Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 27, 1922 S SRS WA A TRt s, decision contest here on December 15, MISKE |t was announced Saturday. night. g‘ é’a‘;l' g:s‘;;e”;f—TSt rgi‘g"b:::: They will divide equally a purse of § been matched to meet in 3 1:en-x'ou"l‘1 $10,000. (By The City-of Bemid one time, for the ‘When: people. firsb, 2 upon our fair city th by the abundance oi b our doors, and which at - one tfn\e,‘ within ;the:memory of the writer, was dotted’ with boats, including, some classy sail boats, and the sport lovers who owned them were always ready for a race. Since the advent of automobiles, Fords and Stats, people who used to enjoy the simple but healthy pastime on.the lake now work overtime try- n'u; to eat'their “peck of -dirt” or else use théir Spare time plowing,the golf g.rnund with a mashie. " But, there is some talk of reviving the healthy winter pastimes that o well in days that are gone. stranger has remarked about-the. in={=. difference of the citizens to his fact. The cost of equiping and maintaining | toboggan slides, a skating rink and a | curling rink together with paid su- pervision is probably the least of any season, and if carried on would mean a healthy lot of people by the time spring came again, besides giving parents. the relief to know that their chidren were indulging in something that would do them more good than harm, because parents know, only too well, that healthy children demand something to- do, and if the induce- ments are strong enough they will engage .in health giving out-door sport. Bemidji clubs who are looking for “something to do,” may act upon the writer’s suggestions as no copyright has been obtained upon them. Moré Colutabia Batteries are used in the United States than ull othet makes com- bfned, bm— Colunibias have been mznufnctund onalarge cals qomlflenbly longet than any other dry battery have over 30 years of battery manufac- X Tla;y . ‘hhmng ekill and improved equipment behind em Every. improvement of any account has been developed:in the Columbia hboratonel ‘The Columbia “Hot Shot” was. the- first sucs msfi:lmscmbly of dry cells in one package And again Ccluq;bm has ‘demonstrated itsv- fnderllnp through the development of ‘the new Steel Case “Hot Shot” Battery - seivi Whérever a dry battery is needed, Cofumbia will always give the best servxce . e this _size, in basketbal}/this winter, and no-doubt the team representing her on the road will: bringimore fame to further advertise the city that has iostexe( and supported this sport in ogher years. glory, it's a hundred to one shot that he never would have been dxsclplmed The New York Boxing Commission’ was quick to back up the actions of T AOTATN T ‘g the French body in giving. Siki the g gate in barring hm from ths country. o | In ths, the august New York body is anything but consistent. l”eciimn‘f‘“"f‘ Boxing Boards| During the last fight between Jack |, N Al C Britton and Ted Lewis, Britton went ot ways Considered | iyer to the Lewis corner and took a P hefty swing on the jaw of one - of roper.by Eass Ted’s seconds. Everyone, including the commissioners, thought it was a . (By Henry L. Farrell) go.;)d ioke B s i (United Press Sports Editor ust recently after a bout a a smal . New, York, N?v 57_1)”),31,5) the | club,'in which one of the boys in the CALENDAR 0F SPOR“ F;ench Boxing Federation is more Jflhnny Keyes-Jimmy Kelly stables R Mt o Southern generally recognized in France. than |Was given.a draw, someone entered e e the Ne; Yar{:‘gx(xlommxesmn is in the | the dressing room,and gave Referee Maryland Agricultuyal Association, . Michigan 16; Minnesota 7. t Bowie. . - N Wisconsin : 0; Chicdgo 0. couniry and even in its own state. Artie McGovern a terrible beating. | = Chicago, . Nov- French ring salons took | Nothing has been done about that. ATHLETICS — Intercollegiate fighting, eleven closed: like s’ vise -on \Iortmvestem 8; Towa 37 titles away from him| The commission hag already main- crosi-conntry championship, at' NeW | Ghijcago’s famous smashing backfeld |- E‘“""Td 10; Yale. 3. s [tained that it must support it's offi- York. bt s Saturday and’ battled the. Maroons Nrmy 17; NaVy 14. S activities n the ring,. it was |cials. If that is support, referees in| BOWLING—Middle west . cham- |, 5 scoreless tie beFore a ctowd of |+ Notre Dame 19; Carnegie Tech. 0. ; the future will have to go about in |Pionship tournament, at Kansas City- | 35 g0, Purdue .7; Indiana, 7, Lin France BOXING—Bartley Madden . vs.| *Pe" oo is aSgidisnc upact i | OBio State 6; linois 3. h wanted it that [armor plate. Guardsman Powell, 20 rounds - at 3 X ! Dagtmouth the predictions, as aéo ‘was !‘?; Cafiiomm y e London. BITING IS ALLOWABLE Baneho Villa vs. Young Montreal, | 52rded as the fa 10 rounds at Boston. 9 s P to win in a conferenc = It has never been done lN ARME flGl‘n’s 121:'[&17?;?5 S’:?z‘;}:;'ci;h""y Curtin, | season and_ casts & hefore and if this case becomes an ¢s- cago’s. clai tablished precedent there is no telling| Buenos Aircs, Nov 27— Prize- logfig;i’:“gzfl::rce"’ge Manley; 10 | "5 covering's where it will end. fights are barred by Iaw in the Ar-| Willie Jackson vs: Chubby Brown, _It'is not to be denied that Siki|gentine, but neverthelesé = prizes|10 rounds, at Rochester. shoud have been disciplined for strk- | ights are held,:and a fighter js'nt |- Johnny Dundee, vs. Phil Delmont, 3 oxer in | gisqualified because he bites, scrat- 12 rounds, at Brooklyn. the ring, bu‘t‘ the l'i'ref:ch should have | ches or- pulls hair, if the affair = is Fl‘fl“kle’ rlemmg,}\,h Jay Lanahan, tional gains. b startgd the “training” of what they |pefore a local referee. 12 rounds, at New York. H'emns “Two now.call a savage as soon as he beat A Buenos Aires boxer appeared also prevented . al HOS Caxpentier. recently before his friends with his .o}-uo STATE WINS ITS .as the Badgers were ‘within . Instead of h“‘l'"&' him_as a. hero, face disfigured, the wounds indicat- 'FIRST BIG TEN.GAME glfl‘:::n::dfi:];“;;:ihmm "-fll kinds of ling that a set of good sound teeth ) people s ¢ g ¢ 3 Eave discouraged him from s ?‘{2‘ififi“fiifi."d‘;"li?.fbffi%’: mnlgceh S:rlx(til Urbana, 1lL, Nov. 27—Ohio State place. on their level if they did figure | thag his oppu‘;lcnt had proceeded to footbal]l team won its first Western that'he was not fit company for them. |kyie him in the aen conference game of the season here _Giving them ninety days suspen-| «And what did yon do?”. he AR Sflt“"dfl) by nosing out Illinois, 6 sion awas fit punishment for the offen- | oo q. . For salt. nght near ynu by Hnr_'dfba}ie Sl ores Efech—ncl b « General Stores . Implement Stores Garages Look for ‘the name Columbia (:cttmg down to common sense, it mus., be a new day when a ring cham- can be legislated out from under superior _in_ “ground throughout the . {ir; Costly iumbles tw A 2.:—-—Playmg F\ghtmg with Bulldog tenacity, nei- | true to their season’s foi'm, the Army- ce, but the attempt to take his titl « - a‘w"ay from him is ls’illy. e 11}“‘};: :;;"bl:l‘:bsnf;w:;‘f;lg fight ther. team was -able to score in_the | football - eleven defeatud thein“éld |- - ; 7 5 5 i 7 (Jack. McAuliffe . says—"The |;; tho Argentine—that between ‘the first two periods of the play- In the|rivals, thel Nav; Vi §amday, 1% to 14. . only wny to get a title is to smack : third Illinois garnered three. points| = The score: ref n d_two touch- heavyweights Luis Firpo and Jim with a drop kick, - Ohio State’s touch- ch, somegne bn the chin and the only | Tracey—but the local fights are fre- down came in the fourth period, after | and two'to way $o:lose:n : it quent, and howlingly patronized. R e Z Ot The Argentine takes his prizetight|’ a brilliant 70-yard run by Kiee. of them har downs and a fiel ch Johntiy Kilbane are notworld’s cham- | (o "0 great deal of carnestness and game with. the TR plont by g rulig of the New ¥ork 1S ieniing o comest rese | YALE [OSES TO HARVARD. _[rai s vend e ater s s i {s es the propoltmn ofv a full-grown oo ) e o 3 RS2 strugglo At th end, 2400 mi % - Tiot. IN BRILLIANT C()NTFST nen.in the north stand chéere e 15 ,000 people in the United States were killed in Auto- An unpopuL\t fight or the oppon- not rld’s _light. heavyweight chan{1 u::gnd the European heavy- WelghERChampion; ent of a favorite needs all the g police S 3 ar(flagfica:l):n;“{g:sc 1‘: t;}:)i Stc‘;:s;e:‘ho protection he, can get for the crowds| = New Haven, Conn., Nov. 27—-Har- P i will come storming against the ropes |vard defeated Yale 10 to 3, winners Frencthiu‘i!;’pLecf‘;zfiflcf:m:f“;c“; on very little provocation. with the odds against them in & game Army.almost as vociferously as they did their. own team, Sin mobile Acciden’s during the year 1921 Smythe, the Army qu: the great star of. the gam ning and’ hi 'forward passing...was unsurpassed on Frankhn field this season. v which in scenic spectacle ‘took _high - rank in the long line of these nation- L :%:*s I o aosear | CONVENTIONS TODAY |+ contess $ A Day . the umform : Crimsoninitiative and Crimson re- Milwaukee, — Midwest Merchant |sources overcame ‘the big Blue team Marine Association. with. George Owen, Harvard’s burly alina, —Ka ai Bar | back, operating as an individual hero, S: Kan—Kansas State Bar I ) ) r t was Owen’s:run’ back of a Yale - n and persecution has no place Association. Tows Cit Iowa Nov. 27— potting in sportsmanship. New Orleans—Louisiana Ice Manu- |punt 47 yards through a fighting Yale Nor‘r,hwesteyr'n to L three:point_lead Mg explanations are being made | facturers’ Association. team that led.directly. to his touch-|;, the- first -quarter, .the Univer: iki's color had nothing to do| ~Pierre, S. D.—South Dakota "Edu- [down_and to his succeeding point by | ;¢ JIowa, 1921 Western :confe: ith t=— cational " Association. kick in the first period. wil Maybe not. However,-if Tive sifiet scores were-madera Reld champlons“and: claima; (‘eorges Carpentier had done the his he scrved for. four . years, he arrested. That savors-of perse- this season, scored a brilli victory SUBSCRIEE FOR THE PIONEER €920y Charlie Otffcorn, Yolels siat in the final game htre Saburday, 31 the second®period, and a field goal kicked 25 yards by Carl Pfaffman, a Harvard sub who was in the game gne minute and out’the next; in- the ‘ourth period. .. As _in other .games|? . 5 season, the Blue players, by-pass. or d Patt}iergm;agut Z‘l‘{sf!‘mn rush, advanced almost twice as-many | T ‘1\1"ne o E yards as the Crimson but were b B | < ; - = back or pressed to a point where their After..Glen Mxller %omd 10‘“3 R | S 5 & thrusts were ineffective all but once fivst_touchdown early ‘in the secon e A - ; .|.quarter,. thcn, was. no doubt about the . < A & : ¢ : 0% L { sams thing' when he was in all siperiority of Ho Jones’ eleven. MICHICAN KEEPS CLAMN* 1= |-~AS BIG TEN CHAMPIONS Mumeapuhs Nov. 27~—Mlchlgnns ‘undefeated Joothiall team retained: onf§l"é‘°i..:e’:’$" “"3 2 3 i its claim to the. “Big Ten" champion- || freo.inds ; ’ ship with Town. here. Saturday. after. || Eomes tso e Rrel : ! EitherjFoot.. .. ... . 2} 1 T i Sight of Either Eye £ roon, by defeating Minnesota 16 to 7. :.‘:.?:":*.:}d. neRs The game, played before. 23,000 Thizelsd . £ H N \cpectators was replete with -thrills ““'" e 'flli" 'ohcy further provides $250 in case of death due to and it appeared in the first quarter B Sclentific mu-m': ewp < = > be@g 52 5 &:‘k knocked down or run over by a moving vehicle that the ‘Gophers wee going to down " ‘anding or walking on any public highwa; tHoir-olivivale, Michigan, however, || Sasiara SggrenL: e e . {fomnad itself in the second pertbd, [} Wl ity oot g sconng two touchdowns for a 13 to || eleans. oue the. nfted - - P {£ 55 g s | TR LOOK FOR THE COUPON IN THIS ISSUE a8 | , 3 added to_ their total with a per! ect “Be wurd;40:pat Vin < % S 3 THGRE WAS A BI§ “TWRM OUT FOR. THE LODGE , place kick by Blott.The seven points || you's Teaed Blarantce. Yo T 5 Cut it out, sign it and send it to the Pioneer Office. We wil SUPPER “AUNT SARAH PEABODY REPORTS THERE ! scored by the Gophers was. the larg- 2 % s wl“ dothe reat. WAS A SHORTAGE OF ICE C! TEY. B F,,gp_ PAN;E;: BAKE‘D BE:E;T_E%.B: e . Jvst score made against the Yostmen lthis year. CITY DRUG srom-:"