The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1919, Page 6

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NORTHWESTERN FOOTBALL LID IS QUIVERING Gridiron Heroes Warming Up for What Promises to Be Strenuous Season NORTH DAKOTA HOPEFUL *Varsity Opens With Minnesota October Four for Eight Stiff Battles St. Paul, Minn., Sept, S—The foot- ball lid is beginn Northwest, Reports received from every univer- sity and college of importance from . Paul to the Pacific coast, all tell the same story. Return of service men, revived interest in the gridiron game annual conflicts postponed — for pns last year, all promis to make this histo season for football in the Northy states. Of the conference colleges in the Northwest, Minnesota and Wisconsin anticipate wonderful teams. — Univer- sites in the Northwest which seldom play teams outside of their district will be in practice ion Within two weeks. Minnesota's first game is with North Dakota, at Minneapolis, on Oct. 4 Wisconsin opens with Marquette at Madison, Oct. 11. Leaving the confe- ference colleges out of consideration, the est reports from Northwest universities and colleges follow : AT CARLETON Northfield, Minn, Sept. 15.—Coach Howard Buck of Charleton college ex- pects to put a fast and powerful foot- Vall team in the field this year, More than a score of candidates of ‘varsity quality have announced their inten- tion of trying for the eleven. The first practice game will take place here Sept. 28, The Schedule follows: Oct. 4, River Falls; Oct. 11, Cornell at Mt. Vernon, Tov Oct. 13, Macalester at . Paul; Oct. Coe, ut Cedar Rap- ids; Noy. 1, Luther college; Noy. 8, St. . Hamline college ; s. Buck} s from Novy, 1 rial. | HAMLINE PRACTICING St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 13.—Hannline, Macalester and St. Thomas colleges all wiil soon be practicing. None of the coache sported as yet but prelimi- nary information has been very op- timistic. D, VARSITY GAME Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 15.—North Dakota university will have eight hard games, the opener being with Minneso- ta on Oct 4, or possibly Sept. Four heme contests have been anged. Present plans are to lay St. Thomas here Oct. 4, if the Minnesota ga played earlier; Fargo college at Fargo, Oct. 11; South Dakota university here Oct. 1 Jamestown college here Oct.. 25; North Dakota A, here Noy. 1: South Dakota State, at Huron. § and Marquette at Milwaukee, 4 The Marquette college date is tenta- tive. The university term begins Sep- tember 22. FARGO VETERANS BACK Fargo, N. x dozen veterans are to return to the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege football team this fall. E: birds are conditioning themselves. At Fargo college, football stock has been im- proved by the return of Coach F. H. Watkins, who will be as ed by E. C. Stauffer. The Aggies’ line-up prob- ably will include “Curl Tovold, star quarter, Underwood, end; “Dutch” Hauser, all-state tackle and Huey, 195 pound tackle. BUNK McKAY BACK Huron, §. D., Sept. 18.—*Bunk’ Me- Kay is home from France gnd_ will coach the Huron college football eleven, Fractice will start next week. The big game of the season will be with South Dakota State on Oct. 11. McKay ex- pects to select a strong team from a score of candidates. COYOTES HOPEFUL Vermillion, S$, D., Sept. 13.—With an urusual of veteran material, the University of South Dakota team prom- ises to complete its heavy schedule with unusual suce Coach John Stewart will be assisted by Frank McCormick, a four-letter man. Steward served in the army. Former stars who are to re- turn include Bob Patrick, picked by Walter Eckersall for his All Western team last year; Pete Alleman, Winner of the Croix de Guerre; Ralph McKin- non; Leo He 1918 captain: Captain Harold Colli Francis and Louis Hengle and Eddie Livingston. The schedule follows: October 11, Creighton at Omaha; Oct. 16, North Dakota at Grand Forks: Oct. kota Day) Morningsid Towa at Towa Cit Aggies, at East La: Drake, her State at Si AT SIOUX FALLS Sious Falls, §. D.. Sept. 13.—Perry ‘Van Tuy), one of the fastest half backs who ever starred for Sioux Falls col- Jege will be back this fall. This fact and the securing of T. R. Johnson to coach the local college have brought optimism to S. F. C. Paul Norberg and Ben Stark, ‘letter men. who played on army teams, and former captain Ray Reeves are among the old men who will be back. Sioux Falls will open its season on Oct. 10, play Madison Normal at Madison. _.. SEX YANKTONAINS BACK Yankton, S. D., Sept. 18.—Six mem- hers of .the conference championship team of 1917, will return to Yankton college this fall. They are Stephons, of Pierre, all-conference fullback ; Bow- ers, Yankton, - all-conference quarter- back; Cooley, Tindall, end; Patrick, Tabor, the other’ end; Courtney, Yank- ton, center; and Morrison, guard. Other letter men will try for positions. ing; Nov. 15, South Dakota to quiver in the} his splendid array of freshmen mate-}] jes our reference. wh BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE SATURDAY, SEPT. 18, 1919. ' The son opens Oct, 3, with the Western Union college eleven, The ‘Vhanksgiving contest will be with Da- Kota Wesleyan, of Mitchell, here, AT SOUTH DAKOTA AGGIE Brookings, $. D,, Sept. 13.—Fifteen letter men are listed among the candi- dates for the South Dakota State Col- lege football team, C. A. West, for- merly coach at Shattuck military aca- demy, Will have cbarge. The team promises to, be exceptionally heavy as ithe yeter average close to | 180 pounds. Funk, the Mason City sensation, will try for rterback. He won the 100 and 220. } 1 dashes at the Morninside meet this year. South Dakota State will piay Huron college, State School of ines, Dakota We: an, North Dako- ta “1 orth Dakota Aggies, and South Dakota University, MONTANA STATE COLLEGE Roseman, Mont., Sept, 15.—Walter Powell, former star nter for the University of Wisconsin football team, will coach Montana state college this fall. Powell was all Western center in 1912. He succeeds Fred Bennion who resigned last spring. Prospects for a strong eleven are considered at. SAFETY WEEK TO BE OBSERVED ALL OVER NATION THIS MONTH Eighth Annual Congress of Safe- ty Council to Be Held September 28 high’ school Cleveland, Sept. 13—A joint proc- lemation designating September 28 to October 4 as Safety Week has been issued by Mayor Harry L. Davis Cleveland, Mayor Cook of La nd City Manager Osborne of East veland. The celebration sill be in conjunction with the eighth annual congress of the National Safety Coun- vil, which opens for a four-day s October 1. More than 3,000 safety enginéers and experts of industrial plants, as well as a large number of educators and muni- cipal and governement officials are expected to attend. Two of the thirty-five sessions of congress will be devoted exclusively the discussion of women in industry. Americanization will also occupy (a section’ of congress, Carl Smith, field secretary, said. Features of safety week include a fiee t of. safety appliances and a fire-fighting demonstartion afety pageants by school children. Police will give ten-minutes talks in public scl WANT TO ORGANIZE ALL WAR VETERANS IN ONE BIG BODY Spanish War Soldiers to Start Movement to Have One / Organization Is. San Francisco, Sept. 13.—A move- ment looking to the amalgamation of all organizations of veterans of Amer- ican wars may be started at the twen- Y annual national encampment of United Spanish War Veterans g| Which opened here today. Resolutions proposing such a mer- ger have been prepared for presen- tation to the convention. Proponents of the plan favor limiting each town to one camp or unit of the central organization. Other matters to come before the Spanish War veterans are: Resolutions memorializing Congress to grant age and disability pensions to Spanish War veterans and to make pensions payable monthly instead of quarterly. Requests for absolute preference to honorably discharged service men and their widows in Federal, State and municipal employment. Proposed amendment of the home- stead laws The annual election of officers is scheduled for September 5, the clos- ing day of the encampment. Milton Nathan of San Francisco, junior past department commander, has been given the endorsement of the Cali- fornia camps for the office of com- mander-in-chief of the national body. U. S. BANKERS TO DISCUSS MATTERS EFFECTING TRADE Annual Convention Will Be Held at St. Louis the End of September e St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 13.—Revival of international trade, the question of furnishing foreign credits to facili- tate exports, the railroad problem and the labor situation are among the important topics to be discussed at the forty-fifth annual convention of the American Bankers’ Association here September 29 to October 3. More than 5,000 bankers from all parts of the United States, Canada, Porto Rico, and the Philippine Islands are ex- pected to attend. President Wilson has been invited to deliver the principal address, and others expected to speak are David R. Francis, formerly Ambassador to Russia, Homer L. Ferguson, President of the United States Chamber of Com- merce, Henry P. Davison of New York, formerly head of the Ameri- can Red Cross and Robert F. Mad- dox, of Atlanta, Ga., president of the association. Richard S. Hawes of this city, first- vice-president of the association, said social conditions and the question of capital and labor would be consid- ered, and plans for the eradication of Bolshevism and other radical doc- trines discussed. Consideration, he said, also would be given the subject of public educa- tion, foreign exchange regulations and the future security of edu@ation, fortign exchange regulations and the future security of railroad invest- ments. SCHOOL BOARDS What about those vacancies? We can supply your needs whether it be principal, assistant. grade or tural teacher. Prepared :for emergency calls. No charge for our service to schoolboards. Nordauist & Matick Teachers’ Agency, Burnstad, North Dakota. Charges unknown; First State Bank 0 staoin etaoin etaoinaoa 9-9-3t. Sega a RT RMR Renee ei nae A 50th Year of Football | Should Be a Corker: BY FRED TURBYVILLE + | N. E. A. Sports Writer. | Football coaches from coast to coast and from gulf to lakes are planning to make the fiftieth anniversary of the) gridiron game the biggest ever. Foot- | ball having had an otf year on account of the war is due for a comeback that will see the unearthing of football stars as never before. | Only college football was suspended | during the war. The players played | on for in every camp on this side or} in France there was plenty of football, | \in fact more football than had ever! been played in peace times. The stars haven’t accumulated any rust; they had plenty of practice. | The big eastern elevens are ready for the call to training camps after a} shifting around of coaches that has awakened a new interest in the sport. | This year will see the renewal of} the classics with regular teams from} Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and other | big schools participating. Al Sharpe at Yale is already on the; ground with Captain Tim Callahan and other of the stars of-Old Eli. Bra den, LaRoche, Galt, Neville and Allen | will be back. Yale’s prospects are un- usually bright. Princeton and Harvard will have erack teams. Bob Fisher will coach the Crimson, Bill Roper is head of the Tigers, Lieut. Elmer Oliphant will coach the Army team at West Point. Princeton and Rutgers, the college teams that inaugurated the gridiron sport 50 years ago, are planning on a big celebration. The Princeton-Rut- gers game will be the feature of the anniversary program. i The west is rich with football mate- rial. Ohio State, Illinois and Michigan loom strong. = Chick Harley is back at Ohio and Chick is almost a team himself. Be- sides Ohio has Stinchcomb, rated by some as good as Harley, and Wiper, a} corking young quarterback. Coach Wilce is not making any boasts. He appears, in fact, rather pessimistic, but that is natural with him. Fuller, end, McDonald, end, Holtcamp, center, and Williams, fullback, are letter men returning. fr Sternaman, captain of the Camp Funston team last year, has returned to Illinois. Schlauderman, center, has returned. Ems is another veteran. Ottis perry of the 1916 team, an over-; seas veteran, will be on hand. Several other service men, who have been playing football rightalong are to tryout. Besides there are several let- ter men of the 1918 team. Fifteen “M” men at Michigan should make the Wolverines a formi-| dable contender for Western Con- ference honors. Coach Yost has Quar- terback Weston, Raymond, halfback; Weinman, fullback; Sparks quarter. Perfect Health Is Almost Every Human Ailment Is Directly Traceable to Im- purities in the Blood. You should pay particulay heed to:any indication that your blood supply’ is becoming: sluggish, or that there is a lessening in its strong-and vital force. By keeping your blood cleansed your-system more easily wards off If the Blood This is the season of upsets and the kings of football are not immune but Chick Harley, who looks as if he might still reign as the king of all footballers this fall. MONTANA SOLDIER BRINGS BACK EX- and half; Peach, end, and a batch of young stars from the 1918 team. Notre Dame is figuring on a team strong enough to make another trip to the Pacific Coast. Many veterans are back—many of the boys absent two years on account of wearing khaki. Indiana, Purdue, Wisconsin, Minne- sota, Chicago and Northwestern are not so wel! fixed on returning veterans but neither can they be counted out of the running for after a year’s layoff it is hard to. say. whois who until the teams get under way. Americans Welcomed ; by Alberta as Home Seekers, Big Influx Germans and Austrians Find That They Are Not Wanted in Canada Grand Prairie, Alberta, Sept. 13.— More than a score of home seeke who recently came to this wild re- gion from the United States, were included in the 10 odd applicants for naturalization, whose petitions were jacted upon at the regular term of provincial court which just ‘closed here. The presiding magistrate, Mr. Justice Walsh, journeyed here from Fort Vermillion, where the “farthest north”. session was held recently. The difference between the treat- ment accorded the Americans and the German and Austrian applicants was sharp. | “You'll do,” was the usual comment when an American -who sought to change his citizenship, appeared be- fore the judge. Every enemy alien was questioned at length, partly be-} cause official attention has been di-_ rected to the large colony of Teutons which is being organized about 45 miles west of the Peace River cross-' ing. There was only one criminal case. ! A-man named Briggs was accused of . poisoning an aged settler. A ver-! dict of not guilty was ordered by the court. - | The Peace River district was once’ the home of D. A. Thomas,-who later became Lord Rhondda, British food controller. Lord Rhondda died in England several months ago. A steam- er bearing. his name operates on| Peace River and it has been claimed ; that the company operating the boat’ sustains a loss to. maintain service. ! The boat was built near here and her machinery was hauled over the prim- | eval trail from Edmonton, 310 miles, distant. _ Phone 189 for Beulah| Coal. tf) Yours ; is Kent Pure sa {enol Gs a8 Sy ey, teeang freddy, vigorous vitalit one needs it just now to keep the system in perfect condition. {a to your Crug store and.get a bottle to-day, and if you need any medi- cal advicé, you can: obtain tt. with- out cost by writing to Medical Di- rector, Swift Specific Co.,,46 Swift discase that is-ever present, w Izy to attack wherever there is an HAVE YOUR CLOT “SEND THEM TO NEVENS by lothes economy. © \ QUICKESTA*° BEST PLAC CLOTHES cleaned often wear twice as long. “ Have your old ones French dry cleaned:by:the , - NEVENS COMPANY - ‘Keeping your clothes cleaned, pressed and repaired is Minneopolis” largest laundry and dry cleaning esta} lishmend. + < ~ NEVENS CO., 1201 Marquette Ave.’ MINNEAPOLIS RCO ht YS ety Pe Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga To HES DRYCLEANED Bought It in Coblenz for $96 But Hanscom of this city has returned from ‘overseas service bringing with him a violin which he says was the property of ex-Kaiser Wilhelm of Ger- many. $96 in Coblenz where he was station- ed with the Army of Occupation and carried it loosely in a sack for some time before he learned its value. Fre- quently he played for the boys in camp not knowing that he was using an instrument worth more than his LOOMS AS BIGGEST STAR OF tee vice. KAISER’S VIOLIN Did Not Realize Its His- Aory, He Says Great Falls, Mont., Sept. 13.—A. ’P.| tity. The youth picked up the fiddle for at iy Ohio State, is the gridiron-king salary for the entire time of his ser- One day Hanscom took the violin to | 4 a repair man and learned the instru- ment was made by August Kreiter and was 300 years old. The violin bore the coat of arms of the German royal family and had last been in a hepair shop in 1891 as indicated by a repair man’s stamp inside. Hanscom was a member of the 3485 Field Artillery, enlisting NO PARTRIDGE HUNTING IN MICHIGAN THIS YEAR Calumet, Mich., Sept. 18—There will be no autumn partridge hunting. in the Upper Peninsula this year. ficial notice has been received from John Baird, state game commissioner, that the season will be closed Octo- ber 1 and will remain closed for 12 Melt VapoRub in aspoon and inhale ~: the vapors, = i . “YOUR BODYGUARD" -SOF,.608, 1:20 ae months.’ This action was taken by Commissioner Baird, after the pro- posal was approved by a majority of the supervisors in each county of Northern Michigan. . Forest.» fires killed thousands of birds this year. ENGLAND TEA DRINKERS | HAVE OWN H. C, L. PROBLEM , London Eng, Sept. 18—Noonday tea- drinkers,. of whom there are. some millions here, were recently shocked by an advance from. five to six cents for a cup of that “which cheers but does not inebriate,” today were de- prived of penny buns. Teashops in raising food prices gave as a reason the increased pay of waitresses. One concern, however, recently paid an annual dividend of 35 per cent. Coal. tf LIKE UNTO Vemon of Snakes ‘ Professor H. Strauss, M. D.; of the Royal Charity Hospital, says, “The tause for an stink of go Hemet, umbago, is supplied by the increase 4 arie acid in the blood serum, the result L~~ |af various causes, the most frequent’ of which is renal. Before an attack, one suffers sometimes from headache, 1 i ia, twinges of pain here and there.” ~-When -your kidneys feel like lumps of ead, when the back hurts or the urine 3 cloudy, full of sediment, or you are ybliged to seek relicf two or three times juring the night; when you suffer with tick headache, or dizzy, nervous. spells, icid stomach; or you have rheumstie pains or lumbago, gout, sciatica. wl jhe weather is ‘bad, do not, neglect the warning, but try simple means. Take six or eight glasses of water during the Jay, then obtain at your nearest store ‘An-uric’ (anti-uriciacid). ” This is the discovery of Dr. Pierce of she Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y. “Ane mic” “is an “antidote for this uric acid soisoning and dissolves usic acid in the yody much as hot coffee dissolves sugar. ‘Anurie” will penetrate into the joints nd muscles, and dissolve the poisonous sceurnulations. It will stamp out toxins. Send 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Aotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial packoge. from this He values the violin at $2,000. Of- Missouri Slope Mandan, No. Dakota School Children free on Tuesday, Sept. 16. All. School Children of the Slope, ask your Superintendent, Teacher or Clerk of Board for your free ticket. BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ CLUB WORK’ from all the Slope counties will-be. repre- sented by exhibits which promise to rival exhibits in other departments. Good Races. ' Big Military: Band. © EXHIBITION FLIGHTS by “Amazing Larry Brown” in loops, nose dives, side slips, tail spins, Immelman ‘turns — He does them all. \ - If never before, get behind-Western North Dakota’s State Fair. with your exhibits and Ty”) “attendance‘and’ PUSH. “LET’S GO” BIGGER AND BETTER In Every Department $10,000.00 spent in’ improvements in buildings and grounds. Best. Live Stock Exhibit ever. made in Western North Dakota, now assured by. entries : Auto. Races. . ¥ t TO THE————— ts already made. - SOLDIERS’ HOMECOMING CELEBRATION ' BIG VICTORY CELEBRATION, Tuesday, “Sept. 16. Everything free to all men in uniform, good. program and a “Whale of a Time.” avi ay | i

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