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WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER' e lvd-N 22, 1922 SEs “FOLLOW THE GAMES, STATES FARRELL Is First Precept a6f‘1<Enery. Football Coach; Roper is PUATA ) Strong F,Q{ RECY s 2t v New. XorknNoy. 22-<=Much.like.the. old logic that a calf will choke him- self if you: gie him _enough . rope, new systems 6f sport; ‘stratégy are being advancéd and. carried out that a wise warrior will let. his' op- ponent beat himself. .- There is the: example of the con- servative game'iof tonhis characteris- ic of the Japanest ‘players. Their idea of strategy is largely the ‘'pre- sentation of -numerous: opportunities for the opponent to make They seldom assumeithe:.aggresive offense and generallyithey conaent themselves with: a suYe return ov the ‘net with #ehance that an av anxious opponent will “pet” “out.”? While Princeton never can be. ac- cused of a “soft” style of play, oria lack of aggressiveness, yet “Bill” Roper has developed one of the most: successful football systems in the country based largely on the theory or errors. | | ton told young Mickey Walker, when BALL” WINS| CALENDAR OF SPORTS of Southern Racing-.‘—l‘l g/ ultural = Association, Maryland ‘Ag at Bowie. = ting, of ;Jafksonville Fair As- sociation, at Jacksonville, Fla. d h Y Farrell Declares;: That Task illing Shoes of Jack By fiem—y L. li‘arrell New York, Nov. 22—“Hope you hold it as long as I did,” Jack Brit- the judges handed ‘the Jersey youth the welterwejght championship after their recentshout.,. " i “Hope 1 do and wish I could be as good a chanipion as you’ve the proud little “Mike™ said. There is liftle hope for;the consum- mation of the hope or .the fulfill- ment of theidyish. < Not that young Walker did not earn the decision which gave him the. that the oppositicn some time in cvery game will make a slip. “During this game, the opposition is going to make a mistake or fall in- to error and YOU BE THERE when | it happens,” they seem to tell tnei Princeton players before every game. | Invariably they are there when it' happens and they make the utmost of it. i championship -and not-that he is not a fine chap, but the task of filling the shoes of grand old Jack Britton is too much to expect of any of the modern school of boxers or fighters. Brittn was one in a thousand and thousands come in revolutions of generations. The former champion may not compare to the rough style of bruising predecessors who made Return of Valuable Bracelet ;. Speaks Highly, for Type of Men in Navy ! M By U. G. Keener (By United Press) "' Rio De Janeiro, Noy.,22—A sailor 4§ a sailor wherever his ship hooks , antl ‘an - American “Gob”is " es- Becially apt: tocbe. - the” subjaek. " of criticism mhétlg He has 'hbe':d} Sat’ a eal “fret to'the' sailor” pott, such as Rio] but’the Brazilian public'is not at all reserved in handing it:to the boys which visited Rio‘as a compliment to Brazil's 'Independence Centenary, various objects valued up in the thousands of dollars were lost aboard the vessel by guests at the function, but every missing object was soon re- stored to 'the owner- * Among these was a bracelet valu- ed at $5,000. After the dance the Nevada’s launches carried the guests back to Rio. Upon arriving at the dock one woman reported the loss of the bracelet of diamonds and sap- phires, a” priceless heirloom. The owner had not giscovered the braee- let was missing untit she landed™ at the port. It was raining and she was unable to return to-lgok for it. Qne reporte eloss tg an offi- cer 'of the N ¥ho lost no time in assuripg theswoman that if the Dracelet had been lost ‘on board the | “Nevada” or in the launches, it would be returned to her. On Sun-| day morning, the missing heirloom was found on board the “Nevada” by one of the members of the crew and was turned over to the captain, and returned to its owner. She ask- ed the name of the finder, that he might receive suitable reward, but the young.sailor was too modest to The eternal vigilance of Princeton , names before him, but he was first gridiron stars in following the ball ' in the school of scientific boxing. has developed into such uncanny per- | If the “art of self-defense” is to fection that nine times out of ten it [ accepted as something mere than an is sure d-ath for an opposing player alibi for prize fighting, Britton was to fumble the ball. {one of the greatest of all times be- Sam White went onto the list of cause he was a great master at it. undying heroes in Nassau’s hall of | Walker happened along when age fame when he grabbed two fumbles had taken so much fire and energy several vears ago and raced for a from the veteran champion that he touchdown that beat Harvard and|was ready to be dethroned by the Yale. Gray, the great end of this i first good youngster who could not year’s team, turned-defeat intc vic- ibe outwitted and outtalked. Walker tory by grabbing a fumble in the, famous Chicago game and a few weeks later in the Harvard game, when the Crimson fumbled twice, . two Tigers were on the ball and they won the game. 4 “Follow the ball”, is the first re- cept of every football coach, but none seem to have so thoroughly driven home the lesson as Bill Roper. It’s a great motto for any - game and any profession. Princeton’s defeat of Harvard was one of the greatest surprises of the season because the Crimson lost on fumbling errors—something that is a rarity for a Harvard player. The Harvard eleven was “almost out-thought, another strange miscar- riage of a system that is generally regarded as the most efficient in football. ~ The injury to Charley Buell, was also a big factor in the defeat. Har- vard ‘specializes in the development of great quarterbacks. This year, however, there was no one to take Buell’s place and, the team depended so much on his judgment and balance that when he was lost, it" Wwent™ to pieces. Tad Jones, the Yale coach, no doubt will welcome Bob Fisher to the fraternity of great:coaches who haye lost great games. ! t is not to be expected, hoyever, that Fisher’s scalp will be demanded by the Crimson alumni, while many of the Yale followers have been de- manding the whole hide of Jones since he lost'the Towa game. : 1f Towa wins the Western Confer- ence championship again this year, it will mean much to the Jones fam- jly. Howard can boast of his second championship team and his brother | Tad can get some satisfaction in the thought that—*it took the best team in the west to beat me.” IMPCORTANT AIR INVENTION Paris, Nov. 22—Lieutenant Mane- |’ yrol, the aviator who just broke -the world’s record for motorless flying, | has completed tests of a novel fea- ture on an airplane that permits the plane to throttle down to almost a walking pace and stilln -maintai headway in the air. Hitherto it was necessary for planes to maintain a a speed of from 25 to 40 miles per hour to: stay in the air. The invention consists of an at- tachmént whereby the width of the wings’is increaséd oy “decrdased dur- ing flight, by pulling a lever. Dur- ing the. first tests Maneyrol flew at 125 miles per hour, th wed 35 miles per hour fit& without' the slightest bum 12 miles per Hour. at only PROPAGANDA EXPENSIVE Paris, Nov. 22—In an effort to combat propaganda against France, started mostly from German sources the goverament has requested an in- \ crease of the credits for counter- propaganda work to 32,000,000 franes, which is an increase of 11,- 000,000 frances. This fund is to be utilized in supporting various chairs in universities, libraries, philanthrop- je works and Franco-foreign leagues designed to better . relations = with other nations. amiead just_happened along. In a division that is rapidly swell- ing with promising youngsters, Mick- Walker has anything but an easy .road ahead of him if he chooses to stay out of a shell and become a real fighting champion, something.that is a rarity in these commercial days. Any young champion who has Georgic Ward, Dave Shade, Andy Thomas and severaliothers ahead of him has no long time title on the crown ahead of him, unless he has a lot of stuff. There is also a young sensation out in Cincinnati who has neyer appeared into the game as a sparring partner with Britton. Before his dethrone-’ ment, Britton rated Ryan as the most dangerous man in the class. Since the fall of the “Old Master” whose skill had them all leary, there is to be expected a rush of 140 pound lightweights into the class. Lew Tendler, the Philadelphia southpaw, has dfready announced his intention to"ir%de the welterweight class and with%the ortunity of making the weight he wants. Tend- ler is one of the most dangerous young men in the ring. i -Benny, Leonard, the lightweight champion, not only wants to stretch out into the welterweight division he has already tried out, unsuccess- fully as it turned out, in an unsatis- factory bout with Britton. ot d- = It js said that the Chicago Cubs market. v, ar In one respect Battling Siki ap- pears to be a ‘real champion. He knows how to get plenty of news- paper space. i . Small pin bowling has the call among ‘Boston bowlers, the Hub having but one:league using the large pins. ; 8 Tommy Murphy, the Grand Circuit reinsman, has made a fine offer for Tslaridér, " the - Athol, ‘tional pacer. | The.-at iation of minor leagues ill'mée&in Louisville, Dec. 8, and not at French Lick Springsia¥ pre- | viously ananFed. Few football players have any- thing on Jack Cleaves, the Princeton star, when it comes to shooting a forward pass. New Hampshire State football eleven, while not very strong on the gridiron, scored on Cornell and thereby put one over on Dartmouth. Gordon Munce, national heavyweight, and C. R.. Seifert will the latter part-of-November. = 1 4 in the east—Billy Ryan, who broke [ let his name become known. " Another guest at the dance, while standing it the side of the gang-way | dropped-a ¢omb studded with dia- monds and rubjes, from her hair. Next day she sent a letter to the| commander of theNevada requesting | that he endeayor to have the lost object restored. ' The comb was found by a sajlor. and was imme- diately torned over to the capain. A lejidi}ig. Rio newspaper, com- nmenting regarding the nonesty of the finders of the lost objects, said: “That .advertisement of these los- ses appeared in no newspepers the morning. following the festivity on board the "'Ngvada" and they were restored .immediately to the losers, speaks, most Iy for the type of ‘“men who serve in the United Statep Navy.” TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Lieatenant Colonel Leopard C. M. S. Amery, First Lord of the Admiral- ty in the Bonar Law. Cabinet, born 49 years ago today. I Sir Charles Gordon, of Montreal, one of the Canadian representatives at the Geneva Confercnce, born in Montreal, 54 years ago today. Rev. Joseph C. Massee, the mnew pastor ¢f Tremont Temple, Boston, SPORT GOSSIP. have placed Turner Barber on the|and formcr college football player, Mass:, +sensa={ifor th “fraining seasor. amateur | ed. The Crimson defeats meet in a special bout-in New York | Princetog, Penn, Cornell, ijwn«dnd Center one each, born at Marshallville, Ga., 51° years ago today- Prof. James W. Garner of the Uni- versity of Illinois, the first American asked to deliver the Tagore lectures in' Calcutta, born in Mississippi, 51 years ago today. Heber J. Grant, the official head of the Mormon Church, born in Salt Lake City, 66 years ago today. One Year Ago Today A dozen were killed by bombs. in |; the rioting in Belfast. Engagement of Princess Mary and Viscount Lascelles announced. Toots Ifcndt, Colorado wrestler bids fair to become a topnotcher among the new crop of grapplers. The Lanark English soccer team which toured America has invited a representative American soccer .team to play a scries of games in England It is donbtful‘if Tom Gibbons will be permitted to box in New York until Minnesota has lifted the ban on the 'St. Paul battler. Manager Ty Cobb of the Detroit Americans announges that his Tigers will return to Augusta next spring o g " Basketball players in ail parts of |- thé ¢éuntry-'are tuning’ up for what' promises to, be one of the greatest|, seasoms in the history of the game. 2l et * Lou Criger, the old American league catcher, is in bad shape. One of his legs Tias been amputated, and now lung trouble forces him to give up his home in Michigan and go to Arizona. Harvard has been defeated 14 times in the Stadium since 1903, the year the big football ficld was open- include Yale 4, Dartmouth and Carlisle, and Tufts, om the U. S. S. Nevada, for hones- |. / "At a ball aboard the “Nevada,”| TOWN PESTS The Slick Business Man who thinks He's Entitled to, Special Cut Rates on His Advertising and Printing used to Pester us Considerable but Not No More, for we Never could See why we should Presént him with Our Profits on His Work. AFTER A V&U TO DENTIST Writer Recalls Some Impressions That Some of Us.Can shudderlngy -Indorse. it | in the Malay 1 2 {travpler .who spent . some time in’}’ ‘{.ihat country. "These persons, he said,” The only person who seems fg pay ' any attention to the “swile” sign in a dentist’s office is the dentist him- self. i i 0ddly enough, dental chairs are de- signed with a view to the patient's comfort.: = i You never renlize what a big mouth you have till the dentist begins lay- ing his scaffolding. in -it. | There is nnthlupnr.\fimuecessnry as his preliminary. apnouncement, “Now, tle.” painlesgiextraction is the injection of the apesthetic into the gums. e The phrage, to take soméone’s head off, undoubtedly- originfited with a den- tist's efforts to gét: the: better of a stubborn wisdom “tgoth. £'-" h The sweetest words that ever fell | on your ear are:-“That will be iall | for today.” i You never had so much fun with & glass of water before. Getting outside, you feel stranger in the world. The worst pain of all comes when | you get your bill.—Edmund J. Kiefer, | in the New York Sun. like a ‘Hailstones Formed During .Heat. 1t is during Summer-time that hail- stones occur most frequently. It is the heat of summer that gives rise to them, for they can be formed only in thundery weather. : i When there is thunder about there are always very strong upward draughts of air. As raindrops begjn to fall they are caught by these cur- rents and carried tq great heights, . where they freeze solid. If they now fall to earth they arrive in -the form * of the small hailstones tbat are usu- ally seen. Sometimes, however, after ! hog and sucking | ing, medicated hog walows, and dip- | remedies. ! ods of control and eradication are dis- { Lice and Mange, Methods of Control; falling through the clouds and receiv- ing a coating of moisture, they are carried up again by other currents. The molsture freezes upon them, in- creasing ‘thelr size. The process may go on for some time, in which case the hallstone re- ceives coating after coating of ice un- til it becomes as large as a marble or even an egg. . “Shished” the Tiger Away. It was a frequent .occurrence for a itiger to earry off a Chinese coolie ninsula, according ‘to could seldom be hrought to belieye in; ‘fl\e.,reul_ty of dangers from animals ) hat they, looked on,as only cats of | sabnormdl dimensions. I ‘saw, this valor of . ignorance tragically = illus- trated one day when I tovk some po- lice out to help me track a tiger re- sponsible for the loss of many lives. From a too distant eminence we soon caught sight of a Chinaman slowly strolling along sucking a piece of sugarcane.. Out sprang a tiger, but missed his mark, the back of the man's head. Without any acceleration ot pace,- the coolle, merely withdrawing the cane from his mouth, waved at the tiger and “shished” him away. ERADICATE MITES AND LICE inda of Exéérnal Para- njurfous %to All of Hogs. Lice and mange mites are the two principal kinds of external parasites affecting hogs, say experts of the United States Department of Agricul- ture. They are injurious to all classes | of hogs, but the greatest losses oceur’ | in pigs and poorly nourished hogs kept in unsanitary quarters, The losses are caused by irritation, unthrifty condition, functional disturb- | ances, arrested- growth, low vitality, and-increased death rate. Only one specles of lice commonly ' affects hogs, and this parasite obtains its food by puncturirfg the skin of the Qlooil. It can beg eradicated by hand application, spray- | ping. Dipping is the best method of applying treatment. Crude petroleum and tar creosote dips are effective Two species of mange mites com- monly affect hogs. The nature and’ habits of these mites, the symptoms; caused by each species, and the meth- cussed in Farmers' Bulletin 1085, Hog and Eradication, Issued by the depart- ment, and sent free on request. Crude petroleum and lime, sulphur dips are, effective remedies for common or sar- coptic mange of hogs. Plans for hog wallows and dipping| plants, together with directions for building them and for dipping hogs, are given in the bulletin, Pig Yard Free From Mud. Care should be taken to provide a pig yard as free from mud as pos- sible. Building Up Sows. Sows thin in flesh should have their | feed grad y in good condition bLefore farrowing. B. W. LAKIN, Presidoot C. L. ISTED, Secretary-Treasurer BEMIDJi LUMBER & FUEL GO, OPPOSITE GREAT NORTHERN DEPOT LET US SUPPLY YOU WITH LUMBER - LATH - SHINGLES LIME - CEMENT - PLASTER PAPER—Roofing and Sheathing BRICK —Common, Ejre and Fancy _ Sash Doors and Mill Werk, FULL LINE OF DRAIN TILE AND SEWER Pll’;B D E.R. EVANS, Maousor | Cleanér, Better‘ mil]:( often prove insurance for K0 b L Take Koors Pasteurized for [J . health insurance. OR W. C. HARDING, PHONE 389 he ch e the cheapest,| health. ekl ORS BROTHERS CO0. Phone 175 1 ! 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To maintain this quality there has been organized modern laboratories where every product is chemically tested for the service it is designed to render. High quality once achieved is made a standard from which deviation is never permitted. Sales and distribution also are organized to produce maximum results at minimum ex- pense. This assures the consumer a depend- able supply, and it guarantees that when he buys a Standard Oil Company (Indiana) product he is paying only a fair and equit- able price for which he receives full value. Every factor entering into the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) business, from the pur- chase of crude, its transportation to the Company’s refineries, its manufacture irlto a large number of useful products, its distri- bution through an intricate network of main and sub-storage depots, tank wagons, and service stations, is developed with a single eye to serving the public. 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