The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 11, 1920, Page 6

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PAGE SIX BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUN! THURSDAY, NOV. 11, 1920 CARPENTIER AND DEMPSEY SIGN wri 7 | ot ! en are] ; ' P ANS HONORS TO BE | | DECIDED AMONG | yl BiG TEN TEAMS. ¢ ackase 3 coal a package Minnesota Out of Running Be- | a cause of Defeat to Wiscon- - ; e Ot e e ar sin Last Saturday | a = ILLINOYS LOOMS UP, \ J Macalester Has Not Lost a Game ‘ a package fk : During the Entire Season of | i. : ® 2 Football i D \ Bik St. Paul, Minn, Nov. 11.—Titular : i e€ 4 al & football honors in the Big ‘Ten Con- | mars : oe ie ies BE ference will be decided in the annual Aue a 1 ge Oe Nee pattie petween Utinois | and Oto | ee silane Pe: pean. ute a week>trom Saturday, as the | oo fi a e It of last Saturday’s play. ; a and tes \ ee Tinta gis am % # . ‘i x y \ Z ie Bon ohio LT eats ame NEW YORK—Georges Carpentier wound up “round one” with a flourish. Before fighters { yt / is (eam defeating Michigan 14 to 7, and | battle in the squared circle there’s always a preliminary squabble of. terms arid such-like in the| ‘ y / ilinois snatching a. victory. in the articles cf war.” At left, above, is shown Jack Dempsey, heavyweight champion of the world, ' game wit i Ghicago by 8 field goal eee pore ee rench champion, sign his name \to the agreement that binds the a package ‘ q sera over fara 8 te O'victory. | ee to fight for the world title some time betw cen March and July. next year. ‘ _ i es 4 Minnesota is hopelessly out of the} ~~ PAL AALS ae eee ae * £ NS ot Re ae : ; conference running, with two games| shown by the Badgers was nothing week end. Mac has not lost a game’ sport cars or it would pay for enough IN to be played to complete the schedule. | more than any conference team is this St. Thomas is a tradi| iee cream sodas to float a battleship i Wiscon suppcsed to h The game with 4; sh Ns { in. ! day gave t i PPESsed fats eu tional enemy, always showing its best |" ‘ 4 . ay ga G [ Illincis is expected to develop ali, the At ti fi i pew conference defeats and no wins for | playing ability of both teams. |football aga the Presbyterians. j 4,5.) ine present inflated prices, of \ the season. Ohio state takes a rest Saturday | Earlier in the season Macalester play- rae it ‘took\every_nickel’s. worth | 4 = Next Saturday, Minnesota meets preparation fcr the final game with ¢d a-tie game with Hamline and Ham- kn a half_million bucks to. bring) ° e I Jowa, with the hope of wiping out de- Should Hinois lose to Wis- | gave the cadets aJicking in the; /emPsey and Carpentier out of their : feat administered by the Towa team Ohio State~can claim: the uel ‘ecntest between the two! Corners. . ¢ 5 ts wed a stronger team against Wis- is played, on a percentage ba! Ec cap iramrt oregas pcage [meeks. | (tn. Humes orypedce, weaaye n than*at any other time this Har lin a, Carl Shon ‘ | turned to gasp masks to save us from z fa : With Ruben back in the game am ine ys. Carlton f i being nervous wrecks in figuring up f i é DEN. and Oss going as he was last Satur-| In the Minnesota college confer- i +; Why the cost of mill ‘entertainment x . 1 day, Minnesota’s offense will present | ece, St, Olaf staged a comeback ; should be so big and burly. x a problem to Iowa. * against St. Thomas last Saturday, | , . ez Meet Saturday winning 6 tc 0 and dragging the! y Long Ago~ . i at { Wisconsin and Illinois meet next | Cadets cut of the conference race, Only 20 or 25 years ago champions} ~ a : Pec Saturday. Wisconsin slid through tie | leaving only Carleton, Macalester and % ‘fought gruelling battles of 20 rounds - Minnesota game to a 3 to 0 victory | Hamline in, the running. The three | jor more and, if they got purses of Ne without showin® scouts from Illinois championship pos bilities were not in /| $1000, or $1500 at the most, they had and Chicage anything, but a hard action last Saturday, and with a two killed the golden goose. smashing backfield which is also able week&preparaticn behind them, it is | ED eres | Bankro]ls are figured different now. ' to run ends behind the best wall of | expected that the play next Saturday 'Car rea ry ’ | Hven a graduate from the preliminary interference seen on the Minnesota wil develop the: best football segh on | Carpentier and Dempsey Will Be | class scoffs at the size‘of the purse field in years, The passin; ame! college fields this year. | , which the champions used to be glad ‘ eae dis wear lton meets Hamline at st?Paul.; Comfortable No Matter | to fight tor. i oth teams are strcng. with driving a , sy i = power enough to score if given an ad-'| : Who Loses Sure Thing Purses yanaee ae the games: how this areacraraas a ‘ In the ‘old days the boxers gambled season both teams have shown man. 7H A with the promoters on a 50 per cent. flashes of: real football, and Satur iW HAT THE TERMS ARE Voute of the gross recelpts. “Spliteing ; rata E pithent costes day’s game is expected to develop the | et > \ their halt 60-40. But that common- Geatment CZEMA, | bcSt either coach has to-offer. Ham- | BY DEAN SNYDER ' place idéa, too, has been’ scooped ino | RINGWORM, TBTTER er | line has’ one conference defeat to its} —A half million dollars is a real nest | the trash heaps of the yesterdays. ether itching skin dlsenson. Te credit, while Carlton will get into ac-|eggsfor a championship fight. Boxing of the present is run on the AA Bec seat ; tion with a clean slate. s | "Five hundred thousand. dollars |e money in de pocket” scale. The Be : SLOW, Druggist Macalester meets St. Thomas this would buy a whole fleet of Rolls-Royce#ffighters want “theirs” before the pro- F : ‘ ANNAN. = ‘ \ =) = : ai cr jhe eH y = a i : is > “DOUBLEMINT | Nene ' ananaanananaenannaenaaasase” é " UMP E PP EPMINT ME a ; cy e1leve in — < 4 ! A ; ‘ moters:turn a wheel .én making up VAG , mee : nae a [WHEAT COST PRODUCTION MEETINGS / : ‘ Big Business ! x N' Adve rtising ; iz Boxing, has reached the stage where BE HELD IN THE COU ITY f it_enters the category of big busi- = WAN GIVES WIF ae Means “ 4 *: 3. | WAN GIVES WIFE id ’ ' , No wonder Dempsey and carpentier! ON€-at ul and One at Baldwin { GLYCERINE MIXTURE , ae at smile. You'd smile, too, if you’ were to Discuss What It Costs She had stomach trouble for years. ~ in their shoes, ~ | After giving her simple buckthorn /The Wise Manufacturer Does. He has seen advertising make his \ factory grow from rear-attic ‘to \ city-block dimensions. » ( \ stock him or an unknown article ve and hear him say: “How about \ your advertising?” ; has seen the goods that’ moved ' slowly begin to move quickly ‘when advertising brought the customers in legion. ~ ; : The Wise Customer Does. He ° has compared the safety, service, : and satisfaction found in adver- tised goods with the disappoint- : ments of unbranded, Ainknown articles. / / You cannot help believing in advertising. You have you watching the columns of your daily newspapers UU MIU TUMOUR UID ULU ULL LLU LUI LA LA LAL The Wise Merchant Does. He 4 had the same opportunity to compare.and-prove. Are ~ VMI. NTR Yet no one is kicking at their good fortune in being so situated that they can clean up a fortune in a /single show. | A boxing title is worth to a champ- ion just what he can make out of it. He would be foolish to go back to the Fat Checks When~Dempsey signed to box Car-/ pentier for the world’s heavyweight championship dack was writing his name to a check payable, ta himself, fort the sum_ of $300,000, and_ Georgedl likeWise* for “$200,000. Amd the promoters who are facing the biggest gamble in ring history— Tex Rickard, William A. Brady and harles B. Cochran—they are a trio of hard-headed business men, who generally look before they leap. The average attendance at heavy- weight-title bouts of the past 20 years has-been less than 20,000. Ot $25 mer card it would require 20,000 to make up the $500,000 purse alone. Picture Rights The picture rights may save the} promoters if the present federal law against the taking fight films from state to state can be overcome. They get 50 per cent. of the picture privi leges and each fighter takes his 25 fer cent. according to the. articles "®t agreement. It’s alot ‘of money. No bigger gam- ple in boxing was ever undertaken. But boxing never before was so pop- ular and the customers so liberal as they are now. Covers And the principals in the big b Territory rag we-used to sing—“Every little bit) added to what you got makes just a little bit more.” NEUMONIA Call a physician. Then begin “emergency” treatment with, He the Farmer to Produce (By G.‘W. GUSTAFSON, Co. Agent.) Two meetings are scheduled for Burleigh county to determine the cost of producing wheat under our con- day evening, Noy. 12. ‘These meetings of the farmers of these communities have been called by County Agent Gustafson. They will in charge of Rex E. Willard arm management specialist ofthe ‘agricultural college. The average cost of .raising an acre of wheat in North Dakota in 1919 was $2.75 per bushel. This cost was based on the figures ‘of over 300 farmers of the state growing wheat under very di- vergent conditions. For the first time farmers of Bur- leigh county will determine the cost of producing wheat under our own conditions. It may cost more or less, but every farmer in these respective communities should plan to attend one of these mectings and give his ideas and experience. SILO USE Over thirty silos have beenserected in Burleigh county during the year These are monumental milestones in the progress and development of a permanent system of agriculture in our county. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Ad- ler-i-ka, her husband says: “My wife feels fine now and has gainé@- Weight: !It \is wonderful stomach -medicine.” Adleré-ka acts on BOTH <inpper and lower bowel, removing fol, matter which poisoned stomach. and which N 2 ace old scale of priceg when igger| ditions. One of the meetings will; you never thought was in.your sys- { The Wise Jobber Does. Try to prizes are ready to'be couhted Wut tobe held at Still Thursday evening, | tem. EXCELLNT for -gas on the him by eager promoters. Nov. 11,.and the other at Baldwin Fri. | Stomach or chronic ‘constipation. Guards against appendicitis. The im- purities it, brings out’ will surprise you. Jos. Breslow, druggi: —————— ~ MAN'S” BEST AGE A man is as old as his organs ;‘he can be as vigorous and healthy at 70 as at 35 if ke aids his organs in performing their functions. Keep your vital organs healthy with GOLD MEDAL ‘The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles since 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates Leok for the mame Gold Medal on every bex ‘gad accept no imitation s : for th i F 4 * excite not only America but Europé| Qoeoeeeesosoooseors Oe a a a } e myriad helpful suggestions the ad s well. That cov retty big area 3 a ” BEM sue cone the Serene Nesey can nace me torase! ¢ Look Out for Rheumatism offer? Ps 2 which has’ been denied him so fax:| ‘ mn 4 e tii ce abilitate his coal ‘ om ° Ny ; Carpentier tho a | As Winter’ Approaches = \ the promoters—if they are lucky— y ee Gi the Pico into the spirit of that O1d | \ SmoHMHHeeoreneey srr nMnnnren oer HOY So many cases of Rheumatism come from a tiny disease germ that infests the blood, that physicians |} fre beginning to realize that this source of the disease is becoming quite prevalent. \Of course a cis- ‘ease, that has its source in ‘the blood cannot be reached by local remedies applied to the surface. icKs 7 bloo’ remedy that has been sold by’ a than fifty’ years. iving out of | the ciscase germ that cause? Amatism, thus ofording real ti 2 4 ‘et 2 4 lief. Begin taking S.S.S. today and if you will write a complete history of your case, our medical director will give you expert advice, with- MM mf i APO ROB | ime emey, that has given splot a coer ero Swift Laboratory, Ate MUULUUUUAYRUAAUOUUUOAEREOUAUUUAECLULAOUG!¢0OSAAUOSEOOGECHEUGEAOAURLEARLOOLO LAO | Over 17 Milin Jars Ved Yesily eee ees the awe ol lianas Ga, : vital organs. All druggists, three sizes, 7 %

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