa. Augsburg vs. St. Olaf at Minne- apolis. vs. Hanover at Cin- Carleton vs. Luther at’ Northfield. Concordia vs. Jamestown at. Jamestown. Gustavus Adolphus vs. Bottineau at St. Peter. aes vs. St. Johns at College. ville. Malcalester vs, River Falls Nor- mal at St. Paul. St. Marys vs. Ft. Shelli Winona. ane Ah plays Missouri and Wisconsin |men carry more. J. S. Phipps, for NATIONAL LEAGUE departments, the experience that a|gulped. Gene seems to kav plays Kansas, of the same |instance, has a “string” of 45, v i R H Ej year in the big show gave Lazzeri fone etalie a his ae eee te ? group. ued ate quarter of a million dol- He Leis aS 2 8 F and. Koenig. plus a rejuvenated 5 3 2 1, | lars. v" incinnati ........ 4 5 uth, tells best the story of the |4&—— — ——————» Three teams fron. the Ricky Sar from $5,000 t5'$10.000. | ~ Frankhouse and Snyder; May Fork vi ey idG a ee ie let: a s . L Snyder; May and| New Work victory in the | a! “ Mountains are on the list: Denver, |"™the ponies Pave. tooctly tities or | Pieinich, Legal ry a ym the American) | Grid Games Saturday | Jlontana Statc and Utah versus] geldings. Fillies predominate be- Ae eG Sere * aa rthwestern, cause of their better dispositions | R H_- Ej] On form, the Yankees look Chicago vs. Oklahoma, at Chicago. ee aules provide the Bi and intelligence. Philadelphia . Nia | 14 | strong enough to be in the run- Indiana vs. Kentucky, at Lexing- ee uiova y iB Plays are figured and planned as| Boston ..... tas it 2} ning for years to come. Any | ton. eee one ues may in basketball with fast backs “feed-| _ Miller and Jonnard; Greenficld,) American League team that Illinois vs. Bradley, at Urbana. with the style of other sections, [ine” the ball for~ard to expert| Wertz and Hogan. hopes to beat the Yankees next Northwestern vs. South Dakota, t vle of other sections. shots. Ability to stay “on top of = season must show at least 59 | at Evanston. PRM is one ef. thn the ball” as in football counts. A| Others not scheduled. per cent improvement. That is Jowa vs. Monmouth, at lowa City, Re note it’, ef crack pony is adept at this, keeping pad asking considerable, Michigan vs. Ohio Wesleyan, at ee iy” caniain eae "different up stride for stride, pivoting, whirl- AMERICAN LEAGUE aie Ann Arbor. Ee teams at that reve reyey ing, dashing in and out of position. R H E Tigers Won 100 In 1915 Ohio State vs. Wittenberg, at Walter Koppisch and Jack Lorch | ¢o5beed_and skill, of course, count} Washington ......, 4 10 2) Recently in discussing champion- | Columbus. Ane edtiwo teams in one sear for the most. - New York . 19 1] ship teams that had won 100 or] Wisconsin vs. Cornell, at Madison. Madden, however, will lead the! @ = Lisenbee, Marberry and Tate;|more games in they American| Minnesota vs. North Dakota, at Soni icaa this sear after be: "i 7 Shocker, Ruether, Shawkey and Col-| league, I called attention to the| Minneapolis. We captain of the 4926 featbatl || Fights Last Night lins, fact that only five had turned the| . Purdue vs. DePauw, at Lafayette. defin. OE —$—$—— ee - _|trick, Philadelphia twice, Boston] “Notre Dame vs. Cole, at South aes New York—Hilario Martinez R H Ejtwice and Chicago once. Now| Bend. Te ths lice coaches to Spain, defeated Sid Terris, New] Boston ...... 6 14 1| New York breaks into the victure,| Nebraska vs. lowa State at Lin- | point of active service in the | York, 10. Milton Cohen, New York,| Philadelphia ... 5 g|making the sixth championship | coln. i south is Charles Bernier, at {Wn on a foul from Davy Aba,| Bradley and Moore; Cantrell and team to turn in 100 cr more vic-| Kansas Aggies vs. Missouri at Hampden-Sidney College. who | Fanama, 1. Perkins. tories at the close of the season. Columbia. Scranton—Eddie Reed, New York, foecee out Lew Mayrs, Baltimore, will start his sixteenth year as a coach this fall. Bernier not only handles football; he also has active charge of basket and baseball, at the Virginia school. i aa Jey, Los Angeles, knocked out Carl *. + | One can expect Harry Stuhl-| Schmadel, Indianapolis, 1. : drebcr, famous as quarter sack of bas ced Notre Dame's “Four Horsemen,”| | Boston—Sid Barbarian, Detroit defeated John Ciccoli, Seranton, io Billy Alger, Phoenix, defeated Clyde Hull, Dallas, 10, ; to know a good back when he sees + one. That is y - might be well to watch Ed Melansen, halfback for "4 Villanova, this season, Stuhldreher } ee atleeen will eines eae Dissabarghy ter = Grey, Johns- arme_as Elmer -| town, Pa., defeat ohn; j den, another “Four Horsemen,” was. Detroit, 10, 7 Dayton, Kentucky—Jimmy Hack jone month to live, how would you My good friend, George More- land, calls my attention to the fact that the Detroit club in 1915 man- aged to win a century of games. yet finished no better than second, since Boston registered 101 wins the same year. That sure was a Others postponed. WHILE THERE'S LIFE— “If a doctor told you you had but spend your time?” : »__|tough break for the Tigers. As aid $5. DEM, Aoctor: a rule 90 games won will come close 33 to capturing a major, league pen- SOMETHING IN A NAME peek wes married iow: you can’t learn to say “Gerald imead Pri nee Otome bors “the of “Arthur,” I'll wring your blessed] ‘american AES it was neck.—London Opinion. organized but only six of them Phone 944 for Tire Service. | fart, Remnant winners, Detroit Oklahoma A. & M. vs. Washing- ton at St. Louis. Drake vs. Simpson, Moines. Marquette vs. Lawrence, at Mil- waukee, Knox vs. Island. North Central vs, Beloit at Beloit. Lake Forest vs. Hillsdale at Hills- dale, Mich. Wheaton vs. Aurora at Aurora. Carthage vs. Culver Stockton at Carthage. McKendree vs. James Millikin at Decatur. Lombard St. Galesburg. at Des vs. Ambrose at Augustana at Rock} St. Thomas -vs. Columbus at St. Paul. ne Try our modern high pres- sure greasing service for all cars. Prices reasonable— Short Stop Station. VULCANIZING Tires and Tubes, Oil and Grease Auto Accessories Ripon vs. Northwestern college ‘at Ripon. Detroit vs. Army at West Point. St. Louis vs. Springfield Teachers at St. Louis. Carroll vs. Milwaukee Normal at Waukesha. looking | He | CHICAGO COACH HAS HIS TEAM NEARLY INTACT Only One Halfback Not Re- turning — ‘Buck’ Weaver on Reserve List SCHEDULE IS DIFFICULT Michigan Carded For Game After Years of Absence— Should Be Real Battle Chicago, Sept. 30.—4)—With the exception of one halfback Coach Stagg has his first string eleven of 1926 intact for the 1927 cam- paign, und among his reserves is the biggest football prospect that ever turned out at Chicago, “Buck” Weaver, 245 pounds, six feet four inches tall. Most of the veterans have been active at outdoor jobs this summer to fit themselves for a strenuous season. One, Bob Wolff, two year letterman at guard, has been should- ering planks in the construction of the additions to Stagg Stadium. Captain Ken Rouse, two year vet- eran at center, has been hustling concrete with a road mixer down- state in Illinois while Larry Apitz, end,'and Kyle Anderson, halfback, have been doing the same thing for the states of Minnesota and Indiana respectively. i Weaver, the gigantic sophomore, has been building houses this sum- mer. He seemed fairly fast for such a big fellow in freshman practice this fall and if he can be taught to use his weight, Coach Stagg en- ions in him an All-American pos- sibility. Hugh Mendenhall, another prom- ising freshman, at quarterback, has also been laying bricks this sum- mer, at Terre Haute. Only one of the squad has been toting ice, Red Burgess, a tackle prospect. Stagg regards this year’s sched- ule as the hardest he has faced in his thirty-six years on the Midway. Six of the eight games are to be played on the hom? field, which now seats 55,000. Oklahoma opens the season In- diana, Purdue, Pennsylvania, Michi- gan and Wisconsin visit Stage Field, with road games against Illinois and Ohio. The renewal of the Michigan rivalry this year ic in the nature of a delicate test »y Stagg and Yost. The teams have not met for years, because of the tense rivalry which | aroused by their last games. | Coming just after the Pennsy'vania gime, the battle with Michigan is expected to tes: Stage’s strategy to the utmost. While ths Penn con- test does not count toward a con- ference title, the Maroons are eager |for revenge for ticir defeat at | Philadelphi: last year, while the Illini were able to down the | Quakers. Hagenlacher Wins First 500 Points in Billiard Match Chicago, Sept. 30.—(?)—Welker Cochrane’s five months old world’s {18.2 balkline billiard championship |crown was somewhat askew to- | never |day because of the brilliant play of Eric Hagenlacher of Germany, chal- lenver. Displaying a remarkable stroke and position game, Hangenlacher last night won the first 500 point block in th 1,500 px‘nt match for the title averaging 29 7-17 | points for a block total of 500 as compared to the Californian’s in- ning average of 19 9-17 and total of 332, The remaining two other blocks of 500 points each will be played tonight and tomorrow, Hagenlacher, with ‘his left-over: in almos2 perfect position, will start tonight’s play. Distribute: BISMARCK GROCERY CO; Bismarck, N. D. Adults 75c, all children 50c. Adults’ season tick: ets $1.75. Children’s sea

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